Amplification - The human body has an amazing ability to amplify weak signals. Resonance is the key.
One example -
Human Brains may contain BioMagnetite that could give them an electromagnetic sense that could provide a link between Brains and many types of electromagnetic phenomena, including but not limited to Schumann Resonance Phenomena.
However in the past decade or so, studies of the ferrous mineral magnetite show that it can act as a transducer linking ambient electromagnetic activity to cellular function. In addition – in both animals and humans – magnetite has been identified in most tissues examined, including the pineal gland (Lohmann & Johnsen, 2000; Schultheiss-Grassi & Dobson, 1999).
Can be linked to opening transmembrane ion-channels
Many amplifications... The body stores energy nonlocally across the living matrix and meridian system which allows weak signals to be amplified into powerful ones. The body is a finely tuned resonant circuit far exceeding what normal amplifiers can do (like a LASER).
Schumann, eyes, prick your finger, smell...
One example -
Human Brains may contain BioMagnetite that could give them an electromagnetic sense that could provide a link between Brains and many types of electromagnetic phenomena, including but not limited to Schumann Resonance Phenomena.
However in the past decade or so, studies of the ferrous mineral magnetite show that it can act as a transducer linking ambient electromagnetic activity to cellular function. In addition – in both animals and humans – magnetite has been identified in most tissues examined, including the pineal gland (Lohmann & Johnsen, 2000; Schultheiss-Grassi & Dobson, 1999).
Can be linked to opening transmembrane ion-channels
Many amplifications... The body stores energy nonlocally across the living matrix and meridian system which allows weak signals to be amplified into powerful ones. The body is a finely tuned resonant circuit far exceeding what normal amplifiers can do (like a LASER).
Schumann, eyes, prick your finger, smell...
We are most connected with our emotional and energetic physical bodies when we are consciously connected with our breath. In many cultures, the word for “breath” can also be translated as “soul” or “spirit.” This is why ancient peoples have placed so much importance on being aware of one’s breathing. While it might seem very challenging to be constantly monitoring our breath, we can at least take designated breaks throughout our day to get in touch with our real self.
But there are MANY examples of mystics, yogis, sages, saints, and martial artists present us with exceptions to this rule (check out the Autobiography of a Yogi for a couple examples).
There is alleged documentation of people who apparently subsist on sunlight alone. There are people who can hold their breath for over 20 minutes underwater. Tibetan monks can sit naked in the snow and dry ice-cold wet robes on their bodies by increasing their skin temperature. These are not tricks. They’re the result of training the physiology.
According to an article in Science Watch (2/9/82), Drs. Herbert Benson, John W. Lehmann, Mark D. Epstein of Harvard, Ralph F. Goldman of the Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, M. S. Malhotra of India’s National Institute of Sports, and Jeffrey Hopkins of the University of Virginia set out to find out how these monks did it. What they discovered was that monks trained in a specific breathing technique called Tummo (or Gtum-mo) can raise the temperatures in their fingers and toes by as much as 17°F.
In 1985, the researchers made a video of the monks on a rocky windblown ledge at an altitude of 15,000 feet in the Himalayas. Wearing only cotton or wool shawls, they slept without shivering all night. In another study, monks were covered with three-by-six-foot wet sheets as they meditated in a room that was 40°F, and within an hour the sheets were dry. Actually, soon after they were placed on the monks, the sheets began giving off steam.
**Wood/Food is releasing Sunlight in the presense of oxygen - Food is condensed sunlight
The cells within the plant, called chloroplasts, capture these photons and convert this energy into sugar molecules and starch molecules. When these particles of light hit a chloroplast, the energy released combines with CO2 and water to create glucose and oxygen.
This all serves to illustrate the point that we humans have more control over our physiology (especially via our breathe) than our modern society has believed.
In fact we can use the breathe to help control and still the mind as we mentioned in Module 5.
But there are MANY examples of mystics, yogis, sages, saints, and martial artists present us with exceptions to this rule (check out the Autobiography of a Yogi for a couple examples).
There is alleged documentation of people who apparently subsist on sunlight alone. There are people who can hold their breath for over 20 minutes underwater. Tibetan monks can sit naked in the snow and dry ice-cold wet robes on their bodies by increasing their skin temperature. These are not tricks. They’re the result of training the physiology.
