Friday, March 21, 2014
Miracle of the Human Heart
Basically, your heart is structured to function as a double pump, with both the right and the left heart having a structure to receive blood and a structure to pump out the blood. The structures that receive the blood are called the atria while the structures that pump the blood are called ventricles. Blood leaves your heart in pulsed waves at a constant and natural frequency. The heart actively contracts to force blood out of its chambers and passively relaxes to allow the next quantity of blood to enter. Contraction of the two ventricles moves the blood out of the heart while relaxation of the two atria refills the heart with blood. This series of relaxation and contraction of the heart muscle, which pumps blood to all parts of yur body, continues non-stop throughout your life time from the womb till your last breathe. Cardiac muscles contracts and relaxes about 70 to 80 per minute without you ever having to think about it. What a miracle! Your heart beats are manifestations of your heart’s vibration energy.
Your heart is also the main supplier of electrical power to your body. To put it simply, your heart functions as an electrical machine. In all human beings, a normal heart beat is initiated by a small pulse of electric current which originates from pacemaker cells located at the top of your heart. Pacemaker cells are specialized in producing electricity. Thus, the first electric wave produced in your heart starts at the top of your heart and spreads downwards all over your heart. Also called the S-A node, the pacemaker establishes the normal frequency at which your heart beats, or your heart’s biorhythm. Overall, your natural pacemaker and specialized electrical conduction cells and tissues, including your heart rate are controlled by signals from your brain through your involuntary nervous system to your pacemaker cells. Your involuntary nervous system also controls many other functions of your body including breathing, blood pressure, and excretion. You can see now that your heart produces electricity in addition to its well-known function of pumping and distributing blood to all parts of your body. The heart’s electricity naturally has its own electromagnetic field and vibration frequency.
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