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November 3, 2007
Table of Contents |
Dr. Ann Wigmore's Autobiography
Statement of Independence
Backslider's Corner - Astonishing Health Disaster
Raw Living Foods Hands-on Training
Raw Living Foods Home Study Program
Feedback - Mona
Feedback - Prince Fidelis
Medicine or Poison?
Real Health, with Dr. Steve Monkiewicz
In The News
Left Brain - Right Brain Test
Soy Lowers Sperm Count
Life is Rawsome!
Problem With New "Raw Organic" Almonds
Is Diabetes Really Incurable?
Events and Meetings
Scholarships to Living Foods Program Available
Live Interviews with James Carey Available Online
Raw Living Foods TV Shows and Videos
Recipe - Fennel Orange Lime Balm Salad
More Raw Living Foods Resources
The Evolution of Medicine - a Spoof
Customer Service
Dr. Ann Wigmore's
Autobiography |
My
Life Story
- by Dr. Ann Wigmore, ND, PhD
The beginning of my life was meant to take place in
America because my father and mother planned to come here when I was about to
be born. However, this was not to happen - I was born prematurely and very
sickly in Lithuania. My father, who was a very stubborn man, told my mother
that since I was a girl, I had not a chance to live and that I should be put in
back of the barn for the wolves. This is not uncommon in many European
countries.
My grandmother was to live at the homestead after my
parents departed for America. Another grandparent also stayed behind. It was
customary for the grandparents to move in with the children when they became
old or sick. But my grandmother was very active in the field of health. She was
a nature doctor. She immediately rescued me and took me into the barn, where
she fed me with goat's milk through an eye dropper, so that I would survive.
She kept me there for some time - until my health improved and I was able to
move into the house. I stayed up there until I was five years old. My
grandfather was an alcoholic. Life was not very pleasant either for my
grandmother or me then, so my grandmother moved out and took me to another
village until World War I broke out.
During the war, life was horrible and dangerous - simply
a matter of survival and moving from place to place. At that time, however, my
first and greatest interest was to be with sick people. I remember climbing
through a window and entering a yard where casualties were brought after the
battles. Some of their legs were cut off, some had been shot. I remember that
there was a great deal of screaming.
Occasionally we had to go to the root cellar in the yard,
because it was unsafe to live even in the basement of the house. Three or four
different families lived in that cellar. My mother was able, in spite of all
the flying bullets and all of the dangers, to get hold of some food in the form
of grass and seeds or whatever she could find that was not destroyed. Most of
the gardens were trampled over. The food in the house was taken by the
soldiers. The only life-giving foods available were grasses and weeds.
Before the soldiers came, there was a great campaign to
save foods, because we were told that when the Russians came, everything would
be taken in that village. All the horrors were displayed in sketches explaining
what would be done to the people if they would not cooperate and leave the
village. My grandmother and I stayed behind for quite awhile, but then were
forced to flee because there was no food available anywhere in that village.
There was a battle, with bombs flying everywhere. We could see the explosions
and fires burning all around us. My grandmother finally had us move in the
middle of the night from a hollow full of water that would eventually have
drowned us all, as we were waist deep in water.
In a remote section of war-torn Europe during the bloody
First World War, and with hand encounters between Russian and Germans occupying
two solid nightmarish years, I came to know the most wonderful physician in the
world - my grandmother. Only the Almighty and nature could have given her the
knowledge she bestowed everywhere. Resourceful, kindly, considerate, she was
the unnamed leader of the few remaining villagers who huddled waist deep in
water in the root cellar of that shell-blasted orchard.
Our hastily gathered provisions were gone and we gnawed
bark from the tree roots which had pushed through the walls and chewed ordinary
grass and seeds that my grandmother had brought back from her forays into the
darkness of the nights. But rising water, drowning two of our little band, made
our shelter a morgue, so grandmother led the scurry for life across the open
fields as bullets - angry bumblebees - zipped past our ears. Some went down as
we, like frightened chickens, dodging around the prostate forms, scattered in
all directions.
But today, what I recall most vividly of that terribly
drawn-out ordeal, is that grass and seeds brought me, a frail and sickly child,
through alive. Yes, grass and seeds can also save people from the ravages of
slow starvation leading inevitably to the huge premature death rate that so
many countries are experiencing.
We traveled furtively through fields, hiding between
bushes and trying to move into areas of safety - however, safety was nowhere to
be found. Finally, we came to an empty house and moved into the cellar, where
there was a fireplace. We stayed there for several days but then had to move
again, and all during the time of moving, we could see the soldiers fighting,
riding horses and running about, and the people scattering to different
ditches, screaming.
Finally, we settled down in a haunted house where no one
had lived since the family had been killed. I remember vividly that in this
house my grandmother cared for sick people during the whole year after the war.
We were able to get some sheep, customary in primitive countries where people
had to make their own clothing in order to keep warm. Luckily, we had a
spinning wheel in the house and somehow we were able to get some goats for
milk. When we found the food which was stored by the family which had been
killed, we were not only able to feed on it but to share with others.
