Guest guest Posted August 19, 2009 Report Share Posted August 19, 2009 I've been a raw foodest for the past few months, eating raw fish prepared in lemon and garlic as well as raw beef, eggs, butter, milk, honey... Today I was getting ready to prepare a beautiful piece of salmon and I saw a parasitic worm wriggling around on it. I put it on my counter and watched it for a minute it in disgust and fear. No more raw fish for me. Can someone please suggest a VERY!!! good parasite cleanse? Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 21, 2009 Report Share Posted August 21, 2009 Fishermen who clean their own fish see these worms and flukes all of the time if they are looking. Nasty looking critters, but most are probably harmless. Some fillets that I have gotten from the market are full of them. No one who has seen them would ever eat raw fish, that is for certain. I've been a raw foodest for the past few months, eating raw fish prepared in lemon and garlic as well as raw beef, eggs, butter, milk, honey... Today I was getting ready to prepare a beautiful piece of salmon and I saw a parasitic worm wriggling around on it. I put it on my counter and watched it for a minute it in disgust and fear. No more raw fish for me. Can someone please suggest a VERY!!! good parasite cleanse? Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 21, 2009 Report Share Posted August 21, 2009 I highly recommend humaworm http://www.humaworm.com I spent many hours researching this topic and I am exceeding grateful to find this product. Thousands of people have tried this product and have written about the great results they had. You can find testimony and picture on curezone.org My own story is too long to type here but basically I acquired severe itchy arms after being at the ocean. I was miserable and can not hardly function as the itch drove me crazy. No doctor or medication helped me. I couldn't see anything on my arms but apparently I had contracted some type of parasite from the sand or water that caused the itching. In my research (and desperation) I learned about parasites and how to kill them. I also learned to my amazement how common they are...because we can't see them. Any way, you will be very satisfied taking humaworm. The herbs are so fresh you can almost smell them outside of the package they come it. Good luck and my best to you, Kim B > > " moonphish_65 " <moonphish > > Wed, 19 Aug 2009 21:35:39 > > << >> Paracites, yuck!!! > > > > I've been a raw foodest for the past few months, eating raw fish > prepared in lemon and garlic as well as raw beef, eggs, butter, milk, honey... Today I was getting ready to prepare a beautiful piece of salmon and I saw a parasitic worm wriggling around on it. I put it on > my counter and watched it for a minute it in disgust and fear. No more raw fish for me. Can someone please suggest a VERY!!! good parasite cleanse? Thanks! > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 30, 2009 Report Share Posted August 30, 2009 I worked for a bacteriologist once who would never eat shellfish, no matter how it was prepared. He ate fish sparingly and not sushi. He said if you ever looked at one of these things under a microscope you would not go near it. In some species an egg is smaller than a grain of sand. I am a meat eater. I sprinkle meat with powdered vitamin E on the outside to help prevent carcinogens from forming and never have it rare. Worms/flukes are so numerous that we have not even named half of them. If you are infested, when introduced to something antagonistic they often go dormant (some eggs are dormant, yet viable, for five years). During dormancy they are hard to kill. This has lead to the practice of 'pulsing' - on a med/herb for three days, off for one or two, back on for three, etc. Western medicine has ignored worms, but for a few, so much so that our labs can usually not detect them. People who have them often don't know the causes of their symptoms, labs cannot detect them, and doctors sometimes will relegate it as a mental problem. Worms also can change over time. They can become resistant to meds and herbs. Ranchers and farmers have seen this happen, yet few new drugs are forthcoming and when they do they are introduced to the veterinary and not the human practice. There is no one drug that addresses all sorts of worms that can plague humans. You are stuck with no diagnosis. I, at one time met a physician who was involved in a clinical trial in another country. He said herbal preparations were sometimes effective, but the safest drug that hit the broadest spectrum of worms in the most life cycles(some parts of the life cycle are resistant to treatment and others, not), is fenbendazole. It is only sold in the states for animals, but can be gotten over the counter or online. The dosage he recommended was one fifth of the dose for dogs (divide human weight by 5 and take for that weight dog)and he said he would pulse it for at least a month and not only take it for three days. This drug is also mentioned in the cure zone. Worms are nothing to toy with. They can breed in one organ (lungs) and then enter the rest of the body's tissues or blood stream or even the brain. It is strange that we treat animals for worms but seldom people. Best of luck. , " moonphish_65 " <moonphish wrote: > > > I've been a raw foodest for the past few months, eating raw fish > prepared in lemon and garlic as well as raw beef, eggs, butter, milk, honey... Today I was getting ready to prepare a beautiful piece of salmon and I saw a parasitic worm wriggling around on it. I put it on > my counter and watched it for a minute it in disgust and fear. No more raw fish for me. Can someone please suggest a VERY!!! good parasite cleanse? Thanks! > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2009 Report Share Posted September 1, 2009 Parasites may be ugly, but there is strong evidence that parasites keep us from getting autoimmune disease. I recently read where a gentleman in another discussion group with MS purposely infected himself with a worm parasite that he knew that he could kill off. It worked... rather extreme, but no doubt, people naturally have parasites and killing them off entirely is not always a good thing. With your