I remember many times when doctors have progressively prescribed stronger broad spectrum antibiotics after the first round or two has no effect on an apparent "infection" of sorts. Nothing ever worked for me when it had to do with antibiotics. Things would usually clear up on their own over time.
I remember many times when doctors have progressively prescribed stronger broad spectrum antibiotics after the first round or two has no effect on an apparent "infection" of sorts. Nothing ever worked for me when it had to do with antibiotics. Things would usually clear up on their own over time.
Hospitals are the worst offenders here. Intravenous antibiotics for practically everything "just in case" and antibacterial lotions and potions in every corner now after Convid.
Local hospitals still mandating a mask for a consultation in one part of the hospital but not the rest!
The germ theory true believers are the ones who are still following all the protocols to a T even though the mandates were struck down earlier this year.
I had pleurisy was treated with antibiotics and they didn’t work. I went back and complained and was given a much stronger antibiotic with an improvement within days! I know from practical experience that antibiotics do work. Although you do have to have the right antibiotic for the right bug
As Dr Tom Cowan explains it (I'll do my best to paraphrase):
All bacteria are beneficial. Bacteria are there to remediate, to fix problems.
Bacteria, as living entities, produce waste. The waste is toxic to our bodies, but our bodies can process the daily waste just fine.
When our body has a more serious problem, the amount of bacteria increase; the type of bacteria depends on the issue. This increase means a lot more toxic waste from the bacteria which gets us "sick".
The reason antibiotics "work" is because they kill off bacteria, which in turn reduces the bacteria waste. However, antibiotics do not address the root cause of the problem inside our body which caused the huge increase in bacteria. Taking antibiotics may make us feel better in the short term but if the bacteria were not given the chance to fix the problem things could get worse or recur.
This is why most people will get well on their own eventually, without antibiotics. The bacteria do their job fixing the problem. But yes, it can get uncomfortable & painful with the increase in bacteria waste.
This is also why surgery can help in serious cases eg serious lung infection. The surgeon removes a chunk of tissue including the bacteria waste.
Yes indeed and 'paraphrasing' is what I am after! I seek to gather up the best phrases from the net and use them to craft the truth. As far as I can I give credit where I should. People need it!
I had sepsis as a result of prostate problems and came within hours of dying. I was given pill versions of "antibiotics" when I was released. When these pills ran out I started to have incredible pain in my back, so bad I went screaming to the emergency room. They found infection in my spine that had eaten into my spinal chord. After an operation to repair and prevent the infection I was given intravenious antibiotics for several weeks. All went well and it is possible to lift weights and run. The previous pain I, attributed to the end of the antibiotic prescription. I cannot say that this was the cause but it seemed to be.
Beautifully explained!
I remember many times when doctors have progressively prescribed stronger broad spectrum antibiotics after the first round or two has no effect on an apparent "infection" of sorts. Nothing ever worked for me when it had to do with antibiotics. Things would usually clear up on their own over time.
Hospitals are the worst offenders here. Intravenous antibiotics for practically everything "just in case" and antibacterial lotions and potions in every corner now after Convid.
Local hospitals still mandating a mask for a consultation in one part of the hospital but not the rest!
The germ theory true believers are the ones who are still following all the protocols to a T even though the mandates were struck down earlier this year.
I had pleurisy was treated with antibiotics and they didn’t work. I went back and complained and was given a much stronger antibiotic with an improvement within days! I know from practical experience that antibiotics do work. Although you do have to have the right antibiotic for the right bug
All antibiotics just kill. They are anti-life.
As Dr Tom Cowan explains it (I'll do my best to paraphrase):
All bacteria are beneficial. Bacteria are there to remediate, to fix problems.
Bacteria, as living entities, produce waste. The waste is toxic to our bodies, but our bodies can process the daily waste just fine.
When our body has a more serious problem, the amount of bacteria increase; the type of bacteria depends on the issue. This increase means a lot more toxic waste from the bacteria which gets us "sick".
The reason antibiotics "work" is because they kill off bacteria, which in turn reduces the bacteria waste. However, antibiotics do not address the root cause of the problem inside our body which caused the huge increase in bacteria. Taking antibiotics may make us feel better in the short term but if the bacteria were not given the chance to fix the problem things could get worse or recur.
This is why most people will get well on their own eventually, without antibiotics. The bacteria do their job fixing the problem. But yes, it can get uncomfortable & painful with the increase in bacteria waste.
This is also why surgery can help in serious cases eg serious lung infection. The surgeon removes a chunk of tissue including the bacteria waste.
What an excellent comment. I have taken the liberty of copying for reference.
Thank you.
I wish I could find the talk(s) where Dr Tom explains this, but my paraphrasing will have to do. ;)
It makes so much sense, doesn't it?
Yes indeed and 'paraphrasing' is what I am after! I seek to gather up the best phrases from the net and use them to craft the truth. As far as I can I give credit where I should. People need it!
I've had pleurisy 4 times, and not taken antibiotics any time. Maybe your
'improvement within days' would have happened even if you hadn't taken antibiotics. :-)
I had sepsis as a result of prostate problems and came within hours of dying. I was given pill versions of "antibiotics" when I was released. When these pills ran out I started to have incredible pain in my back, so bad I went screaming to the emergency room. They found infection in my spine that had eaten into my spinal chord. After an operation to repair and prevent the infection I was given intravenious antibiotics for several weeks. All went well and it is possible to lift weights and run. The previous pain I, attributed to the end of the antibiotic prescription. I cannot say that this was the cause but it seemed to be.