Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled

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Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled

Dr. Christopher's Newsletter 1-5


Page 1 Page 2
by Dr. John R. ChristopherWe are placed on the earth with the finest piece of
machinery, our own body, to be used as a vehicle for our spirit while we are in
mortality. This equipment is completely computerized and if taken care of properly
will last many, many more years than we normally expect it to in our modern
society. Because of improper care and fueling of the human mechanism, our life span
is far shorter, even by hundreds of years, than was common in Biblical times
according to the ancient prophet and writer Isaiah. It is often difficult for the
average individual to make his three score and ten let alone the hundred and ten
years allotted mankind in Bible times after the Great Flood.

Each organ in our body must do its job as efficiently as it was originally meant to
and designed for so that the other organs, will also work smoothly. If any part of
the body should say to another part, "I have no need of you," does this mean we
need to pluck it out? No. In order to have a wholesome (whole) body, each organ
must run smoothly contributing to overall performance.
The heart is an organ which is generally ignored or taken for granted until an
emergency arrives. Being computerized, it just keeps on beating without our giving
it any instructions and it will continue to work by itself until it is stopped by
our neglect--or our inability to cope with its out-of-time or laboring problems.

"There is no evidence that stresses cause heart disease," wrote Kurt Aaron, M.D.,
in the November 14, 1959, issue of the Medical Journal of Australia (East
Brisbane). However, he went on to demonstrate that stress of certain kinds can
cause symptoms of heart disease in patients whose hearts are perfectly normal.

From time immemorial we have associated the heart with our emotions. Language is
full of phrases like "heartfelt, lionhearted, broken-hearted." We know as well that
the heart is closely associated with the emotions of fear and its natural
accompanying physical preparedness. Physical response to danger requires increased
blood supply to the muscles, dilation of the small arteries that lead to the
muscles, the release of a glandular secretion, adrenalin and an increase in the
output of the heart. In other words the heart must beat harder or faster or both.

Of course in earlier days danger meant for man the same thing it means to an
animal, he either fought or ran. These body preparations took place to give him
strength for fighting or swiftness for escape. It is true that the clotting time of
the blood is shortened when one feels fear, anger or hostility. This means the
blood tends to thicken thereby adapting to protect a person if he is wounded so
that he will bleed less. Today most of us are removed from the actual danger of
physical wounds. Nevertheless fear and anger will still produce a thickening of the
blood. One easily sees, therefore, that chronic fear or anger may lead to dangerous
blood clotting.
It is also true, wrote Dr. Aaron, that recalling a past event that made one fearful
or angry will produce the same physiological reaction as if the event were again
taking place. An individual's heart beats faster, or harder, he feels the rush of
blood into the muscles and the stimulation given by the adrenalin which moves
swiftly to all parts of the body readying for an emergency. Undoubtedly people with
very vivid imaginations experience almost the same sensations of fright as they
tell of or re-live a fearful event.

However, in Dr. Aaron's opinion, the normal individual who approaches a doctor with
complaints of heart pain symptoms is suffering from something else. They have a
neurosis. This does not mean that their difficulty is imaginary. It's real enough
all right, but it is the result of something in their personalities, not in the
physiology of their heart. Some of the symptoms in this type of ailment are heart
palpitations, difficulty in breathing, pain in the chest area and fatigue. Any one
of these symptoms alone or in conjunction with other symptoms such as frequent
urination, indigestion or headache often constitute the major complaints of a
patient who has nothing wrong with his heart.

Dr. Aaron goes on to describe these symptoms in more detail. His description of
what is commonly called heart palpitation is particularly insightful. Heart
palpitation, he explains, is the "consciousness of the heart beating." It is
usually a painless, albeit disturbing, phenomena and may be felt in the chest or
over the heart. The heart often seems to be pounding very hard and to the
individual it may seem as if the sensation is at some distance from where he
believes his heart is actually located. Heart beats may occur out of step with the
preceding or subsequent beats, or the heart may beat very rapidly. Palpitations are
often not felt in the moment of real stress or crisis but the patient usually feels
the palpitations while lying down recalling the difficult situation.
Breathlessness or labored breathing is another of the symptoms of an ailing heart
which may be misread:

The patient calls it shortness of breath and means two varieties. The first is an
increase in respiratory rate and the second is the feeling of inability to take a
deep breath, as if he could not get enough air in the lungs. Yet this particular
type of breathing is associated with deep sighing respiration. It is a feeling of
oppression as if something was stopping the thoracic (chest) cage from expanding. I
find it a particularly useful symptom in favor of diagnosis of neurosis; of which
it is characteristic. It occurs at any time, has no relation to effort, and is
particularly prone to happen in association with recall of fearful and unpleasant
situations. It often occurs at night, waking the patient in a panic.

