4 Commonalities of Spontaneous Remissions

Notes transcribed from Evolve Your Brain: The Science of Changing Your Mind by Joe Dispenza.

I latched on to the piece about people who have put disease into spontaneous remission.  The lecture is about so much more.

Eyb_seminar_dvd

ONE

"There is a mind with will that is so much greater than my will
That has a mind that is so much greater than my mind and it has a love for life and a love for me that is so much greater than my love for life
So they reasoned that
If my will could match its will
If my mind could match its mind
If my love for life could match its love for me
Maybe it would actually step in and do the healing for me

And so they began to develop a relationship with this mind
They took the time out of their day to interact with it
Even though they couldn't see it, or smell, or taste it, or hear it or feel it
They said if it's giving me life, and if it’s giving me life I know it exists

So they said I will have to give it some directions
I have to give it some orders
I have to give it a template
I have to give it some plan to follow
And if I can keep giving it a plan
Maybe it would do the healing for me
If I just got out the way

You see we are riding on the back of a giant
We just need to learn how to whisper in its ear.”


TWO

"It was my thoughts and my reactions to my life that created my disease.  They didn’t say it was my husband who left me with three kids, or I was abused by my father who was an alcoholic.  They didn’t say I am woman or a minority, and that is the reason why I have this condition; or this event happened in my life.  They didn’t say any of that - they said it was my own internal thoughts and reactions that created my condition, and as we said that constant feeling and thinking and thinking and feeling over a period of time kept the body at status quo, and because the chemistry was still the same, it was that same redundant chemistry that began the push the genetic buttons that cause disease."

THREE

"I have to reinvent myself.  I got to become somebody else.  I can't be the same person.  And they began to ask themselves some really great questions.  I call them frontal lobe questions.  Questions like: What would it be like to be happy?; Who in my life do I know that is a happy person?; What would I have to change about myself to live in joy?; What is it that I do or how is it that I react that makes me feel this way? And how can I control that?; Who in history do I admire?; Who do I want to be like in history?  And as they began to ask those questions - and wait for the answers - they began to make their brain work in new sequences, in new patterns, in new combinations.  And anytime we make the brain work differently, we are making a new mind.  Mind is what the brain does.  Mind is the brain in action.  Mind is the brain at work.  So they began to change the way their brain was working just by thinking about it  Do you think you can change your brain just by thinking?" 

FOUR

"When I was thinking about this new person that I want to become... they began to retreat from the environment so that they could began to think greater than the environment or no longer let the environment cause them to think and stimulate the familiar circuits in the brain."

Will Franco

Will Franco

Will Franco is the Founder and CEO of jiveSYSTEMS, a video email and web video marketing system. He is also an internet marketing consultant and marketing automation coach.

His personal mantra is, "Think-Automate: Do it, Automate it, Delegate it, or Ditch it"

He regularly writes posts in the jiveSYSTEMS Blog on a variety of business topics. In addition, he has two personal blogs, one that he calls his business notebook, and one that he calls his personal journal, where he writes about his adventures into the quantum realm and the meaning of life.

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