Guest guest Posted December 16, 2010 Report Share Posted December 16, 2010 Dave, of course not. But if you have little money and you need food and the pair of pants isn't part of the problem then why would you get rid of them? How do you determine the pants are a problem? Especially when your body may well be reacting internally and you can't tell for sure. The point I keep pushing with you and the others is how do each of us determine what is causing our reactions and what isn't? We obviously can't just keep buying new clothes. There's a limit. We obviously can't afford to just keep moving from place to place without some sort of plan to determine if the new place is better than the old one. Are you healthier now than before you moved out of the house? Some on this group have moved into a bad place and now can't afford to move again. What do they do to stop their suffering? I've asked the group this before: How do you decide what you are reacting to and what you aren't? If you don't know or can't figure it out then how do you stop the reactions? If multiple sources, how do you prioritize which to focus on first? How do you know the reactions are not from external exposures, but something internal instead? If we can't answer these questions, and experiment at least a little to find out, won't we just keep repeating the same mistakes? How do we get better at managing our exposures to stop from getting sicker? There are a number on this group who have figured it out, most of whom have left because they don't need us anymore. A couple have discussed this just today. What do others do? If 50 people told you the problem was you are wearing orange socks, would you stop wearing orange socks? Of course not! That means you do have some method for making decisions rather than blindly doing whatever the next person suggests or demands. YOU must decide. How do you do that? This discussion is what would help a lot of us who are still struggling. Carl Grimes Healthy Habitats LLC ----- Thank you Carl, my only reply is, is your health worth a pair of pants? I've talked to 50 people since my initial exposure and they've all said rh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2010 Report Share Posted December 16, 2010 We don't have to agree in this group on avoidance. If we all lived in the same house and had to decide jointly on what to do that would be different!! We would have to agree what to do, since our actions would affect each other. A person's beliefs, decisions and actions affect only themselves, so no reason to be upset by other people having different opinions. > > Tug, I'm not trying to cause drama, infact, the opposite. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2010 Report Share Posted December 16, 2010 IF your house was very moldy and it was the only place in the world that was, THEN leaving everything there and leaving right away would make PERFECT sense. However there are alot of sick bldgs, sick from water damage or other things and how do you know " new " things you buy or get are any better than the ones you have? I tried to tell this to friend that was pressuring me to move into an apartment in a hurry. I said if I couldn't tell my house had a problem for four years even AFTER I joined this group, how could I walk into an apt for a few minutes and decide it would be a healthy place for me? He finally talked me into it and turned out I was right...I was SICKER there. They had these baseboard heaters that were clogged with years of dirt and a older of dead animal in basement and stairwell I didn't smell when I looked at it, and when neighbors moved, bugs ran into my apartment. My own home was pristine by comparison to that place. It was a waste of my time and money and had an effect on my health. So since your place is not the only place in town w problems, how do you know clothes you buy weren't store in contaminated place, the fabric wasn't made at contaminated place, weresn't taken home and kept for awhile at someones 'worse' house and then returned to store, etc, etc, etc.. You believe what you beleive but don't force it on others. > > The question is: Works for who? > > There is no single protocol which works for everyone. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2010 Report Share Posted December 16, 2010 sorry to hear that dragonflymcs, it'a long hard road for many of us. maybe they are colonized. I've been out of the WDB for 9 years, but have only practiced advoidance for around 5 years, late last year I started noticeing a change in my hypersensitive reactions but I'm pretty sure it's related more to the allergy part of this for me. cant say my allergies have disappeared but the last time the IgE was checked it was 0. down from around 18 a few years before, not sure what that means but practiceing advoidance and washing the sinuses has helped with the allergies as well as the chemical sensitivities. some re-exposures can still knock me for a lupe, and different ones affect me in different ways, but I can tolerate some things better than I use to. even now if I felling worse over all,sometimes or most times do to being colonized, re-exposures than affect me worse than at other times when I'm felling better. still cant spend much time is places were some is even mildly getting to me as I keep felling worse and worse. it may be that the unmasking and the sensitivies do get worse in ways before they get better. hard to explain, maybe it's do to colonization. I do believe that more people are getting colonized with these WDB exposures than whats being realized, but at the same time I can see where differences in the WDB itself would make a difference. I spent years not really