DWQA QuestionsCategory: Divine GuidanceHe asks: “The problem is that science has determined that we have the equivalent of a common plastic spoon of microplastics in our brains and that the amount of same has increased dramatically over the past 8 years from 2016 to 2024. Cadaver brains of dementia patients had up to 10 times more microplastics than those with healthy brains (Dr. Ben Miles: https://youtube.com/shorts/91g6tepzFCM?si=QI54DVU1MFVJfIHh). What are the implications about health effects from long-term exposure to microplastics in human organs?” What is Creator’s perspective?
Nicola Staff asked 5 hours ago
This is a quite variable phenomena in terms of potential risks short-term or long-term in nature. Both kinds of problems can occur. Much depends on the sensitivity of an individual, as well as the particular cell exposure and tissue where such microplastic pollutants end up, as to what might happen and how serious a problem results. Some things will simply be a small local irritant not perceived consciously by the person. Whereas other things can snowball and become a long-term adverse vulnerability that even stirs up prior karmic trauma that will amplify a local irritation and reawaken cellular memory of prior difficulties, including a consequential early death, from taking something into the body that proves to be too toxic to handle. So microplastics can be a trigger for personal vulnerabilities of many kinds, having nothing to do with plastic per se, but with the phenomenon of vulnerability to an abnormal stimulus and what the body remembers about prior episodes that are, in effect, a time bomb waiting to go off if stepped on, so to speak. That can magnify a small irregularity into a full-blown chronic malady under the right conditions and states of vulnerability in susceptible individuals, and that will be highly variable among the human population but not at all uncommon. So what this speaks to is that the consequences of exposure to microplastics will be hugely uncertain and hugely variable, both, sometimes inconsequential but other times deadly, and it will not be possible to predict for a given individual who might be at greatest risk from such exposure.