Thank you Steve, I am thrilled with your response as it makes a lot of sense
to me. I know of  LDN, MMS1 and MMS2 - and of course EIS.

 

I've got LDN though have never taken it regularly (does this ever go "bad")?
I mixed a batch and it's been in the fridge as I know you're only supposed
to take 2-3mg (I believe) and each pill is 50mg so you have to dissolve it
and then go from there (for me a dropperful is about the right dose) -
though I wonder if it's no good because it's been in the fridge so long.

 

I did MMS2 before and will start doing it again. Do you suggest using the
"old protocol" or the "new protocol"? And I never fared well with the MMS2
so I'd like to just stick with MMS1 if you think that will do the trick.
I'll reach out to the MMS group and ask - but since you're way a head of me
with your wife, I'd love to hear what seems to be working with her (I've got
Grave's and have never felt "right" for years now and I'm tired of it: haha,
literally and physically).

 

Thanks again.

 

Lisa

 

  _____  

From: Steve G [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2010 8:34 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>mycoplasma

 


Mycoplasma are pretty well-known, but normal medicine can't touch it since
these bacterium have no cell walls, and that is what standard antibacterials
target.

Fortunately, mycoplasma can be addressed through MMS1 and/or MMS2.  I don't
know whether EIS has any effect though.

Standard medical theory is that a person has a 'normal' immune system, then
one day 'something' happens and the immune system goes crazy and starts
attacking it's own cells.

Another theory that doesn't get much press, is that auto-immune diseases are
mostly NOT a matter of immune systems magically going insane one day, but
rather the immune system is working the way it was designed.  The problem is
that the mycoplasmas have infected skin, joints and/or organs and have
penetrated the cells.  They are putting out foreign waste within the cells,
and the immune system starts fighting these infections, but not very
effectively.  In the meantime, the immune system is always overwhelmed and
the body is more susceptible to other diseases as well.

Standard medical treatment for autoimmunities includes immune suppression as
with steroids.  This makes the patient feel better quickly, since the immune
system has backed off and is no longer causing inflammation in the affected
tissues.   Unfortunately, the side-effect of suppressing the immune system
is that this allows the mycoplasma infection to become more invasive and
affect additional joints, organs, or skin areas.

That's my take anyway.    

I believe that auto-immune diseases can be more effectively treated by use
of LDN therapy, MMS1,  MMS2, and maybe CS as well.  Having said that, we are
still struggling with my wife's auto-immune disease using both allopathic
and non-traditional methods.  I don't know the best protocol to address
auto-immune disease, but I do believe the answer lies in enhancing or
reinforcing the immune system rather than suppressing it.

Steve G.

0

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--- On Wed, 11/10/10, Lisa <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Lisa <[email protected]>
Subject: CS>mycoplasma
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, November 10, 2010, 3:20 PM

Hello All,

 

Has anybody heard of mycoplasma (a bacteria) - which can effect different
things including one's immune system?

 

Will using EIS kill this bacteria dead!?!?

 

Lisa