PROBLEMS WITH NAMING DISEASES
by Dr. Lawrence Wilson
© May 2025, LD Wilson Consultants, Inc.
All information in this article is for educational purposes only. It is not for the diagnosis, treatment, prescription or cure of any disease or health condition.
Naming diseases is an important part of standard medical care and most natural health care, as well. It is sometimes excellent to identify problems and point one in the right direction toward correction.
However, from the perspective of development science, an overemphasis upon disease names is definitely harmful. Here is why:
1. Incorrect name. More often than one might imagine, a disease is misidentified – given the wrong name. This can be an accident, due to confusion, malicious, or it can be dishonest, such as giving a name just because a patient wants it.
2. Creates a new and often false identity. At times, using a disease name “brands” a person with a new identity that is negative, scary, dishonoring, embarrassing, depressing, or otherwise harmful.
3. A foreign system. Focusing on disease names is a different health care system than the one recommended on this website. We focus on health and healing, not on diseases.
The medical system of naming diseases and then giving remedies for them is not working well at all at this time.
At times, we make use of disease names, but most of the time we do not bother with them at all. This will seem impossible or insane to medically-trained people, but it is not insane at all.
Problems in the body are viewed as nutritional imbalances and system feedback. The name of the condition is much less important than how to work with the whole body system to bring it back to balance. If and when one does this, the “disease” goes away on its own.
4. Confusion due to retracing. This is related to #3 above. Most symptoms that arise when one is following the development program are not related to a disease, although it might appear this way.
Instead, the symptoms are related to a healing process. One may not be able to easily identify the healing process, but it is the truth of the situation. For example, one might be removing a chronic infection, changing the structure of a tissue, or building up new tissue. These are often not obvious situations.
Medically-trained personnel are not trained to look for or understand retracing, healing reactions or purification reactions. All they know about are disease symptoms. The same is true of their websites, which is most all of them. So when one visits a physician or visits one of their websites, one receives false, misleading and often frightening information.
CONCLUSION
We urge our clients not to spend much time researching their symptoms and diseases on medical websites. It is generally a waste of time. Much better to do more of the development program.
We also ask our clients to be very cautious when visiting physicians so that one is not mislead and needlessly frightened, often resulting in stopping the development program when really it is working well.
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