Thursday 28 February 2013

Lesson Nine


Lesson Nine

Purpose: To search for shingles or Herpes.
Materials: A saliva specimen from the person being tested;
they may be thousands of miles away. Also a specimen of the

virus. This can be obtained from someone else's lesions—one
droplet is enough, picked up on a bit of paper towel. The whole
thing, towel and all, can be pushed into a glass bottle for preserving.
Water and alcohol should be added. It can also be put on
a slide, Herpes, homemade. A homeopathic preparation of the
virus does not give accurate results for this kind of testing, due to
the additional frequency imposed on it by potentizing. (However,
homeopathic preparations can be used if the potency matches the
tissue frequency where it resides. Hopefully, some way of using
homeopathic sources will soon be found.)
Method: Place the saliva specimen in its unopened baggy on
one plate. You may wish to open it briefly, though, to add enough
filtered water to wet all the paper and add ¼ tsp. grain alcohol to
sterilize or preserve it.
Place the virus specimen on the other plate and test as usual
(like Lesson Six). A positive result means the person has active
Herpes.
The main disadvantage of saliva testing is that you do not
know which tissue has the pathogen or the toxin. You can only
conclude that it is present. Usually this is enough information to
carry out a corrective program.

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