Thanks Cora; here is a copy of the whole PDF from Olree.
Lately I have used it as a pain killer on one of my sons; it actually takes care of his stomach pain in half an hour; together with magnesium oil. He has this pain lets say twice a month; when he eats poorly or to much candy etc.
(Candy color = aluminum, three boron molecules are wiped out per one aluminum molecule)
"
There’s
the oft-noted fact that old people in rest
homes are deprived of vitamin D, the
sunshine vitamin. Vitamin D deficiency
is enlarged when boron deficiency is a
reality, recognized or not.
Withal, the bone connection haunts
and horrifies post-menopausal women.
Its supplemental role is both invoked
and commanded by osteoporosis. This
is no off-the-wall suggestion — solid
USDA research reveals that 3 milligrams
of boron supplemented each day drastically
reduces calcium loss, by 40 percent
in approximately a week."
by Charles Walters;
On the silver screen when sepia tone
was still a movie tint used for desert reality,
Wallace Beery drove his 20 mule team
to stardom, if not an Oscar. The load was
a boron-containing ore from the Mojave
Desert. Hardly anyone thought of the
soap maker’s payload as a trace mineral
absolutely essential to human health.
Elements are nice, clean entries on the
chemist’s table, graphic or otherwise, but
they are seldom gifted to mankind that
way. They arrive as compounds, and the
stories surrounding boron’s parent material
are as old as the American Frontier.
Who could forget Ronald Reagan’s
narration of Death Valley Days, a series
sponsored by “20 Mule Team Borax”
that lasted for decades? But the Western
adventures never got within a country
mile of the real boron story . . .
DAVEY’S LOCKUP
Boron in fact was discovered by Sir
Humphrey Davey, fitting into the Mendeleev
Periodic Table of Elements at position
5, atomic weight 10.811. On Richard
Olree’s Standard Genetic Periodic
Chart, it appears at position 31, with a
codon AGU (see our Minerals for the
Genetic Code for a full discussion). After
that, the plot thickens, and the much
studied (or too-little studied) nonmetallic
mineral finds its niche in the protein
construction process. The latest calculations
have it that in the construction of
the serine amino acid and nature’s directed
protein, the DNA-RNA code calls
for 15,198,623 transactions using boron
during protein construction.
This is not the plane of observation
sourdoughs employed while fighting dehydration
on long desert hauls. They observed
a yellowish-brown crystal. They
knew nothing about the element’s 1808
isolation by the aforementioned Davey
and colleagues Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac
and Louis Jacques Thénard of France.
We, on the other hand, will invoke the
state of the art knowledge about atoms
and their orbiting protons and electrons.
During the mid-1900s, boron lost its
curiosity status and rose to prime consideration
by physicists, Ernest Rutherford
included, as atomic energy and radiation
swept like a storm into the republics of
learning. Boron, it was learned somewhere
along the line, absorbs atomic
particles. The time came when scientists
learned how to control neutrons involved
in fission to create nuclear reactors. Boron
rods are still absolutely necessary in
physics as well as human health maintenance.
In the first instance, rate of fission
is controlled by the depth of boron rods
in the reactor; in the second, by the presence
or absence of boron in the human
metabolic function.
It may be of lesser importance to note
that boron figures in the hardening of
plant stalks and that compounds of boron
— titanium, thorium, molybdenum
and tungsten — have their role in jet
propulsion. Such revelations may seem
arcane in the extreme until we point out
that boron figures in human health via
plant growth.
SODIUM BORATE
Its chemical name is sodium borate,
or sodium tetraborate. Exposure to
moist air causes crystals to cluster, for
which reason most people think of borate
in terms of powders, water softeners,
soap. Use of various forms of boron
in medicine and eyewash probably goes
back to Hippocrates himself.