thinking it was very possable to get colonized from these exposures but at the same time I knew there was something still going on within my body that was playing havic, no matter what I did or tried. it wasn't until I tried the antifungal nasal spray and had relief with the polops in my sinuses, and when I read about biofilms's it all finally started makeing more sence. sometimes I fell it's kindof useless to try to help anyone going through this, we cant give alot of good advice without getting alot of details and they cant see beyond what they precieve until they get educated and by the time that happens they should be able to help theirself and not really need any advice. so really it is a road we all must travel alone to one extent or another. > > Their problems began in their 40's but they have children just as ill in their > 20's. > >  >  > God Bless !! > dragonflymcs > Mayleen > > > > > ________________________________ > From: osisposis <jeaninem660@...> > > Sent: Thu, December 16, 2010 3:50:02 PM > Subject: [] Re: Avoidance > >  > dragonfly, was wondering how old they are, our defence systems > decline with age from around I think I read 50 or 60, that could play a role in > the ability to recover. > > lots of things out there to worry about that can keep us sick. I couldn't > believe the difference in how I felt day to day by just getting a brita pitcher > and filtering my water. > > so much to think about. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 Carl, you say " We obviously can't afford to just keep moving from place to place without some sort of plan to determine if the new place is better than the old one. " I couldnt agree more. Of course if you visit a new place and start to react, get the hell out. But what if like me, you dont have reactions fast enough (except to chemicals) to be able to pinpoint what exactly cause my symtpoms. Maybe we could compile a list of factors that are more frequently linked to problems. For example someone posted that the bathroom 's sealing in his/her motel room was waiting for a disaster. So if we could describe what a bathroom " waiting for a disaster " looks like, we could make better decisions. It would really be awesome if you, Dr Thrasher and would put together a list of elements to look for or to avoid if possible when moving to another location. Because I think experience (as in having seen many houses/appartments causing health problems) is perhaps the best predictor of future problems. Or maybe that list already exist and someone can tell me where to find it? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 I also read in another thread that if you arent gonna leave everything behind, washing clothes in 1cup of ammonia/load of laundry should suffice to remove a great deal of mold/toxins. Is there some consensus on that? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 When we left our moldy motor home our clothes had a peculiar smell. I washed them with the ammonia and the smell came out and I was not reactive to them. I have been able to keep my clothes & fabrics I use for sewing. I bought ammonian wipes to clean hard surfaces & used C. Grimes suggestion of GSE/water to spray in A/C of vehicle. I have cross contaminated our small motor home but it still is a refuge for me. I am sensitive some what to chemicals but not overly now. In the '94 I was so sensitive I could not leave my house but after a rigid problem of diet & detox & prayer I was healed of severe sensitivities. Only formaldehyde bothers me now and maybe a perfume might annoy me. I personally found this cross contamination very confusing but as I sought after answers on this board and talking to a few and experimenting with cleaning the items and testing I am more at peace with keeping the stuff rather than throwing it all out. Although I am prepared to do this if I find it hindering my healing. We really are so different in our reactions to our environment.   But I have done so well on the CMS-a ton of symptoms left after 3 mos on it. Just recently I am experiencing a setback for we are house sitting at the moment and it has mold and leaves outside everywhere and I have some symptoms back. We are leaving on Monday and I am hoping I will regain my health. My Dr told me b/c of my genotype I can walk into a place & be the only one affected---so now my journey of finding safes places begisn. I pray that you will be led to do what is the very best for you. From: lyme_exterminator <wanna_party_in_LA@...> Subject: [] Re: Avoidance Date: Friday, December 17, 2010, 3:34 AM  I also read in another thread that if you arent gonna leave everything behind, washing clothes in 1cup of ammonia/load of laundry should suffice to remove a great deal of mold/toxins. Is there some consensus on that? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 what is GSE? I actually do suspect that the AC of my car might be contaminated because many times I turn it on I have something akin to an allergic reaction. In lyme forums I think GSE=grape seed extracts So you just mix that other GSE in water, put it in a spray bottle and shoot in the AC vents? what about putting ammonia in water in a spray bottle and shooting that? Also, after you wash your clothes with ammonia, do they smell like it? How many washes does it take to go away? > > When we left our moldy motor home our clothes had a peculiar smell. I washed them with the ammonia and the smell came out and I was not reactive to them. I have been able to keep my clothes & fabrics I use for sewing. I bought ammonian wipes to clean hard surfaces & used C. Grimes suggestion of GSE/water to spray in A/C of vehicle. I have cross contaminated our small motor