Guest guest Posted August 19, 2009 Report Share Posted August 19, 2009 I read that it was the coconut water, rather than the milk. A woman with cataracts accidentally splashed some of the thin liquid from inside a coconut she was opening, and it quickly helped the one eye it had splashed. She was able to compare to her other eye and voilà!I got a small juice-box of it at my local health-food store.Thanks for reminding me to try it. It has a long refrigerator life, fortunately. Coconut milk from a can would be too simple! ;-) Be well,Léna Judy did you read about the coconut milk cure for cataracts? From a fresh coconut a few drops and hot/warm washer over the eyes for 10 minutes? Jane ___________________________________________________________________ not with cataracts but have had great success treating cats with herpes virus and get those horrible, bulging inverted eyes that if untreated will quickly burst and then, of course, the sight is lost. I make the eyedrops in small amounts of 3 tablespoons each of 10ppm CS and aloe vera gel with 10 drops of DMSO, storing in a brown glass dropper bottle and refrigerate which thickens the gel. If the eye problem is caught early and drops are put in twice a day, healing is almost 100% within just a few days. I personally believe the cold drops are soothing to inflamed, painful eyes because the cats I've treated never objected to the drops. Think the drops would be healing for most eye infections. Would you keep me updated on treatment of your cataracts? I have them in both eyes and not inclined to go the surgery route! Judy No virus found in this incoming message.Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.392 / Virus Database: 270.13.61/2312 - Release Date: 08/18/09 18:05:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2009 Report Share Posted August 19, 2009 Please note, it was the liquid from inside a coconut she was opening. Not something preserved for commercial sale. There are lots of definitions of coconut milk and coconut water so please don't even go there. Just get a coconut that has liquid in it and use that liquid. You do not know what's in a juice box. Please don't put it in your eyes!! Saralou Guyot Léna wrote: I read that it was the coconut water, rather than the milk. A woman with cataracts accidentally splashed some of the thin liquid from inside a coconut she was opening, and it quickly helped the one eye it had splashed. She was able to compare to her other eye and voilà! I got a small juice-box of it at my local health-food store.Thanks for reminding me to try it. It has a long refrigerator life, fortunately. Coconut milk from a can would be too simple! ;-) Be well, Léna Judy did you read about the coconut milk cure for cataracts? From a fresh coconut a few drops and hot/warm washer over the eyes for 10 minutes? Jane ___________________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2009 Report Share Posted August 19, 2009 Hi Saralou,My only reservation about cracking open a coconut is that it's hard to control and the juice can be contaminated by the outer hull which can sometimes have molds or other things from the supermarket. In upstate NY, this is a consideration. The Coconut water I got a couple weeks ago was a tetra-pak (not exactly the same as the kiddie juice-boxes) of Harvest Bay original Coconut Water: just coconut water, no other ingredients. (expiration date: Oct 4, 09) "Fresh" is a risky thing in the northeast boonies, so I'd hoped that this might be the safest approach. No? Be well,Léna Please note, it was the liquid from inside a coconut she was opening. Not something preserved for commercial sale. There are lots of definitions of coconut milk and coconut water so please don't even go there. Just get a coconut that has liquid in it and use that liquid. You do not know what's in a juice box. Please don't put it in your eyes!! Saralou Guyot Léna wrote: I read that it was the coconut water, rather than the milk. A woman with cataracts accidentally splashed some of the thin liquid from inside a coconut she was opening, and it quickly helped the one eye it had splashed. She was able to compare to her other eye and voilà! I got a small juice-box of it at my local health-food store.Thanks for reminding me to try it. It has a long refrigerator life, fortunately. Coconut milk from a can would be too simple! ;-) Be well, Léna Judy did you read about the coconut milk cure for cataracts? From a fresh coconut a few drops and hot/warm washer over the eyes for 10 minutes? Jane ___________________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2009 Report Share Posted August 19, 2009 Good points, Lena. If it were for my eyes, I'd stick with honey and DMSO if I couldn't locate the stuff that the reported healing used. I'd be inclined to scrub and bleach and rinse and rinse and rinse some more the coconut around the eyes. Shave it, carve it off so it's smoothish and soaped and rinsed and then poke the eyes in and drain the coconut. I'd also try a taste test between the fresh and the tetra-pak to see if I could discern anything. I don't understand how the tetrapack was preserved. Does radiation kill the good stuff in the liquid? I'm pretty sure high heat does. Will send you a couple of references from the coconut list off list. They know coconut and coconut products considerably better than I do. Saralou Guyot Léna wrote: Hi Saralou, My only reservation about cracking open a coconut is that it's hard to control and the juice can be contaminated by the outer hull which can sometimes have molds or other things from the supermarket. In upstate NY, this is a consideration. The Coconut water I got a couple weeks ago was a tetra-pak (not exactly the same as the kiddie juice-boxes) of Harvest Bay original Coconut Water: just coconut water, no other ingredients. (expiration date: Oct 4, 09) "Fresh" is a risky thing in the northeast boonies, so I'd hoped that this might be the safest approach. No? Be well, Léna Please note, it was the liquid from inside a coconut she was opening. Not something preserved for commercial sale. There are lots of definitions of coconut milk and coconut water so please don't even go there. Just get a coconut that has liquid in it and use that liquid. You do not know what's in a juice box. Please don't put it in your eyes!! Saralou Guyot Léna wrote: I read that it was the coconut water, rather than the milk. A woman with cataracts accidentally splashed some of the thin liquid from inside a coconut she was opening, and it quickly helped the one eye it had splashed. She was able to compare to her other eye and voilà! I got a small juice-box of it at my local health-food store.Thanks for reminding me to try it. It has a long refrigerator life, fortunately. Coconut milk from a can would be too simple! ;-) Be well, Léna Judy did you read about the coconut milk cure for cataracts? From a fresh coconut a few drops and hot/warm washer over the eyes for 10 minutes? Jane ___________________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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