The Chicken Egg Is The Best Example Of A Cell!

 

A chicken egg has three parts: (1) the shell (membrane or capsule), (2)  the white part (cytoplasm) and  (3) the yolk or yellow part called nucleus. The yolk contains all the genetic information necessary for the chick to become a roster or a hen, red or mottled. The white of the egg contains the food energy needed during 21 days, for the chick to develop or come out of the shell. It is indeed Nature’s miracle!

 

We find a very thin membrane when we shell a boiled egg. The placenta of the chick is developed from this thin “skin” or membrane.  During the three weeks of incubation, the chick breaths through this “skin”. The most remarkable part of the chicken egg  shell is its ten thousand very small holes enabling the chick to breath. Through these holes or pores carbon dioxide ad water come out and oxygen goes in, exactly in the same way as in a placenta. More phenomenal still is the fact that the egg shell is charge with electricity! The outside of the shell has a positive charge while the inner side has a negative charge. 

 

All the cells in our body have a “shell” which is called a membrane. This membrane also possesses thousands of small holes or pores. It is also charged with electricity in the same way as the egg shell: positive electricity outside and negative electricity inside! It is this electrical balance or equilibrium in  membrane in every membrane of  our cells that let us generate  electricity to make love!  We must know and appreciate, therefore, what really happens, electrically, in our entire body, from the time or our conception. 

 

 

Pregnancy

When does pregnancy begin?: An average man emits  up to 300 million sperms in one ejaculation! On the other hand, the average woman produces only one egg per month! From this fantastic number of sperms only one is allowed to pierce the female egg, fertilizing it. From this fertilized human egg – which will make its nest on the inner part of the uterus where a placenta will be formed – a male or female will develop.

 

 

 

We must note that the fertilized human egg is only one cell which begins to multiply itself immediately on an exponential progression, that is one cell, divides into two, two divide into four, and so forth, in such a way, that on the fourth day, after fertilization, the future baby is the size of a pin head , but has the shape of an orange! If we cut an orange vertically, we will see its three parts: (1) the skin,(2)  the sections and  (3) the central white band. 

 

These three parts are analogous to the three primitive and basic tissues, which will give origin to the specialized organs needed to produce electricity for making love! Next, we must analyze the compositions of the human electric orange! 

 

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