Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 Hi! I would sure be interested to know more about this, too. As far as Transfer Factor, BioImmune, etc -- in what way do you all see this helping? It is SO expensive, it would be great to hear some good, solid reasons to spend the money! Thanks in advance, Judie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 You can't contact former Congressman Bedell personally, or if you can I have no idea how. I am going to do the colostrum thing myself so I'll keep you all posted but it won't happen until February/March. Bedell used a cow, a guy was doing this for people, and he had dead spirochetes injected into the udder a few weeks before calving. Thus antibodies to lyme were in the colostrum. This is apparently illegal practice of medicine--the feds got on the farmer and stopped him. My friend and I bought goats. He is keeping the goats as he's on a farm in Catskills. They are pregnant, both of them and will have babies in February/March (goats have 5 mos pregnancy). A month before or so, we're going to do the same, but I'm not sure of the protocol yet--but I don't like the dead ketes idea. Even if I could get hold of them what if my strain is wild-type which I believe it is as it made me so friggin' sick so fast and it was western connecticut. And secndly I also have bad candida for many years and I'd like some antibodies to that. So I want to use my own blood. But I have to find out the protocol. Goats are cheap ($150) cows are expesnive ($2000) and mammal milk is mammal milk. So there is nothing more to do right now as I dn't personally know ANYbody who has done this and it could be a waste of time. But its not very much $ or effort and it might work, so if it DOES< then everybody else can follow suit but goats only like to get pregnant in the fall and have babies in the spring. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 You can't get goats for that price up here but maybe at your farm. In our area $150 for a Nubian goat was a very good price. In addition goats are smaller and cheaper to feed. Thanx for the tip on raw milk, I believe the protocol for Bedell was to mix it with regular colsotrum, half and half, and freeze it, and take a few tablespoons a day. I think freezing would probably kill many though not all pathogens if there were any. As for raw goats milk and tick fevers--I think if someone is like the Amish living in a rural endemic area and farming, it's very hard to know where they got their " tick fever " --don't you? Why do you feel its raw milk and why do you feel its tick fever? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 I'd like to see where this came from... At 11:10 AM 10/28/2002 -0700, you wrote: > " 1) Congressman Bedell left office because of lyme, tried IV rocephin 3 >times, and finally used colostrum hand-tailored to his condition (inject >dead spirochetes in udder of cow before it calves) and claims it cured him " > > >Anyone know where he got colostrum for Lyme? Transfer Factor is working >for me but I'd love to be able to get it tailored for Lyme! And how can I >contact former congressman Bedell? > >Ann > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 Can people please do me a favor and if they request me to do further research, just say please and thanx? Sometimes I get frustrated on this list as well as lymenet when I do a lot of research or offer helpful information and from some people what I get back is, Do more, explain this, reference that....as if I were applying for my thesis to my doctoral advisor, or I was being paid as a research assistant and hadn't done quite the job... Just a polite request. That said: 1) TROUBLE IN BLUE EARTH COUNTY: MINNESOTA PROSECUTES FARMER FOR PROVIDING " HEALING WHEY " From The Cancer Chronicles #26 © Feb. 1995 by Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. An unusual medical controversy has erupted in Blue Earth country, Minnesota (southwest of Minneapolis) over an unusual treatment for cancer, Lyme disease, MS and other ailments.The defendant is Herbert Saunders, a local dairy farmer, who sells pregnant cows to people with advanced diseases. The patient then has his or her blood drawn, and this is then injected into the pregnant cow's udder. When the cow gives birth, the patient drink its antibody rich colostrum (first milk) in the form of whey (the serum or watery part of the milk). There have been reports of dramatic improvement on this non-toxic treatment. The whey treatment became well-known after Rep. Berkley Bedell, from the neighboring state of Iowa, reported that it cured him of his Lyme disease-related arthritis several years ago. Bedell, a recent finalist for Coping magazine's Hero Award, is scheduled to testify on Saunders' behalf. The state prosecutors consider this an " udderly " worthless treatment. They contend that Saunders is a common charlatan, who is selling people astronomically priced milk. They also claim that his