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Dear C.P.,

 

Namaste.

 

Thank you for your email.

 

The medical background and pranic healing treatment

for schizophrenia are in PHQANDA messages 1859 and

2561. A copy of these messages is enclosed for your

easy reference.

 

Love,

 

Marilette

 

===========================================================

Message 1859

 

Medical Background:

 

Schizophrenia is a mental illness with 2.5 million

victims in the United States alone. The first symptoms

usually appear when people are in their late 20s, but

neuroscientists now believe that the seeds of the

disorder are often sown during fetal development.

 

That is when the brain is wired up; nerve cells grow

and divide, building connections with each other. The

basic flaw in the brains of many schizophrenics seems

to be that certain nerve cells migrate to the wrong

areas when the brain is first taking shape, leaving

small regions of the brain permanently out of place or

miswired. Such errors in neural architecture may have

one or more causes, which remain to be discovered.

 

The chief symptoms of schizophrenia include apathy, a

blunting of emotions, delusions and the hearing of

internal voices. Once these symptoms begin, they

typically wax and wane for the rest of a person's

life.

 

The origins of the disorder have long been mysterious.

Once attributed to poor communication within families,

the condition is now recognized as a disease of the

brain, as seen in differences between schizophrenic

and

normal brains.

 

The idea that these differences arise during fetal

development, said Dr.David Shore, chief of the

Schizophrenia Research Branch at the National

Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Md., " is one

of the leading candidates for explaining how the

changes we see in the brains of schizophrenics might

have come about. "

 

But that theory does not solve the entire puzzle.

" Schizophrenia is probably many different kinds of

problems that converge on the same

syndrome, not just a single disease, " said Dr. Daniel

Weinberger, chief of the clinical Brain Disorders

Branch of the National Institute of Mental

Health. " But based on the weight of evidence, half or

more of schizophrenia seems to be due to abnormalities

in fetal brain development. "

 

Evidence for that new theory comes from several

different sources, including autopsies of patients'

brains, family movies taken when patients

were as young as 2 and epidemiological data.

 

One of the more convincing reports, based on tissue

from autopsies and published this month in The

Archives of General Psychiatry, showed neurons

out of place in the prefrontal areas of 7 of 20 brains

from patients with schizophrenia and in none of the 20

brains from people without the disorder. The study is

the fourth of its kind to report wayward cells in

various parts of the cortex in people with

schizophrenia.

 

The out-of-place cells are unexpectedly large residues

of the neural subplate, a structure that guides other

neurons to their proper sites. The subplate forms

about the fourth month of pregnancy. It gradually

disappears almost entirely within the first month of

life, having performed its task of aiming neurons

toward their location in the cortex.

 

" The migration of brain cells through the neural

subplate occurs almost entirely in the second

trimester of fetal development, " said Dr. Steven G.

Potkin, a psychiatrist at the University of California

at Irvine and a co-author of the study, with Dr.

William E. Bunney and Dr. Edward Jones.

 

" If you disrupt this migration, cells end up in the

wrong place or have faulty connections -- and that's

what we found in the brains of the

schizophrenic patients, " Potkin said. " The

maldistribution of these cells suggests an abnormality

in the subplate. "

 

Experiments on cats by Dr. Carla Shatz, a

neuroscientist at the University

of California at Berkeley, has shown that making cuts

in the subplate at an equivalent period in the

development of the cat brain produces cortical

cells that are miswired or out of place.

 

Just what might cause the neural subplate to fail to

perform its duties isa matter of surmise. Potkin

speculated that " there may be a wide range of

causes, from a faulty genetic mechanism to

environmental insults, like the mother having a virus

that penetrates the placenta, all of which interfere

with the operation of the neural subplate during the

critical months of fetal brain development. "

 

One nagging question for proponents of the new theory

is why no symptoms of schizophrenia appear for two

decades or more if the brain abnormalities

are present from birth.

 

One answer is that there are, indeed, signs of coming

trouble throughout life but that they are subtle and

easily missed. The British Medical Research Council

tracked every child born in Britain in the first week

of March 1946, assessing them every two years or so

until they reached the age of 43. Dr. Robin Murray, a

British psychiatrist, found subtle childhood

differences among those who later developed

schizophrenia.

 

At most milestones of neurological development --

analyzed by looking at things like when each infant

first sat up and teacher ratings of each

child's performance -- the development of the

schizophrenic group, on average, was delayed.

