Blog #65--Comparing Blood Type With Behavior
- Jack Tuttle
- Jun 4, 2015
- 4 min read
Most of society these days tends to favor specialization. Pick one sport when young and practice it year around at the exclusion of all others. Get on a singular career path, whether blue collar or white collar, and follow it at the exclusion of all others. And within a lifetime of career specialization, further consolidate your knowledge and experience into knowing the maximum amount possible within the smallest field of study.
But what if your true athletic potential doesn’t manifest until you are older, and you discover you’ve been practicing the wrong sport? What if you wake up one day and discover you don’t really want to be a doctor? What if you don’t want to spend an entire lifetime doing the same things over and over, regardless of any financial security your present path might hold for you and your family? What if extreme specialization puts you so far out on the proverbial limb that you no longer have practical value to anyone?
I bring this up because specialization, while it certainly has benefits, can also prevent us from seeing similarities between our own chosen path and others, and between one part of Nature and others. For all the good it may do us to specialize, it may also have a fatal flaw that limits our ability to see the big picture. If so, we can soon outlive our usefulness once the general public’s needs and interests change, which they do with regularity.
I discussed the value of being a generalist in my book “It’s A Secret, So Pass It On: A Toolbox For Life” and provided a number of detailed examples of the many connections we can find between various parts of Nature once we look for the big picture instead of specializing in a small picture. One I didn’t mention is what some call the Body/Mind Connection.
Most scientists and doctors up to now have assumed our egos are separate from our bodies. They realize our bodies function automatically without any conscious help on our part. But they prefer to believe our egos have conscious control and are therefore independent of our bodies. Problem is, the interaction between oppositely polarized energies is responsible both for our bodies and our brains. The separation people wish to assume is a fallacy.
Some research that crosses fields of specialization is now occurring, but much remains to be discovered. One example is blood type. People with type O blood are called “universal donors,” meaning their blood can be used for transfusions to help those in need, regardless of their blood type.
Those with type AB blood are called “universal receivers,” the opposite of type O. They can accept transfusions of any blood type. Type A people have an antigen which attacks type B blood as a foreign object, just as type B blood attacks type A blood. These people can only receive blood transfusions of their own type or type O. Anything else might kill them.
Studies are now being done that suggest there are connections between blood types and certain diseases. For instance, research shows that type O people may be less likely to develop cardiovascular disease. One study suggests that type O people tend to live longer than others, although this is a generalization that has many exceptions. There is some evidence that type AB people are more likely to suffer memory loss, and more type A people may suffer from obsessive-compulsive disorder. Obviously, much work remains to pin down specifics.
However, what scientists are still reluctant to research are connections between blood type and our general behavioral tendencies. For instance, are type O people more likely to give their energies willingly to help others? In other words, are they more likely to behave as universal donors in a wide variety of ways beyond their usefulness as blood donors?
It is known that giving energy guarantees a return of energy to us to fill any void. Is it possible this continuous flow of energy helps maintain the balance necessary for normal physiological functioning of our bodies?
Likewise, are the type AB universal receivers somehow blocking this giving-receiving energy matrix because they draw energy to them but are reluctant to give of themselves to help others? If so, might they be less likely to tune into the space-time continuum where memory truly resides? Might the resulting energy stagnation caused by an inability to give out energy lead to loss of brain function due to an absence of energy flow?
Are type A and type B people out of balance at times and more likely to suffer illnesses and/or psychological problems? Are there connections between blood type and our natural behavioral tendencies (dominant or submissive, direct or indirect, givers or receivers and all the other opposite behaviors within our world)?
I encourage those who love to study science and the body to develop a more generalized understanding as they continue their schooling and independent study. And I ask that they consider looking for connections that specialists cannot see. They’re there: all that is required is that we make a concerted effort to study the possibilities and then accept the findings, even if they go against what we want them to be.
Enlightenment is possible once we break down the barriers which limit understanding.
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