home but it still is a refuge for me. I am sensitive some what to chemicals but not overly now. In the '94 I was so sensitive I could not leave my house but after a rigid problem of diet & detox & prayer I was healed of severe sensitivities. Only formaldehyde bothers me now and maybe a perfume might annoy me. I personally found this cross contamination very confusing but as I sought after answers on this board and talking to a few and experimenting with cleaning the items and testing I am more at peace with keeping the stuff rather than throwing it all out. Although I am > prepared to do this if I find it hindering my healing. We really are so different in our reactions to our environment. >  >  But I have done so well on the CMS-a ton of symptoms left after 3 mos on it. Just recently I am experiencing a setback for we are house sitting at the moment and it has mold and leaves outside Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 Lyme-ext, Carl has a book out on healthy homes and Jeff May, also of this group, has several out. Reading these gives you an idea of what to look for, what 'is' a healthy home. Maybe start a notebook and make your list of things to look for. Maybe we as a group in the future sometime could start to compile a list of things we look for, that wouldn't be considered complete. > > Carl, you say " We obviously can't afford to just keep moving from place to place without some sort of plan to determine if the new place is better than the old one. " I couldnt agree more. > > Of course if you visit a new place and start to react, get the hell out. But what if like me, you dont have reactions fast enough (except to chemicals) to be able to pinpoint what exactly cause my symtpoms. > > Maybe we could compile a list of factors that are more frequently linked to problems. For example someone posted that the bathroom 's sealing in his/her motel room was waiting for a disaster. So if we could describe what a bathroom " waiting for a disaster " looks like, we could make better decisions. > > It would really be awesome if you, Dr Thrasher and would put together a list of elements to look for or to avoid if possible when moving to another location. Because I think experience (as in having seen many houses/appartments causing health problems) is perhaps the best predictor of future problems. > > Or maybe that list already exist and someone can tell me where to find it? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 Hi Carl,   In my particular case I am very reactive almost immediately on everything, most all. In regards to clothes I get a respiratoty reaction, swollen throat, immediately. So I know right away it is bad. I had no odor here when we came. There was cleaner smell and the products were in here. So we asked they be removed and the place vented. The owners did and when we came back still some but more faint. We then left the place open some windows. We put baking soda everywhere in cups and then the smells were gone. My smell is acute now, I could smell nothing else. Except in laundry room. For months I could smell nothing here, then summer came and the place had to be closed up. After about a month I think (or so) heavy rains here too. An odor appeared in a room. We did not use it so we left it opened all the time. Now I do believe it got wet somewhere cause the smell is stronger and I react to it. Still canot find water damage. Still when we closed the place up I had no respiratory reactions , no smell, but did not feel good. And I cannot put my finger on it. So something is wrong here, but no reactions that I normally get. Except now for that one room.. So very very hard to find a place period. I let my nose lead me and my lungs and yet something I could not smell was making me sick. Making the choice with no testing is very very hard. My clothes though, I can tell because I cannot breathe. So I guess if hidden mold or bad remediation maybe with no smell, HOW CAN YOU TELL ??? I am lost now. Owners are almost always not honest. Like my current ones who did not tell us they were in forclosure...................................... God Bless !! dragonflymcs Mayleen ________________________________ From: Carl E. Grimes <grimes@...> Sent: Thu, December 16, 2010 10:35:43 PM Subject: Re: [] Re: Avoidance  Dave, of course not. But if you have little money and you need food and the pair of pants isn't part of the problem then why would you get rid of them? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 worked for me, I also used dawn dish soap with it. some thing took a few washings , but yes the ammonia helped alot with getting the smell out. > > I also read in another thread that if you arent gonna leave everything behind, washing clothes in 1cup of ammonia/load of laundry should suffice to remove a great deal of mold/toxins. Is there some consensus on that? