Now that you understand that pills, potion, and lotion do not improve quality of life we then must talk about where our health comes from. Let me give you a few scenarios to help define this concept:
A) If you have a cut and put a band-aid on your cut, does the bandaid heal your cut?
B) If you broke your arm and put a cast over that for stability, does the cast heal your broken arm?
C) If we have high fever and cold sweats and we decide to take Tylenol, does the tylenol heal the fever?
I ask these questions because the majority of people out there would say that "yes" these do heal us. I would disagree and say what happened if the band-aid fell off, would the cut still heal? Is the high fever and cold sweats a response from our body that there is something inside of us that it wants to fight off? Current research shows that the reason we get high fever is because there is a foreign bacteria in our body that cannot survive in high temperatures. Our body then turns up the heat to not allow the foreign bacteria to survive. How natural of our body to have a survival mechanism like this. Unfortunately, so many people would rather hurry to take a pill to cure the high fever, rather than allowing their body to react naturally. By taking a pill to remove the symptom, the cause of the problem still remains.
The point I am making is that we do not need a pill, potion, or lotion to heal our body, but rather it is our innate intelligence where health comes from. What is innate intelligence you ask? IInnate intelligence is what heals our body when we get a cut, repairs our broken arm, and fights foreign bacteria in our body. One example of innate intelligence is if you were to travel to Antarctica and stand naked on an iceberg your hands and feet would most likely turn blue. This happens because your bodys innate intelligence recognizes that your most important organs are in your core and not your arms and legs, so it reduces the circulation to your extremities. All of this happens because of your innate intelligence.
If you were to climb all 8850 meters to the peak of Mt. Everest, what would happen to your red blood cell count? As you climb higher the pressure decreases, allowing for less oxygen in the air and less oxygen for you to breathe. This is when our innate intelligence kicks in and increases our blood pressure, which increases our red blood cell count. The more red blood cells we have then the more hemoglobin we have, which is what carries oxygen throughout the body. Our body is so smart that it detects when we are increasing in altitude that it increases our oxygen count so that we can survive the highest altitudes.
The question that most of you may be asking is, What controls our innate intelligence?
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