Low body temp is also an indicator of Hypothyroidism.
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Date: Sat, 14 Jul 2012 22:50:27 -0700
Subject: Re: [agi] Re: Emergent "Inference"?
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

Alan,

On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 3:34 PM, Alan Grimes <[email protected]> wrote:

Steve Richfield wrote:

> Sergio,



> Sometimes this can grow to encompass entire races of people!!! For

> example, maintaining 98.6F=37C body temperatures requires good

> nutrition, so people who have been subjected to starvation often drop

> this "control strategy". As a result, entire races of people who have

> been subjected to starvation generations ago are still unable to operate

> at 98.6F=37C, even GENERATIONS after the last incidents of widespread

> starvation, this having been passed through the maternal line through

> mimicry. Irish and American Indians typically have this problem. In some

> areas, this has grown to become a major public health problem.



Weird, my body temperature has always been around 97 degrees. Do you

have some peer reviewed papers that show this is actually a problem?

Dr. Denis Wilson has an on-line book that describes the many medical conditions 
springing from this. His explanation of the problems is excellent, but his 
treatments are ~2 decades behind the times.


For the latest, you should look on my own web site at 
http://www.FixLowBodyTemp.com

Note that I am the **ONLY** person in the world claiming to be a central 
metabolic control systems therapist, so there are no "peers" to review anything 
I might wright. However, I am now working to get some other people up to speed 
on this.


Your doctor would doubtless tell you that temperature makes no difference, and 
in any case there is no changing it. He would be quite wrong on both counts.

There is also an international forum where people discuss their problems at 
http://BodyTemp.eu but it gets really quiet during the hot summer months.


The FIRST step which is needed to fully diagnose what is going on, is for you 
to learn to guesstimate your temperature to ~+/- 0.2F. This usually takes a 
week or two of first reflecting on your physiological clues, guessing your 
temperature, measuring your temperature with an accurate thermometer, and then 
reflecting on what you missed to have the error you had. While 0.2F accuracy at 
first may seem impossible, ~95% of people have no problem learning this in less 
than 2 weeks. There is no helping the remaining ~5%, as I and others have made 
many attempts to help them, all with a 100% failure 


No one who has developed this skill has ever questioned the underlying process 
of switching between setpoints, because once you become observant enough to 
learn this skill, you can literally feel things changing within you.


BTW, last month I reached a new milestone - there is now a web site for breast 
cancer sufferers and survivors, hosted by a lady who credits me with saving her 
life after her doctors put her onto a downward spiral. Its nice to feel 
appreciated.


Steve






  
    
      
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