According to an article in Science Watch (2/9/82), Drs. Herbert Benson, John W. Lehmann, Mark D. Epstein of Harvard, Ralph F. Goldman of the Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, M. S. Malhotra of India’s National Institute of Sports, and Jeffrey Hopkins of the University of Virginia set out to find out how these monks did it. What they discovered was that monks trained in a specific breathing technique called Tummo (or Gtum-mo) can raise the temperatures in their fingers and toes by as much as 17°F.
In 1985, the researchers made a video of the monks on a rocky windblown ledge at an altitude of 15,000 feet in the Himalayas. Wearing only cotton or wool shawls, they slept without shivering all night. In another study, monks were covered with three-by-six-foot wet sheets as they meditated in a room that was 40°F, and within an hour the sheets were dry. Actually, soon after they were placed on the monks, the sheets began giving off steam.
**Wood/Food is releasing Sunlight in the presense of oxygen - Food is condensed sunlight
The cells within the plant, called chloroplasts, capture these photons and convert this energy into sugar molecules and starch molecules. When these particles of light hit a chloroplast, the energy released combines with CO2 and water to create glucose and oxygen.
This all serves to illustrate the point that we humans have more control over our physiology (especially via our breathe) than our modern society has believed.
In fact we can use the breathe to help control and still the mind as we mentioned in Module 5.
Conscious Breathing - Going a Step Further
What exactly is a “conscious breath”? Let’s take a little journey through the body and see. First, there’s a tickling sensation on the tip of the nose as inhalation begins. The air, as the ancients believed, contains a living essence, a life force known as qi or prana. It is this force that energizes mind and body. The air begins flowing through the nasal turbinates, which contain spongy erectile tissue that governs the pattern and flow of air through the nose. As the turbinates are stimulated by air flow, they in turn activate neuronal responses and affect the nervous system. This affects the personality as well. Interesting, as a side note, is the engorgement of the nasal turbinates of lovers, which due to the release of hormones and altered breathing patterns creates what is called the “honeymoon nose.”
Once the air has passed the nose on its way downward, it enters the main channel going to the lungs: the trachea. It then splits into the two smaller channels supplying the lungs, which look like trees with many branches. These are called bronchioles. The bronchioles end as a vast number of tiny air sacs called alveoli—delicate soap bubbles with walls only the thickness of a microscopic cell. Here, the miracle of the “violet mist” takes place as the air oxygenates the blood. The alveoli have minute capillaries so thin that blood cells must enter single file. Any blood cells that have been deformed by pollution cannot enter. The air gives its oxygen molecules to the red blood cells to carry the life force to the various organs of the body.
Off-gassing from carpets, furniture, chemical sprays, cosmetics, tobacco smoke, or exhaust fumes can damage the tiny alveoli. What was once a mass of oxygen-processing bubbles turns into a black hole as polluted air pops them. This means that there is much less area for oxygen to come into contact with blood and transfer its life- sustaining payload. The result is a severe shortness of breath (emphysema). This in turn signals the breakdown of the physical body along with mental and emotional confusion.
Autointoxication...
If any disruption to this natural process occurs, hemoglobin, which is the oxygen- carrying molecule within the red blood cells, will be stopped in its journey throughout the body. This means no oxygen is delivered and no CO2, the waste product of metabolism, can be transported out of the body. The ensuing autointoxication, if severe enough, will lead to death.
In one experiment conducted in the 1800s by Dr. Claude Bernard, a French physiologist, we have a classic example of autointoxication. Bernard took a bell glass that contained what was measured to be three hours of air for a bird. He placed the bird in the glass container for two hours and then removed the bird with no apparent negative effects. This apparently left one hour of air in the bell glass, but when he placed a second bird in the container, it died immediately because it didn’t have time to adapt to the toxicity of the remaining air.
We are poisoned not only by the toxic air we breathe, the chemicals we’re exposed to, and their off-gassing, but by our shallow breathing. When you consider the mental stress we experience and its effect of rearranging our breathing patterns and breath ratios, it’s a miracle we live at all.
This is a testament to the powers of vital adaptation, where the physical organism adapts by shutting off less vital functions so that we may survive. It’s somewhat like a small plane carrying a heavy cargo that jettisons lesser-value items in order to climb higher. The human body just starts shutting down functions, like our sensitivity to second-hand cigarette smoke, off-gassing of carpets, cosmetics, and countless other pollutants we’re exposed to daily.. Slow like frog boiling in water.
