The work of Bruce Lipton supports your thesis.  He has demonstrated that the
genes do not rigidly determine anything, except the basic structural and
procedural details of the physical.  The cell membrane reacts intelligently
to the environment, and the DNA is programmable by speech and thought. 

 

"The Biology of Belief"  ISBN 0-9759914-7-7

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Marshall Dudley [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 22, 2006 9:46 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>Fwd: [EM-health] Our DNA

 

Pat wrote: 

I was drawn into the argument for colon cleansing until the writer started
with silly things like, " 
You will find that in many cases a colon cleanse will purge old 
 emotions and attitudes stored in the intestines. 

The things you take before a colonoscopy, Oral sodium phosphate 
solution and a laxative, is a harsh (and dangerous) 
form of colon cleanse.  I've never heard of anyone passing 
all those weird things.  Normally it's all pretty soft stuff. 
I've seen films of what the doctor sees during colonoscopy and 
it's all nice clean pink intestine. 

                                               Pat

It might have some basis in fact.  From what I have read and figured out,
DNA has lots of genes that are either turned on or off.  One of the quickest
and easiest methods of causing a gene to switch on or off is through
emotions, which helps explain why different ailments are often associated
with different emotions, and why changing one's thinking can cause
miraculous cures for things like cancer.  It appears that these switches can
also be flipped by environmental factors as well, and can program things
like immunity when continually exposed to a toxin.  So if you consider the
gene's response to emotion by turning on or off as being "emotions stored in
the colon", it does make some sense. And if a cleanse can restore these
switches to their "proper"  or former settings (which I do not know if it
can or not), then what was written above could actually make some sense. 

Consider that when a person receives an organ transplant, they will often
feel the emotions, likes and dislikes of the doner until the tissue can
change it's emotional attachments.  Researchers were shocked when this first
became apparent, yet if you ask a alternative practicioners you will
ususally get a response like "well yeah, of course", since they are aware of
the effect of emotions and subtle energies on the body. 

Marshall