Heal Thy Amenta

What is the "Amenta" and why do you need to heal it?

The Amenta Nerve Track is the twelve black dot loci formation that communicates with the entire body (so below) and the ether (as above). You need it in order to heal.

The first locus of the the amenta is the substantia nigra. Studies have shown that without proper nutrition and attention over time, the substantia nigra loses its pigmentation. This loss of pigment or de-neurogenesis is a precursor to memory loss and often marks the onset of Alzheimer's disease.

Humans are the only species on the planet that have twelve active loci and this neuronal difference distinguishes us from other creatures. Apes have ten to eleven functioning loci and other vertebrates and mammals have even fewer. Our high level of amenta activation is what defines us as homo sapiens sapiens.

Equally, the melanin production through serotonin by day and melatonin by night facilitates neurogenesis and the neuronal cell growth at the site of the loci. All humans, albino's and melanin recessives, exist because of the amenta nerve track located in the third and fourth ventricles of their brain. People understand the importance of melanin which, from the time the gamete becomes fertilized during conception, travels as kinetic melanin. Moving through the fallopian tubes as a blastula, the zygote implants upon the uterus while subdividing into the endoderm, ectoderm and neural crest. It's an all-black, melanated cell process. As the embryo becomes the fetus and the soul is eventually birthed from the waters of the mother's uterus, the Amenta is active. Melanin permeates through all of the organs re-vitalizing the cells to grow, heal and repair. Truly, God's ingenuous mind in creating the subtle operational intricacies that define us as humans, is unmatched. The melanin we see on our skin is actually interspersed throughout all of our organs. The skin just happens to be the largest of these. We see and experience the dermis tactilely more often than other organs, but we all contain different types of melanin (neuromelanin, eumelanin, pheomelanin, allomelanin) throughout our bodies. What really matters is that we appreciate what we all have in common:

The Neuromelanin of the Amenta.

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