Another symptom, chest pain, may cause problems in diagnoses for both patient and
doctor because of its similarity to the pain of angina pectoris. This kind of pain,
according to Dr. Aaron, does not occur as a result of exertion on the patient's
part, even though it may be necessary for the patient to rest for several hours.
One patient explained to Dr. Aaron that he, the patient, would have to go to bed
for the rest of the day simply to get relief from the pain which he assumed was
caused by the visit to the doctor in the morning. It is hard to describe this type
of pain. For example, patients may have read accounts of the sensations experienced
by angina patients and then confuse their own sort of pain with that which they
have read about.

Of course then the real question is what causes these symptoms of heart illness
which we have described above? Recalling a situation that frightened or angered us
stimulates the same physical responses throughout our body as if we were again
frightened or angered.

Dr. Aaron states:

I have no doubt that most, if not all, patients suffering from anxiety states have
gone through prolonged periods of fear without relief in action. An insecure
childhood is the most common factor, particularly mother-deprivation, a violent
alcoholic father or over-strictness of well-meaning parents. These histories are
almost always found in the history of these unfortunate persons. My conception of
the etiology (cause) of these disabilities is, the conditioning of prolonged
anxiety and insecurity as a rule in childhood up to the age of 18 years, resulting
in unduly violent emotional reactions to later stresses. These may be everyday
stresses of life, recall of difficult life situations, dreams or new severe
emotional upsets. The reaction remains the same--stimulation of the automatic
nervous system. If the fear of heart disease is superimposed on this, the threat to
life is added and a vicious circle is established.
It is also possible for people with organic heart disease to have heart symptoms
that arise from anxiety neurosis. In such cases the doctor must first treat the
organic heart trouble, then if the symptoms persist after the actual working of the
heart has been corrected, the patient must work to correct the emotional background
that is causing them.

(This is an excerpt from The Encyclopedia of Common Diseases, by the staff of a


prevention magazine, Rodale Press, Inc.)
Malfunctioning of the heart due to an organically caused condition is a problem
that should be corrected by attacking the very root of the problem. Here is a fine
explanation of the cause of breakdowns in the circulatory system by Julius Gilbert
White (Abundant Health, published by the Health and Character Education Institute,
Pine Mountain Valley, Georgia).

The human body is the most marvelous thing in the world. It consists of myriads of
cells which are assembled into tissue, muscle, nerves, glands, organs, bones,
teeth, skin and hair.
Every cell has to be fed with oxygen, water and food. These supplies must be of the
right kinds, in balance and unfailing. If there be a failure, the cells must suffer
and then the organs suffer.

As each cell carries on its work, the foods are used, and their use produces by-
products which must be carried away from the cells without delay or they will
suffer or die from their wastes, which are poison.

Each cell is continually wearing out and being rebuilt. These cell wastes are toxic
and must be carried away as well as the by-products.

TWO SYSTEMS

To supply all of these necessities there are two systems in the body. One system
takes in oxygen, water and food, and delivers them to the cells. The other begins
at the cells and takes their wastes and by-products by the lymph and blood to the
elimination outlets-lungs, pores and kidneys. If these toxic wastes are not
efficiently removed, the cells suffer and then the organs must suffer.
As the blood passes through the liver, one of its functions is to convert certain
toxic elements into the bile for elimination through the colon.

A very fine balance has to be maintained between the operation of these two
systems.
They both are operated by the heart which is the principal means of causing lymph
and the blood to circulate, carrying the supplies in and the wastes out.

This circulatory system which keeps the body clean within, is very efficient. It is
said that if the cells were bathed in two hundred thousand quarts of water, the
water would have to be changed every few days to avoid the cells from being
poisoned by their own wastes; but the blood does this work with about seven quarts
of fluid in conjunction with coordinated facilities.

