A Pound of Cure is a Smack in the Face.
The human mind is incapable of targeting so-called medication simply because of
the possibility that humans are incapable of grasping biological integers.
Biological or Helix integers may be understood mechanically, but not in present
stilted terms. Biomath doesn't exist yet. For crying out loud, mankind (and
womankind, with perhaps rare exceptions) hasn't even been able to get beyond a
syntax sort of alphabet in literature, let alone a biological numeric syntax
capable of location specificity within the body of a patient.
They won't be able to do that in a monetary or pecuniary environment, because
it's too secretive and malicious. Perhaps in a more Hippocratic, as it were,
ambivalence, the appropriate team would come up with a medical syntax, but not
the integer. For that, you'd have to have nature on your team and stop human
logic interference such as treating pie as an infinite number (see the "pie are
squared" article).
Until which time bio-integers can applied to meds, you should content yourselves
with multi-meds the organism can sort out for you. Natural bio-meds. So-called
targeted medications are anything but. They hit a lot as other stuff along the
way. Especially things that affect the nervous system. This is not simply
limited to medications, but also can involve certain types of nutrition.
There are naturally targeted meds that have existed throughout man's brief
tenure in existence, which, when ingested, can produce a certain desired
prescribable affect. This has been thought of ever since the Middle Ages as the
art of the apothecary. But in reality for every ailment that exists, there is a
medicine existent somewhere in nature.
It is the law of disease: there can be no ailment to any organism without its
complement, or cure existent within the plant world. Much as this seems to be a
Polyannaish Eutopianistic Science-Fictionesque in-your-dreams assumption,
nevertheless, incessantly, examples emerge from the plant world like the rain
forests of the Amazon or the Coniferous old-growth forests of Washington State
that help corroborate the postulation.
Even the concept in physics that "every action has an equal and opposite
reaction" can have it's biological equivalent in many ways. Conversely, there is
no malady that can be incurred in the plant world to an animal, but that the
cure is necessarily existent elsewhere in the domain of fauna. I tried to go
over this an article I was attempting to write earlier called "the cure
procure". In a way, what we're looking at here is a science of antidotes, or in
the case of disease, a neutralization of toxicity.
But, once again, the cut-and-slash guys, have got to get in there with their
false senses of priority and their pride trip, and voilą: The patient gets more
ill than ever. Quite often it is the case that the patient dies of the cure,
although it seems the cure itself prolongs the patient's life, in fact, the
patient often perishes from secondary target collateral damage as an eventual
result of the elements involved in the medication.
Though a particular patient may actually live into the eighties, or seventies,
studies could reveal cause of death, in lieu of old-age, would be actually from
complications brought on by side effects of medications prescribed over a long
tenure meant to target and treat different ailments and other areas of the body
than those terminally effected over an appreciable period of time. In fact, were
the patient to be treated with other less detrimental medications, the life
expectancy may have been normal, which is to say that after the medical crisis
had been successfully treated, as much as perhaps one or more decades than those
treated with targeted medications, or, in other words, if the natural resilience
had not been so adversely effected.
People are making an incredible amount of money from this, and this is one way
of knowing that there is erroneous activity involved. In fact with the proper
pharmacological or apothecarian approach, and with proper nutrition, exercise,
and sufficient supply of minerals in trace form, presumably at least a hundred
of them, the patient can often live to the extreme of his biological potential
of his genetic code, idealistically 120 years, but it may be possible to go far
beyond that, if observation and research can properly be conducted on other
species of longevity, such as the tortoise.
Remember there are other factors that affect longevity in the human being, such
as truthfulness. This really isn't so much a case of ethics or idealism, as it
is the concept that the brain supplies the blueprint for the body. Practicing or
expressing falsehood, or lying, as well as other forms of deviant behavior,
causes a preoccupation in the psychological processes, restricting the access to
the blueprint, as it were, by the physical body, in particular proper natural
response to irritation, resulting in a chronic condition in the patient.
As I pointed out in other articles, and remind you here, or those of you who
haven't read the other ones, I tell you for the first time, often it is isolated
individuals privy to a rich mineral source such as the so-called "glacial milk"
prevalent around areas of frozen precipitation accumulations and glaciation
prevalent either in Alpine areas, or in polar extremities. This may also be
observed in other species, such as the elephants, in particular those of them
that are privy to salt licks or mineral deposits either on the plains or in the
mountains.
I have observed cases where individuals were, as I put it, hyper medicated, in
other words placed on an extremely high numbers or varieties of prescription
medicines, none of them over-the-counter, and each intended to target specific
areas, and in the case of each individual there was secondary damage noticed,
particularly in the most common medications, such as arterial or vascular
complications, resulting in such things as premature aneurysms, or in the case
of some patients , preventable aneurysms.
So, sad to say, it appears as though we are in the dark ages of medicine. An age
of profit motive, where the legendary Hippocratic oath is either a thing of the
past or merely brushed aside as non sequitur, by those practicing
"economic-for-profit medicine" along with counterparts in the pharmaceutical
industry. It is impossible to have them overseen by government agencies, as we
live in an era of barbarians were such agencies are bribable in cute little
pathetic legalistic ways, or often also in high or even astronomical amounts of
money or gratuities and gifts.
Quite often you will find, except for such things as traumatic injuries, or such
things as irresponsible nutrition on the part of the individual, those who
cannot afford medical care may turn out to be the ones who survived the longest.
It's a sad story, and an indictment upon our times -- and our ideologies.
--Fine
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Biomath doesn't
exist yet.
Copyright (c) 2005 by Paul A.L. Hall
All rights reserved.
...those who cannot afford medical care may turn out to be the ones who survived
the longest
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