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Re: a silly question

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Yes. Your insurance may cover it if Jack is still outside normal limits

and it's deemed necessary. Did they cover your first band?

>

> When kids need to go into a 2nd band to continue treatment, do you

> have to pay for a whole new band. We paid $1850.00 for our Starband

> and Jack has really outgrown it.

>

> D.

>

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  • 5 weeks later...

Hi Leo:

There are no silly questions.

In Europe you have quark, which is similar to cottage cheese, and I have heard

of many people using this with their flax seed oil.

By the way, your English sounds very good.

Best regards,

spudgun0 wrote:

Dear members ,

I would like to know what " cottage cheese " really is?

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, Rowena , and Bob

thank you all for your input.

Some told me that what in US is called " cottage cheese " we call

" fiocchi di latte " (that is , " milk flakes " ). I 'm not so sure they

are both the same thing, so is for our " ricotta " ...

Anyway, these day I have been trying flax seed oil + yogurt.

What do you think about yogurt as a substitute for cottage cheese ?

Is it effective ?

I love yogurt and I have no problem taking it with flax seed oil or

anything else .... I use low-fat white raw yogurt, which (I think)

should be the most natural and safe of all .... even if I like fruit

yogurt a lot I stay away from it, since sometimes I see the color and

it is too strong to be natural ... white yogurt shouldn't contain

colourants or preservatives , as far as I know.

Apart from all this anyway, I have read a small part of the messages

of this group, and I realized that most of the criticism against

Alternative Cancer Treatments is based upon lack of statistics.

I don't know if there is someone who studied Alternative Treatments

in such a way , I suspect there is more than one , but I don't know

any. When I first faced the truth of conventional cancer treatments,

I was pretty confused , since most of the sources and my little

experience with relatives and aquaintances told me there was little

hope with conventional treatment . I personally know just two persons

who survived conventional treatment, and for one of them I'm not so

sure it was real cancer .... on the other side at least 20 persons I

knew died , in spite of all the efforts made with conventional

treatments ... all this, and all the things I read, convinced me to

explore the other planet ....

I am quite pragmatic and scientifically oriented and I need some

numbers to believe : I have little experience since 20 or so cases

can't be named a significant experience, so I decided to rely on

other people's experience and study all the cases in this group to

make myself some kind of home-made statistic study and get a rough

idea of what could work and what couldn't, and in which cases .

To do this in the right manner,however, I need to know not only

success cases , but even cases of unsuccess.

I read that expecially the Budwig diet scores a huge percentage of

success, something near 90 - 95 % ( that could explain the fact that

we in Italy never heard much about it :))))).... )

Similar thing about Dr. 's protocol (I'm currently reading " the

cure of all advanced cancer " , and I'm expecially interested in the

cases reported at the end of the book).

What do you think about keeping some kind of " scoreboard " for all the

different kind of alternative treatments ?

That could give Alternative Treaments a strong base and convince

many people who want to " see with their eyes " ....

Leo

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Leo,

It is my understanding that you can take the yogurt and drain it to make

" quark. " Find something made of 100% cotton or linen, (like a pillowcase)and

dump quite about a gallon of the yogurt in there. Suspend it over something so

that it can drain into a bowl for a day or two in your refrigerator. More

detailed directions are most likely in the files of this list.

From a gallon of yogurt, you will get about 3-4 cups of quark. It really is

important that the yogurt be concentrated like this, so that their will be

plenty of sulphur proteins around to bond with the flaxseed oil.

Tina in the boonies of Kentucky

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