Suppose an automobile could earn and secure its own supplies, feed itself with gas,
oil, water, and oxygen, and drive itself; and suppose the supplies it gives to
itself would replace all of the losses so that no part would wear out in less than
one hundred years; and if a fender were broken or a tire injured, these supplies
would mend the injuries; and that it would gradually renew its coat of paint as it
goes over the highways so it will always look new--what a wonder it would be! That
is a crude illustration of the human body.

Degenerative diseases are caused by putting in the wrong "fuel" and failure to keep
the cells and blood stream of the body clean.
THERE IS NO ARGUMENT

In order to go deeper into our subject we must understand the effects of poisons on
cells and consequently on the organs. There is no argument over the fact that cells
must be nourished. Likewise, there is no argument over the fact that poisons injure
them. Let us see what happens.

THE KIDNEYS

These magic filters handle nearly a quart of blood every minute, and in seven
minutes handle an amount equal to all of that in the body; at least 600 quarts of
blood pass through the normal kidneys every twenty-four hours for certain wastes to
be removed; all the blood of the body passes through the kidneys many times each
day.

The wastes are removed by the action of the selective cells in the circular-shaped
glomeruli in the tubules which together constitute one unit of filter mechanism of
which there are said to be two million in each kidney (some say four million), each
composed of cells, many of which have the power of selection akin to intelligence.
The glomeruli drain into the tubules, which are so small each one can handle a
fourth of an ounce in sixty years. The glomeruli extract about sixty quarts of
fluid from the blood in twenty-four hours, and pour it into the tubules, which put
back into the blood, all except about two quarts, which are eliminated as urine,
and in which are the wastes that have been extracted. The kidneys thus use one
quart of water to extract forty-five grams of waste. If there is a deficiency of
water in the body, the urine is too concentrated and the kidneys are handicapped in
the elimination of wastes.

The kidney mechanism and functions bear witness to an infinite Mind which designed
their structures, and an infinite Being who continues to maintain their exigency
and Who supervises their functions. To suggest that such an organ could originate
of itself without a Designer and Creator is so foolish that no scientist or
schoolboy would even consider applying the same argument to an automobile. Why not
be consistent?
POISONING THE ARTERIES

The blood containing these poisons is flowing through the arterial system-nearly a
thousand miles of arteries and veins, besides many more thousand miles of
capillaries. Wherever blood vessels are, it goes with its poisons--into organs,
glands, tissue, brain, etc. The walls of the arteries consist of cells which are
subject to the same injury from poisons as the cells in the kidneys. Therefore, the
arteries degenerate at the same time as do the kidneys and from the same causes.
There are various types of degeneracy, but that does not matter so far as our
objectives in this lesson are concerned.

The inner, middle, and outer layers of cells in the artery walls may develop
differing pathology, but the point is they are being injured and their ability to
function is decreasing.

As the cells degenerate, the walls thicken and harden. Now it is called "hardening
of the arteries," or "arteriosclerosis." As they harden they become more brittle--
easier to burst under pressure.
As the walls thicken, the passageway through them diminishes in size so that more
pressure from the heart is required to maintain the proper circulation. Now it is
called "high blood pressure." It is true that an increase in blood pressure can be
caused by an accelerated heart-beat, or by anxiety, or by "nerves," but that is not
the dangerous type of blood pressure under consideration just now.
As the hole through the arteries grows smaller and the pressure increases and the
walls become more brittle, a little extra pressure at some time from any cause may
result in the rupture of a blood vessel. The most delicate ones are in the brain
and consequently such an accident often happens there. That is called a hemorrhage.
A blood clot forms. If it is fatal, it is called apoplexy; if not fatal, a stroke
of paralysis. Ninety thousand Americans die that way each year.

POISONING OF THE HEART

The blood which carries the poisons which injure the cells of the kidneys and the
arteries is surging through the cavities of the heart which push it on its never-
ending journey throughout the body as long as life lasts. But more; the heart has
its own circulatory system by which its own muscle and nerve cells are fed, so that
the injury to the arteries of the body extends throughout the heart as a part of
the body. Sometimes this injury to the arteries becomes pronounced in the heart
first; but in either case, the heart is now degenerating.

