In 1913, a man with a love
for machines and a scientific curiosity, arrived in San Diego after driving
across the country from New York. He had been born in Elkhorn, Nebraska, was
25 years old, and very happily married. He was about to start a new life and
open the way to a science of health which will be honoured far into the
future. His name was Royal Raymond Rife. Close friends, who loved his
gentleness and humility while being awed by his genius, called him Roy.
Royal R.
Rife was fascinated by bacteriology, microscopes and electronics. For the
next seven years (including a mysterious period in the Navy during World War
I in which he travelled to Europe to investigate foreign laboratories for
the US government), he thought about and experimented in a variety of fields
as well as mastered the mechanical skills necessary to build instruments
such as the world had never imagined.
By the
late 1920s, the first phase of his work was completed. He had built his
first microscope, one that broke the existing principles, and he had
constructed instruments which enabled him to electronically destroy specific
pathological micro-organisms.
Rife believed that the minuteness of the
viruses made it impossible to stain them with the existing acid or aniline
dye stains. He'd have to find another way. Somewhere along the way, he made
an intuitive leap often associated with the greatest scientific discoveries.
He conceived first the idea and then the method of staining the virus with
light He began building a microscope which would enable a frequency of light
to coordinate with the chemical constituents of the particle or
micro-organism under observation.
Rife's second microscope
was finished in 1929. In an article which appeared in the Los Angeles Tunes
Magazine on December 27, 1931, the existence of the light-staining method
was reported to the public:
"Bacilli may thus be
studied by their light, exactly as astronomers study moons, suns, and stars
by the light wnich comes from them through telescopes. The bacilli studied
are living ones, not corpses killed by stains."
Throughout most of this
period. Rife also had been seeking a way to identify and then destroy the
micro-organism which caused cancer. His cancer research began in 1922. It
would take him until 1932 to isolate the responsible micro-organism which he
later named simply the "BX virus".
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