Differentiation
Between the
Internal and External "Parasites"
The
colloids of life in your blood (i.e. protits)
develop according to the terrain of the blood.
At some stages of their development they are
outright pathogenic and parasitic. They
constitute the true fungus among us. These are
our internal parasites.
Professor Enderlein called these parasites
ENDOBIONTS (from the Greek "endon" =
internal and "bios" = life). We can
never separate ourselves from them. We
co-exist in a mutually symbiotic relationship.
We give them a vehicle for life, they give us
blood forms like platelets, without which we
couldn't exist. The endobiont appears in all
mammalian species and has shown evidence
through some of its developmental forms to be
of a plant nature. Our symbiotic union with
them evidently occurred millions of years ago
as our species grew into existence. Without
some blood clotting mechanism in place,
mammals could have never evolved.
From my own perspective, this in no way
counters the idea of creationism as God simply
created this incredible plan with astounding
brilliance. It even throws a new wrinkle on
the story of Adam and Eve. When Adam (the
beginning of man) first partook of the apple
(plant), his form on earth was forever altered
and he would hence experience physical death.
The internal parasite (which actually looks
like a snake or serpent in the blood when
you're dying) would one day see to it.
Now you can draw your own inferences however
they suit you. The most important thing is
that the internal parasite, the endobiont, is
a concrete, indisputable and absolute element
of human anatomy and physiology. It just
happens to be unknown (or ignored) by
traditional western medicine.
The
External Parasites
The
internal parasite which exists in us always,
is in contrast to external parasites to which
we occasionally come in contact. This is where
the germ theory actually holds relevance. This
is the area of external microbes and parasites
that when taken to extremes, intensifies into
infectious diseases and epidemics.
Surprisingly, without having even the
slightest idea of pleomorphic biology,
medicine through hygiene, has accomplished
much in this area. The fact is, opportunistic
bugs, bacteria and viruses are all over the
place, including inside you, me, and others.
Some of us get sick and some of us don't. As
far back as the plagues of the dark ages some
lived and some died. Nobody knew why.
Could it be that pH balance, mineral balance,
nutritional balance, all have something to do
with which bugs thrive inside us and which
don't? Absolutely. Disease producing organisms
love off balance metabolic conditions. It's
just like Pasteur had finally admitted, but
nobody was around to hear. Until somebody
listens and metabolic balancing catches on,
the "experts" will be left confused
and scratching their heads wondering why some
people exposed to certain bacteria and viruses
get sick and die, and some don't.