At the same time it is being weakened, it is required to work harder than normal to
maintain normal circulation through a thousand miles of arteries with thick walls
and a small opening. This extra work plus the weakened condition of the heart
handicap the owner and sooner or later bring disaster - heart failure.

A great flood of light has been shed upon this subject by a notable experiment made
in the Rockefeller Institute under the direction of Dr. Alexis Carrel who placed a
living section of a chicken's heart in a bottle in 1912. He fed its cells
scientifically and removed the wastes, and cells lived and continued to grow for 34
years. Although a chicken does not live over twelve years as a rule. Dr. Carrel
said that so far as he can see the cells are "immortal" so long as they receive the
proper nourishment and have their wastes removed. The experiment was abandoned in
1946.
If a man would take as good care of his heart from youth up as Dr. Carrel and his
associates did with the chicken heart, it would never degenerate; and if the same
man would take as good care of his other organs, they would never degenerate, and
the heart would not wear out, he would some day quietly die of old age all at once
like the Deacon's One-Hoss Shay.

CARE FOR THE HEART

Being so perfectly computerized and scientifically formed, the body should receive
more respect than is given it by the average individual today. We should never
allow toxic and mucus producing materials to enter the body, whether liquid or
solid. All foods should be unprocessed and used in their freshest most wholesome
ripened form. Fruits, vegetables, grains, nuts and seeds should be used either raw
or low heated only, well below the hundred and ninety degree point. This can be
done be steaming and using double broilers or thermos type containers. The edibles
listed above are all of the herb family and the true herbalist who believes in
wholistic healing will never use toxic, poison or habit forming food. For more
information on the mucusless diet, see The Three Day Cleanse and Mucusless Diet
(Dr. J.R. Christopher, P.O. Box 352, Provo, Utah 84601).
We also wish to mention in this article more about the body's need for water which
is extremely important. Juice, as an example, is a nutritious liquid, but is not a
fast solvent like distilled water. Each day an individual should consume one ounce
of distilled water to each pound of body weight. A person of one hundred thirty
pounds, for example, would use one hundred thirty ounces or approximately one
gallon of water. This person would want to use two quarts in the morning and two
quarts in the afternoon. By drinking a glass or two at a time, the water will be
gone before you know it. Distilled water leaches out the inorganic salts and
minerals that cause hardening of the arteries but this same distilled water will
not leach out the live organic assimilable minerals.
To keep the system clear of toxins and mucus, begin by keeping the bowels clean.
After a period of strict adherence to the mucusless diet, the bowels will
automatically take care of themselves. Up to that point however, the average
individual needs an herbal aid to keep the system clear. For this we use the herbal
bowel formula given in Volume 1, Number 1 of our Newsletter. Use this formula
according to need, starting with one teaspoon of the combined herbs three times
each day, or two or three of the capsules or tablets, in either form as you prefer
it, three times each day. Increase or decrease the amount according to the initial
results. The bowels should be regulated so there are three or more good, free bowel
movements each day.

FOOD FOR THE HEART

Cayenne is one of the finest foods for the feeding of the heart and for keeping the
veins and arteries in good youthful condition. It is best to begin using cayenne in
small amounts and increase the volume gradually. For example, start with 1/3
teaspoonful of cayenne in a little water three times a day. Continue taking cayenne
in these amounts for three or four days and then add another third of a teaspoonful
to the original third each time it is taken. Again after three or four days
increase the amount of cayenne by another third of a teaspoonful until you can take
at least a teaspoonful three times each day. This herb is not a drug. It is merely
an excellent food, high in calcium, Vitamin C, etc. Even though one senses heat and
slight discomfort at first, this is due only to a stepping up of the circulation
and can do no harm to the body.

The herb cayenne is a great food for the entire circulatory system because it feeds
the necessary elements into the cell structures of arteries, veins, and capillaries
throughout the body so that these structures regain the elasticity of youth again
and blood pressure adjusts itself to normal. Cayenne rebuilds the tissue in the
stomach and will heal stomach and intestinal ulcers. By equalizing blood
circulation, cayenne produces natural warmth and by stimulating the peristaltic
motion of the veins, arteries and intestines it aids in assimilation and
elimination.

