Guest guest Posted December 10, 2006 Report Share Posted December 10, 2006 Duncan That's FANTASTIC - THANKS SO MUCH ! I ripped an enormous amount of stuff off my bowel or intestinal lining (candida, fungal organisms, mould amongst other things some months ago). I have huge malabsorption problems and take digestive enzymes to get some nutrition in. From what I read on a couple of sites, it seems like I damaged my mucous membranes thus causing the malabsorption. I also drink a lot of raw vegetable juice as it is easy to digest and provides the most nutrition I can think of. But if I let it slide for even 2 or 3 days, I get what seem to be huge acidic problems and aching all through my body. This happened once or twice. I immediately took bicarbonate of soda, and threw down more vegetable juice and returned to my normally semi-well state within another 2 - 3 days. My body seems to need more than a normal amount of nutrition. Helen Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...> wrote: Since this isn't Bee's list I'm free to point out that racing hearts may not be due to " die-off " or " healing reactions " , which seem to be the catch-all reason on that list for any unwanted symptoms. These symptoms and racing heart can also be caused by malnutrition including low glutathione and low selenium; magnesium deficiency causes rapid heart rate and potassium deficiency causes weak or irregular heart rate for example. http://tinyurl.com/ye6ck3 A lot of people who do not follow Bee's advice to the letter find die off is markedly reduced by attending to more deficiencies, using supplements. Duncan > > This is not Bee's list. > > Keen > > Re: This is serious - I'm scared > > Thank you for sharing. Some of the die off symptoms- like our racing > hearts- can be pretty scary. Send instant messages to your online friends http://au.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 Helen: You're welcome for the information. The most nutrition though is actually provided by the undenatured whey; it is assimilated with almost no digestion so works very well even in people with a compromized bowel (leaky gut?). I wouldn't overlook it. Bicarb isn't a good thing; it reduces stomach acidity, compromizing the first stage of digestion and the stomach acid's ability to kill ingested bacteria. Food putrefies instead of digesting normally due to the relative absence of stomach acid, and you start to get that bowel wall compromise. The last thing you need is less stomach acid; I'd suggest a read of the subject of Hypochlorhydria for more. If you use whey, which is the only animal protein that is slightly alkalizing, along with the juicing, you will achieve the alkalinity in a natural way without disrupting your digestion. Duncan ><helen_dehavilland@...> wrote: > > Duncan > > That's FANTASTIC - THANKS SO MUCH ! > > I ripped an enormous amount of stuff off my bowel or intestinal lining (candida, fungal organisms, mould amongst other things some months ago). I have huge malabsorption problems and take digestive enzymes to get some nutrition in. From what I read on a couple of sites, it seems like I damaged my mucous membranes thus causing the malabsorption. I also drink a lot of raw vegetable juice as it is easy to digest and provides the most nutrition I can think of. But if I let it slide for even 2 or 3 days, I get what seem to be huge acidic problems and aching all through my body. This happened once or twice. I immediately took bicarbonate of soda, and threw down more vegetable juice and returned to my normally semi-well state within another 2 - 3 days. My body seems to need more than a normal amount of nutrition. > > Helen > > > > Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...> wrote: > Since this isn't Bee's list I'm free to point out that racing hearts > may not be due to " die-off " or " healing reactions " , which seem to be > the catch-all reason on that list for any unwanted symptoms. > > These symptoms and racing heart can also be caused by malnutrition > including low glutathione and low selenium; magnesium deficiency > causes rapid heart rate and potassium deficiency causes weak or > irregular heart rate for example. > http://tinyurl.com/ye6ck3 > > A lot of people who do not follow Bee's advice to the letter find die > off is markedly reduced by attending to more deficiencies, using > supplements. > > Duncan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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