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Mycoplasma
Infections and blood pH.

Appearance
wise mycoplasma may assume a variety of forms having
tails or projections on a spherical or donut shape.
They can appear in the blood serum, in leukocytes
(white blood cells) or on red blood cells looking like
little doorknobs which often make the red blood cell
appear like a water mine. Mycoplsama is one of the
developmental forms of the parasitic endobiont (as
most every negative thing is that is seen in the
blood.)
It
is a symprotit that contains a surrounding protein
substance. Its appearance in the blood happens as fast
as you can snap your fingers. For instance, let's say
you are viewing a red blood cell in live blood. All of
a sudden, poof, a mycoplasma forms on a red blood cell
as if it were from nowhere. That's just how it
happens. Enderlein calls it an endoboiotic formation
that occurs from a quantum biological leap. If the
conditions in the terrain (the environment of the
blood) is just right, (the pH isn't high enough) the
colloids within will jump to the mycoplasma level in
the blink of an eye.
Standard
hematology classifies mycoplasma as a free living
organism which is a genus of highly pleomorphic
bacteria that lack a cell wall and are separated into
many species.
Seeing
them is another indication that pH is off, oxygenation
is low , the immune system is compromised, and there
is potential degenerative disease implications.
Physical symptoms could be any combination of a 1000 different
things. It is absolutely essential to learn and
understand the importance of human pH and fighting any
disease weather it be a chronic infection or cancer or
both.
The
preceding pages covered some key concepts relative to
the rotting mechanism of the body. The rotting
mechanism of the body is the biological equation. The
flip side to this is the rusting mechanism, which is a
chemical and electrical equation.
As we age and get diseases, we are experiencing the
effects of Rot & Rust. It is an interplay of the
biological, chemical, and electrical physiology of the
human body.
With a firm understanding of this knowledge, the
microscope becomes a tool to delve into this interplay
at its most basic level - in the blood.
This whole section has been a peek into our microscope
pre-training program that lays the foundation for the
advanced work. We've discussed pH and introduced
biological terrain, and in our workshops we take it
much further, incorporating things like redox
(reduction/oxidation) and the principles of rust.
We also get into detail on a few other items, all in
an effort to solidly understand biological terrain and
its influence on the live blood and dry layer
analysis.
To give you a little more flavor for this workshop,
some additional transparency out-takes follow along
with brief commentary on a few of them.
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