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Anastasia
30th August 2015, 17:22
I am posting part of this essay and leaving the link to view the rest if it has piqued interest. This is page 1 and most of page 2. The entire PDF is here...

http://api.ning.com/files/MsJ7T**tK5z5D6boe**bZSOURI7XmiiDapDE7n0ie4kqboWCKZ qvDsCzb8SI7xJQNHisif9cv2A9OnnpHVfWcVXPSp8P2sZW/DNA.pdf


DNA –
2, 12 or 13 Strands?
An Essay
by Chris Thomas
© Chris Thomas 2011
Dedicated to Henrietta Lacks


Understanding DNA


We are all aware of DNA
(deoxyribonucleic acid) but very
few of us actually know what it
does in the cell structures of the body.
Medically; it is described as:
“The very long molecule that winds up to
form a chromosome and that contains the
complete code for the automatic construction
of the body. The molecule has a double helix
skeleton of alternating sugars (deoxyribose)
and phosphates...”
But this is far from being the whole story.
In recent years, we have seen an increase in
the number of workshops being offered,
sometimes at considerable expense, to help
people raise their number of DNA strands
from the traditional two to twelve.
So what is the benefit of changing our DNA
in this way? Is it a benefit, or even desirable,
to change the coding “for the automatic
construction of the body”?
To understand these questions, we first must
understand what DNA actually is.

The Construction of the Human
Body

We are used to hearing from
scientists that the body is a
collection of cells which seem to
follow some sort of pattern in which DNA
plays a part and, somewhere or other, we
have a consciousness.
From a religious viewpoint, we are told that
we are a body that has, somewhere or other,
a soul.
The terms “consciousness” and “soul”
meaning very much the same thing but are
used separately to differentiate between the
scientific view and the religious view.
Most people believe that we are a body that
has a soul (consciousness) but are unsure of
where that soul is.
The reality is that we are a soul that builds for
itself a body – not a body that has a soul but a
soul that has a body.
In order for the soul to take on a physical
body, it borrows the “etheric template” of a
human body, makes a copy and begins to
build the body inside the womb.
When the father’s sperm meets the mother’s
egg, an automatic process is begun that is a
function of the fertilisation process – the soul
does not connect at this stage – all that really
happens is that the egg begins to divide.
From both parents, the new foetus “borrows”
some aspects of both parent’s DNA. These are
basic characteristics such as skin colour and
hair colour; no more than that, everything
else about the foetus is determined by the soul
of the incoming child.
After about 800 cell divisions, the soul of the
foetus makes its first connection to the
growing bundle of dividing cells. At this
stage, the soul is not connected to the cells
but begins to imprint the etheric template.
After about 16 days, the soul’s connection to
the foetus begins to strengthen and it is at this
stage that DNA begins to play its role.
At this stage in a foetus’s development, DNA
breaks down into 2 separate parts:
75 per cent of the total DNA is the storage of
memories from past lives. If an experience in
a past life needs to be resolved within the
body during this lifetime, then the memories
of that past life trauma are added at this
point. These memories can take the form of a
disability, such as a missing limb; or they can
be as a result of the past life event imprinted
into the body for this life. For example, if a
previous life ended by your being shot to
death, the memory of the bullet wounds can
show themselves as moles on the skin.
The remaining 25 per cent of the total DNA is
needed to construct the physical tissues of the
body around the etheric template.
As the foetus grows, this percentage gradually
drops until, at birth, only about 10 per cent is
needed to continue the body’s development.
At puberty, when the body has effectively
stopped growing, the percentage drops to
W
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© Chris Thomas 2011 2
about 3 per cent. This 3 per cent is the
amount of DNA that keeps the body
functioning for the remainder of its life.
When doctors claim that they have worked
out how DNA works, it is this 3 per cent of
which they speak whilst claiming that the
remaining 97 per cent is “junk”.
However, from puberty onwards, the
function of DNA breaks down like this:
75 per cent is the storage of past life
memories.
3 per cent maintains the body’s physical
processes.
22 per cent records memories of the events
that take place in this lifetime.
Physical memories are only stored in the
brain for very short term periods – only a
couple of years at most. Long term memory is
stored within the DNA.
This is the reason why the elderly can
remember very little of their recent lives but
can remember their earlier life in great detail.
As the cell structures of the brain begin to
break down as we become older, much of the
short term memory is lost whereas the long
term, DNA, memory is fully intact and
becomes easier for the elderly to access these
memories as their brain cells become less
efficient.
This is the actual make up of DNA – it is
principally memory.

The Higher Self and the Physical
Self

Human Being is defined, by the Earth,
as a physical being that contains the
whole of the soul. When we first came
to Atlantis, this is the state in which humans
were.
However, we encountered problems and,
eventually, decided to divide the soul into two
parts. The soul was to be divided into the
“physical self” – about 25 per cent of the total
soul and the “higher self” – the remaining 75
per cent of the soul. This division took place
about 7,000 years ago and we have been in
this divided state ever since (see Synthesis).
However, we set ourselves a time limit of
7,000 years to find a way to re-merge the two
aspects of the soul back into the physical
body. This is the process we are currently
undergoing.
To understand what this means, we need to
take a further look at the body/soul
connection.
As can be seen from earlier, the soul begins to
make a very tentative connection with the
growing foetus at about 800 cell divisions
following egg fertilisation.
The connection of the soul to the developing
foetus remains limited until about 16 weeks
into the pregnancy. As the foetus develops in
the womb, all of the past life memories or
disabilities are incorporated. After about 16
weeks, the soul decides whether all of the
memories to be incorporated into the foetus
have worked correctly. If they have not
incorporated correctly, the foetus is
miscarried. If incorporated correctly, the soul
begins to draw itself into the body.
This drawing into the body by the soul has
three stages:
At about 16 weeks, the foetus is given life and
begins to respond to the mother.
At birth, or just before, enough of the soul is
drawn into the body to be independent of the
mother.
At puberty, the final piece of the soul, that is
to be incorporated into the body for this
lifetime, is drawn in.
The soul is not located in a particular region
of the body; the soul infuses every single body
cell. The body takes the shape of the soul and
the soul inhabits the body. Or at least, the
“physical aspect” of the soul inhabits the
body; the “higher aspect”, or higher self,
remains outside of the physical body but very
closely connected with it.
However, in this lifetime, we are re-writing
the rules.
Between now and the end of 2012, we are
undergoing a process whereby we are
drawing the higher self into the body – soul
re-integration – and this process has
repercussions for our DNA.

Changes to DNA

Read more...http://api.ning.com/files/MsJ7T**tK5z5D6boe**bZSOURI7XmiiDapDE7n0ie4kqboWCKZ qvDsCzb8SI7xJQNHisif9cv2A9OnnpHVfWcVXPSp8P2sZW/DNA.pdf

Greenbarry
30th August 2015, 19:32
thanks.

Anastasia
31st August 2015, 01:39
shouldnt all topics of CT be on the same thread?
it is about that same person..
:frantic:

The link to this essay is in the main thread also. I thought I would give it it's own thread since other CT essays have their's making the essays easier to find. I would not have done this if we were in general topics.

Greenbarry
31st August 2015, 07:39
all good anastasia.. maybe it is a good way to do it.
just surprised me and i ran my mouth and inserted foot.

:grin: