The Plasma Principle: A Pattern of Life, Earth, and the Cosmos.
- ADOM ACADEMY

- Sep 22
- 7 min read
Updated: Sep 24
Understanding Disease Through the Lens of Imbalance

What I’m about to teach you is not published anywhere, but in the next few minutes, you’ll realize something life-changing.
Everything we know, from our bodies, to our planet, to the cosmos, operates on one simple principle.
The Plasma Principle.
This is a pattern of life, which is also a pattern of pathology.
First, Fluid.
We are born in fluid. At birth, we begin in a fluid environment. The amniotic sac, which supports and nourishes us during fetal development. This fluid phase symbolizes the start of life, where the body is in a state of flexibility and growth, forming the foundation for all future biological processes. Just as we are born into this nourishing, dynamic fluid state, Earth begins in fluid as well. Water, which covers over 70% of the Earth’s surface, sustains life by regulating temperature, supporting ecosystems, and enabling biological functions, just like the amniotic fluid sustains development.
Then, Plasma.
We live in plasma. Plasma is where life takes shape, where the body adapts, grows, and evolves. It's a constant state, guiding the body’s functions as it processes nutrients, eliminates waste, and responds to environmental and internal stresses. In this ongoing, dynamic phase, everything is in motion, constantly interacting with energy to maintain balance.
On Earth, this plasma phase mirrors the energetic forces shaping the planet. Volcanic eruptions, lightning storms, solar radiation, and the forces driving weather patterns all manifest as expressions of this dynamic, transformative energy. Just as the body thrives and changes in plasma, Earth is driven by the plasma-like forces that move its systems.
Followed by Stone.
We die in stone. As life comes to a close, the body undergoes rigor mortis, a process where the muscles stiffen, and the body transitions into a rigid state. This is the stone phase, where the body becomes more solid and unyielding as biological processes slow down and prepare for decomposition.
On Earth, this process is mirrored in the calcification of the planet. The Earth’s solid crust, with its mountains and landmasses, represents stone. These solid structures provide stability, but over time, they become more rigid and less adaptable to changes, just like the human body does at the end of life.
And Finally, Gas.
Eventually, stone transforms into gas. After rigor mortis, the body begins to decompose, releasing gases like methane and carbon dioxide. This phase represents the final transformation, where matter breaks down and returns to the environment.
On Earth, gases are released into the atmosphere as systems break down and renew. The atmosphere, full of gases like oxygen and carbon dioxide, circulates energy and sustains life, just as gases are essential for life’s ongoing processes. The gas phase is where energy moves freely, contributing to new cycles of creation and transformation.
Now, the Most Interesting Part of the Plasma Principle.
The thing we can't deny is that all the phases of life, the fluid, the plasma, the stone, and the gas, are all also pathologies. Life and pathology are not separate. They are essentially different phases of plasma. Just as we experience the stages of fluid, plasma, stone, and gas in our lives, our bodies, our diseases, and even our deaths, plasma is the core force that connects everything.
And it’s the same with Earth and the cosmos. These phases of fluid, plasma, stone, and gas are not isolated. They represent an ongoing transformation of energy and matter. Just as we are born, live, and die through these phases, Earth and the cosmos experience similar cycles. The earth is no different from the body. It evolves through the same phases, from the flexibility of fluid to the rigidity of stone, and ultimately to the transformation into gas. The universe too undergoes cosmic cycles of creation and destruction that mirror the life cycles we experience on Earth.
There is no distinction between life, pathology, Earth, and the cosmos. They are all intertwined and governed by the same principle: The Plasma Principle.
Imbalance: The Root Cause of Disease and Decline.
Disease, both in the human body, on Earth, and in the cosmos, is not just a random event. It’s a result of imbalance. For humans, environmental stress, toxins, and aging disrupt the plasma phase, causing the body to lose its adaptability. Similarly, Earth’s systems are being affected by imbalances, leading to planetary challenges like climate change, ecosystem collapse, and environmental stress.
The cosmos too is not immune to these imbalances. Cosmic forces, like radiation, gravitational shifts, and energetic disruptions, create imbalances in the larger universal systems, leading to events like supernovas, black hole formation, and cosmic energy disturbances. Just as we experience imbalance in our bodies and on Earth, the cosmos experiences cycles of disruption and recalibration.
In this framework, healing is about restoring balance within the plasma phase—where life, energy, and transformation continue to flow in harmony. For humans, this means restoring atomic health, balancing microbes, and maintaining the body’s adaptability. For Earth, it means restoring atomic health, balancing microbes, and renewing its natural systems. For the cosmos, it means restoring atomic health, balancing microbes, and stabilizing cosmic forces, ensuring that the flow of creation and destruction remains in balance.
You see where I'm going here? Now, if we want to understand disease more clearly, let’s begin by considering the bigger picture. How many diseases do you think there are?
Actually, what we’re about to discuss might challenge that perception. Let’s start with the Nussbaumer Pathology Framework, which has 7 disease categories that all diseases fall into.
Now that we’ve established how life, energy, and transformation unfold through distinct phases—fluid, plasma, stone, and gas—we can apply this understanding to disease. Disease, in essence, is the result of imbalance, where natural processes go awry. To organize and understand these imbalances, we have the Nussbaumer Pathology Framework, which categorizes diseases into seven distinct groups based on the nature of their disruptions. Each category reflects a different type of imbalance in the body, Earth, or cosmos.
The Seven Categories of Pathology.
Sorted by Disease Volume.
Plasma
