May 28th 2024
Does one size fit all? Are we all the same? Do we all want the same things?
Do we grow and learn? Is a 50 year the same as when they were 5 years old? Do experiences and knowledge generally lead to wisdom?
The answers to these questions are obvious to anyone. So how can one size fit all?
The idea behind this limiting and unintelligent idea is money and control. If you can get people to believe that every human with arthritis, say, or a cardiac condition, will benefit from a small number of drugs, then a medical doctor only needs the five or six minutes of consultation to prescribe.
Great for profit.
Except it doesn’t work for the patient.
Because we are not all the same.
Quite apart from the different expressions of the condition (different types of pain or discomfort, different levels of pain, different locations, different modalities that naturally relieve or exacerbate the condition), there are a multitude of different causes.
Causes for dis-ease can be physical, such as injury. They can also be emotional, such as never well since a fright, abuse, grief, loss. They can also be mental such as living in a rigid system that doesn’t allow you to be you.
No medical drug can heal these conditions. And they don’t try to. All they can ever do is to palliate the pain. However, not only does that come with side effects, which can be worse than the original condition, the condition will be worsening, perhaps unbeknownst to you. You’re heading towards the end maybe a bit too quickly.
The combination of two or more drugs can be worse, even dangerous. Rarely is the patient told about this.
The first step towards healing is to appreciate that all the symptoms your body gives you are signs that all is not well within. That you’re out of natural balance.
The second step is to learn to FEEL. We use our heads too much. Thoughts can, and do, lead us astray.
Yet when we focus on our heart area, which is where our feelings are centred, and learn what they mean for us, they will never lead us astray.
It’s often easy to feel what we want when we have a big decision to make. It’s the smaller, more subtle feelings we can miss.
A film once focused on this. A man was told he needed an operation. It didn’t feel right to him. His wife persuaded him to have it as she was frightened.
He died.
That story can teach us at least three important lessons:
The third step is to look around at what’s available. Homeopathic health care is not widely known about, but offers so much to help you restore your health.
Dealing with acute conditions at home is not only possible, but can be invaluable. Using a professional homeopath for the chronic conditions can free you to be who you are - a healthy, vibrant individual others envy.
The fourth step is to take action. If only to talk to other people, to holistic practitioners. Talking to your family or even close friends are not likely to help as they have a vested interest in you and will worry. A total stranger or acquaintance is more likely to truthfully share their experiences.
We live in a broken world both on a macro level (we don’t look after our only home, the Earth) and a micro level (most don’t look after themselves).
It’s time for repair. It’s time to question if we really are all the same?
It’s time to come into our own power, our own individuality. It’s time to take responsibility for ourselves and for the wider world. It’s time to make our own decisions.
Whatever you choose, be comfortable with your choice. You may not be popular, but you’ll be at peace.
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