It's probably not migrating back, but appearing to because of food
intake variations that pull silver out and deposits it at variable rates to
be diffused in the nail as it grows, in under and over threshold
concentrations that make an area visible and invisible.
Diffusion would account for a striated fan like spread into invisibility.
Nothing is uniform and everything has hidden elements.
Does a nail grow in layers? Say, both from the cuticle for the
overbearing part and from under the cuticle to the moon edge for a thin
substrate.
It sure appears to when disassembling one and watching one that's been torn
off grow back. [ouch]
Two different interfaces that change in degree of function from day to day.
[??]
At any rate, a nail is a 3D structure and the whole thing doesn't always
grow at the same rate .....curling and twisting and getting groovy sometimes.
Picking up rocks one day and sand the next on the bottoms more fluid
interface with the ground..and crap from the air and rain [cuticle] on the
top [ sorta like a glacier]
Ode
At 12:51 PM 1/15/2010 -0500, you wrote:
But wouldn't it grow out then if it was in the nail itself. What is making
it migrate back toward the root as the nail grows out so it stays put? My
coloration has been present for about 4 years now, and looks just like it
did 4 years ago. Although it started at the root and expanded (not
migrated) out from there when I stopped taking the large amounts of silver
it stopped changing in its darkness and placement.
Marshall
Ode Coyote wrote:
Metals naturally go to hair and nails and grow out as part of the
elimination system.
Silver in an impure form is generally photo-reactive.
Discoloration in the nails is not proof that there is discoloration
under them..and if it grows outwards, it's in the nails, not under them.
ode
At 11:10 AM 1/14/2010 -0500, you wrote:
The moons are gray. Initially only the moons were grey, starting at the
root and progressing out. Over time it progressed until the gray
actually now extends past the moons. The color is different though
because the moons are pure gray, but outside the moons you have the pink
underlaying the area so it appears more purplish..
Marshall
Dan Nave wrote:
You wrote: "What part of their statement do think they got incorrect?"
For example, Marshall states that he got blue moons from EIS. When I
looked at the pictures he posted, it appears that the area above the
moons is blue, but the moons themselves are not blue...
Dan
On Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 7:57 PM, Norton, Steve <stephen.nor...@ngc.com
<mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com>> wrote:
Just a few minor points if I may. An opinion from a different
perspective.
Dispute is a pugilistic term signifying an argument. I don't know
if it is intended that way. I think that an unsubstantiated claim
is an opinion and an unsubstantiated counter claim is also an
opinion. And yes you should feel free to express your opinion but
it need not become a dispute.
Relative to silver poisoning, there is a medically documented
instance of silver poisoning. As I recall, the person accidentally
drank a large amount of silver nitrate and died quite rapidly.
Silver can also, in some instances cause a selenium deficiency
that over the long term can lead to liver failure and death. It
probably has never happened because the person would turn blue
first and get medical help in time.
If someone says they drank silver and got blue moons I believe
that almost 100 percent of the time they are correct. What part of
their statement do think they got incorrect? That they did not
drink silver or that they do not have blue moons?
It is fine if you choose to place no value on anecdotal
information but your choice to not believe it does not make it not
true.
Regards,
Steve N
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From*: Steve G <chube...@yahoo.com <mailto:chube...@yahoo.com>>
*To*: silver-list@eskimo.com <mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com>
<silver-list@eskimo.com <mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com>>
*Sent*: Wed Jan 13 18:04:28 2010
*Subject*: Re: CS>Aluminum in your diet
How about, 'Any info that supports this claim?' My problem is
that all kinds of people make all kinds of claims. If I believe
someone just because they are fervent and are sincere I'll go
around in circles because I hear and read things that conflict
with each other.
My basic stance in life that if someone makes an unsubstantiated
claim, I can dispute it without any substantiation for my
position. If someone presents rationale, information from a
study, then I must consider their rationale or study to see if it
appears to be solid before I can dispute it.
There are some very fervent and sincere people on the internet
pushing the notion that you can get 'silver poisoning.' I don't
believe them. They have yet to provide meaningful support for
their position.
When someone says they drank colloidal silver and got blue moons,
I don't accept it at face value. I need to know how their
'colloidal silver' was made or from whom it was acquired. I am
open to the idea that perhaps someone can get blue moons from
colloidal silver, but I want to know exactly how this happened so
I can figure out what is going on and what I should do.
And on a final note, the credentials of the person making such
claims isn't worth that much to me. They can be mistaken or have
made poor assumptions just as easily as I can.
Steve G.
--- On *Wed, 1/13/10, sol /<sol...@sweetwaterhsa.com
<mailto:sol...@sweetwaterhsa.com>>/* wrote:
From: sol <sol...@sweetwaterhsa.com
<mailto:sol...@sweetwaterhsa.com>>
Subject: Re: CS>Aluminum in your diet
To: silver-list@eskimo.com <mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com>
Date: Wednesday, January 13, 2010, 10:49 AM
At 01:50 PM 1/11/2010, you wrote:
> If you are a man don't eat anything cooked in stainless
steel. It causes prostate to swell..
Any info on why? My brother has been diagnosed with prostate
cancer and I will pass this tidbit on.
sol
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