An Intuitive Sense
As humans, we have an intuitive sense of what we should and shouldn't do.
It's not in our physiology or intuitive awareness to wake up in the morning and say, I’d love some chemotherapy today...
or -
What a day for a statin drug to shut down the primary metabolic anti-inflammatory capacity of my liver...
or -
Today is a beautiful day to inject a mix of chemicals, foreign genetic material, and toxic metals into my arm to disrupt my innate relationship to the 1,000,000,000,000,000 viral components that are in my blood stream right now ...
Your body knows health and the pathways to support health: clean water, soil, food, air, sun, movement, curiosity, and sleep.
So then, how does the U.S. build a $400 billion a year chemotherapy industry? By creating a narrative of biologic helplessness. No mention of the extraordinary healing and regenerative capacity of our biology, then from there, leveraging emotions that overcome the physiologic repulsion to these chemical interventions. Fear and guilt. With cancer patients, they're scared to imagine they may die and leave behind loved ones if they don't undergo this treatment. No other options are offered.
The reality is that we will all die. Biology goes through a life and death (rebirth) process, which is unrelated to cancer. And yet, Western medicine inserts this concept that we’re all going to live — until we get a life-threatening illness.
The US is clearly the most fearful nation. We spend $3.7 Trillion on disease management, 7 times more than most developed nations. With only 4% of the population, the US reports 20% of global deaths in this pandemic. We spend 4 times more money on disease care than military defense and homeland security.
Disease is what we are most afraid of...
What it fundamentally comes down to is emotion. People on the most profound healing journeys begin by letting go of fear and guilt and inserting joy and love. Joy and love are states of being that can last a lifetime — a permanent infrastructure that you build your worldview on.
In forgetting that we are from nature, we create lifestyles of isolation from nature. We fight against Mother Nature as a species, then medical science comes along and begins battling the biology within our own bodies.
It is time to identify what you fear, and realize the tools you are about to reach for are not resolving, but instead heightening, the source of that fear. The chemical tools you are reaching for are taking us further from nature, including our own nature.
We are a lonely species. Let's start a journey into radical reconnection. With nature, with our own bodies, with our intuition, and with one another.