Chapter 10 (Continued)
MISCELLANEOUS QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
22 (Q) Why do MS symptoms tend to worsen in relation to stress, certain viral infections and vaccinations against them?
(A) Some of the symptoms of MS (such as dry mouth, tremors, blurred vision, urinary retention, and constipation) are due to a relative increase in innervation from the sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system (as innervation from the central nervous system becomes progressively less dominant). The effect of stress, certain viral infections and vaccinations against them is to cause a further increase in sympathetic innervation, thus potentiating these symptoms. Moreover, some viruses and their vaccines exert a direct or indirect neurotoxic effect. The combination of doubly increased sympathetic innervation plus neurotoxicity can aggravate (or cause to surface) a wide range of MS symptoms.
23 (Q) Why do antiviral drugs seem to help multiple sclerosis?
(A) By inhibiting viral infections, they tend to eliminate that source of increased sympathetic innervation and possible neurtoxicity.
24 (Q) Is there any drugless way to decrease heightened levels of sympathetic innervation and thereby reduce some MS-related symptoms?
(A) Vibratory medicine represents a long-term solution to the problem. As a temporary, palliative measure, you might try taking (as directed on the label) Passion Flower Fusion. It is a natural sympatholytic, relaxant, and anticonvulsant. The readings often recommended it in cases of epilepsy as a non-habit forming substitute for Dilantin and phenobarbital. It may also be helpful in curbing the muscle spasms associated with spinal cord injuries. As a non-alcoholic substitute, you might try Passion Flower capsules or tea (available from health food stores).
25 (Q) In treating MS, does the vibratory administration of gold have any effect other than tending to eliminate the lack of that mineral in the system?
(A) Yes. It also promotes central nervous system regeneration--even to the point of almost creating a new brain. For that reason, the readings very often suggested its use in treating neurological problems totally unrelated to gold deficiency states, such as Down's syndrome, polio, stroke, and spinal cord injuries.
26 (Q) Is it possible to overdose on gold administered vibratorially?
(A) Definitely. You may become headachy, develop a bad taste in your mouth, become anemic, and experience other unpleasant reactions characteristic of heavy metal toxicity. To avoid that occurrence, be sure to stay within the parameters of vibratory medicine specified in this book.
27 (Q) Do any readings on MS recommend taking gold chloride by mouth instead of (or in addition to) vibratorially?
(A) Yes, several. Apparently, in these cases, the gold deficiency was diet-related, or at least could be helped by an oral gold supplement. Presently, colloidal gold appears to be a viable alternative to gold chloride for oral administration.
28 (Q) Can you suggest a good laxative?
(A) Yes, Innerclean
. Cayce recommended it a number of times as a gentle, natural laxative.
29 (Q) If only the vibration of a substance (and not the actual substance itself) is transmitted into the body via vibratory medicine, how is it beneficial?
(A) My impression from the readings is that one or a combination of the following mechanisms may be at work in any given situation:(1) the body responds as if the necessary substance is physically present,
(2) the body is stimulated to create the necessary substance, or
(3) the body is encouraged to increase assimilation of the necessary substance.
The readings clearly indicate that, in treating MS with vibratory gold, the latter mechanism predominates.
30 (Q) Does childbearing put a woman at risk for developing MS?
(A) Yes. Depending on the circumstances, pregnancy can leave a woman nutritionally bankrupt and with key glands that are spent. That occurrence, coupled with an MS predisposition, can trigger the condition. The prevalence of multiple sclerosis among young mothers just starting a family can be explained in this way. It also explains why women with MS experience a worsening of symptoms for months after childbirth.
31 (Q) Why do MS symptoms frequently abate during pregnancy?
(A) In addition to the natural immune system supression related to pregnancy, the glandular disturbance often associated with multiple sclerosis may also be at least partially corrected or offset during such periods.
32 (Q) What is one of the best ways to prevent MS?
(A) Adhering to the dietary advice in Chapter 4.
33 (Q) What foods are high in gold?
(A) Shellfish, carrots, and salsify (oyster plant).
34 (Q) Why is MS more prevalent in some geographical regions?
(A) Some of the factors responsible may include variations in dietary habits, the presence of environmental toxins (especially mercury), genetic differences among groups of people, the lack of sunlight, and the ready availability of nutritionally deficient food (grown on depleted soil, milled, processed, and refined).
35 (Q) Why do women develop MS at a rate much higher than that of men?
(A) I believe it is because women are more susceptible to glandular disturbances, are more prone to develop vertebral subluxations (due to greater joint laxity), spend less time in the sun than men, and are more likely to be nutritionally compromised (due to relatively poorer diet, monthly iron loss, and the nutritional demands of pregnancy). In addition, toxic chemicals contained in hair products, perfume, cosmetics, and deodorants may also be at least partly responsible.
