1. Summary: The text discusses the principles of coMra therapy, emphasizing the body's inherent intelligence and self-healing capabilities. It contrasts this approach with mechanistic medicine, which focuses on direct manipulation of chemical processes. The text also references videos by Dan Barber and Bruce Lipton, highlighting the importance of understanding the interconnectedness of systems and the impact of perception on cellular health.
And this is what we are trying to do in this course is to look differently. Because if we acknowledge and respect this inherent intelligence of the body, then these experimental results makes perfect sense. Because when energetic stimulus is not in base, it's gentle enough, then the disease cells will take the decision, which way to go. because we're not suppressing this natural course of resolution of disease. And these cells themselves will decide, okay, shall I increase inflammation right now or shall I decrease? In other words, they would intelligently respond to a healing stimulus or be it ultrasound, be it light, be it magnetic field. So now, okay, so we acknowledge that the is intelligent and we need to find approach or a method to work with that intelligence. And the question that we can ask right now is what are those needs of the disease cells? What are those ways to not to suppress, manipulate or control this intelligence, but gently support it? So if I'll sum it up, whenever we talk about any complex system, be it a forest, be it a marsh land, a farm or our body consisting of 70 trillions of cells, we need to understand that the only way this body can be together is one is because all parts of it are practicing and actively engaged in a process of intelligent cooperation. If there is no cooperation, there's just simply no way how the body can stay together as one whole. I mean, it will literally fall apart. This is one. Second, the cooperation must be intelligent. It means that each individual unit of the whole is completely self-sufficient and has full knowledge of what to do in any given situation. So if you think about the body, our body in this way, then it is a perfectly capable system of self-regenerating. And if you think about now mechanistic medicine, it intelligence. It tries to micro manage individual chemical processes. It tries to increase those hormones, decrease those markers and so on. This is direct manipulation and control. And as a result of neglecting and injecting this intelligence, now we have on our hands a healthcare system, which is just completely not sustainable. One I wanted to add just a few little points with respect to some of the videos you saw with the Dan Barber one, something I found really fascinating and it relates back to the wolf example. They measured the health of their firm by the number of predators that were feeding. So the more predators that were feeding, which happened to be migratory birds, the better the firm was doing. Because just like the wolves, the conventional thinking is we got to get them out of here so that everything is working better. But actually, when they brought the birds in, this was a marker for the health of the system that it could sustain the birds as well as the fish farm itself. So you want to take the time, at least I really recommend take the time to look at that. And then when you look at the Bruce Lipton video, it's actually quite lengthy. But what it gets into, it's called the biology of belief. And with that, what I found really fascinating is he goes step by step to show how the cells reflect the state of being of the person and how we perceive the environment. And of course, we've gotten into that a little bit in the -- a lot in the coMra community, some in the first course. And so if anybody wants to do some extra investigation into that, there is a lot that's unfolding in that area now. So I just wanted to add those points, Arzhan. Thank you.