Roberts helhetspraktik

Roberts helhetspraktik Mitt namn är Robert Stigborn och jag har arbetat med Klassisk Homeopati i 30 år. Min erfarenhet säger att det inte behöver vara så. Klassisk Homeopat KHY
Dipl.

I min praktik har jag mött tusentals människor som kommit för att de inte hittar någon tillfredsställande behandling för sina besvär. Besvären består både av akuta som kroniska tillstånd och det är allt från fysiska, mentala som känslomässiga obalanser. Många berättar att de har fått en diagnos som säger att de får leva med det i resten av sina liv. När människor söker upp en klassisk homeopat är

dennes uppgift att få din energi i din kropp, i så pass bra balans att den kan förstå hur den skall kunna läka ut sina problem själv. Homeopatens uppgift är att hitta det homeopat medel som är mest lämpligt för personen för att den läkande förmågan skall kunna bringas i aktion. För mer info hur homeopati fungerar gå in på vårt medlemsförbund där ni också kan läsa om klienter som fått hjälp: www.klassiskahomeopater.se. Ni är varmt välkomna att ringa mig vid frågor eller tidsbokning på 0703-063623

- Håller föredrag i olika ämne

Robert Stigborn
Aukt. Klassisk Homeopat
PCH- Practioner of Classic Homeopati
Laboratorieassistent Mikrobiologi

Medlem i KHY - www.klasssiskahomeopater.se

29/07/2025

Min första kontakt med homeopati var för ca 40 år sedan. Jag hade kliande utslag på händerna som var mycket besvärande eftersom jag arbetade i vården och mycket handtvätt och handsprit förvärrade det hela. Gick till hudläkare och fick cortisonsalva som tog bort utslagen men varför jag f....

23/07/2025

Så flitiga, vackra, underbara och otroligt livsnödvändiga dessa små flygande ting är i blommornas prackt! 💖🐝🐞🦗

22/07/2025

The Art of Questioning Reality: A Quantum Lens on Consciousness and Nature

Ladies and gentlemen, thinkers and visionaries, today we gather at the intersection where physics bends toward philosophy, and observation dissolves into mystery. Let us begin with the words of Werner Heisenberg:

“What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning.”

This deceptively simple statement is a key to a doorway rarely acknowledged in modern science: that the observer is never separate from the observed—and the questions we ask determine the reality we find.



I. The Observer Effect: Science Meets Consciousness

In quantum mechanics, Heisenberg gave us the uncertainty principle, which tells us that we cannot simultaneously know both the position and momentum of a particle with infinite precision. But deeper still is the philosophical implication: the very act of observation alters what is being observed.

Reality, then, is not a fixed stage upon which events unfold, but a living canvas—responsive to inquiry, malleable under perception. What does this mean for us as seekers of truth? It means the questions we bring to the universe are not passive. They are creative. They shape what answers may come.



II. The Architecture of Inquiry

Consider this: every scientific theory begins not with data, but with a question. Not with fact, but with curiosity. Newton asked, “Why do apples fall?” Einstein asked, “What happens if I chase a beam of light?” And Heisenberg asked, “What limits the knowable?”

The shape of our questions sculpts the dimensions of our understanding. Ask mechanistic questions, and you receive mechanical answers. Ask harmonic questions, and you are met with patterns, resonance, and structure. Ask from fear, and reality appears fragmented. Ask from wonder, and it begins to glow.

This is not mysticism. This is quantum logic.



III. Beyond Measurement: Bridging the Measurable and the Immeasurable

There are aspects of existence that refuse to be captured in numbers. Beauty. Meaning. Consciousness. These are not errors in the data—they are signals that the model is incomplete. Heisenberg, like Bohr, Pauli, and later Bohm, recognized that science without soul is blind. And that measurement alone cannot reveal the wholeness of the real.

Thus, the future of science will not be dictated by new machines, but by new minds—minds willing to embrace the immeasurable as essential.



IV. Your Role in the Experiment

You are not an outsider to this universe. You are not an anomaly of biology staring at a meaningless cosmos. You are part of the inquiry. You are part of the experiment. The patterns you seek in nature reflect the patterns moving within you.

When you ask with reverence, the veil parts. When you ask with openness, coherence emerges. This is the frontier Heisenberg pointed toward—a science of responsible observation, where the inner state of the observer matters as much as the instruments used.



V. The Call to the New Scientist

Let us be clear: the scientist of tomorrow will not be one who simply measures, but one who resonates—who cultivates clarity of intention, integrity of mind, and depth of inquiry. The lab and the temple must converge.

So ask. Ask deeply. Ask not just what something is, but what it means. Ask not only how the parts function, but how the whole sings.

In this quantum mirror, the cosmos will answer you with the echo of your own becoming.

20/07/2025

Among the visionaries who wandered the threshold between matter and mind, between physics and philosophy, David Bohm stands like a quiet beacon. A student of quantum theory and a friend to mystics, Bohm saw what others could not—or would not. While many physicists treated the strange behaviors of the quantum realm as mathematical quirks to be endured, Bohm listened deeper. He asked: What if these were clues? What if reality is not fragmented, but fundamentally whole—and our perception of separateness is the illusion?