The biography of borax and its discovery
in the Mojave Desert in 1862 may
be no more than trivia to most of us, but
the survival of boron in the petiole and
the leaf requires us to take note. That leaf
and plant delivery system invites the attention
of grower and patient alike. Here
again, our plane of observation shifts. It
is the kind of shift made famous by the
researcher Thomas Kuhn, who first peppered
us with the word paradigm. Now
we change emphasis from industrial considerations
and examine anew the body’s
use of this magnificent mineral nutrient.
Boron is required in trace amounts
for healthy bones and muscle growth.
The genome code in its paper record said
to be as high as the Washington Monument,
has held that ACGT language in
escrow for all who wish to follow every
phase of the human body’s functions.
For our purposes here, it is enough to say
that organic boron assists in the production
of natural steroid compounds.
There’s more. Boron is mandated for
the metabolism of calcium, phosphorus
and magnesium. First-rate research
points to enhanced brain function when
boron is in adequate supply.
In Minerals for the Genetic Code, boron
comes off as one of four magnificent
minerals — the other three being iodine,
selenium and magnesium — that belong
in the survival kit of most people in most
parts of the country. It is probably safe
to say that most physicians no longer
remember — if they ever knew — that
boron plays a part in the body’s sugar
metabolism equation. At issue is the utilization
of energy.
The official assessment is that people
are not generally deficient in boron
because most people consume foods
that contain it. Such a statement may be
evasive. It loops elderly people in with
the mass population. In fact, it borders
on elder abuse when boron supplementation
is withheld. Usually older people
have problems with absorption. There’s
the oft-noted fact that old people in rest
homes are deprived of vitamin D, the
sunshine vitamin. Vitamin D deficiency
is enlarged when boron deficiency is a
reality, recognized or not.
Withal, the bone connection haunts
and horrifies post-menopausal women.
Its supplemental role is both invoked
and commanded by osteoporosis. This
is no off-the-wall suggestion — solid
USDA research reveals that 3 milligrams
of boron supplemented each day drastically
reduces calcium loss, by 40 percent
in approximately a week.
Richard Olree tells us that one conclusion
flows from his genetic chart that
can’t be wiped away or ignored. The
amino acid that connects with boron
on the Olree Standard Genetic Periodic
Chart is serine. In Minerals for the Genetic
Code, Olree makes the chiropractic
Boron: An Essential
Fence Straddler!
Reprinted from November 2007 • Vol. 37, No. 11
connection and relates the above to the
Chinese I Ching.
Boron is easily displaced by aluminum,
losing three boron molecules for
every aluminum molecule. In terms of
utilization, it positions itself mid-fence,
well under selenium and iodine. Nevertheless,
the capacity for absorbing radiation
makes boron a mineral for our
times. It absorbs and releases without
changing the neutron.
Here are a few notes from Richard
Olree as codified in Minerals for the Genetic
Code:
Boron defends the heart. The story
has been told that Soviet truck drivers
were offered bonuses to deliver boron to
the Chernobyl site, this with the knowledge
that their trip would be fatal, but
families would be paid. None realized
that, fortified with boron, they could have
made their decision with impunity. Boron
stopped the “China Syndrome” from occurring
in Russia.
Boron is known as the calcium helper
and for the metabolism of calcium, magnesium
and phosphorus. Boron improves
retention of both calcium and magnesium
and elevates circulation of serum concentrations
of testosterone.
Boron is found in apples, carrots,
grapes, many dark-green leafy vegetables,
raw nuts, pears and whole grains.
“Found” means if it is there. As early as
the 1940s, Firman Bear found a wide diversity
in nutritional value according to
soils and farm fertilization, especially the
presence of the rare entities containing
“the traces” that one might now easily
supply as fertility from the ocean deep.
In passing, it might be mentioned
that uptake of aluminum in the absence
of boron has a role in Alzheimer’s disease.
The herb that best removes aluminum
from the body is cilantro, this according
to recently released credentialed
research. It is no happenstance that na-
Reprinted from November 2007 • Vol. 37, No. 11
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