,,A doctor is someone who prescribes medicines of which he knows little, for diseases of which he knows even less, to people about whom he knows nothing at all." Voltaire

What Voltaire already knew in the 18th century still holds true—and always will.
,,A doctor is someone who prescribes medicines of which he knows little, for diseases of which he knows even less, to people about whom he knows nothing at all."

This is a fact clearly demonstrated by the way diagnoses are determined—based on symptom similarity, while the root cause of those symptoms differs from person to person. Doctors prescribe medications through a trial-and-error process. Why? Because modern medicine treats only symptoms, not the underlying cause—which is always invisible and therefore unknowable to the doctor. The real cause of illness doesn’t exist on the physical, visible level of the body, but rather in the unseen, subconscious programs of the mind, vibrating with fear. These subconscious fears continually trigger a stress response in the body—even in situations where there is no real danger.

Finding and releasing the root cause—buried deep within our subconscious—is our own responsibility. A doctor can only help within the limits of their knowledge and tools, and for that, they deserve deep respect and gratitude. Their work with sick people is demanding, responsible, and exhausting, and they strive to help as best they can.

Of course, in this context, we are not talking about surgery, but about psychosomatics and stress—the consequences of a fear-filled mind triggering the body’s stress response in non-life-threatening situations. Stress is nothing more than the physical manifestation of fear.
Chronic diseases, intolerances, allergies, autoimmune disorders… are results of invisible mind-body connections that many people still do not understand.

Doctors know nothing about our personal lives—and sadly, in most cases, neither do we. That’s why inner work is essential: we must unlock subconscious memories where our entire life is archived and find the traumatic, painful experiences that cause our minds to protect us—even today—from perceived pain.
Old traumas, feelings of abandonment, rejection, lack of love, life promises, and false interpretations of past events continuously trigger a stress response—even when, in current reality, there’s no reason for it. This long-term subconscious stress becomes so familiar to the body that it turns into a physiological state.

The truth is, a doctor cannot heal us, but the medical system supports our healing by allowing us to believe in it.
The body responds to the mind—and when the mind believes in healing, the body follows.
Belief in healing is a thought free of fear—you trust the healing without doubt, and the body acts accordingly. That belief gives the body the signal to activate its natural healing mechanisms. The immune system becomes fully functional, and the body’s self-healing and cleansing processes take over.

Just think about how a cut heals, or how the body recovers from injury or surgery—isn’t it a miracle?
The intelligence of the body is infinite. It was designed to heal itself.
Our contribution lies in our thoughts.
If they vibrate with fear, they limit healing.
If they vibrate with love, they support it.
We are the creators of our own health—which is why thoughts matter.

The real issue in healing the body is that we don’t know our body. We don’t understand its processes, what helps it or harms it. We don’t realize how much power we have to care for our own health.
We’ve been conditioned since childhood to believe that when we feel unwell, we must go to the doctor—and that they will heal us. But that’s not true. They cannot.
The medication they prescribe only suppresses the symptoms.

A diagnosis is just a cluster of similar symptoms in different people—but the root cause is unique to each person.
The only thing that can truly heal us is our own properly functioning immune system.
Healing comes from belief, from activating the immune system through the absence of stress, and from reprogramming the mind from negative patterns to positive ones.

The body responds to the mind—and follows it.
That’s why, if we want to be healthy, we must also heal the mind. And that’s only possible through deep inner work and self-discovery.

The foundational formula of health is simple:
A mind free of fear = a body free of stress.

Heal the mind, and the body will follow.
This healing process transforms us into creators of our health, shifting the responsibility from doctors to ourselves.
And now that we know this, nothing stands in our way of building and maintaining a lasting state of well-being.


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