Just What Is Good Health?

In order to survive, each and every cell needs voltage. Cells need voltage to maintain themselves, to gather new raw materials for making new cells, to repair any damage from injuries, and to remove toxins from the body. If voltage is too low, cells do not have enough energy to run all their processes. When there isn’t enough voltage, toxins build up, causing fatigue and pain. Therefore, having enough voltage is a basic component of good health.

Where do cells get voltage? The ultimate energy comes from the sun, which we need too. Cells get the most voltage from making new cells. Cells get voltage or energy from good water, clean food, food that hasn’t been processed or pasteurized, so it still has live enzymes. The body needs the right kinds of fats. The fats we must be of good enough quality so that the cell membranes are capable of transferring voltage.

Cells get voltage from the Earth that acts as an electromagnet. This means that the Earth can transfer electrons to our bodies, when barefoot and through Schumann resonances that come from the earth. We also get electrons from alkaline water (that has not been treated with fluoride or chlorine). 

Everytime a muscle is contracted, electrons are given off, just like in piezoelectric crystals. This means that exercise is a component of health! We increase our voltage when we exercise, thereby allowing our cells to maintain themselves and clean out the buildup of toxins. Besides being able to move about in space, we need to be able to move in patterns with our energies, that follow our meridians, or cross our midlines and move in ways that are exemplified in nature.

Another way we get voltage is through physical touch. Each person is a conductor. Electrons move from an area of high voltage to an area of low voltage. When we hug someone, we transfer voltage from person to person in an exchange that can be both comforting and nourishing in many ways. This is also true of when we work with plants, animals, some stones, and trees. Voltage is exchanged and with more flow, cells are able to make more cells and clear out old cells. Moreover we just feel good.

Not only do we have physical needs for good health, but we have emotional needs. Our thoughts and emotions affect how we feel and ultimately affect our health. The person who is content and happy with their life is generally much healthier. Therefore the right thoughts and emotions are also essential for good health.

Good health requires many things. Physically, cells need enough voltage for making new cells, and maintaining and cleaning out toxins for good health. We can gain energy through voltage in good food, water, sunlight, Schumann resonances, movement, exercise, and physical touch. Our thoughts and emotions are also key to good health. Keeping our energy flowing is a healthy way to live. Great health is a process, not just a goal and it takes constant vigilance to keep a body healthy.

Germ Theory vs Terrain Theor

As a biologist, I was taught and taught for many years about the Germ theory. Louis Pasteur published a paper in 1861 stating that germs are the cause of disease. Western medicine picked up on Pasteur’s Germ theory and today it is a basis of Western medicine. It is generally accepted that one gets disease from microbiota, or germs from fungi, bacteria or other pathogens, parasites and viruses (although viruses were not included in Pasteur’s original theory).  Modern medicine isolates each microbe to identify it, to see how it grows, and to find out what stops its growth. However, on his deathbed, Pasteur was said to reject his Germ theory, that Terrain is far more important.

The body has over 37 trillion cells and even more bacteria, fungi, and viruses. That means the body is made up of more microbiota and organisms than there are human cells. Considering that, then how do we define who and what we are? Are we really just humans? If so much more of the human body is made of microbiota, and bacteria and microbiota make you sick, we would be sick all the time. However, we do know there are “good” microbiota. So there must a balance between the “good and bad” microorganisms because we are not sick all the time.

The Terrain theory says that when the whole body is balanced and in a state of homeostasis or equilibrium, the immune system is able to fight off pathogens—or the “bad” microbes that make us sick. The Terrain theory looks at the body’s ecology as a whole. When the body is out of balance or in a state of disease, the body is weakened and pathogens can enter and flourish, allowing an overgrowth of any microbe. The overgrowth results in symptoms that arise while the body is trying to get back into balance, and these symptoms collectively are considered a disease.

When the body is healthy and the vital force is strong, homeostasis is maintained. When the body terrain is healthy, you most likely experience good health! How do we keep this terrain balanced? Easy! We keep the body strong by ensuring we eat, live, and think well. To keep the body healthy we need access to clean water, clean and real food and nutrition, to avoid toxins and electromagnetic radiation, and to have access to fresh, clean air and light.