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The human body is an extremely intricate, divinely
computerized and a highly evolved vehicle. It is much like
man-made vehicles in that it must be in perfect running condition
in order to get a "good performance."
The nervous system consists of three major parts that must
be in a healthy condition in order to work smoothly together.
First let's consider the brain - as explained in New Gould
Medical Dictionary, (Blakiston Co., 1949):
"Brain. The encephalon. That
part of the central nervous system contained in the cranial
cavity, consisting of the cerebrum, cerebellum, pons and medulla
oblongata."
"Cerebrum. The chief portion
of the brain, occupying the whole upper part of the cranium,
and consisting of the right and left hemispheres; the endbrain;
telencephalon."
"Cerebellum. The inferior
part of the brain lying below the cerebrum and above the pons
and medulla, consisting of two lateral lobes and a middle
lobe."
"Pons. A convex white eminence
situated at the base of the brain. It consists of fibers and
nuclei which receive impulses from the cerebral cortex, and
sends fibers to the contralateral side of the cerebellum by
way of the brachium pontes."
"Medulla oblongata. The upper,
enlarged part of the spinal cord, extending from the cord
opposite the foramen magnum to the pons."
The above gives a brief general description
of the brain, showing where the various sections lie in the
cavity, but lets go in a little deeper to see how the different
sections of the brain work together. The following information
is taken from The New Modern Home Physician, (Wm. H. Wise
and Co., Inc., 1947):
" The large masses of nervous tissue
forming the brain has an average weight of forty-nine ounces
in a male adult. The structure of the brain shows extraordinary
complexity. The larger part consists of the cerebrum in the
form of two hemispheres, right and left, which are connected
together by a broad band of fibers running transversely, and
known as the corpus callosum. Below this come, in succession
and on either side, masses of gray nervous matter, the optic
thalamus and corpus striatum, and a stalk, the crus, literally
a limb. Then there is the pons or bridge, and lastly the medulla
oblongata or bulb which is continuous with the spinal cord
(q.v.). Behind and below the cerebral hemispheres is the cerebellum,
or little brain, which also consists of two hemispheres. These
are connected with each other by a central part called the
vermiform process and also through the pons.
Nervous matter is of two kinds, gray and white.
The former consists of nerve cells and their processes, and
the latter of medullated nerve fibers, that is to say, nerve
fibers which have a protective white sheath. Both the fibers
and the cells are supported by a kind of connective tissue
called neuroglia.
The outer surface of the cerebrum and of the
cerebellum is composed of layers of gray matter, and this
is infolded, forming convolutions, affording thereby an increase
in the area of the brain surface. The optic thalamus, as stated,
is composed of gray matter, and besides this there are other
masses in the base of the brain, in the crus, the pons and
the medulla. It is in the cells of the gray matter that nerve
energy originates. The nerve fibers of the white matter merely
transmit such energy.
Within the brain there is a series of cavities
known as ventricles, which communicate with each other and
have a canal that runs down the center of the spinal cord.
These are filled with a watery fluid, called the cerebrospinal
fluid. The brain is covered by three membranes, the pia mater,
in close contact with the brain substance, the arachnoid and
the dura mater. The last is in two layers, one lining the
interior of the skull, and the other supporting the brain
and sending folds into the deep fissures in the brain in order
to accomplish this.
The space beneath the arachnoid is filled with
cerebrospinal fluid, which is in communication with the fluid
in the ventricles of the brain through certain openings at
the back of the medulla oblongata. This fact is of importance
in connection with the occurrence of hydrocephalus (q.v.).
It will be appreciated also that, as a preventive against
injury, the brain has the advantage of resting on a water
cushion.
The deeper fissures seen on the surface of
a cerebral hemisphere mark its division into lobes. The fissure
of Rolando (after the Italian anatomist, Lugi Rolando), which,
beginning a little behind the top of the head, runs obliquely
downwards and forwards, marks the boundary between the frontal
lobe in front and the parietal lobe behind. The occipital
lobe lies behind the parietal, and below these is the temporal
lobe. The mention of these lobes simplifies reference to the
functions of the brain. The gray matter on its surface contains
millions of nerve cells, which are grouped according to the
work they do. In front of the fissures of Rolando is the area
concerned with initiating voluntary movements, subdividing
into parts serving the leg, arm and face in this order from
above downwards. The left side of the brain serves the right
side of the body, however, and vice versa.
