Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 Taking off from WM " preventative medicine " as all too often an excuse to market more high-tech and lucrative testing procedures, another recently reported curious note ... " Treating the dead " (an article in either NEWSWEEK or NEWS AND WORLD REPORT magazine, last week) Research has recently, to the great surprise of the investigators, confirmed that the body's cells do not die in a matter of minutes when the heart and lungs cease normal function and the system lacks oxygen, as was the previous dogma. Rather, they go into a state of shutdown as to the need for oxygen, sort of a hibernation, and remain alive, at least not dead, for several hours. Furthermore, they found that the heretofore standard treatment strategy (in ERs) of attempting to flood the system with oxygen actually precipitates cellular self-destruction / death (some kind of immune reaction that destroys cells rather like the way the immune system deals with cancer cells, if I recall correctly). So their investigating new strategies such as cooling the body and then ways of slowly and carefully reintroducing oxygen. A study found treatment of, say heart attack victims, by the new method successfully restored life 85% of the time, while formerly accepted ER procedures worked 15% of the time! This has other ramifications, which I'll not go into to deeply here, but possibly suggesting that some sort of state, albeit static, of consciousness may also accompany that condition of lack of zong-qi function (ht & lu) but the body's cells not dead. Maybe some sort of steady clear white light?... Anecdotally, two years ago my mother " died " about 3-4 hours before I got there. She was still warm, and the skin had color, tone -- but all very still. I spontaneously put fingers to Ren-17 and Du-20 for a while. Maybe I had, without remembering, read that somewhere before; but did confirm later, with Jeffery Yuen, that that's a traditional technique for helping the shen / hun release. He also has mentioned that the " front shu points " -- Ki/foot shao yin points on the thorax -- map to the zang organs in similar way and order at the " back shu " , and have traditional functions relating to preparation for / guidance through death. The names of those points are certainly evocative. So my sense that my mother experienced my farewell may have some scientific basis. -- Version: 7.5.467 / Virus Database: 269.7.1/807 - Release 5/16/2007 6:05 PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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