Porterville Recorder

Dance of the Death Seed – Part 2

- Sylvia J. Harral Sylvia J. Harral, M.ED., N.C., is the Education Director at Golden Sunrise Nutraceuti­cal, Inc.

The microscopi­st and I were looking at a TV screen attached to his darkfield microscope. Under the eyepiece of the microscope was a drop of my blood.

A finger poke, like a diabetic testing their blood sugar, gave the microscopi­st a drop of my blood which he had carefully mounted between two pieces of glass. One drop of blood reveals everything happening at the microscopi­c level of the bloodstrea­m.

Red Blood Cells (RBC’S) are in abundance. The microscopi­st drew my attention to their size, shape, and the all-important glow that surrounded them. Some were floating in the plasma untouched. Others were stuck together. One RBC looked like a pillowcase with a broom handle inside; or perhaps the roundness of Saturn with its rings stretching out on each side.

“That Red Blood Cell has a parasite inside it,” the microscopi­st said.

“A parasite! What’s it doing in there?” I was alarmed.

“Having lunch,” he said. “A Red Blood Cell contains a lot of nutrients, like a yummy Thanksgivi­ng dinner.”

The White Blood Cells (WBS’S) are our internal military soldiers, first responders, firefighte­rs, and cellular clean-up crews. Healthy WBC’S are always on a mission. Because they’re clear like sandwich bags, you can see right through them and watch wiggly things running around inside them like ants in an anthill. They’re on a mission. If the WBC detects an invader in the area, all the “ants” start running in that direction, and the WBC flows toward the problem. When it arrives, the “ants” split their direction; some run to the right and some to the left. This makes the WBC flow around the invader. Then the battle begins. Will the invader retreat from the WBC, or will it launch an attack on our soldier? Who will win the battle for our life at the cellular level?

A couple years earlier, I had watched a microscopi­c battle between a Melanoma Yack-1 Cancer cell and a group of Macrophage­s; the main, front-line fighters of our internal military. The cancer cell tried to retreat and the Macrophage­s surrounded it. They attached themselves to the cancer cell, and began to inject it with enzyme tools that would take it apart. The cancer resisted and fought back, but the Macrophage­s continued their furious activity. Seventy-two (72) hours later, the cancer cell suddenly exploded and splattered its parts in every direction. The macrophage­s left the scene in search of another cancer cell, and the janitorial/detoxifica­tion branch of the internal military were called in to clean up the mess.

The tiny, white dots that shivered in place began to puzzle me. They were not on a mission; they were waiting for something to happen. When the microscopi­st said they were “death seeds,” I about came out of my chair.

“I don’t want death seeds in my body!” I said with much concern. “How do I get them out?”

The microscopi­st reached into his file and handed me a chart of the Somatid Cycle. The chart can also be seen by entering the Somatid Cycle on Google. What a fascinatin­g study. Pleomorphi­sm is another name for the topic. Pleomorphi­c means many shapes.

The chart shows the 16 stages of developmen­t the Somatid (“death seed”) goes through. If we think of a butterfly going through its stages of developmen­t, we see four completely different shapes and functions it metamorpho­ses through. The egg is laid on the leaf. The egg turns into a caterpilla­r that eats the leaf. The caterpilla­r turns into a chrysalis that hangs on the leaf. The chrysalis opens and releases the Monarch butterfly that drinks the nectar from the flower that grows beside the leaf. The butterfly can’t crawl back into the chrysalis and become a caterpilla­r again. The butterfly’s developmen­t can only dance in one direction. The Somatid, however, can dance in both directions. It can evolve and devolve.

Knowledge of the Somatid Cycle brings understand­ing to the words of the Creator when He told us what would happen to us once our breath returns to Him. He said, “From dust you came and to dust you will return.” The Creator also said, “I am the God who heals you.” He can say those things because He has a clear understand­ing of the Somatid Cycle. He can see the Somatid advance in its stages until it takes the living thing apart, and He can see the Somatid reverse its stages as health returns to the body.

What are the steps the Somatid takes as it dances us to the dust? What are the dance steps that return us to ultimate health at the cellular level? Knowing this will make all the difference.

Until then … TAKE CHARGE! … Sylvia

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States