injection technique constitutes cruelty to animals. This is ironic, since (according to the Encyclopedia Britannica) the local economy is " centered on a prosperous hog market. " The last time we looked, hog butchering was no less cruel than giving a cow an injection in her udder. The cows sold for only one or two thousand dollars (their market value) and Saunders is hardly well-prepared financially for this legal assault. In fact, he is practically bankrupt and his attorney, Calvin of Mankato, along with two legal assistants are working on a volunteer basis, because they believe so strongly in the cause of medical freedom. (They can be reached at 507-345-4545 or faxed at 507-387-1005.) Aside from some rather astonishing anecdotes, is there any scientific rationale behind this rustic treatment? There is, and it centers around a substance called " transfer factor " (TF), which was discovered by H.S. Lawrence of New York University in 1949. This has been used experimentally for decades. It is a long-established fact that there can be a transfer of immunity (say, sensitivity to the TB organism) from the blood of one individual to another. TF is actually a mixture of at least 200 different chemicals normally found in the blood. According to one orthodox history book, " transfer factor has been applied clinically with some success in...a variety of viral and mycotic [i.e., fungal, ed.] disease. " Dr. Lawrence's problem was that he was too far ahead of his time. In fact, he discovered TF six years before anyone even knew that lymphocytes (white blood cells) had anything to do with immunity! In a sense, it was rediscovered as a treatment by Hugh Fudenberg, M.D. of So. Carolina in 1970. Fudenberg is also scheduled to testify in Saunders' defense. TF has now been tried against many diseases, including cancer. Fudenberg recently reviewed the results in a peer-reviewed medical paper. While the outcome in breast cancer were rather disappointing (because, he feels, of incomplete knowledge of how to best give the treatment), a recent test in highly malignant osteosarcoma (bone cancer), was promising. Seven control patients all died by 24 months. But five of the six patients who received TFafter surgery " were alive and disease-free " at the end of 24 months " and also at last follow- up, 100-120 months after therapy. " This increase in survival was due to the prevention of lung metastases. Saunders provided his folk variation on this sophisticated treatment to patients who in many cases have been abandoned by conventional medicine. THE STATE V. HERBERT SAUNDERS The following document is from Saunders' defense committee. · We the People of the State of Minnesota are guaranteed access to colostrum, the first milk of birthing female animals. We the People have the right to choose viable health treatments for our bodies. We the People possess fundamental rights of privacy, fundamental rights of liberty, common-law rights of self-determination, and fundamental rights of Nature. We the People assert our right to speak freely about our health. We the People preserve our right to act upon our knowledge to improve and maintain health. We the People proclaim our rights, as farmers, to sell and peddle our products. We the People claim our right to buy the products of the farm or garden from those who occupy and cultivate either. We the People proclaim that the laws protect those who seek unconventional means of improving and maintaining health equally with those who seek conventional treatments. ### WHEY PROVIDER TO BE RETRIED From The Cancer Chronicles #27 © May 1995 by Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. The trial of Herb Saunders for using a non-toxic " whey " treatment for cancer, Lyme disease, and other ailments (CC #26) ended in a mistrial. The jury deliberated for ten hours without reaching a decision. " My heart sings with the eagle for the one lone dissenting juror, " wrote Saunders' attorney, Calvin P. . But in mid-March, the Watonwan County, Minnesota Attorney announced that he would re- prosecute the Odin dairy farmer for practicing medicine without a license; but there will be no trial for at least six more months. Saunders remains under restrictions not to sell colostrum from which the whey is derived. Saunders may ask the higher courts to declare Minnesota's Practicing Medicine statue unconstitutional.... ### " MILKMAN " STILL AT LARGE AS JURY HANGS FOR SECOND TIME From The Cancer Chronicles #32-#33 © June 1996 by Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. On 5/20/96, a mistrial was declared in the case of Mr. Herbert Saunders, the Odin, Minnesota dairy farmer who has been accused of practicing medicine without a license. The jury in the four-day trial failed to reach a verdict. This follows a hung jury last year as well.The trial's outcome was hailed as " a victory for individual rights, " according to the 67-year-old Saunders. " It showed one thing to me. People want the