Guest guest Posted February 3, 2000 Report Share Posted February 3, 2000 Fortunately, I printed the article so I can give you the web site to enable you to read it. I'm sorry the source didn't work out for you. Try this: http://my.healthatoz.com/Personalization/NewsArticle.asp?article_id=90567 The article was in " HealthAtoZ News " by Janice Billingsley, and was called " Food Poisoning Can Lead to Arthritis " (confused immune cells fight healthy cells, too). I think I will cc the PA Group, in case others have this problem. Best to you, Bunny Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 1, 2003 Report Share Posted May 1, 2003 <<<<< here is an article on a friend of mine's son, who is an aspie. it's very sweet.> sweet indeed. F Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 Ross, There are 7 types of AML (M1 to M7), the M7 type is AMKL. Somebody can correct me if I'm wrong. Simone Wheeler. [ ] Article Still not sure what the difference between AMKL and AML is: http://cl.exct.net/?ffcd16-fe5a157472630c787511-fe1c1d7675660c75761c77 - Ross Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 Thanks, Simone. Yes, has AML/M7 so that makes sense. - RossDuane & Simone Wheeler <windwlkr@...> wrote: Ross, There are 7 types of AML (M1 to M7), the M7 type is AMKL. Somebody can correct me if I'm wrong. Simone Wheeler. [ ] Article Still not sure what the difference between AMKL and AML is: http://cl.exct.net/?ffcd16-fe5a157472630c787511-fe1c1d7675660c75761c77 - Ross Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2005 Report Share Posted April 6, 2005 [ ] article Hi all ... this is an interesting article. I take what works for me in it and let the rest go. Hope you can find some value in it too. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Top 10 Health Secrets for those with a chronic health problem Illness is not, as many think, " a thunderbolt of fate, striking at random " . There is a cause-and-effect relationship between the environment we've created - the lifestyles and diets we've chosen - and the health problems we're experiencing in the Western world - and increasingly in other parts of the world that have adopted our ways. When it comes to identifying the chief cause of illness, we have met the enemy and s/he is us! If you have a chronic health problem, here is the least you need to know for a return to health. 1. The lower your body temperature, the worse your health. Your temperature can vary by more than two degrees over the month (even over one day!). As a rule of thumb, the lowest temperature days tend to be when you feel less well; you can sometimes learn a great deal from keeping a record of your temperature fluctuations vs daily health. 2. All symptoms are due to toxicity. It is a commonly held belief that disease can be caused by vitamin/mineral deficiencies. In most cases this is not true. Disease means there is a toxic, rather than a deficiency, situation. There is a much greater need to remove, rather than add, “stuffâ€. 3. All stress is dehydrating and all dehydration is stressful – and both contribute to toxicity. It is a vicious circle. Long term ill health requires a complete life-style change to eliminate stress – diet, mental/emotional, chemical, structural, energetic, environmental, and so many more types. 4. Dry mouth is the last outward sign of extreme dehydration. As you drink more water (we need at least four pints or two liters daily of clean, plain water) you will find your thirst starts to come back and realise that you have often mistaken hunger for thirst. 5. Dehydration, fear and anger are related. The liver cannot detoxify the body properly if it has been dehydrated (especially for decades). When the liver (the organ most linked to anger) cannot detoxify fully, it literally passes on those extra toxins to the kidneys (the organ most linked to fear). When neither can remove enough toxins, the dryness and resulting increase of toxicity in the body compounds itself, rather like compound interest. 6. The worse your health, the gentler your treatment needs to be. Low-energy illness has to be treated very gently. Any supplementation has to start with very small doses/amounts. The diet also has to be gentle - water-rich (especially vegetables and rice) and without any dry foods such as cheese and wheat-products since these dryer foods are vibrationally very challenging. 7. Cleansing requires open routes of elimination (would you drive a car with a potato stuck in the exhaust or tail pipe?). Healthier bowels/intestines and liver are vital for lowering toxicity levels and a return to health. 8. Cleansing also requires the addition of the important missing elements to enable integrity to return to the body. Water, the Omega 3 EFAs (essential fatty acids) and magnesium are all severely lacking in modern diets. Therefore these do not " supplement " but instead " complete " our dietary requirements. 9. The body tries very hard to keep toxicity from the heart and the head. It operates rather like a centrifuge - it will dump the toxicity first in fingers and toes, often in the joints. With increasing toxicity the body silts up, and this centrifugal force is curtailed as vitality drains away - all in equal measure. So this centrifugal force is our life force, if you will. By the time the head (mental/emotional problems) or the heart is affected, the toxicity levels are very high indeed. 10. All symptoms are related (over both time and space). Fatigue and low body temperature are symptoms common to low adrenal function, low thyroid function, low (or reactive or fluctuating) blood sugar (hypoglycaemia) and pH (acid/alkaline) imbalance. In other words, all these are interactive and also related to long-term dehydration and rising toxicity. About the submitter: Dianna Keel is an internationally acclaimed health consultant/coach. Visit www.FutureVisions.org and click on the " Health Recovery " button for more. Love and Prayers, Beth ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2005 Report Share Posted April 6, 2005 Sorry. finger pushed too soon on send. Beth, just wanted to thank you for sending, what I think, is very interesting reading. Hugs June ----- Original Message ----- From: GoAwayRA@... Hi all ... this is an interesting article. I take what works for me in it and let the rest go. Hope you can find some value in it too. