Healing Power of Connection

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Lynne McTaggart  is an American lecturer, journalist, author, and publisher. She has authored 6 books, including The Intention Experiment and The Field. According to her author profile, she is a spokesperson “on consciousness, the new physics, and the practices of conventional and alternative medicine.” McTaggart is also an anti-vaccinationist.

She promotes this belief in her book What Doctors Don’t Tell You and in other publications.  This has drawn significant criticism of her work and          has created controversy.

Living With Intention – Lynne McTaggart

In her autobiography McTaggart reports that after recovering from an        illness using alternative medical approaches her husband suggested she   start a newsletter on the risks of some medical practices and devised the    title: “What Doctors Don’t Tell You”.  In 1996,  McTaggart published the      book with the same name.

She and her husband set up a public company in 2001, What Doctors Don’t Tell You plc, later Conatus plc,  which published newsletters,   magazines  and  audio-tapes based on conferences and seminars including, What Doctors Don’t Tell You, PROOF!, and Living the Field.  This company was wound up in 2009.

A new company, Wddty Publishing Ltd, run by McTaggart and her husband, took over    the What Doctors Don’t Tell You website, and New Age Publishing Ltd for McTaggart’s other publishing and public-speaking activities. Publication of their monthly magazine What Doctors Don’t Tell You restarted in August 2012, in a glossy format aimed at newsagent and high-street distribution, instead of using the previous subscription model, and carrying paid advertising, something McTaggart had originally said WDDTY would not do.           https://www.biontologyarizona.com/healing-power-of-connection/

In her book The Field, McTaggart asserts that the universe is unified by an interactive field. The book has been translated into fourteen languages. In a later book, The Intention Experiment,  she discusses research in the field of human consciousness which she says supports the theory that “the universe is connected by a vast quantum energy field” and can be influenced by thought. Michael Shermer states that this belief is contradicted by conflicting evidence (e.g. studies on intercessory prayer).

McTaggart has a personal-development program called “Living The Field” which is based on an idiosyncratic interpretation of the zero point field as applied to quantum mechanics. She appears in the extended version of the movie What the Bleep Do We Know!?, (2004).

Click here for Mitchell’s interview with Lynne on A Better World Radio: http://abetterworld.tv/lynne-mctaggart-author-internationally-acclaimed-journalist-science-writer.

Also An in-depth interview with Dr Dacher Keltner about the vagus nerve and its connection with the rebound effect of sending out healing intention.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q-1HhWRcIyQ

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Cancer  largely characterized it as a deficiency disease— a slow-motion starving of vital nutrients resulting from the wholesale industrialization of food —or disease of toxicity — a poisoning from our chronic exposure to some 20,000 chemicals present in  our air, food, water and homes.

Clearly, these elements play an important supporting role. But perhaps not the leading one.

Spontaneous disappearance
They do not, for instance, explain spontaneous remission — how a giant mass can be    there one day and virtually melt away the next.  A small body of research concerns terminal cancer patients who, with little or no medical intervention, end up beating          the odds.

Although medicine likes to pretend that these cases are rare, one in eight skin cancers spontaneously heals, as does nearly one in five genitourinary cancers.

Virtually all types of illnesses, from those where organs have supposedly packed up, as      in diabetes or Addison’s disease, to those where a body part is supposedly irretrievably damaged, as in atherosclerosis, have healed on their own.

Rather than calling these cases what they are — the body’s ability to self-correct — medicine refers to them as ‘spontaneous remission’, as though the illness has simply decided to go into hiding, but might still suddenly spring out at you again at any moment.

We all marvel at cases of spontaneous remission because even the most enlightened among us subscribe to the body-as-machine paradigm. Under this model, what is broken stays broken, until a seasoned mechanic comes along with the right monkey wrench or spare part.

Clearly, what’s going on there is something more complex than eating your greens and throwing away your toxic cleaning products.  The sheer volume of cases of spontaneous remission shows that self-repair and renewal is natural to the human body.

Losing the plot
Lately, I’ve been sifting through these studies, looking for the common thread. What these cases collectively say about cancer is highly instructive. In case after case, they describe people up against a major roadblock in their lives: an unremitting stress; an unresolved trauma; a prolonged hostility; a marked isolation; a profound dissatisfaction; a quiet despair.

They describe people who are boxed in a corner with no apparent way out, people who have lost not only the plot but also their role as the central protagonist of their own life drama. They are people who, in short, hurt deeply in their very souls.

Those people who beat their cancer, whose survival remains unexplained, are those same individuals who find a way out of the corner. They get rid of the source of the psychological heartache: they divorce the abusive husband; they resolve the problem with their mother or daughter; they take full responsibility for their illness.

But, most important of all, they find the lost meaning in their lives.

Most cases of spontaneous remission seem to take place after the patient has made              a major psychological shift to recreate a life that is engaging and purposeful. They          play the piano or go trekking in Tibet, if that’s what they always meant to do before       they got derailed in their lives. They find a path back to their joie de vivre.

The power of thoughts
Most people, this would suggest, get ill because they’ve lost all hope of life ever being good.  And this suggests that they have cancer because of their thoughts — the thoughts they think about themselves and their lives.

For many years, I’ve studied evidence of how profoundly and quickly the brain alters         its function and even its physical structure from mindfulness meditation. Mindfulness meditation is more than just relaxation. It creates a profound change in your worldview: an acceptance of ‘what is’ in the current moment without a judgemental overlay.

The research on mindfulness suggests that our physicality is like Play-Doh, to be molded from our conscious thoughts. Form follows function. If the brain can be physically revised throughout life just by thinking better thoughts, so too can the rest of the body.

Indeed, the dynamic plasticity of the body — its ability to go from ill to well overnight — demonstrates how deeply it is a maidservant of consciousness.

Much has been written about the so-called ‘cancer personality’. For me, the real question is getting to the heart of the cancer in your soul. 👌💯

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