There was a white kid, orphan of a goat the raiders had
killed the week before. He was brought to my cousin and me in the cellar of the
"haunted" house. Before daylight, I would visit the cave in the swamp
where our remaining goat was hidden, get the milk and, with my cousin's help,
feed it to the tiny animal through a nipple made from an old rubber glove. The
warring Russians had ruthlessly stripped the valley of all food, driving my
grandmother from her home. The approach of biting winter weather frowned upon a
starving village and we finally found shelter in this deserted farmhouse. For
several days my cousin and I nursed the kid, ignoring the pitiful whimpering of
little Whitey, my grandmother's dog, begging for more milk.
This morning, the cries of the puppy annoyed my cousin
who struck the wall near the animal's nose. This slight blow was enough - a
crack opened wide as it spread upward, and a moment later I pushed into a
well-concealed root cellar, crammed ceiling high with grain, seed, and root
vegetables. It seems this precious food had been carefully hidden by people who
had since been killed, and my grandmother, as she gathered us in her arms,
whispered softly, "You four have saved this village from starvation. We
now have enough food until spring."
My job was to help my grandmother. We had a room full of
bunks with sick people and ailing soldiers, battered by the war and left
behind. My grandmother knew no enemy; either Russian or German wounded was
welcome to be healed with her nurturing grass juices and poultices. Some of the
villagers came to help with the soldiers. It was my grandmother's job to act as
a natural doctor. She always knew what to do. No matter what the problem, she
always helped the people to get better, just as she had helped me to survive
during early childhood. She told me how she used to put me in mud baths and how
she would give me certain chlorophyll-rich foods.
She depended upon grasses, which were always available
and she would use these on the soldier's wounds. Before dawn, I was sent into
the woods and fields to gather these wild foods. I traveled through fields,
swamps and woodlands before daybreak and vividly remember how sleepy I was when
my grandmother would wake me up. She would feed me with warm goat's milk and
dress me while my eyes were still closed. I was very young then, perhaps only
six or seven years old. Every single day I would go through dangerous pastures
and meadows to collect weeds, but I always had an animal with me, a dog, goat
or sheep. This was the way I got acquainted with all kinds of wild creatures
because I was very fearful at first, until I got in tune with them.
It was instilled in me that if I heard a dog bark or saw
an indication that someone was coming, I should immediately flee from the area,
as there were many robbers and murderers left after the war. Many times I would
run through the woods with the goats, sheep or dog, as they tried to protect
me. Occasionally, I would encounter a very dangerous place where farmers' cows
and other animals were killed for meat by some robbers. I was in constant
danger, yet I had a feeling that this was the greatest contribution I could
make to help my grandmother - taking care of the animals.
A cow was given to her, but it had to be sold so that the
money could be spent for things that were necessary for the house. All of our
foods had to be grown in the small garden. Grandmother would be gone
practically all day to take care of sick folk in the village. Our neighbors
were very generous with their time and would come to help me for many months
when I got sick with malaria and other illnesses, but my grandmother was always
cheerful and assured me I would survive. She always told me I had a
mission.
When I was able to get back on my feet, my grandmother
decided that I should go out to work on a farm to earn money for my trip to
America: I was then about nine years old. She always considered my future, and
she thought that I should have more experience of being with other people, so
she sent me to work on a farm. She felt that I should always be in a good
environment.
On that farm, the father had passed on, and the mother
took care of it with the help of five unmarried daughters. The oldest one was
the director of the farm and the other daughters were under her supervision. I
was to receive (in American money) about $12 a month, which was to be saved for
coming to America to fulfill my mission.
I was very lonely at first on the big farm away from my
grandmother, but I tried to adjust myself to being away, although I would cry
way into the night. The work was very hard. The oldest girl planned
continuously to sell the farm, because the other girls were not interested in
it; they did take care of the animals well. I had to feed the horses, cows,
sheep and goats. I used to be in the stables most of the time, taking care of
the horses. They had a little colt that was deformed and much smaller than the
others. They had planned to sell it, but I begged them to let me care for it
and raise it myself, so that later I could sell it and save the money towards
my trip to America. I liked to take care of sickly animals and bring them back
to health.
I watched the colt grow into a beautiful horse through my
love and care, improving and becoming a very useful horse on the farm. One day,
I saw a farmer beating a horse, one that was different from all the others, a
war horse that had been left behind by the soldiers. The horse was very sickly,
so I asked the farmer to sell it to me. I bought it, using some of the money I
was saving for my trip, but I was bound to have that horse, and to rescue it
when I saw that it was not healthy, as I do for other animals even to this day.
So, when I brought it home, the girls thought it was
silly of me to buy this kind of weak, poor-looking horse that would be of no
use with the farming. I fed him and tried to ride him, but he bucked and didn't
seem to respond. We tried to put a harness on him and he rejected it. Finally
he became cooperative and loving and I was able to ride him without a saddle.
Every Sunday I would ride him to the city, a distance of about 13 miles, to
visit my grandmother.
By this time my grandmother had returned to the city and
I used to see her once a week. Most of the time, I would walk or ride my
beautiful horse. I needed to sell the horse but for no other reason than to get
money to go to America. I needed to work very hard to earn enough money so that
at the age of sixteen I would be able to go to America, as my grandmother had
continually insisted. I even went out to various farms to do extra work,
especially during the period of harvesting.
