February 2011
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superstition
secretly via
posted by danielle
February 2010
7 posts
4 tags
neuroplasticity
(via CBC.ca)
For centuries the human brain has been thought of as incapable of fundamental change. People suffering from neurological defects, brain damage or strokes were usually written-off as hopeless cases. But recent and continuing research into the human brain is radically changing how we look at the potential for neurological recovery.
The human brain, as we are now quickly learning,...
PERSECUTED DOCTORS, HEALTH PROFESSIONALS →
1 tag
INTRODUCTION TO Dr. HAMER'S GERMANIC/GERMAN NEW...
“Through the millennia, humanity has more or less consciously known that all diseases ultimately have a psychic origin and it became a “scientific” asset firmly anchored in the inheritance of universal knowledge; it is only modern medicine that has turned our animated beings into a bag full of chemical formulas.”
Twenty years ago, Dr. Ryke Geerd Hamer, a German doctor...
January 2010
40 posts
Common sleep disorders
The most common sleep disorders include:
Primary insomnia: Chronic difficulty in falling asleep and/or maintaining sleep when no other cause is found for these symptoms.
Bruxism: Involuntarily grinding or clenching of the teeth while sleeping
Delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS): inability to awaken and fall asleep at socially acceptable times but no problem with sleep...
2 tags
AUTO-URINE THERAPY MIGHT CURE HERPES AND CANCER
Auto-urine therapy is an age-old practice of ancient India. Its practitioners talk of Shivambhu, auspicious water of Lord Shiva, a Hindu god and promote it as an inexpensive way to gain health and vitality.
“Drink water from your own cistern, flowing water from your own well.” -The Book of Proverbs 5:15
A bit of an oddball, auto-urine therapy (AUT) is gaining popularity to combat a...
Traditional Mongolian Medicine
Strip of Mongolian eating papers. A printing stock found in eastern Mongolia in the 1920’s documents a historical custom of eating a piece of paper with words printed on it, in order to prevent or heal maladies. On fields of about 24x29 mm magical incantations in Tibetan are printed, along with use instructions in Mongolian. The practise apparently was part of lamaist popular medicine.
...
thalidomide babies
Thalidomide, one of the most notorious drugs in the world, was first developed and sold in Europe in the 1950s as a tranquilizer.[2] A West German company[3] brought it to market, and it was eventually sold by fourteen companies in forty-six countries. Doctors in those countries prescribed it to pregnant women as a relief for morning sickness, not knowing of the drug’s horrible effect on their...