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.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Some of the most educated people are the most ignorant.

Robert Morse, N.D.

If I had a birthday wish, it would be that all of you got your health back and your joy back, you know, because nothing else matters.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Our beliefs limit us.

Robert Morse, N.D.

[…] and for you older folks, you should live on fruits. For a senior citizen a fruit diet is key to longevity, keeping the mind sharp, the nervous system moving well, keeping the kidneys from failing, and keeping your lymph system moving. So, you cannot as you retire [still] eat the way you did when you were young. And as a matter of fact the young people are realizing that [too] in that they can’t eat that way even while they’re young.

Robert Morse, N.D.

A lot of people like to act like acids.

Robert Morse, N.D.

The necessity of teaching mankind not to take drugs and medicines , is a duty incumbent upon all who know their uncertainty and injurious effects; and the time is not far distant when the drug system will be abandoned.

Charles Armbruster, M.D.

I don’t think minds can comprehend the amount of deaths being created through pharmaceutical use; wrong surgery; medical doctor stupidity; etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. I don’t see how you can say that [conventional/orthodox medicine] is a viable science, when it kills over a million people a year.

Robert Morse, N.D.

I never try to get all the spasms out of quadriplegics and paraplegics because I feel that some of that is essential to moving lymph (in their case).

Robert Morse, N.D.

If all the medicine in the world were thrown into the sea, it would be bad for the fish and good for humanity.

O.W. Holmes

We assume 80 and 90 [years of age] is longevity. I don’t at all.

Robert Morse, N.D.

People think [other] people are healthy because they are up walking and look halfway good; illusion, illusion. De-skin them and take a look inside [their bodies]. As a matter of fact, [just] look in the eyes of some people.

Robert Morse, N.D.

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.

Robert Morse, N.D.

You are the one in control. Stop, explore yourself, and rid yourself of the thoughts, images, and feelings that bind you. Become free and healthy and your body will readjust itself to match. Become love.

Robert Morse, N.D.

If we judge consciousness from academics, [then] shame on us, and man needs to learn that.

Robert Morse, N.D.

We have to understand we can use botanicals for an incredible adventure if we use them correctly and the focus is not disease-fighting, [but that] it is cleaning and strengthening the human body.

Robert Morse, N.D.

As far as physical health have you ever noticed that you have to go out of your way, at increased expense, to buy food that isn’t poisoned with additives and hormones and preservatives, [as well as] grotesque levels of fat and sugar; that the idea of good health is almost a bad word, [that] it’s almost held in contempt by industry? I’m always amused when I go to a store and I see things like ‘green,’ or ‘natural,’ or ‘organic,’ as though there EVER should have been anything else produced. They might as well just put ‘less poisonous’, ‘more poisonous’, [or] ‘really poisonous’.

Peter JosephFrom Consequences to Solutions

[…] and once you kill the bacteria in the lymph nodes, you’re in trouble.

Robert Morse, N.D.

You’ve got to be able to control the mind, because how can you control your [own] universe if you can’t control your universe here that’s already created for you?

Robert Morse, N.D.

Medical doctors are alternative, [and] medical thinking is alternative because it’s the most bizarre, it’s the most dangerous, [and] it’s the most killing [modality] of all modalities.

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.

Our biggest problem is [that] we live to eat; we’ve gotta change that.

Robert Morse, N.D.

Every educated physician knows that most diseases are not appreciably helped by medicine.

Richard C. Cabot, M.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.

We don’t always have to follow our mind where it goes.

Robert Morse, N.D.

We, as a group, want to become the most ethical, the most honest, the most godly group in the world; we want to be an example of what God in a walking presence would be.

Robert Morse, N.D.

[…] so when you start getting that green and brown mucus out, you’re into the mix, baby, you’re [digging] into that deep crap inside of you.

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.

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.
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