How Did Taking Good Advice Start Meaning You’re in a Cult?

by Suzanne Anderssen, Brisbane Australia

Your article titled New age ‘medicine’ of Serge Benhayon leaves trail of broken families is full of holes and innuendos. People choosing to live a life in harmony with themselves, their partners, families, friends, colleagues and environment should be regarded as something wonderful, celebrated as a way of life.

In one article, we are told by the medical fraternity that caffeine is not good for us. In another we are told alcohol is bad for us. In another, we are told to get more sleep, go to bed at a regular time. Many, many, many people and doctors know gluten is harmful in the body. And many, many others know dairy causes them gastric or allergic issues. So when someone (be they male or female) decides to listen to themselves and to the many medical articles that have been written separately, and decides to follow all of that advice at the same time, then it is considered weird, cult-like behaviour. How weird is that?

The treatments Universal Medicine practitioners offer are nothing short of beautiful, caring procedures. There is no impropriety involved in an esoteric breast massage whatsoever. The creams used have been created by people who treat themselves to an amazing amount of self-love, and thus the end product created is one of integrity and care for its users. Don’t buy it if you don’t agree.

We should be ashamed for insinuating that it is normal for men to touch their partners without their permission. This is not normal behaviour. If I ever lived in a relationship where it was okay to be touched by anyone without giving my permission, I would leave in a second. Being touched without permission is nothing short of assault.

107 thoughts on “How Did Taking Good Advice Start Meaning You’re in a Cult?

  1. Serge Benhayon has been the only person I have met that’s been ultra careful to NOT tell others what to do, in a world where we are bombarded with health and other information constantly.

  2. Suzanne, I could not agree with you more. There are thousand’s (maybe an underestimation) of books worldwide, that are written, that if we eat this or drink this or do this or that, your life will change. If we are really honest with ourselves, many of us would have bought books or attended a workshop or webinar, to help us with something in our lives. I certainly can put my hand up to it, and what happens afterwards? Tried it, didn’t work, ok what’s the next fad? And we blame the thing we tried as being responsible for it not working, or improving anything for us.

    And so the cycle goes on throughout our lives.

    Along comes someone, who asks us to consider say, listening to our bodies, no impositions, just to observe, the choice is within us to take heed or not. As we experiment, people around, notice and, all of a sudden out comes the label gun, and we are fired at. Something is working for you, but we rather it didn’t, because we don’t want to admit that there is truth behind it.

    And so it continues.

    1. That may be why true truth is so absent in this world, its presence exposes so much that it’s shot down by the massive reaction of the masses.

  3. When people are not wanting to understand what is truly on offer at Universal Medicine, all they can do is spread lies that are made up from those who have an axe to grind and thus express the lies that are propagated by a few.

  4. It really is a playground bully. A pack indulging in whatever antics tickle their fancy, and the moment someone starts looking outside the playground, the rest would do anything to make sure they remain with the group – by charm or threat or whatever it takes and make it very hard for them to leave – even though, individually, they might actually all be having a sense that what they have been getting up to is no real fun and secretly wanting to get out themselves.

  5. Imagine for a minute that people speak truth and simply say the Universal Medicine is ´it´ and share all the amazing reasons for this. That puts other people in an awkward position: either trying it out or to have to be honest in the why not. What articles like this do is to protect the people´s capacity to avoid being honest.

  6. It is unnecessary to behave that way in any scenario but when you have a professional responsibility to report without bias and there is no due diligence done then it makes the behaviour even more shameful.

    1. Yes they have obviously taken the lies at face value and they fail to have any integrity or respect and decency towards the most Loving people.

  7. No one has a right to call a group a cult, especially not tabloid style journalism, it’s irresponsible because it creates fear in communities and impacts negatively on those directly involved. I’ve been studying with Universal Medicine since 2012 and they are definitely not a cult, they are in fact an amazing organisation dedicated to true health and well-being, and are world leaders in self care.