right to do as they choose. That's the way this country is set up to be. " He may however be retried by the district attorney. Saunders was first arrested in 1993 when an undercover drug enforcement officer, posing as a cancer patient, visited Saunders' dairy farm, ostensibly seeking treatment. He secretly recorded conversations in which Mr. Saunders spoke of the therapeutic benefit of colostrum, the cow's first milk after giving birth. The agent then bought both some milk and a cow from Saunders, with money that had been earmarked for the removal of illicit drugs from Watonwan County. The agent had his own blood removed by a medical doctor and then infused it into the udder of the purchased cow. The purpose of this procedure was to prepare an immune response in the colostrum. This sounds far-out, but is closely related to a well-known treatment called " transfer factor, " which was discovered by Dr. Henry S. Lawrence at New York University in the 1950s and further researched by , MD, later president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. The defense team, which largely represented Saunders pro bono, ridiculed the state's argument that curds and whey were dangerous drugs, on a par with heroin. " The real issue in this case is the State's attempt to silence Mr. Saunders' incredible knowledge about colostrum, " declared Calvin , one of Saunders' attorneys (507-345-4545). " He is being prosecuted for talking about what he knows. " ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. is director of the The Moss Reports for cancer patients. Dr. Moss is the author of eleven books and three documentaries on cancer-related topics. He is or has been an advisor on alternative cancer treatments to the National Institutes of Health, the National Cancer Institute, the American Urological Association, Columbia University, the University of Texas, the G. Komen Foundation and the German Society of Oncology. He wrote the first article on alternative medicine for the Encyclopedia Britannica yearbook. He is listed in Marquis Who's Who in America, Who's Who in the World, Who's Who in the East, and Who's Who in Entertainment (as a film documentarian). This Web site does not advocate any particular treatment for cancer. We urge you to always seek competent medical advice for all health problems, especially cancer. Before consulting our site please read our full Disclaimer statement URL:http://www.ralphmoss.com/html/milkman.shtml --- And from Bedell's testimony: " Mr Chairman, and members of this committee, I appreciate this opportunity to communicate to you some of my findings since leaving the United States Congress. " I served six terms in the US House of Representatives from 1975 through 1986 as a liberal Democrat representing a conservative Republican district in Northwest Iowa. I believe I therefore have a unique appreciation of the problems facing legislators such as you, as you grapple with issues such as this. " I left Congress because I contracted Lyme Disease from a tick bite. I was treated with conventional treatments three times; each day I had a strong injection into my vein for periods of three, four, and six weeks. Each time I would feel better for three or four weeks and then my symptoms would return. Finally, I turned to an unconventional treatment. " Let me tell you about that treatment. There is a firm in Iowa that makes veterinary medicine by injecting killed germs into the udder of a cow, prior to the time that the cow has a calf. They then take the first milk that comes after the birth of the calf, which is called colostrum, and process it into whey, so it will keep. The theory is that the cow will communicate the disease to the unborn calf, and then develop in the colostrum what is needed to cure the calf of the disease it has contracted from the mother. " I obtained some killed spirochetes that cause Lyme Disease. I took them to the firm that makes the veterinary medicine and they ran them through a cow. I took one tablespoon of the whey every hour while I was awake. My symptoms disappeared, and I clearly no longer have Lyme Disease. " This treatment cost about $500 as compared to the approximately $26,000 that had been spent on my unsuccessful pharmaceutical treatments. " URL: http://www.positivehealth.com/permit/Articles/Miscellaneous/newyork.ht m That should be enough. