[…] but the real problem is in your lymphatic system, and that is where you gotta go to get remedy; if you’re trying to get remedy through nutrition good luck, [because] you’ll never get it, [and] you’ll be there until hell freezes over.
When the lymph system backs up in the body, it backs up head to toe. And it PARTICULARLY backs up in the GI-tract.
[…] that’s what people don’t realize: when your body starts going into an alkaline, energetic state, your body starts getting rid of those things that are weak or broken down. That is common, that will always be, and people have to get used to that. You’re not losing what’s healthy, you’re losing what wasn’t healthy. Your body doesn’t throw away healthy tissue. Anybody that thinks that [it does] is ridiculous, [for] it just doesn’t happen unless you’re passed that point of no return.
We can’t get to WellVille with the concept of deficiency [or] with the concept of treatment.
Don’t come to me with book knowledge.
We are prone to thinking of drug abuse in terms of the male population and illicit drugs such as heroin, cocaine, and marijuana. It may surprise you to learn that a greater problem exists with millions of women dependent on legal prescription drugs.
We have the authority with this [blood protein] research to stand up and tell people that all the [disease] research teams are researching for nothing. It’s money down the drain. And we speak with authority; it isn’t speaking halfway knowing. We are speaking with knowledge of the answer to every disease known to man and we’re saying that all the research [being done] is going down [the drain]. They’re doing it for nothing. They are researching for the treatment; they’re not researching for the cure.
I’ve chopped off the fat so you can get straight to the point.
The cause of most disease is in the poisonous drugs physicians superstitiously give in order to effect a cure.
Our approach to healing should incorporate awareness of the subtle spiritual, mental, and emotional aspects of life and the ways these can become disturbed, resulting in physical illness. All of human life comes down to forces that no science or technology can explain. Modern medicine is just beginning to acknowledge what traditional cultures all over the world have always recognized: that not all of life can be reduced to a measurable, physical explanation.
Medical practice has neither philosophy nor common sense to recommend it. In sickness the body is already loaded with impurities. By taking drugs (medicines), more impurities are added, thereby the case is further embarrassed and harder to cure.
The greatest part of all chronic disease is created by the suppression of acute disease by drug poisoning.
It’s important for all of us to work kind of on the same page; because if I’m saying one thing and someone else is saying another, you breed confusion and then that poor soul [who’s wanting guidance] gets lost and then they don’t do anything to help themselves.
The real revolution is the revolution of values. Human society appears centuries behind in the way it operates and hence what it values. If we wish to progress and solve the mounting problems at hand, and, in effect, reverse what is an accelerating decline of our civilization in many ways, we need to change the way we think about ourselves and hence the world we inhabit.
The mind does not deal with truth.
No one person has all the answers, but if you looked at nature as your barometer, and asked yourself how nature does these things you’ll be better off than if you asked yourself what man[kind] thinks.
Don’t mess with chemistry.
It doesn’t matter if no one [around you] understands what you’re doing, be strong in what you know.
You can rebuild anything at any age.
It’s going to take a few generations – not only to get these genetics back in shape – but to also get the ‘cooked food’ syndrome out of the consciousness of the homo sapiens, because it’s just too implanted [at this time].
If you get intellectual, then you run the risk of being WRONG.
Well, you men, you gotta get with the ladies, because the ladies have a lot of answers for the men.
I quit having theories. I try to teach you what I have observed, and what I have seen – and what we do know to be factual – as much as I can.
If we judge consciousness from academics, [then] shame on us, and man needs to learn that.
Step back away from your pain and suffering as much as you can, and try to not claim anything that you’re going through; let it all go. One part of getting well is letting the past go in all ways. No matter what happened to you, no matter how bad it was, you have to let it go because it was there for you for a certain reason of awakening and building a strength within yourself.
We assume 80 and 90 [years of age] is longevity. I don’t at all.
[…] and I hear this ‘infection’ crap all the time. Those people that take the antibiotics thinking it (their health problem) is an infection are the ones that always seem to get the cancers, all the ones that get the lupus, the lymes, the fibromyalgias, because what you’ve done is killed your bacteria that break down these acids.
This is about healing and what we can do to help everybody be well. What we do ourselves… we just do our own lives. I don’t judge any of you and what you have to scrape through or what you have to do. If you want to have a Big Mac sometimes, then that’s just what you do.
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.)
A piece of paper [degree] doesn’t always mean you know what you’re talking about.
