Unfortunately, many natural products are over-hyped, so it's easy to understand why allopathically-oriented people might stereotype anyone who's into natural healing. We've all heard the over-hyped claims of xyz berry juice drink or designer supplement! Many of those products are marketed with raving testimonials, making it sound like everyone will get the same results.
In my decades-long quest for healing of elusive issues, I tried many of those trendy products. I got some benefits with some and none with others. I marketed the one I got benefits from and learned very quickly that only about 1 in 3 people gets noticeable benefits from even the 'best' superfood.
This turned out to be true across the board. For every person who had a tumor shrink by drinking xyz berry juice drink, 2 others noticed nothing. Why? Because Person A was deficient in something the xyz berry juice drink provided, while the others weren't...OR there were simply other dietary/emotional/mental/spiritual/genetic factors at work.
Yes, I have experience with those things, so I can understand how someone unfamiliar with the holistic paradigm might mistakenly assume that everyone who's into holistic healing must be a sales rep for one of those over-hyped products, luring gullible, unsuspecting schmucks into paying lots of $$ with big promises to cure their ailment, while somehow keeping them from getting accepted, proven [sic] 'treatment.'
And yes, it's true that some people are just jumping from a quick fix from a pill, to a quick fix from 2 ounces of berry juice drink. They don't want to exercise or change their diet or lifestyle. They want to keep doing what they're doing, and expect the magic elixir to 'fix' them.
Those are the people who may get results from the berry juice drink, because it's probably the first and only healthy thing they've ever done. Sure, their body will cry out for more of that healthy syrup, starved for nutrients amid a sea of diet sodas and white bread.
But their benefits will be short-lived, because they don't yet grasp the concept of taking responsibility for their own health.
However, some do...and some, after getting a taste of improved health, start exercising, or looking into other nutritional supplements, or start eating better. A good experience with xyz designer supplement is often the first step on the road to improved diet and lifestyle! So it's all good.
I have nothing against berry juice drinks...some are excellent products (though others are mostly apple juice). They are good foods, along with other good foods. I'm just using this as an example of a trendy health product.
It's easy to stereotype and automatically assume that anyone promoting alternative health must be one of those people who is just regurgitating what their xyz company has told them to say. There are certainly people like that out there!
But what the person doing the stereotyping doesn't realize is that many of those who've actually lived it, walked their talk for not weeks or months, but years or even decades, have left parroting behind long ago. It's not about some product or even about money. It's about health...it's about life. Someone on a healing journey has endured myriad catalysts and it's an insult to tell them their experiences are invalid and their opinions worthless.
If those people sell a product, it's because that product helped them and they want to help others. Sure, some are just in it for the money, but for the most part, most are just real people who want to help others the way they were helped.
In my case, I got astonishing results from a product, and am now shouting from the rooftops about it. Who wouldn't? But it is different from all the xyz supplements, because it has reams of scientific data, virtually everyone (3 out of 3) gets noticeable results (provided they drink it according to protocol and don't drink sodas), and, it's not even considered a 'holistic' product at all, being that it's approved by the FDA of the country that's ranked #1 in the world for health and longevity, and is certified for hospital use in that country.
Is it a cure-all? No, it doesn't 'cure' anything. It certainly won't work if the person insists on drinking sodas. Why would anyone do that when they're told that sodas will interfere with their healing? Either they don't believe it, or they are still hanging on to their illness because it defines them, or they still need the catalyst. Nothing can 'fix' such a one who wishes to stay sick or in pain. It doesn't 'treat' anything. It's simply one of the key, foundational things our 3D bodies need. It has no nutrients, other than ionic minerals. So there is no such thing as "oh that won't work for me" because everyone's need for water to flush out metabolic waste is the same. It doesn't matter what their problem is. It doesn't matter if they've tried dozens of things that didn't work. They still need to flush out metabolic waste. It's simple chemistry. So I don't think in terms of treatment at all. I think in terms of supporting the person and helping their body do what it was designed to do. And then seemingly miracles occur! But they're not really miracles; it's just simple chemistry! See, it's a different paradigm.
It's the most under-hyped health product I've ever seen. As amazing as it sounds, the reality is far, far more dramatic!
Getting back to the main topic of this thread, it's just criminal that this product isn't recognized in this country. Something that has been used in Japanese hospitals for 40 years, and has numerous medical studies, even appearing in PubMed, Medline, etc. and yet the Medical Mafia of the US refuses to acknowledge it.