I remember on one particular day, we cut the wheat, rye
and hay by hand. The oldest girl was the main farmer and I was her assistant.
We would bring in the seeds and thrash them by hand. It was a very exciting
time when we took the seeds to market, perhaps once a month. We had to go long
distances to the city market.
On other special Saturdays we had to take a sauna
outdoors for a bath. There would be about three or four women from the village
also, for there was a separate time schedule for men and women. I remember
running from the house to the sauna without any clothes on and in winter I
would roll in the snow. One of the girls was quite playful. She would always
make eyes at the boys and try to lure some of the suitors who came to court the
older girls (who were supposed to be married first). The younger girls were not
allowed to participate in this courting; therefore, she would always run away
from the farm but always came back to tell her sisters about the experiences
she had had. She even fell in love with one of the farmer's sons, but could not
marry him.
The oldest girl, who was supposed to be married first,
was not very pretty, but she was a real farmer type. There was no heat in the
house where I lived, except for a wooden stove that was used most of the time
only for cooking and baking. A small oven-type settee was in the living room,
which we could sit on to warm ourselves during the baking and cooking time, but
outside of that the house was very cold. We had to keep warm by being very
active, although the invigorating steam bath made us warm on Saturday
evening.
As the years went by, I had accumulated nearly enough
money to go to America. One day I had to go to the city for my inoculations to
enter the States. When I returned, I felt very drowsy, and the girls could not
rouse me in the morning - I could not move or speak. Then the excitement really
began when they took me for dead. All of the girls started to cry, wondering
how they would bury me without my grandmother present. All this time I could
hear them talking, crying and carrying on. They had distributed among
themselves the scant few clothes that I had prepared for the American trip. I
was desperately trying to scream or move, but nothing happened. It was the most
frightening thing that I have ever experienced. I was afraid that I would be
buried alive, as so many others had been before me. There were no doctors, but
the girls searched for my grandmother. Then I heard a commotion - my
grandmother coming through the field with her little dog, Whitey.
Whitey had come so often to visit me, and now he came
running from about twenty feet toward the house, through the door, jumped right
up on my chest and began licking my face. As my grandmother approached,
everyone was saying, She's dead! Grandmother said, She's NOT
dead - a dog wouldn't lick a dead person. My grandmother began to put me
into cold water, then hot water, and began to massage me to bring me back to
life. Gradually I was able to move, and in a few days to sit up and get my
health back.
Just when I was ready for my trip, the value of the mark
went down. The situation was very serious for many who sold their property. I
remember going thirteen miles to town to see about the money values but it
seemed useless to try to get any help - there was nothing to do but start over
again. I remember before the devaluation of the money, people were selling
their homes for very high prices. But when the value of the mark reached the
bottom, people committed suicide and many of them died from starvation. Many
families left for the big cities, looking for a way to start again, but the
situation seemed to get more and more difficult. Fortunately, my uncle had
planned to go with me to America, and he was some help, so we managed to arrive
after many delays. It took us over two months before I left for Middleboro,
Massachusetts.
I went to the passport office to make arrangements only
to find that they had sold our reservations to someone else. We had to borrow
money for another passage and buy someone else's place. My uncle refused to go
home until we had secured our tickets, and we rented a little room in that big
city to stay in until we had secured passage.
Meanwhile, I was very curious about big city life. I
wanted to know how the electric lights worked. I thought it was strange how the
city lights burned without oil and lighted the room - they looked like big
candles. I took the little light bulb out of the lamp and put my finger inside
the socket to see what made it burn. I was knocked out cold on the floor and
remained unconscious for a long time! From then on, I began to think, I
must not rush into anything so fast without understanding what it is. But
I was, and still am, a very curious person. I had had no formal schooling, but
this did not stop me from doing things. With God's help, I thought that nothing
was impossible.
When we finally reached the boat, I was down to skin and
bones. I was very sick on the ship and I was continually gagging and vomiting -
unable to eat anything. The only thing I remember eating that was very soothing
was an orange - my first one, although I did not eat them later on in life. We
were lodged way down below the decks. It was a horrible place, with such a foul
smell that it was difficult to stay there, so I stayed on deck most of the
time, as the boat rolled and rolled. I asked God to let me be pushed into the
ocean, so that I wouldn't have to go down again into that hole which was my
room, because I could not stand the smell of vomit.
Finally we arrived in America, at Ellis Island. There the
people looked at me with my very long, golden hair and told me I had attracted
some lice and they would have to cut my hair off. I learned later that more
than likely they sold my hair to a wig maker! This unnecessary act made me very
unhappy because I didn't want my parents to see me for the first time with a
bald head. They would think that I was a sickly person because I was so thin
after losing so much weight. I was down to about seventy pounds.
When I arrived my father was disgusted because he had
thought he would have someone to work hard for him, which was why he let me
come to live in his house. When he saw me, he was more disappointed than ever.
Neighbors came to help me, bought me American clothes, and prepared me for the
new life in America.
My mother was very humble, never having anything to say
or disputing my father's ideas. Those time were very difficult for me - going
from one adjustment to another. From the very beginning, my father and I didn't
get along. He wanted me to settle down and get married because I was about
sixteen. I began to work for him in his bakery and candy store, where my job
was to deliver the bread. I had to be up before four o'clock in the morning for
this. He also had me feed the pigs and cows that he had grazing on the other
side of town. I used to bring garbage to the pigs through the town, which I did
not like to do.