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Top 10 Health Secrets for those with a chronic health problem Illness is not, as many think, " a thunderbolt of fate, striking at random " . There is a cause-and-effect relationship between the environment we've created - the lifestyles and diets we've chosen - and the health problems we're experiencing in the Western world - and increasingly in other parts of the world that have adopted our ways. When it comes to identifying the chief cause of illness, we have met the enemy and s/he is us! If you have a chronic health problem, here is the least you need to know for a return to health. 1. The lower your body temperature, the worse your health. Your temperature can vary by more than two degrees over the month (even over one day!). As a rule of thumb, the lowest temperature days tend to be when you feel less well; you can sometimes learn a great deal from keeping a record of your temperature fluctuations vs daily health. 2. All symptoms are due to toxicity. It is a commonly held belief that disease can be caused by vitamin/mineral deficiencies. In most cases this is not true. Disease means there is a toxic, rather than a deficiency, situation. There is a much greater need to remove, rather than add, “stuffâ€. 3. All stress is dehydrating and all dehydration is stressful – and both contribute to toxicity. It is a vicious circle. Long term ill health requires a complete life-style change to eliminate stress – diet, mental/emotional, chemical, structural, energetic, environmental, and so many more types. 4. Dry mouth is the last outward sign of extreme dehydration. As you drink more water (we need at least four pints or two liters daily of clean, plain water) you will find your thirst starts to come back and realise that you have often mistaken hunger for thirst. 5. Dehydration, fear and anger are related. The liver cannot detoxify the body properly if it has been dehydrated (especially for decades). When the liver (the organ most linked to anger) cannot detoxify fully, it literally passes on those extra toxins to the kidneys (the organ most linked to fear). When neither can remove enough toxins, the dryness and resulting increase of toxicity in the body compounds itself, rather like compound interest. 6. The worse your health, the gentler your treatment needs to be. Low-energy illness has to be treated very gently. Any supplementation has to start with very small doses/amounts. The diet also has to be gentle - water-rich (especially vegetables and rice) and without any dry foods such as cheese and wheat-products since these dryer foods are vibrationally very challenging. 7. Cleansing requires open routes of elimination (would you drive a car with a potato stuck in the exhaust or tail pipe?). Healthier bowels/intestines and liver are vital for lowering toxicity levels and a return to health. 8. Cleansing also requires the addition of the important missing elements to enable integrity to return to the body. Water, the Omega 3 EFAs (essential fatty acids) and magnesium are all severely lacking in modern diets. Therefore these do not " supplement " but instead " complete " our dietary requirements. 9. The body tries very hard to keep toxicity from the heart and the head. It operates rather like a centrifuge - it will dump the toxicity first in fingers and toes, often in the joints. With increasing toxicity the body silts up, and this centrifugal force is curtailed as vitality drains away - all in equal measure. So this centrifugal force is our life force, if you will. By the time the head (mental/emotional problems) or the heart is affected, the toxicity levels are very high indeed. 10. All symptoms are related (over both time and space). Fatigue and low body temperature are symptoms common to low adrenal function, low thyroid function, low (or reactive or fluctuating) blood sugar (hypoglycaemia) and pH (acid/alkaline) imbalance. In other words, all these are interactive and also related to long-term dehydration and rising toxicity. About the submitter: Dianna Keel is an internationally acclaimed health consultant/coach. Visit www.FutureVisions.org and click on the " Health Recovery " button for more. Love and Prayers, Beth ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2006 Report Share Posted June 5, 2006 This article makes me think two things: 1. The " every child has special needs " nonsense makes me groan. It's as bad as " every child is gifted " , which says to me that this person has never met a gifted child who is becoming disruptive and depressed at his slow-moving classwork. I have two children, and let me tell you, my autistic son has a *hell* of a lot more " special needs " than my typically-developing daughter. This is the attitude that makes me feel guilty for not having the energy to do the dishes after a long day of turbo-parenting with a fast-moving autistic child. After all, " all children " are exhausting and special, so why should I be tired? This is the attitude that makes people feel as if they are crazy for having a hard time raising a disabled child. Someone corrected me once, saying that my son is " differently abled " . Well, yes, he has some awesome abilities, he reads wonderfully and has been able to do addition since he was 2 1-/2. In many ways he is a real pleasure to raise. But he can't communicate when he wants something to eat, doesn't notice when he hurts himself, and he can't handle going out to a restaurant.. That's pretty f***ing disabling. I doubt any of these sappy, " every child has special needs " people would like to wake up one day as " differently abled " as my son is. 2. The horrendous news stories about parents apparently going insane and murdering their darling children: Wow, these parents needed a *lot* more help and support then they were getting! The thought of my child getting so much as a bee sting makes me cry, so it's pretty unimaginable. But