Mitchell Meyer.com

How Modern Medicine Fails Us Artist name
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Good morning, everyone. Hope everybody's doing all okay. I would like to call this how modern medicine fails us, and

explain my thoughts on it being entrenched in the system for quite a few years with quite a few things which I may touch on. I believe I have a unique perspective on what's going on. So again, how modern medicine, and I use modern in quotes, by the way, fails us. You, me, everybody today.

I believe, rather, I know, medicine is divided into two equal and distinct portions. I call one portion mechanical side and the end other portion, the spiritual side. The mechanical side is the side of the doctors, the physicians, the surgeons, those who give you medicine, those who take things from you. I hate body parts. And the spiritual side is your mental connectivity about the whole thing you and I believe they're equally justified as equals. In other words, one is not more important than the other, as much as you may believe it is, or been taught that it is, it's not, and the spiritual side is just as important, and maybe in some circumstances, or maybe all a little bit more important than the physical side. Because if you look through various articles on the website that you're currently on, there's a lot of spirituality in there, a lot about the human thoughts. And the human thoughts are very important if you're in a situation, in a medical condition, and you have a very poor attitude, chances are you're going to bring more poor things with you, and that includes poor things on the physical side. If you have a very upbeat mental attitude, which sometimes is very, very hard, and this is the impetus of this article, then you're going to bring very, very good things on you, and things are going to turn out quite well. So that's the framework here, and I want you to understand that and put yourself in your past or current situations with that in mind. So we have the physical side. Let's discuss that first. Here's where the doctors reside. They've been going through medical school, and they know the ins and outs and, yeah, I'm sure it would be a hard school to go through. They know the medicines to take, the medicines not to take, I think, I think, but they live in this mechanical, physical side, do this and get this result. If that doesn't work, try this and get this result. Okay, that's where they are. They come in in their little white lab coats, and they sit probably in a superior position to you. I don't know if they're just taught that in school or what. And then they start rattling off all these names of things which you have no clue what they're talking about, because they're all They're all the medicinal names are whatever they call it, fi lapta, Bada, Kumbh, chain like, blah, blah, blah, the list goes on and on, and you sit there and bewilderment because you don't know what they're talking about. And it's designed this way so they sound superior to you, even though they just sit there and go through it every day and just prescribe things now again. I'm not saying they're not trying. Don't get me wrong, I don't believe most doctors, and I use that term most very, very

skeptically, because I don't believe all of them. I think most are very, very good, and they believe in what they do, and they try in what they do, but they sit there and they rattle off all these things to you, and you just sit there and go, Uh huh, uh huh. And you give your body to them to basically experiment on because they are quote, unquote, practicing medicine on you. So they go and do their thing, and they send you home. Now comes the the spiritual side, when you if you have a disease, and I, for one, have had one, I'm sure you can you see that in my last articles, I'll give you a little synops of what it was, but I don't want to get into too much. 25 years ago, I had a disease that they call cancer, and I went through 36 weeks of chemotherapy, which lasted, I think it was three or four hours each. 136 weeks, so nine months. And that was all done through the physical side. And they all did a good job. You know, at least the nurses did. They plug you in, they check your blood work, blah, blah, blah. But in 36 weeks, I was done. Out the door, they kicked me, said, you're done. Now. You just gotta have a colonoscopy every X X X years to make sure it doesn't come back. And by the way, will it come back? Well, we don't know. Can it lead to other cancers? Well, we don't know. You see, the list goes on and on. So you go home, and now, if you're like a lot of people lately, the last thing you think about before you go to sleep is this disease, and the first thing you think about when you wake up is this disease. So it's continuously on you. And you received, here's kind of the key to this article. You received no empathy from your doctor, none whatsoever. They just did their physical thing and said, Go home. We'll see how you are next week. Not any empathy, like I've been there. I've done that. And wouldn't that be nice if some of these doctors in these fields? Because let's admit it, there's so many strains of cancer these days and growing exponentially. It's pathetic. That's another podcast. There's got to be some doctors that have gone through what you have done, some oncologists that can sit across that table with you, navigating the physical side, to have some empathy with you, and say something like, yeah, that happened to me too. I remember feeling that. I remember getting that here's what we did. But no, it's not that way. It's that emotionless, empathetic, less doctor, and I believe that's where we're being failed. Because we go home, we get the information. We have all the questions still and they're not being answered. So we start generating our own results, sometimes to the right, sometimes to the wrong. We generate our own answers to our own questions, because no one else is there to answer them for us. I remember trial number one, but called number 125, years ago, it was through a very big organization, and I'll only give you the initials of it. It's MC. After it was all said and done, I remember getting a phone call from him, Well, Mr. So and So, you did well. You threw it. How did we do? I said you did well in getting rid of the cancer, I hope, but you did terrible in empathizing with the people and helping them through their daily struggles, which, again, as I have said before and will reiterate, is just as important, maybe so even more important. I said, you failed that one, and I'm going through it again 25 years later, with a whole different regime, whole different type, and the same thing exists. They haven't got any better. Oh, go to a group meeting. Well, I can't get to a group meeting. I don't even know where they are, so they just throw that go. To a group meeting. They can't get there. There isn't a group meetings by me, so I'm left, like others, with many questions. And you know what all you'd really want is a hug from somebody that had it and said, Listen, I've been there. It's gonna get better. I know it'll be better. And they try to throw you into all these trial things, or all these experimental things, just go, it is only gonna last three weeks. But then when you talk to somebody who's really been through it, you find out, well, that three weeks is really six months. But they don't have any idea. The doctors, you know, they just hear what they hear. This is a whole nother. This is another article too, because we can talk about kickbacks. But I digress. They don't know, oh, it's only going to be three weeks. Sure. Have you put your body through it? How did you do would you do it again? See, there's where the lack of empathy comes in, and that's what a cancer patient or any patient going through life altering, life altering medical conditions is looking for, and they're not getting it in modern medicine. And that is where they're failing us, folks. They're failing you. They're failing me, and I hope, hope you're everybody's healthy, okay, but this is where we're being failed today, and this is how they're failing us. So I hope this article helped you. Hope maybe somebody could come up with some ideas to get this fixed. I don't know if it's gonna happen anytime, really, really soon, but it needs to be it needs to at least be addressed. With that being said, I'm gonna say Namaste, to you all. God bless you all. Love you all, stay strong. That is so important. I know it's so little, you think, but a place such a big picture in your overall recovery. Thank you.
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