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Re: Neurotic? It could lead to asthma

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I just hope that these SOBs (insurers, pharmas) are outside enjoying

tennis, swimming, running, etc. right now, because in a few years,

they'll all have more than asthsma from chemtrails. Sick, sick, sick.

Barth

www.presenting.net/sbs/sbs.html

SUBMIT YOUR DOCTOR: www.presenting.net/sbs/molddoctors.html

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sac> Can you believe they are still trying to market this garbage?

sac> " 63 or about 2 percent, developed asthma during a median follow-up of more

sac> than 8 years, they report in the latest issue of the journal Allergy.

sac> According to the investigators, individuals who were highly neurotic were

sac> three times more likely to develop asthma than those who were less

neurotic,

sac> and breaking off a life partnership increased the risk of asthma

sac> development by more than twofold. "

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Wow Sharon,

The more things change, the more they remain the same. I am 66 years old, and I

developed asthma at the age of 9, from a genetic predisposition inherited from

my paternal great-grandmother. As a younger child, I remember hearing her

wheeze, and watching her use the then-current standard medical therapy, which

was(I'm not lying), breathing in a coil of marijuana, as it slowly burned in

front of her. By the time I developed asthma, at the age of 9 (in 1952}, the

standard medical therapy, was breathing nebulized (by squeezing a rubber bulb)

adrenaline (epinephrine), on the physiological premis that anything which can

speed up your heart beat, will also speed up the functioning of your lungs, and

the speeding up process would get the air into your lungs (if it didn't kill

you).

By the time I was eleven years old , you were not considered " civilized " if you

were not in therapy with a psychologist or psychiatrist (if you could afford

one). So, naturally, as the stress of living with asthma, was rapidly driving

me, and my parents, insane, the doctors said [in their typical ass-backwards

thought process]that the emotional stress between myself and my parents was the

CAUSE of the asthma, and not the EFFECT of living with asthma.

The " treatment " prescribed for me, was " separation " from my parents for a period

of 6 months. Luckily, as we were poor, there was a charity that had received a

suburban mansion, donated by a millionaire, and had turned that mansion into a

free boarding home, for children like me, to give them the " separation cure " . My

parents were allowed to visit only on one day every 2 weeks, which worked out

good for them, as, in those days you had to be pretty well off to own a car, so

they had to take a cus to the subway, and the subway to Grand Central Station,

and a train to Elmsford N.Y., and a bus to Eastview N.Y., to visit me. The

symbolism of my " convalescent home " estate being across a country road from the

honor farm of Sing Sing state prison, did not escape me.

Sorry for rambling on, like the " old man " that I am, but my point is that I am

still an asthmatic, though the " separation cure " sure taught me to appreciate my

parents more. As the years went on, and I learned to avoid my asthma " triggers "

better, my degree of physical suffering become more of an " inconvenience " ,

rather than a " life-and-death " struggle, and, my " neurotic " behavior was no

longer necessary, as the neurotic behavior was only an adaptation to living in a

moment-to-moment life-and-death situation, and not he other way around, as is

claimed TODAY by the medical study you quoted, and by the medical profession, 57

years ago, when I served my time, upstate. Actually, aside from missing my

parents, it was a pretty nice experience. [but please don't send your own kids

away]

P.S.- 14 years ago, I went through the exact same experience of upregulating my

neurotic behavior, as a response to my first toxic mold exposure reaction. Over

the last 14 years, as I have learned to identify and remove, the mold and

chemical triggers from my life, I have been able to lower my level of neurotic

behavior again, to an " almost-normal " level.

Joe

..........................................

>

>

> Can you believe they are still trying to market this garbage?

> " 63 or about 2 percent, developed asthma during a median follow-up of more

> than 8 years, they report in the latest issue of the journal Allergy.

> According to the investigators, individuals who were highly neurotic were

> three times more likely to develop asthma than those who were less neurotic,

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Sorry about all of that Joe. 

The now neurotic have extended to tumors.  Yes tumors.  There is a cancer

cluster in the area about 40 cases of brain tumors in one area and the news had

the nerve to report that they were suffering from a psycological disorder of

sorts.  We must all be mass halucinators. 

 

 It is disgusting that anyone with a medical degree would attribute asthma to

being neurotic.

 

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/localnews/content/local_news/epaper/2009/06/18/0618\

cluster.html?imw=Y

God Bless !!

dragonflymcs

Mayleen

________________________________

From: joe <josephsalowitz@...>

Sent: Sat, October 24, 2009 11:12:32 PM

Subject: [] Re: Neurotic? It could lead to asthma

Wow Sharon,

The more things change, the more they remain the same. I am 66 years old, and I

developed asthma at the age of 9, from a genetic predisposition inherited from

my paternal great-grandmother.

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