Friday, July 2, 2010

Synchronistic Body Behavior

Our bodies behave synchronistically all the time. Whenever there’s even a slight perturbation in our physical body, the whole body reacts. For example, suppose you haven’t eaten all day, so your blood sugar level starts to drop. Immediately, a whole synchronicity of events works to bring your blood sugar back up. All this could be possible only through nonlocal communication, information correlated faster than the speed of light, outside the bounds of standard physics.




It has been suggested that this nonlocal communication is set up by the resonance of the electrical activity of our hearts. Your heart has something called a pacemaker, which keeps the normal heart beating at about seventy-two times per minute. The energy is sent through your body. The heart creates a field of resonance so that every cell in the body starts to entrain with every other cell, which makes every cell synchronistically attuned to every other cell.



When cells are caught in the same field of resonance, they are all dancing to the same music. Studies show that when we’re thinking creatively, or when we are feeling peaceful, or when we’re feeling love, those emotions generate a very coherent electromagnetic field. And that electromagnetic field is broadcast to the rest of your body.



It also creates a field of resonance where all the cells of the body lock in with each other. Every cell knows what every other cell is doing because they’re all doing the same thing, while still expressing their unique functions efficiently.



In a healthy body, this synchronicity is perfectly regulated. When disease occurs, one of those rhythms has gone awry.



Adapted from The Spontaneous Fulfillment of Desire, by Deepak Chopra (Three Rivers Press).