Parasites (page 1)
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PARASITES


How Do We Become Infected?
Infestation can come from a number of sources: Walking barefoot in contaminated soil; eating unclean fruits and vegetables (especially watercress), rare meat, raw fish (sashimi-raw fish, or sushi); drinking contaminated water supplies; sexual intercourse, autointoxication from poor nutrition, liver flukes, kissing pets, working in the garden, mucus- forming foods (milk products), lack of proper bowel flora or proper digestive enzymes.

Why Don't We Hear More Stories Like Mine?
It is not a subject the general public discusses, either because of embarrassment or people not knowing that they have parasites. Ninety percent of my patients have worms and yet are totally unaware of it. They know they have diabetes, cancer, etc. but not that parasites directly or indirectly caused or contributed to their disease. For example, cancer is simply a symptom indicating a body that is auto-intoxicated with parasites, worms, yeast, virus and other bacteria, and whose colon lacks beneficial flora.

Let's Look at an Example of a Common Parasite.
The pinworm, found mostly in children, lives in the lower intestine and rectum. The female worm comes out of the colon to lay her eggs (mostly at night, thereby contaminating pajamas and bedding as well). A single female may deposit 18,000 or more eggs, which are infective in a few hours. The crawling of the worm on the skin of the area surrounding the anus itches. The child scratches this area and contaminates his nails and hands with eggs. The eggs are also transported by air currents, therefore other family members are easily contaminated. Statistics claim that one in five children today have pinworms. What about the ones not diagnosed?

Parasites
Parasites and worms can travel anywhere in the body. If the Infestation is in the colon, the body puts a protective barrier of fluid around them to keep them corralled off to try to prevent them from traveling to other parts of the body.