+ closing "words of wisdom" for everyone :) Re: orthophosphoric acid
Knowing *about* Andreas Mortiz's book can be different than having read it. His information is biologically/physiologically sound. If you've read it and have difficulties understanding his truths, I'll be happy to help you understand (or explain what I can).
Properly administered enemas (high or low) do not cause months worth of pain; *if* administered properly using pure warm water as the solution (with proper additives as needed), it's simply a physiological impossibility to cause anything but temporary discomfort. (Of course, the exception would be if the enema solution or the tubing loosened something unnatural that had become 'severely' attached, and then nothing was done to totally remove it. But water gently flowing into the colon will barely loosen anything that's not almost ready to come off...and if the tip of the tubing is metal or hardened plastic, or if the tubing is inserted too forcefully or rapidly, that's a totally different story).
If I'm discerning & comprehending what you're saying correctly, it sounds to me like you definitely shouldn't be attempting high/deep enemas again (and wouldn't want to be). So I'll save the post/information about the long, slow, careful, safe process and correct way to administer a high enema.
Just for the benefit of other people reading the post, the LEFT groin area (as it applies to enemas) would be the sigmoid colon (the curvy part right before the rectum). That's the very first part of the colon as one is inserting the tube, and that where folks mostly get into trouble with high enemas (or any of the other 'bends'...the one from the descending colon (left) to the transverse (that runs across the abdomen), or from the transverse 'bend' to the ascending colon, or possibly (but not usually) at the very end/beginning of the large colon, the cecum.
(If you're the person that's emailed me and told me you've used this device for deep/high enemas:
http://www.darmreinigung.org/glueckspumpe.html
- then I can almost guarantee you that's the reason you experienced pain.
In doing a typical enema, one inserts only flexible plastic tubing (well lubricated, never with metal or hard plastic tips) four to six inches or so into the rectum and up to the sigmoid colon and then allows the solution to gently flow into the sigmoid region. Generally speaking, the fluid will be retained mostly in the sigmoid area. As you can see by the picture, any force (with solution OR with the tubing -especially with hardened plastic or stainless tips) has huge potential for causing pain, damage and discomfort. It generally take a 'newbie' an hour or two to gently work the tubing all the way to the ascending colon (while systematically releaseing enema solution for more lubrication around the 'bends')...and the majority of people are not able to accomplish it on the first/second try.
Enough about that. I don't recommend you attempt a high/deep enema again unless you learn what happened the first two times you tried them. And also, one should never experience anything but mild cramping during a colon cleanse (assuming they're using safe products & procedures). Long lasting discomfort is a sign of wrong product/protocol, or wrong usage.
I always follow my liver flushes with a normal coffee enema; since it helps the liver create more bile, it's a great way to flush free any debris that was loosened in the liver/gallbladder, but didn't make it all the way out. And I've never run into ANY problems.
A salt-water flush (proper ratio of salt to water and ingested correctly) is an awesome way to flush your colon free of loose debris. If you've never done one before, I suggest you research them fully (and the typical reactions people have), and do a 'test run' before trying it after a liver flush. Many people throw-up the first time they do one (which renders them ineffective as a flush).
As far as the Clark flush, I'd guess you're correct - it probably is the most widely utilized flush. As far as your comments about Andreas Moritz's "dramatic side effects", it's only a lack of knowledge that makes you question them.
There are zillions of people that feel like 'general crap' for days/weeks after a liver flush...and that's not normal, nor should it happen. If you had any IDEA how toxic the bile & debris is that we flush from our liver (and how fast it can reabsorb into the bloodstream...or worse, absorb over time until a large stone completely breaks down), you'd understand why Andreas's caution is both warranted and sound.
Words of wisdom for everyone to contemplate:
It's FAR TOO EASY to take one or two personal experiences and conclude: "these things caused this" OR "this caused these things"...especially when Curezone is a mass of people grasping for knowledge and trying to make sense out of protocols they've barely used & products & herbs (and protocols) that they don't understand what they cause or how they interact with their own body. And most EVERY Curezoner doesn't start with a healthy, normally functioning body! A human body riddled with health/mind altering toxins that is so clogged it's already throwing symptoms at them right and left, IS NOT NORMAL. So initial reactions to cleansing protocols and products aren't normal either. Yet it's typical that when one has a 'reaction', they make some type of a conclusion and stick with it forever (and even share it with others who believe it and share it with others, who believe it and share it with others...until it becomes a "truth". ARRRRGH.
Folks, we are smart enough (and savvy enough) to realize that the doctors and medical system aren't healing us, and we've come to the realization that we need to be our OWN doctors. Where do we start? By relearning and/or learning where our main organs are located and how they each do what they do? Or do we jump right in "taking and doing stuff", with the same mindset we had previously, depending upon OTHERS (with the "truths" they have guesstimated) to be our "doctors" and advisers?
Methinks taking our health into our own hands is a HUGE responsibility, and I'm SURE that our bodies (and family members, especially precious lil' ones) deserve us to spend more time on learning how to responsibly be our own doctor, than virtually any other activity we have outside of work.
In the famous words of Dennis Miller, "That's just my opinion, I could be wrong" ...but I'm pretty sure I'm right :) lol
Healthiest of blessings -
Unyquity