Pulse oximeters don't seem to work well for me because of irregular heartbeat 
and I have not figured out how to compensate for it.Thanks.PT



      From: Gmail <ironguard...@gmail.com>
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Wednesday, March 8, 2017 5:34 PM
 Subject: Re: CS>Allergies
   
You can also buy a pulse oximeter for $20 that will indicate an allergy buy 
measuring your pulse rate. Much more accurate than kinesiology.

The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really 
know about what they imagine they can design.   F.A. Hayek
On Mar 8, 2017, at 4:32 PM, Joe Huard <joeh6...@gmail.com> wrote:


 
PT,
 I sent you a private email about hydration using Brown's Gas. They use it in 
Japan in hydration bars.
 https://www.eagle-research.com/cms/user/11620/ms_affiliate?a=11620
 To find out what is causing your dryness, I suggest using applied kinesiology 
with a friend to see what it is. I think that you probably already know about 
applied kinesiology.
 
 Joe
 
 On 2017-03-08 4:03 PM, PT Ferrance wrote:
  
  Thanks, RaVen.  I don't know what it could be but I will look into it. PT
     
  
 
        From: ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com>
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Wednesday, March 8, 2017 12:38 PM
 Subject: Re: CS>Allergies
  
     Hi PT,   
  Sometimes dehydration can be from food allergy.  
  I'm now experiencing when I eat sugar like from those instant ice tea mix... 
my hands immediately become very dry and  my fingers curl up. I have to stop 
drinking that sugary drink from now on and now my hands are okay.  If I drink 
too much pasteurized dairy - areas near my nose and cheek becomes chafe and 
peels.  Winters too makes our skins dryer from heaters.  Lots of factors to 
consider for sure.  
  Double check for possible new food allergies perhaps?  
  
 RaVen         
 
      
 
 -- 
 If a man is deep in the woods, with no woman around, and says something, is he 
still wrong?