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Afterlife Comments from Volume One – Scroll Down

Volume One

Afterlife Comments from Volume One – Scroll Down

September 21, 2023 - Volume One, Page 19: “Yes, you could build a car from studying the smashed bodies of...
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Volume One

Afterlife Comments from Volume One – Scroll Down

August 31, 2023 - Volume One, Page 19: “Chaos and String Theory together, along with conscious as a mathematical, factorable...
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Volume One

Afterlife Comments from Volume One – Scroll Down

August 31, 2023 - Volume One, Page 19: “And this is my excitement: when the science of chaos stops describing...
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May 14, 2022 – Volume One, Page 5: “They [the scientists might]see the power of the psyche’s own ecology,its own natural stability and tendency [towards] balance.”

This is a frequent theme in his books. The difficulty with allopathic medicine is that it looks only to masking symptoms and not usually going deep enough to solve underlying problems. Certainly, an injury or wound that demands surgery can and does get treated often and well. But the difficulty of seeing people that are damaged or sick is that the data is inevitably skewed. So skewed, in fact, that any type of “miraculous” healing is disbelieved at best and called false at worst. There is also a tendency towards seeing the medical profession as wiser and more astute regarding your own body than you are. Granted, medical training is meant to be rigorous, and there is a large body of experience to depend upon which is not often available to anyone untrained. However, if (and when) we take time to train ourselves to listen to our bodies’ intelligence, we will be able to heal ourselves better. But the allopathic structure does not support this at all.

Published inVolume One
Francesca Thoman, © 2022