PJ Hendricks understands that some people are skeptical. She admits it’s all very “new age,” but she “doesn’t have to believe in anything to reap the benefits,” she said.
Hendrix operates Willowdale Holistic Center at Chadds Ford’s Old Ridge Village Shops at Ridge Road and Route 202. She describes the center as a wellness center focused on energy-boosting systems. She also adds other holistic practices such as Reiki. Reiki is referred to by practitioners as a practical energy healing technique that promotes relaxation and reduces stress and anxiety through gentle touch.
However, the main focus is on an energy enhancement system that uses scrolling lines of colored lights in a semi-dark room.
“When I’m in the room [with the lights] It helps create a meditative mindset and puts you in a better space,” she said.
But Hendrix emphasized that light does not bring healing. Light provides energy that the body uses to help heal. She says clients report reduced pain, including arthritis, and improved emotional stability.
And while she said she didn’t have to believe in light energy for healing, she said a colleague in another location booked an overnight stay and brought her dog. The dog had a cyst on his neck and after an overnight session, the cyst started to shrink.
Hendricks said healing comes from within the body when cells are properly charged with a bioactive energy field.
“Part of the system is a panel, monitor and computer that provides color therapy and light therapy. It’s called biophotoenergy,” she said.
These two energies are combined with what is called a scalar wave to create a torsion field and an energy-enhancing system.
“That’s what creates a healthy energy level in the room, so when you sit in a room and your body matches the energy level in the room, your cells are charged with healthy, supercharged energy. Then the cells repair themselves and You begin to heal. Your own body does all the work. The EE system provides the energy for your body to use.”
[Scalar waves are naturally occurring energies that are generally a part of quantum physics, but also described in astrophysics, geology, and hydrodynamics.]
According to this theory, when a human body enters a scalar field, that person’s electromagnetic field is excited. EE System uses Scalar technology to return the body to a more original and proper electrical matrix. In other words, the field charges the cells in the body. This system was developed by Sandra Rose Michael, a naturopathic doctor with a Ph.D. — More than 20 years ago.
Hendrix, who holds a master’s degree in healthcare management, further explained that cells in the body have an electrical charge of 70 to 90 mV (or millivolts). Disease occurs when its charge drops below her 70 and the cells begin to deteriorate. She said that cancer is present when the charge drops to 20mV.
(This reporter sat in the energy field for about 45 minutes. The experience was calming, relaxing, peaceful, and accompanied by a sensation that can only be described as a warm emotional sensuality. I felt better and less tense. I also felt some physical pain.
The systems room at Willowdale Holistic Center is dimly lit, with 12 chairs, recliners and zero-gravity chairs, and eight monitors stacked in pairs. Soft dreamy music plays in the background.
She said the effects begin after two hours of exposure to the energy field. You don’t even need to look at the scroll light. The energy from them helps generate torsional fields.
The base rate is $50 per hour, but Hendrix offers a variety of specials and packages that can lower your cost per session. She also offers discounts for first responders, active military and veterans.
Willowdale Holistic Center is open Tuesday through Sunday and closed on Mondays. Business hours are Sunday 11am to 4pm, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday 10am to 6pm, Thursday 10am to 8pm, and Saturday 10am to 5pm. .
For more information, visit https://willowdalehealing.life or call 484-800-8208. To learn more about energy enhancement concepts, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yd3gMgcazvg.
About Rich Schwartzman
Rich Schwartzman has reported on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001, when he became the founding editor of the Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became editor-in-chief of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.