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Immunity involves both physical and energetic processes, the immune system, and the microbiome. This blog sheds light on the energetics involved with a microbial infection, vaccines, and how the microbiome responds. First, you’ll need to know a few basics. Let’s start with your signature spectrum.

Your Unique “Signature Spectrum”

Every life form, whether viral, single-celled, plant, or animal, has a unique color ray spectrum that reflects its life energy.

In humans, it is the sum of all the spectrums of your cells and symbiotic members of your microbiome. This is called your “signature spectrum.”

Your signature spectrum helps establish your identity and supports your personality and self-expression. The more it develops, the better you can identify people and experiences that are compatible with you. It becomes easier to recognize when you need to say, “No, this is not for me.”

New Experiences and Color Rays

Whenever you travel, meet people, learn something new, or do something different, you change and grow. With each new experience, your signature spectrum is enriched and develops.

Healthy microbiota—particularly the symbiotic viruses—support this evolution by adding and subtracting color rays as your new spectrum requires. At the same time, the process of learning and growing increases the flow of mental-body color rays to your physical body. This provides an abundance of high-vibration nourishment to the microbiome.

Interacting with Foreign Microbes

As you engage with life, your microbiome meets new microbes. That means your signature spectrum is introduced to unfamiliar microbial spectrums.

Their unique color collections stand out because they’re different, and they quickly capture the attention of your microbiome. Symbiotic microbes gather around the newbies. Among them are the archaea that decide whether the foreigners provide the color rays the body will need. If they do, they are welcomed into the symbiotic community. Your microbiome becomes more experienced, evolves, and is restocked with color rays.

If the outsiders are not welcomed in, it’s because they bring spectrums of color that are not compatible with your signature spectrum. Your body will then try to remove them.

Clearing Pathogens

To clear pathogens, white blood cells break apart the casings that contain the foreign spectrums (fever is especially helpful for this), releasing the color rays inside. Symbiotic viruses sweep in to collect individual color rays and store them until needed to feed your cells. But the leftover parts of the pathogen, including the unusable color rays, need to be eliminated.

This is why we get symptoms of cold and flu. To release these excess color rays, the body will sweat, cough, sneeze, create mucus, and cause nausea and diarrhea. Resting your body is important to direct all your body’s resources to this task.

How quickly you heal depends on how well your body can either eject the foreign spectrums or disassemble them and convert them into compatible color rays your body can use.

The more unusual the pathogen’s spectrum, the more difficult it can be for the body to manage.

A Pathogen’s Point of View

It’s important to note the foreign microbe’s viewpoint. It’s looking for a symbiotic relationship with a host. Ideally, it would like to join the microbiome.

The idea that viruses only want to find a host in order to replicate themselves doesn’t take into account the fact that a virus can’t live on its own. Microbes need host bodies as much as we need symbiotic microbes. A foreign virus that’s continually in conflict with the immune system and microbiome mutates in an attempt to find compatibility.

Ultimately, the viruses that are harmful to our health do not provide the color rays in the ratios we need. No matter how much they mutate, they cannot become symbiotic with us and be received into the community of our microbiota.

If they proliferate faster than the body can manage them, that person may not survive.

Why Some People Aren’t Affected by a Virus

Viruses’ tenacity is admirable. They will continue to adjust their spectrums, trying various ratios of color, and infecting other people until a compatible, symbiotic host is finally found.

This is why some individuals aren’t affected by the virus; their microbiome has found a way to utilize the foreign virus’s unique spectrum. They’ve found a partnership that serves the host, and so it’s welcomed.

Almost daily—in fact, just about every time we go somewhere or talk with someone face to face—our microbiome is introduced to a new virus. Rarely does a healthy microbiome refuse it, as all are rich sources of color. However, viruses shared among people have one thing in common: their spectrums have relatively even ratios of color, which our cells prefer.

One reason the initial COVID-19 outbreak was so deadly is that its color ray ratios were extreme. The virus’s presence drove our microbiomes into high gear. Most people were unable to manage the COVID spectrum faster than it replicated.

Why Our Microbiome Sometimes Fails to Protect Us

Recall the connection between the mind and the microbiome that I mentioned earlier. When the mind stops taking in new information, seeking new experiences, and pursuing greater truth, it languishes. It sends the same mental spectrums to the body to feed the microbiome, which relies on variety to flourish. The microbiome is less nourished and stagnates. Its ability to handle foreign spectrums is reduced.

It will struggle so hard to maintain the body’s cells that it doesn’t have the energy left over to deal with newcomer viruses.

Vaccines: Colorful Reflections

Whether the vaccine makers know it or not (and they probably don’t), a successful vaccine provides the body with only a reflection of the virus’s color ray spectrum—not the viral spectrum itself.

At first, the microbiome thinks the reflection is real. It recognizes the spectrum as too different to welcome and so begins strategizing with the immune system on how to disassemble it. Soon enough, the reflection is seen for what it is: not real. The body’s response is like a war game, providing important feedback on what strategies might work in a real situation and which need to be improved.

The problem is that as long as the vaccine remains active in the body, the microbiome will continue the war game. In the military, war games are short-lived. You take what you learned for when a real threat arrives. But in this case, when the war game continues indefinitely, the microbiome uses up its resources and can get tired.

If too tired, it may not be able to withstand an actual infection. This is why vaccines don’t always work for some people.

Based on what I’ve observed happening in my vaccinated clients, healthy microbiomes and immune systems are able to stop fighting the viral reflection once they realize what it is. They leave it alone. This is how the vaccine becomes most effective.

Preparing Yourself for a Vaccine

If you choose to take a vaccine, be sure to prepare your microbiome beforehand. Nourish it well with new thoughts and experiences. Learn something new. Try something different. Give yourself more rest than you usually do.

Ironically, strongly held opinions about vaccines (or any topic, in fact) narrow the type of nourishing thought energy the microbiome needs to thrive and intelligently deal with the vaccine’s mirror spectrum.

Those who hold these strong opinions probably shouldn’t take a vaccine until they can expand and soften their mind. Ideally, you want to receive the vaccine with gratitude. Bracing yourself against it means your microbiome will do the same. Then it won’t learn what it can from it, and the vaccine won’t be as effective.

Healing Gemstone Support

Wearing the healing gemstones Yellow Fluorite and Yellow Tourmaline can also support the microbiome’s ability to handle foreign microbes and a vaccine’s mirror spectrum—because it helps the microbiome to be its very best.

The gemstones encourage every function that supports a healthy microbiome. Besides feeding it directly with their unique healing energies, they also encourage the widening of a person’s perspective (an antidote to narrow-mindedness), inspire the desire to learn, and encourage the flow of thought energy toward the body. Every thought carries a spectrum, and new thoughts widen the microbiome’s diet.

Ultimately, the decision to take a vaccine should be yours. But if you must get vaccinated and are feeling unsure about it, try not to resist it. Instead, prepare your body by strengthening your microbiome so the vaccine can be as effective as possible. When the shot hits your arm, welcome it with an open mind and an open heart.

Learn About Yellow Fluorite & Yellow Tourmaline

Please note: It is always recommended to seek the advice of your healthcare professional when making decisions regarding vaccines.

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