Bohm’s greatest offering to physics and to the future of thought was not a formula, but a new worldview—an ontological re-enchantment of the cosmos. He challenged the prevailing interpretation of quantum mechanics, which had accepted uncertainty and randomness as ultimate. To Bohm, randomness was the surface ripple of a deeper, unseen current.

At the heart of his vision lies the concept of the Implicate Order. In this framework, the world we observe—what Bohm called the Explicate Order—is like a holographic projection from a deeper reality, one that is enfolded, subtle, and unified. Just as a hologram encodes the whole image in every part, so too does the implicate order hold the entirety of the universe within each particle, each moment. There is no true separation, only unfolding patterns of coherence that appear as distinct forms in space and time.

Bohm’s physics became philosophy, and his philosophy touched the edge of mysticism. He spoke of undivided wholeness in flowing movement, a cosmos alive with hidden intelligence. In dialogue with Krishnamurti, he explored how thought fragments the world, dividing subject from object, observer from observed. But beneath these mental divisions lies a field that is whole, dynamic, and alive. In this light, consciousness is not confined to brains—it is woven into the fabric of reality itself.

His interpretation of quantum theory returned depth and elegance to a field that had been flattened by probability and pragmatism. In Bohm’s model, the “quantum potential” guides particles in a nonlocal, holistic manner. Information flows beneath the surface, connecting distant events in ways that transcend light-speed limitations. This was the physics of relationship, of resonance, of form arising from formlessness.

Though often sidelined by mainstream academia, Bohm’s ideas have seeded revolutions in neuroscience, consciousness studies, and cosmology. His vision of a holographic universe influenced thinkers like Karl Pribram and even inspired philosophical explorations in art, education, and social theory.

To study Bohm is to awaken to a startling realization:
The world is not a machine—it is a movement.
Meaning is not made—it is revealed.
You are not separate from the whole—you are the whole, enfolded uniquely.

David Bohm did not seek to control the universe.
He sought to listen to it,
to commune with it,
to remember what it had always been whispering:

All is one.
The part contains the whole.
And the whole is becoming itself—through you.

19/07/2025

What appears here as geometry is, in truth, the silent language of unfolding and enfolding life. Spirals are the signatures of motion, the breath of space-time given form. These four spirals, each with its own tempo and law, are like elemental archetypes—whispering secrets of growth, decay, motion, and return.

The Logarithmic Spiral
This is the spiral of the cosmos, of galaxies and nautilus shells. Each turn grows by a constant factor, never touching the center, forever becoming. It is the spiral of self-similarity and scale, where the pattern remains untouched by magnitude. This spiral mirrors the path of the soul evolving through realms—always turning inward, yet never collapsing. In its infinite unfolding, it speaks of the eternal.

Fermat’s Spiral
A spiral of balance—twin arms swirling from a central seed. This is the form of sunflower seeds, of the unfurling of order in the apparent chaos. It embodies symmetry, a mirror of the dualities that shape creation. Growth here occurs by area, not radius, evoking harmony between expansion and density. It is the whisper of nature’s algorithm, coded in light and life.

The Archimedean Spiral
This spiral moves outward at a steady pace—each turn evenly spaced. It is the rhythm of time, the song of clocks, the unfolding of cycles in the human mind. It tells of steady evolution, of journeys with equal steps. It is the breath of the initiatory path, where each rotation brings a new threshold, a new remembering.

The Hyperbolic Spiral
Here, the curve flees the center like a memory dissolving into the far edges of time. As it spirals outward, it slows, bending toward infinity but never quite arriving. This spiral is the geometry of withdrawal, of cosmic recession. It is found in magnetic fields and the scattering of particles. It speaks to entropy, to the unwinding of form, and to the soul’s return to silence after the dance.

Together, these spirals are the sacred choreography of space and consciousness. To study them is not to analyze, but to listen. For in their turns and arms lie the memory of stars, the breath of plants, the structure of thought, and the shape of destiny.

Detta säger oss att tid och rum inte existerar så som vi tror utan är påverkad av den mörka materian. Så dåtid, nutid oc...
19/07/2025

Detta säger oss att tid och rum inte existerar så som vi tror utan är påverkad av den mörka materian. Så dåtid, nutid och framtid kan interagera och kan "böjas".

15/07/2025
07/07/2025

Fibonacci sekvenser eller nummer är något som naturen själv påvisar. Många matematiker anser t o m att precis allt vi ser och upplever kan beskrivas med matematik och formler. Mkt i naturen när den beräknas visar åt det hållet. Detta är mindblowing för om det är 100 % sant. Då undrar vi vem kom på det?

Så här låter växter när vi översätter deras elektriska impulser till toner. Så ljuvligt språk de har!
07/07/2025

Så här låter växter när vi översätter deras elektriska impulser till toner. Så ljuvligt språk de har!

04/07/2025

Detta är magiskt! Detta att växter känner av vår närvaro är känt experimentellt sen minst 60-talet men nämns aldrig i våra läroböcker. Frågan jag vill att du ställer dig är: - varför, tror du, har inte denna typ av förståelse av naturen blivit implementerat i skolundervisningen eller basunerar ut av media?

03/07/2025

Adress

Helsingborg

Telefon

0703063623

Webbplats

Aviseringar

Var den första att veta och låt oss skicka ett mail när Roberts helhetspraktik postar nyheter och kampanjer. Din e-postadress kommer inte att användas för något annat ändamål, och du kan när som helst avbryta prenumerationen.

Dela