When the venous structure becomes loaded with sticky mucus, the heart has a harder
time circulating the blood and therefore higher blood pressure is required to force
the substance through the veins. Cayenne regulates and equalizes the flow of blood
from the head to the feet which immediately relieves the heart and gradually
extends its effects to the arteries, capillaries and nerves. The frequency of the
pulse though not increased is given more power.

Because of my own experiences I must tell you that I am a firm believer in the use
of cayenne for the circulatory. I suffered ill health in my youth and from my
middle twenties to the middle thirties it was impossible for me to purchase life
insurance, even a thousand dollar policy. This was due in part to the hardening of
the arteries and a disposition to high blood pressure which I suffered from.
During my middle forties I tried again for a substantially large policy of life
insurance. Because of the amount of the insurance I had requested, I was required
to see two different doctors, each of whom gave me an examination. After one
examination the doctor exclaimed that he was astounded at my blood pressure which
resembled that of a healthy teenager though I was forty-five years old. The second
doctor measured my blood pressure five times, in each instance shaking his head and
repeatedly scrutinizing my case history chart. I was becoming irritated and asked
him if his equipment was broken, seeing that he had repeated the reading over and
over. He told me that the equipment had been used without trouble for some time,
but since my age was forty-five and I had a perfect systolic over diastolic
pressure he had to wonder if the reading was correct. I assured him that it was and
related what the other doctor had said. I got an O.K. for the policy from both
practitioners.
Last year as I neared seventy years of age I told this story to a class I was
instructing. One of the pre-medicine students asked if my blood pressure was still
as good as it had been then. So I gave him permission to take my blood pressure.
Amazingly, the group saw the blood pressure reading of a healthy young man and not
the average reading of a seventy-year-old individual. This was very gratifying to
me to say the least. The main reason for this good blood pressure of mine, besides
my close adherence to the mucusless diet, was the use of cayenne as a food each
day. I take one to three teaspoons or more of cayenne every day of my life and the
resulting healthy blood pressure is what I call a good pay-off for a total effort.

In more than thirty-five years of practice we have never lost a case when called to
help a heart attack victim because we always use cayenne. After propping up the
patient and pouring down a cup of hot cayenne tea, which is one teaspoon of cayenne
in a cup of hot water, relief comes quickly. One will find a great blessing if this
herb is used as a daily food, six days a week, throughout life.

Certainly one of the major causes for the increased incidence of heart problems in
the world has been a general change of diet, especially since the turn of the
century. In the book Vitamin E: Your Key to a Healthy Heart (Herbert Bailey, New
York: Arc Books, Inc.), we find some facts on the subject of the Vitamin E
deficiency in our country. According to the author's extensive research, about
twelve million Americans are suffering from an outright deficiency of Vitamin E. He
says:

There are undoubtedly many more millions of others who do not show an outright
deficiency but are on the "borderline" in the so-called pre-clinical stage of
deficiency. Remember, we are speaking of deficiencies, not of the amount of Vitamin
E it takes to prevent and/or treat heart and circulatory disorders. The 12,000,000
figure is strangely reminiscent of the 12,000,000 heart disease sufferers in the
U.S. We must emphasize that there have been no objective clinical tests of this
correlation, but there should be.

Thus the findings of our foremost Vitamin E researchers suggest that a good part of
our mounting heart disease, particularly as it is manifested in America and other
"civilized" countries, is due to the ever increasing processing-out of the all-
important Vitamin E which is essential to a healthy heart and circulatory system;
heart troubles seem to have advanced in direct proportion to the decrease in
Vitamin E (alpha tocopherol) in the contemporary diet. In 1896, at approximately
the same time that Vitamin E and other vitamins were beginning to be processed out
of bread and other cereal grains, an autopsy revealed the first identification of
coronary thrombosis, one of the biggest killers among the myriad of troubles
afflicting the heart today. (It was not until 1926 that coronary thrombosis was
identified as the actual cause of death among persons who were previously
considered normal and healthy.)

