Guest guest Posted January 1, 2009 Report Share Posted January 1, 2009 Yeah it tends to do that which is what has stopped me from harvesting my own plants and trying a tea from it . I get to enjoy my plants as they flower. Cheri > > I've had to discontinue taking bloodroot -- it was really messing up my > gut. Ouch. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 23, 2009 Report Share Posted January 23, 2009 > > I've had to discontinue taking bloodroot -- it was really messing up >my gut. Ouch. > I have been taking bloodroot internally for the last 10 months and I have found the most important consideration is to make sure I am taking the bloodroot with a heavy meal of meat, eggs or dairy. I have taken from 2 grams to 7 grams per day and found I rarely had significant digestive upset if I followed this rule. On the rare occasion I would have a bit of digestive difficulty I would lay down and the upset would quickly pass. (Which is also why I would take my final dose of the day before going to bed as I found that even if I didn't have much in my stomach, for some reason, laying down enables the stomach to tolerate the bloodroot quite well. You can find this and alot of other helpful information about bloodroot at hopewelltechnologieslimited.com. They have also posted many peer-reviewed studies about the effectiveness of bloodroot to their site. (I have no connection with them of any kind.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2009 Report Share Posted January 24, 2009 Well Tim after 10 months something must be working. That was quite a haul! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2009 Report Share Posted January 24, 2009 Thank you for the good advice. I am worried that I read abstracts to papers indicating bloodroot caused precancerous lesions in mouths when people used oral products containing bloodroot. > > > > I've had to discontinue taking bloodroot -- it was really messing > up >my gut. Ouch. > > > > I have been taking bloodroot internally for the last 10 months and I > have found the most important consideration is to make sure I am > taking the bloodroot with a heavy meal of meat, eggs or dairy. I have > taken from 2 grams to 7 grams per day and found I rarely had > significant digestive upset if I followed this rule. > > On the rare occasion I would have a bit of digestive difficulty I > would lay down and the upset would quickly pass. (Which is also why I > would take my final dose of the day before going to bed as I found > that even if I didn't have much in my stomach, for some reason, > laying down enables the stomach to tolerate the bloodroot quite well. > > You can find this and alot of other helpful information about > bloodroot at hopewelltechnologieslimited.com. They have also posted > many peer-reviewed studies about the effectiveness of bloodroot to > their site. > > (I have no connection with them of any kind.) > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2009 Report Share Posted January 24, 2009 > > I have been taking bloodroot internally for the last 10 months and I > have found the most important consideration is to make sure I am > taking the bloodroot with a heavy meal of meat, eggs or dairy. I have > taken from 2 grams to 7 grams per day and found I rarely had > significant digestive upset if I followed this rule. Wow -- not exactly the standard anti-cancer diet. What seems to work best for me is a lot of veggies and just a bit of salmon, and a few range eggs a week (maybe 2 - 4). I do also consume FO / CC on most days -- 2 tbs cottage cheese, 2 tbs yogurt, 2 scoops whey isolate, and 3 - 4 tbs flaxseed oil. Oh, and I often throw greens powder into the mix. Most carbs do seem to be really really bad for me. > > You can find this and alot of other helpful information about > bloodroot at hopewelltechnologieslimited.com. They have also posted > many peer-reviewed studies about the effectiveness of bloodroot to > their site. > Oh, these guys -- yea, I've seen their site. It doesn't impress me that much, compared, say, to the sites discussing oleander and the sites discussing artemisinin. But what is important is whether bloodroot works or not. Has it helped you? Did it decrease tumor loads and/or get rid of your cancer? I am very interested to hear about this. > (I have no connection with them of any kind.) > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2009 Report Share Posted January 24, 2009 I helped our 16 year old son (at the time) with Cantron and Bloodroot (salve) to pull the bone tumor out! It took 1.5 years to complete the treatment. Nic is now 18.5 years old and perfectly fine. Johanne From: jrrjim Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2009 9:47 AM Subject: [ ] Re: Some negative input on bloodroot > > I have been taking bloodroot internally for the last 10 months and I > have found the most important consideration is to make sure I am > taking the bloodroot with a heavy meal of meat, eggs or dairy. I have > taken from 2 grams to 7 grams per day and found I rarely had > significant digestive upset if I followed this rule. Wow -- not exactly the standard anti-cancer diet. What seems to work best for me is a lot of veggies and just a bit of salmon, and a few range eggs a week (maybe 2 - 4). I do also consume FO / CC on most days -- 2 tbs cottage cheese, 2 tbs yogurt, 2 scoops whey isolate, and 3 - 4 tbs flaxseed oil. Oh, and I often throw greens powder into the mix. Most carbs do seem to be really really bad for me. > > You can find this and alot of other helpful information about > bloodroot at hopewelltechnologieslimited.com. They have also posted > many peer-reviewed studies about the effectiveness of bloodroot to > their site. > Oh, these guys -- yea, I've seen their site. It doesn't impress me that much, compared, say, to the sites discussing oleander and the sites discussing artemisinin. But what is important is whether bloodroot works or not. Has it helped you? Did it decrease tumor loads and/or get rid of your cancer? I am very interested to hear about this. > (I have no connection with them of any kind.) > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2009 Report Share Posted January 24, 2009 Oh yes bone tumors take a long time to pull out. I used the salve to pull out a breast tumor. Now I am taking the tonic which is bringing something to the surface that was dormant. Best to get it out. Cheri > > I helped our 16 year old son (at the time) with Cantron and Bloodroot (salve) to pull the bone tumor out! It took 1.5 years to complete the treatment. > > Nic is now 18.5 years old and perfectly fine. > > Johanne > > > From: jrrjim > Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2009 9:47 AM > > Subject: [ ] Re: Some negative input on bloodroot > > > > > > I have been taking bloodroot internally for the last 10 months and I > > have found the most important consideration is to make sure I am > > taking the bloodroot with a heavy meal of meat, eggs or dairy. I have > > taken from 2 grams to 7 grams per day and found I rarely had > > significant digestive upset if I followed this rule. > > Wow -- not exactly the standard anti-cancer diet. > > What seems to work best for me is a lot of veggies and just a bit of > salmon, and a few range eggs a week (maybe 2 - 4). > > I do also consume FO / CC on most days -- 2 tbs cottage cheese, 2 tbs > yogurt, 2 scoops whey isolate, and 3 - 4 tbs flaxseed oil. Oh, and I > often throw greens powder into the mix. > > Most carbs do seem to be really really bad for me. > > > > > You can find this and alot of other helpful information about > > bloodroot at hopewelltechnologieslimited.com. They have also posted > > many peer-reviewed studies about the effectiveness of bloodroot to > > their site. > > > > Oh, these guys -- yea, I've seen their site. It doesn't impress me > that much, compared, say, to the sites discussing oleander and the > sites discussing artemisinin. But what is important is whether > bloodroot works or not. > > Has it helped you? Did it decrease tumor loads and/or get rid of your > cancer? I am very interested to hear about this. > > > (I have no connection with them of any kind.) > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2009 Report Share Posted January 24, 2009 I'm just worried that I will be cured of cancer only to die from a hole in my duodenum big enough to drive a truck through. > > Oh yes bone tumors take a long time to pull out. I used the salve to > pull out a breast tumor. Now I am taking the tonic which is bringing > something to the surface that was dormant. Best to get it out. > > Cheri > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.