 

" There were no gross abnormalities, but a lifelong

pattern, on average, of delayed maturation of their

brains, " said Dr. Weinberger, who reviewed

the cumulative evidence linking lifelong neurological

problems to schizophrenia in The Lancet, a medical

journal, last year. " For instance,

at six months, about a third of babies are two weeks

or more late in sitting up. For those who later

developed schizophrenia, two-thirds were

late. As a whole, their lags suggest subtle

abnormalities in neural development. "

 

When researchers in a 1994 study asked the families of

patients with schizophrenia to provide them with home

movies of the patients as children, they found more

signs of unusual neural development. At age 2,

for instance, these children tended to display

slightly odd hand movements that would not have

troubled their parents at the time but would have been

recognized by a trained eye as a sign of troubled

motor development.

 

 

The study by Dr. E. Fuller Turrey, M.D. reviewed 65

research projects carried out on individuals with

schizophrenia who had never been treated with any

antipsychotic medication. In many, the individual had

only recently been diagnosed with the disease. The

projects measured the structure and function of brains

of individuals with schizophrenia and compared these

with normal controls. Neurological and

neuropsychological measures of brain function showed

the most consistent and largest differences between

patients and controls. Measures of brain structure,

such as MRIs, and measures of brain metabolism, such

as PET scans, were also significantly different but

less impressive. The brain abnormalities were not

localized to a single part of the brain but instead

implicated a variety of interrelated regions at the

base of the brain.

 

Developmental neurobiologists funded by the National

Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) have found that

schizophrenia may be a developmental disorder

resulting when neurons form inappropriate connections

during fetal development. These errors may lie dormant

until puberty, when changes in the brain that occur

normally during this critical stage of maturation

interact adversely with the faulty connections. This

research has spurred efforts to identify prenatal

factors that may have some bearing on the apparent

developmental abnormality.

 

In other studies, investigators using brain-imaging

techniques have found evidence of early biochemical

changes that may precede the onset of disease

symptoms, prompting examination of the neural circuits

that are most likely to be involved in producing those

symptoms. Meanwhile, scientists working at the

molecular level are exploring the genetic basis for

abnormalities in brain development and in the

neurotransmitter systems regulating brain function.

 

 

The term " schizophrenia " was introduced in 1911 by a

Swiss psychiatrist, Eugen Bleuler. The word comes from

the Greek schizo meaning " split " and phrenia meaning

" mind. " Bleuler wanted to convey the split between

what is perceived, what is believed, and what is

objectively real. He did not mean that the person with

schizophrenia is split into two personalities, but

that there is a splitting away of the personality from

reality. The concept of " split, " however, has led to

schizophrenia being confused with multiple

personality, a less common and very different

psychiatric disorder, much publicized through such

stories as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Three Faces of

Eve, and Sybil. Today, many health care professionals

regret the existence of the term " schizophrenia "

because of the confusion and misunderstanding that

surround it.

 

Added to this basic confusion is a history of blame.

Families agree that blame is a major stumbling block

to seeking and receiving support.

 

In the late 1800s and the early part of this century,

three competing views about the nature of mental

illness gained acceptance in the psychiatric

profession.

 

Biological psychiatry grew from the research of Dr.

Emil Kraepelin in Germany; psychoanalysis from the

findings of Dr. Sigmund Freud and his colleagues in

their studies on neuroses in Austria; and behaviourism

from the work of Dr. John B. Watson in the United

States. Kraepelin's views predominated the thinking of

psychiatrists in Europe, while both psychoanalysis and

behaviourism (see Glossary) flourished in North

America (Andreasen, The Broken Brain, pp. 11-20).

 

In the 1950s, many North American psychiatrists began

to believe that schizophrenia resulted from a form of

psychic trauma inflicted on the individual early in

life, typically by parents. Mothers of those with

schizophrenia were believed to be over-anxious,

obsessive, and domineering. These women were labelled

" schizophrenogenic. " One mother said she almost

understood this. " When you are pushing to get help for

your child, it is easy for some to 'put the cart

before the horse' and point to this pushiness and

tension as the cause of your child's problem, rather

than the result of it. " Gradually, blame was placed on

the family as a unit. Theorists noticed poor family

functioning where there was someone with

schizophrenia, and confused the effect of the illness

with its cause.

 

Two other theories contributed to the mythology

surrounding schizophrenia. The American psychoanalyst

Thomas Szasz pronounced that schizophrenia, like all

other mental illnesses, is a set of behaviours, not a

disease. The late R.D. Laing, a British psychiatrist,

suggested that it is really a " healthy " response to an

insane world. People burdened with terrible stress act

" crazy " in an effort to adapt.

