Recycling Parts and Pieces
Caution: some may find this article disturbing and/or unsettling.
This past weekend, my husband, a friend and I watched a TV program on organ transplants, as well a work being done with cadaver parts and using stem cell work to ‘grow’ replacement parts.
I am in no way saying either is ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ – but would like to share some thoughts and questions on the energy, cell memory and soul aspect of these two types of procedures. I have no definitive answers.
Organ Transplant
My thoughts (as they often zip around)…
If:
- The soul enters the body anywhere from conception right up to just before birth; it’s the soul’s preference as to when it enters the body.
- Our blood cells retain memories (cellular, or cell, memories) – to possibly include ancestral cellular memories.
- According to the practice of soul retrieval, any trauma can result in a soul loss (a small portion of one’s soul stays at the point of trauma, resulting in a small reduction in soul). Soul loss can occur in any lifetime (past or present) and takes a retrieval to reclaim and re-incorporate the soul fragment back into the whole.
Then:
What happens when someone dies and their organs are donated?
We know that many organ recipients have experienced changes in taste, habits, hobbies, interests and/or temperaments.
Though science states there is not scientific proof of cellular memory; many recipients beg to differ.
Is there cell memory transfer to the organ recipient? (My thought = highly likely)
Is there soul fragment loss for the organ donor? (My though = highly unlikely)
Cadaver ‘Parts’ and Stem Cell Work
Well, you know me; those thoughts led me to ponder on the procedure where cadaver body parts (scrubbed of outer layers) are infused with stem cells to “re-grow” the cadaver body part and make it viable for transplant (example: nose or an ear).
With organ donors, the organs are “harvested” quickly to transplant, (if I understood correctly) not so for cadaver parts.
So…
- Does this mean that the life force in the cadaver part is non-existent?
- Is there cellular memory in the cadaver parts?
- What is the energy and/or cellular ramifications or side effects on the recipient?
Again, I have no answers; I have no sense or feeling of ‘right’ or ‘wrong’; and I have now shared my thoughts and questions with you.
What are your thoughts? (Please share and keep it ‘clean’).
Hey Jan! I have no idea what would happen… creeps me out. I’m never letting a doctor put someone else in me, unless it is the woman I love
Though come to think of it, she’d have to be dead… and that would be even more horrible. Sorry, I was just thinking about the idea of sharing another person’s energy. I don’t want to be walking around with 1/30 of a mass murderer’s karma…
Andrew
Hi Andrew!
I cannot say what I would do – I have not been in a position to have to make that decision. I do have concerns (energy-wise and cellular memory-wise) as to the repercussions of either procedure.
It does make one think, eh?
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on this Andrew!
Very interesting topic. I have a friend that had a heart transplant… I asked her if she had memories she didn’t think were hers. I was thinking as in Chinese medicine where I think the heart is considered the place of the soul and memory. She replied that she would every once in awhile feel very self-absorbed, or selfish, but didn’t know if that was “her”, having lived through a transplant, or the heart donor’s memories. Your writing also made me think of the Christian School students I was a teacher for when cloning was big. The students struggled with cloning and whether clones have souls, since their understanding was one body, one soul. Hmmmmmmmmm… good questions…..is all I can say.
Hi Kelly!
Like I said, I have no pat answers to any of this – but am intrigued.
Thank you for sharing this Kelly!