Sensation is to some extent served by this
area, but more by the parietal lobe. Tactile sensations and
those of pain and temperature are, however, appreciated by
the optic thalamus; but this is under the control of the cerebral
cortex or outer surface, and if this control is lost pleasing
sensations become more pleasing and painful more painful.
In the optic thalamus, also, it would appear that movements
expressive of emotion originate, smiling, for example, or
grimacing from pain.
The center for hearing is in the temporal lobe,
and the smell seems to be related to a part of the brain at
the anterior extremity of this lobe. The centers for vision
are in the occipital lobe. The speech centers appear to be
in the lower frontal and parietal lobes on the left side for
a right-handed person. The cerebellum is of importance in
preserving equilibrium, and in coordinating the movements
of muscles so as to permit the performance of complicated
actions.
From the brain comes twelve pairs of nerves,
whose names and actions are as follows: (1) olfactory, subserving
smell; (2) optic, nerve of vision; (3) oculomotor, supplying
most of the muscles which move the eyeball and the muscle
which contracts the pupil; (4) nerve supplying the muscle
which turns the eyeball downwards and outward; (5) trigeminal,
nerve supplying sensation to the face, etc., and to the muscles
of mastication; (6) nerve supplying the muscle which turns
the eyeball outward; (7) facial, nerve supplying the muscles
of the face; (8) auditory, subserving hearing; (9) glossopharyngeal,
a nerve of taste, also supplying sensation to the inside of
the throat and activating some muscles there; (10) vagus,
or wandering nerve, supplying the heart, lungs, stomach and
other viscera, etc., (11) spinal accessory, supplying muscles
in the neck; (12) hypoglossal, supplying the muscles moving
the tongue.
The blood supply of the brain is derived from
the internal carotid and the vertebral arteries. The venous
blood and cerebrospinal fluid drain into the large venous
channels, known as sinuses, which, in turn, pour their contents
mainly into the internal jugular vein. At various points on
the surface of the skull these sinuses are connected with
external veins, which, if they become infected, may communicate
infection to the veins within. One of the sinuses, the sigmoid,
lies on the inner side of the mastoid process, and not infrequently
becomes infected in suppurative disease of the middle ear.
Injuries and Disease of the Brain
An injury to the head may cause concussion,
a condition characterized by transitory, or rarely, more prolonged
loss of consciousness without evidence of gross damage to
the brain. In its mildest form it is little more than the
sensation of being stunned after a blow to the head. When
the injury is more severe and causes bleeding into the brain
or over its surface, or if skull fracture results with secondary
pressure on the brain by a spicule of bone or by a depressed
bone fragment, there results a proportionate loss of brain
function, as for example, paralysis, impairment in mental
faculties, visual disturbances, etc. There are certain late
complications of head injury which may be of serious import.
Of these the most frequent are the occurrence of late bleeding,
meningitis and brain abscess. In the case of bleeding and
abscess many of the symptoms may be the result of brain compression.
Concussions may give rise to nothing more than
the sensation of giddiness and slight headache of short duration.
The patient may, when recovering from a stunning blow, feel
nauseated and vomit. Persistent vomiting after a head injury
is always a serious sign. Likewise the degree of alertness
which the patient shows after the accident is an important
sign. Prolonged drowsiness with difficulty in arousing the
patient is a danger signal. Concussion, itself, is usually
recovered from completely. In some cases, however, there are
persistent symptoms in the form of memory defects, headaches,
irritability, inability to concentrate, etc. Since there are
centers for motor and sensory functions in the brain the residual
symptoms of injury depend on the amount and position of brain
tissue affected. If, for example, the centers for movement
are irritated, convulsions occur which may be limited to a
single limb, or be generalized and involve all four limbs,
in which case consciousness is generally lost. Laceration
of the brain may result in a prolonged state of semi-consciousness
or alternating states of wakefulness and drowsiness. Not infrequently
these patients exhibit states of irritability and excitement
characterized by confusion and disorientation. Should meningitis
or brain abscess develop the patient shows a temperature rise.
In meningitis the headache is intense and the patient is often
sensitive to light. Compression of the brain results in the
profound unconsciousness known as coma. The breathing is slow
and stertorous, though later it may become rapid and irregular.
