destroyed, just changed by different actions, including oxidation, ionization,
and parasitic action, just to name a few.
An example of how we can accumulate parasites within our physical
body was seen in a case involving a nineteen-year-old female. She came to
me undernourished and thin from malabsorption of her foods. She was tired
all the time, and was never feeling as good as she should. She had muscle
aches and digestive problems. As I started her on my detoxification program
she began to eliminate a lot of mucus, which is standard. She also began to
notice “weird-looking creatures” in her stools. She drew me pictures of what
she saw; pictures which even astounded me. Two were tapeworms—one a
beef tapeworm, and the other a common tapeworm. She saw roundworms
and pinworms, flukes (“jellyfish-looking” creatures), and other unidentifiable
parasites. She panicked and went to the Emergency Room of her local
hospital where the ER doctor told her that “there is no such thing as parasites
in Americans.” The young lady insisted that the ER doctor have her stools
tested, which he did after much apprehension and discussion. The report
came back from the lab that this sample was full of parasites.
We are a host to many parasites, mostly microbial. However, I would
guess that about 40 to 75 percent of homo sapiens have the larger ones that
you can see if you look for them. There are many different types of parasites
including yeasts, fungi, warts, viruses, bacteria, worms of all types, and
flukes. Most people have many of each of these types in their bodies. All
people have yeast (Candida) or fungus in them. Over thirty different strains
of fungus can be found in most people. The yeast-type fungus is mostly
located in the mouth to aid sugar and starch digestion. Those with
overgrowths of a fungus type called Candida albicans which grows
throughout the body suffer from fatigue, listlessness, itching, skin irritation
and infections, just to name a few of the symptoms.
Candida creates a craving for sugars and starches, and patients are
typically and incorrectly told not to eat fruits because of the sugars. As we’ve
learned in a previous chapter, fructose and glucose are two of the principal
energies or fuels for a cell. These sugars are simple sugars and are essential to
the body as its main source of fuel. Fruits are vital in helping the body
eliminate Candida because they are high in antioxidant and astringent
properties. These properties clean the lymphatic congestion out of the tissues,
which is essential since congestion is the “home” of these little critters.
Complex sugars, however, are another story. They are super fuels (or food)
for Candida, but are unusable as fuel by the body until they are broken down