For the past 25 years, We’ve worked to understand, develop, manufacture, and share the Energetic Fitness Systems technology. Since that first day, science has been our driving motivation—along with three guiding principles: truth, science, and materials. Those pillars have pushed us forward every step of the way.
Truth in what the technology does—and what it doesn’t do.
From the beginning, we refused to make up stories or claim miraculous results. Instead, we’ve chosen honesty and transparency, no matter how tempting it might be to join the noise of marketing hype that surrounds the wellness industry.
Science has meant a relentless effort to understand how this technology works. We’ve studied the processes behind it, not just the outcomes. And materials—they matter more than most realize. Nikola Tesla didn’t have access to the materials we do today. If we tried to replicate his original setups, we’d be shut down immediately for safety concerns. In the 1890s, high-voltage cables had no insulation. Today, that’s unthinkable. Modern materials allow us to bring Tesla’s ideas forward safely, precisely, and powerfully.
Truth and Science Together
One of the best examples of how truth and science intersect comes from the story of Royal Raymond Rife. Many people have heard of Rife’s “healing frequencies,” but few know what he actually did. Rife theorized that at the center of every cancerous tumor was a virus—and that if he could find the right tone (not frequency), he could destroy it. To do this, he had to see the virus in real time, so he built an extraordinary microscope—over 5,000 individual parts—that could take up to 24 hours of adjustment just to bring an image into focus.
His tone generator worked much like an old AM radio. The tuner used five separate crystals that had to be precisely adjusted. While watching through the microscope, Rife would slowly fine-tune the crystals until the organism began to vibrate. Once it did, he increased the amplitude, and the organism would eventually break apart.
It’s worth noting:
• Rife never worked with frequencies—he worked with tones and crystal settings.
• He never created “healing frequencies.” He created destructive tones to eliminate pathogens.
• He always carried his fifth crystal with him so no one could tamper with his setup.
Yet today, entire “frequency healing” industries have grown around his name, selling lists of so-called “Rife frequencies” that never existed. It’s snake oil, rebranded for the digital age.
Analog vs. Digital: The Core Difference
That brings us to one of the most important points in all of wellness technology: the difference between analog and digital.
Frequencies in the body aren’t magical—they’re simply vibrations. Each atom vibrates at a unique rate depending on its state. The average 154-pound person contains roughly 7 × 10²⁷ atoms. While not all are different, each has a measurable frequency, quantified to 5–8 decimal places—and every one of those vibrations is analog.
Yet, nearly every piece of modern wellness equipment is built on a digital platform. Digital is great for computers and TVs—but not for living systems. If digital frequencies were truly bio-compatible, then strapping a cellphone to your chest all day should make you healthier. Instead, the wellness community constantly warns against digital signal exposure—then turns around and sells digital PEMF devices. The contradiction speaks for itself.
Analog systems, like the Energetic Fitness System, are in harmony with the body’s natural field, not in conflict with it. They amplify what’s already there—you.
Integrity in an Age of Imitation
In more than two decades of working with this technology, one thing has always amazed me: how quickly information gets copied, distorted, and resold. Any time we shared something new or exciting, it would appear on other PEMF websites within days. The funniest moments were when “mat” style PEMF devices began bragging about plasma physics. You have to laugh.
Still, through it all, we’ve stayed true to our core: honesty, science, and authenticity.
Even in today’s world of AI-generated content, the challenges persist. I once asked ChatGPT to help write a web page and it automatically added fake testimonials. When I objected, it replied, “That’s how all the other PEMF companies are doing it.” Imagine arguing with artificial intelligence about honesty.
A Word of Advice
The wellness market is a $400-billion industry, and with that much money in motion, misinformation spreads fast. So here’s my simple advice:
When someone tells you something—ask questions. Do your own research. Find your own answers.
It might take a little more time, but truth is worth the effort.
Energetically,
Justin Brost
President, Energetic Fitness Systems