The blood, undoubtedly, is a magical liquid. To medical science, it is worth its weight in gold with a whole department, Hematology, serving it. Apart from the blood serving as a major diagnostic tool, it is a life saving transfusion liquid. It irrigates the organic tissues, supplying cells with oxygen and nutrients. It is responsible for evacuating toxins as well as transmitting hormonal messages from one cell to another. Furthermore, it plays an important role in the organic defense system.
With this information, the blood definitely must be our body’s faithful servant working round the clock, as it were, to keep the body alive.
But is this really true?
Is it the job of the blood to keep the body alive? Does it play a subordinate role to our body?
Let us examine some few facts:
In a 24-hour period of dialysis we can purify 300 to 400 grams of urea, whereas the single presence of 2 grams per litre of blood is considered very dangerous. Since our entire body only holds approximately seven litres of blood, where does the 300 to 400 grams of urea come from? Evidently it was not stored in the blood since the presence of a few grams is fatal. It was held back in the body, more precisely in the organic tissues, and could only be returned to circulation through dialysis.
The blood is slightly alkaline. Its pH, an indicator of its acidity or alkalinity, is around 7.4. One to 7 represents acidic range with 7 being neutral. Values above 7 to 14 are alkaline. The blood falls within the alkaline range.The point to note here is that the 7.4 value is very important to the blood since deviation is lethal. In a persistent state of acidity, as occur when unwholesome diets form the bulk of diet, alkaline minerals are taken from different tissues in the body. They are taken from the skeleton, the nails, the skin or the hair in order to re-establish the blood’s pH level. When the pH imbalance is not resolved, the continual removal of alkaline minerals depletes the body of its mineral composition and transforms it into a real state of ruin: the bones decalcify and become porous; the teeth decay, crumble and fall out; the skin cracks, etc.
It must be asked, “Why should the body ‘sacrifice’ itself to maintain the integrity of the blood?” Is there something beyond what medicine can determine which underlies the importance of the blood for the body to perform the ultimate sacrifice?
Two phenomena point at an answer, incarnation and death!
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During incarnation, when the soul takes possession of the growing fetus in the womb, blood circulation commences. This happens about midway through pregnancy. Then, the expectant mother experiences the first powerful kick of her baby. Conversely at death, when the soul departs the body, blood circulation ceases.
Why does this happen? Why is the onset of blood circulation linked to incarnation and its cessation a pointer to departure of the soul at death?
The answer goes beyond conjecture. The core of man, the spirit, through the soul, can only animate the body through the blood!
Without the blood, the soul could not incarnate nor stay incarnated in the physical body that serves as its instrument or tool. The soul therefore is not connected to the body but to the blood and through it, the body.
This is why the body works so vigorously for the blood, that it is even willing to sacrifice itself. An unwholesome blood cannot serve as a proper connecting bridge and therefore no physical life can be sustained in the body. If the body is alive it is not because of the blood but because of the soul connected to the body through the blood.
This assertion, no doubt, opens a ‘new’ frontier for modern medicine. Medicine must improve on blood ‘therapeutics’ using proper nutrition. Since food regimes react upon the composition of the blood, food can, and does have influence upon the wellbeing of the body. A diet of fast food can never produce a rich blood. High sugar consumption poisons the blood. Same goes for smoking and ingestion of recreational drugs. Thus the injunction is simple, yet profound: “let food be your medicine and medicine be your food.” The right kind of food, that is.
The many people today who suffer from undefined, yet persistent fears, depression and disturbances can therefore be treated with pharmaceutical remedies that return the blood to its ideal composition. The treatment would be simple and it would involve giving the blood what it is missing through a food regime (and therapeutic fasting) as well as the taking of organic vitamins and minerals adapted to each particular case. With the blood enriched, it will provide the necessary radiation which ensures adequate binding of the indwelling soul. Life is maintained and the movement of the body as a vehicle of the spirit becomes harmonious.
I have noted that some of the food and lifestyle advice we give at Patmos Pharmaceuticals are as powerful as the drugs we hand out to patients. The body belongs to Nature. And with Nature, balance is everything.







