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There are nearly 37 trillion healthy (good) bacteria in our intestines. If the human body is roughly 70 trillion cells, the bacteria represent around 50% of our body. 12 There are an estimated 10,000 microbial species. In these bacteria are trillions of viruses. 1 It's creepy, but they are "us." This is the good bacteria that digests our food. The human digestive system is one of the most complicated and diverse systems known to man, only second to the human brain. Your body is an ecosystem that regularly hosts families of pathogens. It takes some pathogens only 30 minutes to replicate.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
There are nearly 37 trillion healthy (good) bacteria in our intestines. If the human body is roughly 70 trillion cells, the bacteria represent around 50% of our body. 12 There are an estimated 10,000 microbial species. In these bacteria are trillions of viruses. 1 It's creepy, but they are "us." This is the good bacteria that digests our food. The human digestive system is one of the most complicated and diverse systems known to man, only second to the human brain. Your body is an ecosystem that regularly hosts families of pathogens. It takes some pathogens only 30 minutes to replicate. Billions of pathogens can build up in your body within days. "Researchers found, for example, that nearly everyone routinely carries pathogens, microorganisms known to cause illnesses. In healthy individuals, however, pathogens cause no disease; they simply coexist with their host and the rest of the human microbiome [intestines], the collection of all microorganisms living in the human body. Researchers must now figure out why some pathogens turn deadly and under what conditions, likely revising current concepts of how microorganisms cause disease." 2 So, if you have all of these "bugs" in your body, why is it one or more of them will cause you to get sick? And why is it some people in close contact with sick people don't get the same sickness? Researchers don't need to figure out why. Some people working outside of institutions already know why: There is a natural method to activate your immune system to fight off the pathogens that make you sick. Our body is constantly destroying viruses, bacteria, fungi, candida, and mycoplasma all the time. Some viruses, bacteria, etc., that your immune system cannot detect will rampantly divide and overwhelm tissues and organs, causing the body to have a cascading response, like mucus, sweating, high fever, and vomiting. This is because they have a cloaking or camouflage ability. Some viruses and bacteria will take some of your cellular debris and surround itself to create the cloak. The immune system is constantly seeking out what is "self" and "not self." With an insulation of cellular debris, your immune system will determine the virus, bacteria, etc., to be "self." Allopathic medicine has vaccines to wake up the immune system to combat pathogens. Vaccine makers use the ten best known viruses and boil them until they have a group of dead pathogens. Once the dead bugs are injected into a person, they add a small amount of an immunostimulant like arsenic, mercury, or aluminum to wake up the immune system. This allows the immune system to recognize a virus that it normally cannot detect. The intent is to allow the immune system to see the viruses so that antibodies can be made to combat the virus if or when the person is infected. The smallpox vaccine, for instance, has proven to be very effective. What if you had a natural method for creating your own vaccine, something as unique as your own fingerprint? This would target your own unique virus or bacteria that is cloaked and attacking you at the cellular level. First allow me to explain about the 70 trillion cells that make up your body and how these cells get sick and create sickness throughout the body.
Autorenporträt
My journey into the subject of health and wellness has been lifelong. I wanted to understand how to stay healthy. I read books like Linus Pauling's Vitamin C and the Common Cold, and Anatomy of an Illness by Norman Cousins. In 2008, I attended a workshop called "Know Your Purpose," led by a man named Tim Kelley. I learned that my purpose in life-the thing that is innate in me that would bring me the most joy-is to write about healing. Feeling that I wasn't qualified to write on the subject, I started reading books on healing, which led me to read 90+ books on health, wellness, nutrition, anatomy, virology, pathology, and spiritual healing. And this led me to study with the Trinity School of Natural Health where I received a doctorate in Naturopathy in 2020. I am also a Certified Nutritionist.