Apr. 21st, 2011
(no subject)
Apr. 21st, 2011 07:27 pmInnnnnnnnnnnnnteresting.
Learning about Bentonite and, 'Fuller's Earth' clays - in edible forms, and also as detox baths. Adding some Zeolite will definitely help, and, I think, is key - as it was used at Chernobyl and probably saved a lot of lives. They are also aggressively putting it into the ocean in Japan, as we speak, in hopes of absorbing and trapping some of the radioactive particles. In Russia, they were also successful in treating livestock with combinations of clay and zeolite - and were able to get the levels down to NORMAL, so that the animals were then safely edible.
Another unsung hero? Our friend, baking soda. Both internally and in the bath.
"Oral baking soda diminishes the severity of the changes that uranium creates in the kidneys. Bathing in baking soda (1-3 pounds per bath, depending on severity of exposure) and in magnesium salts (magnesium chloride or epsom salts) binds to uranium on the skin and some soaks into the body. Sodium bicarbinate has been used to clean soil contaminated with uranium. You can also boil baking soda in water and breathe the steam (carefully!) as a nebulizer to bind with any uranium breathed into the lungs. So keeping 10 or more pounds of baking soda on hand is an inexpensive preparation."
http://askdrjudi.blogspot.com/2011/03/baking-soda-for-radiation.html
Also looking at recipes for soap-making - to which toxin/heavy metal-absorbent clays can be added.
Annnnnnd, happily drinking my burdock root/milk thistle tea. With a little added raw sugar, it's pretty good, actually. We boiled some up, last night, and have it in the most fabulous, fancy cut-crystal and sterling pitcher -- it looks like something from the Enterprise, heheheh. :)
These are things we MUST learn - and use - for the rest of our lives, I guess.
*~*~*
DJ's out buying a cake for me to take to work for Robert Smith's birthday. Why not?
Learning about Bentonite and, 'Fuller's Earth' clays - in edible forms, and also as detox baths. Adding some Zeolite will definitely help, and, I think, is key - as it was used at Chernobyl and probably saved a lot of lives. They are also aggressively putting it into the ocean in Japan, as we speak, in hopes of absorbing and trapping some of the radioactive particles. In Russia, they were also successful in treating livestock with combinations of clay and zeolite - and were able to get the levels down to NORMAL, so that the animals were then safely edible.
Another unsung hero? Our friend, baking soda. Both internally and in the bath.
"Oral baking soda diminishes the severity of the changes that uranium creates in the kidneys. Bathing in baking soda (1-3 pounds per bath, depending on severity of exposure) and in magnesium salts (magnesium chloride or epsom salts) binds to uranium on the skin and some soaks into the body. Sodium bicarbinate has been used to clean soil contaminated with uranium. You can also boil baking soda in water and breathe the steam (carefully!) as a nebulizer to bind with any uranium breathed into the lungs. So keeping 10 or more pounds of baking soda on hand is an inexpensive preparation."
http://askdrjudi.blogspot.com/2011/03/baking-soda-for-radiation.html
Also looking at recipes for soap-making - to which toxin/heavy metal-absorbent clays can be added.
Annnnnnd, happily drinking my burdock root/milk thistle tea. With a little added raw sugar, it's pretty good, actually. We boiled some up, last night, and have it in the most fabulous, fancy cut-crystal and sterling pitcher -- it looks like something from the Enterprise, heheheh. :)
These are things we MUST learn - and use - for the rest of our lives, I guess.
*~*~*
DJ's out buying a cake for me to take to work for Robert Smith's birthday. Why not?