4.
Dietary Consultation
There is a connection between a person’s blood and diet. Each person is a unique creation with specific characteristics. No two people on earth are alike – having the same fingerprints, lip prints, ear lobes, irises, or voices (not even identical twins); therefore not all people should eat the same foods.
Blood is the blueprint of our health, the élan vital that has sustained us since time immemorial. A single drop of blood, too small to see with the naked eye contains the entire genetic code of a human being. The DNA blueprint is intact and replicated within us endlessly – via our blood.
Our blood also contains aeons of genetic memory – bits of specific programming, passed on from our ancestors in codes we are still leaarning to comprehend. The code residing in our blood type is perhaps the most important to decipher in our attempt to unravel the mysteries of blood, and its vital role in our existence.
To the naked eye, blood is a homogenous red liquid. But under the microscope blood shows itself to be composed of many different elements. The red blood cells contain a special type of iron that our bodies use to carry oxygen. White blood cells, far less numerous than the red cruise our bloodstreams like ever-vigilant troops, protecting us against infection.
This complex, living fluid also contains proteins that deliver nutrients to the tissues, platelets that help it to clot, and plasma that contains the guardians of our immune system.
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The Importance of your Blood Type
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You may not know your blood type, unless you a blood donor, or needed a transfusion. Most people think of blood type as an inert factor that only comes into play during an emergency. In reality, it is the driving force behind human survival, changing and adapting to new conditions, environments and food supplies.
Why is our blood type so important? What is the essential role it plays in our survival?
Your blood type is the key to your immune system. It controls the influence of viruses, bacteria, infections, chemicals, stress; the entire assortment of invaders/conditions that might compromise your immune system.
The immune system works to define ‘self’ and destroy ‘non-self’. This is a critical function, for without it your immune system could attack your own tissues by mistake, or allow a dangerous organism access to vital areas of your body. In spite of its complexity, the immune system has two basic functions: recognizing ‘us’ and killing ‘them’. Your body is like an invitation-only party: If the prospective guest can produce the correct invitation, Security allows him to enter and enjoy. If an invitation is lacking or forged, he is forcefully removed.