No matter where you go, you’re always there.

[Not] until you fix digestion, absorption, [and] utilization, can you ever assume [that you have a nutritional] deficiency.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Learning how to breathe correctly is vital as well. You notice if you start deep breathing enough, you’ll start to cough up some mucus; so we know that oxygen and carbon helps to break up mucus. Remember, don’t breathe thoracically (shallow breathing), breathe abdominally. When you take your first breath, you want your [lower] abdominal muscles to move.” (NOTE: Deep breathing is – as discovered by lymphologist Jack W. Shields, M.D. – important for stimulating the lymphatic system. When the lungs are expanded to full capacity at peak of inhalation, they compress the thoracic duct in the chest moving the lymph fluid that stagnates there from shallow breathing.)

Robert Morse, N.D.

Balance, for some people, can be a 70-day fruit fast.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Our weaknesses drive us to learn.

Robert Morse, N.D.

[…] when you start on these programs, sometimes your skin can look worse, and that’s because you’re shaking the tree, man, it’s common sense. When you start cleaning, things are starting to be expectorated, starting to move out of the body – not staying in, that’s medical thinking; suppression.

Robert Morse, N.D.

And for all you natural doctors, get your shit together. Too many people are not getting well under your care and it’s giving everybody a bad name. And you medical doctors, get your shit together [too]; you’re hurting too many people. […] We all have to do the best we can, give our love out and let go and let God.

Robert Morse, N.D.

I’ve chopped off the fat so you can get straight to the point.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Never say never, and don’t stop.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Don’t stick me on an island with vegetables!

Robert Morse, N.D.

We blame the little creatures of Nature for everything; [have] you noticed that? Man blames EVERYBODY but himself!

Robert Morse, N.D.

They should go to jail right now today, don’t pass GO, don’t collect $200.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Watch out for yourselves, that’s the key here. […] we have a tendency to absorb the teachings. Don’t do that. YOU are that which exist; you are the all in the all, you just haven’t opened yourself up to that realization yet.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Drugs never cure disease. They merely hush the voice of nature’s protest, and pull down the danger signals she erects along the pathway of transgression. Any poison taken into the system has to be reckoned with later on , even though it palliates present symptoms. Pain may disappear, but the patient is left in a worse condition, though unconscious of it at the time.

Daniel H. Kress, M.D.

There is no place you can go to be away from yourself.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Another condition worth noting is how it’s financially good for the market to (1) have mandated health fees and premiums on everyone, (2) to have people consume more pharmaceuticals, or (3) to service increasing cancer rates; it’s a business, and profit is the primary driver, so your well-being will always be second to the profit motive.

And as social stressors increase, people are left to find ways to manage the psychological stress generated by the world around them. Meanwhile, we’re bombarded with advertising for goods and services in which billions of dollars are made from the ongoing conception of health products, drugs, and lifestyles.

Jason LordEconomic Inequality and Public Health

As a practitioner, if you can’t help someone, don’t discourage them from looking and finding another healer, because there is always someone better than you; you guys will be better than me, [and] I hope so.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Self-education is always best in my opinion because you learn more. People that are self-taught learn so much more than people that go to school, I can tell you that. If I’m hiring someone, I want someone [who is] self-taught because if they have the ambition, they’re going to tear it up. They’re going to learn everything, the connecting links, and whys.

Robert Morse, N.D.

[…] lung cancer, [and] diabetes treatments create jobs; they create economic growth; they create GDP. I hope everyone firmly understands that. From an economic perspective, sick people – needing servicing – are great. Think about it. There is nothing to gain economically by the resolution of any given problem on any level. It is the maintaining and servicing of problems that underlies actual economic growth.

Peter JosephFrom Consequences to Solutions

Always, if you get (feel) down, go to nature, [and] plug in; because the big mama is always there to hug you – and if you can – go into yourself, into that quiet, alone state where only you exist and then you will find out who you really are in that state.

Robert Morse, N.D.

I think the biggest problem man[kind] has made is that he is fixated on nutrition in the blood, and yet over on this [other] side we have a sewer/immune/lipid-carrier system that’s much, much bigger than the blood system, so due respect and due attention must be shifted over to the lymph.

Robert Morse, N.D.

You can’t focus on nutrition and forget elimination; that’s [unfortunately] what people are doing. Even the raw foodists are in trouble.

Robert Morse, N.D.

When the lymph system backs up in the body, it backs up head to toe. And it PARTICULARLY backs up in the GI-tract.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Not all roads to Wellvile are beautiful, full of love and friendly; sometimes there are some bumps, humps and pitfalls.

Robert Morse, N.D.

When you see a human, you see a very integrated, complex being; a being that starts out as consciousness and then takes on individualized bodies to experience life in creation; a life of duality at most levels.

Robert Morse, N.D.

We’re not into diseases.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Illness of any kind can also be a growth experience; it can inspire one to reorganize priorities in life and encourage the experience of self-reassessment and openness to a larger spiritual dimension.

Rosette Poletti
Detox Mono Diet

Protein is the roughest form of chemistry on the human body, despite what everybody thinks, [and] despite the fact that it’s so implanted in the consciousness; but naturopaths from the early 1800s tried to warn people about proteins.

Robert Morse, N.D.

The person who takes medicine must recover twice. Once from the disease and once from the medicine.

William Osler, M.D.
GrapeGate