Guest guest Posted January 27, 2006 Report Share Posted January 27, 2006 > > Hi all - > > What's the minimum time you have to wait before doing another liver > cleanse? I did it > last week and it was awesome and can't wait to do it again! > > Deborah Deborah, If that was you first time, you can wait 2 weeks and do again, but after you've done a few, and are fairly cleaned out, I'd go for every 6 months. If I feel the need to do it sooner, I do, but every 6 months as a rule for me :-) http://happynutritionist.com/gallbladder.html L. Meydrech, CN Certified Nutritionist Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 29, 2006 Report Share Posted January 29, 2006 Hi , I can certainly understand your concern. The rule of self-health is " First, do thyself no harm " . I'll let Dr. (Hulda Regehr , Ph.D.,N.D.) answer that. Words from her book " The Cure for all Diseases " are self explanatory. Her book is where I first learned of the necessity and technique for flushing my liver and gallbladder. Enjoy: How safe is the liver cleanse? It is very safe. My opinion is based on over 500 cases, including many persons in their sev¬enties and eighties. None went to the hospital; none even re¬ported pain. However it can make you feel quite ill for one or two days afterwards, although in every one of these cases the maintenance parasite program had been neglected. This is why the instructions direct you to complete the parasite and kidney rinse programs first. CONGRATULATIONS You have taken out your gallstones without surgery! I like to think I have perfected this recipe, but I certainly can not take credit for its origin. It was invented hundreds, if not thousands, of years ago, THANK YOU, HERBALISTS! This procedure contradicts many modern medical view¬points. Gallstones are thought to be formed in the gallbladder, not the liver. They are thought to be few, not thousands. They are not linked to pains other than gallbladder attacks. It is easy to understand why this is thought: by the time you have acute pain attacks, some stones are in the gallbladder, are big enough and sufficiently calcified to see on X-ray, and have caused in¬flammation there. When the gallbladder is removed the acute attacks are gone, but the bursitis and other pains and digestive problems remain. The truth is self-evident. People who have had their gall¬bladder surgically removed still get plenty of green, bile-coated stones, and anyone who cares to dissect their stones can see that the concentric circles and crystals of cholesterol match textbook pictures of " gallstones " exactly. > > I am hesitant to do the cleanse because I have been warned that stones may be caught in the bile duct, precipitating emergency surgey .. Any advice ? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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