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Why Energy Matters
Your body is energy! Your body is more than biochemistry—it’s an energy network. When that network runs smoothly, you feel vibrant, clear, and alive. When it’s disrupted, you feel drained and stuck. Fatigue That Never Fully Lifts Maybe you sleep 8 hours and still wake up exhausted. Or you push through the day with coffee and willpower, but your energy crashes in the afternoon. Often, the problem isn’t just “low energy”—it’s energy leakage. When your body field is misaligned,

Charles Gray-Wheeler
Apr 21 min read


Strengthen Your Immune System with Source Energy
Source Energy Ever wonder why some people seem to be healthy without doing much at all? There's that person that makes it through the winter, spring, and fall without an issue. The picture of perfect health. Except maybe not. Since you're reading this article, you probably do everything you can to keep your immune system humming. You get plenty of sleep... eat the right foods... optimized your gut health... drink enough water to sink a small ship... but something isn't quite

Charles Gray-Wheeler
Mar 283 min read


The Body-Field and Physical Body are interdependent.
This same cellular activity gives rise, at least in part, to the body-field, which in turn directs and organizes the information that drives our biochemistry. It’s a chicken-and-egg paradox, and an example of how the real and virtual are both necessary for life processes. On the one hand, real chemical processes drive physiology, giving rise to the bioenergetic reality of the body-field; on the other hand, the body-field is responsible for directing the information that main

Charles Gray-Wheeler
Mar 283 min read


Explaining the Human Body-Field
Explaining the Human Body-Field What is the human body-field? The human biofield (or body-field) is a complex set of fields made up of: Electromagnetic charges from the nervous system; Electrostatic fields set up around the charge in the nerves; Low frequency longitudinal waves (sound waves), particularly from the chest cavity (especially the beating of the heart), electrical brain activity, and the expansion and contractions of the lungs. More subtle sources may include the

Charles Gray-Wheeler
Mar 283 min read
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