Modern Medicine's Lost Direction
How the doctor-patient relationship was sacrificed to objectification
Clip from THE BOOK OF VISION film (2020):
"Whoever listens to his body and learns to understand its language holds the key to health. The feeling within one's body is more important than any medicine and also more important than any "objective" rational knowledge.."
Mattias Desmet, The Psychology of Totalitarianism
Modern medicine lost its way long before Rockefeller's crusade against natural medicine. Rockefeller's pharmaceutical replacement of natural medicine also results from the moment in the history of medicine in which doctors stopped listening to patients.
This happened as a result of the objectification of the human body. Once people started seeing the human body as an agglomeration of separate body parts, not a living soul, the healing importance of the doctor-patient relationship was forgotten.
The doctor-patient relationship started failing long before doctors put their patients at risk by injecting them with experimental unsafe & uneffective Covid19 injections.
The symptom of this failure is doctors not listening to patients when patients tell them they have been harmed by the Covid19 experimental injections. Many people feel that doctors dismiss them when they tell them that.
Dismissing patients harmed by Covid19 injections is just as bad as dismissing patients harmed by Covid19 disease. The denial of patient accounts of both Covid19 disease & injection harms is the same gaslighting of patients.
Another symptom of failure is the doctor-patient consultation reduced to 5 minutes just to prescribe a non natural pharmaceutical. It fails even more when doctor consultations are moved to video calls, or replaced by AI.
The way to address this is for people in the healing arts to really start listening to patients again.
This is why the answer on how to fix medicine can't lie in science, it lies in returning to listening.
Patient experiences should not be denied by experts of a failed science and return to the *ART of medicine*. This begins with truly and deeply listening to patients again.