Very few researchers question the value of exercise, a well-balanced diet, and a
fairly relaxed mental attitude. We have shown that cardiovascular disease is not
caused by any single factor which can be applied to all societies, to all cultures,
or to all individuals. Indeed, we have shown that all current hypotheses which
plead "special causes" can be torn asunder. Yet no one would be so rash as to say
that any one of the proposed hypotheses is absolutely invalid. For instance, should
a deficiency of Vitamin E be recognized as the major factor in the increase of
cardiovascular disease in recent years, it would still be necessary to exercise and
eat properly and to avoid excessive weight and heavy stress.

There seems to be little doubt that one of the factors which plays a prominent role
in the origin and treatment of most forms of heart disease is exercise--properly
regulated, of course. Dr. Paul Dudley White, probably the best known heart
specialist today because of his successful treatment of former President
Eisenhower, is a vigorous proponent of exercise. His latest views were stated in an
article in the Atlantic Monthly for October, 1963.

However, neither food (as eaten in the U.S., Great Britain, and other "civilized"
countries) nor exercise seems to offer absolutely definitive answers to the riddle
of heart disease. We have more heart disease not because there are more people who
are old but because it claims more and more victims in the middle-age and younger
brackets. It is this rising proportion of deaths among the young and middle-aged
persons which has so alarmed the authorities.

All of the Romans mentioned by Pliny who died suddenly were well-born and wealthy;
Dr. White thinks that luxurious living was a major factor in their mysterious
deaths and that most probably the cause of death was from cardiovascular disease.
He points out that almost every case of sudden death today-excluding violent
actions--when autopsied, reveals significant degrees of coronary atherosclerosis.

If the thesis advanced by Dr. Shute and others holds true, i.e., that a Vitamin E
deficiency is responsible for many coronaries or strokes, we can understand why the
rich Romans did not enjoy good health: they ate too much, drank too much, exercised
too little; very likely they did not eat the "plebeian" coarse bread which was a
major source of Vitamin E. We know with almost certainty that most heart disasters
result from atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis. This is true, whether our victim
is a citizen of Imperial Rome, a modern American, Briton, or Russian, or whether it
is a rat, gorilla, guinea pig, or chicken.

Mr. Bailey goes on to tell us that in many foreign countries like Russia, France,
Great Britain, Germany, Italy, Austria, etc., Vitamin E has been successfully
administered long before we in this country were allowed to do so in the open.

I remember an incident well over twenty years ago when I was called upon to visit a
home in Idaho to see a patient who was lying helplessly in a bed with a severe
heart condition. He was not even allowed to get out of bed to use the bathroom and
how he hated that bedpan! His family had been informed that he would live a few
days because of his heart and they were also told that another attack might
suddenly take him at any time. This gentlemen was from the old school of eating--a
meat, potato and gravy man. He ridiculed the idea of a mucusless diet, a cleanse
program and the use of cayenne, saying, "I love eating the way I have always eaten
and would rather die early with a belly full of steak than live your way." Knowing
that he was a cattle man I asked him what he did for his sick cattle. He explained
that experience had taught him that the best medicine for sick cattle was wheat
germ oil and he purchased it in large drums to supply his herds. I asked him if
there was any reason, seeing that the wheat germ oil was good enough for his prize
stock, why he himself could not use the same procedure. He was then instructed to
use three to six tablespoons of the wheat germ oil each day.

One day two years later as I was waiting in the lobby of a Salt Lake City hotel I
saw a man run up the front steps in great haste and into the lobby where I was
sitting. When he saw me he came to a screeching halt, yelled my name, and
vigorously extended his hand to me.

"Bet you don't remember me," he said. "I am that 'dying' heart patient in Idaho you
saw a couple of years ago. I took that 'cow oil' (wheat germ oil) and in a few days
was up and around; in a few weeks I was out on a little business and in six months
was out with the cattle, doing a hard day's work. Boy, am I a ball of fire today.
Thanks Doc."

His thanks meant much more to me than any money I had been paid to make that house
call.
Many people would rather take Vitamin E capsules than the oil as it is more
concentrated and much more pleasant to swallow. Depending on whether it is to be
used as a preventive or as a remedy after heart attack, one may take from 20 to 50
IU of Vitamin E daily, even up to 300 IU per day if necessary.

