Traditional medicine had failed me. Desperate, I ordered a strange copper ring from a holistic healer.

By Lana (Svetlana) – Founder of Samarit Energy Crafts
Five years ago, I sat on my porch clutching a cup of tea, my hands stiff from arthritis, my head throbbing from another sleepless night. Traditional medicine had failed me. Desperate, I ordered a strange copper ring from a holistic healer—a "Tensor Ring," she called it. Skeptical but hopeful, I placed it around my neck.
Within hours, the tension in my shoulders softened. Within weeks, my migraines decreased. Today, that same ring hangs above my bed, humming with an energy I’ve come to trust.
This is what I’ve learned.
Tensor Rings are unbroken loops of copper wire, often shaped with precise geometric ratios. Unlike decorative jewelry, they’re tools—subtle energy conduits first rediscovered by the late Slim Spurling, a man who believed ancient civilizations harnessed this technology.
A physicist might dismiss it, but my body didn’t.
I needed proof, so I dug into research:
Mainstream science ignores scalar energy, but Nikola Tesla wrote extensively about it—an omnipresent force that doesn’t decay over distance. Tensor Rings may tap into this, acting like antennas for ambient energy.
Everything from atoms to galaxies spins in torus (doughnut-shaped) patterns. Tensor Rings mimic this, potentially stabilizing chaotic energy around them. When I placed one near my Wi-Fi router, my insomnia improved. Coincidence? Maybe. But I kept testing.
I filled two glasses with tap water—one near a Tensor Ring, one without. After 24 hours, the "charged" water tasted smoother. Later, I learned Dr. Masaru Emoto’s work showed similar results with intention and crystals.
These aren’t magic. They’re tools requiring engagement. Here’s what worked for me:
After moving my ring near my laptop, the buzzing headache I’d blamed on "eye strain" vanished. Now I keep one in my home office.
My wilted basil plant revived when I coiled a small copper ring around its pot. Later, I read studies about copper’s antimicrobial effects on soil.
Not all rings are equal. I bought cheap versions early on that did nothing. The best are:
Tensor Rings won’t replace medicine. But for me, they became a bridge—a way to interact with energy I couldn’t see but could feel. Whether placebo or physics, the results quieted my skepticism.
If you try one, start with curiosity, not expectation. Place it where you feel dissonance—your aching hands, a chaotic room, a dying plant. Observe. That’s where the real discovery begins. You can start with researching our own tensor ring creations and let me know how you feel.