Biology Biology, Wildlife and Forest Conservation

 

 

 

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Biology And Beliefs

The Communication of Your Biology & Beliefs
By Maria Boomhower

Not only do we communicate with ourselves, but our cells communicate with each other and the environment in order to respond to situations, which ultimately create our belief systems.

Dr Bruce Lipton has done extensive work on how our beliefs and perceptions affect us at the cellular level. Much of what he has written is on what he calls the biology of belief. Both he and Greg Braden speak on cellular interaction, connection and response in the environment.

Cells are very intelligent and have receptor antenna that look at our perception of the environment around us and respond to our beliefs about it.

Certain behaviours are learned from our perceptions, our views and understanding of what we believe to be happening in the environment. In turn we have responses to environment that will play like recorded tapes in our lives every time we encounter that situation. They are like a computer program that starts up each time we encounter the same situation.

Dr Lipton states that each of us has our own PIN #. These receptors on our cells act like antenna, whose keys are also unique. This is our EEG fingerprint.

If you stop to see how you respond to situations in your life, you will start to notice patterns when you are in similar circumstances. It could be about a person, (love, hate or other emotions), an event (Christmas, holidays, summer), or a political issue (abortion, religion, different lifestyles, forestry).

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