Parasites adapt quickly so I am changing protocols and poisons.
Date: 11/29/2015 11:45:16 AM ( 9 y ago)
Parasites are smart. They learn and they adapt quickly. My research tells me that I need to change my poison and my protocol to keep outwitting these buggers. After discovering Dr. Kalcker's protocol yesterday, I am going to order some of the drugs he prescribes. My understanding is that they are available over the internet. But that may take a while and I am in the middle of a cleanse and don't want to stop. In anticipation of changing my poison, I ordered a parasite kit from the Parasitology Center in Arizona, run by Dr. Amin. I reviewed the changes in my protocol with my Dr. and he agreed but warned me to start slowly with the bottle marked Cleanse or I may be surprised by diarrhea.
Still finding liver flukes or parts thereof in my stool. This is about day 60 since I started dealing with the critters. I started with diatomaceous earth only but after 2 months of doing that only during the 5 days before and after the full moon, my Dr. added Vitaklenz. That made a huge difference and I started doing the cleanse every day. I am on day 40 of a daily cleanse and the amount and size of the critters has decreased. I have to admit that every time I think I have them licked and there are no specimens for several days, they show up again. It's almost as though there is an order to the elimination. First it was worms, then flukes, then what I believe may be schistosomas, then back to worms and now back to flukes. It may just be their cycles. Because they coexist inside me, maybe they have timed their cycles so they don't compete. It would make sense from a biological adaptation.
I wish someone would create a good image library of human parasites. Apparently there are about 300 of them. I have added 3 images on this site. You can find them under my blog name Mizmac. There are some under the name of sciencephotolibrary. That's one of the best sources I've found. The Smithsonian has a collection of parasites that they acquired from the USDA but I can't find any photo images. I have an inquiry into them about identifying the large ones that I have photographed. if someone reading this knows of a good image library, please let me know.
One of the interesting things that came out during a colonic was a red ball of tissue. I took it to my Dr. thinking that it was a new and different parasite. He said he didn't know what it was but that it looked like intestinal tissue. I found an image online that was identical that was identifed as a hydatid cyst. I looked into those but I also learned that the body can surround worm eggs with tissue. I think (actually I really hope) that is what came out. Hydatid cysts can be really dangerous. Having eggs surrounded by tissue sounds like a defense mechanism. Worms can lay thousands of eggs per day. That's why you need to do a cleanse for a really long time. Dr. Kalcker says for a year! Then a deworming every 3-4 months. We do if for dogs, why not for humans. By the way, Dr. Kalcker says to give your dog away. Paul Chek says that dogs are not our best friends. Both say that you need to treat everyone in your family and your sexual partners.
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