Treatment vs. Regenerative Approach to Solving Problems

The preeminent philosophy we are offered, growing up as children in America, is to treat a symptom, in order to manage its difficulty and pain levels. As a child, this is simple enough to stomach because a cold or flu might come along which is seen as a temporary sickness — the symptoms are treated with medications and the whole thing is only a transient unpleasant experience lasting a few days. As an adult or when more serious symptoms occur throughout life, the medical community can sometimes describe the symptoms as likely to last a lifetime or that the persistence of the symptoms will be a lifelong liability for the individual.

What’s sad about treatment-based thinking is that it accepts that a root cause of the problem is unlikely to go away, be solved or be healed. Rather, you must live with these symptoms until you die — and you must therefore treat them. In this equation, the drug, device and treatment companies benefit financially as you become more dependent on them the further you drift into ‘Treatmentville’.

What’s strange is that the breakdown of human tissue is not that complex of a complex either. Were these top-of-their-class, book-smart medical students to simply review the segment entitled ‘Understanding Body Chemistry’, they would recognize this widespread phenomenon of excessive acidic chemistry within most individuals in modern society. At that point, they may even think twice about whether they should inject, radiate, or prescribe more acidic compounds into an already acidic body. Yes, indeed — in order to achieve expedient results of suppressing symptoms, the entire medical community ubiquitously uses acidic products to treat patients who are already suffering from over-acidity.

The regenerative-based approach to solving problems is completely different. If I am using this philosophy of approaching my body in such a manner so that it can regenerate, then it allows me to open up and try and gain an understanding of why it has degenerated in the first place. I can then seek to solve the source of the degenerated problem of my body, and bring it back to full function. This is a worthy goal and a target worth aiming for— I am not interested in simply treating or masking the symptoms of a current problem. I am committed to full self-actualization in terms of health and wellness.

In essence, the regenerative-based approach allows for the goal to be formulated to completely solve a health problem and return the body back to harmonious balance. Only after this goal is formulated can it be reached. If the goal is never set, and if it were dismissed that the body could actually heal, then the body should certainly not heal and it becomes a sad, self-fulfilling prophecy. So one of the biggest values of the regenerative-based approach is that the intention is set to completely solve the problem.

If I use the regenerative-based approach, then, after I have set out to do so, I can continue using this approach to find out what is causing my health problem. I can then seek to understand true science and universal truth about the nature of reality, chemistry, and how I can reverse the cause of the conflict. Then, I can logically apply my own discoveries to remove the causes or inputs creating the conflict or imbalance within the body. Once the negative causes are removed, then I can simply allow my body’s own ability to work unobstructed, to clean, detoxify, regenerate and heal itself, and I can observe as the body does its thing.

Nature exists by means of simple laws and principles — concepts of duality, balance, and cause and effect. We too are a part of this natural equation of all of creation. We should not forget that, and it would be wise to humble ourselves and respect the power of this simplicity. We should hold this awareness and gratitude as we maintain this approach to allow for natural regeneration.