Even if you get caught up with candida, we’re here to help you fix it all those things. Don’t get upset, just go back, go slow, take a deep breath, get your spirituality, [and] pull back from the mind. The mind is always going to pull you toward unhappiness, toward depression, toward saying you’re not good enough; it’s always going to take you away from yourself – that’s it’s job.
I think we have to start getting real with life, love, beauty, and experience. These judgmental attitudes people have and all this [negative] stuff out there, we have to leave it, because it only builds bitterness between humans and there is no reason to [do so]; we want to build love between the species, not bitterness, anger, and ‘I’m good, you’re bad’ syndromes and stuff like that. It’s going to take all you guys to help us to [accomplish] this.
We think the mind is how we know.
Every drug increases and complicates the patient’s condition.
Why must we accept as normal what we find in a race of sick and weakened human beings? Must we always take it for granted that the present eating practices of civilized men are normal? …Foul stools, loose stools, impacted stools, pebbly stools, much foul gas, colitis, hemorrhoids, bleeding with stools, the need for toilet paper are swept into the orbit of the normal.
If we judge consciousness from academics, [then] shame on us, and man needs to learn that.
It’s a lot more fun to move by thought than it is to move the physical body around.
If you don’t have someone always directing people in the simplicity of things, then the mind wins and complexity takes over.
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.
[…] we have to get out of this medical thinking that disease is an entity of some sort that is created by God to do harm to its fellow creatures; that’s insane.
Become the observer of life instead of the thinker.
I don’t care who you are, what mother you are, what grandfather you are, you’re never too old to change your diet.
Remember, the action of fruit is so much more aggressive; they’re more magnetic; [and] they’re more astringent. People mistaken that for [fruit] being bad for them.
The body can regenerate itself. And you have to learn what causes all the problems that man suffers with. It’s easy to understand that there’s no such thing as diseases. “Diseases” is simply a theory of the allopathic community that doesn’t have any basis. It’s not scientific.
I think that if you go back to the Flexner Report, you’ll find that the Rockefellers had a big role in the decision of buying medical schools and setting up their curriculum. The problem with germ theory and stuff is that you don’t understand nature.
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.
Nutrition is so simple we shouldn’t even have nutritional classes.
You just have to understand that there are some things in physiology we don’t know. […] the AMA is probably the most ignorant of how the body works, and yet we think they’re the smartest, and that’s fallacy
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.
The greatest part of all chronic disease is created by the suppression of acute disease by drug poisoning.
Remission is not a good word. You’re looking for complete understanding and complete freedom of acid burns of cells.
You breathe it, you eat it.
If you get intellectual, then you run the risk of being WRONG.
Medicine is only palliative, for in back of disease lies the cause, and this cause no drug can reach.
There is pieces of truth in everything; there is no doubt about that. Everybody has a piece of the rock. I think it’s up to us to put these pieces together, but simple enough where the average person can find their remedy.
Natural healing is based on the premise that our bodies are wisely designed to maintain health and that, given nourishment and support when needed, they will do so. It is, one could say, an approach to medicine based on confidence in the perfection and logic of the body. This view differs from that of conventional medicine, which considers the body a machine that cannot maintain adequate functioning without regular trips to the repair shop, the doctor being the mechanic.
[…] I feel, though, that you have to physically get into the body to remove physical chemistry. There are some things you’ve got to do physically; you can’t just expect higher levels to filtrate the lower levels and make a change, because every level is of its own.
Our biggest problem is [that] we live to eat; we’ve gotta change that.
Who’s in control of your consciousness? YOU! And you have to gain control of [it], and the only way to gain control of your consciousness is [to] get away from your mind.
I think if you understand the simplicity of how the body works, then the complexity of it can come along as long as you maintain the simplicity of it; if you lose the simplicity of it, you’ll get yourself lost again – and sometimes when you have a serious issue, you don’t have a lot of time to get lost.
Don’t be a skeptic, it blocks truth. Be open to truth. [Being] open to truth means you’re not going to believe everything you read, you’re going to buck it up, but you don’t buck it up against false information, you don’t buck it up against propaganda, you buck it up with what in science is factual – not theories, you don’t buck it up against things that are false because then you’ll never find the truth and you’ll waste your time believing in theories that don’t exist [and] belief systems that don’t hold any water.