bacteriologist, it is possible to know too much. These creatures are damned scary under high magnification, but most of us have a few and we are generally none the worst for it. Kids always went barefoot in the summer years ago and most had pin worms as a result. Now that is seldom the case and autoimmune diseases are on a steep rise. Make your choices. Re: Paracites, yuck!!! </message/57781;_ylc=X3o\ DMTJyZTZ2M2dzBF9TAzk3MzU5NzE1BGdycElkAzQxOTgyNTEEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzA1MDYwODE0BG1zZ0l\ kAzU3NzgxBHNlYwNkbXNnBHNsawN2bXNnBHN0aW1lAzEyNTE4MTg1NzE-> Posted by: " patram81 " patram81 <patram81?Subject=%20Re%3A%20Paracites%2C%20yuck%21%21%21> patram81 <http://profiles./patram81> Mon Aug 31, 2009 7:36 pm (PDT) I worked for a bacteriologist once who would never eat shellfish, no matter how it was prepared. He ate fish sparingly and not sushi. He said if you ever looked at one of these things under a microscope you would not go near it. In some species an egg is smaller than a grain of sand. I am a meat eater. I sprinkle meat with powdered vitamin E on the outside to help prevent carcinogens from forming and never have it rare. Worms/flukes are so numerous that we have not even named half of them. If you are infested, when introduced to something antagonistic they often go dormant (some eggs are dormant, yet viable, for five years). During dormancy they are hard to kill. This has lead to the practice of 'pulsing' - on a med/herb for three days, off for one or two, back on for three, etc. Western medicine has ignored worms, but for a few, so much so that our labs can usually not detect them. People who have them often don't know the causes of their symptoms, labs cannot detect them, and doctors sometimes will relegate it as a mental problem. Worms also can change over time. They can become resistant to meds and herbs. Ranchers and farmers have seen this happen, yet few new drugs are forthcoming and when they do they are introduced to the veterinary and not the human practice. There is no one drug that addresses all sorts of worms that can plague humans. You are stuck with no diagnosis. I, at one time met a physician who was involved in a clinical trial in another country. He said herbal preparations were sometimes effective, but the safest drug that hit the broadest spectrum of worms in the most life cycles(some parts of the life cycle are resistant to treatment and others, not), is fenbendazole. It is only sold in the states for animals, but can be gotten over the counter or online. The dosage he recommended was one fifth of the dose for dogs (divide human weight by 5 and take for that weight dog)and he said he would pulse it for at least a month and not only take it for three days. This drug is also mentioned in the cure zone. Worms are nothing to toy with. They can breed in one organ (lungs) and then enter the rest of the body's tissues or blood stream or even the brain. It is strange that we treat animals for worms but seldom people. Best of luck. <%40>, " moonphish_65 " <moonphish wrote: > > > I've been a raw foodest for the past few months, eating raw fish > prepared in lemon and garlic as well as raw beef, eggs, butter, milk, honey... Today I was getting ready to prepare a beautiful piece of salmon and I saw a parasitic worm wriggling around on it. I put it on > my counter and watched it for a minute it in disgust and fear. No more raw fish for me. Can someone please suggest a VERY!!! good parasite cleanse? Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 2, 2009 Report Share Posted September 2, 2009 There is a general classification of 'parasites' which covers a multitude of creatures. Some, certainly, are with us and do little damage. Others can infect the brain. They can invade organs, like the gall bladder, causing removal and surgeons may remark of the holes in the organs but do not have enough training to spot signs of worms. Farmers have complained that their entire herd is infected and the current meds will no longer remove them. THis meat contains eggs which I do not believe can be easily detected during the scanty meat inspection that goes on in the US. Salads can contain them. If the creature can go through an entire life cycle in the human body, we can be the home for generations of them. If a brain infestation has gone on for too long, the person passing from one physician to another, the situation can be without remedy. I don't take these things lightly unless I know precisely what I am up against and see that it is relatively harmless. Bacteria, many, are our friends, but I would not advise a person who possibly have MRSA to take it lightly. We go to physicians with skin problems, hoping it is not melanoma, and even they often misdiagnose. There is almost no one to go to who can diagnose most worm conditions that animals are privy to. Because our food comes from foriegn sources and populations travel the globe our doctors are seeing things that they have no idea how to treat. Medicine has not kept pace with our changing lifestyle. The fact is, a person who has never left this country can come down with some esoteric infestation that requires very specialized treatment and that frequently cannot even be properly diagnosed here, so there are no recommendations as to where to turn for help. a , Jim Clark <huuman60 wrote: > > Parasites may be ugly, but there is strong evidence that parasites keep > us from getting autoimmune disease. I recently read where a gentleman > in another discussion group with MS purposely infected himself with a > worm parasite that he knew that he could kill off. It worked... rather > extreme, but no doubt, people naturally have parasites and killing > them off entirely is not always a good thing. With your > bacteriologist, it is possible to know too much. These creatures are > damned scary under high magnification, but most of us have a few and > we are generally none the worst for it. Kids always went barefoot in > the summer years ago and most had pin worms as a result. Now that is > seldom the case and autoimmune diseases are on a steep rise. Make your > choices. