THE CURE FOR ALL DISEASES
Yeast Infections........................................................
The most common yeast in humans is Candida albicans.
Candida has always been around. It flies in the air, searching for
a place to land and reproduce. It can invade a variety of human
tissues like the mouth (called thrush), skin (including some kinds
of diaper rash), vagina, and the digestive tract. We all have some
yeast in our digestive tract, but when it gets out of hand, it's
called candidiasis.
Yeast is a fungus. It needs dampness to survive and sugar to
grow.
Our immune system, white blood cells, are capable of eradi-
cating yeast provided it isn't growing too fast. And provided the
white blood cells aren't immobilized or preoccupied with
something else.
Diaper Rash..............................................................................
A baby's rash is an example of the white blood cells being
preoccupied. When chemicals are used in the diaper, the white
blood cells go after the chemicals and let the yeast grow. Drying
the baby's skin helps since the yeast must have dampness. This
should be done with air, sunlight and a heat lamp, not with more
chemicals! Certainly not with cortisone containing salves that
further reduce the immune competence of white blood cells.
Use a heat lamp for five minutes at a time, several times a
day. Switch to cloth diapers; do not bleach them with chlorine
bleach, the residual chlorine trapped in the cloth is a chronic
irritant, setting the stage for another rash and future chlorine-
allergy. Cloth diapers should be sterilized, not bleached. Use the
hottest water your laundry system is capable of producing. Add ½
cup borax for the washing process. If you have homemade
Lugol’s iodine (made by your pharmacist or by yourself, see
Recipes), add a tsp. to the wash or rinse. Vinegar is a yeast in-