It’s been noted that 10,000 hours practice is the benchmark for becoming an expert at anything. Â Colon hygienists are a tiny, tiny slice of the general population, but are witness to a critical social element. Â Plus, a colon hygienist is on the back-end of a feedback loop between a doctor and their patient. Â In other words, we hear about the failures. Â Consider too, that we hear details people would never tell their friends and family. Â Who talks about their poop and who wants to listen? Â I would also grant that colon hygienists have their failures, too.
Yet, sit for one 40-hour work week of colon cleansing listening to people’s stories and it will make a big impression. Â What impression? Â That our people are in crisis and our system has broken down. Â Which system? Â Take a moving picture of the story as I see it and run it backwards. Â Poop isn’t coming out. Â Why? Â Medicine has impaired digestive organs as a side-effect. Â Now there are multiple side-effects spinning off from the original side-effect, like fungal and bacterial imbalances, like the accumulated wastes released from the growth of these microorganisms passing into the blood, which have been identified as triggers to headaches. Â Now other drugs are prescribed with other side-effects and these people might end up seeing a colon hygienist, but probably not; certainly less than one-percent clean their butts. Â How did this person become so ill in the first place?
Back to the social system and 10,000 hours of listening to people: Â food choices are different than any time in human history. Â What are these foods and where do they come from? Â The chicken wrapped in cellophane? Â The ground pork? Â The seemingly fresh-picked salad at the Wendy’s salad bar? Â The doughnuts and the jelly filling. Â We tend to view certain foods as good and certain ones as bad and we get it all wrong, partly because our information comes from mass media.
Our system now includes: food products, mass media, doctors and their patients and their drugs. Â Where does the colon hygienist fit in? Â As an observer. Â A savvy colon hygienist, with 10,000 hours under his belt, can make other causal connections and bring it back to social feedback loops as a means toward broader learning and communication. Â Anybody listening?
Here is one system loop: Â farm – lethal farm chemicals – impaired farm products added to toxic rancher-products – manufactured into a bizarre food product – presented as natural – mildly poisons the consumer – leading to ill symptoms – leading to medical testing – leading to prescription(s) – leading to side-effects – leading to more ill symptoms not recognized as side-effects – leading to more medical testing – leading to additional prescriptions, ingested on top of various food-bourn chemicals – leading to general malaise – leading to commercials on television selling drugs designed to relieve malaise.
You get the idea. Â Now I have started a blog (like so many bloggers). Â I am just another social feedback loop. Â And that’s all it is.
But how many hours have YOU spent watching shit come out of people? Â None. Â How many hours has your doctor spent watching shit come out? Â None. Â So, this is what I bring to the table; ten thousand hours of experience compressed into a few paragraphs here and there. Â Observations, man, observations! Â S.