i was just picking these two medicines off the top of my head as a guess based on what i know of agricultural veterinary treatments... and farmers give their flocks these things routinely because they almost always pick them up and they almost always cause problems that can knock-on to further other problems

what do you mean by binders? would psyllium husk serve for this?

i should be able to get these medicines pretty much OTC from an agricultural supply shop, right? or what do you recommend for sourcing it because i like the idea a lot of shredding the population of invertebrates from my interior

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I recommend working w a holistic nutritionist / nurse who specializes in this during the process bc it can be toxic to the body. Also, it’s nice to be able to figure out what is coming out of you with them bc it’s pretty much a science experiment. So you get to ask them anything and if things get weird they can help.

Husk, yes, also charcoal and bentonite clay. As well as coffee e’s.

Don’t eat solid foods. Puree/ blend everything. Butternut squash soup and lentils have been staples for me. Helps the critters move out not having solid things to cling to as they exit.

Good luck🕊️

ok, i already eat a low solids diet as milk is helping me send early stage type 2 diabetes into remission, duly noted on the things to add... i even have some diatomaceous earth but i know to be careful with that stuff, not much more than a teaspoon a day, so i'll find charcoal, some ivermectin and a good vermicide...

i remember as a kid in australia there was ads about worming medicines, combantrin i think it was called... i never took any but i wonder now whether it should not be a 5-10 yearly thing anyway, maybe more often in warmer clients where there is a greater proliferation of these critters

also part of the reason why i'm interested to try this is because if antiparisitics like ivermectin basically stop COVID dead in its tracks then implicitly the virus's effects most likely are at least partly caused by a synergistic (if that's the right word) relationship with blood and GI tract parasites, especially blood of course

which means that having a low parasite count probably is strong protection against future similar viruses

Took combantrin about a month ago, $35 each pack in canada. It recommends every 6months for worm.

The rest of the family has no side effects, myself my BMs were liquid for 3 days (which is a side effect)

after the treatment what was your subjective experience? any improvement? more energy?

Honestly, nodda. ( my wife felt my oldest might have been effected so the whole family took it)

My daughter did find her bum didn’t feel like something was crawling on it…

yeah, i figured worms are probably a lot less problematic than microbes especially ones that migrate into the blood

but nostr:npub158mxap4gsexqeutj5sws2pfkngyq3lh726gex8wa7flt28tzhytq4jy85z is reporting a fairly substantial effect so i am very inclined to try the combo in one go with psyllium husk, charcoal and diatomaceous earth and milk only for a week (i currently have cheese and sometimes egg and salad) i mean a week of the diet, the treatment whatever the instructions say

I would consider no dairy bc that can add to mucous

Butternut squash soup puréed, lentil soup and smashed avocados. Might smash poached eggs if I am tired. Green smoothies and juices fine. A little nut butter okay but avoid peanut butter.

IMO best not to eat things that are solid or leafy / textured bc then you can’t tell what is undigested food and what is a potential parasite.

i'm very experienced with the milk diet and i'm not bothered by a bit of mucus, that is more of an issue from eating a lot of cheese or UHT or other processed, i mean pasteurised milk and medium age goat cheese and yogurt

milk also provides a lot of its own natural fibre because the intestines polymerise excess lactose into fiber, it is surprising how regular you get on a milk diet

with what i find with my reaction to foods cutting out dairy for this means no eating at all, and that's not what i have in mind, i think it helps to feed the beasts a little while you douse them with poison, to make sure you catch as much of their lifecycle as possible and prevent the survival of eggs/spores, very often eggs and spores are not vulnerable to the poisons thus the time you have to keep taking the medicine

also i'm pretty sure that milk diet kills off some section of the parasites and dysbiotic microflora, it certainly kills anything that can't work with protein, fat or lactose, which is a surprising number of organisms, this is part of the reason why mammals produce lactose sugars

Awww glad your daughter feels better. Wonder if sleep has changed at all.

Anecdotally her sleep has gotten worse but could be because she has more energy.