A Crazy Thought About Where Our Money SHOULD Be Spent In
Research
Mike Casey is an expert in nutrition, stem cell
research, and the mind-body connection. You can
visit his blog, where this post originated at
http://stemcelltherapyresearch.com/
I again want to focus on the power of our mind and how it works
with our body.

In the face of heroic efforts needed to save our own lives,
what chance do we have to save the world? Confronted with
current global crises, we understandably shrink back,
overwhelmed with a feeling of insignificance and
paralysis-unable to influence the affairs of the world. It is
far easier to be entertained by reality TV than to actually
participate in our own reality.
But consider the following:
Fire walking: For thousands of years, people of many different
cultures and religions from all parts of the world have
practiced fire walking. A recent Guinness World Record for
longest fire walk was set by 23-year-old Canadian Amanda
Dennison in June 2005. Amanda walked 220 feet over coals that
measured 1,600 to1,800 degrees Fahrenheit. Amanda didn’t jump
or fly, which means her feet were in direct contact with the
glowing coals for the full 30 seconds it took her to complete
the walk.
Many people attribute the ability to remain burn-free during
such a walk to paranormal phenomena. In contrast, physicists
suggest that the presumed danger is an illusion, claiming the
embers are not great conductors of heat and that the walker’s
feet have limited contact with the coals. Yet, very few
scoffers have actually removed their shoes and socks and
traversed the glowing coals, and none have matched the feat of
Amanda’s feet. Besides, if the coals are really as benign as
the physicists suggest, how do they account for severe burns
experienced by large numbers of “accidental tourists” on their
firewalks?
Our friend, author and psychologist Dr. Lee Pulos, has invested
considerable time studying the fire walking phenomenon. One
day, he bravely faced the fire himself. With his pants rolled
up and his mind clear, Lee walked the gauntlet of burning
embers. Upon reaching the other side, he was delighted and
empowered to realize that his feet showed no sign of trauma. He
was also totally surprised to discover upon unrolling his
pants, his cuffs detached along a scorch mark that encircled
each leg.
Whether or not the mechanisms that allow fire walking are
physical or metaphysical, one outcome is consistent: those who
expect the coals to burn them, get burned, and those who don’t,
don’t. The belief of the walker is the most important
determinant. Those who successfully complete the firewalk
experience, firsthand, a key principle of quantum physics: the
observer, in this case, the walker, creates the reality.
Meanwhile, on the extreme opposite of the climate spectrum, the
Bakhtiari tribe of Persia walk barefoot for days in snow and
ice over a 15,000-foot mountain pass. In the 1920s, explorers
Ernest Schoedsack and Merian Cooper created the first feature
length documentary, a brilliant award-winning movie titled
Grass: A Nation’s Battle for Life. This historic film captured
the annual migration of the Bakhtiari, a race of nomads who had
no prior contact with the modern world. Twice a year, as they
have done for a millennium, more than 50,000 people and a herd
of half a million sheep, cows, and goats cross rivers and
glacier-covered mountains to reach green pastures.
To get their traveling city over the mountain pass, these
hardy, barefooted people dig a roadway, through the towering
ice and snow that blankets the 14,000 foot high peak of
Zard-Kuh (Yellow Mountain). Good thing these people didn’t know
they could catch a death of cold by being shoeless in the snow
for days!
The point is, whether the challenge is cold feet or “coaled
feet,” we humans are really not as frail as we think we
are.
Heavy Lifting: We are all familiar with weightlifting, in which
muscled men and women pump iron. Such efforts require intense
bodybuilding and, perhaps, some steroids on the side. In one
form of the sport called total weightlifting, burly male world
record holders lift in the range of 700 to 800 pounds and
female titlists average around 450 to 500 pounds.
While these accomplishments are phenomenal, many other reports
exist of untrained, unathletic people showing even more amazing
feats of strength. To save her trapped son, Angela Cavallo
lifted a 1964 Chevrolet and held it up for five minutes while
neighbors arrived, reset a jack, and rescued her unconscious
boy.5 Similarly, a construction worker lifted a 3,000-pound
helicopter that had crashed into a drainage ditch, trapping his
buddy under water. In this feat captured on video, the man held
the aircraft aloft while others pulled his friend from beneath
the wreckage.
To dismiss these feats as the consequence of an adrenaline rush
misses the point. Adrenaline or not, how can an untrained
average man or woman lift and hold a half ton or more for an
extended duration?
These stories are remarkable because neither Ms. Cavallo nor
the construction worker could have performed such acts of
superhuman strength under normal circumstances. The idea of
lifting a car or helicopter is unimaginable. But with the life
of their child or friend hanging in the balance, these people
unconsciously suspended their limiting beliefs and focused
their intention on the foremost belief at that moment: I must
save this life!
