Building Immunity
In this video, Tom Kopko spends about 35 minutes speaking on "Building Immunity" at the 30th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
Thank you, Frank. I read Norman Cousins were still alive. He went around the world lecturing about a positive mental attitude. Mary Hart do is good, like a medicine and a broken spirit drives up the bones. Wait a minute. I know Mary Hart, who is good like a medicine, but a broken spirit, dry as a bone bones that was written four thousand years ago. 4000 years ago. Did they know that the blood cells were formed in the bone and the bone marrow. 4000 years ago.
So were depressed, discouraged and despair. Maybe we don't produce healthy blood cells. I'm Mary Hart. Do good like a medicine, but a broken spirit. Dry up the bones. Yes. Norman Cousins was the father of the program that we advocate here of love and laughter with each longevity. The day I was born, I cried.
How many can say that? Every infant that's born cries.
And everybody around me, when I was crying today, I was born with smiling.
When I die. I want to be smiling and everybody around me to be crying.
And the only way that can happen is if we have this wonderful love and laughter in our lives. So that that when that day comes, I could be smiling as my last day and others could have tears in their eyes.
If you take an interest.
And only changed the diaper and only give it a bottle. And there is no love and there is no affection, no human touch to that engine.
What happens? Someone says it dies. Others says it has problems the rest of its life if it lives.
Folks, love is needed at the beginning of life.
And love is needed at the end of life. Therefore, my conclusion is love must be needed throughout life.
And we must develop into loving people.
It was a nurse in London many, many years ago that helped eliminate the blood and transfusions for giantess infants. Here's an infant that's born, that is jaundice. The infant may die. This is many years ago. Many did.
Yellow. Because the liver's not working right?
The skin is yellow. Here's a loving nurse that took the infant in her arms. Broke the hospital regulations and went outside the maternity ward and held that baby and love that this baby. So I wouldn't I for 20 minutes. And guess what happened? The sun beat down on a partial side of that infant's face. And as that sun beat down and that nurse loved that baby, the jaunty skin turned a beautiful pink.
Guess what that led to?
It did away with the transfusions. Of infants and introduce full spectrum