Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-16 Thread Victor Cozzetto
Correct. It shouldn't contain gluten. But you need to trust the vendor too.
I recommend Pines, as they explicitly say that are gluten free, and you can
see their explanation on their FAQ here:

http://wheatgrass.com/t-faq.aspx

Here is the text about gluten:

"I am allergic to wheat/gluten. Is it safe to eat PINES Wheat Grass?

We recommend you check with your doctor or allergist to be certain, but it
is likely to be perfectly safe.

As you probably know, wheat allergies are usually a reaction to the gluten
found in the wheat berry. PINES Wheat Grass is a vegetable, harvested
before the wheat plant forms the grain (berry), and it is after during the
transition from vegetable to grain that gluten begins to form.

We have done multiple tests on our whole leaf products and never had a
detectable amount of gluten in our whole leaf wheat grass or barley grass.

Pines is very careful to harvest our wheatgrass at the jointing stage and
to harvest above the joint so that no gluten is in the product.  Further,
we test each batch to make sure that the product can be considered gluten
free.  Other companies harvest their products after the jointing stage
which allows gluten to be in the finished product.  With Pines Wheat Grass,
you can be assured our wheatgrass is being harvested at the correct time
and that it has been tested to make sure we can say it is gluten free."

Hope that helps.
Victor


On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 10:56 AM, PT Ferrance <ptf2...@bellsouth.net> wrote:

> Wheatgrass is not supposed to contain gluten so you should be alright with
> it but you might want to try a couple of shots from a health food store
> before you invest in a container.
> PT
> --
> *From:* ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com>
> *To:* Silver-List <silver-list@eskimo.com>
> *Sent:* Tuesday, September 15, 2015 7:13 PM
> *Subject:* Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
>
> Wheatgrass has gluten, right? I cannot eat gluten.
>
>
>
> On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 8:50 PM, Victor Cozzetto <victor.cozze...@gmail.com
> > wrote:
>
> One superb source of vitamin A is wheatgrass. A lot of people grow it;
> however, you can actually buy a superior powdered grass from Pines at
> wheatgrass.com
>
> I explain my opinion about buying vs growing here on my blog
> <http://www.otezok.com/2015/06/15/micro-greens/>.
>
> Victor
>
> On Wed, Sep 2, 2015 at 9:40 AM, ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Thanks, PT, for this fascinating information of how bladders can have
> chronic bladder infections due to lack of Vitamin A. This all makes total
> sense --- for years I've suffered annoying on and off bladder infections -
> especially with no-no foods/drinks, stress, etc. I just found out this year
> I have severe vitamin A deficiency. Bladder infection has been reduced
> dramatically but I couldn't figure out why.
> Thanks for demystifying this!
>
> Cheers,
> RaVen
>
>
>
>
>
> --
>
>
> My Google Voice Text # is (720) 442-8725
> *Quote: *
> There is no luck except where there is discipline.
> Irish proverb
>
>
>


Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-16 Thread RaVen
Thanks for this.  Gluten really wrecks my thyroid & I instantly feel horrible 
when ingested. So I got to be really careful.  Will write to them to double 
check. 




On Sep 16, 2015, at 3:26 AM, Victor Cozzetto <victor.cozze...@gmail.com> wrote:

Correct. It shouldn't contain gluten. But you need to trust the vendor too. I 
recommend Pines, as they explicitly say that are gluten free, and you can see 
their explanation on their FAQ here:

http://wheatgrass.com/t-faq.aspx

Here is the text about gluten:

"I am allergic to wheat/gluten. Is it safe to eat PINES Wheat Grass?

We recommend you check with your doctor or allergist to be certain, but it is 
likely to be perfectly safe.

As you probably know, wheat allergies are usually a reaction to the gluten 
found in the wheat berry. PINES Wheat Grass is a vegetable, harvested before 
the wheat plant forms the grain (berry), and it is after during the transition 
from vegetable to grain that gluten begins to form.

We have done multiple tests on our whole leaf products and never had a 
detectable amount of gluten in our whole leaf wheat grass or barley grass. 

Pines is very careful to harvest our wheatgrass at the jointing stage and to 
harvest above the joint so that no gluten is in the product.  Further, we test 
each batch to make sure that the product can be considered gluten free.  Other 
companies harvest their products after the jointing stage which allows gluten 
to be in the finished product.  With Pines Wheat Grass, you can be assured our 
wheatgrass is being harvested at the correct time and that it has been tested 
to make sure we can say it is gluten free."

