Re: root canals and tooth loss
I've had root canals, and I've had them out. I know the dynamics at play. The bacterial issue is real and affects the whole body.
root canals are a ticket to physical and mental weakness and fatigue. Tooth loss is a more natural phenomenon and is by far superior to
root canal therapy.
After tooth loss, the body seeks to resolve the gap issue. If one has a good diet, exercise, spinal flexibility, and balance within the body, the nutrition required to maintain the hardness of the bone will get there and the gap won't close over where the tooth is.
If the system's at a shortfall position nutritionally, then the body won't be able to support the 'gap' where the tooth was, and the surrounding teeth will shift into that gap. At that point, whatever problems caused the original tooth to decay, loosen, or whatever, will now become the problems of the other teeth that want to move there.
If those problems aren't addressed, then the next tooth will suffer the same fate. A constitutional or lifestyle deficit that enabled one tooth to falter will cause another to go as well if not corrected. If the tooth was lost through accident or other acute cause then that's different, there's not a systemic or chronic problem that has to be addressed.
Once a
root canal is in place, the body begins to lean on that tooth, as dead as it is, and so the body is then a mini mortuary: it keeps one dead tooth and puts up with the smell. Unfortunately the smell can affect other parts of the body since that tooth now has no immunity: it's a cadaver, not a tooth.
Teeth are extensions of the skeletal system, not foundation parts of it: it's much more in harmony with the system of nature that they fall out or are pulled than forced to stay once they've tried their best and have lost the ability to do their job.
Taking blood purifying herbs like nettle and dandelion and foods like spinach and beetroot and
Celery can enable the body to make rich blood cells and support the loss of a tooth without problems, thus allowing the natural reaction to the loss to occur, whether it includes the shifting of other teeth or not.
www.angeltowns.com/members/sebastian