top of page

Making Your Radionic Box Work

  • 5 days ago
  • 3 min read

So you've built yourself a radionic box. Congratulations! You now possess an instrument that's been

causing controversy and consternation for over a century. But having it and making it work are two

very different things.



The All-Important Rate

The rate is everything. It's the relationship between you, the operator, and whatever you're working

on, expressed as numbers on those dials. That rate might represent a whole person or just one

aspect of them. As we go through this, you'll see what I mean.


The Witness: Your Link to the Target

Let's say you want to work on your Uncle Eustace. First thing you need is a witness. What's a

witness? Anything that physically represents your target with some of their energy field attached to

it. Photograph, signature, hair clipping, nail clipping—anything works in theory. In practice,

photographs and signatures are easiest to get. Even photocopies work as long as the original is

intact.


Here's why: In a photograph, light reflected off the person acts on the chemicals in the negative,

carrying that energy forward. Every copy carries it too, back to the negative and back to the subject.

When someone signs their name, body touches pen, pen touches ink, ink touches paper—the trail

leads right back to them.


If you know someone well enough, you can even use your own consciousness as a witness. Write

their name on paper, pop it in the sample can, and you're good to go. As long as there's some link,

the machine works.


Setting Up Your Workspace

Place the witness in the sample can. Keep it clean—dust it out occasionally, and definitely don't use

it to hold crackers or pretzels. Sit and meditate for a few minutes. You're doing more than tuning

dials here, so act accordingly. Maybe play some mad scientist movie music to get in the mood. And

keep this secret—your friends will laugh at you unless they're already convinced you're crazy.


The Tuning Process

Concentrate on your subject. Keep distracting thoughts out of your head. Television in the

background? Bad idea. Reading the editorial page before working? Never do that—editorial writers

are either utter bores or complete morons. Extraneous thoughts show up in results, so focus.

If you built the machine correctly, the witness is on your left, stick pad on your right. Radionic

practitioners call this "right-hand operation"—rubbing the stick pad with your right hand while tuning

dials with your left. Sit facing the machine at a comfortable height. Left hand on the first knob like aradio dial, right thumb on the plate.


Turn the first dial very, very slowly while lightly rubbing your thumb over the stick pad. If you

practiced the stick pad, you'll recognize the stick when you get it. Stop. Repeat with the other two

dials, and you've got your rate for Uncle Eustace.


When Things Don't Work

Pretty easy, right? For most of us, yes. But if you're one of those who can't get a stick on the first

try, don't despair. Turn the dial back and try again. Still nothing? Different spots on the stick pad are

more sensitive—rub around until you find one that feels right. Change the direction you face. Some

folks are sensitive to Earth's magnetic field (which is how all this started anyway).

If you still can't get a stick, use a pendulum to tune. The pendulum starts swinging as you get close

to the rate and keeps swinging after you pass it, so set an arbitrary point—when the pendulum

crosses the edge of the pad or hits the desk, you've got the rate.


There's always the galvanic skin response meter if you want one, but get one with a meter rather

than a tone generator. The tone is annoying.


Or just hold the question in your mind while turning the dials until they feel right.


What's Next?

Now you've got your box working and can get rates. But what do you actually DO with it? That's where things get really interesting.


Ready to put your box to work?









bottom of page