Hope that helps.
Victor


> On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 10:56 AM, PT Ferrance <ptf2...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
> Wheatgrass is not supposed to contain gluten so you should be alright with it 
> but you might want to try a couple of shots from a health food store before 
> you invest in a container.
> PT
> From: ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com>
> To: Silver-List <silver-list@eskimo.com> 
> Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2015 7:13 PM
> Subject: Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
> 
> Wheatgrass has gluten, right? I cannot eat gluten. 
> 
> 
> 
> On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 8:50 PM, Victor Cozzetto <victor.cozze...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> One superb source of vitamin A is wheatgrass. A lot of people grow it; 
> however, you can actually buy a superior powdered grass from Pines at 
> wheatgrass.com
> 
> I explain my opinion about buying vs growing here on my blog.
> 
> Victor
> 
> On Wed, Sep 2, 2015 at 9:40 AM, ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks, PT, for this fascinating information of how bladders can have chronic 
> bladder infections due to lack of Vitamin A. This all makes total sense --- 
> for years I've suffered annoying on and off bladder infections - especially 
> with no-no foods/drinks, stress, etc. I just found out this year I have 
> severe vitamin A deficiency. Bladder infection has been reduced dramatically 
> but I couldn't figure out why.  
> Thanks for demystifying this!
> 
> Cheers, 
> RaVen
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> 
> 
> My Google Voice Text # is (720) 442-8725
> Quote: 
> There is no luck except where there is discipline.
> Irish proverb



Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-15 Thread PT Ferrance
Wheatgrass is not supposed to contain gluten so you should be alright with it 
but you might want to try a couple of shots from a health food store before you 
invest in a container.PT
  From: ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com>
 To: Silver-List <silver-list@eskimo.com> 
 Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2015 7:13 PM
 Subject: Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
   
Wheatgrass has gluten, right? I cannot eat gluten. 


On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 8:50 PM, Victor Cozzetto <victor.cozze...@gmail.com> 
wrote:

One superb source of vitamin A is wheatgrass. A lot of people grow it; however, 
you can actually buy a superior powdered grass from Pines at wheatgrass.com
I explain my opinion about buying vs growing here on my blog.
Victor
On Wed, Sep 2, 2015 at 9:40 AM, ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com> wrote:

Thanks, PT, for this fascinating information of how bladders can have chronic 
bladder infections due to lack of Vitamin A. This all makes total sense --- for 
years I've suffered annoying on and off bladder infections - especially with 
no-no foods/drinks, stress, etc. I just found out this year I have severe 
vitamin A deficiency. Bladder infection has been reduced dramatically but I 
couldn't figure out why.  Thanks for demystifying this!
Cheers, RaVen





-- 


My Google Voice Text # is (720) 442-8725Quote: There is no luck except where 
there is discipline.Irish proverb



  

Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-15 Thread ASL raVen
Wheatgrass has gluten, right? I cannot eat gluten.

On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 8:50 PM, Victor Cozzetto 
wrote:

> One superb source of vitamin A is wheatgrass. A lot of people grow it;
> however, you can actually buy a superior powdered grass from Pines at
> wheatgrass.com
>
> I explain my opinion about buying vs growing here on my blog
> .
>
> Victor
>
> On Wed, Sep 2, 2015 at 9:40 AM, ASL raVen  wrote:
>
>> Thanks, PT, for this fascinating information of how bladders can have
>> chronic bladder infections due to lack of Vitamin A. This all makes total
>> sense --- for years I've suffered annoying on and off bladder infections -
>> especially with no-no foods/drinks, stress, etc. I just found out this year
>> I have severe vitamin A deficiency. Bladder infection has been reduced
>> dramatically but I couldn't figure out why.
>> Thanks for demystifying this!
>>
>> Cheers,
>> RaVen
>>
>
>


-- 


My Google Voice Text # is (720) 442-8725
*Quote: *

There is no luck except where there is discipline.
Irish proverb


Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-02 Thread Gmail
20 years ago i sold 12 oz. bottles of "sweet-pee" for $5. It was a .5 molar 
solution of d-mannose in CS. Worked very well for yeast infections.

 'Gold is the money of kings, silver is the money of gentlemen, barter is the 
money of peasants – but debt is the money of slaves.' 