I was very disappointed in American life because I
thought it would be entirely different, as my grandmother had told me that the
streets were lined with gold. I did not mind the hard work as much as the very
restricted life with my father, which I resented. It was not like the hard life
with my grandmother, where there was a lot of love and togetherness - life with
my real family was very cold.
I became sick from eating candy and donuts from the
bakery and my teeth began to fall out. I became very sad and was sick most of
the time. One day I was driving the wagon to deliver bread when one of the
horses got scared and began to run, so I pulled on the reins and dropped one.
As the horses turned around, they tipped the wagon over and it fell on top of
me and began to crush me. Both my legs and an ankle were broken, and I was
choking to death until someone came along just in time to lift the wagon off of
me.
They took me out and on to the hospital. After a two-week
treatment the doctors said that gangrene had set in and my legs would have to
be amputated, because there was no way that I could possibly live with the
gangrene. I said no, that I wanted to go home. The doctor and the nurses were
upset and would not attend me anymore. My parents wouldn't come to visit me. My
body burned with fever and I wanted to die. I didn't see how I could live
without legs.
God will always send someone to help if you just pray and
call out. It was my alcoholic uncle who answered my call and helped me through
these trying times. He placed me underneath a tree in an area where there was
grass, and I kept chewing the grass and weeds like dandelion, purslane and
lambsquarter. I wanted some water, but no one would come near me because my
father said I was in that condition because I had disobeyed him. It was months
before I could even walk with my crushed legs, but they healed. As I got
better, I ran away once to a farm, but was discovered and brought back home
again because I was not yet eighteen.
My father got very angry at many of my actions, because I
didn't eat what they supplied in the bakery anymore, neither the candy nor the
dairy products they sold. He punished me over and over for disobeying him. I
knew if I ate the flour and milk or cheese that I would never get well. After
nearly a year of abuse from him, I heard him downstairs one night making
arrangements to have me taken away and married to a person I did not know who
was much older than I was. He was going to get money for forcing me to go with
that stranger!
Because of this, I ran away again and my parents were
unable to find me. I was eighteen by now and was, for the first time, strictly
on my own. I had many jobs, such as child sitting, house cleaning, and
restaurant work. While in the restaurant, my legs gave out again completely,
and the woman I worked twenty hours a day for got very angry when I had to
leave, and didn't pay me my wages. I walked with an old suitcase for about ten
miles with terribly painful legs and then decided to go to Brockton Hospital
where I had previously worked. I asked them if I could stay there until my legs
healed, and when I was better I would work there again to repay them.
They agreed and when I improved, they put me in a cancer
ward to help patients suffering in the most severe stages. This is where I
learned what it was to pass on from cancer, and I would go into the bathroom
and cry. It was very hard for me to understand why people had to go through so
much suffering and pain. This was when my real interest in cancers began,
because I didn't think it was necessary for people to go through such a
horrible experience before they died. For a year and a half, I was very joyful
in a way because I loved to work with the patients and try to help - but to
hear them crying and screaming was almost more than I could bear.
I turned twenty-one and my real struggles were to begin.
A friend introduced me to my future husband, who looked like a gentleman, and
he wanted to take me out. I was very shy, reluctant, nervous and afraid to go
out with this person, for my grandmother had warned me before coming to America
never to let any boys take advantage of me.
I did finally consent to go out with him. He used to
shower me with gifts of candy. I ate them to be polite, but got migraine
headaches. So, I asked him to bring me fruit instead. I was always afraid to
take expensive gifts from the opposite sex.
The time came when he really wanted to marry me, and he
brought me home to meet his mother. His family lived in Stoughton, where his
father was a contractor. His mother, who was very dictatorial, was always
finding fault with her husband. When he could get out, he would sit in the barn
by the hour, not wanting to come into the house because his wife was always
nagging and complaining. There was always some sort of argument in the house. I
desperately wanted to adjust to that environment and although it was very
difficult, I did everything possible to do so.
I finally married him, and it wasn't six months before
his father died, and my husband bought the house. We had to live there with his
mother, who did not feel well - she always argued and was unhappy and turned
her nagging and complaining toward me and her son, who then took it out on me.
I felt like a whipping boy.
Eleven years passed and I could not get pregnant so I
decided to change my diet and eliminate meat and sweets. I became ill and when
I went to the doctor, he told me that I was pregnant but because of tumors in
my uterus, he didn't think I could possibly survive the birth. I had great
problems during labor, and when I came back home, I was never really well there
afterwards, even though I had the joy of my life, my precious child. My
headaches were getting better, but I was never really happy there, because of
the way I was treated.
I needed to find people who treated me respectfully and
lovingly, and joined various church groups and served as chairperson of banquet
committees. We had a huge estate with over one hundred acres of land, and I
worked very hard and planted a large beautiful garden with every fruit tree and
flower available. My little baby girl was always by my side in her cradle,
watching the butterflies, clouds and birds as I worked in the garden. This was
the only time I was happy, when I was with her.
