Aleksandr
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 1,285
Seems to have some interesting ideas. I remember reading his stuff a few years back, and he was really into CO2 (same as Dr. Peat) - however he recommended a cheap effective way to get it: Sodium bicarbonate. He also recommends magnesium chloride (also very cheap). But now he seems super into hydrogen, which i didnt think he used to mention.
@Helen @mattyb @Orion @HS
Protocol | Dr. Sircus
"All living organisms have basic elements in common: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and so on. These elements make up 99% of atoms found in the body. The four “macromolecules” that make life possible - protein, carbohydrates, lipids and nucleic acids all have hydrogen piggy backing on them that the body needs to strip off. The other major elements, phosphorous, sulfur, sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium, total just 3.5% of a living being’s body, with trace elements like iron, iodine and other minerals taking up the remaining 0.5%, yet with iodine, for instance, we find we cannot live at all without it."
"The top three nutrients the body needs are gases: oxygen, hydrogen and carbon dioxide. Water obviously combines two of these most important substances, hydrogen and oxygen. The idea is to get command of these three gases as a starting step and then add magnesium, iodine, selenium and both sodium and potassium bicarbonate." - Seems to be in line with your thinking, Helen???
"Natural Allopathic Medicine. Probably the most similar approach is orthomolecular medicine. Two-time Nobel Prize winner, and molecular biologist, Linus Pauling, Ph.D., used the term 'orthomolecular' "to refer to the practice of varying the concentration of substances normally present in the body to prevent and treat disease." Orthomolecular medicine provides the body with optimal amounts of substances which are natural to the body."
What was the deal with Hydrogen, the conclusion we came to here? There was lots of hype about it. From memory, it made Tubzy's hair test slower? When he was already slow? @Boris @Helen do you think maybe then its only good for a fast oxidiser?
@Helen @mattyb @Orion @HS
Protocol | Dr. Sircus
"All living organisms have basic elements in common: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and so on. These elements make up 99% of atoms found in the body. The four “macromolecules” that make life possible - protein, carbohydrates, lipids and nucleic acids all have hydrogen piggy backing on them that the body needs to strip off. The other major elements, phosphorous, sulfur, sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium, total just 3.5% of a living being’s body, with trace elements like iron, iodine and other minerals taking up the remaining 0.5%, yet with iodine, for instance, we find we cannot live at all without it."
"The top three nutrients the body needs are gases: oxygen, hydrogen and carbon dioxide. Water obviously combines two of these most important substances, hydrogen and oxygen. The idea is to get command of these three gases as a starting step and then add magnesium, iodine, selenium and both sodium and potassium bicarbonate." - Seems to be in line with your thinking, Helen???
"Natural Allopathic Medicine. Probably the most similar approach is orthomolecular medicine. Two-time Nobel Prize winner, and molecular biologist, Linus Pauling, Ph.D., used the term 'orthomolecular' "to refer to the practice of varying the concentration of substances normally present in the body to prevent and treat disease." Orthomolecular medicine provides the body with optimal amounts of substances which are natural to the body."
What was the deal with Hydrogen, the conclusion we came to here? There was lots of hype about it. From memory, it made Tubzy's hair test slower? When he was already slow? @Boris @Helen do you think maybe then its only good for a fast oxidiser?