> On Sep 2, 2015, at 3:30 AM, Dee <d...@deetroy.org> wrote:
> 
> Ive lost track of who posted so am tagging on here.  I just thought I'd 
> mention D-Mannose here as my sister uses this for recurring bladder 
> infections.  I believe it is the active ingredient in cranberry juice.Dee
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
>> On 2 Sep 2015, at 00:06, PT Ferrance <ptf2...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
>> 
>> Jeff, I just remembered about a friend who had chronic bladder infections 
>> and the doctors finally told her she would just have to learn to live with 
>> them.  She started researching nutrition and found that Vit A deficiency 
>> will cause the bladder lining to become like a petri dish and bacteria will 
>> just grow uncontrolled.  She was too poor to purchase supplements but lived 
>> in the country where violets grew wild.  The leaves she told me were the 
>> highest natural source of Vit A.  She started cooking them like spinach and 
>> eating them in salads and before she knew it the bladder infections were 
>> gone.
>> I thought you might be interested so you could do some research.  I believe 
>> at the time it was Adele Davis.
>> PT
>>  
>> From: Jeff <ssc...@grandecom.net>
>> To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
>> Sent: Tuesday, September 1, 2015 11:33 AM
>> Subject: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
>> 
>> Thank you for your reply John. I was wondering if the MSM would do any good 
>> adding it to the CS irrigation, or if it would do better with her taking it 
>> by mouth. I was thinking to have her take it by mouth anyway and I think 
>> 1000 mg is a nice round number to use. As for the DMSO, that is something 
>> that the doctors used to use when doing this and it seemed to be effective. 
>> My thoughts are just using CS for a few treatments to kind of heal the 
>> exposed areas of said hamburger and then adding small amount of DMSO so 
>> there will be less or no irritation and the DMSO will allow the CS to travel 
>> past what it has already done to the deeper problem. I would love to do two 
>> treatments a day but she will not go for that. She hates the treatments and 
>> I am lucky to get two a week, but I am going to press for more. I am in full 
>> agreement with you that the more exposure to the CS the better. I keep 
>> telling her that it is only working while it’s touching the problem area.
>> Something I had forgotten about that I rediscovered by accident is 
>> bentionite. I am also wondering if adding a pinch of bentonite to the CS 
>> would be of any benefit.
>>  
>> “Sorry, but I missed an ingredient in making salt water that is similar to 
>> tears or blood plasma.  For each pint of water, you add a teaspoon of salt 
>> and 1/3rd teaspoon of epsom salt.  These should be added after the silver 
>> water is brewed.”
>>  
>> --
>> Regards,
>>  
>> John Popelish
>>  
>>  
>> From: silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com 
>> [mailto:silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com] 
>> Sent: Monday, August 31, 2015 9:35 PM
>> To: silver-dig...@eskimo.com
>> Subject: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
>>  
>>  
>> 
>> 


Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-02 Thread Dee
Ive lost track of who posted so am tagging on here.  I just thought I'd mention 
D-Mannose here as my sister uses this for recurring bladder infections.  I 
believe it is the active ingredient in cranberry juice.Dee

Sent from my iPad

> On 2 Sep 2015, at 00:06, PT Ferrance <ptf2...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
> 
> Jeff, I just remembered about a friend who had chronic bladder infections and 
> the doctors finally told her she would just have to learn to live with them.  
> She started researching nutrition and found that Vit A deficiency will cause 
> the bladder lining to become like a petri dish and bacteria will just grow 
> uncontrolled.  She was too poor to purchase supplements but lived in the 
> country where violets grew wild.  The leaves she told me were the highest 
> natural source of Vit A.  She started cooking them like spinach and eating 
> them in salads and before she knew it the bladder infections were gone.
> I thought you might be interested so you could do some research.  I believe 
> at the time it was Adele Davis.
> PT
>  
> From: Jeff <ssc...@grandecom.net>
> To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
> Sent: Tuesday, September 1, 2015 11:33 AM
> Subject: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
> 
> Thank you for your reply John. I was wondering if the MSM would do any good 
> adding it to the CS irrigation, or if it would do better with her taking it 
> by mouth. I was thinking to have her take it by mouth anyway and I think 1000 
> mg is a nice round number to use. As for the DMSO, that is something that the 
> doctors used to use when doing this and it seemed to be effective. My 
> thoughts are just using CS for a few treatments to kind of heal the exposed 
> areas of said hamburger and then adding small amount of DMSO so there will be 
> less or no irritation and the DMSO will allow the CS to travel past what it 
> has already done to the deeper problem. I would love to do two treatments a 
> day but she will not go for that. She hates the treatments and I am lucky to 
> get two a week, but I am going to press for more. I am in full agreement with 
> you that the more exposure to the CS the better. I keep telling her that it 
> is only working while it’s touching the problem area.
> Something I had forgotten about that I rediscovered by accident is 
> bentionite. I am also wondering if adding a pinch of bentonite to the CS 
> would be of any benefit.
>  
> “Sorry, but I missed an ingredient in making salt water that is similar to 
> tears or blood plasma.  For each pint of water, you add a teaspoon of salt 
> and 1/3rd teaspoon of epsom salt.  These should be added after the silver 
> water is brewed.”
>  
> --
> Regards,
>  
> John Popelish
>  
>  
> From: silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com 
> [mailto:silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com] 
> Sent: Monday, August 31, 2015 9:35 PM
> To: silver-dig...@eskimo.com
> Subject: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
>  
>  
> 
> 


Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-02 Thread Deborah Gerard
How interesting!!! 


 On Tuesday, September 1, 2015 7:06 PM, PT Ferrance <ptf2...@bellsouth.net> 
wrote:
   

 Jeff, I just remembered about a friend who had chronic bladder infections and 
the doctors finally told her she would just have to learn to live with them.  
She started researching nutrition and found that Vit A deficiency will cause 
the bladder lining to become like a petri dish and bacteria will just grow 
uncontrolled.  She was too poor to purchase supplements but lived in the 
country where violets grew wild.  The leaves she told me were the highest 
natural source of Vit A.  She started cooking them like spinach and eating them 
in salads and before she knew it the bladder infections were gone.I thought you 
might be interested so you could do some research.  I believe at the time it 
was Adele Davis.PT
   From: Jeff <ssc...@grandecom.net>
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Tuesday, September 1, 2015 11:33 AM
 Subject: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
   
#yiv9383873849 #yiv9383873849 -- filtered {panose-1:2 4 5 3 5 4 6 3 2 
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1.0in;}#yiv9383873849 div.yiv9383873849WordSection1 {}#yiv9383873849 Thank you 
for your reply John. I was wondering if the MSM would do any good adding it to 
the CS irrigation, or if it would do better with her taking it by mouth. I was 
thinking to have her take it by mouth anyway and I think 1000 mg is a nice 
round number to use. As for the DMSO, that is something that the doctors used 
to use when doing this and it seemed to be effective. My thoughts are just 
using CS for a few treatments to kind of heal the exposed areas of said 
hamburger and then adding small amount of DMSO so there will be less or no 
irritation and the DMSO will allow the CS to travel past what it has already 
done to the deeper problem. I would love to do two treatments a day but she 
will not go for that. She hates the treatments and I am lucky to get two a 
week, but I am going to press for more. I am in full agreement with you that 
the more exposure to the CS the better. I keep telling her that it is only 
working while it’s touching the problem area.Something I had forgotten about 
that I rediscovered by accident is bentionite. I am also wondering if adding a 
pinch of bentonite to the CS would be of any benefit.   “Sorry, but I missed an 
ingredient in making salt water that is similar to tears or blood plasma.  For 
each pint of water, you add a teaspoon of salt and 1/3rd teaspoon of epsom 
salt.  These should be added after the silver water is brewed.”  -- Regards,  
John Popelish    From: silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com 
[mailto:silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com] 
Sent: Monday, August 31, 2015 9:35 PM
To: silver-dig...@eskimo.com
Subject: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190    

   

  

Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-01 Thread Patricia
Jeff.. my thoughts.  No on adding bentionite to the flush.. in my 
opinion.  I think CS is sufficient.  But yes .. to taking it in liquid 
form by mouth on empty stomach.. or an hour away from food or meds.
I mix in large glass container and add one tsp of clay to each 8 oz of 
water.  Let it sit on top until it drops ..then stir with wood of 
plastic .. no metal should touch it.
 I keep in fridge but not necessary..just tastes better... chug 3-4 oz 
2x a day .  It absorb over 600 diffeent toxins and pathogens.  If she 
doesn't want to drink it you can put clay in capsules and drink water.  
I think it is more powerful in liquid form.  You will be amazed.  I 
cured myself of diverticulitis by taking it 2x a day over a few 
months..and tests proved it.  In my opinion the CS flush plus drinking 
it throughout day plus clay 2x.  Don't mix anything with the clay...that 
detracts from its power.
I always run for the clay when I get sick with most anything.  I like 
the Redmond Clay.  www.redmondclay.com  I have used others and this one 
seems more powerful...there is definitely a difference in the clays.
Good luck.