really, why is the community not providing respite care, and loads of other financial services and whatnot to these parents? I'm sure you guys all know the red-tape runaround and the several-year-long waitlist routine as well as I do. If not for my awesome husband, my Mom, my Dad, and my Mother in Law occassionally caring for my son, I too might go insane! What on earth do people do who don't have family to help out? They used to put these kids in institutions (horrible, but I have a point here), because no one actually expected mere humans to be able to handle a severely disabled child 24/7. Now everyone assumes that a good mommy will be happy to become a professional nurse for the next 30+ years, at full financial cost to herself, of course. Maybe that is just not a good option for everybody. Maybe some parents would just need a little bit of help to keep from doing something horrible. Would these tragedies have happened if they had a nurse for 2 hours a week giving some respite care and support services so the parents could have a little time to relax? Just some thoughts, Molly <a href= " http://lilypie.com " ><img src= " http://b3.lilypie.com/iqYWm5.png " alt= " Lilypie 3rd Birthday Ticker " border= " 0 " width= " 400 " height= " 80 " /></a> <a href= " http://lilypie.com " ><img src= " http://b2.lilypie.com/zvDcm5.png " alt= " Lilypie 2nd Birthday Ticker " border= " 0 " width= " 400 " height= " 80 " /></a> --------------------------------- Be a chatter box. Enjoy free PC-to-PC calls with Messenger with Voice. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 6, 2006 Report Share Posted June 6, 2006 When my son was younger, lower functioning and completely nonverbal, I was a single parent going through a nasty divorce and also dealing with a newborn who'd just had a serious vaccine injury & was quickly regressing into autism herself. I requested social work services for 3 years in a row - first from EI then from the school. In each case they refused, and documented that I didn't need them because I was " educated " (I'm still not sure what that means, but I always thought it might have meant " white " ). I was very open about feeling that I couldn't handle my son's needs and didn't feel I could handle him, even at one point requesting foster care because it was so overwhelming. The response was that it would be very hard to find anyone else who could learn to meet his medical needs (diet, supps, etc.) We've been on a waiting list for 5 years for respite, due to lack of workers. The school suggested if I wanted respite that I should start a program, so I went to one of the universities here and did that. The special ed. students who provide respite will have a one- year " respite " credit on their transcripts, plus they are paid. (Generally there is funding, but the respite agencies don't always have programs in place to recruit enough workers.) If anyone is interested in doing that email me offlist and I will give you the details. What has always stunned me is that during those years, I was quite blunt about how difficult I was finding the situation, yet in every case they took no action, not even to suggest I personally get some professional support. Luckily I found biomedical info. and got help on my own .... but for every parent like me, who is freely and loudly admitting to being at the point of needing that level of intervention (plus able to ultimately find my own resources to prevent disaster), how many mothers of kids like ours are out there who for whatever reason aren't open about how bad things are getting, and don't have the slightest idea where to turn? I think there should be a presumption that parents will have a hard time dealing with this, and services be made available for them, unless they specify that they are doing ok and don't need outside support. Although these are horrible stories, it is not hard to relate to the underlying despair. Amy Meanwhile, > 2. The horrendous news stories about parents apparently going insane and murdering their darling children: Wow, these parents needed a *lot* more help and support then they were getting! The thought of my child getting so much as a bee sting makes me cry, so it's pretty unimaginable. But really, why is the community not providing respite care, and loads of other financial services and whatnot to these parents? I'm sure you guys all know the red-tape runaround and the several-year-long waitlist routine as well as I do. If not for my awesome husband, my Mom, my Dad, and my Mother in Law occassionally caring for my son, I too might go insane! What on earth do people do who don't have family to help out? They used to put these kids in institutions (horrible, but I have a point here), because no one actually expected mere humans to be able to handle a severely disabled child 24/7. Now everyone assumes that a good mommy will be happy to become a professional nurse for > the next 30+ years, at full financial cost to herself, of course. Maybe that is just not a good option for everybody. Maybe some parents would just need a little bit of help to keep from doing something horrible. Would these tragedies have happened if they had a nurse for 2 hours a week giving some respite care and support services so the parents could have a little time to relax? > > Just some thoughts, > Molly > > > > > <a href= " http://lilypie.com " ><img src= " http://b3.lilypie.com/iqYWm5.png " alt= " Lilypie 3rd Birthday Ticker " border= " 0 " width= " 400 " height= " 80 " /></a> > <a href= " http://lilypie.com " ><img src= " http://b2.lilypie.com/zvDcm5.png " alt= " Lilypie 2nd Birthday Ticker " border= " 0 " width= " 400 " height= " 80 " /></a> > > --------------------------------- > Be a chatter box. Enjoy free PC-to-PC calls with Messenger with Voice. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2010 Report Share Posted October 13, 2010 Sursiliimp@... please provide me with the article I need to take to my doctor. I noticed silicone was mentioned often. I have saline. Is there risk with saline also? TY Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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