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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 126

instance, why is it that when you overexert yourself a common cold or influenza may develop? In order to provide the virus with the opportunity to thrive, one has to stress the organism to produce the appropriate chemical changes.
Such ideas are common and almost universally accepted today, yet they have not been applied to research or therapeutics and are either ignored or misinterpreted.
Everybody is trying to find out where the AIDS virus has come from, and nobody seems to realize that it might have been with us all along, the only difference being that now the conditions are ripe for infection within millions of organisms.
Today we see the disease in its epidemic form simply because a great number of organisms have been undermined through venereal diseases, drugs and general pollution, so that their immune systems have become incapable of combating the virus.
From the knowledge we have today on the mutation of microorganisms under stress (chemical changes within the body), we may deduce that the virus could have sprung from an endogenous process of constant mutations of different micro¬organisms.
In the early stages of the AIDS epidemic, there was already a great number of humans who automatically manifested the virus through a series of mutations because of a great predispo¬sition towards this virus. These human organisms then became the potential sources of infection for other humans who were similarly prepared to accept the virus.
The live organism is in a dynamic state which accepts change, be it large or small. It is in a state where an electron can move between orbits and therefore disappear or reappear, determining whether the organism will be thrown off balance or will remain in balance. For example, how many times during the day does your mood change? When you are in a bad, depressed or anxious mood, there are deep changes within your system that fluctuate according to your external and internal conditions. It is obvious that your mood not only changes temporarily but also for longer periods of time and may, depending on the stress, change permanently. In the case of chronic depression we may say that the electron which formerly maintained the balance is