At the end of May is a time to party. It marks the end of the school year for many, which coincides with Memorial Day, the unofficial start of the summer. That means diploma and resulting parties, barbecues, beach days in the summer sun, a dip in the pool, juicy watermelon and a little more time to lean back and relax.
Today we celebrate Memorial Day and remember those who have given the ultimate sacrifice for the freedom of our nation. While we honor the memories of these brave men and women, we look a bit deeper into the meaning of memory and the role it plays in our health and healing.
Memory is defined as “the cognitive process of coding, storing and collecting information.” We often correlate memory with our mind. After all, that is how we remember things. Right?
At the surface level you use your mind to remember things that happened. However, memory is not just a recall of an event or person. It’s going much deeper. Your cells have memories of love and happiness. Memory is built into the fibers of your being and reaches greater depths than we can ever remember in one life. Memories include generations, connect past to present, mother to child and current generations to their great -grandparents.
If you look at genetic disease, how is it that some people can heal themselves so that future generations do not suffer? If you have a gene for a specific disease, you also have a complementary gene built into your genetic code to cure it. Your body also has this memory. We live a very fast life and do not often stop to realize the enormous potential that our body has.
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Time and space: are we leaving the past in the past? Memories and emotions have the power to transport us to a different time and space. How does that translate into illness and illness?
The gift of genetics Your genetic code is a treasure. If you express the gene for a specific disease, you also wear the complementary gene to help yourself cure yourself.