EXPANSION of Body ~ Mind ~ Spirit

Highlighted section shared by Lorpuris, the head of the White Brotherhood Medical Unit...

Digital Art courtesy of www.webshots.com

EXPANDED EXPERIENCES AND M.A.P.


Since the MAP program developed as a response to struggles with integrating an expanded level of operation of our body, mind and spirit, Lorpuris explains how we operate during these times of expansion.

MAP is for general health balance, regular health issues, extraordinary health issues, as well as  assistance during expansion experiences. When people reach the point of feeling that they need more from their medical support system because of the physical and emotional pressure that expansion experiences place on them, M.A.P. may be helpful. Expansion experiences have traditionally been relegated to spirituality, and many feel that only those who are "spiritually evolved" have expansion experiences. Well, this simply isn't true. We all have expansion experiences. Any time we learn something new, that's expansion. Any time we experience something new, that, too, is expansion. Whatever is new to us must be received and processed accurately and well in order for the experience to be useful.

A good sign a person needs MAP is when he has a deep sense that he needs more medical support than is presently available to him. Many feel the need for additional help when struggling with especially challenging expansion experiences because, as a rule, traditional and alternative medical systems prevalent today do not accept or understand that the human body plays an essential role during expansion. They don't understand or accept how the body functions at these times or what help we need if we are not functioning well. Lorpuris will be helpful to those of you who recognize that you have been backed into a corner because of difficulties arising from expansion.

As well as explaining the role of the body in expansion, Lorpuris also shares how we operate as body/soul life systems on our planet. This may be helpful in general, in understanding why we would feel the need for new medical assistance.

LORPURIS: HOW WE PHYSICALLY SUPPORT EXPANSION

An expanded experience does not by definition mean it to be nonphysical or beyond five-senses form. It simply implies that the experience is beyond that which the person has experienced prior to that time—thus, the sense of expansion. We have said to you that the band of form is quite complex, and this is true. It includes all that a person can potentially experience while participating within any given level of form such as Earth.

While participating within a level of form such as Earth, all reality adheres to the universal law of horizontal compatibility. Consequently, what is expressed within the Earth level is "of form" whether it be discernible to the naked eye or not. The limitation regarding form arises when an individual defines form strictly from the perspective of the five senses. Nature, for example, does not distinguish between the tree as seen by the naked eye and the nature spirit of the tree that is not seen. To nature, both are fully "of form" and, therefore, have impact on and respond to one another within the laws of form.

Now, the laws of form are much broader than what is encompassed when one thinks of the five-senses sensory system. In fact, an expanded experience is simply learning or allowing the sensory system, as most individuals know it, to operate in a fuller capacity. The problem is that individuals see the five-senses system as the one and only sensory system, and anything beyond or outside this base functioning as being something entirely different. In fact, they are both functions of the same system.

When a child is born into the Earth level, its sensory system is quite sensitive and expanded. It is, after all, just moving from a state of being prior to birth in which the sensory system naturally functions in a broader state. If left on its own, the child would continue to develop its sensory system from the point of this broader perspective. And what one might call "expanded experiences" would be the norm. Societal preconceptions are what encourage the child to limit the sensory scope, and the development of the sensory system throughout childhood then takes place from this more limited perspective. Along with this, the limited definition of the sensory system and its scope of discernment becomes the rule of thumb by which to judge experience.

Now, if the sensory system is capable of naturally operating in a much broader scope than most individuals can at present imagine, it follows that the physical body must respond to and support that operation. The sensory system itself is a part of that overall body response and support system. Everything works as a team, ideally. Consequently, one cannot have what is known as an expanded experience without the sensory system and the physical body system as a whole responding to and attempting to support it. So, one may see a meditative state as an expanded experience, but, in fact, it is a broader use of the sensory system and draws appropriate response and support from within the physical body itself. Just as one cannot move a finger or toe without the entire body's muscular and skeletal systems responding, one cannot shift from one state of mind to another without a similar physical response and shift.

There is a saying many on the Earth level use: "If you don't use it, you lose it." Normally, this refers to muscle and body tone. When a child limits the scope of operation within the sensory system, the complementary scope of physical response and support is no longer needed or utilized. In those areas, a person stiffens and atrophies. Then, later on, when the individual is an adult and consciously chooses to reactivate the sensory system in a broader way, the physical body no longer "knows" how to respond and support that expansion. The person will experience nothing, no matter how much willpower he musters, or the experience will be partially perceived and most likely distorted, as well.

Let's address the body system itself and what happens when the sensory system responds to an experience. Any experience initially strikes the human body through the electrical system. This occurs whether the experience is easily perceived or not. The initial receptor of experience is not the brain or the senses but the electrical system. The impact immediately, almost simultaneously, shifts and translates into the nervous system and routes itself throughout the nervous system appropriately as it begins its identification and experience process. This includes activating the sensory system in an appropriate manner. (All this occurs within a split second.) The point to remember is that the initial level of impact is electrical, followed by an impact on the nervous system. If the experience is within the individual's perceived notion of "acceptable," this usually means that the person knows how to perceive the experience on all levels operating within the physical body.

Two things can occur if the individual doesn't know what to do with the experience. Either the physical body doesn't know how to respond and support the experience and is in need of assistance, or the experience itself is so beyond the person's operating scope of reality that it takes on an intensification that literally overwhelms the body and requires of it a level of operation well beyond its present range of capability.

 In the latter case, the person must have a good foundation for such a stretch, or else he risks damaging himself physically. You would not want a person who is not capable of walking a half-mile to suddenly be forced to run three miles. But you could expect someone who easily runs three miles could tackle a seven-mile run without sustaining damage. It's a challenge, but it is not beyond the scope of possibility, and most likely not dangerous. However, the body used to the exertion of the three-mile run would have a challenge with responding well to the longer run, and it could result in soreness and discomfort until the body learns to support the longer run.

Let me sum up the relationship of the cranial/spine/sacrum with the expanded experience. The experience is received electrically, shifted to the nervous system for sorting and identification, and, at this point, the physical body systems move to support what is being identified. If the body cannot adequately shift, the electrical system will overload or break, and the corresponding vertebrae, sacrum, or cranials will most likely react by misaligning. Hence you have the sensation of trying to catch six balls all at once while only being able to catch four.

A SPECIAL NOTE ABOUT THE CRANIALS: An expanded experience carries with it an intensity that registers through the electrical system, moves into the nervous system, and continues its impact into the cerebrospinal fluid. The brain is impacted by both the nervous system activity and the CSF (cerebrospinal fluid) pulse response to the impact. The cranial plates must respond accordingly to accommodate this two-pronged impact. The range of plate movement will be affected. If the cranials have lost their knowledge of how to move within this new range or if they are three-milers stretching for the seven-mile run, they run the risk of jamming or misaligning. This is when so much of the head pain associated with expanded experience comes up. Cranial adjustments may be necessary over a period of time in order to allow time for the plates to properly adjust to and move in a more expanded range. One may receive these adjustments either from a physician such as a chiropractor or from MAP.

Just as the leg muscles need to adjust to the seven-mile run, the cranials need time to adjust to expansion. Because of the close working proximity with the electrical and nervous systems, the cranials must be considered one of the primary areas for assistance during times of expansion. In a relatively short period of time, the cranials, as well as the rest of the physical body system, will learn how to operate within the expanded range of experience with ease, accuracy, and efficiency.

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