I'm Ann Corbyn, your crossover coach here with this week's episode of The mind body spirit connection. You are a complex being composed of 3 parts. Just get those 3 parts, mind, body, and spirit, Corbin together in harmony, and upscale your life. I'm here to show you how. Maybe I should start today with a spoiler alert. This episode of the Mind Body Spirit connection just might get a little controversial. But I Anne talk a little about health and immunity Anne connected subjects.
And naturally, from the perspective of someone who has been interested in science and medicine all her life. So why didn't I become a doctor? You might well ask a good question. The short answer is that the sausage machine of a school that I went to, and it was considered to be a good school In many ways, it was to be honest, but that school's headmistress was the physics and chemistry teacher for O level. Anne she loved chemistry and taught it really, really well.
So I thought chemistry was easy. But clearly in hindsight, she was frightened of physics. She didn't understand it, But I suppose there was nobody else around, and she was the head, and that's why she was teaching it because she was a science teacher. And Unconsciously, she transferred her fear into most of us. And I thought physics was really difficult and certainly something that I didn't want to consider doing for the rest of my life or even studying at a higher level.
Those teenage years are when you have to firm up on what you want to do as a career, and nobody's well, very few people are really equipped to do it. And I gave some thought to becoming a doctor because I loved biology. But I knew that physics a level would be required, and I didn't think I'd be able to do it. It was as simple as that. I never pursued the idea of training as a doctor any further, and it was all influenced by one incredibly bad teacher.
And I know for certain that my experience is far from unique countless children must be put off what could be promising career by really bad teaching. Early on in their school days. So this is just, I suppose, brainwashing from a personal perspective This is what happens to teenage children. They believe what's thrown at them. And in my case, It wasn't even intentional, but that's the way a child's mind works, I suppose, because Someone in their early teens, they're not very old.
They're not experienced in life, and they haven't really learned to think for themselves. And back then, I didn't know what I didn't know. But back to my interest in biology Anne the promised that I was going to be a bit controversial. I think we, as a class, all learned about Louis Pasteur, and the smallpox vaccination in history possibly. And maybe that was as far back as junior school, because I feel like I've known about it forever.
Just to summarize the story that we were told, which was quite scarce as far as scientific fact was concerned. Louis Pasteur was a doctor who noticed that the milkmaids in the village in the countryside never succumbed to smallpox. Now he was working in the 19th century Anne smallpox was a curse. It was a killer disease at the time. And if you were Anne of the very small percentage of people who survived having caught it, then you would be left horribly scarred with pockmarks.
And Louis Pasteur noticed that the milkmaids Never got smallpox, but they did get a less serious, less disfiguring kind of a rash, which was known as cowpox, and it made them ill, but not anywhere near to death. They invariably recovered. Anne somehow, he figured out that he could infect a healthy person by giving them a small dose of this cowpox from a person who is ill. It's it all sounds a bit disgusting, but they got spots which developed little pustules just like the smallpox pustule.
So he thought he could take a bit of the unpleasant stuff in the pustule Anne scratch it into the skin of a healthy person that they might get Calpox, obviously, a very risky strategy. So he tried it on himself and his family, and it worked, and they didn't get smallpox So this was the story that we were told in history or it might have been general knowledge. And Louis Pasteor was hailed as a hero Now at a level, I studied the real science involved in the story, and it's a little bit different.
Pastor also noted during a different study that he was carrying out on Moss, that susceptibility to infection was affected by temperature and by humidity and by sanitation or cleanliness. But mainly, he focused on tiny particles, which he called microbes. Anne he developed what we now call or what was labeled then as germ theory, and we still talk about germ theory. So Pastor laid the foundations for the ways that illness and infection are still discussed today.
The idea being that germs enter a healthy host and attack it. And thereby, they cause disease. Anne although smallpox was caused by a virus Anne pastor was working in the 19th century, before viruses have been identified exactly. They didn't really know a lot about disease. They were fumbling around in the dark, really. They I think they'd named a thing called a virus that they knew they couldn't see, and they knew it to be tiny. And the word is particulate rather than liquid.
In other words, it was like, a little tiny particle, a microscopic particle, but it was so small. You couldn't see it with a regular microscope. But it was identified by, fellow called Thomas Milton Rivers in 1926 And he called it an obligate parasite, and then the electron microscope, believe it or not, that was developed as far back as 1931. And once they got that power of magnification, finally, they got to see a virus for the first time. By that stage, of course, Pastor was long dead.