HEART FOOD DELUXE: THE HAWTHORN BERRY

For well over 30 years we have seen patients rebuild their hearts and eliminate the
pain and misery of a diseased heart with diet, herbs, exercise and especially by
changing their attitude. A positive attitude will help the individual abandon the
negative and harmful opinion that a malfunctioning heart is incurable.

One of the greatest herbs of all for rebuilding the heart and venous system is the
hawthorn berry (Crataegus oxyacantha). Potter's Cyclopaedia of Botanical Drugs and
Preparations (Potter and Clarke, Ltd., 60 Artillery Lane, London, England) is
considered one of the outstanding volumes on herbal information. In this book the
value of the hawthorn fruit (berry) is described as a cardiac tonic. I think this
term is quite self explanatory.

Moldenke (Plants of the Bible, New York: The Ronald Press Co.) gives information on
the hawthorn, stating that it grows in Herman, Bashan, Galilee and also on the
tablelands of Palestine. As far back as Biblical days the hawthorn berry has been
known and used.
In lesson material from one of my teachers, the renowned Dr. Edward E. Shook, I
copy the following:

An herb which has won the admiration of herbalists of the present day, and can be
traced back hundreds of years, is hawthorn. It is mentioned in Grieve's articles on
folklore; and as Grieve quaintly says, 'This hawthorn is the badge of the Ogilvies
and gets one of its commonest popular names from blooming in May (Mayblossom). Many
country villagers believe that hawthorn flowers still bear the smell of the Great
Plague of London. The tree was formerly regarded as sacred, probably from a
tradition that it furnished the crown of thorns. The device of the hawthorne bush
was chosen by Henry VII, because a small crown from the helmet of Richard III was
discovered hanging on it, after the battle of Bosworth. Hawthorn is called
Crataegus Oxyacantha from the Greek, Kratos, meaning hardness (of the wood), oxus
(sharp) and akantha (thorn). Throughout all Europe, it is known as a very fine
cardiac tonic, curative for organic and functional heart disorders, such as
dyspnea, rapid and feeble heart action, hypertrophy, valvular insufficiency, and
heart oppression.

Hawthorn berry may be taken as an herbal tea. Use one teaspoon of powdered or
granulated herb to a cup of hot water. Steep the mixture for twenty minutes and
then strain. One half to one full cup of the tea should be taken in the morning and
again in the evening or even three times in a day. If desired two or more capsules
or tablets may be taken each day which is the same dosage we have suggested for the
tea.

When I graduated from the Dominion Herbal College in Vancouver, British Columbia,
Dr. Nowell made me a present. It is one of the most valuable presents I have ever
received. It was the formula for a hawthorn berry heart tonic that had been given
to him by an old English teacher. The man who had given the formula to Dr. Nowell
had used it in his practice for over forty years. As he gave it to me Dr. Nowell
told me that he had used it in his own practice for about forty years with
phenomenal success. He gave it to me in 1946 and I have also used it with great
success since that time.

He gave this formula to me with certain stipulations. I could make it up and use it
for my patients but I was not to give the formula to anyone until after Dr.
Nowell's death and then it was mine to use in any way I saw fit. While he was still
alive we made up the formula and aided many patients with both organic and
functional heart problems helping them to rebuild a new and healthy structure.
Since his death the formula and the instructions for making it have been given to a
number of students who in turn have helped many, many people. We would now like to
give to you the instructions for making this tonic:

Fill a container (never use aluminum) to within approximately two inches of the top
with ripe whole hawthorn berries. If dried berries are used first, reconstitute
them with distilled water until they are plumped up to their former natural size.
Next, pour distilled water over the berries so that they are covered with one inch
of water. Simmer the water and berries for twenty minutes but never boil them.
Afterwards set the mixture to one side in a warm place and steep for twenty
minutes. Next strain off the liquid and transfer it to a clean container and set it
aside. Now mash the simmered and strained berries with a potato masher or some
similar utensil. Again cover the mashed berries with fresh steam distilled water
covering them with about one inch of water. Simmer these mashed berries and water
slowly for twenty minutes, steep the mixture for twenty minutes and again strain
off the liquid. Mix this liquid with the liquid from the first straining which was
previously set aside. Now measure the amount of liquid you have. This mixture of
the liquids from the two strainings must now be simmered down slowly to one fourth
of its original amount. One gallon, for example, will be simmered down to one
quart.

