Guest guest Posted June 6, 2002 Report Share Posted June 6, 2002 This was not forgotten. Just had to think about it a lot. Based on some principles i teach, there really is some music that would have at least the potential to control yeast. Here's how it works. We know that music can change an environment. We know that many yeast infections are closely related to fungal infections of material in a home or other building where one spends a lot of time. We also know that music played live in a building will " stick " to the area for a while, until something happens to change that. We know that live heavy metal, thrash punk, and some rap music will cause the very bricks of a building to rapidly deteriorate. Rowdy rock or country music takes longer, but is normally associated with a building being destroyed within about 30 years. On the other hand, cathedrals where only gentle music is played have a remarkable life span. So somebody needs to send lots of money to somebody with enough strange letters after their name to have credibility, and have a study of this done. I really think that it would be possible for a house with heavy mold, to get better if live music were played daily for a while. How long, we don't know. What species of molds would be affected, we don't know. We do know that for the most part, the music has to be live, played on natural instruments like harps, flutes, guitars, and maybe trombones. Recorded music, or music that depends entirely on electronic power, won't work. One exception might be a technology called " ProCeDe " that i found in the Netherlands. There are a few exeptions regarding recorded music. A few pieces are so powerful, that they will " blow through " all the intermediate circuitry. This includes Pachelbel's Canon in D and Bach's Brandenburg Concerto #5. If anyone knows some good Classical musicians and wants to experiment with this, please do keep me informed. At 09:46 AM 5/31/02 -0500, you wrote: >Hey Michael: Very interesting answer! I have enough evidence to believe >that I have a pervasive yeast problem of my own (what kind, I have no idea, >not being in possession of an electron microscope...*lol*). Are you >talking about Feng Shui type stuff with the furniture-moving? I know >nothing about it, but I'd certainly never considered that as a possible >irritant to my system. > >I used to basically live and breathe sugar. In the last month I've >successfully cut back quite a bit, lowered my coffee intake to a cup a day >(substituted a really good no-caf herbal tea I found that's sweetened with >Stevia), and tried to drink lots more water. You're right; for about a >week my energy was totally sapped, but it's starting to come back. I'm >craving veggies and rice (big rice cravings; I've even been eating it plain >as a snack--weird huh?), which I never did before. (Before I only craved >sweets.) > >The only thing is, the symptoms that led me to pinpoint my problem as yeast >aren't going away. The most obvious of these is a topical fungal infection >(I wrote about this before to the group) that not only won't go away, it >keeps spreading, even though I'm making all these changes and hitting it >with black walnut tincture every day. Could I be missing something? > >Hey, and just out of curiosity, what music would you recommend for yeast >control? > >Thanks, >MSL > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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