z -Voice Within Brought Me Here

Heal your mind documentary!!!

The Power of LIFE OVER Death are in your Tongue… Your Mind doesn’t CARE what you TELL IT…. It Believes EVERYTHING you SAY !!!

Repeat after me: To overcome cancer you have to be a tough cookie with NO raccoon eyes.

Your words are like directives and commands to the subconscious mind that is waiting and watching. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1r5HHuW_Vc
It’s about making informative choices: the Omega Masticating juicer can be used by those healing non-malignant conditions. Those wanting to heal cancer would do best using the Norwalk, Pure or Champion Juicer along with a separate press. You can learn more here: https://gerson.org/gerpress/gerson-guide-to-juicers/Manage

Hi Ken. I have been taking a B17 regime for 10 weeks. Had a scan last week.                   Rapid growth, spread to abdominal wall. Not sure where to go from here!! ~ Anonymous
YouTube b17. Dr. Tony Jimenez in Tijuana awesome doc uses b17- 2000mg per day. I have been taking 100]mg at night and 1000 [n morning since Oct.  I am still here – I buy it from tj supply on li e the brand is Novodalin. I take it with zinc. Be aware there is Novadalin and its fake! Google Dr Tony Jimenez. Good luck!! https://www.cancertutor.com/laetrile/
What should I take alongside B17? Worldwithoutcancer website quote: http://www.anticancerinfo.co.uk/extra_info_faqs.html
Dr. Contreras of the OASIS Hospital, Playas de Tijuana, Mexico. He recommends        taking pancreatic enzymes, vitamin C, pangamic acid (B15), shark cartilage, vitamin A (emulsified), Barley Grass, antioxidants and other nutrients.  The idea is to attack the cancer very aggressively, without doing any harm to the patient, while strengthening the immune system.

For those people who have had chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery, or damage     from the cancer itself, there are other supplements which help – see the website www.healthgenesis.com (and others). http://www.anticancerinfo.co.uk/extra_info_faqs.html

                                                                                                                                              Cancer free: Sarah Hershberger, second from right,                                                                                                                                                        is pictured at her family’s roadside stand in Homer Township.                                                                                                                                 Also pictured are her father and three of her siblings.

If you like pristine country side you would Love the Amish Country of Holmes County.      It is here in Ohio, doctors at Akron Children’s Hospital, in April 2013, diagnosed 10-year-old Sarah Hershberger with lymphoblastic lymphoma, an aggressive form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The Amish girl’s parents, Andy and Anna Hershberger,  when told  85 percent of the patients treated for this illness survive, agreed to a two-year chemotherapy program. After the first round of the chemotherapy, the tumors on Sarah’s neck, chest and kidneys were diminished.

In June 2013, after a second round of chemotherapy treatment made their daughter extremely ill, the Hershbergers decided to stop the treatment. They took this action against the advice of cancer doctors who warned them that without the chemotherapy, Sarah would die.

The hospital authorities, believing they were morally and legally bound to continue treating the girl, went to court to take away the parents’ right to make medical decisions on their daughter’s behalf.

Andy and Anna Hershberger, in September 2013, took Sarah to an alternative cancer treatment center in Central America where doctors put the girl on a regimen of herbs and vitamins. When the family returned to the United States, hospital scans showed no signs of the lymphoma.

On October 13, 2013, an Ohio appellate court judge granted Maria Schimer, an attorney and licensed nurse, limited guardianship over Sarah Hershberger. The guardianship included the power to make medical decisions on her behalf over the objections of her parents.

Shortly after the court ruling, the guardian sent a taxi out to the family farm near             the village of Spencer, Ohio to fetch Sarah and take her to the hospital in Akron for additional chemotherapy. When the cab arrived at the Medina County home located          35 miles southwest of the Cleveland metropolitan area, the family was gone.
A few weeks later, pursuant to a welfare check on Sarah, deputy sheriffs went to the       farm to find the place unoccupied. No one in the Amish community seemed to know  where the Hershbergers were hiding out. If members of this Amish enclave knew the family’s whereabouts, they weren’t cooperating with the authorities. Attorneys for the Hershberger family appealed the guardianship ruling to the Ohio Supreme Court on  issues related to religious freedom.

If Sarah Hershberger’s fate remained in her parents’ hands, and she died from the cancer, Mr. and Mrs. Hershberger could face negligent homicide charges. Moreover, people who helped them avoid the authorities could be charged as accomplices to the crime. The right of religious freedom does not match the right of a child to receive life-saving healthcare. Being given vitamins and herbs as a cancer cure, while less painful than the immediate aftermath of chemotherapy, did not qualify, in the eyes of the medical profession and the law, as adequate healthcare.