On 9/1/2015 10:33 AM, Jeff wrote:


Thank you for your reply John. I was wondering if the MSM would do any 
good adding it to the CS irrigation, or if it would do better with her 
taking it by mouth.






Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-01 Thread Victor Cozzetto
One superb source of vitamin A is wheatgrass. A lot of people grow it;
however, you can actually buy a superior powdered grass from Pines at
wheatgrass.com

I explain my opinion about buying vs growing here on my blog
.

Victor

On Wed, Sep 2, 2015 at 9:40 AM, ASL raVen  wrote:

> Thanks, PT, for this fascinating information of how bladders can have
> chronic bladder infections due to lack of Vitamin A. This all makes total
> sense --- for years I've suffered annoying on and off bladder infections -
> especially with no-no foods/drinks, stress, etc. I just found out this year
> I have severe vitamin A deficiency. Bladder infection has been reduced
> dramatically but I couldn't figure out why.
> Thanks for demystifying this!
>
> Cheers,
> RaVen
>


Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-01 Thread PT Ferrance
I find the writings of Adele Davis to still be wonderful.  She talks about 
vitamins, no neutraceuticals, and for me it is all the difference in the world. 
PT
   From: Victor Cozzetto <victor.cozze...@gmail.com>
 To: "silver-list@eskimo.com" <silver-list@eskimo.com> 
 Sent: Tuesday, September 1, 2015 8:50 PM
 Subject: Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
   
One superb source of vitamin A is wheatgrass. A lot of people grow it; however, 
you can actually buy a superior powdered grass from Pines at wheatgrass.com
I explain my opinion about buying vs growing here on my blog.
Victor


On Wed, Sep 2, 2015 at 9:40 AM, ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com> wrote:

Thanks, PT, for this fascinating information of how bladders can have chronic 
bladder infections due to lack of Vitamin A. This all makes total sense --- for 
years I've suffered annoying on and off bladder infections - especially with 
no-no foods/drinks, stress, etc. I just found out this year I have severe 
vitamin A deficiency. Bladder infection has been reduced dramatically but I 
couldn't figure out why.  Thanks for demystifying this!
Cheers, RaVen



  

Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-01 Thread ASL raVen
Thanks, PT, for this fascinating information of how bladders can have
chronic bladder infections due to lack of Vitamin A. This all makes total
sense --- for years I've suffered annoying on and off bladder infections -
especially with no-no foods/drinks, stress, etc. I just found out this year
I have severe vitamin A deficiency. Bladder infection has been reduced
dramatically but I couldn't figure out why.
Thanks for demystifying this!

Cheers,
RaVen


Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-01 Thread PT Ferrance
Jeff, I just remembered about a friend who had chronic bladder infections and 
the doctors finally told her she would just have to learn to live with them.  
She started researching nutrition and found that Vit A deficiency will cause 
the bladder lining to become like a petri dish and bacteria will just grow 
uncontrolled.  She was too poor to purchase supplements but lived in the 
country where violets grew wild.  The leaves she told me were the highest 
natural source of Vit A.  She started cooking them like spinach and eating them 
in salads and before she knew it the bladder infections were gone.I thought you 
might be interested so you could do some research.  I believe at the time it 
was Adele Davis.PT
   From: Jeff <ssc...@grandecom.net>
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Tuesday, September 1, 2015 11:33 AM
 Subject: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190
   
Thank you for your reply John. I was 
wondering if the MSM would do any good adding it to the CS irrigation, or if it 
would do better with her taking it by mouth. I was thinking to have her take it 
by mouth anyway and I think 1000 mg is a nice round number to use. As for the 
DMSO, that is something that the doctors used to use when doing this and it 
seemed to be effective. My thoughts are just using CS for a few treatments to 
kind of heal the exposed areas of said hamburger and then adding small amount 
of DMSO so there will be less or no irritation and the DMSO will allow the CS 
to travel past what it has already done to the deeper problem. I would love to 
do two treatments a day but she will not go for that. She hates the treatments 
and I am lucky to get two a week, but I am going to press for more. I am in 
full agreement with you that the more exposure to the CS the better. I keep 
telling her that it is only working while it’s touching the problem 
area.Something I had forgotten about that I rediscovered by accident is 
bentionite. I am also wondering if adding a pinch of bentonite to the CS would 
be of any benefit.   “Sorry, but I missed an ingredient in making salt water 
that is similar to tears or blood plasma.  For each pint of water, you add a 
teaspoon of salt and 1/3rd teaspoon of epsom salt.  These should be added after 
the silver water is brewed.”  -- Regards,  John Popelish    From: 
silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com [mailto:silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com] 
Sent: Monday, August 31, 2015 9:35 PM
To: silver-dig...@eskimo.com
Subject: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190    

