It is with a sense of great sadness that I note the passing of Dr. Hulda Clark on September 3, 2009, as a result of complications from a spinal cord injury. This page was last updated in August 2009. It is a work in progress.
"The intellect has little to do on the road to discovery.
There comes a leap in consciousness, call it intuition or
what you will, the solution comes to you and you don't
know how or why."
"The truly valuable thing is the intuition."
- Albert Einstein -
I was diagnosed with parasites by my naturopath in 1995. I was still suffering from the symptoms of Crohn's disease, one year after Dr. Kenneth Atkinson operated on me and saved my life in St. Paul's hospital in Vancouver. Dr. Hulda Clark's groundbreaking book The Cure for All Dieases was first published in 1993 but it was still not available in bookstores in Vancouver in 1995. My naturopath gave me the phone number of someone selling Dr. Clark's books door to door. When the lady came over for a visit I bought a copy of The Cure for All Diseases. I asked her if she knew the name of a biological dentist in Vancouver who could safely remove my "silver amalgam" fillings. She gave me the name of her own biological dentist. He removed my 14 mercury amalgams (the real name for "silver amalgams") and replaced them with bio-compatible plastic composite fillings. I did chelation therapy for the next nine months to remove mercury residue from my organs and tissues. My energy level improved dramatically, as did other symptoms of Multiple Sclerosis from which I had been suffering since being paralysed by MS in 1989. But the Crohn's symptoms persisted.
Following the directions in Dr. Clark's book I tried her herbal parasite killing program to kill parasites that had obviously been infesting my intestines since before my operation for Crohn's disease in 1994, and were still causing me serious problems. I got good results with Dr. Clark's parasite cleanse, so I knew I was onto something important. But the parasites returned not long after finishing the cleanse. In her book Dr. Clark described a new electronic device called the zapper. She had a picture of a primitive zapper called the "tapper zapper". I set to work and made one, which was not terrible difficult because it merely consisted of hooking the positive and negative electrodes of a 9-volt battery to copper handholds and tapping the handholds for 7 minutes to get zapped. Well, after 7 minutes of tapping the handholds I needed the 20-minute break. My hands were tired. Not surprisingly, I did not get any results from Dr. Clark's "tapper zapper".
Nevertheless, I was undaunted. In early January of 1996 I went to a health fair in Bellingham, Washington. When I walked in the door there was a lady selling raffle tickets. The prize was a Dr. Hulda Clark zapper which was displayed on the table for all entrants to see. It was a real zapper housed in a plastic box, not a "tapper zapper". The moment I looked at the zapper a feeling came over me. I knew I would win the draw. There was absolutely no doubt in my mind. So, I bought a raffle ticket. When the winning number was called, sure enough it was mine. I picked up my prize from the maker at his home in Bellingham, had a chat with him and took my first real zapper home, looking forward to experimenting with it. I was happy when I got results. Although the results were not as lasting as I would have liked my interest was stimulated, to say the least. I was highly motivated because I was getting results and I was able to discontinue Dr. Clark's 3-week herbal parasite cleanses. Crohn's disease brought me close to death in 1994, so this was not an intellectual pursuit for me. I was highly motivated to produce the best zapper in the world. It was no accident that I finally succeeded in doing so.
By now zappers were starting to become popular in Vancouver in the alternative health field. With the help of my friend, Nelu, we took apart my Bellingham zapper and went to work to produce a better one. I didn't realize that Nelu had no background in electronics until I saw him looking at all the resistor and capacitor wires pushing through the perforated project board. He had no idea where to go from there so he bowed out, bidding me adieu and good luck. But I had a very good idea of where to go. My imagination came alive with the thought of the possibilities. Although I did not have a degree in electronics I had a long-standing interest in everything electronic that went back to my boyhood in the 1950's.
My imagination was inspired by my grandfather who produced the first crystal radios in Montreal around 1920. He opened a radio shop and started repairing and making the first radios in Canada. He was self-taught, like his grandson the zapper maker. My mother still relates how they use to listen to KDKA in Pittsburgh in the early days with the crystal in the glass. Ma is now 97 and she recalls making the rounds with my grandfather to purchase radio parts in Montreal in the 1920's. I used to love watching my grandfather around his radios. He had a mammoth Telefunken in a beautiful wood cabinet that dominated his living room. That Telefunken was the most beautiful and thing I had ever seen. It was magic. When my grandfather died my cousin Phil inherited it.
