Guest guest Posted May 10, 2012 Report Share Posted May 10, 2012 This was interesting. I know that salt helps a lot, but I haven't gotten to the point you are at yet. This will be especially useful down the road when I start on all the abx. Thanks, Terry > > He used a teaspoon to a cup of warm water. > I only use a half-teaspoon to avoid blood pressure issues, and I add a pinch of citric acid to make it taste and work a bit better - winds up like a light Alka Seltzer. Not too far different from the Lyme Salt+C components > > That thought led me to confirm that table salt = sodium chloride and baking soda = sodium bicarbonate, and then I wanted to see what the difference is between ascorbic acid (vitamin C) and citric acid. > > > What I found was a site that compares chemical types and properties in a way I have never been able to understand before, though it doesn't tell me how ascorbic and citric acids differ: > > http://chemistry.about.com/od/acidsbases/a/acidsbasesterms.htm > > > Properties of Acids > > * taste sour (don't taste them!)... the word 'acid' comes from the Latin acere, which means 'sour' > * acids change litmus (a blue vegetable dye) from blue to red > * their aqueous (water) solutions conduct electric current (are electrolytes) > * react with bases to form salts and water > * evolve hydrogen gas (H2) upon reaction with an active metal (such as alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, zinc, aluminum) > Properties of Bases > > * taste bitter (don't taste them!) > * feel slippery or soapy (don't arbitrarily touch them!) > * bases don't change the color of litmus; they can turn red (acidified) litmus back to blue > * their aqueous (water) solutions conduct and electric current (are electrolytes) > * react with acids to form salts and water > Examples of Common Acids > > * citric acid (from certain fruits and veggies, notably citrus fruits) > * ascorbic acid (vitamin C, as from certain fruits) > * vinegar (5% acetic acid) > * carbonic acid (for carbonation of soft drinks) > * lactic acid (in buttermilk) > Examples of Common Bases > > * detergents > * soap > * lye (NaOH) > * household ammonia (aqueous) > Fun, huh? > > Kajay > > > > ________________________________ > From: " Goldstein@... " <Goldstein@...> > bird mites > Sent: Tuesday, May 8, 2012 12:39 AM > Subject: Re: Minocycline, yogurt, and baking soda water > > > Â > That is interesting about your grandfather... I wonder how much baking soda he put in the warm water. Â I have started putting apple cider vinegar in a glass of water in the morning to help combat candida. Â The abx really help the candida grow; I've taken antifungals, but stopped a week or so ago. Taking probiotics too. Â Many of my problems are in the gut. Â Yogurt makes me very congested and for some people with candida like me, even yogurt cannot be tolerated well. Â I have not noticed as many problems with kefir for some reason. Â Yogurt did not bother me until recently. Â I'm currently not doing Doxy and Rifampin but will start up in the next day. Â Have had a good break from it since my stomach was acting up for the last 1-1/2 - 2 months. Â Will have to go back to it per my LLMD. Â Will be back to taking 4 abx at the same time. > > Dray - I've started the Nattokinase too - no problems with it. Â Supposed to help thin the blood, making it easier for our abx to reach various organs better. Â I have thick blood. > > > Kajay, are you talking about slight nausea, gas or bloating? > > > > ________________________________ > From: " Kajay109 " <morjella@...> > " bird mites@groupscom " <bird mites >, finding1cure , GeorgiaLyme , " Lyme Rife " <Lyme_Rife >, DougPlus > Sent: Monday, May 7, 2012 9:23:40 PM > Subject: Minocycline, yogurt, and baking soda water > > > > > Starting third week of Minocycline. Yogurt helps, but when I really feel the yeast acting up, I drink what I didn't initially realize (as someone who has spent a lot more time knowing I have Morgellons than I have knowing I have Lyme) is very close to a classic Lyme remedy. I keep a shaker filled with baking soda and a bit of citric acid to make it taste a bit less awful, and of course bears a loose resemblance to Salt+C - and it works. Ladies, you know what symptoms I'm talking about and how glad I was to be rid of them. > Hope this short-term solution works over the long-term of my abx therapy. Will keep you posted. > > In going through old documents after my mother's death last year, I have learned a lot about my family. Among others, I learned that my grandfather, at 35, was diagnosed as having a chronic acidic condition based on something that the doctor described as encrusted. Don't know if he meant at blood, skin, or other level. Anyway, my grandfather then spent the remaining 66 years of his life drinking a glass of warm soda water (baking soda) every morning of his adult life. I think that is why he lived so long, that and good genes. I say that because many of his peers who were also happy, who exercised more, ate as wisely, and observed " moderation in all things, " dropped dead 20 to 50 years before he did. It is the only thing - again, other than family longevity - that he did differently. > > Kajay > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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