Re: Sure, why do it unless you need to.
so you are saying saponified olive oil sat in my stomach and liver for 3 to 6 months and then one day decided to roll out?
Regardless... fact is you can't prove that flushes don't clean out the liver, lumpy stones or not.
As far as scans and what not.. it is well known that they do not catch everything. I know of several cases in particular where people have had their gall bladder removed even though the scans showed no stones, and guess what? They were filled with stones or had blockage that was not seen by the scan. Either way the scans are not full proof.
The digestive system is still somewhat of a mystery that is a fact.
How are you defining gall stones?
How come sometimes when a person does a
Liver Flush they pass these globbules(aka what people call stones) and other times they don't pass any stones? Why do they form sometimes and other times they do not from?
How did I pass these stones without doing a cleanse?
How and where do these stones form? Especially when a flush is not taking place?
Soap dissolves in water, olive oil soap dissolves quickly in water especially if it is warm.
If they are saponified...soap why don't they dissolve in the accompanying diarrhea or in the toilet bowl?
I need evidence for where these stones come from and so far nobody in the mode-earn medical establishment has been able to give me any answers. The closest thing they could say was that they didn't know. They couldn't provide any evidence they just said it was so...sound familiar?
What about other oils that have been used to do liver flush? Why do the stones look pretty much the same?
And finally not sure if I mentioned this one...
How do you pass these stones without doing a
Liver Flush or even using olive oil for 3 - 6 months?
Your evidence has not been compelling so far, I am not convinced that the
Liver Flushes "don't work". I tried it and I found the opposite, that in fact they have a profound affect on digestion. I think that there may need to be some clarity in the language used to explain such phenomena, but something happens. To say they "don't work" is laughable when one has experienced the immediate change in ones constitution prior to a liver flush.
Your evidence based stance is good and what not, but I don't see how you can prove that the
Liver Flushes "don't work"
No doctor I have ever spoken to about it said flatly that they "don't work" They simply said they didn't know for sure. And they certainly were not willing to go and find someone to fund an experiment as such. So at a point my own personal experiments have become much more valuable than some fantasy experiments that never took place but somehow they disprove that
Liver Flushes had a profound affect.
How can you convince me that they "don't work" when I have experienced the opposite?
What is your evidence?