I became fascinated by radios and by everything electronic when I was a young boy. I remember buying my first crystal Rocket Radio, an imitation of the Sputnick, the world's first satellite put into space by the Russians in 1957. I used to clip my Rocket Radio to the radiator in my bedroom every evening. I moved the nose cone up and down to find stations to lull me to sleep with music through the tiny earphone. I took my Rocket Radio apart to see how it worked. In the kitchen we had the GE Bakelite, and upstairs we had the old Motorola tube "portable", with its massive battery, as constant companions. I took them both apart to see how they worked. Then I got my first transistor radio which replaced the Motorola as my constant companion in the late 1950's. It was the first truly pocket-sized portable radio. I took it apart, of course. Then I saved up enough money from my paper routes to buy a beautiful hardwood Nordmende tube radio in 1964 so my brother and I could listen to music in high fidelity -- as well as the hockey games and the blow-by-blow broadcasts of the Casius Clay (Muhammad Ali) boxing matches. I remember to this day the look on my father's face when I bought my Nordmende home. Dad asked, in total surprise, "What's that?" "This is my new radio, Dad", I replied. I was so proud of my purchase. I took the Nordmende apart, of course. I took anything and everything apart that was electronic to see how they worked. Those were exciting times. Those were magical times. Electronics has been a strong influence throughout my life. Opening up boxes to discover how things worked has been a passion of mine ever since I can remember.
Arthur Doerksen of Auto-Zap and David Etheredge of ParaZapper insist you have to be a professional electronics engineer to know anything about electronics and to be a zapper inventor. They are both electrical engineers and have been using their professional credentials for 14 years to try to discredit me on their sites. Fair's fair, so let's look at some interesting facts. The greatest inventors in the history of electronics were all self taught. They were not professional electronics engineers. This includes the three most famous inventors in the history of electronics -- Nikola Tesla who invented the alternating current (AC), Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell.
And they were not alone. Many other famous inventors in the history of electronics were self taught, as well. Saul Marantz who founded Marantz Company in 1953, one of the two most famous audio companies in the world (the other is McIntosh), was a freelance graphic artist and amateur musician, not an electronics engineer. He was self taught in electronics. Emile Berliner, the inventor of the first record disc, was not an electronics engineer. He was self taught. My mother who graduated high school in 1929 and who is now 97 years old was the secretary to Edgar Berliner, the son of Emile Berliner, at the Berliner Gram-o-phone Company of Canada in Montreal. It became the Victor Talking Machine Company of Canada and then part of the large RCA Victor corporation. My mother says that The Ultimate Zapper and the work that I have been doing these past 14 years would have fascinated my grandfather. Electronics has been in my blood since the very beginning, with no small credit due to the influence of my grandfather and my mother.
In the field of zapper technology, it is an interesting fact that radios and zappers operate on the same simple principle -- the principle of resonance. The radio is a receiver. It receives signals that produce sound, based on the principle of resonance. The zapper is a transmitter. It transmits signals that kill pathogens, based on the same principle of resonance.
Part of the credit for the development of The Ultimate Zapper must go to my old friend Clancy. In the summer of 1996 I used to visit Bellingham, Washington every weekend. I became friends with Clancy who owned Clancy's vitamin store in Bellingham. I enjoyed visiting Clancy very much. We would talk for hours about the possibilities for improving the original Hulda Clark zapper by adding an AC adapter. I talked to some of my friends in Vancouver who were zapping. Like me, they were experiencing inconsistent results zapping with battery-powered Hulda Clark zappers. So, I added the AC adapter to the Hulda Clark zapper. Other important modifications were made to it that summer, as well, the principle improvement being a near 1005 Duty Cycle. The result of 9 months of dawn-to-dusk work was The Ultimate Zapper. It became known as the best zapper in the world.
There were two other factors that influenced my invention of The Ultimate Zapper. By the 1980's I had a deep and abiding interest in alternative medicine, especially vibrational medicine, nurtured by my career in management in the health food and vitamin business. I was introduced to Rife technology, the precursor to the zapper, as well as many other aspects of alternative medicine which opened my mind to many concepts and therapies that had been foreign to me.
Finally, I was inspired to create The Ultimate Zapper through my 7-year struggle to overcome Multiple Sclerosis and Crohn's disease. There is nothing like a life and death struggle to focus one's attention and stimulate one's imagination. I had a very good reason to be highly motivated to create the best zapper in the world. I needed a better zapper to help resolve serious health issues regarding Crohn's disease and Multiple Sclerosis which I had been suffering from for nearly 7 years. I felt that if I succeeded my zapper could help many others suffering from a wide variety of illnesses and and diseases. This has proven to be true.
Although my little zapper is certainly insignificant when compared with the incredible inventions that have come down to us through the ages, my background, knowledge, reasoning ability and intuition enabled me to create a unique electronic device that no one else in the world of zapper technology had created. I am very gratified that The Ultimate Zapper has helped thousands of people overcome a wide variety of serious illnesses as well as minor ailments since 1996. After the bitter 7 years I went through to recover my health, helping people has become my greatest reward.
In 2003 I transformed The Ultimate Zapper's square wave into a stabilized square wave. Stabilization enables the square wave remain perfectly square with body contact, making it far more effective than zappers without this feature.
The Ultimate Zapper was an instant success in 1996. It continues to be highly favored by people looking for the most powerful and effective zapper available.
Read about my step-by-step program for detoxification and revitalizing the immune system in My Recovery Protocol.
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