The Difference Between Physicians and Healers

    Do you know the difference between a physician and a healer? Today, I’m going to explain.

    1. Treatment Approach

    Physicians are trained to treat symptoms. When you visit them, they address your symptoms with one of three solutions: drugs, injections, or surgeries. That’s the extent of what the medical monopoly offers.

    A healer, on the other hand, looks for the root cause—or causes—of your condition. If you’ve read my book Reverse the Cause or watched my videos, you know I’ve broken down the seven root causes of dis-ease. That’s what a healer does: they reverse the cause so the symptoms disappear.

    Let me clarify something: the only conditions that can truly be cured are infections or perhaps some viruses. Chronic conditions, however, cannot be “cured.” They’re malfunctions of the body. A healer understands this, which is why they never use the word “cure.”

    2. Diagnosis and Its Impact

    Physicians often hold patients hostage with diagnoses. You may think a diagnosis is essential—and it feels that way because your inner child needs to hear, “This is what’s wrong with me.” But diagnoses are part of the illusion. Physicians use their big machines, lab tests, and specialized jargon to make you believe only they can provide answers.

    A healer doesn’t rely on diagnoses. Instead, they use symptomology—the study of symptoms. For example, if you’ve had a head-to-toe analysis with my team, you know we count and analyze symptoms. Symptomology shows how one issue can connect to another.

    Just yesterday, someone approached me about a pancreas issue. They sent me their lab work, and I noticed a B1 deficiency. B1 can certainly impact the pancreas and may even lead to congestive heart failure. Would their physician have caught that? I doubt it.

    3. Time and Care

    Physicians give you 10, maybe 15 minutes per visit. That’s because the medical system operates like a factory. Your primary care physician is like a point guard on a basketball team. They listen to your concerns, order lab tests, refer you to specialists, and pass you along. If you have a lot to say, you’re in trouble—because they’re on the clock.

    A healer, however, dedicates at least 45 minutes to you. They take the time to truly hear you out.

    4. Governance and Defensive Medicine

    Physicians are governed by rules, regulations, and malpractice insurance. While malpractice insurance may seem like a good thing, it can actually hurt patients. Physicians are forced to test and diagnose you defensively to avoid lawsuits. This practice, known as defensive medicine, leads to over-testing and, ultimately, over-diagnosis.

    Over-diagnosis is a major issue, as I explain in my book Medical Monopoly. It often results in unnecessary treatments—treatments that can do more harm than good. Why? Because the medical system doesn’t view the body holistically.

    The truth is, physicians are soldiers in a system they may no longer believe in. They’re governed by the elite powers controlling the medical monopoly.

    A healer, however, is independent. They are governed by God, not by institutions or bureaucracies.