The baby girl became very sick and my husband gave me a
harder time. He was jealous that I could not give him as much attention as
before because I needed to care for my daughter, and he was disappointed that
the baby was not a boy. Our relationship worsened and my husband became more
dictatorial. The more time I gave to our daughter, the more difficult things
became between us.
I had very serious blood poisoning in a finger and went
to a doctor who operated on me and gave me my first drugs for the pain. As
before, I lapsed into a coma. In the mornings, the doctors would pass my bed in
the hospital and say, Well, I don't think she will live anyway, so we
don't need to do anything. That went on for awhile and I came out of the
coma. Then I began to understand why I had to come to this country and go
through so much struggling, unhappiness and sickness - so that I could learn
lessons about sickness and be ready to help other people in similar situations.
I began to pray for guidance, which I always received.
One early morning I was lying on a couch reading a Bible
and asking God what I should do. I asked why I must be in this predicament. Why
was it necessary to find solutions for so much sickness and unhappiness? Then a
revelation came. It was almost like a voice saying, Become a minister and
build temples. It was nearly three years before I understood that
"temples" meant "holy healthy bodies." I thought, how can I
become a minister?
For help, I went to a Methodist minister and asked him
what to do. He looked at me and told me I was crazy and that I should forget
all about it because I was a woman, and at my age, I could not become a
minister. He said I had other obligations - with my husband and my family. I
said to myself that I certainly could not forget the revelation that was given
to me by God... it was God speaking to me through ideas. I thought there must
be some way to fulfill my mission.
Then I got in touch with a woman I read about in a
newspaper. I called her up and told her that I wanted to belong to one of her
groups. She said that every person who came into her group had to be
investigated, so I told her to come and investigate me and see for herself that
I was a reliable person. She invited me to join her professional women's group.
At the time, I was a furrier working from my home - I had gone to school for a
year to learn the fur business. This woman, I learned later, was studying for
the ministry, so she immediately gave me literature that opened a way, a
correspondence course from the Unity School of Christianity.
After I had finished the course, I had to go to Missouri
and study at the main campus; thereafter, I had to go back for a one month
refresher course every year for four years. My husband resented it, but I was
determined to continue to the finish to follow God's request.
As I was away so much, my husband and daughter spent more
time together. Finally, he asked me to choose between him and my career. How
could I turn down God? He took a shotgun from the closet and told me he would
kill me before he let my career come between us. I was not at all upset or
fearful and I sat at the kitchen table and looked up at him and said that I
would be going back to Missouri. I added I would leave him soon and he could
kill me if he wished because I had to follow God's mission for me. He then laid
down his gun and cried like a baby. So then he told me that if I went, I could
not come back. I kissed him goodbye, said goodbye to my daughter and proceeded
with my plans, hoping that he would come to his senses when I returned.
When I got to school in Missouri I found an article my
husband had printed in the hometown paper, saying that I had run away from
home, deserting my sixteen year old daughter. He made many other false
accusations in it, because he was out of his mind and was determined to ruin my
character. I needed him to support me in this holy work, and he was fighting
me. I felt pulled in two directions but knew I had to follow God's plan for me.
I stayed in Missouri to finish that month's course but
then returned and filed for a divorce, as he wished. I signed papers his lawyer
wrote turning the entire estate over to him, giving everything away to him, if
he would only promise not to have our daughter involved in the court sessions
as I wanted to protect her from the pain she and I would feel in hearing lies
about me. He broke his promise and brought her to court anyway, and she was
exposed to horrible lies about me. I prayed that one day she would know how
much I loved her and wanted to protect her from those awful proceedings. He
paid the divorce lawyer one thousand dollars.
I was completely without a penny, but borrowed money to
go back to school where I had to start from scratch again. I stayed with
friends for about a week, and finally stayed alone in a room I found. I
continued with the fur work and started a massage business also, to help put me
through school.
One day a friend asked me to go help her sister on Cape
Cod who was afflicted with cancer and I agreed to go for a few days to take
care of her. When I got there, her sister Frances wanted me to stay with her
and also help her to study. I wanted to become a Doctor of Divinity, so I
helped Frances and studied for the ministry at the same time. After she passed
on, I stayed for one and a half years more.
Because of the emotional problems and finding out that I
had cancer of the colon, it was a great help for me to be able to stay at a
quiet place to gather together my resources for my mission. It was good for me
to be alone and I prayed a lot. I was given twenty-five dollars a week by the
trustees to care for the estate, and this helped with my schooling and my work
in overcoming the cancer problem. I put a great deal of effort into completing
the work that I so loved, helping people spiritually, mentally and physically.
This effort helped me to survive all of my loneliness for my daughter. My stay
on Cape Cod opened a new life for me and afterwards I went to Boston to give
classes on spiritual enfoldment and to continue with the help I was giving my
body for self-healing.
My first experience on the Cape was to visit some rose
gardens. As I sat on a bench, I enjoyed the scene of beautiful roses and
gorgeous colors. I looked down and saw some birds. One was struggling and sick;
the other was dead. I looked at it, curious to know what had happened. Asking
the caretaker what had caused them to become ill, I was horrified to hear that
he had just sprayed the roses and this was a consequence of the
spraying.
