Why Nobody But You Can Heal You

Hello fellow traveller!

The bad news is that health industry can’t make you healthy. It’s stuck in a 17th Century belief that your body is a machine.

Body-as-machine medicine works well for acute mechanical problems. But conventional health care rarely solves illness symptoms, and often makes them worse.

Because illness isn’t caused by a mechanical problem in your body.

You originate symptoms in your body in response to a type of traumatic stress called “biological conflict.”

The anatomical changes are the result – not the cause – of biological conflicts.

The healthcare industry is essential for keeping us alive when we have an acute anatomical problem (whether that problem was caused by getting hit by a truck or by having a biological conflict). But to get and stay healthy, you need a systems or quantum mechanics approach (“quantum healing”).

And, thanks to the brilliant and meticulous body of work from Dr. Ryke Hamer, you now have access to that, too.

(It’s what all my courses, articles, sessions, and these Cliffsnotes are created to give to you)

There’s just one BIG problem: if your licensed healthcare professional practices this new science, she’ll go to jail.

3 Reasons Your Healthcare Professional Is NOT Allowed to Practice Real (Scientific) Healing

Reason #1 Controlled Acts
The health industry has tremendous power over people. As much power as the Church had before the Scientific Revolution. But every healthcare professional is strictly limited. Her license to practice only allows her to do one or more of the following:

  • Make a diagnosis,

  • Do things to your body underneath the surface of your skin,

  • Sell you patented or controlled substances or equipment, or

  • Give you psychotherapy.

 

Healthcare is never scientific. Science means admitting you don’t know something, setting up a hypothesis, and then testing it, which means trying to knock it down.

True health “science” would mean actually checking to see how much of a new drug will cause catastrophic symptoms in a patient. Or comparing doing nothing with doing therapy. Which means, to do health care “scientifically,” we’d have to let people get hurt or die on purpose.

This is why the health industry is not and cannot be scientific. (And why most medical “research” is somewhere between “irrelevant” and “total BS”)

“Controlled acts” are permitted only because they are meant to mechanically fix you when your body is broken in some way. There is no room for experimentation.

Reason #2 The Public Interest

A licensed health care practitioner may want very much to heal your problem. But, to keep her medical license, your healthcare professional has to “serve the public interest.”

Not your personal interest.

In fact, she isn’t legally obliged fix your problem at all. Her contract is with – and thus her obligation is to – the College that licenses her.

This is a public body. And “the public” doesn’t mean “you.” It means a collective: a sort of statistical average that isn’t anyone in particular.

Standards of care for cancer, heart disease, and infectious diseases are all based in beliefs that have already been disproven. And rates of “cure” for virtually all major diseases including psychiatric problems are worse than 50/50.

But the “public interest” means a healthcare professional has to treat every individual like a statistic, and to try to push that individual, mechanically, closer to the statistical average.

And nothing more.

Reason #3 Social Laws

The healthcare industry’s job is to use controlled practices to mechanically make your body closer to the statistical average.

But healthcare practitioners must also avoid doing bad things such as:

 

Healthcare standards come from constitutional laws, which are meant to govern how individuals treat one another.

 

The Mistake No Smart Health Professional Will Make (and You Shouldn’t Either)

Every organization (such as a health industry) has two goals: a real goal …and a stated (or implied) goal.

It’s easy to figure out the stated goal of an organization because it will be on all the marketing materials. It’ll be what everyone believes the goal is. For the health industry, that stated goal is right in the name: health and care.

But it’s a law of physics that every organization (every system) always follows its real goal. And the real goal of the health industry is its own financial self-preservation.

The healthcare industry is rigidly faithful to one goal. And that goal is not health. Its goal is keeping its customers. That means its goal is to keep people alive.

(Not healthy)

 

Seize Control. Feel Better.

The more similar a system’s real goal is to its stated goal, the more integrity it has. (And the better it works)

Systems whose stated and real goals are too different become corrupt and untrustworthy.

It’s not that the system is unsustainable. Unfortunately, bad systems are every bit as sustainable good ones.

It’s that we can’t trust it.

I had a very traumatic personal experience with going to a series of professionals to get health and care and instead getting treated like a statistic and a machine. I developed panic disorder and other serious health problems because I could not trust the system that I thought had what I needed.

But then I learned a powerful trick for dealing with an organization whose stated goal is widely different from its real goal.

The trick is to acknowledge the real goal of the system …but demand they fulfill their stated goal.

So you can acknowledge that your doctor’s real goal is to uphold the standards of her medical college. But then you can make her follow her stated goal. You can force her to defend herself with science. You can ask her outright what she really believes about the treatments she’s offering. You can remind her that you are an individual, not a statistic (so you need to assess before you can make a responsible decision). You can refuse treatment and hold her accountable to you as an adult and a professional.

(This is a wonderful trick. It works everywhere. Try it on your whiny teenager or the nasty frenemy who’s always trolling you on social media: treat them like they’re grownups who are responsible for their own feelings. Then stand back and watch lol)

Now I am my own health and care provider.

I go to the health industry when I want their products: diagnosis, under-the-skin mechanical treatments, patented substances or products, and mental health support where available. I relate to these individuals in exactly the same way as I would hire a babysitter or a building contractor.

I don’t look to the health industry for cures. I look to myself. And so can you.

Be well.

Lishui Springford
Seize control. Feel better.

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