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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 96

the beginning of evolutionary or degenerative processes. This jump becomes necessary for the organism to cope with the new situation created by a hostile or a positive stimulus.
Hostile stimuli are comprised not only of bacteria and viruses, but also chemical drugs (medicines). The human organism when confronted with a drug initially attempts to eradicate the drug’s toxic effects, and so re-establish order. However, when exposed to a frequently recurring onslaught of drugs, things take a different turn. A primary example would be AIDS cases. AIDS patients often have a history of multiple exposures to antibiotics for the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases acquired before AIDS becomes manifest. These antibiotics, themselves noxious influences, represent stresses that undermine the host’s defensive reaction to the AIDS virus. As a consequence, the host’s defenses retreat a "quantum jump", from the level where the virus’s effects had been contained, to a deeper level. This defensive shift actually signifies that the host is more deeply disturbed than previously; the immune response has proven inadequate in coping with this intruder. If the host continues to be subjected to the effects of strong drugs, the disturbance will penetrate deeper and deeper levels; e.g. the central nervous system—the deepest level of involvement in AIDS virus infections.
The negative influence of drugs is not only quantitative but also qualitative, the former being the visible or direct side effects of drugs upon the human organism, and the latter being the subtle, long-range impact upon the natural defenses. The long-range impact is the destruction of the organism’s inner ecology. After prolonged allopathic "therapies" a patient’s defense system becomes confused and almost paralyzed, losing its capacity to initiate curative responses because such reactions are constantly counteracted by the intervention of some allopathic medicine.
On the other hand, most of the serious alternative therapies focus on strengthening the curative abilities of the organism. If the stimulus is curative or positive, a process of regeneration will begin and ultimately a real cure can take place. But the stimulus must be powerful and specific.
The confusion which exists today in the field of alternative methods of healing is due to the fact that the so-called practition-