    1. Hear, hear, Melinda. There is nothing cult-like about Universal Medicine. In my opinion, the culture I grew up has more cult-like threads and they call it culture, beliefs, conforming, religion etc. But all hidden because you belong to this community, you are from this country, or that religion, it is their norm, so we accept it.

      When we decide to no longer live from this “norm” we grew up around, the cult card is thrown at us.

      Universal Medicine needs to be studied and then report these findings publicly, so people can make their own unbiased opinions, instead of one-sidedness – is this a fair thing to consider?

  8. It seems to be a common trend lately to create stories from nothing to earn money for nothing. It’s easy to label something as a cult. Sensationalism and lies are sadly the basis of some so called journalism like that. It’s in us the readers, the ability to discern those lies and the power to feed it or not.

  9. It’s crazy to think the extent to which we’d go to in order to protect our beliefs and the reality we live in – even claim that sexual assault is okay if you’re married.

  10. I am starting to realise (yes clearly I am a bit slow off the mark) that journalism isn’t about writing truth all the time. On the whole there is a bigger pull to sell papers and sadly sensation sells. We, the readers, the subscribers, are fully responsible for that end result and the only way we will call for a deeper sense of integrity in what we read, is to walk with our feet and use consumer power.

  11. The thing is when you leave normality then normality kicks back because it makes them seem not normal so you’d better stay inside the lines otherwise we might look silly. The cult of humanity wants to you be reliant on coffee, sugar, sweets, bread, milkshakes and everything else that everyone else does. However we need to stay strong and firm because we (those to chose to listen to what feels true to us) are the ones everyone else will be seeking out when the s**t hits the fan for real.

  12. “Being touched without permission is nothing short of assault.”

    Hear hear Suzanne and anyone that would suggest, imply or out rightly state otherwise is perhaps revealing their own misogynistic attitudes toward women.

    1. Yes, absolutely. No-one has any right to touch someone without their permission – where have they gone that they could think otherwise???

  13. Some medical doctors – in the UK, USA and Australia – are even catching on and advocating more healthy lifestyles, suggesting we cut down on coffee, alcohol, carbohydrates etc. will they too be labelled as cultists?

  14. Great title Suzanne. No one attending Universal Medicine presentations is forced to be there. We all attend of our own free will, and then make our choices as to how to live. No coercion, no follow up if we opt out. So where does the word cult come from? From an as yet hidden self fury- jealousy – that their own health isn’t as amazing as that of many esoteric students, because they prefer comfort to truth?

    1. Yes, attendance to any Universal Medicine event is a choice to make, there is no advertising, or persuading to attend any event, ever.

  15. Ironically it seems if you break away from societies’ norms and unquestioned rules and start making your own decisions about how you want to live your life, you are branded with a label of being in a cult and criticised for this decision. This for me exposes just how much pressure there is to conform in the world.

  16. “So when someone (be they male or female) decides to listen to themselves and to the many medical articles that have been written separately, and decides to follow all of that advice at the same time, then it is considered weird, cult-like behaviour.” – Is it not interesting that when a gigantic group of 60,000+ people gather together in a stadium, chant obnoxious, crude, and lewd songs while painting there half-naked bodies in the colours of their favourite football team, and cheers on a group of men who are trying to crush an opponent in a mini-war nobody considers THAT to be a cult, but they do when a group of people are committed to living the love that they know they are made of inside and then expressing that with others fully?

    1. It is completely and utterly ludicrous! I’m considered weird because I don’t drink alcohol, and I’ve heard comments of others being “part of some weird religious group” because they don’t drink. But no one questions the fact that just because the majority drinks alcohol doesn’t mean it’s natural, the majority just makes that activity seem normal. Alcohol is scientifically proven to be linked to various cancers and very harmful for the body, and related to various other social problems including domestic violence. For me I felt the harm it was doing to my body many years ago so it was easy to let go of. It doesn’t mean I’m in a cult because I don’t drink, I’m just taking care of myself. That’s all the students of Universal Medicine are also doing, taking loving care of themselves.

    2. ha ha yes I love that analogy! It is quite absurd that there should be this much fuss. If you don’t like what we live then simply walk away.

