BD Prep 503 for humans

2002-07-30 Thread James Hedley



Dear List members,

I have been interested lately in what the individual 
preps do. We always seem to use the compost preps in a block to add to compost 
or to brews or to cow pat pit.So I began reading again about the 
individual preps. The description and pictures of the chamomile in the intestine 
of the cow, while the prep 503 was being made, set me thinking. Then I was at a 
workshop on BD and someone said that this was about the digestive process in the 
compost heap. I realised at that moment that it was about the digestive gesture 
or energy, full stop - in anything. 

My digestive system has always been my weak link. So I 
thought to myself - ah I could use this stuff on myself. James, who was sitting 
behind me, leant forward at the same time and said "You ought to take that. It 
would be good for your digestion." Bingo. So when we 
got home, we prepared a homeopathic remedy using a Rae card of sample Prep 503. 
I took one dose. My guidance, when asked should I take more, said "You only put 
it in the compost heap once." 

The effecthas been remarkable. I would describe the 
result as putting the energy into my digestive system. Instead of putting it 
into the ground to put it into the food or into the animal that I would then 
eat, I have taken the separate energy of this preparation directly and I now 
have a digestive gesture in my body that was not there before. 

That was 3 weeks ago now that I took the one dose and I 
can still feel the effects. Firstly there was an increase in warmth around my 
middle that spread within 24 hours to my whole body, and it remains. I have 
experienced a detox and my lymphatic system has been functioning fully. That 
lasted 2 weeks and was not always comfortable, but then no change seems to be 
comfortable. I feel like I digest food now. It feels very good and positive. I 
also get hungry and thirsty in a way I have never experienced before. I have 
also been very relaxed and happy and at peace.The prep 503 has also 
balanced a nitrogen imbalance in me that manifested as dizziness and that has 
now subsided. The prep is used as a nitrogen rebalancer in the 
soil.

I was wondering who else has tried this Prep 503 on 
themselves and with what results. I was also wondering if anyone has any other 
experience of using this prep agriculturally by itself also. 

Love and Light Barbara 
Hedley


Radiasesthesia and Radionic AnalysisRadionic Insect and Parasite 
controlBioethical Agriculture Consultant

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FW: [globalnews] Western States: A Grasshopper InvasionĀ Linked to Climate Change

2002-07-30 Thread Jane Sherry
Title: FW: [globalnews] Western States: A Grasshopper Invasion?Linked to Climate Change





 TomPaine.com

Western States: A Grasshopper Invasion? 
A Warning Signal, But Is Anybody Listening?
Shepherd Bliss, D.Min., owns the organic Kokopelli Farm in northern California and has contributed to 16 books. 

The biggest grasshopper invasion since World War II has hit the West this summer. Grass, crops, and pastures are being ravaged by grasshoppers and Mormon crickets in unusually large numbers. Most states west of the Mississippi have been attacked. 

They're even eating the paint off some of the houses, moaned Nebraska farmer Robert Larsen. Outside Steamboat, Colo., 200 grasshoppers per square yard have been counted, reaching up to one million grasshoppers per acre. 

A grasshopper can eat more than half its body weight per day. Some people feel like they are experiencing one of the Biblical plagues -- as if they were being punished for some sin. 

When my family in Nebraska talks about grasshoppers, I think of their cousins here in Northern California where I farm -- the glassy-winged sharpshooter (GWSS) that threatens our lucrative wine industry. The GWSS has already infested various southern counties, and a few have come up here. 

Is the arrival of such pests in large numbers and often to new areas isolated incidents, or do they represent a pattern? Are these pests the problem, or merely the symptom of a deeper problem? What has happened to the predators that have historically eaten such pests? 

The media tends to cover the grasshopper invasion as resulting from hot, dry weather and as drought-caused. Little is said about the global warming that in all likelihood causes the drought and probably will worsen, if current trends continue. 

The sharpshooter has come North because of climate change; it certainly will not be the last new pest to migrate our way. The sharpshooters have historically thrived in warmer climates to the south and perished in cooler weather. Even a slight rise in temperature expands their territorial reach. 

The main solution currently used for the grasshopper and GWSS invasions is pesticides. But that merely treats the symptom, and can have unwanted side effects that worsen the underlying cause. The California Department of Food and Agriculture is foolishly spending millions of our tax dollars to arm itself with chemicals; the bugs will adapt and resist. The federal government recently granted California another $28 million for its chemical war against the dreaded beasts. 

But the next major pest surely waits in the shadows, and the short-term gain of eliminating some of today's pests by chemicals poses very significant long-term risks by further disrupting nature's balance -- polluting the soil, air, and water and killing many beneficial insects, including those that would naturally keep these pests in check. 