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 4, 2009 Report Share Posted September 4, 2009 http://www.coconut-connections.com/parasites.htm I just came across this info on extra virgin coconut oil, and its action against parasites. Cindy C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 11, 2009 Report Share Posted September 11, 2009 Lynn, I am lucky that I live in an area with lots of doctors, lots of competition and some very good physicians. I look at modern medicine as a course of training that is a work in progress. It does not have all the answers. There is too much funding from drug companies, which skewers the teachings. There certainly is too much ego involved with some of the decision makers in the CDC and the people constructing curriculum of med schools. But there are doctors who are sincerely motivated for their patient's good and do buck the system in their hospitals and become heroes to some and villains to others. One of my doctors had a nice conversation with me regarding the possibilities of mammograms actually causing cancer. He mentioned that hospitals had to recoup the expense of the purchase of costly equipment and sometimes encouraged doctors to order tests. THis is the cause of many tests that may not be thought of as totally necessary and not just the fear of medical malpractice suits. It was a doctor who told me about Olive Leaf Extract, which I recently used when I got an abcess over the holiday weekend. A doctor gave me a source, which she said had good quality control, of an herb that helped with blood pressure. It was a doctor who told me that nearly all the advances in cancer were to do with early detection and if those cases were subtracted out of the equation it would be found that we made perhaps no or little advances and in some cases actually have slipped backwards. Many doctors dislike the system as much as we do. They don't like HMO's telling them that they have less than 15 min. per patient visit. I know a doctor who makes house calls to geriatric patients. Their training neglects a great deal. Money from drug companies pays for so much - med schools, conferences after med school, etc, that they are not getting balanced pictures, but many know something must change. In Germany doctors start treating patients with what we consider alternate medicine before they start prescribing drugs. Columbia Presbyterian is supposed to have an alternate medicine function now. I wish we would not tar all doctors with the same brush. There are some good people in the field and why would we wish to turn those individuals into enemies? Granted, the majority will follow the herd and parrot what their establishment leaders tell them, but that is human nature in most professions, isn't it? To not expect the medical profession to act like that is giving them special status. Most police never have to draw their guns once on the job. Most lawyers never once plea a case in court during an entire career. Many people go through their working lives avoiding challenges and just going along with the herd. I think I must have researched about 10 doctors that I have been to and not one was a member of the AMA. I wonder who they actually speak for? I do think there should be a national group that licenses them and can pull a license of a bad doctor. Now, they can just go to another state. I am lucky that I can go to numerous doctors and since they talk to you more when you visit the first time, I can get a feeling for their intelligence and dedication. I also ask every nurse I meet to mention the doctor he/she uses and who they like. Often, that is the person who will buck the system for the sake of their patient. My mom died because the hospital she had cut costs by sharing one cardiac surgeon with two other hospitals and he chose to operate on a young girl in another hospital so my mom died. The cardiologist she chose also screwed up in scheduling the initial operation too soon as she had had another condition that was clearing up but caused complications. I used to both hate and fear doctors until I realized that they are just humans and I guess they make just as many errors as the rest of us do on the job. I think a big part of our problem is that drug money supports much of modern medicine and so schools and the system are actually fighting things that can be of benefit to us. But isn't it not corporate money and the need for raising a fortune for Congresspeople what does the most harm in our political system? Whenever I have thought badly of one group or another I have found one or two who, personally, are good and dedicated and it totally changes my opinion. I cannot, at this point, make a blanket statement which derides any entire group. , lynnzy <lynntulumello wrote: > > Really, it seems that modern medicine ( I hate calling it that) doesn't have answers for ANY of the common problems that people face regularly. They don't even know how to treat cancer or MS or anything really! All they want to do is take your money and tell you that there is nothing wrong with you and pass you on to the next guy or gal who is an MD. It's a complete joke anymore to expect real diagnoses and real cures. If we want that, we are highly left to our own investigations and treatments. The fact that they don't know about parasites is just a drop in the bucket of what is not known. Half the time I think NOTHING is known! ( except how they can make money). There is a new special called 'Money Driven Medicine', and after watching that I came to realise that there are a lot of us out here who think that going to a doctor is just an exercise in money making. No care at all for what the patient is going through. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2009 Report Share Posted September 13, 2009 Great article Cindy. I've used virgin coconut oil for head lice with fantastic results. We have epidemics of head lice here in the schools. The standard treatment is extremely toxic and has been known to cause neurological problems, but the coconut oil works like a charm. Kate , " cindy_martian " <cindy_martian wrote: > > > > http://www.coconut-connections.com/parasites.htm > > I just came across this info on extra virgin coconut oil, and its action against parasites. > > Cindy C. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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