 

Scientific research and factual data have discredited

these theories. Unfortunately, they were all popular

enough at one time to have gained public attention.

You may still run into health care professionals who

will suggest that you " caused " your relative's

illness, and that a continuing family relationship may

hinder recovery.

 

Aside from the history of blame, the symptoms of the

illness itself can often add to the stigma of

schizophrenia. The odd and unpredictable behaviour,

poor functioning, or lack of good health habits can be

disturbing to others. News coverage on acts of

violence or suicides committed by people reported as

having schizophrenia serve to add to the stigma, even

if unintentionally.

 

 

 

Message 2561

 

This is to update protocol in message 1859.

 

Pranic Psychotherapy:

 

1. Invoke before, during and after treatment.

 

2. Scan the aura: the top, middle and bottom part (

not feet)of the aura. Take note of the condition.

 

3. Scan all the different parts of the brain and the

major chakras, front and back. Take note of their

condition.

 

4. Scan the affected section(s) of the brain and then

the chakras for negative thoughtforms.

 

Using the divide the chakra into 6-sections technique,

scan each section of the affected chakras for negative

thoughtforms.

 

Take note of the specific affected section of the

brain and of the chakra.

 

5. Scan the different sections of the brain and then

the chakras for negative elementals.

 

Using the divide the chakra into 6-sections technique,

scan each section of the affected chakras for negative

elementals.

 

Take note of the affected sections of the brain and

sections of the chakra.

 

6. Do proper abdominal pranic breathing (6-3-6-3) for

three(3)

cycles. Continue pranic breathing during entire

treatment. NOTE: Power is in the rhythm.

 

-Do general sweeping three times with EV.

 

-Disintegrate and remove the negative thoughtforms in

the affected sections of the brain and affected

sections of the chakra with EV.

This has to be done thoroughly.

 

-Rescan. Repeat treatment if necessary.

 

-Disintegrate and remove the negative elementals in

the affected

sections of the brain and affected sections of each

chakra with EV.

This has to be done thoroughly.

 

-Rescan. Repeat treatment if necessary.

 

Rescan aura ( top, middle and bottom )and the major

chakras. Check the effect of EV on the negative

thoughtforms and negative elemntals.

 

7. Energize the back heart chakra with EV- 7 cycles.

Energize the ajna chakra with EV - 7 cycles.

 

Sweep the front and back solar plexus thoroughly

fifteen(15) times

with with EV.

Energize with greeenish blue then with 7 - EV

 

Sweep throat chakra thoroughly with EV. Energize with

greenish blue

then with 7 - EV.

 

Sweep basic chakra thoroughly with green. Energize

with Gold,

then with green and blue to inhibit the chakra.

 

Activate the ajna chakra and crown chakra by

energizing with ordinary

LV and simultaneously willing the chakra to become

brighter and

bigger.

 

 

8. Distribute the energy in front seven(7) times, and

the back seven

(7) times. Leave the energy on the crown.

 

Distribute the energy to the arms and legs.

 

9. Create internally permeable chakral shields for the

solar plexus,

throat, and ajna chakras, then an internally permeable

auric shield.

 

10. Stabilize and release projected pranic energy.

 

11. Repeat treatment three(3) times per week, for

bi-polar disorder,

repeat treatment two(2)times per week for as long as

necessary.

 

- Proper medical and professional psychological

treatment are important and must not be discarded.

 

- You may teach the patient how to do the exercise for

improving memory found in the book, Hinduism Revealed

by Master Choa Kok Sui. Recommend the exercise for 12

cycles per session daily, gradually increasing the

number of cyles to 21 cycles per day. This exercise

will properly bring up the energy to the brain and

gradually improve the person's behavior.

 

- When the patient is sufficiently stabilized and is

capable of meditating, recommend the regular proper

practice of the Meditation on Twin Hearts to the

patient. Alternate the practice of the MTH for

physical healing with the practice of the MTH for

psychological well being.

 

Love,

 

Marilette

 

 

Pranic Healing is not intended to replace orthodox medicine, but rather to

complement it. If symptoms persist or the ailment is severe, please consult

immediately a medical doctor and a Certified Pranic Healer . ~ Grand Master Choa

Kok Sui

 

Miracles do not happen in contradiction to nature, but only to that which is

known to us in nature. ~ St. Augustine

 

Ask or read the up to date Pranic Healing protocols by joining the group through

http://health./

 

For the latest international information regarding GMCKS Pranic Healing, visit

http://www.pranichealing.org.

 

 

 

________

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