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 Well the truth is I have no idea what statements anybody is going to want me to validate or explore further or come up with further research. You might have asked me to validate the guy who got well doing saunas, or ask someone else to validate the various comments about bee sting therapy. I just appreciate politeness as there is an odd feeling sometimes on these lists that people owe them information. Whenever I find information interesting I then go do a search on the web for it myself. It's easy enough to put " Bedell lyme " into google. Thanx again. > >Can people please do me a favor and if they request me to do further > >research, just say please and thanx? Sometimes I get frustrated on > >this list as well as lymenet when I do a lot of research or offer > >helpful information and from some people what I get back is, Do more, > >explain this, reference that....as if I were applying for my thesis > >to my doctoral advisor, or I was being paid as a research assistant > >and hadn't done quite the job... > > > >Just a polite request. > > > >That said: > > > >1) TROUBLE IN BLUE EARTH COUNTY: > >MINNESOTA PROSECUTES FARMER > >FOR PROVIDING " HEALING WHEY " > > > > From The Cancer Chronicles #26 > >© Feb. 1995 by Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. > > > >An unusual medical controversy has erupted in Blue Earth country, > >Minnesota (southwest of Minneapolis) over an unusual treatment for > >cancer, Lyme disease, MS and other ailments.The defendant is Herbert > >Saunders, a local dairy farmer, who sells pregnant cows to people > >with advanced diseases. The patient then has his or her blood drawn, > >and this is then injected into the pregnant cow's udder. When the cow > >gives birth, the patient drink its antibody rich colostrum (first > >milk) in the form of whey (the serum or watery part of the milk). > > > >There have been reports of dramatic improvement on this non-toxic > >treatment. The whey treatment became well-known after Rep. Berkley > >Bedell, from the neighboring state of Iowa, reported that it cured > >him of his Lyme disease-related arthritis several years ago. Bedell, > >a recent finalist for Coping magazine's Hero Award, is scheduled to > >testify on Saunders' behalf. > > > >The state prosecutors consider this an " udderly " worthless treatment. > >They contend that Saunders is a common charlatan, who is selling > >people astronomically priced milk. They also claim that his injection > >technique constitutes cruelty to animals. This is ironic, since > >(according to the Encyclopedia Britannica) the local economy > >is " centered on a prosperous hog market. " The last time we looked, > >hog butchering was no less cruel than giving a cow an injection in > >her udder. > > > >The cows sold for only one or two thousand dollars (their market > >value) and Saunders is hardly well-prepared financially for this > >legal assault. In fact, he is practically bankrupt and his attorney, > >Calvin of Mankato, along with two legal assistants are > >working on a volunteer basis, because they believe so strongly in the > >cause of medical freedom. (They can be reached at 507-345-4545 or > >faxed at 507-387-1005.) > > > >Aside from some rather astonishing anecdotes, is there any scientific > >rationale behind this rustic treatment? There is, and it centers > >around a substance called " transfer factor " (TF), which was discovered > >by H.S. Lawrence of New York University in 1949. This has been used > >experimentally for decades. It is a long-established fact that there > >can be a transfer of immunity (say, sensitivity to the TB organism) > >from the blood of one individual to another. TF is actually a mixture > >of at least 200 different chemicals normally found in the blood. > >According to one orthodox history book, " transfer factor has been > >applied clinically with some success in...a variety of viral and > >mycotic [i.e., fungal, ed.] disease. " > > > >Dr. Lawrence's problem was that he was too far ahead of his time. In > >fact, he discovered TF six years before anyone even knew that > >lymphocytes (white blood cells) had anything to do with immunity! In > >a sense, it was rediscovered as a treatment by Hugh Fudenberg, M.D. > >of So. Carolina in 1970. Fudenberg is also scheduled to testify in > >Saunders' defense. > > > >TF has now been tried against many diseases, including cancer. > >Fudenberg recently reviewed the results in a peer-reviewed medical > >paper. While the outcome in breast cancer were rather disappointing > >(because, he feels, of incomplete knowledge of how to best give the > >treatment), a recent test in highly malignant osteosarcoma (bone > >cancer), was promising. Seven control patients all died by 24 months. > >But five of the six patients who received TFafter surgery " were alive > >and disease-free " at the end of 24 months " and also at last follow- > >up, 100-120 months after therapy. " This increase in survival was due > >to the prevention of lung metastases. Saunders provided his folk > >variation on this sophisticated treatment to patients who in many > >cases have been abandoned by conventional medicine. > > > >THE STATE V. HERBERT SAUNDERS > > > >The following document is from Saunders' defense committee. > > > >· We the People of the State of Minnesota are guaranteed access to > >colostrum, the first milk of birthing female animals. > > > > > >We the People have the right to choose viable health treatments for > >our bodies. > > > >We the People possess fundamental rights of