So, I went back to the estate and started a little garden
in the yard. The land was sandy, but I took compost from the kitchen and began
to enrich the soil. I remembered the neighbors gardens close by, where
everything was sprayed, but which still had flying insects, and I planted some
beans. When they sprouted, I noticed that no bugs came close to those in my
garden. I wanted to prove that when the soil was healthy, insects and pests
would not touch fruits and vegetables planted there anymore than germs would
not touch a healthy body. From this point on, I became interested in organic
gardening even more than before.
Work started almost immediately after that in Boston,
even though I was still living at the Cape. I was sent to visit a woman
suffering from back problem. I kept asking her what I could do about starting a
nursing home and she told me of a man who was interested in health care who was
retiring. He had been publishing a paper on health, and he might be willing to
help me. Finally, I was able to make an appointment to meet him in a hotel on
Copley Square. I waited in one hotel for him, while he waited in another. I
made another appointment to meet him in the library. We finally met, and he
seemed to be very much interested in my persistence and in what I was trying to
do. He invited me to come occasionally to Boston to help him with his paper,
which I did.
When the time came for me to leave the estate on the Cape
I moved to my sister's in Connecticut, but my brother-in-law did not agree with
my ideas about health. I baked on a hot plate and lived on less than
twenty-five cents a day for over eight months. I had to live on cooked food
there and I became very sick again. I traveled to Boson every week to work on
the paper but then decided it was time for me to be on my own. I didn't have
any funds to work with so I borrowed money from my cousin and rented a room on
the sixth floor of a building on Cumberland Street.
The colon cancer had returned when I came to Boston from
the country. The air was polluted as was the water. There was no place in the
city that had good healthy food or even fresh vegetables or fruits. It was
important for me to get healthy again, so I went to the Charles River bank for
weeds and grasses. This improved my health, which was very bad from eating the
cooked baked foods at the Cape and in Connecticut.
I was given the health magazine to publish! One evening I
was on my way to my sister's house in Connecticut. I was very tired and pulled
off the road and went to sleep in my car. I was awakened by the morning sun,
which shone so brightly in my eyes that this brightness took on a new
beginning. Then and there I knew that the Rising Sun Christianity had to be
born. It was a new beginning for me and a way to share with others. Since then,
I have never stopped working, day and night, for a better world, first
physically, because then the mental and emotional self would gain strength in
order for the spiritual union with body to take place. I sent a paper on this
to thirty-five different countries. I mailed the information on health through
sprouting, living food and easy-to-digest nourishment and corresponded with
people all over the world.
During my ride to Connecticut, everything seemed to
unfold slowly and I began to understand what I was to do. From then on, I was
guided daily, step-by-step, toward this ultimate goal, which is now in
existence. There was much discouragement. There were problems I was facing for
the first time, alone, and I had no funds and no home.
Boston was the place where I felt I must unfold. For
nourishment, I went to the vacant lots where I gathered weeds and grasses and
used them for food. In doing this, I returned to the source of nourishment
which had, in the past, greatly improved my health, although this took
considerable time.
During that fall, I was able to work in many areas,
mailing out information, studying, working on the magazine, etc. I will still
quite tired and had to sleep long hours and this bothered me very much as I
felt there was not enough time to do all of the things I had to do. Winter was
coming and I was concerned about where I was to obtain the grasses and weeds
that I had been gathering from the outdoors to live on. At that time, I asked
God again to help and protect me.
One beautiful thing happened regarding sprouting, which I
considered a great step toward better nourishment. I adopted a sick monkey from
a pet shop. At that time, I was helping ill animals wherever I found them. I
had been nourishing myself on dry seeds and fed these to the monkey. I noticed
she was having difficulty swallowing or digesting the seeds and discovered it
was because she was toothless. I wanted to soften the seeds so I put them
between two moist towels and, lo and behold, I was led to re-discover the
timeless act of sprouting - the seeds opened and put out little tender shoots
or sprouts within several days! These easily digested sprouts from softened
seeds led me to explore further and that's how I came to give the world the
benefit of my discovery of sprouting - through the love of a pet.
I gave her some fruit also, but her main diet was soft
seed in the form of sprouts. I decided to use the same sprouts myself, and I
know the Creator gave me the idea of how to add more nourishment to my body
through loving that monkey: as ye do unto the least of them, ye do unto
Me. I began to grow wheat, buckwheat, rye, timothy grass, cats, etc.
There must have been six or seven different grains.
Two of them grew very fast - buckwheat and wheatgrass. I
kept giving the buckwheat to the monkey, which she enjoyed, and I also began to
use it in my salads. These replaced the weeds I had been using before winter
came. I was happy because I now had a replacement for the weeds and grasses and
felt well prepared to nurture my body. I continued to grow the different
grasses and greens and fed them to my pets, observing which ones they liked
best. By that time, I had a raccoon, monkey, two cats and a few other animals
which I kept in friends homes as I was not allowed to have pets in my
room. I enjoyed taking care of sick animals and watching them get healthy.
My observations showed me that every pet preferred to eat
the wheatgrass and buckwheat, but especially loved the wheatgrass. The cats not
only kept eating the wheatgrass, but would lay about in it, as well!