There may be paralysis of the limbs on one side of the body,
or in the later stages both sides may be affected.
The most efficacious single measure to be taken
for patients who have suffered a head injury is to put them
completely at rest. They should be kept in bed until further
medical advice can be given. While awaiting the doctor an
attempt may be made to lessen the shock by putting hot-water
bottles to the feet and the sides. The room should be darkened
and quiet. Alcoholic stimulants should never be given.
Inflammation of the brain substance is called
encephalitis (q.v.). Occasionally the term polio-encephalitis
is used when the gray matter is especially involved. The latter
condition is similar to the inflammation of the gray matter
of the spinal cord, which results in infantile paralysis.
Convulsions, fevers, visual disturbances, sleep disturbances
are common symptoms in encephalitis.
When the blood supply of a part of the brain
is cut off, as, for example, by an embolus, the tissue dies
and undergoes liquefaction or softening. In old people hardening
of the arteries may produce such areas of softening in the
brain, and, as a consequence, some degree of mental deterioration.
In mild cases the only sign may be a disturbance in memory
for recent events. It is characteristic in these cases that
the memory for the remote past remains intact.
The most common tumors of the brain are the
meningiomas, derived from the coverings of the brain, and
the gliomas. Sarcomas and cancers do occur but are almost
always derived from tumors in other parts of the body, for
example, the breast and the bowel. Tumors of any size and
duration produce certain general symptoms indicative of an
increase in the intra cranial pressure, namely, headache,
vomiting and optic neuritis or swelling of the optic nerve
just as it enters the eyeball. Dizziness is another common
symptom, and in the late stages mental changes may occur.
In tumors of the frontal lobe mental changes are sometimes
the earliest indication of the disease process. Tumors of
the temporal lobe often produce a dreamy state, sometimes
associated with hallucinations of smell. The position of the
tumor may often be determined by noting the muscular and sensory
abnormalities of various parts of the body and correlating
the findings with what is known regarding the localization
of function in the brain."
The brain must be properly nourished and kept
free of inorganic materials that can cause this tremendous
organ to malfunction.
Processed foods, stale refined foods, etc.,
minerals in hard water (which minerals can be accepted into
the body, but never assimilated) - these materials are accumulated
and cause hardening of the arteries known as arteriosclerosis.
This is explained in The New Modern Home Physician (Wm. H.
Wise and Co., Inc., 1947):
Arteriosclerosis
The literal meaning of arteriosclerosis is hardening
of the arteries, and this is what happens in the disease.
Degenerative changes occur in the walls of the vessels which
impair their elasticity, and a deposit occurs in the inner
coat which narrows the lumen of the vessel. The vessels are
weaker also and tend to rupture when exposed to strain, thus
giving rise to aneurysm or hemorrhage. A change of the kind
is apt to appear in the arteries after middle life, and in
old age they may be more or less rigid tubes. In some people,
as a part of their physical inheritance the arteries may harden
at an unusually early age. Increase in blood pressure is an
important cause, and unfortunately, the blood pressure may
be abnormally high for a long time without giving any marked
hint of its presence. Lead poisoning, syphilis and kidney
disease are among other causes which should be mentioned.
Arteriosclerosis may also give rise to kidney disease, and
it may result in enlargement of the heart.
It gives rise to a large variety of symptoms,
depending to some extent on the site of vessels affected.
Some of these are: giddiness, especially on altering one's
position; headache; impairment of the power of attention;
weakness or paralysis of muscles; coldness of the hands and
feet; insomnia; noises in the head; shortness of breath and
pain over the heart. The possibility of its occurrence should
be borne in mind by those who have passed middle life and
especially by those who live freely." (p. 56)
One vulnerable area in the human body for this
"hardening of the arteries" is found in the brain.
Regardless of how intelligent an individual has been in the
past, when the arteries in the brain area become hardened
there is a resulting slowness in thinking, loss of memory,
headaches, dizziness, dimming eyesight, paralysis, and one
of the saddest conditions of all - senility.
When there has been a severe condition of stroke,
or a long-standing case of senility, autopsy will often show
a brain that has practically "turned to stone."
So it is obvious that even the most brilliant scholar can
become senile if he allows such a condition to occur in his
body, i.e., clogged or hardened arteries.
