Friday, 22 February 2013

Tremor


Tremor

Tremor is a symptom, not a natural part of aging. The nerves
controlling the hands and arms are poisoned. The nerves
originate in the brain where the poison has accumulated. What is
the poison? Did it happen long ago? No! It could have happened
as long as two weeks ago but not longer!
Tremor is the result of ongoing poisoning! It is important to
find the poison as soon as you can since the rest of the body will
soon be affected, too. Search your memory for the new things that
happened in the last two weeks. It is a herculean task but only
gets harder each day, so keep notes as you ask: Is there new
carpeting? Is there a new furnace? Is there a different water
supply? Is there a new hair dresser? Did somebody bring a vase
of fresh flowers? Is there a new laundry person? Was the place
sprayed for insects? Is there a new medicine (drug) or supplement?
Was remodeling done? Is there a new food?
The list is endless and the situation looks hopeless because
so many new things can happen in two weeks.
Rather than asking individual questions like these, let's ask
only five general questions and have the assurance that one of
them will catch the culprit.
1. Is it in the air? This will catch insecticide, flowers, carpets
all together.
2. Is it in the water?
3. Is it in the medicines or supplements?
4. Is it in the clothing?
5. Is it in the food or on the dishes?
To answer each question, test the item using your Syncrometer
searching technique. Make a test substance. Then search
a saliva sample for it.
To test the air, take a dust sample off the kitchen counter or
table (this gives you fresh dust). Pick up the dust with a few

wipes by a small, two inch square of damp paper towel. Place in
a resealable baggy.
To test the water, make samples by putting about a tsp. of hot,
cold, or filtered water into a resealable baggy with a bit of paper
towel in it. Try to get the first morning water before it has run.
To test the medicines and supplements put one of each in resealable
baggies.
To test clothing (laundry) use a bit of it, (such as a sock)
rolled up tightly.
Testing food is the biggest job. If there are leftovers in the
refrigerator or freezer, this helps. You can combine all the leftovers
in a single baggy. Frozen things don't need to be thawed for
testing. Still, the chance of missing a food culprit is quite high.
Be sure to test everything eaten in a two week time period: unusual
things like popcorn, candy, crackers, cookies, health foods
and special powders. A consolation is that you will find a number
of bad foods that are not necessarily the tremor causes but
which cause other health problems.

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