Guest guest Posted December 31, 2007 Report Share Posted December 31, 2007 , Yes, you can avoid coconut oil until later. I had to be on the diet and supplements for 6 months before I could tolerate any antifungals. Soy feeds candida; it is a legume that is high in carbs. In addition it is toxic and damaging to the body, which adds to the overload of toxins in your system and interferes with normal functioning. Candida toxins are mostly alcohol which burns up B1 in particular. You can do an internet search to see the list of symptoms it causes, which includes nightmares. Milk feeds candida, so no, it wouldn't be a healing food. ==>Egg yolks contain sulphur which kill candida, so the problem wouldn't be some of the foods you are eating that I consider unadulterated healing foods. Bee > > > > , nightmares are also caused by toxins. Coconut oil, butter > and > > eggs (foods on my program) all kill candida which releases over 79 > > different kinds of toxins, most of which are alcohol. So your > > nightmares would be similar to those a drunk gets after going on a > > binge. Drunks even pass out and have amnesia, so alcohol greatly > > affects the brain/mind. > > Hi Bee, > Forgive me for possibly beating a dead horse, but I have a hard time > understanding what's going on w/the nightmares... > > What is interesting to me is that the nightmares occur only with the > foods the test said I had IgA allergies to, with the addition of > coconut. And egg yolks don't cause nightmares for me, just whites, > and I thought the yolks would have a stronger detox effect. Also, > soy causes the nightmares and that wouldn't be a food killing > candida, right? > > When I used to drink 2% pasteurized milk, that would cause them -- is > milk in that form a healing/detoxifying food? > > I think, but am not positive, that gluten also caused nightmares. > However, I've been strict on no gluten for so long and I'm not > willing to eat some to see if I have a nightmare! > > To me it seems like the nightmares are caused by some bad foods and > some good foods, so it's hard to understand. But it always seems to > be reaction to ingesting particular foods and not a general die-off > reaction. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.