Guest guest Posted April 8, 2010 Report Share Posted April 8, 2010 Thanks very much, Sharum, and to those of you who wrote off-list. In response to some questions I've received, I'm posting what I get to be the root causes of MS by percentage of people in whom the factor is a major contributor to the disease. (Some of these factors overlap, of course, and can't actually be teased out as causative separate from some of the other factors.) Some of what I get seems to ignore conventional wisdom about MS, but I think that's when intuitive knowing is most valuable: when it encourages us to reevaluate what we believe to be true. I get: stored trauma/emotions (leading to dysregulation of the HPA axis) %50 spinal misalignment %50 vitamin d deficiency %50 drainage impairment and general toxicity %30 chemical sensitivity %15 faulty B12 metabolism %10 mercury %15 miasm/heredity %15 HTLV-1 retro Virus %10 EBV virus %10 (If I've omitted something you know to be important, please add to my list. It has evolved over time, and is probably still incomplete.) In my way of viewing, impairment in the activity of the immune system comes up as more of a symptom of HPA dysregulation and vitamin D deficiency, so it doesn't make the list of true root causes. I get MS therapies that aim at the immune system without regard to why it's dysregulated won't be curative. Two of what I now get to be the top three causative factors weren't even on my list in the first couple of years of my practice. I was a patient of Roy Swank's at OHSU until he closed his practice at the age of 90. He was forever pondering why the high incidence of the disease in northern climes and and low incidence in southern, sunnier climes. He was following 1000 MS patients all the years I was seeing him, and he said the only thing he knew for sure about location was that everyone did better if they moved to Hawaii. It always vexed him that he couldn't point to the missing factor and I so wish he'd lived to see the new information on Vitamin D. Here's a site I found very interesting with regard to MS and D: http://www.vitamind3world.com/Multiple_sclerosis.html Even though I'd been told by another medical intuitive that injury to my spine was a root cause of my own MS, for some time I considered it a RESULT of MS rather than a cause. I took a new look after one of my MS clients, whose intuitive scan indicated that Bowen therapy was important for her, wrote me after two Bowen treatments thrilled because all of her symptoms were mostly gone. (Looking back, I'm embarrassed to say that I was disappointed that she didn't want more than symptom relief when I wish I had simply shared in her delight :-) Aren't our clients/patients our best teachers? Re the HPA axis: recent studies are confirming that the more active MS lesions present in the hypothalamus (leading to greater dysregulation of the HPA axis), the more severe the disease is likely to be. I understand that it may become a bio-marker for the illness. I'm very afraid that this information will become more terrifying than useful unless there is some understanding that the reason lesions favor the hypothalamus is likely to be the result of stored trauma (and a resultant decrease of chi) in that part of the body. Again, thank you for letting me share and I hope there's something here that may be useful. Shadburne Medical Intuitive/ Bio-energy healer http://www.shadburne.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.