Oh, I forgot to mention that Tennant advice on taking calcium. I use to take coral water from Japan about ten years ago. The cost was prohibitive, it might be cheaper now. I would prefer from food sources if it was not the allergies. Anyone else tried coral water? Kooky [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
N.O.W. makes a coral calcium powder that is very pure.
You could mix with some sea salt and water? On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Kooky <[hidden email]> wrote: > > > > > Oh, I forgot to mention that Tennant > advice on taking calcium. I use to take > coral water from Japan about ten years ago. > The cost was prohibitive, it might be cheaper now. > I would prefer from food sources if it was not the allergies. > > Anyone else tried coral water? > > > Kooky > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
Regards Calcium and Tennant,
He advises Calcium for everybody especially for those with a low body voltage, Bill, Tennant also advises coral Calcium as the best way for Calcium. copy paste from Tennant's pdf: ... Calcium carbonate is alkaline with a pH of about 10. It will cause your system to become more alkaline. A good source of calcium carbonate is from coral. In addition to the calcium, you get trace minerals as well. Coral calcium is about 1/5 calcium carbonate. For example, 565 mg of coral calcium would contain about 110 mg of calcium carbonate. ... Bill, you mentioning sea salt... Tennant advises sea salt as one of the 10 things to do to support your adrenal function. Tennant also focuses a lot on hypothyroidism. Being a major factor on why adrenals are "overworked". He says Hypothyroidism is mostly misdiagnosed. You can only test it with checking body temperature when waking up and check for symptoms. To solve hypothyroidism he advises to take Iodine and a naturally thyroid hormone (like Desiccated Thyroid Hormone for instance from Armour Thyroid). Tennant focuses a lot on the importance of Iodine (for all illnesses). In sea salt there is almost no Iodine (well sea salt is 90% or 95% NaCl!), but in sea vegetables like Phytoplankton for instance are a very good source ofIodine. He advises everybody to have a lot of Iodine in the diet. He thinks there is a strong link between the Japanese that have the lowest amount of cancer and fact that they are the population with the highest consumption of Iodine. Tennant mentions in his book: "taking Iodine orally tends to kill the good bacteria in the gut. It is therefore better to dose it through the skin." I'm kinda intolerant to eating sea vegetables (and Iodine specifically according to kinesiology), so I think I'll try to take some Iodine lugol drops on the skin, see what happens! According to Tennant Phytoplankton and eggs are one of the foods that almost consists of everything your body needs nutrition-wise... Stephen. --- In [hidden email], Bill Bruno <wbruno@...> wrote: > > N.O.W. makes a coral calcium powder that is very pure. > You could mix with some sea salt and water? > > > On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Kooky <furstc0404@...> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > Oh, I forgot to mention that Tennant > > advice on taking calcium. I use to take > > coral water from Japan about ten years ago. > > The cost was prohibitive, it might be cheaper now. > > I would prefer from food sources if it was not the allergies. > > > > Anyone else tried coral water? > > > > > > Kooky > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > |
Regards Tennant and Iodine,
Would like to add that Tennant concluded that Iodine is not only good for thyroid functioning (what most will agree) but essential for ALL glands in the body! These are: thyroid (highest concentration), salivary glands, cerebrospinal fluid and brain, intestinal mucosa, choroid plexus, breasts, ovaries, vagina and uterus, prostate, ciliary body of the eye, nose, sinuses, mouth, substantia nigra of the brain, conjunctiva of the eye, making stomach acid, making digestive enzymes in pancreas, liver and gall bladder, skin, bone marrow, pancreas, adrenal glands, kidney and lung. This list is the same organs that typically get cancer. As mentioned: The Japanese consume a lot of seaweed and thus a lot of Iodine. They have the least amount of cancer of anyone on the planet... Stephen. --- In [hidden email], "stephen_vandevijvere" <stephen_vandevijvere@...> wrote: > > Regards Calcium and Tennant, > > He advises Calcium for everybody especially for those with a low body voltage, > > Bill, Tennant also advises coral Calcium as the best way for Calcium. > > copy paste from Tennant's pdf: > ... > Calcium carbonate is alkaline with a pH of about 10. It will cause your system to become more alkaline. A good source of calcium carbonate is from coral. In addition to the calcium, you get trace minerals as well. > > Coral calcium is about 1/5 calcium carbonate. For example, 565 mg of coral calcium would contain about 110 mg of calcium carbonate. > ... > > > Bill, you mentioning sea salt... Tennant advises sea salt as one of the 10 things to do to support your adrenal function. > > Tennant also focuses a lot on hypothyroidism. Being a major factor on whyadrenals are "overworked". He says Hypothyroidism is mostly misdiagnosed. You can only test it with checking body temperature when waking up and check for symptoms. > > To solve hypothyroidism he advises to take Iodine and a naturally thyroidhormone (like Desiccated Thyroid Hormone for instance from Armour Thyroid). > > Tennant focuses a lot on the importance of Iodine (for all illnesses). Insea salt there is almost no Iodine (well sea salt is 90% or 95% NaCl!), but in sea vegetables like Phytoplankton for instance are a very good source of Iodine. > > He advises everybody to have a lot of Iodine in the diet. He thinks thereis a strong link between the Japanese that have the lowest amount of cancer and fact that they are the population with the highest consumption of Iodine. > > Tennant mentions in his book: "taking Iodine orally tends to kill the good bacteria in the gut. It is therefore better to dose it through the skin." > > I'm kinda intolerant to eating sea vegetables (and Iodine specifically according to kinesiology), so I think I'll try to take some Iodine lugol drops on the skin, see what happens! > > According to Tennant Phytoplankton and eggs are one of the foods that almost consists of everything your body needs nutrition-wise... > > Stephen. > > > > > > --- In [hidden email], Bill Bruno <wbruno@> wrote: > > > > N.O.W. makes a coral calcium powder that is very pure. > > You could mix with some sea salt and water? > > > > > > On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Kooky <furstc0404@> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Oh, I forgot to mention that Tennant > > > advice on taking calcium. I use to take > > > coral water from Japan about ten years ago. > > > The cost was prohibitive, it might be cheaper now. > > > I would prefer from food sources if it was not the allergies. > > > > > > Anyone else tried coral water? > > > > > > > > > Kooky > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > |
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In reply to this post by furstc0404-2
> Anyone else tried coral water?