About this time I began to be curious as to what were the
best nutritional elements contained in the wheatgrass. I discovered that after
seven days, wheatgrass was more powerful than the previous six days to heal
wounds or make me healthier. I was to find out later that on the seventh day,
the wheat grass puts out negative ions, which make us feel great. These are the
same ions we feel during a shower, or at the beach when the waves are crashing,
or after a rain. Before the seventh day, the grass is pulling the negative ions
out of anything or anyone around it, and leaves one feeling depleted.
To be
continued...
- contributed by Dr. Flora van Orden III
Statement of
Independence |
While this newsletter is inspired by, and based on the
teachings of Dr. Ann Wigmore and
Creative Health Institute, and
Dr. Carey sits on the Board of Trustees of
Creative Health Institute,
this newsletter is independently operated and is not directly affiliated with
Creative Health or any other Wigmore Center. Opinions expressed herein are
strictly those of Dr. Carey and his editorial assistant.
Backslider's Corner - Astonishing Health
Disaster |
Backsliding but progressing is NOT about feeling guilty
about slipping. Even if you weren't 100% raw this week, how much better are
you feeling than when you were on the SAD?
The Most Astonishing Health Disaster of the 20th
Century
A five-minute video about the state of healthcare in the
US today. If you haven't seen all of this info in one place before, it will
shock you: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FPI7zdGdqo4.
Another look at the state of our healthcare comes from
satirist Bill Maher (4 minute video):
http://naturalparadigms.com/billmaher.html
Raw Living Foods Hands-on Training |
 |
Some try to heal you with vitamins or herbs, others with
drugs or surgery. But the Dr. Ann Wigmore program is different - we don't
wait to get sick. The Wigmore Program "tunes up" your entire
body, now, so you won't get sick in the first place! |
We've been teaching the benefits of a plant-based diet
for 30 years in an intensive, two-week, hands-on program of health education
and raw foods preparation. The testimonials of former Creative Health students
speak volumes about the Living Foods Lifestyle that we teach -
http://rawlivingfoods.typepad.com/1/feedback_creative_health_institute/index.html.
The best way to get to know us it to come visit for an
afternoon. Sundays we have a wonderful raw gourmet vegan buffet at 2:30
pm. Call us at (866) 426-1213 for dates. For directions visit
CreativeHealthInstitute.com/contact_us.htm.
Raw Living Foods Home Study
Program |
The Home Study Program about Raw Living Foods was
developed from the teachings of Dr. Ann Wigmore. We put this program together
because we talked to many people who either didn't have the time or the money
to attend a two-week hands-on program.
The Living Foods Lifestyle includes other
components besides just raw Organic foods. There is the "living"
aspect of our foods, as well as internal cleansing, colon health, lymphatic
system health, proper exercise, wheatgrass juice, energy soup, proper food
combining, dehydrating, nutritional and dietary balance, and yummy food
prep. All of this we teach in the Home Study Program.
Learn more at our website, chiDiet.com.

What people are saying about the Raw Living Foods® Home Study Program:
http://rawlivingfoods.typepad.com/1/feedback_home_study_program/index.html.
Feedback -
Mona |
Dear Jim,
Thank you so much for my order. And.... a big big thank
you for all the bonuses ;) !!!! I'm so excited I'm just jumping out of my skin.
I'm sort of taking this home class "under cover" I'll have to wait
until my spouse is gone to work to watch the dvds. Then he'll just have to see
the miraculous changes in me without my preaching and I'm sure he'll come on
board. Again a great big THANK YOU!!!
Mona
Feedback - Prince
Fidelis |
Thank you once again for the DVD's you've sent out to me,
I will live to appreciate you Dr. Jim, I have started telling my families,
Inlaws and friends about you, what God is doing through you in my life,
ministry and family. I tell them that you are the Angel of my life.
Regards
Prince Fidelis Bartholomew Udumaga
Kaduna, Nigeria
Medicine or
Poison? |
"The food you eat can be either the safest and most
powerful form of medicine, or the slowest form of poison."
- Dr. Ann Wigmore, N.D.
Real Health, with Dr. Steve
Monkiewicz |
I'm a big fan of this new podcast by Dr. Steve, ND, PhD,
CBT, EFT. Of course, being a regular on his program may have something to do
with it:
"We are facing a Health Care crisis. That is because
our system is a Disease Maintenance system not one focused on getting you well
and keeping you well. If you are looking for truthful, honest and holistic
answers... you have found the right place!" -
http://web.mac.com/drsteve720
In The News |
Raw Living Food Lifestyle-related news and
events are published on our blog: http://rawlivingfoods.typepad.com/.
You can have the postings delivered via
email or RSS feed by signing up at
http://rawlivingfoods.typepad.com/1/2006/06/ways_of_subscri.html.
For every article that makes the newsletter, there are many more of related
interest on the blog.
"If you don't stay informed, then
who will tell the others the truth?" - Unknown
Left Brain - Right Brain
Test |
Are you a right- or left-brained person? This test
purports to show you:
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22556281-661,00.html.
Soy Lowers Sperm
Count |
Here's a good article on how soy specifically lowers
mens' sperm count and will make you... well, you know...
http://healthtruthrevealed.com/full-page.php?id=09184229810&&page=article.
- thanks to Steven Gibb for sharing
Life is
Rawsome! |

Smile! Life is Rawsome!