  17. It just shows how far we’ve come when we have to say this ‘Being touched without permission is nothing short of assault.’ and that our media would perpetrate anything else is crazy and yet it’s happening … where are we at with respect and decency, a wake up call for all of us to consider how we treat each other.

  18. Just so simple – how can a series of decisions that mean you honour your body, are less likely to become a burden on the NHS, and more likely to live a consistent, connected life where the focus is on love and sharing that be a bad thing.

  19. It’s one thing to not buy a product you do not like, it’s a completely different thing to publish lies and vilification about it.

  20. You can twist anything to look bad if you want to, it makes no sense when all our healthcare systems are bowing under the pressure of just how unwell we are as a society to criticise and ridicule people who simply choose to look after their own health and well-being.

  21. Sadly, we have allowed a culture to generate massive mistrust of anything that offers a point of difference outside the deemed normalcy of comfort and security that we have settled for, due to our lack of awareness and being able to discern what is true and what is not, as a result of overriding our bodies and sense of truth. The fact that we have allowed abuse to be an accepted part of life is not right and obscene, and admitting that the way we live has had a hand in this culture developing is not always accepted easily, and often we think it is easier to blame another or another group. Choosing to live with love in our lives may not, at this point seem normal, but this only highlights just how far away we are living from a truly honouring, respectful and harmonious way.

  22. Suzanne you bring up a great point about inappropriate behaviour, being touched without permission is abuse, and now many well known actors, and prominent people are being brought to account for inappropriate behaviour, I recently heard one say ‘it may have been acceptable a decade ago, but it is not acceptable now’, when in truth it is never acceptable.

    1. Yes I agree it was never acceptable it was outrageously taken as normal and that is the horror that we now face. How many other things have we taken as normal that we now call abuse? We must never stop questioning.

  23. Perhaps the reason others react so strongly to those who make loving changes in their lives like no longer drinking alcohol, feeding their bodies nourishing food, going to bed early etc, is because they can see that these would be loving choices to make for themselves, but it all seems too hard. When we are entrenched in a comfortable way of living it does seem rather scary to even begin to think about making changes, let alone start to make them.

  24. Yes clearly stating – it became obvious to me that the level of integrity in the journalists, listed above, would have to be very low that they have come to attack a company that works from absolute integrity and love, and try to make it look bad, whilst actually it brings the absolute truth to mankind. Now that to me this is a dangerous form of journalism – which is not at all what journalism is about – and the fact that this is possible is very alarming and should not be accepted by us at all.

  25. I agree Suzanne, soon as anyone does anything to support themselves whether it be dietary changes or live differently, you are labeled.
    I have been called ‘weird’ by staff members because I do not eat diary, gluten or salt but the end of it all is that I have simply made choices to support me and my body and they have made their own choices.

    As for most journalists their profession is based on shocking people by either dooming or dramatical news – it’s the way of the profession but there is often another side to the story that is often unexplored.

  26. This article and the story is it writing to, was some time ago now but many of the comments still linger. It’s not up to me to convince or prove things one way or another as most wouldn’t listen anyway. What I do continue to do is live what I talk and everyday it changes and moves. Each day my eyes open to something that I may not have understood or seen in that way before, there is a freshness to life. People can believe whatever they need things to be but that won’t hold me back from enjoying the difference in what I see and what I feel. My life has changed significantly for the better from my association with Universal Medicine and so with respect call me what you like, the people that know me know who I am.

  27. Most people do weird things, things that are harming to themselves and to others. Yet, they and these get accepted as mainstream and normal. Some people revise the concept of what is normal according to what they do to the body and they are accused to being in a cult. “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.”

  28. “And to the journalists Josh Robertson and Liam Walsh, you should be ashamed of yourselves for insinuating that it is normal for men to touch their partners without their permission.” . . . Thank you Suzanne and for this . . . “Being touched without permission is nothing short of assault.”