It's beyond criminal; it's evil. It epitomizes what we're talking about here: the drug industry continues to profit by keeping people sick. Sick people are commodities to them.
In my decades-long quest for healing of elusive issues, I tried many of those trendy products. I got some benefits with some and none with others. I marketed the one I got benefits from and learned very quickly that only about 1 in 3 people gets noticeable benefits from even the 'best' superfood.
This turned out to be true across the board. For every person who had a tumor shrink by drinking xyz berry juice drink, 2 others noticed nothing. Why? Because Person A was deficient in something the xyz berry juice drink provided, while the others weren't...OR there were simply other dietary/emotional/mental/spiritual/genetic factors at work.
Yes, I have experience with those things, so I can understand how someone unfamiliar with the holistic paradigm might mistakenly assume that everyone who's into holistic healing must be a sales rep for one of those over-hyped products, luring gullible, unsuspecting schmucks into paying lots of $$ with big promises to cure their ailment, while somehow keeping them from getting accepted, proven [sic] 'treatment.'
And yes, it's true that some people are just jumping from a quick fix from a pill, to a quick fix from 2 ounces of berry juice drink. They don't want to exercise or change their diet or lifestyle. They want to keep doing what they're doing, and expect the magic elixir to 'fix' them.
Those are the people who may get results from the berry juice drink, because it's probably the first and only healthy thing they've ever done. Sure, their body will cry out for more of that healthy syrup, starved for nutrients amid a sea of diet sodas and white bread.
But their benefits will be short-lived, because they don't yet grasp the concept of taking responsibility for their own health.
However, some do...and some, after getting a taste of improved health, start exercising, or looking into other nutritional supplements, or start eating better. A good experience with xyz designer supplement is often the first step on the road to improved diet and lifestyle! So it's all good.
I have nothing against berry juice drinks...some are excellent products (though others are mostly apple juice). They are good foods, along with other good foods. I'm just using this as an example of a trendy health product.
It's easy to stereotype and automatically assume that anyone promoting alternative health must be one of those people who is just regurgitating what their xyz company has told them to say. There are certainly people like that out there!
But what the person doing the stereotyping doesn't realize is that many of those who've actually lived it, walked their talk for not weeks or months, but years or even decades, have left parroting behind long ago. It's not about some product or even about money. It's about health...it's about life. Someone on a healing journey has endured myriad catalysts and it's an insult to tell them their experiences are invalid and their opinions worthless.
If those people sell a product, it's because that product helped them and they want to help others. Sure, some are just in it for the money, but for the most part, most are just real people who want to help others the way they were helped.
In my case, I got astonishing results from a product, and am now shouting from the rooftops about it. Who wouldn't? But it is different from all the xyz supplements, because it has reams of scientific data, virtually everyone (3 out of 3) gets noticeable results (provided they drink it according to protocol and don't drink sodas), and, it's not even considered a 'holistic' product at all, being that it's approved by the FDA of the country that's ranked #1 in the world for health and longevity, and is certified for hospital use in that country.
Is it a cure-all? No, it doesn't 'cure' anything. It certainly won't work if the person insists on drinking sodas. Why would anyone do that when they're told that sodas will interfere with their healing? Either they don't believe it, or they are still hanging on to their illness because it defines them, or they still need the catalyst. Nothing can 'fix' such a one who wishes to stay sick or in pain. It doesn't 'treat' anything. It's simply one of the key, foundational things our 3D bodies need. It has no nutrients, other than ionic minerals. So there is no such thing as "oh that won't work for me" because everyone's need for water to flush out metabolic waste is the same. It doesn't matter what their problem is. It doesn't matter if they've tried dozens of things that didn't work. They still need to flush out metabolic waste. It's simple chemistry. So I don't think in terms of treatment at all. I think in terms of supporting the person and helping their body do what it was designed to do. And then seemingly miracles occur! But they're not really miracles; it's just simple chemistry! See, it's a different paradigm.
It's the most under-hyped health product I've ever seen. As amazing as it sounds, the reality is far, far more dramatic!
Getting back to the main topic of this thread, it's just criminal that this product isn't recognized in this country. Something that has been used in Japanese hospitals for 40 years, and has numerous medical studies, even appearing in PubMed, Medline, etc. and yet the Medical Mafia of the US refuses to acknowledge it.
It's beyond criminal; it's evil. It epitomizes what we're talking about here: the drug industry continues to profit by keeping people sick. Sick people are commodities to them.