This is why it’s crucial to begin to breathe consciously. Not only does it allow us to breathe deeper, but it allows us to begin to reconnect our dormant senses, thus reconnecting us to the world around us. And this course is all about reconnecting to Nature and her life supporting elements.
When the inside dog, accustomed to the stale air and other smells within the home, is let outside, there’s a marked reduction in its ability to track game. The outside dog has no trouble retaining its natural propensity.
The International Breath Institute found that 70% of the body’s toxins are released during exhalation. Although we probably know that the main waste product of breathing is carbon dioxide, which the delicate alveoli must release and exchange for oxygen and other gases in our inhalation, the exhaled air is filled with other deadly poisons, including VOCs or volatile organic compounds. CO binds to hemoglobin.
Exhaled air contains methanol, isoprene, acetone, ethanol, alcohol, ketones, hydrocarbons, and water. It’s almost as if we make our homes and offices, with their artificial heating and cooling systems recycling our exhalations, into that bell glass and we’re the canaries. However, unlike the proverbial miner’s canary that dies from bad air, we humans degenerate via the law of vital adaptation to our toxic conditions, blaming our ailments on everything else. One disease - Toxemia… Most people get adequate nutrition (though barely, but you do not see scurvy, beri beri and many malnutrition issues in the West), its more the TOXINS in the food, water, and air and electrosmog that ages us and makes us sick.
Certainly, there are many contributing factors that are outside this discussion. The point here is that, no matter what your circumstances may be, taking time to be conscious of breathing deeply is of a far vaster benefit than it may appear to be. So, take time during your day to do three connected deep breaths.
What exactly is a “conscious breath”? Let’s take a little journey through the body and see. First, there’s a tickling sensation on the tip of the nose as inhalation begins. The air, as the ancients believed, contains a living essence, a life force known as qi or prana. It is this force that energizes mind and body. The air begins flowing through the nasal turbinates, which contain spongy erectile tissue that governs the pattern and flow of air through the nose. As the turbinates are stimulated by air flow, they in turn activate neuronal responses and affect the nervous system. This affects the personality as well. Interesting, as a side note, is the engorgement of the nasal turbinates of lovers, which due to the release of hormones and altered breathing patterns creates what is called the “honeymoon nose.”
Once the air has passed the nose on its way downward, it enters the main channel going to the lungs: the trachea. It then splits into the two smaller channels supplying the lungs, which look like trees with many branches. These are called bronchioles. The bronchioles end as a vast number of tiny air sacs called alveoli—delicate soap bubbles with walls only the thickness of a microscopic cell. Here, the miracle of the “violet mist” takes place as the air oxygenates the blood. The alveoli have minute capillaries so thin that blood cells must enter single file. Any blood cells that have been deformed by pollution cannot enter. The air gives its oxygen molecules to the red blood cells to carry the life force to the various organs of the body.
Off-gassing from carpets, furniture, chemical sprays, cosmetics, tobacco smoke, or exhaust fumes can damage the tiny alveoli. What was once a mass of oxygen-processing bubbles turns into a black hole as polluted air pops them. This means that there is much less area for oxygen to come into contact with blood and transfer its life- sustaining payload. The result is a severe shortness of breath (emphysema). This in turn signals the breakdown of the physical body along with mental and emotional confusion.
Autointoxication...
If any disruption to this natural process occurs, hemoglobin, which is the oxygen- carrying molecule within the red blood cells, will be stopped in its journey throughout the body. This means no oxygen is delivered and no CO2, the waste product of metabolism, can be transported out of the body. The ensuing autointoxication, if severe enough, will lead to death.
In one experiment conducted in the 1800s by Dr. Claude Bernard, a French physiologist, we have a classic example of autointoxication. Bernard took a bell glass that contained what was measured to be three hours of air for a bird. He placed the bird in the glass container for two hours and then removed the bird with no apparent negative effects. This apparently left one hour of air in the bell glass, but when he placed a second bird in the container, it died immediately because it didn’t have time to adapt to the toxicity of the remaining air.
We are poisoned not only by the toxic air we breathe, the chemicals we’re exposed to, and their off-gassing, but by our shallow breathing. When you consider the mental stress we experience and its effect of rearranging our breathing patterns and breath ratios, it’s a miracle we live at all.