  29. It should be front page news the miracles that have happened in the lives of the students of Universal Medicine, through choosing to be responsible and make self loving choices they have a vitality and a joy that they have not experienced before. Totally opposite to the lives of people living in a cult.

  30. In our current modern society, it is considered very normal to go to the gym obsessively, even if that includes replacing meals with protein shakes and partying religiously on the weekend and training hard again to work it off. This is just one of the many lifestyle choices we accept as normal….but why? Why is it that we are completely unchallenged by a person living in this way? And further more why are we so challenged by someone making positive lifestyle choices after attending Universal Medicine events? It seems very convenient that an organisation like Universal Medicine becomes the villain, the cult, the strange thing, when in truth it is the most all-encompassing and deeply considerate philosophy I have been privy to, to date. There is no obligation to sign up or attend and it is open to the general public. There really is nothing weird, well nothing weirder than what is already accepted by many, but very interesting that most people try to put it in the weird box, for as long as it sits on the ‘cult’ side of the room, nobody has to ask themselves why they are not living this true model of health.

  31. When a woman is touched even by their partners in a way which is inappropriate and without the respect she rightly deserves, a woman has every right to say ‘No’. Why should it be any different? It is appalling that we as women have got to this place of utter disregard where our society even considers that this behaviour is normal and acceptable.

  32. At Universal Medicine everyone is free to come and go as they choose. It is a sad reflection on much of journalism today that many who call themselves journalists jump on the bandwagon of the sensation seeking cult-ure of rubbishing what they have not bothered to find out for themselves.

  33. Branding something a cult inappropriately immediately casts suspicion and judgment on it which is always the intention.

  34. Suzanne thank you for clarification in your awesome blog that Universal Medicine is not a cult . . . I am sure these journalists have never been in a cult otherwise, they would describe it differently or the only reason why they wrote it like this was to get more newspapers sold. If that would be the case then something very important is out of order.

  35. Well said about this irresponsible piece of journalism printed by the Courier Mail, Suzanne.
    To so-brand people who are inspired to actually improve their lives and care for themselves, as so many students of Universal Medicine are doing, is impossibly ridiculous – and yet, there it is, in print.
    We have a long way to go in order to fully call our media – at least sectors such as this – to account.

  36. ‘Being touched without permission is nothing short of assault.’ It is assault plain and simple. In legal terms it’s called Common Assault. I volunteer in a hospital for people with neurodisabilities and during our training we were shown that even touching someone gently on for example, their arm or shoulder without permission is Common Assault. It is not OK however normalised it has become.

  37. The true story here has been overlooked for the push for sensationalism and showing headlines. I can see now how many people are swayed away form knowing the truth because of the doubt that is portrayed within sections of the media. The true and very worthwhile story is that many people are changing everything about their lives and it’s making a difference.

  38. It just makes no sense for these journalists to call Universal Medicine a cult just because we have chosen to make life style choices that are loving and healing to our bodies, this way of bringing in self love is so foreign to a world that is all about self identification which brings abuse to the body in many varied ways.

  39. It is crazy to think you are treated with suspicion or said your in a ‘cult’ because you make lifestyle choices that are truly loving and supportive, you lose excess weight, become more productive at work, deepen all your relationships, have more energy and vitality, become more engaged in the community – who is really living in a cult? I leave it for you to decide.

  40. If looking after yourself means you’re in a cult then the world is truly crazy. I don’t care what anyone says – I’m going to look after myself until the end!

  41. I love the header of this blog Suzanne, it exposes their own stupidity of what they are trying to make be doom and gloom.

  42. It really is sad that many see one who chooses to live in a way that honors and respects their body, to the degree where what they eat and how they live changes, because it is felt that the old ways were not honouring and respectful. What if just doing this in our lives could enrich our health and wellbeing, bring back a true sense of responsibility and to boot, relieve the pressure on our health systems. Now this is what needs to be reported.

  43. Hear, hear Suzanne, I agree with all you say. One has to conclude that there needs to be the return to true journalism, true reporting with true investigations, with real concern for people and for humanity at large. Whatever are these so called ‘journalists’ on about?