On December 6, 2013, according to media reports, the court appointed guardian decided not to force Sarah Hershberger to undergo further chemotherapy treatments. The family’s whereabouts were still unknown.

In October 2015, MRIs and blood work performed at the Cleveland Clinic revealed that Sarah Hershberrger showed no signs of cancer, and appeared to be in perfect health. As a result of these medical tests, the family judge ended the court-ordered guardianship of the Amish girl. However, when the Hershberger’s returned back into the states. They lived in Lancaster Pa. with relatives until the all clear was given for them to go back to there home in Eastern Ohio. Sarah now cancer free wondering if her mother and father would end up in prison for doing what they felt was right.

It appears that the parents’ decision led to their daughter being cured. Why threaten them with jail for that? If they’d continued with the chemo, and she’d died, would you be calling for the arrest of her doctors? Even the court appointed guardian says she no longer needs chemo. This whole thing is nothing more than the medical establishment getting embarrassed by someone without a US government approved license.
And on the completely unrelated subject of religious freedom, your argument is incredibly short sighted. You plainly favor relieving the parents of their rights, in order to protect their child. What are the limits to that concept? Should the state take custody of a child if there’s a gun in the home? Should the state take custody of a boy who’s allowed to play football? A girl with a body mass index higher than 30? Should parents with unfavored political views lose their children? That appears to be your position, in this case. Their actions were successful. The girl was cured. The parents even allowed the proscribed treatments, until they judged the cure to be worse than the disease. Your only complaint   is that they’re Amish. Should all Amish children be removed from their homes?            That’s the plain inference you’re making.

Government is not common sense. Government is brute force, constrained only by mindless bureaucracy. If they’re allowed to imprison us for our personal beliefs, we’re      all slaves already. There’s no middle ground. The state doesn’t allow middle ground.    Every power they claim inevitably becomes absolute, and usually arbitrary.

Why are some people more driven than others???

Some people just have that “Get up and go,” don’t they??? This goes by many names –  self-control, grit, motivation, drive, persistence, work-ethic. When it comes to succeeding in a particular pursuit, this thing is a pretty important factor, too.  One study found that self-reported grit was more important than IQ in predicting a number of outcomes in eighth-grade students:
Self-discipline measured in the fall accounted for more than twice as much variance          as IQ in final grades, high school selection, school attendance, hours spent doing homework, hours spent watching television (inversely), and the time of day students began their homework.
It’s a pretty common trait among successful people, too. Will Smith is a pretty successful guy by most standards. Why is that? Here’s what he has to say about success: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5nVqeVhgQE
Why are some people driven like this, while others are happy to tread water? Will Smith   is clearly a very competitive guy with a huge work ethic. Where other people would be happy to take a day off, he keeps on working. Where other people slow down, he speeds up. Sounds exhausting! What is behind such a huge amount of effort?

Genetics

I don’t believe that this is a fixed trait, because different people in different cultures and environments will react differently. But I do think genetics play a role. Many traits studied by psychologists have a strong genetic component, according to studies of twins. So maybe the traits that lead to being driven also develop more easily in people with a certain set of genes. I’ve never believed the idea that “All people are created equal.” Clearly, some people are born with better aptitudes in different areas than others. We’re not all born with the same mental blank slate, onto which we can develop in different directions.

Intrinsic Motivation

I’ve talked before about the difference between intrinsic motivation (something you do for its own sake) versus extrinsic motivation (something you do for a reward). Could it be that lack of drive is simply a symptom of doing something for a reward, as opposed to doing it for the pure pleasure of doing it?
Michael Jordan talks in his autobiography about how the massive amount of effort he put into training was fun. For him, getting up early every day to practice free throws was scarcely an effort. Not that it’s right to say he has no work ethic — of course not — only that what seems on the outside to be a strong work ethic and “forcing” of behaviours is sometimes less so from the inside. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=7&v=JA7G7AV-LT8
The key thing to keep in mind here is difficulty. In the video above, Will Smith mentions the idea of talent versus skill, of honing your craft for thousands of hours until you’re a master. This gels with Ericsson‘s work on deliberate practice, and the well-known (thanks to Malcolm Gladwell) idea that it takes 10,000 hours of deliberate practice to reach mastery, regardless of the starting skill level. Deliberate practice is different to just doing the activity. It is doing it at the outer limit of your ability. It’s working on those hard, frustrating aspects that actually take effort. If you find a pentatonic scale difficult but could jam along to “She Loves You” all day long, then working on the former contributes to your 10,000 hours but the latter does not.
If your craft is something that naturally appeals to you, and you enjoy, so much the better, but you’ll still have times you don’t want to practice, or you’d rather relax, or where you’ve reached a plateau that is hard for you to progress past. Therefore, to the extent that skill level plays a role in success, it stands to reason that grit, persistence, and work ethic is going to play a role in success regardless of intrinsic motivation. As beneficial as it may be, don’t make the mistake of thinking that intrinsic motivation is necessarily synonymous with “high” motivation. I read books for intrinsic reasons, but I don’t always want to read.
You could say therefore, that success can stem from something that you’re intrinsically motivated to do, but either doesn’t require high levels of skill, or you already have high levels of skill in. As long as it’s not something mundane like eating. If you can find something like that, you’re home free, so it’s worth considering if any activities like this exist for you.
However, there is a trap here. If you’re looking for external success via something you’re intrinsically motivated to do, it could very easily switch to something you’re extrinsically motivated to do when you start seeing it as a path to external rewards. This is particularly dangerous, because as Dan Pink notes, motivation for activities only tends to be increased by external rewards when these are rote, boring, repetitive tasks. Ability on tasks that require creative thought or effort tends to be stunted by the promise of rewards. Maybe that’s why a musician’s second album is usually worse than the first?

