Guest guest Posted September 20, 2008 Report Share Posted September 20, 2008 Some years ago I started sending the following quote to all of you about Bannister breaking the four-minute mile: " A great English physiologist got the Nobel Prize for a book in which he proved that the human body cannot possibly run the mile faster than five minutes, and I think that within a week after the publication of that book a totally obscure Finn broke the five-minute mile barrier; and WITHIN, I WOULD SAY, SIX WEEKS ALL OF US HIGH SCHOOL KIDS ALL OVER THE WORLD HAD RAISED OUR OWN SPEED BY SIX SECONDS HERE, NINE SECONDS THERE, and 10 or 12 years later, when the four-minute barrier was broken, the same thing happened. " We stand on the shoulders of our predecessors. " - Drucker, " Managing The Nonprofit Organization " Well, my young friend, you have done the equivalent, with curing yourself, of breaking the four-minute mile. And the fact that doctors write books like the one Drucker was talking about here goes to show you how stupid doctors, including the ones that sit on the Nobel Prize committee, are. And also how smart people who actually do things, like ignore the doctors and break the four-minute mile record, or ignore the doctors and cure cancer anyway, are. As people often pointed out to me, there are a lot of things that cure things. There's muscle testing, Reiki, EFT, energy medicine; now if you want me to name your favorite one this is going to be a very long list, so I'm not going to try to do that. I think you get the point. People succeed in curing things with all these things, including just going to the doctor and taking a drug. These things are the five and even – some of them – ten-minute milers; and they just won’t get you there at all, with some things. Like agonizing over diet, which I also do -- I don't cure anything with it, but it makes me feel good, agonizing that way, so I'm careful about what I eat. But I sure never killed a virus by eating, or not eating, things. Viruses have to be killed directly, instantaneously, which you may have already done. But even if you haven't, if you've just gotten a signal and a grin came across your face, you've done the equivalent of killing one. And that, with cure, is the equivalent of running a four-minute mile. And a wider point here is that Bannister, and the people who came after him, changed the whole methodology of running forever. People just don't run now, or wear the same kind of running shoes or other gear, the way they ran before Bannister came along. Record breakers cause change in everything. Now, since what we've done is not widely broadcast -- I haven't been on TV yet, have you? -- this change isn't spreading through the world very fast. There are a handful of people, a few thousand of us maybe, who know about this, and most of us are silent, or actually have forgotten we knew about it. Yes, people cure things and then forget they can, including close friends of mine who I have had to remind over and over again, like Bill Pelle. And I try to be as rude as possible when I remind them. Because we have to be that. Because we have to be rude loud and obvious. We need to treat this like a medical emergency. What does an ambulance do? Is an ambulance surreptitious? Tactful? Are ambulance drivers considerate of other drivers right to use the road? When an ambulance driver sees another car that in a hurry, doesn't have time to pull over, the guy is obviously late for work, does the ambulance driver slow down in consideration of that person's preoccupations? We need to turn on the siren and barrel through, whatever that means. If you're running to the bathroom to vomit you shove your husband, kids, and or total strangers out of the way if they're in your path. Because vomiting is urgent -- you've got to get that stuff out of you -- your body knows that. No, we've got to be rude loud and obvious, like an ambulance. Because the world needs to know about all the records we've broken; there are thousands of us wandering around worldwide, some in Australia, some in New Zealand, some in the USA, both hemispheres, probably all continents, who've done things, each single unique individual one of us, that no human being on earth ever did before in all of recorded history. At least not the way we've done it -- not as fast, not as easily, not as incisively, not as completely, not as fleetingly, not as lovingly. People get a negative medical test on herpes in 10 days! I once watched a woman stop a cea outbreak in the middle -- her face went from red with pustules to normal with dried little bumps that were going to fall off soon. Five minutes! That's a record. I just know it is. And you're a record-breaker. Because, even though I was the first to cure something this way, you've probably cured something that I didn't. That's a record, isn't it? You did the Four-Minute Cure! Even if all you got was a finger movement, just a little signal, and a good feeling in your chest, well, you probably had something in there that nobody else ever cured, and now it's gone. So this is what you have to recognize about yourself. That for you, everything has changed, and you can live with that, and in that, by breaking records every day, taking out things nobody else has, and feeling good in ways only you can know. You know, Mandela once said: " The greatest victories won by human beings are usually never seen, nor appreciated by anyone but the victor. " Now imagine Mandela in that prison, where he spent 27 years, with some short-term, immediate challenge to overcome that, at least for that day, might have been greater than any challenge ever faced by anyone in recorded history, such as defusing someone who wanted to assassinate him; and imagine that he never wrote about that challenge, or told anyone about it, but somehow managed to alter that person's feeling, that person's commitment, so that assassination never happened. What a victory that would have been, and it would have been a victory that no one but Mandela ever knew anything about. And I imagine that something like that is probably why he said what I just quoted to you. Well, these things that we remove, that we feel so good after removing, are coming at us to kill us. And when we face them it's just us and God, God there standing be beside us, and maybe a few angels and spirit guides along with God, and if we know that, and can feel how alone, and yet how empowered by the higher forces we are -- use the force, Luke -- we understand that we are making history, every time we remove or install something, or come to know something that we couldn't have ever known with our five senses. And we understand that we are history, we are part of history; we are the force that is shaping things, as well as just helping ourselves. What we're doing here is way beyond helping ourselves. That's the way it is, when you do something that's never been done before. Because we've made this public: you and I have. And at some point, inevitably, every human being who walks the Earth, even if they are completely unwilling to do it, will know that it is within their reach, within their grasp, within their power to cure. b Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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