Re: CS nasal spray / hair

1998-05-23 Thread It's not me
Bill,

Never thought of that.  If you try the CS, let us know if it seems to work
on mites.  I developed a sensitivity to mites a few years back and itched
nearly on a constant basis.  I finally had to get rid of all the cloth
surfaces in our house including the couch, drapes, carpet and recliners.
When it came to the mattress and pillows, we used some of those
dustproof/waterproof mattress and pillow cases.  It worked and now I don't
have any problems at all.  It also helps to wash your clothes and bedsheets
in really hot water.

Vern

-Original Message-
From: Bill Kingsbury 
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Date: Friday, May 22, 1998 1:38 PM
Subject: Re: CS nasal spray / hair


> Mites very likely rely upon bacteria and/or fungus for the
> function of their digestive systems.  Use of =sufficient= CS to
> destroy this bacteria and/or fungus could thereby destroy the
> mite's ability to live and feed in human pores and follicles --
> or pillows, mattresses, etc.
>
> Does anyone know a practical, proven way to stop mites from living
> in pillows, pillow cases, mattresses, etc. (without removing and
> boiling them) ?
>



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Re: CS nasal spray / hair

1998-05-22 Thread bjs1779
Bill Kingsbury wrote:
> 
> 
>  Does anyone know a practical, proven way to stop mites from living
>  in pillows, pillow cases, mattresses, etc. (without removing and
>  boiling them) ?

Ozone


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Re: CS nasal spray / hair

1998-05-22 Thread Bill Kingsbury

 Perhaps CS would NOT affect mites, but then perhaps it would.

 Mites very likely rely upon bacteria and/or fungus for the 
 function of their digestive systems.  Use of =sufficient= CS to
 destroy this bacteria and/or fungus could thereby destroy the 
 mite's ability to live and feed in human pores and follicles -- 
 or pillows, mattresses, etc.

 As for hair loss, a CS hair rinse could eliminate any follicular 
 fungus that might be =directly= responsible for hair loss.

 In any case, NCOAMA's report of success -- with apparent NEW hair 
 growth AND improved hair quality -- is worth noting, and further 
 use seem warranted, regardless of 'theoretical considerations'.

 Does anyone know a practical, proven way to stop mites from living
 in pillows, pillow cases, mattresses, etc. (without removing and
 boiling them) ?


 As for scalp follicles, castor oil probably works, and it is 
 reportedly used in Russia for growing hair.

 Since castor oil acts as a 'transdermal carrier' for any agents
 (such as herbal extracts) that are mixed into it, why not mix
 strong CS into a castor oil, lecithin, and vodka emulsion,
 add some herb and spice extract -- nettles, and perhaps ginger,
 black pepper, garlic, or cayenne.  Use this as a scalp
 conditioner, and any mites or fungus should soon be history. 
 (Not too much vodka!  It's flammable.)  It would probably remove
 the 'sebum' in the follicles, also.

 (A nettles herb plus chopped onion 'vodka extract' grows hair, 
 according to some reports.  Research shows nettles can increase 
 'available free testosterone' and thus counteract dihydro- 
 testosterone (DHT), which is the main cause of male-pattern 
 baldness, prostatitis, and sometimes even low sex-drive in both 
 males and females.  Avena Sativa, or wild oats, and Saw Palmetto 
 also work to counteract DHT, and raise testosterone.)


 Note:The active ingredient in castor oil is ricinoleic acid.
 Ricinoleic acid has been shown to be effective in preventing
 the growth of numerous species of viruses, bacteria, yeasts
 and molds. (J Am Oil Chem Soc 61;37.323-325.)

 Used externally, hot 'castor oil packs' stimulate lymph 
 circulation and T-cell immune function, and treat fungal
 infections; internally, castor oil is a strong purgative.
 There are dozens of other uses in healing; in India the
 castor bean plant is called 'Erand'.  Only cold-pressed
 castor oil should be used (Heritage brand is one source).


 --Bill



 5-22-98, "It's not me" wrote:
 >
 > Would this work?  I recall reading that CS kills simple, 
 > single cell organisms, but not complex organisms.  I don't 
 > think that CS would help with mites, but would certainly 
 > kill bacteria in the pores or on your pillow.

