Private Library for Anything and Everything

Majid Ali – The Cortical Monkey and Healing (1990)

Majid Ali – The Cortical Monkey and Healing (1990).pdf
[1 Scan OCR – 1 PDF]

Description

elib.tech Exclusive… sharing elsewhere will result in being banned!This product is brought to you by Majid Ali (Integrative Health) Books/Trainings GB is a particular species of monkey native to Karnal, my birthplace. During my childhood, these monkeys lived in our town by the hundreds. They were a nuisance for the grown-ups, but for us children they were a lot of fun. I remember my father telling me how these monkeys had a peculiar habit. They did not let their wounds heal. If one of them ever lacerated his skin, he would pick at his wound continuously. He would peel off whatever little scab did form. These wounds festered for long periods of time.Putting Something Between the Monkey and His WoundIt has occurred to me that the first man to invent a bandage probably got his idea from watching a monkey (or some other animal) constantly pick at his wound. It might have occurred to him that the way to let the wound heal would be to put something between the monkey and his wound. When he got hurt himself, the lesson learned from the monkey might have taken a practical turn. A bunch of leaves, perhaps of some herbal plant, might have served this purpose. This, or something similar, is likely to have been the forerunner of our modern Band-Aid.There is something relevant in the story of Karnal monkeys to our ideas of self-regulation and healing. Time and again, I see patients who understand how their cortical condition throws roadblocks in the way of limbic healing. In our autoregulation laboratory, I demonstrate to them how their biologic profiles are composed of a host of electromagnetic or molecular events. I show them how their whole biology is sustained in an even state when they go limbic, and how it is thrown into turbulence when they go cortical. I explain to them the impact on their internal organs of talking for control and listening for healing. At intellectual and analytical levels, they seem to understand these phenomena. Yet, left to their own devices, they slide back into the calculating and competitive cortical state. They are unable to keep their analytical mind (“the cortical monkey”) out of the way of the healing limbic state.The cortical monkey loves to recycle misery, and when that is not enough, it yearns to precycle feared, future miseryIndeed, patient and persistent work is required to break long-established cortical habits and put the cortical monkey to sleep. Reviews“…people who read this book will benefit from it.” Linus Pauling, Noble Prize Award WinnerMajid Ali, M.D. is a surgeon turned pathologist, turned immunologist, turned allergist, turned ecologist, turned teacher in self-regulation. He has written eleven books and more than 75 papers in various scientific medical journals in the fields of pathology, immunology allergy, human ecology, nutrition and self-regulation. Dr. Ali is deeply committed to his work in what he calls an emerging new possibility of a molecular medicine, a medicine which seeks to reverse chronic diseases and preserve health with non-pharmacologic molecular protocols of nutrition, allergy and chemical sensitivity, self-regulation and fitness.Dr. Ali presents a new and extremely successful choice – the reversal of the disease process using autoregulation and a body-over-mind approach! Chapters include Ten Lessons Learned From Patients; The Elephant and Star Wars Medicine, Lata and Limbic Breathing; First, Do No Harm!This is a fascinating book coming from a physician who was a surgeon who became a pathologist, immunologist, allergist, ecologist, and now a teacher in self-regulation. There are many little gems here.”Norman Shealy, M.D.,Past President, American Holistic Medical Association“The new book…is a wonderful overview of the problems with ‘standard medical care.’ Dr. Ali mixes fact with philosophy into a unique and readable book. One can now clearly understand the illogic of “modern medicine” and the logic of “molecular medicine.”James Frackleton, M.D.,Past President, American College for Advancement in Medicine“It contains many fresh insights and much common sense. I intend to use it as a primary reference during my medical students teaching sessions this fall.”Jessica Davis, M.D.,Cornell Medical Center, NY“If anyone else told me of Majid Ali’s dictum, I would disbelieve it all. Majid’s expertise in so many fields makes disregarding anything he says a costly mistake. He has taught me autoregulation, and I have personally seen what it alone can do.”Hueston King, M.D., Past President, American Academy of Otolaryngic Allergy.5.0 out of 5 stars I am glad I have read this great thinker.This is one of Dr. Majid Ali’s earlier books where he was developing his methods of healing. It shows his original thought much of which I am very familiar, I just enjoy reading him. He has tremendous knowledge of health and nutrition and is extremely helpful in putting into words illustration of how the human body works. I am trying to learn about the human body and how to write about it, and his works are very inspirational. I find myself constantly making notes not on what he says but what it makes me think about my body and how to regain and keep its health and strength and how to tell others. I am glad I have run into this great thinker.as always a big appreciation goes to trance33 for doing all the amazing OCRs.If you’d like to help us bring Majid Ali’s Integrative/Preventative Health materials to elib please consider pledging in Majid Ali GB.Access times:Contributors: Now, ratio-freeVIP+: 2 WeeksPU+: 8 WeeksUsers: upgrade to Power User

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Majid Ali – The Cortical Monkey and Healing (1990)”
Quick Navigation
×
×

Cart