Problem With New "Raw
Organic" Almonds |
The new "raw" organic almonds that I got from Wild
Oats could not make into smooth almond cream. Dr. Wigmore's worst nightmare has
come true. She said the most important thing we need to do for the
future is guard our seed and nut supply.
- Dr. Flora van Orden III
Is Diabetes Really
Incurable? |
Is diabetes being treated wrong in America?
http://www.renegadehealth.com/blog/is-diabetes-treatment-wrong
- I've seen wonderful results of the body healing itself
from diabetes when the people began to live the lifestyle of raw living foods:
RawLivingFoods
Resources blog.
Events and Meetings |
"The gathering of people is what most frightens
oppressive government. Wherever freedom reigns in the world, there is open
communication amongst people. When we gather, we gain power. When we fail to
gather, we only fail ourselves. Therefore, let us not forsake the gathering of
ourselves together. It is as vital now as it has ever been." - Jay
North
The Special Events page is
regularly updated at
RawLivingFoods.typepad.com/1/special_events/index.html.
The Regular Meetings and Events page is at
RawLivingFoods.typepad.com/1/regular_meetings_and_events/index.html.
Scholarships to Living Foods
Program Available |
Hi Jim,
Hope you are doing great! Things are going fantastic
here! I just received a rather large donation and I have several scholarships
to pay 1/2 the tuition for my Nov. 2-11 and my Jan. 4-13 class. If you know of
anyone who would like to come to the course but who needs scholarship help,
please let me know.
Much Love and Many Blessings,
Brenda Cobb
Living Foods Institute
404-607-1816 direct line
404-625-1956 cell
www.livingfoodsinstitute.com
Live Interviews with James Carey
Available Online |
Here's my interview with Alexi Bracey:
http://www.radioforyourhealth.com/.
A few months ago I did an Internet radio
interview/tele-seminar with Chris Brisson about the benefits of the raw living
foods lifestyle. You can listen to the interview here:
http://rawlivingfoods.typepad.com/1/2006/11/jim_carey_inter.html.
I also did an Internet radio interview/tele-seminar with
Michael Snyder that month. You can listen to the show, or download it to CD,
at: http://rawlivingfoods.typepad.com/1/2006/11/jim_carey_on_in.html.
Raw Living Foods TV Shows and
Videos |
A large collection (over 70) videos on Raw and Living
Foods: http://feralfoods.org/video.html.
-------------------------
Here are the dates of the Raw Food TV show on Al Gore's
new TV Network: http://www.current.tv/pods/cuisine/PD04852
Here is the link if you want to view it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbT-pz40mUI
-------------------------
Raw Living Foods Lifestyle
Reduces Global Warming
- Last year a UN Report showed that the raw vegan diet is the best deterrent to
global warming and promoting sustainability.
This video by Glen Beck discusses how Al Gore - and other
politicians - ignore how going low on the food chain deters global warming (8
minutes): http://youtube.com/watch?v=VwkbDubF2qM.
So... Is the Raw Living Foods® Lifestyle "An Inconvenient
Truth?"
Recipe - Fennel Orange Lime Balm
Salad |
Lots of Raw Vegan Recipes are posted on our blog at
http://rawlivingfoods.typepad.com/.
We've sorted them by category for your convenience.
Fennel Orange Lime Balm Salad
1 large fennel bulb
5 large oranges
2 1/2 tablespoons lemon juice
1/2 cup seedless grapes, halved
1 tablespoon chopped lime balm leaves
Trim the top and bottom off fennel bulb. Quarter and
slice bulb as thin as possible. Place fennel in medium bowl. Peel, seed and cut
oranges into sections, then chop into smaller pieces. Stir in the grape halves
and toss with lemon juice. Sprinkle with lime balm leaves.
- contributed by Suzanne
More Raw Living Foods
Resources |
For an organized, searchable resource on all sorts of
Raw Living Foods Lifestyle information, including the newsletter articles
sorted by subject, visit our new website at
RawLivingFoods.typepad.com.
Back issues of the newsletter are available at
http://chidiet.com/news/.
Why Suffer?: How I Overcame Illness & Pain
Naturally, by Dr. Ann Wigmore, ND, is available for free via
download (you'll have to supply the printer and paper, or read it on your
computer): RawLivingFoods.typepad.com/books/whysuffer.pdf.
The Evolution of Medicine - a
Spoof |
Complaint: "Doctor, I have an earache..."
Response:
2000 BC Here, eat this root.
100 AD That root is heathen; say this
prayer.
1850 AD That Prayer is superstition; drink this
potion.
1940 AD That potion is snake oil; swallow this
pill.
1980 AD That pill is ineffective; take this
antibiotic.
2000 AD That antibiotic is artificial; Here,
eat this root and say this prayer!
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this newsletter is not meant to be a substitute for professional advice.
While this newsletter is inspired by, and based on the
teachings of Dr. Ann Wigmore and the
Creative Health Institute, and
Dr. Carey sits on the Board of Trustees of
Creative Health Institute,
this newsletter is independently operated and is not directly affiliated with
Creative Health or any other Wigmore Center. Opinions expressed herein are
strictly those of Dr. Carey and his editorial assistants.
© 2007 by chiDiet.com. Please feel free to reproduce
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contents
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