This encompasses stone, plaque, lipid, fat—all as phases of the same process. These are conditions characterized by buildup, obstructions, deposits, and degenerative changes that interfere with function. It reflects the various stages of plasma, from fluid accumulation and obstructions to solidifying deposits and structural changes.
Imbalance
Deficiencies, excesses, dysfunctions in metabolic, systemic, and hormonal regulation.
Fluid
Edema, infiltration, and infection-based fluid accumulation.
Tumor
Abnormal growths influenced by microbial, genetic, and metabolic factors.
Tear/Break
Structural failures, ruptures, and mechanical damage.
Genetic and Epigenetic
Congenital, mutation-driven, degenerative, and atomic-scale disruptions, along with changes influenced by environmental, microbial, and chemical factors that impact genetic expression.
Gas and Air
Conditions involving trapped gases, embolisms, pressure changes, and air-related dysfunction.
Now, here’s the interesting part: we know that fluid, tumor, and gas and air are actually phases of the plasma state. These are all variations of the plasma phase, where life is in a dynamic, ever-changing form. For example:
Fluid is a phase where plasma accumulates or infiltrates tissue.
Tumor growth is influenced by microbial, genetic, and metabolic processes, but ultimately reflects changes in plasma dynamics.
Gas and air conditions involve changes in pressure, gas buildup, and air-related dysfunction, all of which can be attributed to disruptions in the plasma state.
Because of this, we can simplify the categories into four core categories of pathology:
The Four Core Categories of Pathology
Plasma
This encompasses stone, plaque, lipid, and fat—as phases of the plasma state, representing dynamic changes from fluid accumulation to solid deposits and obstructions.
Imbalance
Deficiencies, excesses, dysfunctions in metabolic, systemic, and hormonal regulation.
Tear/Break
Structural failures, ruptures, and mechanical damage.
Genetic/Epigenetic
Congenital, mutation-driven, degenerative disruptions and changes in gene expression influenced by environmental, microbial, and chemical factors.
Now that we’ve narrowed the pathology categories down to four core phases—Plasma, Imbalance, Tear/Break, and Genetic/Epigenetic—we need to understand how Tear/Break and Genetic/Epigenetic are also tied to the plasma phase.
Tear/Break as Plasma
Tear/Break conditions, such as ruptures or structural failures, cannot exist without plasma. When trauma occurs, plasma—composed of fluid, ions, and proteins—becomes activated as part of the body's response to injury. Plasma rushes to the site to begin the healing process by delivering cells, proteins, and ions like calcium, which are crucial for tissue repair. Without plasma, the body cannot respond to trauma, and the injury cannot heal. If plasma's response is disrupted, the injury worsens, leading to complications like chronic inflammation or calcification.
Genetic/Epigenetic as Plasma
Genetic and epigenetic diseases cannot exist without plasma either. Plasma is vital in regulating gene expression and maintaining DNA stability. Environmental factors like toxins, radiation, or stress interact with plasma, which directly affects the cellular processes that regulate gene activity. These disruptions in plasma can lead to mutations, altered gene expression, and genetic disorders. Without plasma, these genetic and epigenetic changes wouldn’t occur, making it an essential factor in the development of these diseases.
By understanding this, we see that all of pathology, whether it’s related to structural damage, genetic disruptions, or disease formation, ultimately returns to plasma as the underlying factor in maintaining balance, adapting to stress, and responding to environmental factors.
Putting It All Together
So, what do we have left?
We have plasma and...the only true cause of disease
Imbalance.
When you really break it down, all of life, pathology, death, Earth, and the cosmos are merely phases of plasma, and imbalance is the core driver of disease, environmental collapse, and cosmic disruptions.
To restore health in ourselves, our planet, and the universe, we must first learn to recognize and correct these imbalances. Right now, we are out of sync, but the good news is we can we can bring everything back into harmony.
These four phases, fluid, plasma, stone, and gas, define the pattern of life and death, creation and destruction. They are not separate from disease. In fact, disease is nothing more than a disturbance in this natural cycle. That disturbance has one name: imbalance.
Imbalance is the singular, universal cause of disease. Whether we are talking about the breakdown of cellular function, the collapse of an ecosystem, or the explosion of a star, it all stems from imbalance. There are not thousands of different causes for disease. There is only one. Everything else is a symptom or a consequence of imbalance.
What we call pathology is simply the physical expression of imbalance in different forms.
Tumors are imbalances in growth regulation.
Plaque and stone are imbalances in transformation and elimination.
Inflammation is imbalance in immune response.
Genetic disorders are imbalances in the regulation of expression and repair.
Trauma is imbalance in force and structure.
Fluid retention is imbalance in distribution and flow. Gas buildup is imbalance in containment and release.
But none of these are separate diseases. They are different faces of the same underlying disruption.
Imbalance in plasma. The state of transformation and adaptation, is the common denominator.
When the plasma state is balanced, the system is adaptable. It self-regulates. It heals. It maintains harmony across all phases. When the plasma state is disrupted, everything else begins to break down. Energy no longer moves freely. Matter builds up or breaks down inappropriately. Communication between systems fails. That’s when disease appears, not as an isolated problem, but as a system-wide expression of imbalance.
The same principle applies at every level. In the human body, imbalance causes disease. On Earth, imbalance leads to climate collapse, ecological disruption, and natural disasters. In the cosmos, imbalance drives stellar explosions, gravitational anomalies, and the birth and death of galaxies. The scale changes, but the pattern remains.
This is why the Plasma Principle matters. It gives us a way to unify our understanding of biology, environment, and physics. It shows us that healing is not about fighting disease. It is about restoring balance.









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