Arteriosclerosis can be reversed if one will
reverse the cause and the "cause" is the use of
inorganic, dead, stale, processed and overcooked foods. Use
fruits, vegetables, grains, nuts and seeds, and as many of
these "raw" or "wholesome" as possible.
Also, low-heated foods, such as grains, lentils, potatoes,
etc., can be used.
Eliminate all sugar and flour products, and
change from processed foods to live foods, and healthful drinks
such as raw vegetable juices.
Another part of the "reversing program"
of overcoming hardening of the arteries is the principle of
flushing the system with steam
distilled water. The amount used should be one ounce of
steam distilled water for each pound of body weight per day.
As an example, a person of 130 pounds of weight should drink
no less than 130 ounces or approximately one gallon of this
water each 24 hours. This (steam distilled) water is pure
and can do miracles for a person who will drink it faithfully.
Ponce de Leon journeyed to the New World in
search of the Fountain of Youth, whose water would give eternal
life to the one fortunate enough to drink of it.
Gilgamesh, who had lived through the ancient
civilizations of Sumer and Akkad, was recorded by the Babylonians
as searching the world over for supplies of special water
that give him virtual immortality.
Many legends tell of magic water which would
sustain life forever for those fortunate enough to find them
and keep drinking them. Even Christ used the simile of the
Water of Life.
WHO, The World Health Organization, a division
of the United Nations, has reported that people living in
areas of the Middle East, where the main source of water consists
of trapped and stored rain water, live an average of 11% longer
than their neighbors who have well and river water.
How would you, as an American with a life expectancy
of 72 years, like to live another eight years? How much would
you pay for each additional year?
You can, you know - the secret that the ancients,
Gilgamesh and Ponce de Leon, were seeking was pure water -
water which did not add to the inorganic mineral burden of
the body; water which can purify the cellular system; water
which can remove inorganic toxins rather than add to them.
This water is to be used alone and not in the
form of tea, or used to dilute juice. This is a pure flush
and cleanser that also washed out the dead, inorganic salts
and minerals. These dead minerals are accumulative and collect
in injured or weakened areas of the body. After a period of
time these can cause side effects, after effects, and disease.
As an example, hard water and finely processed foods can cause
kidney stones, gall stones, arthritis, hardening of the arteries,
cataracts, etc. Steam distilled water will clean these inorganic
minerals out of the body by a "leaching" process.
The same water that leaches away the "inorganics"
will not vibrate to the live organic minerals, and so leaves
the live ones in the body to be assimilated and "put
to good use" in repairing and building new cell structure.
When steam distilled water is used alone, the
cleansing is far superior and far more efficient than when
mixed with food or juices. When used with other liquids or
solid foods, the body is working hard on a digestive program
and has not time for the cleanse. It would be wise to follow
the Three-day
Cleanse Program regularly on a monthly basis (Dr. C.).
Many find great help in using various yoga postures, especially
the shoulder stand, and we would recommend them, at least,
the daily use of the slant board.
To speed up the cleansing of the brain, circulatory,
nerve centers, and system, it would be of great help to many,
to use the following formula as an aid to better brain activity
and to aid in the overcoming of memory loss. Blue vervain,
periwinkle, blessed thistle, lobelia, cayenne and ginger combination
has been a great help to many who are wondering why their
memory is slipping. We recommend two or more capsules of this
combination two or more times a day. This combination is a
food and cleanser for the nerves, veins and arteries in the
brain area.
The blood stream delivers to the cells nutrients
and carries off waste, as well as feeding and rebuilding the
very cells in the circulatory system and to assist in this
process the distilled water is doing its job of leaching off
the inorganic minerals, cholesterol, etc., that had put a
lining inside the vein and artery walls. We now will add a
circulatory formula.
This formula is given to assist blood purifying
teas to work more efficiently and to also aid the clearing
up of allergies, etc. This group of herbs feeds cayenne (a
stimulant) and ginger (stimulant) into the circulatory system
where the cayenne works from the bloodstream to the heart
and arteries, out into the veins. The other herbs in the formula
assist these two herbs and work together to equalize the blood
pressure (whether high or low) and to bring it to a good systolic
over the diastolic reading. Blood flow is life itself. The
blood circulatory combination (BPE) consists of ginger, cayenne,
golden seal, ginseng, parsley and garlic.