  44. ‘So when someone (be they male or female) decides to listen to themselves and to the many medical articles that have been written separately, and decides to follow all of that advice at the same time, then it is considered weird, cult-like behaviour. How weird is that?’ Definitely weird Suzanne, very well said.

  45. Universal Medicine being a cult is just farcical. Any true investigative journalist could discover and report the truth in a minute, for many journalists that is not their intention. I look forward to the day that changes.

  46. Thank you Suzanne for a very clear and powerful response to the extremely harmful reporting by Josh Robertson and Liam Walsh. A great opportunity squandered by these two to be able to present truth to humanity by choosing instead to resort to lies and sensationalism. And the public also have a responsibility in this when it comes to choosing what to read.

  47. I love your simple and direct approach Suzanne – I totally agree with all you share. It is interesting if you make choices that are more loving and true people start saying you must be in a cult, if you have harming behaviours and continue to live a lie everyone leaves you alone because they don’t feel challenged by your lifestyle choices.

  48. Saying it as it is, Suzanne. A great counter to the garbage being peddled as news. Why is it we’re OK taking on facts in bite-sized articles, yet when they’re all put together and presented under a broader umbrella of absolute wisdom and truth, the word ‘cult’ suddenly gets applied? Ridiculous beyond belief if it wasn’t so shameful in a world where illness and disease are bankrupting many a nation’s health budget.

  49. Short and to the point Suzanne! I echo your words and can absolutely state from experience that Universal Medicine is the furtherest thing from a cult that you could possibly imagine – it is the furtherest thing from brain-washing (commonly associated with cults) that I know (!) and it encourages quite the opposite which is for individuals themselves to feel what is right for them. There is no pressure and no obligation to do or join anything, but simply an opportunity to connect to true self-care and the love we naturally are. How on earth could anyone doing their due research come up with anything other than this, unless of course they were not doing research and / or advancing propaganda and sensationalism simply to sell a story? Not very responsible journalism I say!

  50. I so agree with all of your article Suzanne – very clearly expressed. Universal Medicine presents a way of living – for us to choose or not. Many of the points you raise are now – three years on – being more accepted by some parts of society – although not all in one package. And when was it ever acceptable to touch women ( or men or children for that matter) without their permission?

  51. ‘Being touched without permission is nothing short of assault’. This is spot on Suzanne. Having the self-worth to voice when and if we want to be touched and HOW is very liberating and respectful and loving of one-self. Since when did that become a crime?

  52. Have we forgotten the art of respect? Everybody is allowed to walk away from Universal Medicine if he or she doesn’t like to hear what is presented. But to insult and blame is a respectless behaviour.

  53. “it is normal for men to touch their partners without their permission. This is not normal behaviour. If I ever lived in a relationship where it was okay to be touched by anyone without giving my permission, I would leave in a second. Being touched without permission is nothing short of assault.” – YES

    This is actual written law, however as seen in countless domestic violence cases they are rarely enforced to a meaningful degree.

  54. Universal Medicine (re)presents that what we have always known deep inside is true ant that includes that fact that there’s something deeply ailing about the way we currently live, and it also presents that it is our choice and responsibility that make it what it is, and we do have a choice to choose otherwise. And that there are people who are starting to choose the true way – this is very uncomfortable for some.

  55. Thank you for this very straight to the point and fact updating blog Suzanne. There really isn’t much more to say than journalists please check your facts before reporting as you are lying about a very reputable company – Universal Medicine AND with that you are lying to the public.

  56. The denigration of women in the media needs to be addressed, for Josh Robertson to insinuate that it should be ok for a man to touch their partner without their permission is incredibly disrespectful. When domestic violence is such a serious issue in our society, to say something like this is not only irresponsible but shows the misogynistic behaviour some men still hold towards treating women with equality and respect.

  57. It amazes me that these men can, with consideration, put their names to what they have written. I would be so embarrassed to take such a stand these days? On one hand we are campaigning to end domestic violence and on the other we have journalists saying that it is ok for men to treat their wives as property, the very premise/misconception we are trying to change. These guys seem quite medieval.

