The Ideal Food
Chapter 10
The necessity of the transformation of the sense of taste
The individual's innate good or bad tendencies are thus not inherited from the parents but are a direct "inheritance" from his previous existence. This "inheritance" is stabilised or elicited through the fact that the individual is attracted to parents within the same "wave-area" or with the same tendencies.
      When the individual is born with tendencies towards being overweight it is likewise his own "inheritance" from previous existences that is manifesting itself. Regaining the natural line or slimness can thus happen only by becoming accustomed to natural food. Such a process of habituation can of course not be achieved in days or weeks, but only in months or years for individuals in whom such tendencies are innate. For those individuals who suffer only from tendencies from their present life the matter is much simpler. For both parties, however, the way to health and vigour does not go through artificial medication but on the contrary exclusively through the transforming of the erroneous sense of taste of all the individuals so that all unnatural foods or products harmful to the organism, through this sense, give rise to a feeling of disgust, while the products that are absolutely healthy for and beneficial to the organism likewise through the sense of taste give rise to a natural feeling of pleasure and satisfaction.
      As an erroneous sense of taste and its ensuing unfortunate tendencies are universal, the following question is of immediate interest – how does one change this sense of taste? The answer to this is quite simple; it is of course – through training.
      This training consists in getting oneself used to eating natural products, which I will here show constitute the absolutely right food for the human organism's state of vibration.
      When the individual has so accustomed himself to it that the taste of these products is the only appetizing thing in the world, then he is liberated from the lethal food that now, because of the force of habit, binds him like a chain to a primitive view of life, to illness, sorrow and mutilation.