Guest guest Posted December 10, 2009 Report Share Posted December 10, 2009 Hello all, Ive been very interested in the above article by Andy Rosenfarb please see link below: http://www.pacificcollege.edu/pcom_static/alumni/newsletters/spring2007/Yin & Yang\ ofCholesterol.pdf I am concerned however about being perceived as neglient in asking a Yang case to ingest higher amounts of milk, cheese and the like. Does anyone use this protocol and can you relate your clinical experience of it please? Please note I've already looked at 300 odd previous posts on hyperlipidemia to get some background and it seems this issue not discussed. Many thanks Lorraine Hodgkinson MNIMH MRCHM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2009 Report Share Posted December 11, 2009 In regards to higher amounts of milk. Store milk is not milk. It is a white liquid with milk sugar and chemicals. Therefore there are bad results from drinking it. Real milk is healthy and does help resolve disorders. For information on real milk and how it heals see Weston Price. To me this is like blaming the natural herb Huang Qi as dangerous because one takes a extra large dose of a concentrated standardized phyto-drug 'ephedrine' labeled as Huang Qi. Then banning the herb. Ed Kasper LAc www.HappyHerbalist.com eddy …………………………………………………………. Hello all, Ive been very interested in the above article by Andy Rosenfarb please see link below: <http://www.pacificcollege.edu/pcom_static/alumni/newsletters/spring2007/Yin & YangofCholesterol.pdf> http://www.pacificcollege.edu/pcom_static/alumni/newsletters/spring2007/Yin & YangofCholesterol.pdf I am concerned however about being perceived as neglient in asking a Yang case to ingest higher amounts of milk, cheese and the like. Does anyone use this protocol and can you relate your clinical experience of it please? Please note I've already looked at 300 odd previous posts on hyperlipidemia to get some background and it seems this issue not discussed. Many thanks Lorraine Hodgkinson MNIMH MRCHM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2009 Report Share Posted December 11, 2009 It's not just milk, it's butter etc as well! It flys right in the face of everything we've been told about tackling cholesterol. I was wondering if other practitioners had used this protocol and to share their experience. Also to start off discussion on the whole Yin Yang approach. Lorraine Lorraine Hodgkinson MNIMH MRCHM HERBS AND HELPERS 6, Butts Fold, Cockermouth, Cumbria, CA13 9HY. UK. Tel: +44 (0) 1900 826392 Mobile: 07761 489838 (O2) www.herbalmedicineuk.com On 11 Dec 2009, at 14:38, " Happy Herbalist " <eddy wrote: > In regards to higher amounts of milk. > > Store milk is not milk. > > It is a white liquid with milk sugar and chemicals. Therefore there > are bad > results from drinking it. > > Real milk is healthy and does help resolve disorders. For > information on > real milk and how it heals see Weston Price. > > To me this is like blaming the natural herb Huang Qi as dangerous > because > one takes a extra large dose of a concentrated standardized phyto-drug > 'ephedrine' labeled as Huang Qi. Then banning the herb. > > Ed Kasper LAc > > www.HappyHerbalist.com > > eddy > > …………………………………………………………. > > Hello all, > Ive been very interested in the above article by Andy Rosenfarb > please see > link below: > > <http://www.pacificcollege.edu/pcom_static/alumni/newsletters/spring2007/Yin > & YangofCholesterol.pdf> > http://www.pacificcollege.edu/pcom_static/alumni/newsletters/spring2007/Yin & > YangofCholesterol.pdf > > I am concerned however about being perceived as neglient in asking a > Yang > case to ingest higher amounts of milk, cheese and the like. Does > anyone use > this protocol and can you relate your clinical experience of it > please? > > Please note I've already looked at 300 odd previous posts on > hyperlipidemia > to get some background and it seems this issue not discussed. > > Many thanks > > Lorraine Hodgkinson MNIMH MRCHM > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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