Prof. RNDr. Anna Strunecká, DrSc. - Czech Republic
Abstract of the presentation
Panacea for Life and Health: Discoveries of Contemporary Science and the Transformation of Consciousness
Branch: Spiritual healing (Non-contact massage)
The search for the elixir of life runs throughout the history of humankind. In this presentation, I will reveal newly discovered connections that may be useful in the current stage of humanity’s transformation. To the surprise of many researchers, it has been found that human cells use the pigment melanin to break down water in much the same way that plants do during photosynthesis. Melanin decomposes water and uses it as a source of energy. In this way, cells obtain up to 90% of their energy from water. Hydrogen is nature’s most widely used energy carrier, and melanin transforms water into biological fuel. This unexpected discovery opens a new era in biology. It may fundamentally reshape biochemistry, where glucose has long been regarded as the central energy molecule, stored in ATP.
How, then, can melanin levels in humans be increased? Melanocytes are stimulated to produce melanin by the herb Artemisia vulgaris (mugwort). Sunlight triggers the body’s production of vitamin D3. At present, 85–95% of the population in developed countries is at risk of vitamin D3 deficiency. The best proof of its necessity for the human body is that all cell types are equipped with receptors for this vitamin. Through them, vitamin D3 regulates 2,000 genes in the human genome and affects up to 500 different disorders and diseases. Melanin and vitamin D3, together with water and sunlight, represent a modern panacea.
We are living in an extraordinary time of consciousness transformation. Within a short span, humanity is undergoing a quantum leap into a new way of being. People are aging, healing, and dying in new ways. Yet 2.5 billion of our fellow human beings still lack access to clean water, and every hour 650 children in the world die of hunger. The state of our consciousness reflects the state of our overall health, and consequently the health of our planet. It is time to turn away from material dogmas and accept the fact that we are spiritual beings having a human experience. We are all one. Everything on this planet can be changed.
Curriculum vitae
She completed eleven years of schooling in Prague. She also graduated with honours from the Faculty of Natural Sciences at Charles University in Prague, majoring in biology and chemistry (1961–1966). She underwent scientific training, worked as an assistant, completed internships abroad, published dozens of scientific papers, and defended her candidate, habilitation, and doctoral dissertations at Charles University in Prague. She was appointed associate professor of animal physiology in 1980 and professor of animal physiology on 1 February 1989. From 1981 to 1990, she was head of the Department of Physiology and Developmental Biology at the Faculty of Science, Charles University. She lectured on human and animal physiology at the Faculty of Science for biologists, toxicologists, and biochemists, and at the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics for biophysics students.
She has published more than 350 scientific papers and conference proceedings in her research work. She has focused on the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease and autism. She also points out the health risks associated with increasing concentrations of fluoride and aluminium ions in the environment. She has been the principal investigator for a number of scientific grants, the author of five professional textbooks, a member of the editorial board of the journal News in Physiological Sciences (USA), and a member of several Czech and international scientific societies. Her biography is featured in various foreign publications such as Who is Who. In 1995, she received the ABI USA Woman of the Year award.
In 1965, she married Otakar Strunecký and has a daughter, MUDr Kateřina Seimlová, and a son, Mgr Otakar Strunecký, PhD. She has seven grandchildren.
In 1990, she was dismissed from her position as head of department and completed a two-month course at the Centre for Non-Traditional Medicine in Moscow.
Her textbook for future biology teachers (Integrative Human Physiology) was awarded the Silver Bludný Balvan (Erroneous Boulder) prize by the Sisyfos Club almost immediately after its publication (1999) and was subsequently banned as a textbook. In 2018, she received the Diamond Bludný Balvan prize from the Sisyfos Club. She has published 15 popular science books, two of which became bestsellers and four of which were published abroad. For ten years, she gave more than 100 popular lectures to the general public, appeared in the media, and wrote dozens of articles for popular magazines.
Please note that some of the texts also include machine-generated translations.