Purpose / Meaning

Maybe some people have a greater sense of purpose behind them, and this provides         the motivation for them to keep going even through difficult times. Survival is one such purpose. It’s also hard to imaging Chinese factory workers doing 18 hour days in terrible conditions for any reason other than to survive. If they had a few million in the bank,     that would seem like an absurd course of action.
Being anchored to a purpose might keep people going. When they feel like they want to take a break, they remind themselves of what they are trying to do, and they suddenly feel the urge to continue. This makes sense to me. I think our bodies keep energy in reserve, even when we feel very tired, just in case something of high importance becomes salient. Many a times I’ve been walking down the street, tired and hunched, when I see a pretty girl walking the opposite way. Isn’t it funny? I suddenly find the energy to walk upright and stick my chest out a bit!
I imagine this as a kind of evolutionary reserve power store, just in case something comes up that might influence our ability to survive our reproduce. But because our brains are adaptable, and self-programmable, we can “install” a number of rules so our brain learns other occasions it should access our reserve power. The ability to build a sense of purpose might be one such thing. Of the top of my head, I can think of one study that backs this up, where people who reviewed their core values did better in a self-control task than people who didn’t.
The need for success itself might serve this role for some. Why would Will Smith rather  die than get off a treadmill before you? You could imagine some negative motivations behind this, like not wanting to feel like a failure, or status consciousness taken to such   an extreme level that people would rather try to beat everyone that simply deal with that issue. But it doesn’t necessarily have to be that way. Competition can be a tool, something that you use to motivate yourself but deep down understand is essentially meaningless. Beyond competition, the desire to contribute and to serve might provide that purpose. There are many examples of people being willing to put themselves through hell, even to die, for a purpose. This is something we’ve been reminded of in recent years but the mechanism has always existed.
If this is correct, the action step here is to install a purpose into yourself, to find the meaning behind what you want to do. There are two ways.

One is to determine your values, beliefs and convictions, and pick your direction based    on them. This makes sense but is very difficult.  If you ask yourself  “What do I value?”, “What do I believe?”, it would be hard to know if the answer is “real,” and not something that has been pushed into your head from one of the 10 zillion sources we’re bombarded from in daily life. How “deep” do you have to go to find your true purpose, if there is such   a thing, and where does it even come from?
The other way is to take your direction, and integrate your values into it. This strikes       me as a temporary solution at best since the two probably won’t fit together very well.      It’s unlikely you be pursuing a path  that’s in line  with your core values and not know it    on some level. The reverse is probably true as well, if you’re going in a “wrong” direction there’s probably a little niggling feeling that pops up occasionally (but you bash it back down with the perks of the job).
Career analyst Dan Pink examines the puzzle of motivation, starting with a fact that social scientists know but most managers don’t: Traditional rewards aren’t always as effective as we think. Listen for illuminating stories — and maybe, a way forward. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=11&v=rrkrvAUbU9Y

Why Your Supplements Aren’t Working

Dr. Len Lopez
CBN.com — The time has finally come: you’re tired of taking medications that are only treating the symptom. Because you want to take a safe, natural approach, you might have already tried a supplement program but have been disappointed with the results. Why haven’t you gotten the results?
This is a problem I hear about all too often, but there could be several reasons you’re not getting healthier from all of the supplements you are taking.
Inferior Supplements
You could be taking an inferior or poorly manufactured product. There are lots of these around. Unfortunately, many manufacturers focus on the price, NOT on the quality of the product. They use inexpensive nutrients that are poorly absorbed. You, as the consumer lose. Unless you know what to look for on a label, you could easily be paying for a product that’s not going to help much. Be careful of supplements sold at the big discount shopping stores. Many times, these products only focus on the price, not the quality.

