The wake from your journey is as bright as the path.
*Natalia*
On 30/09/2012 4:59 PM, Ray Harrell wrote:
Thank you Natalia,
We all have our journeys and awareness's to find and accept. For some
it's going to the Bering Sea in the fall and going in seven times a
day. For others its different. We are all unique and all Eternal
and must find our own ways because it is a part of why we came in the
first place. That's what I was taught and that is what I accept.
Thank you for your energy. I acknowledge your gift.
REH
*From:*[email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] *On Behalf Of *D & N
*Sent:* Sunday, September 30, 2012 7:32 PM
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: [Futurework] Diminishing life expectancy of the poor
Negative emotions that generate from suppressed energies and
unrealized expression, creative or simply communicative, are often
known to turn inward; especially, as you state, when balance is out.
This does not, of course, address the cancers of those who are unaware
that they have the disease at birth, say, or those who have had it
forced upon them by inescapable environmental toxins. Cause of cancer
is not an easy call, but in many individuals, illness occurs when the
body succumbs to psychological fatigue. How one responds to its
presence will vary greatly, and have a bearing on healing, healing
rates and remission. And then, we learn that certain chemo and
radiation treatments actually actually cause tumours. One hopes to
respond in a way that's best, but sometimes just living in the moment
sends a corrective message. You want to be certain that decisions are
both informed and true to the self.
The astounding case of Anita Moorjani speaks to this aspect of illness
in her documented account of miraculous recovery from stage 4 lymphoma
(organ shut down, coma, huge open lesions, just skin and bones with
lemon-sized tumours throughout her system) and her amazing NDE that
allowed her to experience pure consciousness, allowing true spirit to
shine through to result in complete remission and total absence of
cancer within days of awakening in that new state of awareness. Her
recovery is exceptional in both the medical community and previously
recorded NDEs, and therefore worthy of mention.
Moorjani said in her book that healing was not due to positive mind
over matter, not because of religious figures or sudden awakening
during the NDE, nor from any physical anomaly that might account for
the flipped switch that stopped all cancer growth. She understood that
in her own situation, living in fear of being her true self caused her
suppressed magnificence (which, emphatically, she states we all have)
to be revealed as cancer. That the energy of that magnificence (pure
love) unexpressed is easily powerful enough to manifest reflection in
physical response. She said that her first experience of pure being
(in NDE state) of the soul enabled her to initiate the healing.
She stresses that being and doing are two different states. The former
a state of pure consciousness & unconditional love, allowing awareness
of timelessness, 360 vision, and synesthesia (simultaneous perception
of the senses) and the latter in mind matters such as intellect,
putting food on the table and such. Most of us are too wrapped up in
the /doing/, such that /being/ cannot be fully experienced. She
related " the infinite energy mass as the real me, and the body was
only a barometer to show how much of this life force was "coming
through" or being expressed. It felt as if the 3-D world was the other
dimension, and my energy mass was real."
She asserts that, though she once believed she wasn't spiritual enough
and needed to work harder at it, after the NDE, realized we're all
spiritual, regardless of what we do or believe. "We can't be anything
else, because that's who we are--spiritual beings. We just don't
always realize it." Believing in a certain way is simplistic, and not
what she advocates. She's more focused on self-awareness rather than
entrenched believes that no longer serve us, keeping us in a constant
state of judgment. We get defensive of these beliefs, and discover
that our beliefs start to own us rather than the other way around.
Makes it hard to open up to greater awareness. Awareness, she says,
doesn't need defending, and this suspension of previously held
doctrine and dogma allowed her body to "reset" itself. An absence of
belief was required for her healing.
Upon learning she was in stage 2, Anita left work, changed diets, went
through forgiveness of everyone, then did it again, tried yoga,
meditation, went to India to experience Ayurvedic healing--which
worked well while she stayed in a region where everyone accepted it as
real, then returned to Hong Kong where oncologists' and friends'
beliefs led her to question her seeming healing at the time.
When asked whether healing came about internally, rather than
externally, she replied, "It was neither internal nor external, or I
could say it was both. Once I was no longer expressing from the state
of duality, I realized there's no separation between within and
without. I became the Source of all things, and the Source became me.
But if you're referring to whether I think it's me--as in the ego or
physical self--behind my healing, then no. It emanated from expressing
through my infinite self and knowing that I'm not separate from Source
or anything."
She was reluctant to publicly record her experience because she did
not wish for anyone to think they are any less magnificent in a state
of illness. Everyone has their own journey. She feels that her cancer
was related to her sense of self-identity, and her body was letting
her know that her soul was grieving for the loss of her own worth. She
expresses disappointment over $ billions spent on cancer awareness and
symptoms while little is spent on cause itself. Eventually she grew
certain that sharing her experience was part of expression of her true
self that would help those who it could.
Here's her site, where there should be a link to the record of events
and the medical reports. After finally getting a copy from the
library, I decided to buy her book, /Dying to Be Me/, which offers
more insight than the website pages. Hope you find it helpful.
http://anitamoorjani.com/?page_id=159
*Natalia*
On 29/09/2012 11:39 AM, Ray Harrell wrote:
Interesting. You sound like a Cherokee who insists that bad thoughts create
illness. We say that thoughts have power to heal or to hurt. I believe
that it is more complicated than either. However, like riding a single
water ski, it's all a matter of balance and energy. I can tell you that
certain kinds of cancer have no pain until they kill you.
REH
-----Original Message-----
From:[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mike Spencer
Sent: Saturday, September 29, 2012 2:28 PM
To:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [Futurework] Re: Diminishing life expectancy of the poor
REH wrote:
So feeling bad gives you cancer. Rather than Cancer makes you feel
bad.
I'm not up to date on my science so I'm open to correction. That
said:
+ The immune system is complex (in the technical sense) and not
fully understood. But there is indication that ongoing emotional
states influence its performance.
+ The role of the immune system in controlling cancerous or
potentially cancerous cells is also not fully understood but such
effects exist.
It's easy to infer from those observations that prolonged episodes of
feeling bad may predispose your immune system to fail, both in resistance to
exogenous infection and to endogenous deviant, malignant and potentially
metastatic cells.
Of course, *knowing* you have identifiable, diagnosable cancer will make you
feel bad so there's the possibility for harmful positive feedbac there.
- Mike
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