The body contains too Many Negative
When the body contains too many negative, slowly vibrating forces, or electrons,
and its aggregate of electron vibration is consequently diminished, the result
follows that the feeling of strength—the vitality, that is, becomes depressed; we
feel weak, tired in the limbs; we possess little warmth and easily grow cold;
metabolism falls below the normal; the skin becomes pale and so causes the
overplus of negative electrons stored in the mucous membrane to set up a morbid
action of that structure. Catarrh sets in. In short, negative diseases are the
immediate result; such, for example, as nervous debility, anaemia, diabetes, catarrh
of the stomach, intestines or air passages, influenza
, cholera and diphtheria.
In these conditions the principles of physiological chemistry laid down by me may well be
called into service and improvement effected by a correct adjustment of diet.
When there is an excess of rapidly vibrating, positive electrical forces, or electrons,
raising the vitality of the nerves and blood above the normal, the sufferer becomes
easily excitable; the body is hot and inclines to inflammatory, feverish or positive
diseases, which take the form of inflammation of the lungs, measles, scarlet fever,
chicken-pox, typhoid fever, etc.
As I have already remarked, in order to understand a disease and to undertake its
cure, it is first of all necessary to form a clear mental picture of its course and
origin. With this purpose in view and a medical library at command I have honestly
tried to formulate from the initial stages a mental picture of scarlet fever, measles,
and kindred ailments; but the entire medical literature did not advance me further
than pathological anatomy, which informs us that the original cause of disease is
certain changes in the form of the cellular elements of different digestive organs, in
the explanation of which the customary technical terms are used, such as atrophy,
degeneration and metamorphosis.
By the aid of true physiological chemistry I have been enabled to trace these
mysterious incidences in the life current, learning that the cellules—the smallest
elements in the human system—require for their composition alternating quantities
of different chemical substances.
Which of the chemical elements these are, what mutual relations exist between
different organs of the body, and by what means they enter the organism, it has
become my intricate and absorbing task to observe.
In this investigation it was gradually made clear to me that every organ and every
tissue is dependent upon the introduction of proper nutritive constituents into the
blood.
Healthy blood formation is the one great essential requisite to the maintenance of
health or the cure of disease. And such blood must be formed from a full supply of
the requisite chemical factors, including all of the mineral ingredients.
Dech-Manna Diet.
This is a point commonly overlooked, and my organic nutritive cell-food termed
Dech-Manna-Diet is especially designed for the purpose of its enforcement.
In order to obtain a clear understanding of the various forms of disease which
attack the human body, it is requisite to know more of the condition we call
inflammation.
To this end we may consider successively the following facts;
namely, that electrons so fill the body as to bring its condition to one equivalent to
that of a magnet; that electron lies ranged beside electron; and, that no alteration of
location takes place.
Effect of Injury.
But now, suppose some part of the body is subjected to a morbid irritation by some
injury. The affected electrons are set into increased vibration and acquire an excess
of force above that of the neighbouring electrons. For, the faster a substance
vibrates, the more its force increases—a fact with which we are familiar in the
action of boiling water and the generation of steam. In proportion as the affected
part exceeds the adjoining parts in the vibration of its electrons, it becomes more
positive than they and gradually involves these adjoining electrons in the
accelerated process of vibration.
So, at the seat of injury a centre of positive action
is brought into existence which becomes the more intense the longer it continues.
Since the electrons in this locality fall out of their regular positions, in consequence
of the general attraction and gravitate toward their appropriate poles, they are found
to exercise a reciprocally repellent influence upon each other, by which action the
vibration naturally increases still further. This causes pain; for the pronounced
opposition of the electrons is attended by a feeling of considerable unpleasantness.
The blood, which is an efficient conductor of electro-magnetic force, becomes
involved through its ready mobility. The affected part becomes filled with blood. It
swells and becomes inflamed;—quickened metabolism and greater warmth are
produced by the increase in blood contents and by the more rapid vibrations of the
electrons. If the inflammatory process progresses further, the tissues finally
disintegrate, partly because of blood stagnation, but chiefly because of the supra-
normal vibration of the electrons. Either the tissues are shattered by this motion, or
melt in the resultant heat. They undergo purulent disintegration, as we may call it.
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