So he was very clever because he was dealing with something that he'd never seen. And Pastor, far from being a doctor, he was originally a chemist. So he was working in the very early days of investigation of how organisms succumbed to illness. He was a really, really great speaker or salesman, if you like, Anne he developed the work and the theories of earlier scientists.
He was even accused of plagiarism because he took their theories Anne presented them as his own, or he might have built on them, but he took full credit, which he should not have done. Now Anne Baychom was already a respected biologist during these times, and he was one of Pastor's greatest rivals. And he believed instead that living entities would create bacteria within them somehow in response to environmental factors.
In other words, The disease, or the disease, stemmed from an unhealthy bodily bodily system. That was breaking down in a way. Changes within it had been triggered by minute particles within the body that were unhealthy because of the environment that they were living in. Anne this was called host theory. So it was the the host, the person who got sick that was at fault rather than something invisible and traveling around in the atmosphere.
So, Bayesham, theorized that germs were actually chemical byproducts that arose within the body when it was in an unbalanced state. And for the disease to take hold, there already had to be some kind of cellular decay, disintegration, dysfunction, Anne it was the, the production of dead tissue at different sites in the body, that cause the disease.
And then these little microbes who are opportunists would show up and be able to take hold in a body that was already completely out of balance, out of kilter. Anne the sort of thing that would cause the imbalance would be malnutrition, and people generally in those days were not well nourished They were poor. They lived in quite appalling conditions in sanitary conditions. And They they would be cold. There was no central heating.
There there were all sorts of issues which or I should say in which Disease could just thrive. So the 2 opposing theories, at that stage, were germ theory, Corbin to Pastor Anne Host Theory Corbin to Baychamps. Well, we know that Pastor won because he was the orator, he was the salesman, people believed him, and still A 150 plus years later, still our science is based on germ theory Anne it's flawed because even pastor himself on his deathbed said something along the lines of I was wrong.
It's not the germs. It's the substrate. It's the host. So right at the very end of his life, Pastor gave credit to his rival. Right now, I am so tempted to go down the rabbit holes of big pharma and vaccinations Anne or otherwise. And COVID passports and booster jobs But for now, I will resist. However, of course, if you let me know that that's what you want, then, of course, I will happily comply but that will have to wait for a future podcast.
What I want to mention before this podcast finishes is that I feel that the so called science behind these rapidly produced COVID jabs is suspect to say the least. I learned recently that Webster's dictionary was pressured into changing their definition of vaccine because the Pfizer vaccine did not correspond to the long standing definition of what a vaccine is because of its ingredients. And personally, I am super suspicious of Jabs that contain MRNA.
Now whether or not the original COVID pathogen is a natural mutation or a Anne biological weapon is another rabbit hole, but it is a 100% clear that the global response to this disease is massively more sinister than just plain incompetence. And if you like facts and figures, There's a brand new book that I highly recommend. I'm plowing through it at the moment, and it's taking a long time, but it's utterly fascinating.
It's by Robert Kennedy Junior, Anne, yes, he is the nephew of the famous president who was killed. And It's called The Real Anthony Fauci. I would also say that the reason the powers that be got away with their lockdown agenda originally was that they managed to terrify the majority of whatever population they were talking to, fear is one of the lowest vibrations. It's down there with guilt and remorse and sadness and so on.
And going back to Pasteur and beicham, Bayham's theory in particular, we have to ask the question, is a higher vibration or a low one more likely to put you in a position to ward off disease, imaginary or otherwise.
Quick reminder to listeners, the best way to remain healthy is to take moderate regular exercise, eat a healthy balanced diet, including as much fresh food as possible, all the vitamins and minerals that you can get your hands on, I'm not actually talking about supplements, although they do seem to be more necessary these days than they were because they're meddling with our food. Topic for another podcast. But remember that our bodies were designed to heal themselves.
Sometimes they need a bit of outside help, but remember, if you work on raising your vibration, You will notice what a huge difference it makes in your life. And if you change your perception, if you change the way you look at something, then the thing that you look at will change. So friends, that wraps up the mind body spirit connection for this week. Let me know, please.
If there are any subjects that you would like me to include in a future podcast, join me, same time next week, or connect with me anytime. On social media.
