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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 32

What has never been taken into consideration is that before a patient arrives at a definite pathological state corresponding to an existing disease label, he goes through unexplained states of discomfort or ill health, consisting of several undefined symptoms for which his doctors are unable to prescribe suitable remedies. They can only prescribe a course of treatment if it has been recorded and described previously in the medical litera¬ture as a distinct pathological entity.
In the case of chronic disease the problem is that once a patient arrives at such an advanced pathological state, there is usually no possibility of cure; his suffering may be palliated, but by and large he must learn to live with his disease. In reality the patient was in a state of imbalance for quite a long time before manifesting the gross pathology which we call disease. It is the failure of doctors to incorporate the earlier states of imbalance within their disease framework that has prevented medicine from implementing effective preventive care.
The Model also presupposes that there is an "ideal" state of health (in reality unattainable), and also that all individuals find themselves within a "continuum" where at any given time they are in a "relative" condition of health.
The Model will not be examining the human being’s anatomi¬cal structure and physiology. That has already been done quite extensively, although a lot still has to be learned. Rather, it will be examining the dynamic, complex structure and interactions of interrelated energy fields and organizational pat¬terns. This Model is strongly based on what Einstein has said concerning all matter: "We may therefore regard matter as being constituted by the regions of space in which the field is extremely intense… there is no place in this new kind of physics both for the field and matter, for the field is the only reality."3
The Model will also take into consideration the individual¬ity and uniqueness of the human being as well as his individu¬alized response to stimuli. The fingerprint of an individual is uniquely "his" and his alone—it is his mark, his seal of identifi¬cation. We know that fingerprint patterns are specific genetic combinations that are unique in every case. These same finger¬prints that identify an individual as Mr. John Doe on the physical level have their counterparts on the emotional and intellectual levels.