Willing away illness
Q. Masters, my friend told me that he was diagnosed with a brain tumor and that when he went back to his doctor, further tests showed it was no longer present. He told me with a laugh that he had merely “willed it away.” What really happened—was he misdiagnosed?
A. Dear Doubting Thomas, your friend truly had a brain tumor. It was a blockage in his brain created by the restriction of the flow of blood. This condition was created by your friend’s habit of hording and clinging to things he did not need. The energy around him became very sluggish, thick, and slow moving. In this environment, his body responded by stopping its work of cleaning out debris which results from the normal cellular processing of nutrients within the physical body. (In medical terminology this blockage, an abnormal growth of material within a confined space, is a brain tumor.)
When presented with the shocking news of a brain tumor, your friend went in search of a cure. He consulted the western medical practitioners and was told surgery was the only solution. He did not want his head cut into so he continued looking. He discovered the mind-body connection, which is what many call the recognition of their spiritual aspect. He began reading voraciously and learned that what you think and what you intend is what you create.
On his path back to health, he began with meditation and getting in touch with his inner self. Then he learned to balance the flow of energy within his body by removing negative elements, such as his hording propensity, resulting in a free flow of cleansing actions throughout his body. This in turn started to restore a normality to the blood flow in his brain.
Next he used visualization to remove the residual debris of the tumor. Using his own powerful energy, he saw himself inside his head scouring away the very last of the tumor and polishing up the blood vessels so that nothing could cling to them in the future. Through this mindful process he “willed away” his tumor. This is an ability that all souls possess when they choose to acknowledge the fact.