Re: CSIonic minerals, is this true?

2011-04-27 Thread PT Ferrance
I can tell you from an Oriental Medicine point of view that sea vegetables are 
hard to digest so I would wonder how available the minerals are.  I have used 
seaweed tea baths for mineral absorption and they did seem helpful.
PT





From: Tara McClintick tmcclint...@fuse.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Wed, April 27, 2011 11:32:26 AM
Subject: CSIonic minerals, is this true?


 
Question for y'all, because there seems to be totally opposite views on ionic 
minerals being easily usable by the human body.  How true do you think the 
following information is?
 
 
 
Objects in the mineral kingdom are made up of substances like carbon, 
hydrogen, 
oxygen, silicon, manganese, and a vast assortment of other elements.   Elements 
in this kingdom are held together by very strong bonds.  The scientific terms 
for the strong, inorganic, mineral kingdom bonds are electrovalent or 
ionic  
. We don't have the physiological capabilities of easily converting 
inorganic minerals into usable materials, but plants do.
 
The minerals we eat should be from the plant kingdom Once the minerals 
become part of the plant kingdom, the bonds are no longer strong; in fact they 
become very weak...Our metabolic systems can use these plant minerals easily 
and 
effectively  ~ Ted Morter, Health and Wellness
 

This makes sense to me, as plants can survive off of water, sun, and sometime 
soil -yet humans need edible materials such as plants and animals sources since 
we are higher up the food chain. 
 
Best to throw out the ionic mineral supplements and eat more sea vegetables, 
algae, etc???  

 
 
Thanks in advance for your help or any info. you may have! 
 
Tara

RE: CSIonic minerals, is this true?

2011-04-27 Thread Nenah Sylver
Well, Tara, if you want to get rid of your ionic minerals, send them right
over to me, and I'll pay for shipping and handling. (I'm serious!) Because
that website is twisting everything and handing you a load of bull just to
sell their own supplements.

 

I researched this issue for over two years (not a typo) when doing research
on the section on water for my Rife Handbook. In a nutshell and loosely
defined, ionic simply refers to the properties (including size) of the
particles in the fluid. And ionic WILL pass across the cell membrane. Under
certain conditions, which include movement and sunshine, minerals from rocks
are transformed so that they ARE bio-available to the system.

 

This plant-versus-mineral-supplementation debate appears periodically on the
Internet and whenever I see it I could scream. So keep and use your
supplement. Or, as I said before, send them to me. If they are a good brand
and are truly ionic, I will make good use of them, I promise.

 

Best,

Nenah

 

Nenah Sylver, PhD

author, The Rife Handbook (2009)

Holistic Handbook of Sauna Therapy (2004)

VoiceBio and Biomodulator certification

 http://www.nenahsylver.com www.nenahsylver.com;
http://www.rifehandbook.com www.rifehandbook.com 

  _  

From: Tara McClintick [mailto:tmcclint...@fuse.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 27, 2011 8:32 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: CSIonic minerals, is this true?

 

 

Question for y'all, because there seems to be totally opposite views on
ionic minerals being easily usable by the human body.  How true do you
think the following information is?

 

Objects in the mineral kingdom are made up of substances like carbon,
hydrogen, oxygen, silicon, manganese, and a vast assortment of other
elements.   Elements in this kingdom are held together by very strong bonds.
The scientific terms for the strong, inorganic, mineral kingdom bonds are
electrovalent or ionic  . We don't have the physiological
capabilities of easily converting inorganic minerals into usable materials,
but plants do.

 

The minerals we eat should be from the plant kingdom Once the minerals
become part of the plant kingdom, the bonds are no longer strong; in fact
they become very weak...Our metabolic systems can use these plant minerals
easily and effectively  ~ Ted Morter, Health and Wellness

 


This makes sense to me, as plants can survive off of water, sun, and
sometime soil -yet humans need edible materials such as plants and animals
sources since we are higher up the food chain. 

 

Best to throw out the ionic mineral supplements and eat more sea vegetables,
algae, etc???  

 

 

Thanks in advance for your help or any info. you may have! 

 

Tara

 



Re: CSIonic minerals, is this true?

2011-04-27 Thread PT Ferrance
Hi Nenah,
I tried a brand of ionic minerals some years ago.  I didn't notice much 
difference, they were expensive, and many of them had to be taken away from 
other minerals so as 'not to interfere' with the absorption of those minerals.  
Eventually it just became too burdensome to take them as I was often away from 
home at the time that I needed to take something and since they were liquid and 
were not to be mixed with things it wasn't that they could easily be carried 
along.

I would be interested in your comments.
Thanks.
PT

 




From: Nenah Sylver nenahsyl...@cox.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Wed, April 27, 2011 12:04:43 PM
Subject: RE: CSIonic minerals, is this true?


Well, Tara , if you want to get rid of your ionic minerals, send them right 
over 
to me, and I’ll pay for shipping and handling. (I’m serious!) Because that 
website is twisting everything and handing you a load of bull just to sell 
their 
own supplements.
 