As we notice here, the cayenne, a stimulant,
is working in the blood stream to the heart, then to the arteries,
veins and capillaries in a continuous circuit. It also is
supplying calcium phosphorous, potassium, magnesium, iron,
Vitamin A, thiamin, riboflavin, capsacutin, and Vitamin C
(ascorbic acid). These not only assist in leaching, but feed
the circulatory cells, renewing them with elasticity for expansion
and contraction. This is the herb that changes the circulatory
system from an "old rubber hose type" (that breaks
with varicosity) to strong new type veins that can take the
extra pressure.
Ginger is another stimulant, but it goes from
the blood stream into the capillaries. Plugged up capillaries
are the beginning of "constipation of the circulatory
system" (where it has difficulty in ridding the blood
stream of waste materials). This fine herb is high in sulfur,
potassium, chlorine, calcium and phosphorous.
Besides having Vitamin A, thiamin and riboflavin,
it is high in niacin. Lack of niacin is one of the causes
of schizophrenia (one of our most ignored sources of niacin
is whole wheat and most other whole grains). Here we see that
ginger has many values in it to aid the circulatory system.
Golden seal is an anti-infectious herb. Ginseng
is the tonic of tonics to aid the entire area. Parsley is
a diuretic to aid in urine and waste elimination. Garlic is
one of the great antihistamines and has an amazing healing
effect on the cells. It has much organic sulfur, allyl propyl
disulfide, fluorine, pyridoxine, iron, phosphorous and calcium.
These are healing and rebuilding substances.
We have discussed the amazing, computerized
brain, which, if used at its best, can think clearly, remember
well, have perfect recall, and can tune into the great Universal
Mind. "God will not dwell in an unclean tabernacle."
Messages being carried to the brain needing solutions or answers
must have connection to every part of the body (messages coming
to and going from the brain).
The second part of the nervous system to consider
is the spinal cord. We need a large cable type (and in good
condition) carrier of messages to and from the brain. Then
there are hundreds of thousands of small lines (or nerves)
from all over the body connecting the cable (spinal cord)
which will be able to send "messages" to the brain
(body controller).
The brain is of no good to an individual unless
the messages can be transferred from it to various parts of
the body, where and when needed. We quote again from New Modern
Home Physician, (Wm. H. Wise and Co., Inc., 1948):
Spinal Cord
The medulla spinalis, or spinal cord, occupies the canal formed
by the arches of the superimposed vertebrae of the spine.
It is continuous above with the medulla, or bulb, the lowest
part of the brain, and extends downwards as far as the lower
border of the first lumbar vertebrae, where it ends in a blunt
point, called the conus medullaris. Its average length in
the male adult is about 18 inches and its thickness about
that of the little finger. Prolonged downwards from the conus
medullaris is a cord, known as the filum terminate, which
is attached at its lowest ends to the first coccygeal vertebrae.
The membranes of the brain are prolonged through
the foramen magnum, the large opening in the base of the skull,
and the outermost, the dura mater, lines the spinal canal.
Within this is the arachnoid, and around the cord, the pia
mater, a band of which passes across on either side attaching
the cord to the inner surface of the dura; as this attachment
is by means of a series of tooth-like processes, the band
is called the ligamentum denticulatum.
The cord is cylindrical in shape, but somewhat
flattened in front and behind, and presents two enlargements,
one in the cervical regions, from which the nerves to the
arms go out, and another in the lower dorsal region, from
which are supplied the nerves to the legs. There are thirty-one
pairs of spinal nerves, namely, eight cervical, twelve dorsal
or thoracic, five lumbar, five sacral and one coccygeal. The
first cervical passes out above the topmost vertebrae, the
axis, the others pass between adjoining vertebrae. Each nerve
has an anterior motor root, its fibers actuating muscles,
and a posterior sensory root bearing sensations. On the latter
is a swelling formed by the posterior root ganglion.
As the cord itself reaches no lower than the
first lumbar vertebrae, the lumbar, sacral and coccygeal nerves
pass downwards in a bunch, somewhat resembling a horse's tail,
and so called the cauda equina. The bag formed by the dura
mater extends as far down as the middle of the sacrum, however.
This bag contains cerebrospinal fluid.
