Newport, Trich/Hodkins and copper (and Morgellons/Lyme's)
>>>When I get a couple of brain cells to rub together I will write about Trichinosis and its involvement with brain swelling and Lymphogranuloma\Hodgkin’s.
I've been kicking myself for the past few days because of letting a darned "bug" catch me, thinking I didn't have time to zap or do the Beck BE, or make collodial silver...or maybe I just got too cocky about everyone else getting sick around me but I wasn't going to get it :)
The grandkids are constantly sick, and around here with their "bugs" all the time. I do think it makes a difference to zap or BE regularly to keep things warded off that we might be exposed to. I won't get complacent again.
I've had a couple of ah-ha thoughts about copper that I hadn't considered before, and want to run them by you--but I am also waiting for a couple of brain cells to rub together before I do...if I can remember what it was I wanted to ask you by then- LOL.
I have read alot on the Lyme strategies yahoo forum, about the crawling/wiggling that people feel when they are hitting Lyme's...and with all of that was also stuff that was saying that people who are feeling that with the Morgellons- are 80% of the time positive for Lyme's! Interesting!
I know you have said you didn't think the lymephotos stuff was accurate, but the crawling/exit wounds is what they are also referring to with microfilarial worms exiting when they are being hit (look like a brown thread)- and pulling them out slowly so they don't break off. What do you think?
>>>>Without going into a lot of detail, our theory is that Lyme is not just a bacterial disease, but also an infestation of microfilarial worms. Bacteria, worms, internal mites and the possibility of other creatures have been quite horrifying. Ticks can transfer many types of pathogens into the body of their host. It is also possible that the tick could pick up a new pathogen and pass it on to their next host, explaining why Lyme patients have different types of organisms within their bodies. Shortly after starting the treatment, we were shocked by the presence of the worms. Microfilarial worms live symbiotically with bacteria. They protect the bacteria from being exterminated by the
Antibiotics . Our theory is that the microfilarial worm, though possibly a nematode, is a parasitic nematomorph which we name Paragordius Lyme Incorporehumani. The Lyme bacteria is Borrelia burgdorferi, named after Willy Burgdorfer.
>>>The average infected person has billions of eggs among his body tissues. The so-called "brain lesions" may just possibly be reams of eggs. The knot on the side of the neck, near one's spinal cord, so common to many sufferers, is a breeding chamber