This is a testament to the powers of vital adaptation, where the physical organism adapts by shutting off less vital functions so that we may survive. It’s somewhat like a small plane carrying a heavy cargo that jettisons lesser-value items in order to climb higher. The human body just starts shutting down functions, like our sensitivity to second-hand cigarette smoke, off-gassing of carpets, cosmetics, and countless other pollutants we’re exposed to daily.. Slow like frog boiling in water.
This is why it’s crucial to begin to breathe consciously. Not only does it allow us to breathe deeper, but it allows us to begin to reconnect our dormant senses, thus reconnecting us to the world around us. And this course is all about reconnecting to Nature and her life supporting elements.
When the inside dog, accustomed to the stale air and other smells within the home, is let outside, there’s a marked reduction in its ability to track game. The outside dog has no trouble retaining its natural propensity.
The International Breath Institute found that 70% of the body’s toxins are released during exhalation. Although we probably know that the main waste product of breathing is carbon dioxide, which the delicate alveoli must release and exchange for oxygen and other gases in our inhalation, the exhaled air is filled with other deadly poisons, including VOCs or volatile organic compounds. CO binds to hemoglobin.
Exhaled air contains methanol, isoprene, acetone, ethanol, alcohol, ketones, hydrocarbons, and water. It’s almost as if we make our homes and offices, with their artificial heating and cooling systems recycling our exhalations, into that bell glass and we’re the canaries. However, unlike the proverbial miner’s canary that dies from bad air, we humans degenerate via the law of vital adaptation to our toxic conditions, blaming our ailments on everything else. One disease - Toxemia… Most people get adequate nutrition (though barely, but you do not see scurvy, beri beri and many malnutrition issues in the West), its more the TOXINS in the food, water, and air and electrosmog that ages us and makes us sick.
Certainly, there are many contributing factors that are outside this discussion. The point here is that, no matter what your circumstances may be, taking time to be conscious of breathing deeply is of a far vaster benefit than it may appear to be. So, take time during your day to do three connected deep breaths.
CONCLUSION ON LIGHT/PINEAL/Circadian AND KEY POINT IN ENERGY MEDICINE!
If not THE KEY POINT, so PLEASE MEDITATE ON THIS!!
Life is based on a deep and profound relationships. With nature, each other and the universe. Heartmath has shown a heart to heart synchronization in HRV of mother and newborn. Similarly we need to synch up, reconnect and bond to Mother Nature. This is one of the MAIN themes of my book and this course, if not THE main theme.
In oriental medicine, that daily patterns of individuals are associated with the level of health they maintain. Imbalanced responses to specific rhythms, seasons and their associated cycles are related to physical and emotional problems. Harmony within our life processes is related to our communion between our bodies and the environment. Isn't internal integration a mirror of our integration with ALL OF LIFE (people, animals, plants, nature, work, etc).
Perhaps literally and symbolically our longevity may be related to our ability to integrate and synchronize ourselves with the planetary and solar-stellar energies that surround us.
The Pineal gland and its interdependence with the rest of the body holds the KEY to the mysteries of our aging as well as our potential agelessness!
Enlightenment and its deep connection to the ideas of Light, interconnectedness and harmony and synchronization has a very direct connection to the pineal gland/third eye but because the body itself is so deeply interconnected, it is the WHOLE BIOFIELD. We need to reconnect, synchronize and harmonize our Biofield within and without, in our health, relationships with others and the ultimate relationship with our True Self, the God within.
More on this in module 8 (The Pineal also releases DMT which we'll look at in connection with meditation). So there's MORE!
The pineal gland has been known in ancient civilizations such as the ancient Egyptians (eye of Horus), the Indian mystics as the Third eye (or Ajna chakra), the "seat of the soul" by Rene Decartes to name a few. Interestingly, even the Vatican has a Giant Pine Cone! We'll come back to the Pineal in Module 8 and its connection with mystical experiences and DMT.
If not THE KEY POINT, so PLEASE MEDITATE ON THIS!!
Life is based on a deep and profound relationships. With nature, each other and the universe. Heartmath has shown a heart to heart synchronization in HRV of mother and newborn. Similarly we need to synch up, reconnect and bond to Mother Nature. This is one of the MAIN themes of my book and this course, if not THE main theme.
