Jack:

Yes, very true:  There is an actual disorder related to eating clay -- very
often the wrong clay -- that shouldn't be confused with real pelotherapy.
However, the base "driving" instinct is correct; it's the expression that is
the problem.

As an example, I was reading an abstract the other day; new in-vivo tests
prove that bentonite taking internally can reduce the adsorption -- or
perhaps increase the elimination -- of Lithium by over 30%.  The study was
done to see if bentonite -- on the FDA GRAS list -- could be a viable
treatment for a Lithium overdose.  The conclusion was affirmative.

Best Regards,

Jason



----- Original Message -----
From: "Jack Dayton" <jack...@harbornet.com>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 3:36 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Burn treatment with bentonite and CS ...


> Jason Eaton  7/31/03  5:47 AM
>
> > I was hoping that the further research would begin to unveil the
> > mysteries of clay healing from a scientific viewpoint.  Sadly, it has
done
> > exactly the opposite!
> ********************************
> Thanks for that entire post  about the
> mysteries of the various properties of
> clay in many of it's forms, now I wont
> have to ask WHY clay does anything
> beneficial, - I thought it was for tennis
> courts, and ceramics only.
>
> I can't imagine eating clay, but I have
> read of people who do so compulsively.
> ( A mineral deficiency? )
>
> Jack
>
>
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