Rather than treat the symptoms with a chemical-led assault, we need a systemic approach. All creatures have natural predators. When agribusiness plants a monocrop, such as wine grapes, and saturates the fields with chemicals, it destroys those predators and invites pests to a banquet. This only makes a bad problem worse. 

Sometimes answers and alternatives are right before our eyes, even if policy makers and agri-businessmen dont see them. Grass is one of nature's treasures and agriculture's most valuable crops, though its importance is often over-looked in favor of value-added final products like wine. Its also essential to a healthy food chain. Spraying bugs on the grass leads to the accumulation of toxins in the soil and plants, which not only moves up the food chain to humans, according to scientists, but wreaks havoc on the ecosystem. 

We need to ask the larger questions and consider what the grasshopper invasion symptom tells us about the health of nature and our food system. What has happened to the birds and rodents that usually prey on grasshoppers and the fungal diseases that keep the numbers of insects down? Such smaller critters are vulnerable to the pesticides used to kill unwanted insects. Beneficial insects -- including bees, ladybugs, spiders and dragonflies far outnumber pests and are also killed by pesticides. 

The costs of spraying pesticides are much more than hiring an aerial sprayer and buying the chemicals. If global warming continues unabated and agribusiness continues with its chemical addiction, grasshopper and glassy-winged sharpshooter problems are likely to worsen. Ultimately, only the chemical companies will benefit. 

This summers grasshopper invasions are a wake-up call to not only look at how chemicals continue to unbalance ecosystems and contribute to climate changes, they should prompt policy makers and business leaders to fundamentally rethink the way theyre managing the food chain and ecosystems that support it. 


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grasshoppers

2002-07-30 Thread mroboz



The devastation has also been happening in the southern 
parts of the Prairie Provinces of Alberta. Saskatchewan and Manitoba, especially 
the first two. Now is the time to do mass peppering! Years of severe 
drought have set up an imbalance, hence the insect attack.
Do Mormon grasshoppers only attack Mormon owned farms?! 
(: Michael


Re: BD Prep 503 for humans

2002-07-30 Thread Glen Atkinson

Hugh  Barbara
Yes I can concure with Barbaras experience and observations and Hughs
suggestion that these are some of the best remedies available for human
use.
How are we different to the soil or plants. We have the same spiritual
bodies, made of the same fabric yet woven together in slightly different
patterns. What works in the soil has to work for humans.
I started taking 503 in 1990. I have taken too much of it over a
extended period and can only describe the experience as developing the
consciousness of a pregnant women. In moderation though it does
wonderful things
Glen




Re: grasshoppers

2002-07-30 Thread Allan Balliett

The devastation has also been happening in the southern parts of the 
Prairie Provinces of Alberta. Saskatchewan and Manitoba, especially 
the first two.  Now is the time to do mass peppering!  Years of 
severe drought have set up an imbalance, hence the insect attack.
Do Mormon grasshoppers only attack Mormon owned farms?! (:  Michael

Damn, Michael - It's not Mormon Grasshoppers, it's Mormon Crickets.



The way to do a mass peppering is to build long fires at night for 
the grasshoppers to fly into. Save the ash in the morning for future 
applications.

Oh, and send for the seagulls...




Re: BD Prep 503 for humans

2002-07-30 Thread Peter Michael Bacchus



Dear List Members,
 
I've had an interesting experience with 501 in relationship to an abscess in the 
nerve canal of my lower jaw. The abscess was on the move towards the jaw hinge 
and it was time to do something decisive. After a discussion with Glen I started 
taking some 501. After about four dosesat two hourly intervals the abscess 
returned to the tooth where it started, then climbed up past the tooth and sat 
just under the skin beside the tooth. It was accutely painfull and demanding to 
be lanced. I then changed over to Schusseler's cell salt #12, silica 6x and 
after another four doses at two hourly intervals the abscess disolved and 
drained away via the lymph system. Perhaps this would be a good system for 
moving abscesses or tumors that are in inoperable situations.
 
I was later invited to try the same treatment on a dog that had a large abscess 
on the top of its head. When it headed up and was ready to be released the vet 
and the owner decided to put the dog down instead.
 
Apart from proving, I believe that any herbal or homoeopathic remedy should only 
be taken for as long as it is needed. If the condition returns then repeat the 
treatment.
Cheers,
Peter.

  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Hugh Lovel 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Tuesday, July 30, 2002 8:36 
PM
  Subject: Re: BD Prep 503 for humans
  


BD Prep Remedies for Humans

2002-07-30 Thread Allan Balliett

Is there anyone using the Rae cards or other technique who would be 
willing to make up a set of preps for me to work with?

Thanks

-Allan Balliett