Fri October 27, 2023

By Jeff Smithpeters

Business

Texarkana's ArkLaTex EEnergy Healing Center uses scalar energy said to promote healing

Arklatex Eenergy Healing Center Tonja Hodde Richard Hodde Wellness Coach
Texarkana's ArkLaTex EEnergy Healing Center uses scalar energy said to promote healing
If you want to investigate options in alternative medicine in the four states area, you can take the short drive to Texarkana, Texas, more specifically 4059 Summerhill Road, to experience the ArkLaTex EEnergy Healing Center.  

There, for about $60 per hour or $110 for a two hour session (the price is reduced in packaged deals of multiple sessions), you can lie down on comfortable lounge furniture, covered with a warm bed spread and allow waves of scalar energy, produced by four devices with three screens each. These waves, said Tonja Hodde, who co-owns the center with husband Richard, help our cells heal.  

Hodde, who said she has been a wellness coach for 25 years, called the EEnergy Healing Center a part of a “worldwide initiative for global health.” The initiative began with the invention by Sandra Rose Michael of a technology she calls the Energy Enhancement System, that she believes creates scalar waves using multiple computer monitors set up in a particular shape and showing multicolored patterns with runes Hodde said are representations of the human genome. 

Hodde was careful to say scalar wave therapy does not treat or cure any particular condition. She also recounts instances in which, following sessions inside the space where the monitors are set up, clients told her of improvements in their physical and mental conditions.  

While showing me a view of the therapy room on security monitors, Hodde provided an explanation of how the technology works: “So if you look in here on the cameras the towers in each corner are panels and basically they are coded to our cells. It creates scalar energy and photons that recharge your cells back to the original millivolts of 70 to 90, which is what your body hopefully runs on.” 

Hodde referred to a page on the EESystems website where a set of articles can be found that Michael has provided to support the technology’s use. 

I tried the therapy myself, lying in the darkened room for an hour while the monitors rolled their patterns and ambient music played. I had mentioned to Hodde a condition I have struggled with for my entire adult life and she had added aloe vera juice to my water, which is said to help. After an hour, that didn’t seem like an hour, of lying in the room with a cosy blanket over me I did feel a touch better, but relaxation has always helped my issue temporarily. Unfortunately, it was back the next day. 

Tonja Hodde also assists in Hope as wellness coach several times a week at Hope Nutrition at 222 North Hervey.  She can be contacted at (903) 908-4350.

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