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Whenever
we peer into the microscope to look at living blood,
we inevitably come upon principles of chemistry and
physics looking back at us. These principles are so
core to existence itself that it seems odd that
medicine has yet to incorporate these concepts in its
practice and medical schools have yet to teach them to
medical students. But having said that, it is also
apparent that many who study in the naturopathic field
as well have missed some of these ideas.
To that end, we felt it important to fully share
another excerpt from our book "How You Rot &
Rust" which we use as pre-training for our basic
biological terrain & microscope class. Another
section of this website gives a "Rot & Rust
Tour" and if you have not been through it, you
may find some of the concepts of interest.
What makes this section so important is that if you
get the gist of what is written here, you will
discover keys to the secret of reversing and
eliminating heart disease.
If you are a "live blood" microscopist and
have not taken a Biomedx training program, then it is
quite possible you are about to learn in detail for
the first time a most fundamental aspect of the blood
which causes most of the pictures you see to be.
With that said, let's get started with a little
overview of some research that will lead into our main
topic of discussion.
Insights From the Stealth Pathogen
Lida Mattman is a researcher who has written on the
nature of these microorganisms in a book entitled
"Cell Wall Deficient Forms - Stealth Pathogens".
This refers to the little microbial forms that show an
ability to be present one moment and not the next,
just like the microbial forms that come and go in the
blood. They have this changeable stealth nature about
them. In the introduction to her book she recounts the
words of earlier researchers regarding this topic.
In 1892 Wilhelm Zopf wrote that it was thought that
only micrococcus could produce micrococci, not rods or
spirals, and similarly, spirals could give rise to
spirals only and not to rods and cocci, and fungi are
not able to pass through different stages. He stated
that the old theory now only has historical
significance.
In 1899 Willibald Winkler, MD, found remarkable
deviations in forms, and using carefully prepared pure
cultures, found that bacteria pass through stages with
markedly different morphology. He stated his
observations would likely not be accepted immediately.
100 years later these observations are still not
generally accepted by medical thinkers.
A very insightful section of Lida Mattman's book
discusses how changing the terrain of the culture
medium, changes the developmental form of the microbe.
Examples: anthrobacter develop rods, rather than
spheres if peptone is added to the glucose-mineral
salts medium; whether triangle forms or ellipsoidal
forms of yeast develop will be dependent on the amino
acid mix in the medium; candida develops only budding
yeast cells when glucose is the sole carbon source,
but with soluble starch, glycogen, or dextrin, there
is extensive filamentation; the presence of simple
ions can determine the shape of an organism; for some
fungi, mycelia form only when zinc, copper and iron
cations are all present; excess zinc can prevent
fungal sporulations.
All of this
leads back to the terrain. The terrain is everything
and it is the premise behind How You Rot & Rust.
In the human body, many think of the blood as a fluid,
but it is more akin to a suspension, i.e. solid
particles are suspended in a liquid.
In essence, blood is a suspension of colloids.
In colloid chemistry blood could easily be thought of
as nothing more than a colloidal slurry and the
principles that apply to any colloidal slurry or
suspension also apply to the blood. The term
most apt to explain the coming together of the red
blood cells and the various microbial forms in the
blood is ZETA POTENTIAL. This relates to the
electrical charge around a colloid. In the blood this
is controlled by pH and all the other elements found
in the "soup".
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