what the book was about.
“Christianity and faith she answered. Why do you ask I told her that I was writing anew book on the placebo effect and that my book was all about belief.
“I want to tell you this story she said. She went onto tell me that years ago, she had been diagnosed
with gluten intolerance, celiac disease,
colitis, and a host of other ills, and experienced chronic pain. She’d read upon the diseases and gone to see several different health professionals for advice. They had advised her to avoid certain foods and to take certain prescription drugs, which she had done, but she’d still felt pain throughout her entire body. She also hadn’t
been able to sleep, had skin rashes and severe digestive disturbances, and suffered from a whole list of other unpleasant symptoms. Then, years later, the woman went to see anew doctor, who decided to do some blood tests.
When the blood tests came back, all of the results were negative.
“The day I found out I was really normal and there was nothing wrong with me, I thought,
I’m fine, and all my symptoms went away. I
immediately felt great and could eat whatever I wanted she told me with a flourish. Smiling, she added, What do you believe about
that?”
If it’s true that learning new information that leads to a degree turnaround in what we believe about ourselves can actually
make our symptoms disappear, what’s going on in our bodies that’s supporting that and making it happen What’s the exact relationship between the mind and the body Could it be possible that those new beliefs could actually change our brains and body chemistries, physically rewire our neurological circuitry of who we think we are, and alter our genetic expression Could we in fact become different people?
Parkinson’s vs. the PlaceboParkinson’s disease is a neurological disorder marked by the gradual degeneration of nerve cells in the portion
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