Cause unknown
I was listening to a radio show the other day which features a monthly slot about women’s problems called Time of the Month.
The previous one was talking about pre-eclampsia in pregnancy and how common it was becoming.
I listened with fresh ears having adopted the terrain perspective and couldn’t help wondering why this is an increasing problem. Very often the assembled panel of experts would say to callers from the public — well we really don’t know this or that or the causes. In fact the only thing they seemed agreed on most of the time was that some form of treatment would always be essential and in the best interests of the mother and the baby.
Certainly as with blood pressure generally, there was talk of the safe parameters having been changed and what was once considered safe wasn’t any longer.
This sounded to me a bit like they needed to move the goal posts (acceptable blood pressure) to get more goals (more patients).
Then the next time I was listening (since I was travelling on a Tuesday again at the same time but a month later) they were talking about endometriosis.
This was again some female experts assembled to take calls and was again a triumph of uncertainty.
They kind of knew what it was although these parameters seemed a bit wooly. But time after time I was hearing: ‘well we really don’t know how this kicks off, how fast it might progress how best to treat it and specifically who are those most at risk’.
The internet says this:
Causes are not fully understood, though theories include retrograde menstruation, genetic factors, hormonal influences, and immune system dysregulation.
It primarily affects people with a uterus from puberty through to menopause, with risk factors including early onset of periods, short menstrual cycles, and family history.
Treatment focuses on managing symptoms rather than curing the disease, as there is currently no known cure.
The radio show experts’ excuse for their dazzling display of being puzzled was that everyone is different. No shit Sherlock.
Note: I love that above it says: ‘this primarily affects people with a uterus’ and not women or perhaps women who still have their uterus (ie not having had a hysterectomy). 😂
It illustrated to me something that is becoming more obvious to me all the time which is the mysterious functioning of the human body is exactly that — mysterious and we really don’t know anything like as much as we are given to believe.
The highly qualified professionals after years of training with access to books full of supposed research and pharmaceutical drug trial data are basically often just guessing.
This shouldn’t be a surprise because they are always trying to identify a specific bodily malfunction and then find a specific culprit. All nice and simple.
Germ theory and genetics are usually implicated but very rarely is the lifestyle, diet and outlook of the person taken into consideration and neither are the toxic environmental assaults they might have been exposed to.
Pick a card, any card.
As a bit of fun I would challenge anyone to think of an illness and then search the internet to see if the exact cause is known. Obviously you can exclude anything said to be caused by a virus because viruses have yet to be found or isolated from a scientific perspective.
Also when the medical industry states a cause empathetically like dog-bites cause rabies and mosquito bites cause malaria try to look beyond the dogma and assess whether or not you consider this to have been proven beyond all doubt.
I chose tetanus at random which is also conveniently something you can supposedly be protected from if you are correctly jabbed up to date.
My bog-standard search said simply: “What causes tetanus?” I got this returned:
Causes
The bacterium that causes tetanus is called Clostridium tetani. The bacterium can survive in a dormant state in soil and animal faeces. It’s essentially shut down until it discovers a place to thrive.
When the dormant bacteria enter a wound — a condition good for growth — the cells are “awakened.” As they are growing and dividing, they release a toxin called tetanospasmin. The toxin impairs the nerves in the body that control muscles.
Given that I doubt the bacteria is the cause and may well arrive after to try and clean things up we must believe this sleepy-fella is sitting there dormant on the offending rusty nail you just stood on and then springs into life purely to make you ill.
I have heard far more plausible fairy stories.
So when it isn’t causing people to have tetanus what does ‘clostridium tetani’ actually do?
What actual purpose in nature does it serve or was it designed purely for illness by releasing its dreadful toxin? And what use is the stupid thing at all if it has to sit there on your rusty nail being dormant most of the time?
The closer you examine the medical industry’s so-called answers the more they like a complete crock of tetanus.
To explore a different view of health, wellness and the real causes of illness check out the Reality of Illness website to see who also accords with the terrain viewpoint and what evidence they can show in support of it.