In oriental medicine, that daily patterns of individuals are associated with the level of health they maintain. Imbalanced responses to specific rhythms, seasons and their associated cycles are related to physical and emotional problems. Harmony within our life processes is related to our communion between our bodies and the environment. Isn't internal integration a mirror of our integration with ALL OF LIFE (people, animals, plants, nature, work, etc).
Perhaps literally and symbolically our longevity may be related to our ability to integrate and synchronize ourselves with the planetary and solar-stellar energies that surround us.
The Pineal gland and its interdependence with the rest of the body holds the KEY to the mysteries of our aging as well as our potential agelessness!
Enlightenment and its deep connection to the ideas of Light, interconnectedness and harmony and synchronization has a very direct connection to the pineal gland/third eye but because the body itself is so deeply interconnected, it is the WHOLE BIOFIELD. We need to reconnect, synchronize and harmonize our Biofield within and without, in our health, relationships with others and the ultimate relationship with our True Self, the God within.
More on this in module 8 (The Pineal also releases DMT which we'll look at in connection with meditation). So there's MORE!
The pineal gland has been known in ancient civilizations such as the ancient Egyptians (eye of Horus), the Indian mystics as the Third eye (or Ajna chakra), the "seat of the soul" by Rene Decartes to name a few. Interestingly, even the Vatican has a Giant Pine Cone! We'll come back to the Pineal in Module 8 and its connection with mystical experiences and DMT.
As Herrera et al. suggest (1), light may be critical for humans, just as it is for plants and bacteria. Nature has not deprived humans of the advantages of exploiting light. The role of melanin in the process described above has not yet been fully explored, although the melanin could conceivably absorb visible light and then emit the absorbed energy in the infrared band. That could power appreciable EZ buildup, charge separation, and therefore energy to run the cell.
They address a mystery of ocular function that remains unsolved: the retina stands as one of the most avid of the body's consumers of energy; yet nearby capillaries are remarkably sparse, and therefore seemingly unable to meet those energy needs. Herrera et al. argue that the missing link could be melanin (a black substance in certain tissues that absorbs all wavelengths), which exists in unexpectedly high concentration in the eye. If melanin were a light antenna, collecting numerous photons, then that concentrated energy could drive metabolic processes just as they do in green plants. Melanin could resolve the energy problem.
First, melanin is an ancient protein, which may have been present at the inception of life. Second, its distribution is ubiquitous not only within, but also among, living organisms. Third, melanin in brain tissue increases with ascent up the phylogenetic ladder, reaching a peak concentration in man; it is invariably found in the brain's strategic, highly functional loci. And, melanin responds to light, with semi-conductive properties. Hence, the provocative idea that melanin may be centrally involved in transduction of light energy into chemical energy gains traction from this evidence.
They address a mystery of ocular function that remains unsolved: the retina stands as one of the most avid of the body's consumers of energy; yet nearby capillaries are remarkably sparse, and therefore seemingly unable to meet those energy needs. Herrera et al. argue that the missing link could be melanin (a black substance in certain tissues that absorbs all wavelengths), which exists in unexpectedly high concentration in the eye. If melanin were a light antenna, collecting numerous photons, then that concentrated energy could drive metabolic processes just as they do in green plants. Melanin could resolve the energy problem.
First, melanin is an ancient protein, which may have been present at the inception of life. Second, its distribution is ubiquitous not only within, but also among, living organisms. Third, melanin in brain tissue increases with ascent up the phylogenetic ladder, reaching a peak concentration in man; it is invariably found in the brain's strategic, highly functional loci. And, melanin responds to light, with semi-conductive properties. Hence, the provocative idea that melanin may be centrally involved in transduction of light energy into chemical energy gains traction from this evidence.
What does it feel like? Soothing Sensations of when the sun comes out from behind the sun on a cool day. Like a runners high, releases endorphins.
Heat – too much heat is stressful and fatigue on the body, but just the right amount at a certain NIR wavelength
Controlled warmth is desirable for increasing circulation, detoxifying the body, boosting the immune system, increasing metabolism, reducing pain in the joints and lower back while increasing flexibility.
Think of why you “warm up” before exercise.
No UV, completely safe.
Heat – too much heat is stressful and fatigue on the body, but just the right amount at a certain NIR wavelength
Controlled warmth is desirable for increasing circulation, detoxifying the body, boosting the immune system, increasing metabolism, reducing pain in the joints and lower back while increasing flexibility.
Think of why you “warm up” before exercise.
No UV, completely safe.
COMING SOON!