Glenn Stewart Coles, 9251 Yonge Street, Suite 8-924, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada, L4C 9T3

Text Box: Some say that change is the only constant, and yet much of our effort goes into not changing. Our existence is a continuous cycle of repetitive patterns, unfolding hourly, daily, weekly, and yearly. We try to hang on to what we have, and resist movement in certain directions. We are often defined by our patterns, as they reflect our character and what we do. Yet change is possible, even to the greatest depths.

The cells in the human body are continuously regenerating. As old cells die, they are swept from the body, and new cells grow to replace them. Our skin, our blood, our organs and even our flesh are forever replenishing. Old cells die and are replaced by new cells that have split from others.

Every year or two, the majority of cells in our bodies are eliminated and replaced. How do we stay the same? Why do we carry physical ailments over time? Why do we maintain the same habits, emotions and feelings? Why does our body grow older, even when the cells are replaced with fresh ones?

The answer lies in cellular memory, and the programming of our DNA. When a cell splits into two cells, the child cells carry the memory of the parent cell. Some cells such as liver cells divide into two liver cells. Other cells, known as stem cells, have the capability to divide and transform. When two new stem cells are formed, one remains a stem cell capable of further division, and the other mutates into the cell format required. Thus, both skin and bones can be formed from the same stem cell.

What this means is given food, water and shelter, our bodies have the capability to continually regenerate cells. If we could learn to manage the healing and aging of our cells, we could extend our lives. The body is mostly water, and healing energy can alter the constitution of water. Thus, our thoughts have great impact on our physical being.

As our bodies reform into the same patterns, we tend to stay in the same vibration. We tend to do the same things every day. We are creatures of habit, and even though our intentions may be set on growth, our actions are often reflections of yesterday. We feel the same feelings, over and over. We relive the same memories, over and over. The end result is that we reinforce who we are.

Within the strands of our DNA lies a program that defines us. The source of our physical characteristics can be mapped from a diagram. What our DNA does not define is our soul, the character that carries us through each day. While our lives are setup with possibilities and potentialities, we still maintain freedom of choice. Our habits, feelings, actions and character are managed by the choices we make. While external forces may have influence, ultimately each of us is in control.

Sometimes change is not easy. A level of comfort forms, and energy easily falls into repetitive patterns. To create change in your external world, it is first necessary to change within. What you vibrate is what you experience. Feel joy, and experience joy. Feel confident, and experience confidence. It really is quite simple.


© Copyright Glenn Stewart Coles, 2006


First Published May 28, 2006

Changing Patterns

 

Every year or two, the majority of cells in our bodies are eliminated and replaced.