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Sacredstar
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This is in response to anther thread where this subject came up.
Dr. Paul Pearsall
Psychologist Pearsall had a personal experience with "energy cardiology" when he had hip cancer. He went on to study heart transplants and how the background of a new heart could affect its recipient; for example, one man began to yearn for spicy foods and to study Spanish before he knew that his donor had been Hispanic. He finds evidence in the experiences of heart transplant recipients to support his claim that the heart thinks and the cells remember.
He has gone to study and work with a research team with other organs too since the release of his book 'Hearts Code' in 1998. This book includes true stories of organ transplant patients and what they reveal about where we store our memories. It states that the heart thinks, feels, remembers, loves, and hates. It communicates the information and memory stored throughout its life to every cell in the human body. This is the astonishing theory being drawn from current research on cellular memory. It states that 'Hearts Code' presents one of the most important medical, social and spiritual discoveries of our time - that the heart, not the brain, is the very essence of our being.
But I recommend if you are interested in this subject, that you also view the scientific papers at www.heartmath.org.
New Electrophysiological Correlates Associated with Intentional Heart Focus
Rollin McCraty, M.A., Mike Atkinson, and William A. Tiller, Ph.D.
Published in Subtle Energies.
The Physiological and Psychological Effects of Compassion and Anger
Part 1 of 2
Glen Rein*, Ph.D., Mike Atkinson and Rollin McCraty, M.A. Journal of Advancement in Medicine, 1995:8(2): 87-105. Reprinted by permission.
http://www.heartmath.org/research/science-of-the-heart/soh_20.html
More on the heart
Anger “biggest predictor of heart disease”
18/11/2002 15:59:00
Hostility levels may be a better predictor than high cholesterol or smoking for predicting heart disease, say US researchers. The findings suggest that health providers should examine the effectiveness of providing psychological interventions for individuals with high hostility levels, say authors of the new study published in the journal Health Psychology.
Previous studies have suggested that anger is linked to the development of heart disease. In this study, researchers sought to determine whether hostility was an independent influence or a contributing factor to disease development.
The team, led by Dr Raymond Niaura of Brown Medical School in Rhode Island, used a sample of 774 men whose average age was 60. The men’s hostility levels, blood fats, fasting insulin, blood pressure, body measurement index, weight-hip ratio, diet, alcohol intake, smoking and education attainment were assessed over a three-year period beginning in 1986. Results showed that incidences of heart disease were more common in men with higher levels of hostility than in men who had other known risk factors such as high cholesterol or alcohol intake, or who smoked tobacco.
being love
Sacredstar
Dr. Paul Pearsall
Psychologist Pearsall had a personal experience with "energy cardiology" when he had hip cancer. He went on to study heart transplants and how the background of a new heart could affect its recipient; for example, one man began to yearn for spicy foods and to study Spanish before he knew that his donor had been Hispanic. He finds evidence in the experiences of heart transplant recipients to support his claim that the heart thinks and the cells remember.
He has gone to study and work with a research team with other organs too since the release of his book 'Hearts Code' in 1998. This book includes true stories of organ transplant patients and what they reveal about where we store our memories. It states that the heart thinks, feels, remembers, loves, and hates. It communicates the information and memory stored throughout its life to every cell in the human body. This is the astonishing theory being drawn from current research on cellular memory. It states that 'Hearts Code' presents one of the most important medical, social and spiritual discoveries of our time - that the heart, not the brain, is the very essence of our being.
But I recommend if you are interested in this subject, that you also view the scientific papers at www.heartmath.org.
New Electrophysiological Correlates Associated with Intentional Heart Focus
Rollin McCraty, M.A., Mike Atkinson, and William A. Tiller, Ph.D.
Published in Subtle Energies.
The Physiological and Psychological Effects of Compassion and Anger
Part 1 of 2
Glen Rein*, Ph.D., Mike Atkinson and Rollin McCraty, M.A. Journal of Advancement in Medicine, 1995:8(2): 87-105. Reprinted by permission.
http://www.heartmath.org/research/science-of-the-heart/soh_20.html
More on the heart
Anger “biggest predictor of heart disease”
18/11/2002 15:59:00
Hostility levels may be a better predictor than high cholesterol or smoking for predicting heart disease, say US researchers. The findings suggest that health providers should examine the effectiveness of providing psychological interventions for individuals with high hostility levels, say authors of the new study published in the journal Health Psychology.
Previous studies have suggested that anger is linked to the development of heart disease. In this study, researchers sought to determine whether hostility was an independent influence or a contributing factor to disease development.
The team, led by Dr Raymond Niaura of Brown Medical School in Rhode Island, used a sample of 774 men whose average age was 60. The men’s hostility levels, blood fats, fasting insulin, blood pressure, body measurement index, weight-hip ratio, diet, alcohol intake, smoking and education attainment were assessed over a three-year period beginning in 1986. Results showed that incidences of heart disease were more common in men with higher levels of hostility than in men who had other known risk factors such as high cholesterol or alcohol intake, or who smoked tobacco.
being love
Sacredstar
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