Is good health an accident?

May 3rd, 2010 | Posted in Basics

I am fighting for health from 1996. No – I am not shooting, not kicking… Nothing of this sort.

But I know I MUST do something to overcome my uninvited guest – Multiple Sclerosis (MS).

Tricky thing – official medicine, claiming to be on top of health keeping, can’t help me. It can’t help millions of other seriously ill with ALL sorts of chronic degenerative diseases.

So I decided to be responsible for my own health. And I succeeded ! I am not alone. There are lots of others, who succeeded fighting for their own health, too.

* * *

It wouldn’t be possible keeping own health in good shape, being alone. That’s really interactive process – learning from others and applying to yourself.

In so long time I discovered many superior teachers. Some of them are doctors, some – not. But all of them are teaching personal responsibility – and are naturalistic (not synthetic medication based).

One of my top teachers is a journalist (health ranger) Mike Adams. I like his articles very much. Some my articles are based on his most valuable and interesting writings: Faulty medicine?, MS, cancer and FUD, MS – name ambiguity.

I came across his article Good health is no accident recently. I was excited – again. The author put all the aspects every carrying about a personal health should know, into a logical and elegant unit.

Anybody interested should read whole article. I’ll present some pieces I like the best. You’ll see the power of these wise words:

  • Those who seek answers for their health outside the realm of their own decisions are looking in the wrong place… Lasting health can only appear as the result of a lifetime of informed, deliberate decisions aligned with nature’s principles of health, not the distorted version of health promoted by our backward system of mainstream medicine
  • … The cure for cancer is already programmed within. Each person is born with a highly-advanced cellular nanotechnology that already knows how to cure cancer. Activating this inner healing potential is all that’s necessary to prevent and cure cancer …
  • … masses continue to eat cancer-causing foods and pursue cancer-causing lifestyles even while blindly handing over their money in the form of donations to organizations that they naively hope will come along and “save them” someday
  • Obesity is what happens when a person spends each day imagining how much they’re going to start exercising tomorrow.
  • Cancer is what happens when a person spends each day eating cancer-causing foods… rather than just getting some sunshine to boost their own vitamin D.

Disease is what happens when people believe they have no role in their own health outcome. So they eat for entertainment rather than for nourishment, and they live for product-induced external stimulation rather than internal fulfillment

  • Cancer can never be “cured” through any external, artificial means, regardless of how many billions of dollars are thrown at it. Trying to cure cancer with synthetic medications makes about as much sense as trying to cure illiteracy by feeding children “reading pills”
  • Health, like learning to read, is something that must be pursued through dedicated self-advancement. Neither literacy nor health can be endowed upon you with the flick of a magic (medication) wand. They cannot be injected into you through a needle. They can only be achieved by teaching each person how to own their results

If you wish to learn how to read, for example, you must first accept responsibility that no one else can read for you. YOU must go through the learning and advancement curve if you wish to experience the positive results of being literate

If you have read this piece up to this point, it’s rather safe to assume, that you agree with health ranger Mike Adams, and me – a folk, who is living after multiple sclerosis (MS):

Good health is no accident !

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On MS definition

May 23rd, 2009 | Posted in MS enigma

So you are interested in cures for MS (Multiple Sclerosis).

But do you really know, what Multiple Sclerosis is?

Being somewhat confused, the other day I typed a phrase: “Definition of Multiple Sclerosis” into a Google search box. That’s the result:

  • a chronic progressive nervous disorder involving loss of myelin sheath around certain nerve fibers
    wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
  • Multiple sclerosis (abbreviated MS, also known as disseminated sclerosis or encephalomyelitis disseminata) is an autoimmune condition in which the immune system attacks the central nervous system, leading to demyelination. …
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_sclerosis
  • A chronic disease of the brain and spinal cord characterized by changes in sensation, visual problems, weakness, depression, difficulties with coordination and speech, impaired mobility and disability
    en.wiktionary.org/wiki/multiple_sclerosis
  • a disease of the central nervous system that is an unpredictable condition that can be relatively benign, disabling, or devastating, leaving the patient unable to speak, walk, or write.
    www.rwjuh.edu/health_information/adult_pmr_glossary.html
  • A slowly progressive central nervous system disease characterized by disseminated patches of demyelination in the brain and spinal cord.
    www.cdc.gov/cfs/cfsglossary.htm
  • Disease that affects the central nervous system-the brain and spinal cord. In MS, certain cells in your immune system attack your brain and spinal cord. These cells destroy myelin, the protective sheath that covers the brain, spinal cord, and optic nerves.
    www.novantrone.com/patients/global/glossary.jsp
  • An autoimmune disorder of the CNS in which the body’s immune system destroys myelin.
    www.msimmunology.com/msimmunology/glossary/index.m
  • is a progressive disease of the central nervous system in which the myelin sheath of the neuron weakens.
    highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/dl/free/0073531936/399662/Feldman8_esl_mod07.doc
  • a disease marked by patches of hardened tissue in the brain and on the spinal cord that causes the destruction of the nerves’ protective myelin sheath. Partial or incomplete paralysis and jerking muscle tremor can result.
    www.dana.org/news/publications/detail.aspx
  • A degenerative disease affecting the central nervous system. MS causes scarring of nerve fibers and leads to such symptoms as arm and leg weakness, numbness, double vision and impaired coordination and movement. Trigeminal neuralgia also sometimes develops when MS scars the trigeminal nerve.
    www.fpa-support.org/learning/Glossary.html
  • A disease that affects the Central Nervous System, causing a variety of symptoms including vision problems, muscular weakness, depression, speech difficulties, severe fatigue, cognitive impairment, and pain.
    www.vitamindcouncil.org/reference/glossary-M.shtml
  • A disease that affects the Central Nervous System, causing a variety of symptoms including vision problems, muscular weakness, depression, speech difficulties, severe fatigue, cognitive impairment, and pain.
    www.vitamindcouncil.org/reference/glossary-M.shtml
  • Literally, “many hardenings”, MS is a disease of unknown cause that manifests as multiple hard plaques of degeneration of the insulating layer of nerve fibers in the central nervous system. The loss of insulation allows “short circuiting” of nerve impulses. …
    www.dmu.edu/medterms/nervous/nervous_diseases.cfm
  • A chronic demyelinating disorder.
    pedsdemyelination.ccb.sickkids.ca/famGlossary.shtml
  • One of the most common nervous system disorders with symptoms such as weakness or loss of control in the limbs, sudden vision problems or disturbed sensations.
    www.dva.gov.au/health/HlthStdy/validation/glossary.htm
  • A chronic, progressive, degenerative disorder that affects nerve fibers in the brain and spinal cord. A fatty substance (called myelin) surrounds and insulates nerve fibers and facilitates the conduction of nerve impulse transmissions. …
    www.childneuro.org/html/glossary.html

Heaps of definitions. Some provided by educational, other by governmental, scientific etc institutions. But is any of above definitions explaining reasons or processes of Multiple Sclerosis? Regretfully – not. All of them concentrate on MS symptoms. And, most regretfully, nothing on cures for MS.

Are you happy with these definitions that explain practically nothing? I’m definitely far from being happy. Nevertheless, as I see such things for years, I know what to do.

Explanations – on pages of my web site ‘Beyond MS’.