I researched this issue for over two years (not a typo) when doing research on 
the section on water for my Rife Handbook. In a nutshell and loosely defined, 
“ionic” simply refers to the properties (including size) of the particles in 
the 
fluid. And ionic WILL pass across the cell membrane. Under certain conditions, 
which include movement and sunshine, minerals from rocks are transformed so 
that 
they ARE bio-available to the system.
 
This plant-versus-mineral-supplementation debate appears periodically on the 
Internet and whenever I see it I could scream. So keep and use your supplement. 
Or, as I said before, send them to me. If they are a good brand and are truly 
ionic, I will make good use of them, I promise.
 
Best,
Nenah
 
Nenah Sylver, PhD
author, The Rife Handbook (2009)
Holistic Handbook of Sauna Therapy(2004)
VoiceBio and Biomodulator certification
www.nenahsylver.com; www.rifehandbook.com



From:Tara McClintick [mailto:tmcclint...@fuse.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 27, 2011 8:32 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: CSIonic minerals, is this true?
 
 
Question for y'all, because there seems to be totally opposite views on ionic 
minerals being easily usable by the human body.  How true do you think the 
following information is?
 
Objects in the mineral kingdom are made up of substances like carbon, 
hydrogen, 
oxygen, silicon, manganese, and a vast assortment of other elements.   Elements 
in this kingdom are held together by very strong bonds.  The scientific terms 
for the strong, inorganic, mineral kingdom bonds are electrovalent or 
ionic  
. We don't have the physiological capabilities of easily converting 
inorganic minerals into usable materials, but plants do.
 
The minerals we eat should be from the plant kingdom Once the minerals 
become part of the plant kingdom, the bonds are no longer strong; in fact they 
become very weak...Our metabolic systems can use these plant minerals easily 
and 
effectively  ~ Ted Morter, Health and Wellness
 

This makes sense to me, as plants can survive off of water, sun, and sometime 
soil -yet humans need edible materials such as plants and animals sources since 
we are higher up the food chain. 
 
Best to throw out the ionic mineral supplements and eat more sea vegetables, 
algae, etc???  

 
 
Thanks in advance for your help or any info. you may have! 
 
Tara

RE: CSIonic minerals, is this true?

2011-04-27 Thread Tara McClintick
 
 
Thanks, Nenah, I'm glad to hear from someone who's researched it. I was
hoping I wasn't being snowed the other way - such opposite information!  
 
 
 
Thank-you, PT, for sharing the Chinese medicine view on the digestibility of
sea vegetables- I have several books on Chinese medicine in my to read
stack - it is fascinating to learn a totally different perspective on
things...

  _  

From: Nenah Sylver [mailto:nenahsyl...@cox.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 27, 2011 12:05 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: CSIonic minerals, is this true?



Well, Tara, if you want to get rid of your ionic minerals, send them right
over to me, and I'll pay for shipping and handling. (I'm serious!) Because
that website is twisting everything and handing you a load of bull just to
sell their own supplements.

 

I researched this issue for over two years (not a typo) when doing research
on the section on water for my Rife Handbook. In a nutshell and loosely
defined, ionic simply refers to the properties (including size) of the
particles in the fluid. And ionic WILL pass across the cell membrane. Under
certain conditions, which include movement and sunshine, minerals from rocks
are transformed so that they ARE bio-available to the system.

 

This plant-versus-mineral-supplementation debate appears periodically on the
Internet and whenever I see it I could scream. So keep and use your
supplement. Or, as I said before, send them to me. If they are a good brand
and are truly ionic, I will make good use of them, I promise.

 

Best,

Nenah

 

Nenah Sylver, PhD

author, The Rife Handbook (2009)

Holistic Handbook of Sauna Therapy (2004)

VoiceBio and Biomodulator certification

 http://www.nenahsylver.com www.nenahsylver.com;
http://www.rifehandbook.com www.rifehandbook.com 

  _  

From: Tara McClintick [mailto:tmcclint...@fuse.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 27, 2011 8:32 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: CSIonic minerals, is this true?

 

 

Question for y'all, because there seems to be totally opposite views on
ionic minerals being easily usable by the human body.  How true do you
think the following information is?

 

Objects in the mineral kingdom are made up of substances like carbon,
hydrogen, oxygen, silicon, manganese, and a vast assortment of other
elements.   Elements in this kingdom are held together by very strong bonds.
The scientific terms for the strong, inorganic, mineral kingdom bonds are
electrovalent or ionic  . We don't have the physiological
capabilities of easily converting inorganic minerals into usable materials,
but plants do.

 

The minerals we eat should be from the plant kingdom Once the minerals
become part of the plant kingdom, the bonds are no longer strong; in fact
they become very weak...Our metabolic systems can use these plant minerals
easily and effectively  ~ Ted Morter, Health and Wellness

 


This makes sense to me, as plants can survive off of water, sun, and
sometime soil -yet humans need edible materials such as plants and animals
sources since we are higher up the food chain. 

 

Best to throw out the ionic mineral supplements and eat more sea vegetables,
algae, etc???  

 

 

Thanks in advance for your help or any info. you may have! 

 

Tara