What "being healthy" means
Starting this week, we'll be coming together with you every Sunday on the pages of Odatv. You might ask, "Where did this health column suddenly come from?" I will approach these articles with the awareness that correcting the many mistakes made specifically around health, shedding light on the darkness, and recognizing that being healthy is one of the most important human rights, are all important.
Health is a state of complete spiritual and psychological well-being in individuals, along with the absence of conditions such as illness or disability.
Illness, on the other hand, is a disorder or abnormal change in the organism's bodily functions and operation. It can be caused by a bacterium or a virus, just as abnormalities occurring within the cells themselves can also give rise to a state of illness.
In the 'Universal Declaration of Human Rights', adopted in 1948, the right to health is included alongside the right to life. According to the definition given there, every individual has the right to nutrition, shelter, housing and medical care for the welfare and health of themselves and their family. Mothers and children have the right to special care and assistance.
What we need to remember is that "a human being is not a machine"—repairing parts or replacing them with new ones does not make the whole body healthy. Treatments aimed solely at repairing a disease whose signs appear in the body, or in other words, at repairing damaged organs and tissues, cannot succeed on their own.
THAT BODY, MIND AND SOUL ARE A WHOLE…
To make a person healthy, it is necessary to understand that the body, mind and soul are a whole and interact with one another. Only by approaching treatment within this wholeness can a person truly be restored to health. I am someone who has long devoted great effort to Regulation Medicine and Complementary Medicine in Turkey. In COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE AND REGULATION MEDICINE, those of us who work with Regulation Medicine evaluate health and illness as a whole, and we approach problems on this basis.
Diseases do not appear suddenly. They often stem from many small underlying negative stimuli and from a toxin burden that, at first, does not strain you or that you are not even aware of. In complementary medicine, the body is not viewed as an organism made up of a mere collection of individual organs. Because, in the approach of wholeness and regulation, in addition to the organs each being free of problems individually, the relationships between them, the body's energy, and the person's psychological and social state are also important.
This holistic approach is, at the same time, a strengthening of health. The real goal here is not so much fighting illness as supporting the body so that a person remains continuously healthy and does not fall ill.
In the series of articles I will be sharing with you from now on, I will address topics that everyone is curious about, such as: Regulation Medicine above all, along with Neural Therapy, the immune system, proper nutrition, obesity, food sensitivity, detox, chelation, sleep disorders, the importance of water, coping with stress, hypoxia, reflux, gastritis, allergy, chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, migraine, lower back pain, gout, smoking addiction, how to stay healthy during seasonal transitions, and how we protect ourselves from illness, among others.