<mailto:microelectricitygermkil...@yahoogroups.com>microelectricitygermkil...@yahoogroups.com
To: microelectricitygermkil...@yahoogroups.com

I discovered the other day that some bugs had been feasting on my neck in the back just into the hairline. I had a large, sore, itchy bump.

I took a 9-volt battery and placed it with the electrodes on either side of the bump. First I wet the area with saliva and held the battery so that it just touched (too painful if too much contact). After 10 minutes, I had to go do something, but 20 minutes later, when I checked the bump, it was almost gone! The itching had stopped, with almost no soreness.

I can see the value of the 15K resistor (no stinging, right?). I just received a package of 200 of them, so I think I will start building them for my friends.

Terry Chamberlin

..From what I gather...
A "Godzilla" is but a 6 volt battery, [or any battery, really] some wire and a couple of salty wet sponges. The current delivered depends on how well the electrolyte conducts over what area of skin its applied to. Higher currents over smaller areas tend to cause electro-chemicals to build up in the skin faster than blood flow can wash them away....the result...itchy red rashiness....IOW "chemical burns" [not serious unless you're an idiot and don't stop with the discomfort ] IMO it's the acid or basic quality of those chemicals that provide the disruptive actions on venoms, parasites and bacterium..even cancer cells..and when the two products of electrically splitting salt apart re-combine, they become salt again. That's acid on one pole [Hypochloris Acid] and basic [Sodium Hydroxide] on the other, switch polarity to neutralize the former chemical and end further burning.

 A self neutralizing, targeted, chemotherapy treatment.

A current controlled CS generator can be used and not deliver more than its set current...
Or ANY DC power source and some common sense.

If you use silver electrodes and CS as the electrolyte, you induce silver iontophorosis...the direct injection of silver ions though the skin.

Ode


At 06:22 AM 7/5/2010 -0700, you wrote:
Is the godzilla a type of zapper?

is the a website?

Thanks


Paul Steel

h 508.520.6905

c 508.922.0519

The harder you work the luckier you get!





From: MaryAnn Helland <marmar...@bellsouth.net>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, July 5, 2010 9:02:06 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Tick Bite

Del -- it's not true that your Godzilla is only useful if used right away. Some years back I got into a nest of ticks while on a trip to Virginia. I found around 20 ticks and bites on me, four of them with Lyme rashes. By the time I realized what I was dealing with, I had two days of traveling to get home. The bites with rashes were packed with colloidal-silver soaked bandages, covered with saran wrap and taped in place, and left there for the trip home. I also drank CS all the way back. When I got home, I contacted a homeopathic doctor and my chiropractor. The chiropractor treated the bites with his electro-stim machine -- the same one that is used for muscle treatments, etc. The homeopathic doctor told me to continue with CS but to add Goldenseal capsules (three a day if I remember correctly) and Echinacea tea.

So -- except for Colloidal Silver, treatment was started effectively one week after the bites -- and I've never suffered any signs or effects of Lyme. The point of the story is that electricity wasn't applied until a week later -- and that's what effectively dealt with the large, swollen, itchy sites of the bulls-eye tick bites. Since then, I use my Godzilla on every tick bite -- never waiting to see if a bulls-eye develops. If you're two days out from the bite, and she's on antibiotics, you can still use the Godzilla to destroy the enzymes in the skin surrounding the bite.
HTH.
MA


From: Del <d...@altsystem.com>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, July 5, 2010 7:31:55 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Tick Bite

Rowena:

Thanks for all your information. I have forwarded it to Jane. It will take a while to absorb.
Thanks to all others who have responded.
She was back home within 48 hrs of being bitten, and the doc here immediately put her on Doxycycline, 100 mg twice a day for 3 days.
According to some postings, that should be continued for more days.
She is also using some colloidal silver, which she does not like to use because it previously turned her cuticles silvery gray. I am trying to persuade her to use my olive leaf, oregano oil combination (which I take twice a day) - she is a bit fearful of that because I had such strong detox symptoms when I first started using it. The Salt/C protocol may be too strong for her. She is very sensitive to all meds and supplements. However, she has not reacted to the Doxy yet. I have a Godzilla zapper from V. We also have the therapik, but my understanding is, it is only useful if you get the bite right away. She has already tried the Bentonite clay (with apple cider vinegar I believe). I will have her do more of that. I had a really itchy mosquito bite a few days ago, was driving me nuts, and an application of bentonite clay took the itch away within minutes, and it never came back. That stuff really works.

Del
----- Original Message -----
From: <mailto:new...@internode.on.net>Rowena
To: <mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com>silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Monday, July 05, 2010 2:13 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Tick Bite

Google Salt and C protocol.
Real salt not table salt, or Himalayan, or the chemist's stuff, though I would prefer Himalayan. Might be a bit late to put salt, CS, etc. on the entry wound, but still worth doing.
Rowena

On 5/07/2010 10:31 AM, Del wrote:
Hi:

My wife, Jane, was bitten by a tick while visiting her mother on Shelter Island, one of the Lyme capitals of the world. Anybody out there with knowledge of what should be done immediately to deal with the possibility (probability?) of infection with Lyme? My understanding is that if you catch it early, it is easier to eliminate, but doctors here in Vermont don't know much about dealing with Lyme. There is actually too much information on the web, if you can believe that, she wants an answer fast and my head is spinning with the many Lyme articles I have already read, none of which were targeted at what to do right away if bitten.

We were told here that you have to wait four weeks to test to see if you have been exposed to Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme spirochete), and then the test (not sure what test they are talking about) costs $200, is NOT covered by Medicare or our health insurance, and may or may not be reliable. Anybody know about that?

Thanks,
Del



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