
A Word From Dr. Maria Bleker
© Copyright 2003 by Dr. Maria Bleker, Germany
(Explore Issue: Volume 12, Number 6)
It is an unfortunate fact that many interpretation errors (some of them serious) are committed when performing Enderlein’s Darkfield Blood Analyses. These are in large part due to insufficient biological knowledge – but also often because of inadequate technical skills.
Biological knowledge: You are either a monomorphist or a polymorphist. If monomorphist, you need read no further. However, if you are a polymorphist, you must accept polymorphism in its entirety. You need to read – in fact study – Bacterial Cyclogeny by Professor Enderlein. In it, you will find out that:
1. All microbes on earth (REGARDLESS OF HABITAT) are protein colloids that share the same developmental sequence: birth (embryo)/teenager/adult—in biological terms: microbial (primitive) phase/bacterial phase/ fungal (yeast) phase. Most importantly (yet evidently “overlooked” or ignored by many):
In their primitive and bacterial phases, all microbes look alike, even if they occur in groups (Symplasts, Sclerosymplasts, etc.).
It follows that one cannot know which microbe one is dealing with until it has reached adulthood, since only in this phase does it exhibit a characteristic appearance – just as, examining a human embryo, we cannot predict whether it will at birth turn out to be Chinese, Indian, Negro or Caucasian.
2. For their further development, microbes require a specific nutrient medium, just as we humans vary our diet in each of our life stages. Biologically, this means: for each developmental step – and they are innumerable – microbes demand a different pH value of their nutrient medium. The primitive (embryo) phases require a very alkaline pH, the bacterial (teenager) phases a slightly alkaline pH and the fungal (adult) phases an acidic pH. If the pH value is not right, the microbes cannot survive in their current form.
3. Only a single one of the innumerable developmental phases is pathogenic (very rarely two or three, as in the diphtheria bacillus). Of course, one has to be able to recognize these phases in order to initiate the proper course of treatment.