Tuesday 17 September 2019

On An Appreciation Of Life


A word about our bodies, and the intricacies thereof, in perhaps fuller appreciation of life.

Our bodies are extremely fascinating and intricately designed.  Just two examples, the two sides of a coin, as it were.  

First: Hyperglycemia, or high blood sugar.  It turns out that when there is too little vitamin B6 in the system, an essential amino acid (a protein product) called tryptophan malfunctions and is changed into a substance called xanthurenic acid.  This can damage the pancreas, which, among other jobs, produces insulin, which is needed to bind with sugar in the bloodstream and transport it out and into the cells and tissues for energy production.  If the blood sugar builds up too high, it ‘spills’ out into the urine, and becomes a symptom of diabetes, which can wreak all kinds of havoc on the body, including cataracts and gangrene.(1)  So: the old ‘for want of a nail’ lesson in life.

Second, and the other side of that coin: Hypoglycemia, or low blood sugar.  This is perhaps even more complicated than the above process; but in its essence: When the adrenal glands are not functioning well - a condition called ‘adrenal exhaustion’(2) - they can’t do their jobs, one of which is to secrete a hormone that controls the levels of insulin being produced by the pancreas.  In the absence of the controlling factor, the level of insulin builds up above a normal range, and too much blood sugar is escorted out of the bloodstream into the body tissues.  This deficiency leads to such conditions as fatigue, blackouts, and alcoholism - the latter being the effect of the brain crying out for ’Sugar!  More sugar!’ and the person translating this into such as more of that before-dinner sherry that they have become accustomed to nipping at, or the before-during-and-after-dinner cans of beer. or the boxes of chocolates that aren’t lasting as long they used to, as a signal of pending hypoglycemia.(3) 

All very clever stuff.  Certainly beyond any mere evolutionary process to come up with.

Not to say that that part of the subject is any less complex.  It turns out, from a close reading of the historical record - by one man in particular, an intrepid researcher by the name of Zechariah Sitchin (who taught himself how to read Sumerian clay-cylinder script, to get into the oldest records of civilization on the planet) - that Homo sapiens sapiens was crafted on this planet by the combining of the DNA of the indigenous hominids with that of a race of ‘ancient astronauts’ from a planet - a very eccentric member of this solar system, whose orbit is 3,600 of our years (and thus the basis of the counting system of the Sumerians) - that the Sumerians called Nibiru, meaning 'Planet of Crossing'.  Which project was filled with much trial and error.(4)  And then ‘we’ got settled on.(5 )  With a female Annunaki scientist doing most of that ‘leg work’.  Name of Ninmah, according to the Sumerian records.

But I digress.  A little.  

But just to note: ‘We’ are mede up of models that came from some superior Source themselves.  And given the amount of intricacy involved in the making of the vessel, giving the spirit inhabiting ti an opportunity for expression, 

it would behoove us to have a little more respect for our Source than we are showing these days.

A good lesson for today.   


footnotes:

(1) Although, interestingly enough, if there is sufficient magnesium in the diet/body, this can override the deficiency in vitamin B6, and keep this process from unfolding.
   As I say: a complex organism, we are.  Or to say, rather more accurately: our body is. 

(2) brought on by too much stress on the body.  From various sources, including poor nutrition.  Another subject in itself.

(3) I remember in my youth a film entitled ‘Lost Weekend,’ wherein the lead actor (Ray Milland, for you film buffs) portrayed a businessman who got blind drunk on the weekends.  And think as well of the more recent ‘Days of Wine And Roses’ (Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick).  I don’t know why it has taken ‘us’ so long to recognize this symptom for what it is.  Alkies obviously are craving a fix of some sort; and it can’t be that hard to trace it down - not to the alcohol per se, but what the brain is frantically signaling that it needs to function properly.
   Actually, I do know why we are so slow on the uptake.  (A design flaw???...)  
   There’s no money in it for the medical-pharmaceutical complex.
   Having insidiously become the medical-pharmaceutical-government complex.

(4) Including two-headed creatures, and two-faced ones, and malfunctioning ’models’ “including eye and eyesight diseases, trembling hands, an improper liver, a failing heart…rigid hands, paralyzed feet, dripping semen…”   Quoted in ‘The Anunnaki Chronicles: A Zecharia Sitchin Reader’ ed. by Janet Sitchin; quoting from an early Sumerian text (p. 171).   

(5) With one particular major difference between us and our creators, to keep us in our place, as it were, subordinate to them: the length of our telomeres.  Which are substances kind of like shoelace tips at the ends of our DNA strands which control longevity.  As we age, these grow shorter.  And can actually be made to lengthen; a ‘trick’ that modern medicine has caught on to.  
   Although I’m not sure that they have fully uncovered the science of our gods.
   Although I see that some of our modern scientists have been bought off by our EMs to link the human body to a machine, in a process called Transhumanism.  The point of that caper?  Even more control over us than they already have.
   Anything to keep from having to earn one's wings the correct way.

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