  58. As a male I wouldn’t appreciate my mother, sisters, nieces or partner to be touched inappropriately and as stated in the blog it’s nothing short of assault.

  59. It keeps puzzling me why it is so challenged in our society when someone or a group of people start to live in a more loving way including healthy food choices and living harmoniously with the people around them. It does not really make sense!

  60. Suzanne I couldn’t agree more with your points, the article printed was full of lies. I find it frustrating that three years on no media newspaper will print the true story of people turning there lives around 360 degrees to great health, vitality, engagement in work and life, building great relationships with work, friends and family. This is what the world needs is answers to how we can turn around the harm and abject misery most find themselves in regardless of their bank balances. My life has infinitely improved and is beyond anything I could have dreamed of as I now feel in my bones that I am beautiful, lovely, sweet, powerful and worthy of love. To accuse Universal Medicine of doing harm or being subversive stops people from seeking and understanding the truth that is being lived and can be lived by everyone.

  61. Suzanne I totally agree there is nothing about Universal Medicine that resembles a cult. Just lots of people listening to common sense information and lots of freedom of choice to embrace this information into their own lives or not, our choice!

  62. Thank you Susanne, it is absolutely abhorrent that we let journalists lie; this is just a reflection of how far we have strayed from the truth. It is time to bring a change to what we as society accept as a ‘so called truth’. Regulating against lies should be the last stance; we as humanity should just live the truth through our loving commitment to each other in brotherhood!

  63. If we use the media’s wobbly yardstick for determining that Universal Medicine is a cult, every group that congregates over a common interest point should also be considered a cult – eg pet owners, car and sporting clubs, orchid growers, book clubs, political parties, small business owners etc. Obviously quite ridiculous!

  64. Absolutely. Sadly journalism has strayed far away from being an honourable profession dedicated to reporting truth.

  65. So true Suzanne – to treat ourselves with integrity and love supports us – and to ignore our body is just another form of abuse. We treat our cars with more love than we treat our own body – now, that does feel really weird!

  66. I very much agree what you are saying Suzanne, there are actually many things that are known to be truly good for us human beings, like going to bed and rising early, not taking drugs (including alcohol), eating a balanced diet (most people I speak to know for example that vegetables are good for us) and I assume and thoroughly hope that every single human being on this earth has experienced a loving moment with somebody and has felt how truly heartwarming and nurturing that is. If that defines a cult then we are one big cult on this earth.

  67. Thank you Suzanne. To suggest that by my choosing to live a life bringing the fullness of me to every moment is ‘weird’ or ‘cult-like’ is actually very weird in itself. I think it’s remarkable and I feel amazing.

  68. Well stated Suzanne, So lovingly and unwavering setting the facts straight.

  69. There is an amazing amount of wisdom shared in the blogs published in this website. I know first hand how life changing they are (for example, I went back to sleep every night after almost ten years of bad sleeping). Everyone has the right to either give it a go and see what happens or to reject what is here presented. Either option is cool. None is cult.

  70. Thank you for your blog Suzanne. Its crazy to see on one hand we have the medical authorities telling us certain foods are no good for us and then on the other hand, when an individual comes along and agrees with the medical, he and everyone associated, are claimed to be in a cult. Where is the responsibility of the press in providing a sensationalised piece rather than a true account that could help many more people in starting on the road to self-care and so lessen the burden on the health systems.

  71. 20 years ago when I was working in the NHS the concept of self-care was being discussed. There was awareness then that to turn around the burgeoning ill health statistics and the demands on health care services, we needed to take back responsibility for our own health (as the experts about our own bodies), seeking advice and support from medical practitioners, whilst living lives that are respectful of our bodies and their well-being. How can any journalist justify undermining a way of life that is about empowering the individual to be in their own driving seat, making responsible choices, rather than living recklessly and expecting someone else to pick up the pieces. My time in the NHS was a while ago. I do not see that general attitudes have changed much. Ill-researched and irresponsible journalism has had a huge part to play in this.

