Course XXXVII - Teaching 9: Heart and Lungs
Heart and lung correspond to the Heart Wheel.
The heart, principal organ of the circulatory system, which plays the part of a suction and impulsion pump, has very important secondary centers.
It has a center that rules 49 negative centers that govern the blood vessels.
Also, the heart has other secondary centers scattered in the pericardium, which rule any emotion of instinctive and mental nature, when thought becomes emotion, or vice versa.
When the thought becomes emotion, these centers, individually and collectively, make vibrate a center that is in the aortic orifice; consequently, blood pressure rises, first because of nervous influence, an later because of hormonal influence.
When the emotion becomes thought, these centers make vibrate another center that is in the orifice of the lung artery, with repercussion on respiratory rhythm and oxygenation of blood; then, pressure goes down.
When a being gets or transmits emotions of astral kind, these emotions have repercussion on the 34 secondary centers placed in the mitral orifice.
The heart has 16 secondary centers, distributed like this: four centers in every one of its cavities.
The four centers of the right auricle are purifiers of the blood; they secrete certain characteristic hormones that give peculiar subtlety, luminosity and purity to the running blood, being purified as a result of it.
Hormones secreted by these four centers are of a materialized ethereal substance of simple mineral nature; one of these materials is an isotope of potassium; another, of radium; and the third, of magnesium.
The right ventricle has four centers that give other characteristics to blood, by enrichment, with hormonal substances formed by sodium combined with proteins and carbohydrates.
Without this purification and enrichment, neither lung oxygenation could be produced nor a release of carbon monoxide in lungs.
The left auricle has four centers, which give its particular characteristic of cardiac blood to blood.
The four centers of the left ventricle put an end to this transformation, by which this blood is different from blood that circulates through the rest of the organism.
Lungs are related to secondary centers that intervene in oxygenation and exchange of gases.
Their important centers are five: three in right lung and two in left lung.
Three lung centers attract respectively: the lower center, atoms of the ethereal air; the mean center, atoms of astral air; and the superior center, atoms of cosmic air, which is above the stratosphere.
By these three centers, a man makes contact with material emanations of the Universe. A deficient activity of the lower center produces asthma.
In animals, the lower center is the only one active; in man, the superior center works better when it is on high regions.
The two centers of the left lung are related to the inner air of the organism. The superior center maintains the air dissolved in humors, and this way it avoids physical troubles; and the lower center blocks the access of heavy atoms of aerial toxicity produced inside the Earth.
The right lung has a more evolved function and is stronger to endure lung diseases.
Also in bronchial tubes there are secondary centers, destined to block the access of pathogenic organisms, by transforming their toxins.