Garlic Inject and "A&P"???Re: The real skinny on my CST.
What does "A&P" stand for, and what qualifies someone for "master"?
>>>"we've got a diagram of how far up under the rib cage the liver goes" <<< When you post the video, please be sure to point out that this placement varies SUBSTANTIALLY from person to person, and even varies within a person depending upon the condition of their liver and rest of their body (particularly the transverse colon).
Garlic injection - your reported response to the garlic injection indicates something may have been amiss. I've seen incredibly varied reactions to all parts of the Cold Sheet Treatment, but when folks do the garlic injection it seems the response is typically as reported by
Dr. Schulze (and what I experienced)...and that response/reaction is not typically: "but it wasn't horrible either" or "it wasn't as shocking as I thought it'd be".
This is the one part of the CST that everyone I've coached consistently dislikes. I'm seriously jonesin' to do another CST, but I am also dreading the garlic injection...even though I totally understand it's benefits & purpose/s, the cramping and burning (albeit temporary) is definitely an "over the edge" experience.
Garlic Injection: 10 large cloves of organic garlic put into a blender or Vitamix with 1/2 ACV and 1/2 water, to yield a minimum of a cup of 'garlic solution', to be injected anally/rectally.
I couldn't find a rectal syringe that would allow all the solution (garlic pulp) through the holes in the syringe (or one that could be easily filled), so I used a cheap, flimsy 'fleet enema bag', cut off the tip of the tubing so the hole would be bigger in the end (and then rounded the freshly cut edges with a file). I made 1 1/2 cups of solution (knowing some would remain in the tubing and bag). Then ran the "slurry" all the way down the tube, clamped the tubing, and inserted it. Then I twisted the top of the bag down to the 'slurry level', unclamped the tubing, and squeezed the slurry mixture down the tubing as best as I could with two hands (to force the 'slurry' through & out of the bag/tubing). As is typically reported, I could not possibly retain the slurry/solution, and immediately jumped on the potty to expel it.
Dr Schulze in the SYL manual:
"According to
Richard Schulze , "It's powerful. It burns. That person lights up. They will run to the toilet, but it doesn't all come out. In about 2 minutes, the burning and the cramping go away. I think it's incredibly grounding. It seems to break any psychological armoring the person has. The person knows immediately that this is something that
they have never had before."
We're all different, of course, so it's possible that Miss H's body didn't experience what the majority of folks do. But when there's something/someone that has a substantially different experience than what's typical reported, it's always a good idea to check and make sure the protocol has been done correctly (and if it was, to point out to others that the reaction is not 'typical').
Healthiest of blessings,
Unyquity