It will be seen that one important function
of the cord is to serve as a conducting cable, as it were,
between the brain and other parts of the body, the nerve fibers
being grouped together in bundles, or tracts, according to
their function and the parts they supply. The other function
of the cord is to act as a reflex center. Some of the afferent
fibers pass forward in the gray matter to arborize round motor
cells in the anterior horn, thus completing a reflex arc -
sensory nerve endings in the skin or elsewhere, afferent fibers,
nerve centers in the cord, efferent fibers, and muscles whereby
the reflex action is produced.
The spinal nerves have a segmental distribution
which is most clearly seen in the thoracic nerves, each of
which passes round beneath a rib, thus supplying a ring of
the body tissues. Below the seventh rib the terminations of
the intercostal nerves are in the anterior abdominal wall,
that of the tenth, for example, being in the region of the
umbilicus. This explains why a pain in the abdomen, which
may be thought to indicate appendicitis, or some other abdominal
lesion, may actually be due to pleurisy. The budding-out of
the limbs rather obscures the segmental distribution of some
of the nerves, but it is quite easy to map out the distribution
of any spinal nerve, and when symptoms of disease affect the
area of this distribution, inflammation of the nerve root
or radiculitis, or of its main stem, is indicated.
In three regions spinal nerves form a plexus,
or network, from which branches are supplied to various parts.
Thus, there is the cervical, the brachial and the lumbosacral
plexus.
Diseases of the Spinal Cord
A severe jarring of the body may cause concussion
of the spinal cord, the result of which is paralysis of the
parts supplied by the affected parts of the cord. This will
probably clear up, however, with complete rest. The continuity
of the cord may be interrupted more or less by myelitis (q.v.),
caused by pressure from disease or dislocation of the spine,
tumors or hemorrhages of the spinal canal or cord, etc. In
the disease known as syringomyelia (q.v.), cavities form in
the gray matter interrupting the fibers conducting impulses
of temperature and pain, and interfering with the nutrition
of parts supplied by the affected portion of the cord.
Interruption of tracts in the cord may be caused
by a hardening process in the nervous tissue described as
sclerosis (q.v.). Inflammation in the gray matter is called
poliomyelitis, or Infantile Paralysis (q.v.).
Spinal meningitis may be caused by extension
from the meninges of the brain, as in cerebrospinal fever,
or occur independently, when the cause may be a penetrating
or other injury, or infection. Tuberculous infection, for
example, may extend to the spinal meninges from the vertebrae,
in Port's disease. Among the symptoms are pain, rigidity of
the spine, paralysis and wasting of various muscles, loss
of sensation, and so on. (The New Modern Home Physician, pp.
737-739)
We can see that if the spinal cord is not kept
in good condition, much damage can be afflicted upon the body.
In cases where the spinal cord, even though protected by the
spine, has been severed, it leaves paralysis from the severed
area down through the rest of the body. In cases where the
spinal vertebrae has slipped and pinched the cord, paralysis
would also result from this impingement.
Over the years we have worked with many damaged
"backs" - some from slipped disc, hump back, curvature
of the spine, broken backs, and severed spinal cords. We have
seen remarkable recoveries by using the principles of wholistic
procedures.
We have used various herbal aids as well as
therapy. One herbal formula we have used for years, that has
performed "miracles", is called "bone, flesh
and cartilage" (BF&C). This combination of herbs
has brought curvature of the spine and other types of back
and bone injuries to a healed, normal condition once more.
Bone, flesh and cartilage (BF&C) is an aid
for malfunction in bone, flesh, sinews, etc. Make a tea of
the following herbs: oak bark, marshmallow root, mullein herb,
wormwood, lobelia, scullcap, comfrey root, walnut bark (or
leaves), gravel root. Soak the combined teas in distilled
water (at the rate of one ounce of combined herbs to a pint
of distilled water), then soaking four to six hours, simmer
thirty minutes, strain and then simmer the liquid down to
½ its volume and add 1/4 vegetable glycerine (if desired).
Example: One gallon of tea simmered (not boiled) down to two
quarts and add one pint of glycerine.
Soak flannel, cotton, or any white material
other than synthetics, never use synthetics. Wrap the fomentation
(soaked cloth) around the malfunction area and cover with
plastic to keep it from drying out. Leave it on all night,
six nights a week, week after week, until relief appears.
All cases: Drink 1/4 cup of finished concentrated
tea with 3/4 cup of distilled water three times a day.
