Tuesday, 26 June 2018

He came that we might have ...




The above is taken from Through  the Bible IV by Eugene Halliday.

Despite words of wisdom uttered by Christ, understandably, large swathes of the population have been lured away from Christianity because of the manner in which many churches have used it as a tool of subjection. It's been suggested that though the army is the right hand of the state, the church is the left arm. From imperial Roman times, Christianity has been put to this left arm use.

Science, meaning 'knowledge through study', has lifted us out of the darkness of churchianity. Knowledge is revealing to us possibilities that before were undreamt of. However, in the process, the abandoning of Christianity has also thrown the baby out with the bathwater. In the west we are now in the realm of pseudo-science, in which many scientists believe, because they've learned a few tricks with DNA, that they are qualified to conduct the course of human evolution.

"He came that we might have the forgiveness of sins"

This is a theme mentioned several times. Wherever forgiveness of sins is mentioned biblically, this is the exact phrase used.

Forgiveness isn't what you get when you enter the confessional and receive absolution from his 'vicarious representative' the priest. Forgiveness is a way of life that he showed us by His example. I believe that His reportedly marvelous healings were in part a result of this adherence to the concept of forgiveness.

Forgiveness has played a large part in my recovery from disease.

The most difficult person to forgive is oneself, but ultimately I believe even that is possible.

Sunday, 10 June 2018

Important ratios of cannabis oil


CANNABIS OIL

I recently discovered this important video from a Spanish research specialist for anyone who's treating their cancer with cannabis. Treating a hormone driven illness needs to have a different mode of application to treating other types of cancer. The recommendation for hormone driven cancer is 1 part THC per 3 parts CBD.

[Dr Cristina Sanchez PhD cannabis and cancer]


In the final stages of 'conventional' cancer treatment, when injection with carcinogenic chemotherapy has failed, pain killers to overcome debilitating pain are delivered into the system. These are usually opiates and cocaine derivatives, both prescribed legally. Both are highly addictive, both are class 'A' drugs. Both are medically acknowledged to produce the 'side-effect' of severe constipation. Toxic waste products of what has been eaten will spend more time in the gut, during which time they are absorbed into the body through the intestinal walls, thereby taxing an already severely compromised, overly-toxic body system.

Compare this with cannabis oil. Termed a class 'B' drug, it cannot be prescribed legally, and yet many testimonials from people using it claim the oil gives a very generous relief from pain without the side effects produced by medical prescription drugs. By many accounts, including mine, it has the added benefit of reducing the size of tumours. And also of being non-addictive.

Leaving aside the legality, who are the most culpable drug peddlers, cannabis providers or government sanctioned oncology departments?
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Thursday, 7 June 2018

Self-balancing

Simple monocells survive by a process of self-balancing. The cell adjusts itself to the incoming stimulus. When the stimulus is too great, the cell may die.

More complex life-forms still operate under this basic principle of self-balancing. Good parenting will teach the growing child to avoid stimuli which are too great (open fires, road traffic, etc.) and which are to be embraced (healthy eating regime, maintaining an adequate body temperature, etc.) which they in turn have learned from their parents and from other sources.

Having grown to adulthood, one can expect from 'reliable' sources only what they have learned in their own process of self-balancing. Though there are occasionally altruistic individuals who see this clearly and act from a place of love, modern-day self-balancing includes a leaning towards commodity accumulation, and we may expect that any information from such sources will be found to be unreliable.

And so in considering this game of self-balancing, if one wishes to trust anyone at all, it's better that they trust themselves, and start to learn rules of self-maintenance, and not only learn them, but train oneself to obey them.

We have ultimately to cut out any desire to rely on any external person's 'integrity', without sorrow at the loss of friendship, and become as far as possible self-reliant.

https://goo.gl/images/RBHgJt