Wednesday, February 17, 2010

what is it about my conviction to natural therapy?

I will explain to you the major points that crystallize my belief in natural product which happened approximately 1996.

1) Observation of failure by conventional synthetic medicine to do the job it claims to do.

2) Wondering why this system costs patients so much money and why this scrambled and flawed system is available only to the insured, which happen to be the very few upper class. The middle class, highly educated, family values demographic is the demographic who suffers most financially and sometimes through death by this supposedly benign system.

3) The problem of money leading me to examine the problem of the business of medicine and how ethically, business and medicine are moral and ethical contradictions. I still believe this, but won't ever attack any good willed doctors doing good healing; especially the orthopedic or trauma surgeon. A sincere medicinal doctor should never give up but rather reform the system from within. Those insincere doctors will mostly likely become victims of their own insincerity.

4) Experiencing therapeutic or complete alleviation of disease through natural therapy through recommendation to others (which is not "Medical Advice") or myself. I abhor any synthetic pill and will avoid it at all cost.

5) Experiencing cognitive dissonance in what information is shared from a conventional standpoint versus what little organized information there is from an alternative medical standpoint.

6) Coming to an understanding that the result is the endpoint, not the way it works which only satisfies the questioning mind but not the ailing body. Academia gets hypnotized by the myriad details of how something works, in order to affect the same result. That has an important and essential place in human knowledge, but sometimes academia simply spends its life on the details regardless of the result. It's age old holistic versus reductionist debate.

7) An epiphany that all synthetic medicine is derived from that which is found in nature, and that the life and matter found in our environments as provided by them without alteration are most often far superior to what humans try to create. Our best pain killers are still distilled from the opium flower, a plant. Some would call it a weed, others a Promethean gift. At the same time, this same natural substance wields the potential for great harm. Wars are fought over it, lives are ruined with it, and pain is lifted by it.

8) A belief in an ideal that humanity must transcend its physical shackles, either self-imposed or imposed against one's will, in order to begin to understand higher truths and more evolved perceptions which will advance humanity. Enslaving humanity for money against their health is undoubtedly devolved and primitive, as well as a certain blackmail.

9) Based on this belief, I think that people can empower themselves as best as they can in the present to prevent what major chronic maladies they can with simple, cheap, natural gifts of the Earth. The liberty of the planet makes these available to all, but the evil in human hearts denies this or deceives others to believe it is not medicine. It has always been medicine, and is the basis of all pharmaceutical industry hijacked by corporate finance and geopolitical control structures. The utilization of this knowledge of a natural biological pharmacy will prevent many people from falling into "The Trap" which has fomented the death of millions upon millions of people on this planet, just as it was intended in WW2. We do not need to repeat the mistakes of our predecessors. We can change course to a benevolent and modern path.

10) Science and technology have their place on this planet, side by side with seemingly primitive medicine, which actually is far more advanced than anything man can create because it is the product of evolution. Evolution created us, but we cannot create evolution, and we currently can barely create anything new other than a microbe or some abomination based on what already exists. The responsible way to employ science and technology is to reveal wisdom, truth, and advancement, not using it to fuel humanity's innate primitive tendencies.

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