General Discussion Undecided where to post - do it here. |
Reply to Thread New Thread |
![]() |
#21 |
|
The Gerson Therapy cures diabetes I don't think the present diet is as good as the old one because of this omission. It was eliminated because the livers used back in 1989 were contaminated with Campylobacter. They should've just frozen the livers for a few weeks, as that kills most parasites, bacteria and especially Campylobacter which is easily killed this way. |
![]() |
![]() |
#22 |
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
#23 |
|
As Madfranks said, Threads like this make me proud to be a member of this forum. First off I'd like to thank everyone for their kind words and advice.
I found this site very interesting, http://www.ihealthtube.com/ but as Letter Factory said, "I don't mean to rain on anyone's parade, but has anyone tried any of these alternative treatments and seen them work?", and I'm a skeptic also, but unless we don't try we'll never know. TPTB don't want us healthy, don't want us running at full potential, they want us strong enough to go to work and pay our taxes, and that's how they control us. |
![]() |
![]() |
#24 |
|
The first thing that people must realize (and I really don't understand why the medical establishment did this) was call them the same thing. IDDM (insulin dependent diabetes mellitus), as people have quoted properly is an auto-immune disease. NIDDM (just add non in front) is not. Routinely people mistake the two considering them the same (Type 2) and think we're bad eaters and lazy. Generally, the first question out of everyones mouth is, "you're not fat", duh....... anyways, it is a bitch, but, highly manageable. Kids with this have to be carefully watched and ingrained in them the importance of a well maintained glucose level. A couple of points higher over long periods of time will blow the system out. Think of sugar as a thickener. The higher it is the thicker your blood becomes. Now, try to pump goo through all those little vessels and you end up with a high pressure system that could burst at any time at its weakest point (Eyes are the worst, kidneys, circulation in the extremities, so on and so on). Now, another thing to watch out for is mood swings (change depending on sugar level). The brain panics when the levels are not optimal and will (in a lot of cases) skip reasoning centers the brain would normally process. Think fight/flight scenario. We may burst out uncontrollable or before we realize we have. I've apologized a few times for an outburst (most realize now its not me or them, just the wrong time to push me). The little girls dangerous time is not feeding her insulin. She may or may not feel symptoms and drop on a dime. I could ramble on forever about the subject, but, I'll leave it to you guys to ask if you want. Couple important things to remember, if a "Type 1" hits the floor, they do not need insulin (9 out of 10 times), they need fast acting sugar (and I mean fast), think juice/pop (not diet)/ sugar packs rubbed between cheek and gum). The other 1 out of 10 is the denier that doesn't watch their disease and runs the sugar so high that they coma out. I can't stress how the maintaining of a normal sugar is so important. Getting the disease young, you have a cumulative effect over the years and its the growing/high school (I wanna fit in) that beats the shit out of most of us so that by the time we're in our 30's or 40's, the problems start. BTW, I've stocked up about years worth of insulin incase SHTF. Just gotta keep it refrigerated............. They still don't know what causes it (hmmmm), but like JQP says, the alternative is worse, but, its still royally sucks..........
|
![]() |
![]() |
#25 |
|
As Madfranks said, Threads like this make me proud to be a member of this forum. First off I'd like to thank everyone for their kind words and advice. |
![]() |
Reply to Thread New Thread |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|