Guest guest Posted August 31, 2006 Report Share Posted August 31, 2006 I JUST WALKED OUT OF MY DOCTORS OFFICE WHICH WAS ON THE SECOND FLOOR OF A HOTEL. AS SOO AS THE ELEVATORS OPENED SMELLED MOLD COMING FROM THE INDOOR PLANTERS. who <jeaninem660@...> wrote: -great advice erik,Im not dead yet but have felt that I got close a few times. I can detect mold and chemicals and even particles that go up my nose and change my voice and cause sinus headackes if I dont get them washed out quick enough, but the last slam I got was outside, the air was decent, and weather it was one myco or one mold spore with myco's attached I do not know but there was no warning and it has put me right back where I have tried so hard to come from. Im just really confussed how one minute you can state how you can pre- consieve exposure before it happens and the next minute you are talking about takeing a bad hit. so you cant detect any better than the rest of us. however your advice is great on evacuateing and decontaminateing, but once inhaled its to late to do anything. other than haveing a bubble on my head, I dont know what else to do. the problem with detect is that, that is when you breath it up your nose. -- In , " erikmoldwarrior " <erikmoldwarrior@...> wrote: > > " centurydemos " <centurydemos@> wrote: > The fact I was sleeping in a cold car to > > breathe wasn't for the fun of it. yet, do they even want > > to learn from my tragedy so that the next person may not > > endure such a horrible illness? Do they even care about me & > > Tlee losing not only our lives, but all our belongings. NO!! > > > > Nobody cares and NOBODY is liable. 2 people are poisoned, > > unable to work, need help..and NOBODY accepts any liabilty. > > > > I will speak out. If I don't then..shame on me. Some of my > > own family may be ashamed of me for blasting this medical > > clan..the Drs. are close knit and they all know about me > > & tlee. Shame on all of you. You are in medicine for > > the wrong reasons. Sometimes a patient DOES know more than > > you do. > > > I thought it was bad enough when doctors didn't want to learn from > my experience as an original CFS prototype who was trying on the > very first day of " CFS " to get the CDC/NIH to look at mold, but it > was even MORE bizarre when I exhibited an unexpected recovery while > in the NIH ampligen program and they took no interest in how I did > it. > Of course, I've told all of you over the last eight years what I'm > doing. > I'm just following my military training in biological warfare and > treating mycotoxins exactly like Nerve Agent. > " Detect, Evacuate, Avoid and Decontaminate " or you're DEAD! > Catchy, but that's the military for you. Always a mnemonic acronmym > so you don't forget. > - > --------------------------------- Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 31, 2006 Report Share Posted August 31, 2006 There are a lot of things going on with mold exposures biologically, and I'd venture that these physiological things are exceedingly complex and interrelated.. How do doctors define, for example, what is an 'allergy' and what is a toxic reaction and what is a biologically active substance with toxic possibilities.. (under some conditions?) Does anyone know the answer to that question or how I might find out? Also, Dr. Shoemaker mentions that the " Heidelberg Retinal Flowmeter' is able to detect a decrease in bloodflow to the retina a very short amount of time after initial mold exposure. Does anyone know more about this or any other, similar biomarkers of mold exposure that could be leveraged into numbers that showed the potential of brain damage, for example? (retinal cells are a good example of what is happening in the brain, I've heard because they are one of the only parts of it that is accessible directly from outside the body noninvasively) Sometimes, when I get mold exposure, there is a fairly predictable cluster of effects that I bet could be measured.. I'm sure others have noticed this.. The support we all get here is valuable but it doesn't accomplish much in terms of change on a legal or scientific level. Don't you all think that its time to stop playing around and going on and on about our health issues and instead, start trying to get together to measure and quantify what is going on a bit more scientifically? If doctors are too terrified of the 'gatekeepers' currently in power, then perhaps its time for us, who have much more to gain and less to lose.. (they have already taken our health..) to do our best to package up some real-world information on what happens to us so that it can't be ignored? Its the only way.. if we wait for the 'medical establishment' to act it could be another 50 years and we could be behind where we are now..-because by then things will quite possibly be MUCH more polarized and political and MUCH less open to information like this that could require some kind of expenditures on poor people's issues. Seriously.. We may be missing out on speaking up now when we might be able to make a difference - but without cold hard impenetrable data its very difficult as the medical and political establishments will just ignore us as we are not scientists.. (or more significantly, lobbyists holding cash.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2006 Report Share Posted September 1, 2006 when you get to the point you feel faint, it is toxic i would presume LiveSimply <quackadillian@...> wrote: There are a lot of things going on with mold exposures biologically, and I'd venture that these physiological things are exceedingly complex and interrelated.. How do doctors define, for example, what is an 'allergy' and what is a toxic reaction and what is a biologically active substance with toxic possibilities.. (under some conditions?) Does anyone know the answer to that question or how I might find out? Also, Dr. Shoemaker mentions that the " Heidelberg Retinal Flowmeter' is able to detect a decrease in bloodflow to the retina a very short amount of time after initial mold exposure. Does anyone know more about this or any other, similar biomarkers of mold exposure that could be leveraged into numbers that showed the potential of brain damage, for example? (retinal cells are a good example of what is happening in the brain, I've heard because they are one of the only parts of it that is accessible directly from outside the body noninvasively) Sometimes, when I get mold exposure, there is a fairly predictable cluster of effects that I bet could be measured.. I'm sure others have noticed this.. The support we all get here is valuable but it doesn't accomplish much in terms of change on a legal or scientific level. Don't you all think that its time to stop playing around and going on and on about our health issues and instead, start trying to get together to measure and quantify what is going on a bit more scientifically? If doctors are too terrified of the 'gatekeepers' currently in power, then perhaps its time for us, who have much more to gain and less to lose.. (they have already taken our health..) to do our best to package up some real-world information on what happens to us so that it can't be ignored? Its the only way.. if we wait for the 'medical establishment' to act it could be another 50 years and we could be behind where we are now..-because by then things will quite possibly be MUCH more polarized and political and MUCH less open to information like this that could require some kind of expenditures on poor people's issues. Seriously.. We may be missing out on speaking up now when we might be able to make a difference - but without cold hard impenetrable data its very difficult as the medical and political establishments will just ignore us as we are not scientists.. (or more significantly, lobbyists holding cash.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2006 Report Share Posted September 1, 2006 I just feel very, very weak for no apparent reason; not having done anything strenuous, etc. --- Leigh McCall-Alton <mccallalton@...> wrote: > when you get to the point you feel faint, it is > toxic i would presume > > LiveSimply <quackadillian@...> wrote: > There are a lot of things going on with > mold exposures biologically, > and I'd venture that these physiological things > are exceedingly > complex and interrelated.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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