During the time this liquid is being simmered down, it must be stirred frequently
so it will not stick to the bottom of the container and burn. Again please remember
not to boil this liquid. Even if hours are required to reduce the liquid to one
fourth of the original amount, only simmer slowly to do the job correctly.

When the simmering is finished, measure the now concentrated liquid carefully and
then add to it one fourth of its own volume of pure vegetable glycerine and also
one fourth of its own volume of a good quality grape brandy (Christian Brothers or
some comparable brand name). As an example, if the liquid concentrate after
simmering measures one quart, then add one cup of the glycerine and one cup of the
brandy. Mix the concentrate, the glycerine and the brandy together and pour it into
dark brown or green tinted glass bottles such as prescription or vitamin bottles.
Do not use plastic containers if glass is available. When the bottle is tightly
sealed or corked, it is a good precaution to turn the bottle upside down and dip
the top in melted sealing wax.

This formula does not have to be refrigerated and will keep for years at household
temperature. The dosage of this tonic is one half teaspoonful three times a day or
more if desired. One half teaspoonful three times per day, however, is adequate for
an adult sized heart.

A few years back a lady came to me to have her eyes read (iridology) and was told
that among other things she had a heart weakness. It was suggested that she use one
half teaspoon of the hawthorn berry formula three times a day. She was told this on
a Tuesday morning and began using the tonic that day. Before the week was even over
she had experienced a dramatic improvement in her condition.

In another instance, during one of our evening lectures, a young man asked if he
could relate an experience of his mother's. The young gentleman stated that his
mother had had edema in the ankles and they had been swollen so badly over the last
four years that the ankle bones had not been visible. Many remedies prescribed by
various doctors had been used but the swelling would not go down. The young man
then asked his mother to come up to the front of the lecture hall and to stand on a
chair, so the entire audience could see her feet. She now had well defined ankle
bones showing after less than a week of the tonic's use. Of course we encouraged
the lady to continue using the proper mucusless diet and distilled water as well as
the tonic. All of these procedures would help her, as they would anyone else, to
maintain general good health.

This heart tonic is a very special food for the heart and circulatory systems. In
hundreds of cases we have had wonderful results with this heart formula in people
all the way from small infants to youth and to adults of all ages. Let me recall an
experience we had with my own father-in-law who was in his sixties at the time and
who had had heart trouble since birth. He was born with a leakage of the heart and
was carried around on a pillow as an infant. He worked hard all of his life on the
farm but never could he take a job where a physical examination was required for he
would always be turned down because of the heart condition.

During the years of the Second World War he had been accepted at a large chemical
depot. The firm had hired him because of the war-time manpower shortage. They had
placed Mr. W. in their construction division without a physical examination when he
was sixty-two years of age, and he had worked for them until he was sixty-five
years old. He had begun using this heart tonic when he was sixty years old and had
used it faithfully from then on because, according to him, 'it tasted good.' Now he
was sixty-five years old and the war came to an end. He was called into the
company's main office where they complimented his work record and asked him if he
would remain there as an employee. First they would have to send him in for a
physical examination and, of course, this was what he had feared most. Nonetheless,
he agreed to take the examination. You may imagine his surprise when he found that
he had been given a clean bill of health. He then asked the doctor, "What about my
heart leakage?" The doctor replied, "I wish I had a heart as good as yours. You
should never worry about dying from a heart attack; in fact, if you don't get hit
by a truck or lightning you will probably die quietly in your sleep from old age
and won't even muss up the covers." Mr. W. worked for several more years at the
plant, retired and then lived on until he was in his eighties. On a July evening in
1970, he went to the rodeo with his family and enjoyed the evening like a kid as he
watched his son ride and perform with the rodeo group. The next morning one of his
sons came to his home and found his father lying peacefully in bed. He had passed
away with his hands folded over his chest and, just as the doctor had predicted,
the covers were 'not mussed up.' No heart attack-just the final sleep of old age.

Good friends, we are hoping that you will always have a good strong heart and a
long life and we also hope that you will help others enjoy living in health and
happiness.

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