What happens in big, happens in small. As
above, so below. This post only really makes sense if you believe that humans, as
a whole, not individuals, have gotten out of control. The big things. Poverty,
disease, war, inequality, injustices, child abuse, famine. And on a more local
level – although local to all localities – gun crime, knife crime, well ANY
crime actually, political correctness gone mad, binge drinking, domestic abuse
etc etc.
Humanity seems to have lost its way somehow.
So, from that (and actually more, but won’t go into that now as it is the more esoteric
areas, such as our planets own aura being filthy from the not so high radiation
that humans are pumping out) came these thoughts about humans and the
overpopulation situation. And because there is the concept that what happens in
big, also happens in small.
And so was thinking about what happens when
we cut ourselves with a knife (by mistake of course!) What actually happens
when we cut ourselves? Is the healing process where a damaged area needs to
have cells multiplying, quickly and in quantity to heal the cut area?
Apparently this is not the case. What does
happen is actually is this: Cells repair and replace. Regenerate. They don’t
OVER multiply to make up for any lost cells, they simply replace like with
like, so that if you killed off 100 cells, 100 cells would replace them. Now,
think of that and look at the human…3 million humans have now grown to 7 billion.
So, it seems that we are not in a healing process at all. Further questions
needed to be asked (to the world wide web), specifically what would cause cells
to multiply quickly and quantitatively. And of course it came up immediately
with Cancer. Which was not unexpected. So, no surprise there.
Check this out – by the way, our own cells
are utterly awesome. Huge respect for my body: The characteristics of normal
cells Normal body cells have a number of important characteristics. They can
•
Reproduce themselves exactly
• Stop reproducing at the right time
• Stick together in the right place
• Self
destruct if they are damaged
•
Become specialised or 'mature'
How cancer cells are different Cancer cells
are different to normal cells in several ways. They don't die if they move to
another part of the body and
• Cancer cells don't stop reproducing
• Cancer cells don't obey signals from other
cells (or from the main signaller)
• Cancer cells don't stick together (are not
connected) • Cancer cells don't specialise, but stay immature (What is my
specialisation?)
• Cancer cells create and develop their own
blood supply
The bits in brackets in the above lists are
my own words.
Of course, when a foetus is growing from
conception a similar kind of process is also happening, i.e. a very rapid
multiplying of cells. However, the difference is, is that the cells know
exactly what they are doing, grow exactly to what is required, stop multiplying
at the exact right time and are cohesive. They also become specialised which I
take to mean that they become fingernail cells or brain cells or whatever.
Skilled and talented at their particular expertise.
On reading these things about cells, a
recognition of human behaviour became apparent in all of this. We, as humans (remember,
this is MY BELIEFS ONLY, I am not saying this is how it is – although for me
this IS how it is, but I understand that others don’t believe what I believe)
have, on the whole, started to behave like cancerous cells. We don’t stop
reproducing – overpopulation, we don’t obey signals (and in my mind that signal
is God and Creations signal, i.e. we have become disconnected), we don’t
specialise – we don’t necessarily, as
individual human beings, follow what our individual human purpose is, let alone
our overall human purpose. And finally we humans have now created our own
‘blood supply’.
This blood supply is what I see as our
reminder of what we are supposed to be doing. I.e. what our purpose on this
planet and born as humans is. So, my beliefs are that we are here for a God and
Creation reason (religion – not necessarily an organised one, but having a
religious pathway of some sort), we are supposed to be fulfilling a job for
them somehow and that reason would be the blood supply – a flow from one to the
other. Venal and arterial. To and fro. A two-way process.
But we have lost our connections and so have
had to manufacture our own blood supply – and our new reasons and purposes to
live, the things that make life bearable and worth living, our own manufactured
‘religion’, things such as making money, the financial world, things such as politics,
football, careers, entertainment, drugs, etc etc. So, have we become cancerous?
Next questions for me to ponder will be what are
the cures for cancer? How far along is the cancer that humans on this planet
have? What cure, if any, is there for humanity?
I guess that will be for another post….
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