Laughter is the best cure. Bucketlist Survivalhack™: Actual cures are better. All illnesses aren’t understood. “Catch all” drugs allow an abandonment – at the treatment level – of the scientific method we learned in elementary school.
Cures come from multiple possibilities, as disease often does.
The pharmaceutical medicine model leaves little time for doctors to show interest in who, what, where, when, why or how of disease at treatment. It’s damning when there’s no medical treatment or cure. Treatment is the wrong word. Management is where pharma medicine settles at. Bucketlist Peeve: The word “management”. A shitty Brooklyn workplace’ll do that.
Bucketlist Healthhack™: Heal from all. Whether illness, diet, memory, family, relationship, home, or job. Healing takes place on multiple levels. As does disease.
Illness may be turned on by knowns and unknowns. Our emotional, physical and environmental reality, in and out of our body, regulates our health. It’s not entirely under our control. Disease can develop without your doing anything wrong.
Bucketlist Longevityhack™: How we breathe and what we eat impact our health. Death-Free™ food supports and strengthens the body without compromising the soul.
Cures come from multiple possibilities, as disease often does. Dividing us from all possible treatment options is like watching one corner of the screen during a movie. Bucketlist Healing niyat (intention), don’t knock it till you’ve tried it. Allopathy. Nutrition. Acupuncture. Herbs. Traditional Chinese Medicine. Meditation. Ayurveda. Reiki. Physical therapy. Homeopathy. Chiropractic. Water therapy. Shamanism. Naturopathy. Massage. Flower remedies. Cupping. Sauna. Vitamins. Drugs. Probiotics. Plant Medicine. Epigenetics. Osteopathy. Qiqong. Biofeedback. Kinesthesiology. Psychology. Fasting. Colonic. Death-Free™. Pieces of a puzzle undermined by ego, ignorance and disconnect. The only quackery is choosing to ignore available knowledge.
Bucketlist true story: A Parent’s children advocated gallbladder removal because of the inconvenience the illness caused them. Tired from pain, the “quick-fix” allure worked. Removal didn’t resolve the pain. Alternative healing isn’t quick-fixing. Bucketlist knows too many alternative practitioners take advantage of our hopelessness, frustration, and wallet.
Bucketlist Lifehack™: Ignore morons
Bucketlist fact: Pharmaceutical (allopathic) medicine is reliable lifesaving and life extending especially in emergencies, including accidents and cancer. Led by Muslim genius, Ibn Sina, allopathic medicine has developed an impeccable understanding of the body, amazing diagnostic technology and drugs. It’s one of our greatest achievements.
Bucketlist confession: I was exclusively about pharmaceutical medicine, and believed it was about curing. Surgery after surgery. Drug after stronger drug. I trusted. Few seemed interested in cause or cure. Or the illogic, how long could I keep repeating surgeries? I was familiar with herbs. I understood food can strengthen or weaken. I knew prayer, nazr (curses), and meditation. Yet still “alternative” medicine seemed silly. Until gifted an acupuncture session. I walked in pain-hunched as I’d been for weeks. 90 minutes later, I walked out standing tall. My pharma doctor was uninterested. My interest was peaked.
The segmented and segregated approach to healthcare is detrimental. Who decided to compartmentalize health such that no one could see or connect the whole again? Bucketlist Lifehack™: Ignore morons.
Bucketlist knows access to healing is income based. Universal Bucketlist envisions merged treatment options. Diagnostic technology can test many methods or remedies. There’s enough time. Enough money. Attention is what’s missing.
Bucketlist Heal results from years of poring over research; speaking with doctors, healers from diverse practices; traveling to understand herbs, breath, acupuncture, reiki, plant medicine; and, most importantly, from observing, hypothesizing, experimenting and concluding. Bucketlist lays it plain. To your excellent health. Laugh unapologetically. In time, there’s a cure.
Bonne vie, Friends.