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 Carl, personally I believe in EXTREME avoidance. IMO that's the only way to survive mold exposure. This is only my opinion but as long as you drag anything that's been contaminated from one place to another at best you'll only partially recover. I live off a limited income my total wardrobe costs me slightly over 100.00 come Sunday I'll throw all my belongings away and start all over from scratch. If anyone knows about living on below the poverty level that would be me but because I'm the only one thats been affected I can get away with living on the most basics necessities of life. (V told me to tell you hello) > > Dave, of course not. But if you have little money and you need > food and the pair of pants isn't part of the problem then why > would you get rid of them? How do you determine the pants are a > problem? Especially when your body may well be reacting > internally and you can't tell for sure. > > The point I keep pushing with you and the others is how do each > of us determine what is causing our reactions and what isn't? We > obviously can't just keep buying new clothes. There's a limit. We > obviously can't afford to just keep moving from place to place > without some sort of plan to determine if the new place is better > than the old one. Are you healthier now than before you moved > out of the house? Some on this group have moved into a bad > place and now can't afford to move again. What do they do to > stop their suffering? > > I've asked the group this before: How do you decide what you are > reacting to and what you aren't? If you don't know or can't figure it > out then how do you stop the reactions? If multiple sources, how > do you prioritize which to focus on first? How do you know the > reactions are not from external exposures, but something internal > instead? > > If we can't answer these questions, and experiment at least a > little to find out, won't we just keep repeating the same mistakes? > How do we get better at managing our exposures to stop from > getting sicker? > > There are a number on this group who have figured it out, most > of whom have left because they don't need us anymore. A couple > have discussed this just today. What do others do? > > If 50 people told you the problem was you are wearing orange > socks, would you stop wearing orange socks? Of course not! > That means you do have some method for making decisions > rather than blindly doing whatever the next person suggests or > demands. YOU must decide. How do you do that? This > discussion is what would help a lot of us who are still struggling. > > Carl Grimes > Healthy Habitats LLC > > ----- > Thank you Carl, my only reply is, is your health worth a pair of pants? > I've talked to 50 people since my initial exposure and they've all said rh > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2010 Report Share Posted December 17, 2010 I like your advice Carl. You can't throw away everything, though Tug is right that some things are not worth it. My experience is different than most of you in that I do not have most of the ill effects that you have. I am extremely hyperreactive, going into a severe cough within seconds of some exposures. Interestingly, one recent problem was my wife spending a few hours in a very moldy building. I reacted to her as soon as she walked in the door of our home. I reacted to the chair she sat down on. I reacted to her car. I reacted particularly badly to her hair. Fortunately, her clothes were fine after being washed (high heat in the dryer), she was fine after showering, her upholstered chair was fine after spending a warm fall day in the sun, and her car was fine after fumigating a week with pans of Clorox. Because I am so hyperreactive, it's easier for me to tell what bothers me. I have found an old shirt left outside under the deck a month, very moldy and causing reaction; non-reactive after washing, though discarded since mold stain didn't wash out. I have never had clothes so contaminated that laundering would not solve the problem, though a few detergents caused me to react, particularly a few which highlight cleaning enzymes on the box. Each person must refrain from paranoia and experiment to see what is salvagable and use common sense to balance to cost-benefit relationship of what is financially managable versus the cost of health damage. Re: Avoidance Posted by: " Carl E. Grimes " grimes@... grimeshh Date: Thu Dec 16, 2010 8:36 pm ((PST)) Dave, of course not. But if you have little money and you need food and the pair of pants isn't part of the problem then why would you get rid of them? How do you determine the pants are a problem? Especially when your body may well be reacting internally and you can't tell for sure. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2010 Report Share Posted December 18, 2010 Gil-quick question-aren't you afraid of putting super moldy stuff in your washer? I just had to replace a practically brand new washer because of mold in it that I could not get rid of (no matter how much washing and bleaching I did). I had previously used my washer to clean things that seemed moldy and I did have great success but... I now have a complete lockdown on my washer. My daughters (who don't live at home but like to use Mommy's free washer) are forbidden to wash their clothes in it just in case there's something bad. > > I like your advice Carl. You can't throw away everything, though Tug is right that some things are not worth it. My experience is different than most of you in that I do not have most of the ill effects that you have. I am extremely hyperreactive, going into a severe cough within seconds of some exposures. Interestingly, one recent problem was my wife spending a few hours in a very moldy building. I reacted to her as soon as she walked in the door of our home. I reacted to the chair she sat down on. I reacted to her car. I reacted particularly badly to her hair. Fortunately, her clothes were fine after being washed (high heat in the dryer), she was fine after showering, her upholstered chair was fine after spending a warm fall day in the sun, and her car was fine after fumigating a week with pans of Clorox. Because I am so hyperreactive, it's easier for me to tell what bothers me. I have found an old shirt left outside under the deck a month, very moldy and causing reaction; non-reactive after washing, though discarded since mold stain didn't wash out. I have never had clothes so contaminated that laundering would not solve the problem, though a few detergents caused me to react, particularly a few which highlight cleaning enzymes on the box. > Each person must refrain from paranoia and experiment to see what is salvagable and use common sense to balance to cost-benefit relationship of what is financially managable versus the cost of health damage. > > > Re: Avoidance > Posted by: " Carl E. Grimes " grimes@... grimeshh > Date: Thu Dec 16, 2010 8:36 pm ((PST)) > > Dave, of course not. But if you have little money and you need > food and the pair of pants isn't part of the problem then why > would you get rid of them? How do you determine the pants are a > problem? Especially when your body may well be reacting > internally and you can't tell for sure. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2010 Report Share Posted December 18, 2010 Have you tried carbon filter MCS air purifiers for the odors? You can get them with UV for mold. Have you had a mold remediator come in and look the place over? I will pray for you, Mayleen. Take care, and I really hope you find answers to this challenge. Don't give up. On Dec 17, 2010, at 1:35 PM, dragonflymcs wrote: > Hi Carl, > > In my particular case I am very reactive almost immediately on everything, most > all. In regards to clothes I get a respiratoty reaction, swollen throat, > immediately. So I know right away it is bad. I had no odor here when we came. > There was cleaner smell and the products were in here. So we asked they be > removed and the place vented. The owners did and when we came back still some > but more faint. We then left the place open some windows. We put baking soda > everywhere in cups and then the smells were gone. > > My smell is acute now, I could smell nothing else. Except in laundry room. For > months I could smell nothing here, then summer came and the place had to be > closed up. After about a month I think (or so) heavy rains here too. An odor > appeared in a room. We did not use it so we left it opened all the time. Now I > do believe it got wet somewhere cause the smell is stronger and I react to it. > Still canot find water damage. > > Still when we closed the place up I had no respiratory reactions , no smell, but > did not feel good. And I cannot put my finger on it. So something is wrong > here, but no reactions that I normally get. Except now for that one room.. So > very very hard to find a place period. I let my nose lead me and my lungs and > yet something I could not smell was making me sick. Making the choice with no > testing is very very hard. > > My clothes though, I can tell because I cannot breathe. So I guess if hidden > mold or bad remediation maybe with no smell, HOW CAN YOU TELL ??? I am lost > now. Owners are almost always not honest. Like my current ones who did not > tell us they were in forclosure...................................... > > God Bless !! > dragonflymcs > Mayleen > > ________________________________ > From: Carl E. Grimes <grimes@...> > > Sent: Thu, December 16, 2010 10:35:43 PM > Subject: Re: [] Re: Avoidance > > > Dave, of course not. But if you have little money and you need > food and the pair of pants isn't part of the problem then why > would you get rid of them? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2010 Report Share Posted December 18, 2010 I started washing my clothes in Borax. And someone told me fels naptha is good on laundry, also. As for a healthy building, I don't know if it will help, but as far as I can understand them, Bau Biologie and Ecology in Florida trains professionals (architects, doctors, construction workers) and layman alike on how to build health buildings and also how to make the ones you live in safer. They have some free videos to watch online and you can also pay for classes to take online. I haven't taken any yet but am very interested. You may wish to check them out and see what you can glean from the free videos and whether they inspire you to study further with them. Education is empowering. On Dec 17, 2010, at 10:31 AM, lyme_exterminator wrote: > what is GSE? I actually do suspect that the AC of my car might be contaminated because many times I turn it on I have something akin to an allergic reaction. > > In lyme forums I think GSE=grape seed extracts So you just mix that other GSE in water, put it in a spray bottle and shoot in the AC vents? > > what about putting ammonia in water in a spray bottle and shooting that? > > Also, after you wash your clothes with ammonia, do they smell like it? How many washes does it take to go away? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2010 Report Share Posted December 19, 2010 Do you have one? Can you recommend a brand or model? I would like to put one in my basement, which is unfinished, so it has that cementy smell sometimes when I'm feeling more sensitive. Thanks! Surella > > Have you tried carbon filter MCS air purifiers for the odors? You can get them with UV for mold. Have you had a mold remediator come in and look the place over? > > I will pray for you, Mayleen. Take care, and I really hope you find answers to this challenge. Don't give up. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2010 Report Share Posted December 19, 2010 I have the caughing too Gil, and my airways close up, balance goes way off. weakness,ect. RADS, happens with most exposures but not all. > > I like your advice Carl. You can't throw away everything, though Tug is right that some things are not worth it. My experience is different than most of you in that I do not have most of the ill effects that you have. snip Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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