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One
Grape
By
KK Fowlkes
“A
new application of high technology and a more informed and
intelligent approach to nutrition have now placed a scientific
approach within everyone’s grasp.
The high technology comes in the form of a complex device
about the size of a pickup truck called the ICP (inductively
coupled plasma) spectrometer.
The spectrometer is now being used to determine the precise
trace mineral status of athletes and other high performance
seekers.” (Richard
A. Goodman, Health World. Nov. Dec. 1990.)
This same spectrometer has also been used to analyze the
different compounds in fruits and vegetables.
It has been found for instance to show that over 5 million
different compounds (or different chemical combinations) have been
found in one grape.
(Information for the basis of this newsletter was provided by T.L.
Rodgers...lifesave.org).
How many of these do we understand or even have a name for?
There is not a group of men on earth that can even scratch
the surface, yet people advocate that one vitamin or one mineral
or a group of 26 vitamins and 15 minerals can improve different
functions within the body. Not
only do we not understand and know the names of these 5 million
compounds, we don’t know the infinite number of the
inter-reactions of each compound with the other existing compounds
in the body. Thus, if
one mineral or one vitamin is taken, will it interact properly
with the other trillions of chemical reactions taking place
continuously in the human body?
No…we don’t know the answer to these questions yet.
Those who have gained wisdom, leave these answers to a
higher being and make an effort to consume a gentle god-given
diet—taken from the earth…one that has not been altered (by
cooking and processing) from the original way it was and is
provided …on the trees, from the vine, from the grasses.
So….when will we know these things and how will we use
this knowledge? 50
years, 100 years, 1000 years?
An anonymous writer has provided this fanciful look into
the future when we do know the answers to how our bodies react to
what we ingest.
“A
Trip to the Hospital in the year 2200.
When we think of going to the hospital today for
treatment of a life threatening illness, there is probably a great
deal of fear. What
will they do? Can I
survive? Will life
even be worth living after they get through with me?
We know the hospital’s arsenal includes numerous medical
specialists, the surgeon’s knife, concentrated drugs, radiation,
and an environment removed and foreign from our day to day life.
Will the kind of hospital we have today be ours for the
future?
Perhaps not.
“Let us imagine ourselves going to the hospital in 2200.
A visit to our family health practitioner indicates a
possibly serious problem that needs to be looked at.
We know now that diseases are a manifestation of improper
living, a toxic or low oxygen condition in the body, and perhaps
emotional or mental problems that are manifesting as a disease
process.
“Off we go to our local community wellness center for a
checkup, diagnosis and treatment regime for what ails us.
The building is much like being inside a greenhouse –
naturally lighted by overhead skylights and jammed with tropical
plants and indoor trees of all kinds.
People seem relaxed, and as the clerk admits us, we answer
a number of questions about diet, family history, medical
problems, etc. The
admissions person is particularly concerned with our family’s
current diet, what kind of diet I had while growing up, and the
history of my work environments.
They ask about stress I may have experienced, what I do for
recreation, and what do I think is wrong with me.
“I am assigned to a suite of rooms complete with kitchen,
living area and greenhouse atrium which contains hot and cold
pools of mineral water. The
greenhouse area contains beautiful flowers of all kinds and even a
small waterfall.
“After settling in, I am visited in quick succession by
an iridologist, phlebotomist (for the tiniest bit of blood from my
finger), dietician, and the health care coordinator, who does a
complete physical. The
coordinator explains that once a diagnosis is made and confirmed,
we will discuss the problem, consider various treatment
possibilities, and then proceed with the one I think is the best.
The coordinator suggests I tour the hospital before the
evening meal, which I will share with my family in the
conservatory. They
explain that the basis for treatment in the center will revolve
around an enzyme rich diet (living food), and grasses, cleansing
treatments using colonics, hot and cold mineral baths, and steam
and dry heat, herbal treatments depending on the diagnosis, cranio-sacral
therapy, and individual and family counseling.
They do not do surgery here.
“They leave me with a video that explains how diseases
are usually a result of a convergence of events mostly related to
poor nutrition, insufficient oxygenation of cells, and perhaps a
physical or emotional trauma.
The thing that sticks in my mind is how the coordinator
stresses that I am responsible for my current problems and that I
can solve them successfully.
“The hospital is actually more like a health spa it
seems. On my tour I
have seen a large exercise area with all sorts of equipment for
strength and aerobic workouts.
An adjacent area contains other hot and cold mineral pools,
saunas and steam baths. It
appears there are colonic rooms, and private rooms for mud-pack
therapies as well. There
are many people of different ages involved in exercises and they
seem to be enjoying it. There
appear to be quite a number of staff members monitoring the
patients as they engage in their various activities.
“The dining area is the nicest.
They are preparing a really choice buffet for the evening
meal which consists completely of raw foods and raw juices.
To one side is a huge juice bar where I can see trays of
different kinds of grass, sprouts, and lots of fruits and
vegetables ready to be juiced.
“There is also a large wing of the building containing
the labs, specialized treatment areas that I will explore further
later on, a large auditorium, and what appear to be classrooms.
Another wing of the building which I also hope to see
tomorrow contains a children’s ward and a chapel.
Part of out spiritual rehabilitation which is a major part
of our treatment includes reading to and helping these children
cope with their illnesses. Renewing
our ability to give love and hope to others appears to be a major
part of the healing process.
“Outside they tell me is a huge organic garden and
orchard, and it is part of our therapy to spend several hours a
day there learning and working with a horticulturist.
Learning about the health of my body, and how it relates to
the health of the soil will be a major part of my education I
understand. Just now
it is time to meet with the health care team so I end my
explorations for today.
“The news seems bad.
The health care team coordinator says that I have a life
threatening disease. She
tells me not to worry because it will be simply a matter of
helping me to understand how to reverse the disease process and to
begin the implementation of it.
After reviewing my records, the team has agreed that my
enzyme-poor diet coupled with lots of daily stress has caused my
body to be extremely toxic with a very weakened immune system.
The team suggests a program that will keep me in the
hospital for three to four weeks.
During that time they will help me learn about how the body
has developed the toxicity and why, how to eliminate the toxins so
that the body will become vital enough to heal itself… and most
importantly how to keep my body healthy in the future.
The team stresses that my stay in the hospital is mainly to
educate me in how to regain my health.
It is my responsibility entirely to carry out the program
which will last a good two years after I leave the hospital.
They say there is no magic pill, no surgeon’s knife, no
“death ray” that will solve my problem or make up for my years
of neglect and improper living.
Does this mean I have to give up coffee, cigarettes and
cheese pizzas with pepperoni?
I ask.”
Copyright
© 2009 by Living Whole Foods, Inc.
All rights reserved. Permission granted up to 100
words in a review when proper credit is
given. Proper Credit = website reference: www.wheatgrasskits.com
and article citation.
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