THE CURE FOR ALL DISEASES
since you wipe up dust each day. To test it, place it in a plastic
bag, wet it thoroughly and search from 510 KHz downward, one
KHz at a time. The various tapeworm stages emit between 510
and 440 KHz.
If you have a household pet, you will always be able to find a
tapeworm stage in your sponge or in a dust sample you collect
from the table or kitchen counter in the morning. Gather dust with
a damp bit of paper towel, put it in a plastic bag. Then wash your
hands or you may accidentally eat some.
This, of course, happens to every household member. Eating
the dust off the tables, inhaling the dust, and eating off surfaces
wiped by the kitchen sponge happens to everyone. And everyone
“catches” colds. If you search for Adenovirus, though, in your
dust sample, it isn't there!
Similarly, you can search for the mites in your house dust.
Search near the frequencies given for them. There is a good
chance you will have one that is not given, because the list is so
incomplete. Name it after yourself. Compare notes with others;
maybe it is common, maybe it's a rare one. Again, you will not
find Adenovirus beeping its characteristic frequency out of your
mite specimen. Why not? Possibly, it is too faint; it must multiply
and create a loud chorus before you can hear it. But multiply it
will, if given a chance, in you. You must, of course, first eat or
inhale the dust.
Then the tape eggs hatch into the cysticercus stage, which
promptly gets to the liver. Sometimes it gets to other organs, like
the muscles, the spleen, the pancreas. Presumably the liver
screened it out of the blood originally.
Soon you will zap them, wherever they are. If you are using a
slide specimen of cysticercus you can locate it in your body. If
you are only listening to its beeps, you can't. If you can do both,
you may be able to see which organ allows the virus to replicate
after it emerges. Maybe only the respiratory organs do; maybe
they start to replicate in the organ where they emerge, such as