By using this formula faithfully and following
a proper diet week after week, the body is able to rebuild
its malformed areas. There are no two people alike, some heal
faster than others, so just use patience and be happy with
the results.
In this combination we have oak bark. (This
may be white oak, scarlet, red, black, scrub, oak inner bark
from any of the Quercus alba, Rubra and Tinctoria, Beech Family).
This herb is a powerful astringent, tonic and antiseptic.
It has in it calcium, phosphorous, potassium, sodium, magnesium,
manganese and copper, gallic acid, gallotannic, allagic and
tannic acid, etc. This herb aids in feeding calcium into the
bones, muscles, nerve sheaths, etc. It is an amazing tonic
and has natural protein and fiber to assist the building process.
Marshmallow root is anti-gangrenous, an emollient
and demulcent, and is an extremely nourishing food for wasted
and deformed areas.
Mullein herb is a glandular herb to assist in
keeping the lymph system efficient and in removing waste materials.
Wormwood acts in two capacities. One is to relieve pain and
the other is to act as a vermifuge to aid in eliminating worms.
Lobelia is our catalyst and an accentuating herb - our great
"thinking herb". Scullcap is to aid in rehabilitating
the spinal cord, to clean, repair and rebuild the master trunkline.
Comfrey root is a cell proliferant, causing the good cells
to grow rapidly, and discarding the malfunctioning and dead
ones. Comfrey is very high in the substance of allantoin,
the healing and rebuilding "power". Black walnut
bark is an antifungus herb - it's high in iodine, sulfur,
manganese, potassium chlorine, magnesium and cellulose. These
minerals are only a small part of this outstanding herb. Our
final herb in this group is gravel root - one of our fine
solvents. This herb aids the body to leach out and remove
inorganic minerals that are slowing the healing process.
These God-given herbs are credited with the
healing and rebuilding many parts of the body that have either
been severed by accidents, eaten away with cancer of the bone,
injured or damaged kneecaps, hip and many other joints that
have deteriorated or otherwise injured or badly mashed, mangled
bones. We have seen so many broken and deformed bodies rebuilt
and made whole with this formula. It is very gratifying to
be privileged to work in this field of teaching. I say "Teaching"
because as Edison once said, "The day will come when
doctors will be replaced with 'teachers'." This day is
very near at hand - -Praise the Lord.
When the medulla oblongata, at the base of the
skull and into the first and second vertebrae has been damaged,
or has deteriorated from improper eating routine (arthritis,
etc.), and in some cases because of weak inherent conditions
handed down from generation to generation, we have trouble
in body motion and movement. This area, when in malfunction,
is the inability of the body to control itself, as it should.
This condition displays itself in many ways,
as dizziness, lightheadedness, loss of control over locomotion
- epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, stroke,
etc.
The "number one" part of the body
that then needs help in these type of conditions is the motor
nerve area, at the medulla.
We have a special formula (B & B Tincture)
that we first used with our epileptic patients years ago.
This formula came as an answer to a prayer, when help was
needed in a severe epileptic case. The formula is made up
of blue cohosh, black cohosh, blue vervain, scullcap and lobelia
in a regular "ninety proof" tincture form.
There are approximately three million, five
hundred thousand herbs, and we do not know of any two herbs
on earth that will do the job of rebuilding the motor nerve
as well as do blue cohosh and black cohosh. I am glad the
good Lord was kind enough to locate them for us; I could never
have gone through that many herbs to locate these specific
herbs for a specific job.
He also showed the use of scullcap in the formula
for the use of rehabilitating and renewing the spinal cord,
so it could again relay its messages from the motor nerve
area to the parts of the body that required help and guidance.
Lobelia is an antispasmodic, to act as a nervine and to discontinue
spasms that were cutting off or slowing down the messages
being sent.
These five herbs put into a formula, as they
have been, have given thousands of people a new lease of life,
by cleaning a fouled up message and delivery system and getting
it into a smooth and natural response, instead of seizures
and contortions as before.
Now is the time to consider the third section
of the "message circuit program" of the human body.
After the message either to or from the brain
is made and in motion, it must go through a complex nervous
system of many miles of connected nerve cells. These nerve
cells can become damaged by malnutrition, injuries, etc.,
but they can be rebuilt and renewed. It would, for our continuing
education, help to learn a little about the nervous system
of the human body and then learn how to reestablish or rebuild
a worn out one.
