Summary: This text discusses the body's response to stimuli, particularly in the context of coMra therapy. It explains the concept of an activation response, where the body exerts effort to adapt to a higher dose of stimuli, while remaining within physiological norms. The speaker uses the analogy of running a race to illustrate this process, and then analyzes the results of a coMra Wellness Test, noting that while some systems are slightly tuned down, overall coherence is high.
Now if you look at activation response. This type of response happens when the stimuli is larger. There's a higher dose of medication, there is exposure to cold temperatures, higher dose of magnetic field therapy and so on. Now the body has to struggle. It has to apply some effort to sustain their adaptation. see, it goes up, but still it stays within so-called physiological norm. And just to give you an example, so you can relate to it, you could look at if you are running a race, so let's say, when you get just outside the red zone, you're pushing yourself a little harder than you know you can sustain, so you slow the pace just a bit, so you stay in that red zone, which is the physiologic norm. And then you go another bit and you push yourself just a little bit outside the range and then you come back in again. So that's why I get this going in and out, just as a physical example. Thank you, Arzhan. But overall, your coherence is still fairly high. You only see here that, for example, here, the inhibition of central nervous system is activated, meaning the central nervous system is not inhibited. You also will see here, for example, that the blood coagulation system is also somewhat tuned down. But the rest of the systems are operating at the high threshold of this physiologic norm, but still you are highly coherent.