Beneficial Resonance with your
Biofield
In 1994, the National Institutes of Health in the United States adopted a new term – biofield –
to describe a growing body of research showing a subtle field that permeates and extends beyond the physical body. The biofield
is something you’ve probably already noticed: a vital force that animates our bodies and powers our daily lives. When
our biofield is out of balance, we’re out of balance. Disease, fatigue, and apathy all reflect a compromised biofield.
When something improves our biofield, such as the Q-Link, it can increase our mental and physical performance, reinforce our
natural immunity to stress and enhance our sense of well-being. Every day, our biofields
are negatively impacted by flickering computer monitors, irate bosses, cell phones, emotional stress, tabloid television,
and traffic jams. We are literally bombarded with frequencies that wear us down. That’s why it is essential to recharge.
Q-Link products tune up your biofield through a resonant effect that harmonizes
your energy and helps you to navigate smoothly through a stressful world. Think of them like tuning forks that remind your
biofield of its optimal functioning state. Worldly stress causes the biofield to become more chaotic and incoherent. The Q-Link
reverses this process, ensuring greater efficiency, harmony, and balance. Q-LINK ON TOUR
| | The Q-Link Pendant
is currently worn by more than 300 touring professional golfers on the four major golf tours (PGA, Champions, LPGA, and European).
It was worn by players during victories in more than 10 major golf championships. It was worn by the members of the European
Ryder Cup team when it beat the U.S. in 2002. It was worn when the decades old PGA 72 hole scoring record was broken by Mark
Calcavecchia. Congratulations go out to some of the recent tour winners, all of whom wore the
Q-Link pendant during their victories: the 2005 Byron Nelson Classic (Ted Purdy) the 2005 U.S. Senior Open Championship (Allen
Doyle) the 2005 U.S. Women's Open (Birdie Kim) the 2005 Women's British Open (Jeong Jang) and the 2005 Women's
World Match Play Championship (Marisa Baena). |
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