privacy, fundamental > >rights of liberty, common-law rights of self-determination, and > >fundamental rights of Nature. > > > >We the People assert our right to speak freely about our health. > > > >We the People preserve our right to act upon our knowledge to improve > >and maintain health. > > > >We the People proclaim our rights, as farmers, to sell and peddle our > >products. > > > >We the People claim our right to buy the products of the farm or > >garden from those who occupy and cultivate either. > > > >We the People proclaim that the laws protect those who seek > >unconventional means of improving and maintaining health equally with > >those who seek conventional treatments. > > > >### > > > >WHEY PROVIDER TO BE RETRIED > > From The Cancer Chronicles #27 > >© May 1995 by Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. > > > >The trial of Herb Saunders for using a non-toxic " whey " treatment for > >cancer, Lyme disease, and other ailments (CC #26) ended in a > >mistrial. The jury deliberated for ten hours without reaching a > >decision. > > > > " My heart sings with the eagle for the one lone dissenting juror, " > >wrote Saunders' attorney, Calvin P. . But in mid-March, the > >Watonwan County, Minnesota Attorney announced that he would re- > >prosecute the Odin dairy farmer for practicing medicine without a > >license; but there will be no trial for at least six more months. > >Saunders remains under restrictions not to sell colostrum from which > >the whey is derived. Saunders may ask the higher courts to declare > >Minnesota's Practicing Medicine statue unconstitutional.... > > > >### > > > > " MILKMAN " STILL AT LARGE AS > >JURY HANGS FOR SECOND TIME > > From The Cancer Chronicles #32-#33 > >© June 1996 by Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. > > > >On 5/20/96, a mistrial was declared in the case of Mr. Herbert > >Saunders, the Odin, Minnesota dairy farmer who has been accused of > >practicing medicine without a license. The jury in the four-day trial > >failed to reach a verdict. This follows a hung jury last year as > >well.The trial's outcome was hailed as " a victory for individual > >rights, " according to the 67-year-old Saunders. > > > > " It showed one thing to me. People want the right to do as they > >choose. That's the way this country is set up to be. " He may however > >be retried by the district attorney. Saunders was first arrested in > >1993 when an undercover drug enforcement officer, posing as a cancer > >patient, visited Saunders' dairy farm, ostensibly seeking treatment. > > > >He secretly recorded conversations in which Mr. Saunders spoke of the > >therapeutic benefit of colostrum, the cow's first milk after giving > >birth. The agent then bought both some milk and a cow from Saunders, > >with money that had been earmarked for the removal of illicit drugs > >from Watonwan County. > > > >The agent had his own blood removed by a medical doctor and then > >infused it into the udder of the purchased cow. The purpose of this > >procedure was to prepare an immune response in the colostrum. > > > >This sounds far-out, but is closely related to a well-known treatment > >called " transfer factor, " which was discovered by Dr. Henry S. > >Lawrence at New York University in the 1950s and further researched > >by , MD, later president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering > >Cancer Center. > > > >The defense team, which largely represented Saunders pro bono, > >ridiculed the state's argument that curds and whey were dangerous > >drugs, on a par with heroin. > > > > " The real issue in this case is the State's attempt to silence Mr. > >Saunders' incredible knowledge about colostrum, " declared Calvin > >, one of Saunders' attorneys (507-345-4545). " He is being > >prosecuted for talking about what he knows. " > > > > > > > > > >------------------------------------------------------------------- --- > >---------- > > > >Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. is director of the The Moss Reports for cancer > >patients. Dr. Moss is the author of eleven books and three > >documentaries on cancer-related topics. He is or has been an advisor > >on alternative cancer treatments to the National Institutes of > >Health, the National Cancer Institute, the American Urological > >Association, Columbia University, the University of Texas, the > >G. Komen Foundation and the German Society of Oncology. He wrote the > >first article on alternative medicine for the Encyclopedia Britannica > >yearbook. He is listed in Marquis Who's Who in America, Who's Who in > >the World, Who's Who in the East, and Who's Who in Entertainment (as > >a film documentarian). This Web site does not advocate any particular > >treatment for cancer. We urge you to always seek competent medical > >advice for all health problems, especially cancer. Before consulting > >our site please read our full Disclaimer statement > > > >URL:http://www.ralphmoss.com/html/milkman.shtml > >--- > >And from Bedell's testimony: > > > > " Mr Chairman, and members of this committee, I appreciate this > >opportunity to communicate to you some of my findings since leaving > >the United States Congress. > > " I served six terms in the US House of Representatives from 1975 > >through 1986 as a liberal Democrat representing a conservative > >Republican district in Northwest Iowa. I believe I therefore have a > >unique appreciation of the problems facing legislators such as you, > >as you grapple with issues such as this. > > " I left Congress because I contracted Lyme Disease from a tick > >bite. I was treated with conventional treatments three times; each > >day I had a strong injection into my vein for periods of three, four, > >and six weeks. Each time I would feel better for three or four weeks > >and then my symptoms would return. Finally, I turned to an > >unconventional treatment. > > " Let me tell you about that treatment. There is a firm in Iowa > >that makes veterinary medicine by injecting killed germs into the > >udder of a cow, prior to the time that the cow has a calf. They then > >take the first milk that comes after the birth of the calf, which is > >called colostrum, and process it into whey, so it will keep. The > >theory is that the cow will communicate the disease to the unborn > >calf, and then develop in the colostrum what is needed to cure the > >calf of the disease it has contracted from the mother. > > " I obtained some killed spirochetes that cause Lyme Disease. I > >took them to the firm that makes the veterinary medicine and they ran > >them through a cow. I took one tablespoon of the whey every hour > >while I was awake. My symptoms disappeared, and I clearly no longer > >have Lyme Disease. > > " This treatment cost about $500 as compared to the approximately > >$26,000 that had been spent on my unsuccessful pharmaceutical > >treatments. " > > > > > >URL: > >http://www.positivehealth.com/permit/Articles/Miscellaneous/newyork.h t > >m > > > >That should be enough. > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 , its good info to know if others want it. Up here in the north, in the Catskills, you can't eat grass in the winter. And we felt all around goats would be easier to handle and I like them better as they're much smarter. I have no idea when and where auctions are, this was very easy to do, he picked up the goats and they were already bred by a lady who has prize goats--I had no idea goats won prizes but they do just like horses and dogs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 > You don't have to grain them. Doesnt' necessarily mean you kill bugs w/freezing. The diseases still go around here when we have freezing ice storms/snow. > As for the above--and I do think it's worthwhile to be concerned about colostrum contamination--although colostrum is sold in health food stores and I doubt it's " pasteruized " but I should find out-- anyway--freezign storms and snows don't actually FREEZE the goat milk. The temperature outside doesn't really matter to the goat's teat, right? Milk still comes out warm I'm sure. The point is you're tkaing the colostrum and mixing it with regular colostrum and freezing it--probably mianly to make it last. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2002 Report Share Posted October 29, 2002 I am going to be lurking on this board henceforth. I find the BVT information very useful. But people seem to get querulous and testy with each other even over that. Anyone who wants to email me about colostrum or find out how it worked in a few months feel free. It is only extra stress to get into arguments about whether I spent an extra $100 or not...time is $...the time it would take to hunt around for cheaper goats and travel to an auction would cost more...my friend had the car, the space, and the nearby goats...they were not " prize " goats...he loves goats he had them as a kid...I like goats...what is the problem? And who cares? The point is about the science...this is not drinking raw milk, this is not feces or urine in a winter barn...maybe this will work, maybe not...I'm willing to try...I don't want to argue or be put on the defensive...so as I said, I'll be lurking, robynn does a great service with her news and her list... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Updates? This post is year's old - fill me in?!?! Posted June 19, 2015 Report Share Posted June 19, 2015 Ok, so there's VERY little chance any of you that posted on this thread more than a decade ago are going to have any clue that I'm posting this.  But I'm sending it out there with a prayer and some faith.  So after all these years, how is everyone?  I'd like to try the targeted colostrum.  Did anyone have success?  Has your Lyme gone away?  Feedback, updates, tips, guidance, would be muy bueno!Hoping for the best!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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