Drinking Poison: Every day we bathe our bodies with
antibacterial soaps and scrub our homes with potent antibiotic
cleansers. Thus, we protect ourselves from ever-present deadly
germs in our environment. To remind us how susceptible we are
to invasive organisms, television ads exhort that we cleanse
our world with Lysol and rinse our mouths with Listerine . . .
or is it the other way around? The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention along with the media continuously inform us of
the impending dangers of the latest flu, HIV, and plagues
transported by mosquitoes, birds, and swine.
Why do these prognostications worry us? Because we have been
programmed to believe our body’s defenses are weak, ripe for
invasion by foreign substances.
If Nature’s threats weren’t bad enough, we must also protect
ourselves from byproducts of human civilization. Manufactured
poisons and massive amounts of excreted pharmaceuticals are
toxifying the environment. Of course poisons, toxins and germs
can kill us-we all know that. But then there are those who
don’t believe in this reality-and live to tell about it.
In an article integrating genetics and epidemiology in Science
magazine, microbiologist V.J. DiRita wrote, “Modern
epidemiology is rooted in the work of John Snow, an English
physician whose careful study of cholera victims led him to
discover the waterborne nature of this disease. Cholera also
played a part in the foundation of modern bacteriology-40 years
after Snow’s seminal discovery, Robert Koch developed the germ
theory of disease following his identification of the
comma-shaped bacterium Vibrio cholerae as the agent that causes
cholera. Koch’s theory was not without its detractors, one of
whom was so convinced that V. cholerae was not the cause of
cholera that he drank a glass of it to prove that it was
harmless. For unexplained reasons he remained symptom-free, but
nevertheless incorrect.”
Here’s a man who, in 1884, so challenged the accepted medical
opinion, that to prove his point, he drank a glass of cholera,
yet remained symptom-free. Not to be outdone, the professionals
claimed he was the one who was wrong!
We love this story because the most telling part is that
science dismissed this man’s daring experiment without
bothering to investigate the reason for his apparent immunity,
which was very likely his unshakable belief that he was right.
It was far easier for the scientists to treat him as an irksome
exception than to change the rules they created. In science
however, an exception simply represents something that is not
yet known or understood. In fact, some of the most important
advances in the history of science were directly derived from
studies on anomalous exceptions.
Now take the insight from the cholera story and integrate it
with this amazing report: Rural eastern Kentucky, Tennessee,
and parts of Virginia and North Carolina are home to devout
fundamentalists known as the Free Pentecostal Holiness Church.
In a state of religious ecstasy, congregants demonstrate God’s
protection through their ability to safely handle poisonous
rattlesnakes and copperheads. Even though many of these
individuals get bitten, they do not show expected symptoms of
toxic poisoning. The snake routine is only the opening act.
Really devout congregants take the notion of Divine protection
one giant step further. In testifying that God protects them,
they drink toxic doses of strychnine without exhibiting harmful
effects. Now, there’s a tough mystery for science to
stomach!
Spontaneous remission: Every day, thousands of patients are
told, “All the tests are back and the scans concur . . . I am
sorry; there is nothing else we can do. It is time for you to
go home and get your affairs in order because the end is near.”
For most patients with terminal diseases, such as cancer, this
is how their final act plays out. However, there are those with
terminal illnesses who express a more unusual and happier
option-spontaneous remission. One day they are terminally ill,
the next day they are not. Unable to explain this puzzling yet
recurrent reality, conventional doctors in such cases prefer to
conclude that their diagnoses were simply incorrect-in spite of
what the tests and scans revealed.
According to Dr. Lewis Mehl-Madrona, author of Coyote Medicine,
spontaneous remission is often accompanied by a “change of
story.” Many empower themselves with the intention that
they-against all odds-are able to choose a different fate.
Others simply let go of their old way of life with its inherent
stresses, figuring they may as well relax and enjoy what time
they have left. Somewhere in the act of fully living out their
lives, their unattended diseases vanish. This is the ultimate
example of the power of the placebo effect, where taking a
sugar pill is not even needed!
Now here’s an utterly crazy idea. Instead of investing all of
our money into the search for elusive cancer-prevention genes
and what are perceived to be magic bullets that cure without
the downside of harmful side effects, wouldn’t it make sense to
also dedicate serious energy to research the phenomenon of
spontaneous remission and other dramatic, non-invasive medical
reversals associated with the placebo effect? But because
pharmaceutical companies haven’t come up with a way to package
or affix a price tag to placebo-mediated healing, they have no
motivation to study this innate healing
mechanism.
by Mike Casey - May 18, 2010
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