 ~~
 5-21-98, Bill Kingsbury wrote:
 >
 > 5-21-98, NCOAMA wrote:
 > >
 > > i havn't used it in my nose for very long but i have put
 > > it on my head for nearly two years.  my scalp is still
 > > flesh color and my hair is much younger looking (even
 > > the new hair that the cs grew)
 >
 >
 > This makes sense, considering the theory that hair-loss is
 > infectious in nature, (usually?) due to fungus or mites living
 > in the hair follicles.
 >
 > There was a news-slot on CBS channel 2, around six weeks ago,
 > regarding the purported discovery of the root-cause of hair loss.
 > I missed it, but I saw the two-second preview shot -- of a
 > wiggly mite, somehow clearly filmed in a hair follicle.
 >
 > Does anyone have more info ?  I tried looking on their web
 > page:  www.channel2000.com , but there was nothing there, at
 > that time.
 >
 > There was a special on PBS TV (Nova ?) on mites earlier this
 > year.  The largest mites (in humans) are found in the eye-lash
 > follicles, and they are found in pores and follicles everywhere
 > on the body -- unless you take peroxide baths often, I guess.
 >
 > Or colloidal silver baths...  Yes, a CS hair rinse makes sense.
 >
 > CS in the washing machine might make sense, also, since mites
 > live in clothing and bedding -- where ever there's (dead) human
 > skin flakes (or dandruff).  Pillows and mattresses are the most
 > mite- populated places.  Would a CS pillow- spray work ?
 >
 > Dust mites, naturally, live on dust, but most dust is purported
 > to be human skin flakes.  'Mite control' is important for those
 > with allergies and asthma, since mites (and mite feces) are a
 > MAJOR allergy trigger.
 >
 >
 > --Bill
 >




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Re: CS nasal spray / hair

1998-05-22 Thread It's not me
Would this work?  I recall reading that CS kills simple, single cell
organisms, but not complex organisms.  I don't think that CS would help with
mites, but would certainly kill bacteria in the pores or on your pillow.

-Original Message-
From: Bill Kingsbury 
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Date: Thursday, May 21, 1998 3:57 PM
Subject: Re: CS nasal spray / hair


>
> 5-21-98, NCOAMA wrote:
> >
> > i havn't used it in my nose for very long but i have put
> > it on my head for nearly two years.  my scalp is still
> > flesh color and my hair is much younger looking (even
> > the new hair that the cs grew)
>
>
> This makes sense, considering the theory that hair-loss is
> infectious in nature, (usually?) due to fungus or mites living
> in the hair follicles.
>
> There was a news-slot on CBS channel 2, around six weeks ago,
> regarding the purported discovery of the root-cause of hair loss.
> I missed it, but I saw the two-second preview shot -- of a
> wiggly mite, somehow clearly filmed in a hair follicle.
>
> Does anyone have more info ?  I tried looking on their web
> page:  www.channel2000.com , but there was nothing there, at
> that time.
>
> There was a special on PBS TV (Nova ?) on mites earlier this
> year.  The largest mites (in humans) are found in the eye-lash
> follicles, and they are found in pores and follicles everywhere
> on the body -- unless you take peroxide baths often, I guess.
>
> Or colloidal silver baths...  Yes, a CS hair rinse makes sense.
>
> CS in the washing machine might make sense, also, since mites
> live in clothing and bedding -- where ever there's (dead) human
> skin flakes (or dandruff).  Pillows and mattresses are the most
> mite- populated places.  Would a CS pillow- spray work ?
>
> Dust mites, naturally, live on dust, but most dust is purported
> to be human skin flakes.  'Mite control' is important for those
> with allergies and asthma, since mites (and mite feces) are a
> MAJOR allergy trigger.
>
>
> --Bill
>
>
>
>
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>The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.
>
>To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to:
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>
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>


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Re: CS nasal spray / hair

1998-05-21 Thread Bill Kingsbury

 5-21-98, NCOAMA wrote:
 >
 > i havn't used it in my nose for very long but i have put
 > it on my head for nearly two years.  my scalp is still
 > flesh color and my hair is much younger looking (even
 > the new hair that the cs grew)


 This makes sense, considering the theory that hair-loss is 
 infectious in nature, (usually?) due to fungus or mites living 
 in the hair follicles.  

 There was a news-slot on CBS channel 2, around six weeks ago, 
 regarding the purported discovery of the root-cause of hair loss.  
 I missed it, but I saw the two-second preview shot -- of a 
 wiggly mite, somehow clearly filmed in a hair follicle.

 Does anyone have more info ?  I tried looking on their web 
 page:  www.channel2000.com , but there was nothing there, at 
 that time.

 There was a special on PBS TV (Nova ?) on mites earlier this 
 year.  The largest mites (in humans) are found in the eye-lash 
 follicles, and they are found in pores and follicles everywhere 
 on the body -- unless you take peroxide baths often, I guess.

 Or colloidal silver baths...  Yes, a CS hair rinse makes sense.

 CS in the washing machine might make sense, also, since mites 
 live in clothing and bedding -- where ever there's (dead) human
 skin flakes (or dandruff).  Pillows and mattresses are the most
 mite- populated places.  Would a CS pillow- spray work ?

 Dust mites, naturally, live on dust, but most dust is purported
 to be human skin flakes.  'Mite control' is important for those
 with allergies and asthma, since mites (and mite feces) are a
 MAJOR allergy trigger. 


 --Bill




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