What Makes for a Healthy Body?
by Bill Haggard
Originally published in the September/October 2018 issue of Truly Alive magazine
So much has been written about the operation of the body; libraries, colleges, and medical schools are devoted to its study. It’s worth understanding a bit!
While serving in the Air Force during the Vietnam era, I was an aircraft electrician. I repaired fighter jets, helicopters and cargo planes. I worked on their nervous systems (electrical wiring). Wiring went from a power source to a component, such as an engine, landing gear, a machine gun, a cargo door, etc. Nothing happened to any of these components unless a command was given. Like turning on a switch, the energy flowed down a specific pathway to the component that needed to operate. Sounds like what happens when the brain tells the body to move an arm, wiggle a finger, or walk across the room. However, if the pathway has a break in it, the message does not get through and nothing happens.
Yes, aircraft, and even your automobile are complex and all created things have operating principles. If these principles are known and followed, they will work well for you. You don’t have to be a mechanic, an electrician or a doctor to figure things out.
Our body vehicle that gets us around was created by God and has operating principles, also. It was not created with defects in its original design. When the sperm fertilized the egg, a miracle began to happen. We were knit together in our mother’s womb by the hand of God. For most of us, all of the information and coding needed to form a “normal” living child was provided and continued in stages and sequences over time to completion (birth). When the child becomes an adult, he or she should be living a healthy, strong, vibrant, clear-thinking life to last 120 years, according to scripture. However, today only an abbreviated life of 60 or 70 years might be expected, if we are violating the laws of health along the way. If this is you, then your body will likely break down sooner than it would otherwise.
If your health provider does not know the basic principles or fundamentals for maintaining health and longevity, they cannot be your guide. A good health care practitioner knows the basic principles or fundamentals for maintaining health and longevity. A Doctor of Oriental Medicine (DOM) taking pulses and checks your tongue. A practitioner of Iridology looks into the iris of the eye and reads the story of health long before a problem becomes systematic. A Reflexologist palpitates the feet and hands and looks for tender spots which tells them where the problem areas are in the body. If these approaches and others like them were combined in diagnosing, many serious problems could be avoided. Issues would be noticed and corrected before they became problematic.
Another huge oversight in the natural healing of our bodies is that we give very little emphasis to elimination: pooping, peeing, spitting (expelling congestion), sweating and breathing properly – all of which are extremely important. If we don’t eliminate, we intoxicate. If we are intoxicated, it sort of looks like Alzheimer’s doesn’t it? (Something to think about.)
In the 1930-40’s and 1950’s, enemas or other means for moving the bowel were the main cures for most health issues. If enemas continued to be the main source for reclaiming health, perhaps health issues would not be as abundant as they are today. Now I’m not talking about the little disposable Fleet enemas, but the bag or bucket enema that holds 1-1/2 quarts of water. Better yet, reclaim your health in a more significant way with a colonic! One colonic is equivalent to approximately 20-30 enemas, without the mess and odor.
Love, Bill
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