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The Power of the Mind
Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010
Sometimes an ugly thought, word, deed or action of another can grow into one of these clusters. They may even comprise a soul fragment from someone close to the 'host' who perhaps died unexpectedly or in fear and therefore clutched to someone they loved, knew or who was in close proximity at the time of passing. Whilst the cluster may have come from a source outside the host, it can only take residence if activated by a behavioural stimulus such as drink, drugs, or uncontrolled horror - perhaps arising after a friend or relative died of cancer and there is a fear of the pattern repeating. A general anaesthetic or intrusion into the natural immune defences by external stress factors may also perforate the auric field, providing a portal for these dense energy clusters to take hold.
This cluster, which may start out benign, instigates a programming glitch into the cell regeneration process, causing the cells to reproduce with the wrong coding and in a way that perpetuates the production of negative cluster cells. This causes the lump. Certain environments and diets nourish this lump more than others; acid foods and dark negative thoughts enable it to thrive.
If this hypothesis is correct then there would be a number of energy healing and/or complementary therapies which could help to dissipate the traumatic memory which initiated the cluster and release the dense energy pocket sustaining its life-force, recalibrating the cell replication blue-print. However, like conventional treatment programmes, the formula is likely to be most effective if the environment fostering the dense energy is neutralised.
Emotionally, the advent of cancer is likely to trigger fear. This in itself is not helpful and the patient needs consistent and reliable support from friends, relatives and if necessary outside specialist support networks. However, they should not be encouraged to go into 'victim' mode and hand over responsibility for their welfare 'carte-blanche' to third parties as this can add to the helplessness and fear of death that is prominent in our society. Death is something that is rarely talked about and can lead to fears and uncertainties that can eat away at the cancer patient. Consequently, the eventual prognosis is often pointedly avoided by doctors and supporting loved ones, who act in denial and hope the subject will go away! A sympathetic therapist who can listen passively and can even reassure them that death is purely a transition to another state of existence, one in which there is only bliss consciousness, can help. Following such discussions, it seems as if a black cloud lifts from their energy field so that even 'terminally' ill patients begin to get better. Such is the power of the mind!
Author: Joanna Bristow-Watkins www.harmonyhealing.co.uk








