Books

A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 98

If you keep on hammering an organism with antibiotics, eventually, because of the strength of the stimulus, the organism will have to change its level of resistance and go to an even deeper level. Here we may cite the example of Proteus, a non-pathogenic organism (a natural inhabitant in the intestinal flora) which mutates to a pathogenic organism under continuous treatment with antibiotics given for milder infections. The overall health condition of the individual is thus degraded.
16. A relatively healthy organism is at all times in a state of "sensitive balance" with a certain degree of "unpredictability" concerning the future. Any changes that may ensue because of a stimulus will depend on the organism’s health—on all three planes—as well as the quality and intensity of the information (stimulus-stress) it receives.
Because of its very nature, a healthy organism is in dynamic balance, which it tries to maintain at all cost. When the human organism has attained this balance and is in the best possible health, it exhibits a kind of vulnerability because of its dynamic, fluidic state. It seems that everything in its environment has to work for it now, harmoniously and conclusively, if it is to maintain this optimum, balanced condition. The tendency is to easily lose such an equilibrium under a strong negative or positive influence. Moving negatively is akin to "entropy"; moving positively is akin to evolution toward a higher level of existence.
It appears it is not so difficult for a negative stimulus to break down the first defenses of a healthily balanced organism, but once disturbed the organism will put up another line of defense that is much more difficult to break down. This means the stimulus necessary to push the disorder into deeper levels has to be much stronger and more invasive.
For example, let us look at the case of a chronic hay fever sufferer.
In the early years of this individual’s life, it appeared that his hay fever condition began from "out of the blue" and without much provocation. In order for hay fever to be "suppressed" into an asthmatic condition, a very strong stressor or a very weak organism is needed. Such a state can come about from frequent