The nervous system we have been studying is
so very powerful and wonderful that when it is healthy, it
can perform miraculous feats; but when tired, hungry and worn
out, it is a pussycat turned "ferocious lion." A
good example is a highly nervous person, whose nerves are
worn to a ragged edge and literally screams, "Stay your
distance!"
When a nerve is impinged as in a vertebrae impingement
there is pain and discomfort hard to "stand" or
describe. Sometimes a simple adjustment of the spine is all
that is necessary, relocating the vertebrae in its normal
place; or by massage or reflexology (foot therapy). Adjustments
of these types can often give quick and blessed relief. But
if the offending area will not stay in place, it needs, instead
of just therapy, also feeding of the muscle and nerves to
help them attain their relaxed state and they can readjust
the impingement on their own.
We have seen this happen many times by using
the bone, flesh and cartilage as was described above and through
the proper feeding program.
In addition, we have used for our nervous friends,
a great "nerve food". This nerve formula consists
of nine efficient and life giving herbal foods.
Nerve herbal food combination (The Christopher
Family produces this formula as Relax-Eze. They do not include
Lady's slipper in Relax-Eze). Here is a formula we have used
with great success for well over thirty years and is used
for relieving nerve tension and insomnia. It is mildly stimulating
and yet lessens the irritability and excitement of the nervous
system, and also lessons or reduces pain. This formula contains
herbs that feed and revitalize the motor nerve at the base
of the skull (medulla area and upper cervical), and also herbs
that help rebuild or feed the spinal cord. This group of herbs
will also rebuild the frayed nerve sheath, the nerve itself,
and its capillaries. The following herbs in this combination
are food for your valuable, and in many cases shattered, nerves;
black cohosh, capsicum, hops flowers, Lady's slipper, lobelia,
scullcap, valerian, wood betony and mistletoe. The suggested
amount for an adult's use would be one to three cups of the
tea, or two or three capsules or tablets three times in a
day, taken with a cup of celery juice or steam-distilled water.
The various herbs in this formula each have
their own job to do. Black cohosh is one of the herbs we mentioned
before as a special aid for the motor nerve. It is astringent,
diuretic, emmenagogue and alterative; it's high in fiber,
cimicifugin, isofirulic acid, phosphates and other organic
salts.
Capsicum, a stimulant, tonic, rubefacient; it
is high in calcium, sodium, Vitamin C (ascorbic acid), niacin,
riboflavin, thiamin and Vitamin A.
Hops flowers, a tonic, anodyne, diuretic. It
has calcium, phosphorous, potassium, copper, trace of arsenic
and also has humulene, etc.
Lady's Slipper, antispasmodic, nervine and tonic.
It is high in fiber and has calcium, phosphorous, sodium,
potassium, etc.
Lobelia, antispasmodic, nervine, expectorant,
emetic, diaphoretic and antispasmodic. It also has potassium,
calcium, and phosphorous.
We remember scullcap as the special food for
our spinal cord. This herb has high fiber, calcium, phosphorous,
potassium, sodium, chlorine, iron and magnesium.
Valerian in an anodyne, antispasmodic and nervine.
Here we are supplied with sulfur, copper, manganese, phosphorous,
calcium, potassium, magnesium, sodium, valenanic acid, tannic
acid, acetic acid, and many others. This herb is almost 'pure
nervine".
Wood betony is one of the top herbs in calcium
and phosphorous. It is a nervine, aromatic, astringent and
alterative. It features potassium, calcium and phosphorous.
The last of this nerve herb formula is mistletoe.
It is a nervine, antispasmodic, tonic and narcotic. It has
calcium, phosphorous, potassium, sodium, magnesium, visine
and many other trace minerals.
If you will notice, most of the nervine herbs
in the formula are well supplied with calcium, phosphorous
(which work well together), and these two are for the worn
nerve sheath. They also have potassium, sodium, and trace
minerals to rebuild worn parts.
We have seen many nervous people use this rich
nerve tea and find that their nervous system has calmed down
and showed a great needed change and a "better disposition."
I realize that much of these promises of "Herbal Miracles"
sound fantastic to unbelievable, but we are preparing documented
cases which will appear in book form in the future.
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