  

Re: CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-01 Thread John Popelish

On 09/01/2015 11:33 AM, Jeff wrote:

Thank you for your reply John. I was wondering if the
MSM would do any good adding it to the CS irrigation, or
if it would do better with her taking it by mouth. I was
thinking to have her take it by mouth anyway and I think
1000 mg is a nice round number to use.


MSM is great to improve healing ability, but I think a
steady trickle from her urine and in her bloodstream would
be more beneficial than a flush, every few days. But both
won't hurt. MSM is good stuff for living tissue.


As for the DMSO, that is something that the doctors used
to use when doing this and it seemed to be effective. My
thoughts are just using CS for a few treatments to kind
of heal the exposed areas of said hamburger and then
adding small amount of DMSO so there will be less or no
irritation and the DMSO will allow the CS to travel past
what it has already done to the deeper problem.


I am not very knowledgeable about DMSO, except that it makes
tissue permeable to many other molecules (maybe ionic
silver, not so sure about colloidal silver particles) and
the body metabolizes DMSO into MSM. That was how MSM was
discovered.


I would love to do two treatments a day but she will not
go for that. She hates the treatments and I am lucky to
get two a week, but I am going to press for more. I am in
full agreement with you that the more exposure to the CS
the better. I keep telling her that it is only working
while it’s touching the problem area.


The lining of the bladder normally has a protective lining
that protects the living cells from constant contact with
urine, just as your stomach and intestines have to protect
themselves from digestive enzymes and acid. An infection can
degrade or break down this protective layer and urine will
continuously cause damage, until that layer can be
reestablished. Silver helps with the infection, but a saline
flush helps with the constant urine damage, and lets healing
proceed.

Try to explain how more often irrigations are helpful with
healing as well as fighting infection. If she thinks this
procedure is a pain, remind her that it is a walk in
the park, compared to living without a bladder.

Getting her to drink lots of water, to lower the
concentration of urea in her
urine should also help a little.


Something I had forgotten about that I rediscovered by
accident is bentionite. I am also wondering if adding a
pinch of bentonite to the CS would be of any benefit.


I am not aware of any specific benefit from bentonite in
this situation. I'm a little worried that it provides lots
of surface to gather up all the silver. And the bladder is
not really equipped to handle sediment settling on its surface.

--
Regards,

John Popelish


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CS>RE: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190

2015-09-01 Thread Jeff
Thank you for your reply John. I was wondering if the MSM would do any good
adding it to the CS irrigation, or if it would do better with her taking it
by mouth. I was thinking to have her take it by mouth anyway and I think
1000 mg is a nice round number to use. As for the DMSO, that is something
that the doctors used to use when doing this and it seemed to be effective.
My thoughts are just using CS for a few treatments to kind of heal the
exposed areas of said hamburger and then adding small amount of DMSO so
there will be less or no irritation and the DMSO will allow the CS to travel
past what it has already done to the deeper problem. I would love to do two
treatments a day but she will not go for that. She hates the treatments and
I am lucky to get two a week, but I am going to press for more. I am in full
agreement with you that the more exposure to the CS the better. I keep
telling her that it is only working while it's touching the problem area.

Something I had forgotten about that I rediscovered by accident is
bentionite. I am also wondering if adding a pinch of bentonite to the CS
would be of any benefit. 

 

"Sorry, but I missed an ingredient in making salt water that is similar to
tears or blood plasma.  For each pint of water, you add a teaspoon of salt
and 1/3rd teaspoon of epsom salt.  These should be added after the silver
water is brewed."

 

-- 

Regards,

 

John Popelish

 

 

From: silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com
[mailto:silver-digest-requ...@eskimo.com] 
Sent: Monday, August 31, 2015 9:35 PM
To: silver-dig...@eskimo.com
Subject: silver-digest Digest V2015 #190