Microbal Balancing information from Perelandra. Great Read! Back - TopicsExpress



          

Microbal Balancing information from Perelandra. Great Read! Back in 1996, I introduced the Perelandra Microbial Balancing Program. A number of people began working with the Program right away and reported terrific successes. But over the past 18 years since its introduction, the Program has become more and more unnoticed. During this same period, the environmental and human health pictures have changed dramatically. Climate change is causing all of nature to adjust. Animals and insects are migrating in search of new environmentally-friendly conditions. We humans are now interfacing with disease-carrying insects that weve not had to deal with before. Add to this our current high level of global travel causing regional health problems to become global health problems that know no boundaries and spread in record-breaking time. In short, we have big changes going on around us. So I think its time to reintroduce the Perelandra Microbial Balancing Program. And this time Im introducing it in new ways that will make jumping into the Program not only easier to learn, but easier on your wallet as well. First, let me give you some simple facts about microbes from the Perelandra Microbial Balancing Program Manual. (Ive included links to recent relevant articles.) 1. Microbes have existed on the planet from the beginning and have been instrumental in forming this planet into an environmentally-friendly biosphere that supports all its life forms, including humans. 2. No matter how hot, frigid or extreme the planets conditions became over those 3.5 billion years, microbes were always present. They were never wiped out. They have an unbroken chain of existence that runs throughout Earths entire 3.5 billion year history. 3. No matter how powerful we think we are, we will never win any battle we might mount against microbes. They are the masters of survival and brilliantly adjust in order to survive (mutation). They have over 3.5 billion years of practice and theres nothing we humans can throw at them that they cant survive. Some bacteria can mutate in twenty minutes. Several years ago, scientists bombarded viruses in a controlled lab experiment in an effort to determine if they could be destroyed. They obliterated the viruses and their DNA. There was nothing left. (Personally, I think this was a rude thing to do to viruses and that PETA needs to look into this! But I digress . . . ) The scientists then watched. Within 24 hours the viral DNA had re-formed and within a short period of time after that, the viruses were back. Soil Microbes Can Alter DNA In Response to Climate Change, Study Says Some facts about microbes and human health: 1. The relationship between humans and microbes begins at birth. Researchers say that prior to birth the fetus is germ-free. As the baby passes through the birth canal, or the second it is touched by the doctor or midwife during Caesarean delivery, its adjustment to microbes begins. The infant is then colonized by successive waves of microbes. Four hundred species begin to set up housekeeping in the babys gut. Many more reside on the skin, mouth and elsewhere. Only a few bacteria out of thousands of known species in the world are virulent threats to human health and welfare. Those that colonize the human body are, for the most part, working on the hosts behalf. From Birth Our Microbes Become As Personal As A Fingerprint The Secret Ingredient in Breast Milk 2. The bodys bacterial colonies are among the most dense in nature. Half the contents of the colon is bacterial. Every year each person excretes his weight in bacteria. There are very few places in nature where one can find populations as diverse and numerous as the ones found in the human body. It is estimated that the number of microbes that colonize the body exceeds the number of cells in the body by tenfold to one-hundred fold. 3. Microbes feed their host. Some help synthesize vitamins. Others produce sugars that the body wants and needs. In turn, we feed our microbes and can actually control the ratio and mix of colonies by what we eat. The Guts Microbiome Changes Rapidly with Diet How a Versatile Gut Bacterium Helps Us Get Our Daily Dietary Fiber 4. Friendly gut microbes work hard to keep disease microbes out of the body. And this is true with the other colonies located in and on the body. Consider them your very own Neighborhood Watch. 5. New research has shown how the bacteria that live in and on humans communicate with their host body and provide comfort, protection and nourishment. Colonies can initiate the bodys different complex functions through communication with one another and the bodys cells thus establishing needed timing and rhythms. 6. And finally, my favorite fact about our microbes: The number of individual bacteria in one healthy human mouth could easily exceed the number of people living on earth. (You might want to reconsider that anti-bacterial mouthwash you are using. You could be causing more damage and problems than you realize!) Some conclusions drawn from what we know about microbes and the human body: 1. Arguably it can be said that our body belongs to our microbes. They vastly outnumber any other element or system in the body. The system that comes closest to microbes in presence is our massive electric system. 2. Were never going to achieve health or successfully address disease by doing battle with our microbes. They outnumber us. Their goal is to survive and this is what they are experts at accomplishing. If we try to wage war, they will immediately do whatever is needed to survive, and they will win. Period. End of story.
Posted on: Mon, 27 Jan 2014 11:55:55 +0000

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