Archive for May 18th, 2009

posted by admin on May 18

I wish it could feel as good as it does when I am going to come, after I come, but the better it is, the shorter it is. By the time 1 get to feeling really good, there’s not much time to enjoy it.

HUSBAND

“I know when he says he’s coming, that’s about the time he’ll be going.” The wife frowned as she expressed her marriage-long frustration with her sexual relationship. Her husband busied himself straightening the books on the table next to his chair, as if looking for some quick retort to save his self-esteem.

The wife continued, gaining momentum from her newfound freedom to express her concerns openly. “He seems to be trying to get something accomplished. I call him pelvically hyperactive. When they talk about going all the way, I’d really love to, but it’s just that I don’t think he can last long enough to go even halfway.”

The husband laughed at his wife’s sarcasm, but his smile masked the pain evident in his clenched fist. He shuffled his feet on the floor, much as a little boy caught stealing cookies once too often. He smiled at me awkwardly, as if appealing for some form of universal male empathy for our failure to explain to the opposite gender the nature of our sexual enigma. Why does it seem that the better it feels, the sooner it’s over? If we are not coming too soon, we are having trouble coming at all. Why does it seem that we enjoy so little of what we talk about so much? When we come, it sometimes feels that we haven’t been very far at all, not really been anywhere.

*115\97\8*

posted by admin on May 18

Apart from friendly bacteria, there are other “friends” which live happily in our bodies. Medical science calls them parasites. Their activity in a healthy body is limited to the intestines, which is, strictly speaking, outside the body proper.

In particular, humans are hosts to the “human intestinal fluke” (fasciolopsis buskii). Fluke means “flat” , because it belongs to a family of flatworms. If you eat meat and other animal products, you could have many more parasites like for example Eurytrema, the pancreatic parasite of cattle.

These parasites have to go through certain stages to multiply. A pure and healthy body can predict these stages, expel the eggs before they have time to hatch, and therefore we could live in symbiosis with our “friends”, because their population is limited.

However, very special processes occur if we have certain toxins in our body, called solvents. Examples of solvents are: benzene, all types of alcohol (propyl, wood alcohol), toluene, xylene etc..

The liver, kidneys, and other blood purifying organs in our body are overloaded with requests to process the above solvents, together with other toxins you take with your food, and they are unable to detect and kill tiny little stages of parasites, thereby allowing them to circulate around the body with the bloodstream. In addition, the existence of solvents forces thousands of parasite eggs to hatch prematurely. Flukes in various stages grow and multiply everywhere around the body, attaching themselves to any organ where favourable conditions exist.

Some of the possible consequences are listed below:

propyl alcohol : accumulates in your liver. Adult flukes occupy the liver, but eggs and other stages circulate and grow everywhere around your body, producing excessive amounts of powerful cell growth hormones, forcing your organ cells to divide. This is exactly what our Medical science calls cancer. 100% of cancer patients have propyl alcohol in their bodies.

wood alcohol (methanol) : accumulates in your pancreas and in the eyes. The favourite spot for adult flukes becomes the pancreas. Their activity causes diabetes. 100% of people with diabetes have wood alcohol in their pancreas.

benzene : this extremely toxic solvent (comparable in toxicity* to a radioactive uranium) accumulates in your thymus gland, gradually damaging it. Adult flukes colonise the thymus gland, which, by the way, produces T-cells, identified by our Medical Science to be related to the functions of our immune system. Fluke activity gradually reduces the capacity of the thymus gland to produce T-cells. When the thymus gland cannot produce enough T-cells, our immune system can fail completely. The condition of low T-cells count is what the medical profession calls AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome). 100% of all AIDS patients have benzene in their thymus gland. If you have the tiniest amount of benzene accumulated in you thymus, your immune system is impaired and you get sick more frequently.

toluene and xylene: they go to your brain. Adult flukes colonise your brain and you develop Alzheimer disease.

Solvents in prostate: Adult flukes colonise the prostate and you develop chronic prostatitis. In the case of uterus: in the presence of adult flukes you develop endometriosis etc., etc..

The above are just a few examples of the many diseases caused by the existence of various toxins in our body, after our parasite friends have taken advantage of it.

*14\96\8*