CELLULAR REGENERATION- IS IT A SUPERPOWER?
If you have been looking at previous blogs in this series, you would not be surprised that the original Doctor Strange was created by Stan Lee, the writer (with, of course the collaboration with artist, Steve Ditco. The character began his strange reign in “Strange Tales” #110.
It wasn’t too much later that he became more obviously like the Sorcerer Supreme that he was meant to be.
By now, there have been dozens of more sophisticated comics and two movies, one of which I will speak about here.
There is no doubt in my mind that the original Dr. Strange is one of the most brilliant and sensational films I have ever seen. This is not because I am promoting his vocation as a sorcerer or the practice thereof- but because the film contains many intriguing theories of what is possible through powers inherent in human beings- some of them considered to be superpowers beyond our reach.
One of those is healing.
And the desire to heal that which is unhealable in science is the reason for Dr. Stephen Stange’s obsession which leads him to seek an answer outside his realm of traditional medicine. Yes, this scientifically dedicated medical doctor, is forced, by his own desire to remain a medical practitioner to find some way, anyway to heal his hands that have been tremendously injured in a car accident, making it impossible for him to practice the complex surgery he has specialized in.
Having exhausted all the real medical possibilities, he accidentally encounters a man whose spine was rendered almost inoperative, leaving him unable to walk or carry on any normal functions, but apparently was cured. He contacts the man, amazed at his recovery- but he is also surprised at the origin of his healing, some kind of organization called Kamataj in Katmandu, Nepal. This turns out to be one of several centers in the world harboring advanced adepts at magical practices and run by a woman called the Sorcerer Supreme. His original meeting with her shows his amazing and somewhat rude skepticism about her methodology.
At first, he asks him if she, indeed, heal a paralyzed man named Panglar. She replies, “In a way.” Did she help him to walk again? She replies, “Yes.” He then asks, how on Earth could she correct a complete C-7 injury? She says that she didn’t actually do it but rather taught him how to encourage his body to heal itself. He then basically says, amazed, then you are saying your managed to create cellular regeneration and were doing this without a medical license- therefore you are disguising yourself by pretending to be a mystical practitioner. “No,” she says, “I taught him to reorient the spirit to heal the body.”
St this point, Stephen Strange freaks out, saying “There is no such thing as spirit.” And he gets extremely angry, telling her there is only matter and that’s it…”
So, at this point, she pulls him out of his physical body, hurtling him into the astral plane, another cinematic masterpiece- where Dr. Strange voyages into planes of existence he never knew existed and learning that life, indeed, is stranger than he thought and possibly more promising.
In the movie, I think it is important to emphasize that Panglar was not taught to heal himself but rather learned to navigate the different planes of existence that somehow automatically favored his healing- but what if there were exercises that could do just that- initiating healing directly by the subject him or herself- but also tapping into other planes of reality?
Here is a conversation with Gregg Braden discussing exactly this possibility, including what he proposes as a startlingly simple way of paving the way to cellular regeneration. Gregg’s research is supported by scientific studies which are based ib techniques possibly thousands of years old developed by indigenous peoples throughout the world.
Becoming SUPERHUMAN: Unlock The Full Potential Of Your Mind & Heart | Gregg Braden
In my later years in high school I was given a book as a gift called, “In Search of the Miraculous,” by P.D Ouspensky which she inscribed with the words, “To Add To Your Confusion.’ This book was about Ouspensky’s encounter with G. I. Gurdjieff, a Russian spiritual teacher and led to years of search for someone in that tradition, culminating with five years of personal training in what is called “The Work.”
That same year, I found another book, “The Next Development of Man” by an English author named Lancelot Law Whyte, who predicted the coming of a new type of science. I was taken by this book and consumed with the idea of finding this science. Before I actually came closer to my idea of what that was, I became obsessed with talking to him- and, oddly, my father, a lawyer, won a case big enough to take the family to Europe and I somehow managed to talk to him. In his home Unfortunately for my poor, seventeen-year-old ego, he was not all that impressed by me or my obsession about his book and, despite his attitude, I did later develop a theory I called Tonal Geometry, whose evolution stopped at a certain point as I began to hone on meditation and consciousness and look for a teacher.
After many years- and somewhat recently, I began to change my attitude and understanding of consciousness and Higher Reality- and began to think I had begun to understand what the Next Development of Man night be. And as I began to move forward into this new understanding, my many efforts at writing certain books and screenplays- drew me into a new understanding about what these archetypical superhero stories were doing to our psyche and to our understanding of ourselves and our future.
The following s from a 2022 article in Under The Under The Sun titled, by Allen Roth on Sherborne, Pt. 3
“The final chapters I will end with an anecdote by George CorneliusIf it is to be believed, it is a sign of what is possible through the Work.
Cornelius had met and worked with Gurdjieff. He was sent to Turkey, where he became so sick it was feared he would die. In his delirium he saw a photograph of Gurdjieff – and I must say I wonder how that came to be unless he had brought it with him – and had them hang it in his room (although he was in delirium?). Be that as it may:
George leaned forward and looked straight at me: “All of a sudden I heard him speaking. His voice sounded just like a wind whistling in iced-up telephone lines in the winter – you ever hear that sound? – and said: ‘Not worry, American, you not die.”
George’s delirium broke during the night. All he could remember of the past days was the vivid transcontinental reception of the voice. As soon as George was able, he returned to Paris to relate his unusual tale. Packed into Gurdjieff’s apartment were the customary visitors and hangers-on, making private talk impossible. But he found himself seated next to him for the supper. The first words to him from Gurdjieff came abruptly, like a little thunderclap inserted between two moments: “You believe now, don’t you, American? I say not die: not die.”
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