Compliance

The second reason for poor results could be compliance. It’s easy to understand that you can NOT walk five minutes a day, or do only five push-ups and hope to get in shape. To reap desirable benefits, you need to walk at least 20-40 minutes or do 20-40 pushups a day. So why do so many people only take one capsule of “whatever,” when the recommended dosage is two to three capsules, twice a day?

A simple rule of thumb for many nutritional supplements is the bottle should last about one month. For example, if the package contains 60 capsules, you would typically take two per day. If the package contains 180 capsules, the recommended dosage is probably six per day, unless it is the ‘economy size’ bottle. Too many people think they    get a six-month supply of something when it contains 180 capsules, even though the recommended dosage says “six capsules a day.” Proper dosage, much like exercise, is critical in the healing process.

Food Allergies

The third problem is closely related to the first, but instead of inferior raw materials,      you may have a “hidden” food allergy to one or more of the ingredients. Common food allergens that you could be having a problem with are dairy, wheat, corn, soy, and peanuts. Read your labels. It doesn’t take much to illicit a reaction that can also interfere with the absorption of that supplement. You’d be amazed how sensitive the body is and how easily it reacts to certain foods.

Poor Digestion

Another reason that is very common is poor digestive function. If you are constantly struggling with indigestion, heartburn, and other irritable bowel problems, how can you expect to digest and absorb the nutrients to help your joints, allergies, immune system, or hormones? Address those digestive and elimination issues first; otherwise you could be wasting lots of money on supplements that aren’t absorbed. Just because you swallowed it doesn’t mean you absorbed it! The same goes with our elimination system. If you struggle with constipation or diarrhea, something is wrong and you are contributing to the toxic overload and poisoning of your body.

Pills Not a Cure-All

Supplements only take us part of the way. Diet, stress, sleep, and exercise take us the rest of the way. We might need to implement other lifestyle changes, such as eating foods that keep our blood sugar stable (low to moderate glycemic foods). Don’t skip meals! Stay away from processed, refined foods. How about making a conscious effort to reduce stress in your life? Get some exercise and get a good night’s sleep. We can’t put all our faith in the supplements.

Make stress work for you.

We’ll never overcome any health challenge if we don’t balance our blood sugar (insulin  and glucagon) and stress hormones (cortisol, adrenaline, DHEA). You can never balance your reproductive (estrogen, progesterone, testosterone) hormones, unless you balance your stress hormones, and you will never balance your stress hormones if you don’t balance your blood sugar!
Making stress work for you – YouTube

▶ 8:49
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xf_9vud9oP0
Mar 7, 2015 – Uploaded by Fox News
Stress can take a toll on your mental and physical health as well as affecting your relationships. Dr. Manny … 8:49

Kelly McGonigal: How to make stress your friend | TED Talk

▶ 14:28
https://www.ted.com/…/kelly_mcgonigal_how_to_make_stress_yo…
But while stress has been made into a public health enemy, new research suggests           that stress may only be … 14:28

Stress Management Strategies and Techniques For Mental Health …

▶ 31:42
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pqypf7EzzQo
Stress Management Strategies and Techniques For Mental Health – 31:42                               Why … you can actually make stress work …

As you can see, there is no ‘magic’ pill? It would be nice to only swallow one pill for whatever ails you, but realistically that is not how you get healthier. Too often people      are swallowing products for specific ailments like diabetes, arthritis, osteoporosis, PMS, prostate, thyroid, or menopause without first addressing the smaller issues that eventually lead up to your major health complaint.

We don’t wake up one day with a major problem like irritable bowel, allergies, high      blood pressure, loss of libido, or any other degenerative or autoimmune disease. There have probably been many little clues your body has given you: such as indigestion, fatigue, poor elimination, cravings, weight gain, irritability, loss of hair, or difficulty concentrating or sleeping. This tells us that something isn’t functioning properly.
Restoring your health is a matter of first restoring normal function. The best results I have seen come from people who follow a simple program that encompasses all of the above questions. It doesn’t matter what your complaint is — it could be fatigue, weight gain, PMS, hot flashes, heart disease, arthritis, or some other degenerative or autoimmune disease. The point is, before you start swallowing some magic formula, you need to make sure all of the key areas (digestion, elimination, hormones, blood sugar) are functioning properly. Otherwise you may be caught in a ‘vicious’ cycle, where one system throws another system out of balance.
Celebrity hypnotherapist, Marisa Peer, explains how you can reverse your age, and stay young in body and in mind. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1r5HHuW_Vc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9HN-z40kzc