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there is no doubt that i am energetically unbalanced. chi qong helps some. i

am constantly rotating my vermicides. i understand this concept. i will

revisit acupuncture again, as i am stronger than i have been, perhaps it will

stick this time.

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Dear luck,

It sounds like you have sensitized your colon by years of taking these

herbs.

They work better if you just use them spring and fall.

Using them all the time will allow the parasites to adapt to the herb, and

not be affected.

Maybe try some acupuncture. You sound energetically unbalanced.

Best of Health!

Dr. Saul Pressman, DCh

URL: http://www.plasmafire.com

email: saul@...

" The problems of today cannot be solved using the same thinking that created

them " . - Einstein

Re: magnetic bed

> black walnut hulls. well... i've been on that for many years now. it

works.

> but black walnut does not put them to sleep, it kills parasites. when you

> kill parasites, bad things are released. i have been experiencing this for

> many many years, and it is an enormous strain on my immune and nervous

> system. hence, my reason for asking for a way to put them to sleep at

night

> when i want to be at rest and not at war. my colon is hypersensitive at

this

> point. i need to find a way for it to relax. if you just touch my belly as

> lightly as you can, my whole colon reflexively constricts. i went to dr.

kam

> yuen's fre lecture last night and volunteered as a guinea pig. he did some

> energy corrections which really worked. problem is, they only lasted for

> about a half hour.

>

> thanks for your post

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  • 11 years later...

The green hulls are a very good remedy for parasites (part of a remedy anyway). It is high in arsenic. So don't overuse it. I assume the black hulls have it too. I am personally acquainted with a woman who used them a lot and she got a serious case of arsenic poisoning. I understand she used it a lot for a long time, but that is the extent of my understanding of the situation. pj

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Hey VB. Didn't you really mean to say 'vermifuge'? :-)

From: Baker <vbaker@...>iodine Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 4:06 PMSubject: Re: black walnut hulls

Try putting Vit C powder on the black walnut stain. If it turns clear, you would have some evidence for iodine being present. But it won't.Here is a statement about this. http://curezone.com/forums/fm.asp?i=1235396It's not based on lab results, but it is based on sound logic. Iodine is an element. The black walnut tree cannot manufacture iodine. So if it is growing in iodine-rich soil, it might have iodine in it. But if iodine-depleted, it won't. It is completely dependent on the soil in which the tree is growing.The color is coincidental.It is, however, a powerful antihelminthic.--moderatorOn 27 Feb 2012 at 10:34, james fry wrote:> > > > The only 'Old Wives' thing I ever heard about Black Walnut shells is> that they would chase 'unwanted fauna' from your digestive track. Jim> > > From: polo <dahart@...>> iodine > Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 9:56 AM> Subject: black walnut hulls> > > I am curious if anyone on this list has any knowledge that what has> been taught in herbalogy for eons that black walnut hulls are rich in> iodine, is true? Certainly, it will stain your hands similar to iodine> and it looks like iodine, but is it? I have researched online and> cannot find any lab studies that actually said that iodine can be> assayed from black walnut hulls. It seems to me that black walnut> trees cannot continually pull iodine out of the soil year after year> without some

depletion.> > Any body with any scientific information on black walnut hulls and> iodine content?> > doug

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heh. --V

On 27 Feb 2012 at 16:15, james fry wrote:

>

>

>

> Hey VB. Didn't you really mean to say 'vermifuge'? :-)

>

>

> From: Baker <vbaker@...>

> iodine

> Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 4:06 PM

> Subject: Re: black walnut hulls

>

>

> Try putting Vit C powder on the black walnut stain. If it turns clear,

> you would have some evidence for iodine being present. But it won't.

>

> Here is a statement about this.

> http://curezone.com/forums/fm.asp?i=1235396

>

> It's not based on lab results, but it is based on sound logic. Iodine

> is an element. The black walnut tree cannot manufacture iodine. So if

> it is growing in iodine-rich soil, it might have iodine in it. But if

> iodine-depleted, it won't. It is completely dependent on the soil in

> which the tree is growing.

>

> The color is coincidental.

>

> It is, however, a powerful antihelminthic.

>

> --

> moderator

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