Guest guest Posted January 2, 2002 Report Share Posted January 2, 2002 I've done about 5 or 6 flushes where I got green blobs out (I don't call them stones - they're quite soft - but I don't want to argue about semantics either) and I've been wondering how long it took other people to " clean out " their livers and GB's? I reckon I'm going to keep going until I have no more green blobs, and then switch to maintenance (2-4 times a year, I guess.) Every time I do a flush, I think surely this is the last time before maintenance, I've gotten rid go so much stuff, and every time I'm wrong. What experience have other people had? I must have passed close to 1000, if not more. Also the blobs don't seem to decrease in size much - this morning again there were a couple of pretty big ones (maybe 15mm in diameter). How much fat can there be in a liver? Annie _________________________________________________________________ Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device: http://mobile.msn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2002 Report Share Posted January 2, 2002 Dr. suggest you could have thousands in there and to keep flushing until they are all out. How is your diet? Maybe you are making more as fast as flushing them out? Do you still have pain when you eat fatty foods? Barry. > I've done about 5 or 6 flushes where I got green blobs out (I don't call > them stones - they're quite soft - but I don't want to argue about semantics > either) and I've been wondering how long it took other people to " clean out " > their livers and GB's? I reckon I'm going to keep going until I have no more > green blobs, and then switch to maintenance (2-4 times a year, I guess.) > Every time I do a flush, I think surely this is the last time before > maintenance, I've gotten rid go so much stuff, and every time I'm wrong. > What experience have other people had? I must have passed close to 1000, if > not more. Also the blobs don't seem to decrease in size much - this morning > again there were a couple of pretty big ones (maybe 15mm in diameter). How > much fat can there be in a liver? > > Annie > > _________________________________________________________________ > Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device: http://mobile.msn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2002 Report Share Posted January 2, 2002 In a message dated 1/1/02 11:06:01 PM Eastern Standard Time, allists@... writes: > Every time I do a flush, I think surely this is the last time before > maintenance, I've gotten rid go so much stuff, and every time I'm wrong. > What experience have other people had? I must have passed close to 1000, > if > not more. Also the blobs don't seem to decrease in size much - this > morning > again there were a couple of pretty big ones (maybe 15mm in diameter). How > > much fat can there be in a liver? > Hi Annie It's astounding to think how much fat our livers are capable of dealing with! And what a relief it must be to the liver when some of that is removed! I have done 5 cleanses so far, and still seeing stones (even though they are soft, that's just the terminology that is used). Each body is different, of course, but from what I've read it isn't unusual at all to have 1000 stones or even twice that. If you're still passing sludge or chaff, that's good, too. That could eventually turn into stones, so it's good to get rid of it. As for the size of the stones, mine have really varied. I think the first flush was a lot of chaff, tons of the little stones and a couple of bigger ones. They got bigger as I went along - I mean, more bigger and fewer smaller ones. But I still had a mixture - chaff, small stones and bigger ones (the largest I've had were about 1.5 cm). The last flush had some smooth ones, which from what I understand means they came from the liver. To me that's a good sign that the cleansing is getting more thorough, or deeper, or something. It takes time for the body to make changes, I think, as it takes some of us time to change our eating habits. So don't be discouraged if it takes a while longer before you get to the maintenance stage. Just remember that each time you are ridding yourself of something that could have caused you more health problems down the road. Each time your body is breathing a sigh of relief at something it doesn't have to deal with anymore! Keep up the good work.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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