Why Dr. House Doesn't Prescribe Living Clay

house-home2

Living clay. It can be used topically. It can be used internally. It can be sprinkled on your granola, or included in a smoothie. It can be added to soups or stews. In each case, using certain living clays will do something that is naturally beneficial for your body. How beneficial? How about drawing toxins to itself like leeches suck blood, but without the “ickiness?” How about safe and effective relief for mosquito bites, bee stings, and snake bites? How about relief from skin rashes, eczema, psoriasis, and burns? How about for helping to heal nerve damage (neuropathy), or even prevent the amputation of a body part, and radiation poisoning?

Sounds too good to be true, except that it is true. Truth can sometimes be far more wonderful than conventional wisdom, and yet, if it’s not familiar, or told to us on TV, we are quick to disbelieve. When topically applied or ingested in small amounts, living clay draws harmful stuff to itself, and out of the human body. When toxicity is removed from a diseased body, it tends to get better on its own. The clay is not healing the body, it simply helps it restore balance. A balanced body is self-healing. You might expect anything that works like this must be in every doctor’s bag of tricks, including the celebrated Dr. Gregory House, right?

Wrong.

Dr. House, principal character played by Hugh Laurie in the Fox television series “House,” probably wouldn’t need the pain medication he’s addicted to if he considered some natural approaches, including living clay, which not only gently draws pathogens and toxicity from the body, but has an uncanny ability to help facilitate healing in some areas where medical treatments have been particularly ineffective.

However, it’s unlikely he’ll be using living clay anytime soon because, in spite of its many beneficial properties, this natural, life enhancing substance hasn’t been embraced by his profession. The problem? It’s a product of Mother Earth.

Unlike fossil fuels that are rapidly being depleted, using living clay in medical practice is not a supply problem, it’s more so a problem of efficacy, and propriety. Certain families of living clay appear to be extremely compatible with human physiology, enough so that they demonstrate remarkable therapeutic effects. However, they are not patentable. More over, using tools that help restore health would mean a reduction in the cost of health care. And as you know, presently, such costs are only projected to rise. The “best minds” are trying to figure out how to control the rate of increase in health care, when the answer is to help make more people healthy again, and to sustain their health. Mother Earth has always been here, ready to help with resonant, life enhancing, living and intelligent material.

In contrast, Dr. House’s medical bag has a laundry list of synthetic, patented, expensive, toxic, and holistically antagonistic pharmaceuticals. The intent, operational strategies, and methods behind these products is the obstruction, disruption, alteration and manipulation of the body’s natural physiology. It is a classic adversarial relationship, with the doctor as the knight in shining armor, who speaks in a foreign tongue and uses laboratory-derived chemical weapons to overcome the malady and make the patient well again.

Except that the “overcoming the malady” and “well again” parts, more often than not, remain just out of reach, close enough to remain hopeful (as long as the insurance coverage is in effect), but out of reach nonetheless.

Moreover, a patient’s post-treatment experience is often characterized by non-reversible life changes which may result in prolonged breathing, but not restored health, and optimal living.

The contrast between the standard tools of today’s Dr. House and clay, is in the term “living.” When we realize that the earth provides the raw materials for everything that we need to create every earthly experience, we discover that the provisions include raw materials for the human body itself.

The human body, and other carbon-based life forms, are fully compatible with the molecular and energetic structure of certain types of living clay. Some animals know this and, when they’re in some form of physical distress, or have sustained an injury, they will go to a watering hole and cover themselves in the mud. The healing properties of the clay are activated with water… not polluted, but structured water. The mixture will behave differently from situation to situation, because, being a living substance, it will respond intelligently, according to the need of the individual. This statement does not apply to drugs.

The term “living” means that an interactive communication is occurring between the clay, facilitated by its activation in structured water, and the cells within the body itself.

In her book, Hexagonal Water, Nature’s Ultimate Solution, MJ Pangman describes the “normal” water dipole with a positive (hydrogen) and negative (oxygen) charge, with the respective atoms forming a “V” of 104.5 degrees.

This is not a hexagonal, or structured water molecule. When the conditions are met that allow a structuring event to occur, the angle increases to 109.5 degrees, which allows the formation of an open water network. Structured water is optimal water.

This is considered to be the perfect tetrahedral angle for water where each water molecule serves as (both) a donor and acceptor of 2 electrons. This angle and the resulting geometry give rise to a hexagonal network– the same molecular arrangement found in ice. — MJ Pangment from Hexagonal Water: The Ultimate Solution

The significance of this minor change, and the giving and receiving of electrons, is in the coherent, unobstructed, and virtually instant communication that is facilitated between the water, that which it bonds with, and the cells within the body itself. In addition to the communication, the attractive force of the water dipole, combined with that of the highly negative (beneficial) ionic charge of the living clay and the oxygen, means that it has a very large drawing power when it comes to attracting positively charged pathogens to itself, to be eventually escorted out of the body.

A body that has had its pathogen overload significantly reduced, and balance restored (homeostasis) demonstrates its innate ability to heal itself. It never forgets how. However, we tend to forget that it can, then feed it materials that continue preventing it’s natural operation.

I literally thought it was a joke when I first heard about living clay, then I read the book that goes by the same name. The author goes by the name, Perry A~, which rolls off the lips in such a way as to remind you a certain brand of spring water.

My attitude has changed as my understanding of human physiology, and humanity’s natural place in the Natural Order.

With Mother Earth providing for everything else, including the raw materials that make up the synthetic drugs that Dr. House relies on, it is now quite evident that She also provides raw materials that make up, and are beneficial for the repair and even re-growth of the human body itself. Why? Because the materials of both share a very subtle, but real harmonic resonance, a life force energy, and an innate ability to communicate in the same life enhancing language. And quite simply, medical science and research has not yet learned to imbue its products with such ability.

I had a conversation recently with Perry on Talk For Food, and you can get a feel for what I’m talking about by clicking the link below.

LISTEN

Click here to listen to my conversation with Perry A~, author of Living Clay, and founder of The Living Clay Company.

BUY

You can purchase living clay by visiting shop.understanding-mms.com

Please follow and like us:

Written by 

Related posts

2 Thoughts to “Why Dr. House Doesn't Prescribe Living Clay”

  1. Very good article; very informative; I have used Living Clay for 2 years now; sell it also; IF we could only get this information to everyone… the benefits of clay are not isolated to anyone and all could benefit.

    1. Thank you Paul.

      Clay is a natural resource that we’ve simply overlooked… but that’s changing.

      Adam…

Leave a Comment