  72. Even the NHS here in the UK has started promoting ‘self care’ because they have realised that the only way to slow down the ever spiralling cost of our healthcare is for people to take more care of themselves in the first place to avoid getting sick. So this is not fringe or alternative thinking but mainstream common sense. How can taking care of yourself be seen as weird or crazy?

  73. Suzanne, I could not agree more, there is nothing cult like about taking care of yourself through sensible diet, elimination of alcohol and taking early nights, this is simple common sense.

  74. Yes the statistics of the abuse on women is horrendous. Josh Robertson and Liam Walsh had a great opportunity to provide a truthful account of Universal Medicine and the treatments offered to women which completely honours and empowers women. They could have written a powerful and inspiring article. But instead they chose to suggest there is something wrong in being honest with your partner and telling him whenever you prefer to not be touched. They chose to write a cheap, meaningless and harming article. A great opportunity squandered.

  75. This article holds such a high amount of integrity. Thank you for simply exposing what is going on – and the reactive behaviour shown by people who think living in a more loving way is cult – behaviour. It is not – it is a choice – and one that everyone is free to make.

  76. To me, any person that thinks Universal Medicine is a cult is afraid that what Unimed is saying might be the truth, and they may have to admit to them selves that they messed up. Serge Benhayon has been presenting a way of living that works for me and i feel can change humanity for the better.

  77. How does taking good advice mean you are in a cult? I fully agree with everything you have said here, this was incredibly irresponsible journalism by Josh Robertson and Liam Walsh.

  78. Showing the way forward for humanity by choosing to live in harmony with yourself and your surroundings should be applauded. Thank you Suzanne for so clearly setting out the ridiculousness of the attacks on Universal Medicine and challenging the appalling suggestion that women should not have the right to choose who touches them.

  79. Great blog Suzanne straight talking and calling out the fabricated lies that have been created to bolster an utterly abhorrent and skewed agenda to denigrate Universal Medicine

  80. It seems Josh Robertson and Liam Walsh are suggesting that it is wrong and weird for a woman to be in charge of who touches her and how, implying that ‘not allowing their partners to touch them without permission’ is a bad thing…. Is this not simply irresponsible journalism?

  81. People following the advice that is given to support well-being and health are being labeled as abnormal. If that is seen as abnormal then does that not further support what Serge Benhayon presents as humanity is acting against how we are to naturally be.

  82. After two years of attempting to spread lies about Universal Medicine the distractors are still just a mere announce. The world has evolved but they have not, kind of like the dinosaurs.

  83. Thank you Suzanne Anderssen for this article. I agree with Everything you are saying here and it is almost 2 years since you wrote it and I know the media are still printing lies to the public and the only way it is going to stop is if people like me and you stand up and speak our Truth.
    Like you, I live in way that supports me in every way and there is nothing cultish about that.

  84. Great post Suzanne! It is absolutely ridiculous that individuals who are choosing to make self-loving choices such as going to bed early, avoiding alcohol, dairy and gluten, and saying no to abusive relationships, can be labelled as belonging to a cult?! Surely, if this were the definition of a cult, there would be a large portion of the population throughout the world that would be also be defined by this term, and yet this is clearly not the case, What propaganda are the media and individual journalists involved in, to promote such untruths, and why are they not made to be accountable?

  85. It is so strange, bordering on mad that people who take great care of themselves and their environment, should be branded as ‘cult followers’ instead of being publicly celebrated as beautiful examples how we can be loving with ourselves and others. What has the World come to? Not a great place indeed.

    1. How mad is a world that still feeds off negativity and gutter news?

      Will we learn to appreciate and celebrate people and stories that show us there is a way to live in support of one another and life, not pitted against in monstrous battles of competition, comparison and judgment? Our current choices and the writings of men like Josh Robertson and Liam Walsh are reflected in the fact that we have not been free of war in the world for more than a second in over two hundred years.

      We will learn to work together, that is our way. It is not a question of if, just when, and that is up to us and how much more we delay the inevitable turn around.

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