Thursday, 28 February 2013

Lesson Seven


Lesson Seven

Purpose: To test for the presence of aluminum in your brain
and your foods.
Materials: An aluminum measuring spoon, a tsp. of free
flowing aluminized salt, a square inch of aluminum foil, a package
of pork brain from the grocery store, kept frozen. (Other
animal sources will do). Or a stained slide of cerebrum, cerebellum
or other brain tissue.
Method:
1. Cut a piece of brain tissue (about 1 tsp.) and place in a
plastic bag.
2. Place the aluminum samples in separate plastic bags. Add
filtered water to each, about 1 tbs. Keep all surfaces and
your hands meticulously clean (do not use soap).
3. Place the aluminum sample on one plate and the brain
sample on the other plate.
4. Probe for resonance. If the circuit resonates you have aluminum
in your brain.
5. If your aluminum specimen actually has cadmium or copper
in it, you are also testing for these in your brain. Repeat the
aluminum test with other aluminum objects. If they all
resonate, you very, very likely have aluminum in your
brain. If you can, test yourself to cadmium and copper,
separately. If you don't have these in your brain, the
aluminum test result is even more likely to be correct.
6. Of course, it would be desirable to have absolute certainty
about this. To achieve this, purchase pure aluminum or an
Atomic Absorption Standard. These are available from
chemical supply companies.
If you do have aluminum in your brain, where is it coming
from?

7. Leave your purest aluminum test substance on one plate,
and replace the brain sample with these items, testing them
one at a time. Remember to rest after each positive result.
• a teaspoon of cottage cheese or yogurt taken from the top
of a container of a foil-capped variety
• a piece of cream cheese or butter that was wrapped in
foil
• a chip of bar soap or a bit of hand lotion
• a piece of cake or rolls baked in an aluminum pan
• a piece of turkey skin or hot dish that was covered with
aluminum foil
• anything baked with baking powder
• a carbonated beverage from an aluminum can


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