Life, and the process of life, is a controlled fire. The chemical exchanges that drive the life process in cells all take place in a fluid, water, environment. By virtue of these processes cells are nourished, cleansed, grow and reproduce. The chemistry of such exchanges is driven by the presence of Sodium, Potassium, Magnesium and other trace chemicals which allow for the fluid exchange of one chemical molecule into another. These are in minute quantities, hence the use of the term trace. They are not there in saturation.
Allopathic medicine, by contrast, hits the body with the sledge hammer of a given chemical. Not simply a cell where the exchange is needed, but the entire corpus. Every cell in the body now has to deal with a saturation of some new and alien chemical. All of this to bring about a restoration of balance to the organism. These are subtle changes which are needed, not major shifts, such as might occur through dehydration, starvation or hypothermia.
The result of this is that the body is thrown into chaos as it seeks to restore its balance against the invasion of the prescribed medication. The body has to draw chemicals, most notably water, from their places in the body to combat the effects of this invasive prescription. The result is called ‘side effects’.
There is a close connection between the large intestine and the lungs. If any one has started smoking and then stopped, to start again some months later, they will be aware of the shift of water in the body. But when a ‘side effect’ is to cause diarrhoea and another is to cause production of phlegm, or shortness of breath. There is no thought that these two symptoms might be complementary and the result of the placement of water within the body.
One of the ways that the body heals itself, with a cut for instance, is to move water and with it antibodies, to the site of the injury. Anything that causes the interference in the proper conducting of water about the body throws the body into chaos as it tries to restore its balance. Any such invasion is seen as toxicity with the body trying to battle a poisonous substance.
If the pharmaceutical industry was to move its focus from profit to wholistic well-being, and to recognise the significance of water and its movement within the body, there may be some hope of improving the quality of life for people, instead of now, trying to alleviate a single condition in isolation with total disregard of the other physiological processes involved in maintaining life. Where there is a worldwide market there is an opportunity for widespread research into the effects of the ‘medications’ they ply us with, if only the persons suffering reported them and the data collected and analysed. Instead what we find in Britain is denial by the medical profession that such a side effect is associated with a given prescription. The patient knows this to be the case for themselves by simply stopping the medication and finding the symptoms disappear.
The over consumption of meat is not beneficial to the body, but has any research into diet and the incidence of bowel cancer been carried out?
One thing is clear we will never eradicate death, and until the race faces its mortality, it will continue to hide behind one condition after another – today it is fashionable to state prostate cancer and dementia as causes of death – in a vain belief that death will never happen to them. And that, despite the disappearance of one species after another on a daily basis from the world today.