36 (Q) Why is muscle pain a symptom in some cases of multiple sclerosis?
(A) It may be related to the attempt on the part of muscle tissue to "wrest," so to speak, necessary nutrients from the surrounding circulation.
37 (Q) What is the relationship between vibratory medicine and energy medicine?
(A) Vibratory medicine is a type of energy medicine. The radial appliance and wet cell battery are basically energy medicine devices which, when used with the solution jar, become vibratory medicine devices.
38 (Q) Besides vibratory medicine, diet, and massage, do the readings consistently recommend any other therapy for MS?
(A) Osteopathy was recommended in enough readings on multiple sclerosis (about 1 in 4) that you might consider obtaining (on a twice per week basis) a series of 6 to 8 general manipulations--including the sacrum and coccyx--before initiating your first vibratory medicine session, and two or three times a year thereafter. Unfortunately, very few osteopathic physicians currently practice osteopathic manipulative therapy. To locate a suitable practitioner, there are a number of options open to you.1) Visit
http://www.edgarcayce.org/health/cayce_professionls_list.asp
to see if there is a Cayce-friendly osteopath in your locality.
2) Contact the A.R.E. center in your area (if any) for a possible recommendation.
3) Look in the yellow pages under physicians (osteopathic) to see if anyone advertises their specialty as OMT.
4) Contact the American Academy of Osteopathy to find a member in your area.
Some chiropractors and naturopaths are skilled in osteopathic techniques, and, as a last resort, a vibrator applied rhythmically up and down both sides of the spine may be of help.
39 (Q) What if vibratory medicine does not work for me?
(A) It is known that some individuals do not respond to vibratory medicine. Even so, if there has been absolutely no improvement in your condition after the first several months of treatment (assuming you were following all procedures correctly, your device was functioning properly, and all connections were good), consider making the following changes in the treatment plan:(1) if you were using the radial appliance, try the wet cell battery;
(2) if you were using the short-pole version of the wet cell, try the long-pole version;
(3) if you were using the general approach to electrode placement, try the specific approach;
(4) if you have not already done so, obtain the osteopathic spinal manipulations mentioned in the answer to the preceding question;
(5) strive to rid yourself of anger, resentment, bitterness, unforgiveness, prejudice, hatred, animosity, jealousy, hostility, unbelief in the efficacy of vibratory medicine, and all other negative attitudes and emotions;
(6) other options include increasing the duration of your vibratory medicine sessions, increasing both the size of the solution jar and the amount of solution, increasing the concentration of the solution, and alternating gold chloride with commercial strength spirits of camphor and/or a solution of silver nitrate (see the readings on MS for examples of these and other possibilities);
(7) because some cases of MS have recently been associated with viral, bacterial, or fungal infections, consider a course of treatment with colloidal silver and gold; and
(8) above all, get right with God by sending for, listening to, and heeding the counsel contained in the UNSHACKLED! cassette mentioned in the About the Author section.
40 (Q) Do you have any additional helpful advice?
(A) Yes. If you have not already done so, call the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation (1-800-441-7055), the Multiple Sclerosis Association of America (1-800-532-7667), and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society (1-800-344-4867) to obtain information regarding the many useful publications and services available from these organizations to persons with MS. Also, get plenty of sleep, and avoid stress, heat, viral infections, and overexertion. In addition, you might consider elevating the head of your bed 6" to 8" and wearing a copper bracelet (for MS-related inflammation), and supplementing your diet with the following (all of which are obtainable from the Heritage Store or other health food outlets): bee pollen (one of nature's most perfect foods), alfalfa (a natural multivitamin/mineral), colostrum (a natural way of supplementing the immune system), tumeric (a food seasoning said to combat MS), sunflower seeds (loaded with nutrition), phosphatidylserine (said to be a brain food), St. John's Wort (for depression), lecithin (believed to help nourish the nervous system), Jerusalem Artichoke (for pancreatic insufficiency), and Chamomile tea (for insomnia).
For a wealth of additional information on the drugless management of MS, read Multiple Sclerosis
, by Judy Graham, and visit
http://www.webspawner.com/users/directoryofmultalt/index.html
41 (Q) How would one summarize the treatment recommendations presented in this publication?
(A) First, go on the apple cleansing diet described in the answer to Question 8 above. Upon completion of the apple diet, implement the dietary suggestions in Chapter 4; at the same time, commence receiving the osteopathic spinal manipulations recommended in the answer to Question 38 above. When the first series of manipulations has been completed, begin using the wet cell followed by massage as suggested in Chapter 4. Two or three times a year, repeat both the apple diet and the manipulations. Eliminate all negative attitudes and emotions. Lastly--and most importantly--make knowing God your highest aim.
42 (Q) What do you foresee as the future of vibratory medicine?
(A) I believe that it will eventually be hailed as one of the greatest contributions to modern medicine since the advent of penicillin.
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