I recall having a horrible reaction to some coral calcium product mixed in a glass of water. These days, I take calcium lactate, which requires the fewest amount of biochemical reactions to turn it into something the body can use (or so they say) Marc |
I haven't heard of coral water, but I've been taking coral calcium capsules.
My applied kinesiologist says that the kind of calcium you should take depends on your Ph level. I forgot which was which, though. Most people will absorb the regular ones better (calcium carbonate or calcium citrate), but some need the coral calcium. I recommend getting professional advice from a holistic practitioner to select the best type. BTW, some natural food stores don't carry coral calcium because of the damage it does to the coral reefs in harvesting (I found this out later on). The only reason I continue to take the coral calcium is so that I can finish the bottle. I figure it would be even more wasteful to throw it out. ~Amie On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 6:59 PM, Marc Martin <[hidden email]> wrote: > > > > Anyone else tried coral water? > > I recall having a horrible reaction to some coral calcium > product mixed in a glass of water. These days, I take > calcium lactate, which requires the fewest amount of > biochemical reactions to turn it into something the > body can use (or so they say) > > Marc > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
Hello,
on http://www.hetbitje.nl/bitjeD20109h.pdf the lalest Version of *het bitje* 2010 is available for download. Although it is in german, the images speak for itsself. It is about measuring. Because the english readers,are so few, who have shown interest in reading them, I have not made an english version. Greetings, Charles Claessens member Verband Baubiologie www.milieuziektes.nl www.milieuziektes.be www.hetbitje.nl checked by Norton [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Amie Kim
Regards dosages of Calcium you need to take,
Amie, Tennant also suggests dosages depending on your pH, pH of... below 6.0: 7700 mg coral Ca or 1540 mg Ca carbonate 6.0-6.5: 5500 mg coral Ca or 1100 mg Ca carbonate 7.0-7.5: 3300 mg coral Ca or 660 mg Ca carbonate > 7.5: none A salivary pH of 6.5 suggests a cellular pH of 7.2. Thus one has to adjust the cellular pH numbers by about 0.7. In Tennant's pdf this is explained on page 15. Tennant's 86-pages-you-definitely-must-go-and-get-for-free-pdf is downloadable on: http://www.tennantinstitute.com/TIIM_MAC/Patient_Forms.html (Click on how to stay well booklet) I think it's best to test how much Calcium you feel good or better with. And make sure you also take Magnesium (otherwise it doesn't matter how much Calcium you take). Stephen. --- In [hidden email], Amie Kim <MsAmieKim@...> wrote: > > I haven't heard of coral water, but I've been taking coral calcium capsules. > My applied kinesiologist says that the kind of calcium you should take > depends on your Ph level. I forgot which was which, though. Most people > will absorb the regular ones better (calcium carbonate or calcium citrate), > but some need the coral calcium. I recommend getting professional advice > from a holistic practitioner to select the best type. > > BTW, some natural food stores don't carry coral calcium because of the > damage it does to the coral reefs in harvesting (I found this out later on). > > > The only reason I continue to take the coral calcium is so that I can finish > the bottle. I figure it would be even more wasteful to throw it out. > > ~Amie > > > > On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 6:59 PM, Marc Martin <marc@...> wrote: > > > > > > > > Anyone else tried coral water? > > > > I recall having a horrible reaction to some coral calcium > > product mixed in a glass of water. These days, I take > > calcium lactate, which requires the fewest amount of > > biochemical reactions to turn it into something the > > body can use (or so they say) > > > > Marc > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > |
> I think it's best to test how much Calcium you feel good or better with. And make sure you also take Magnesium (otherwise it doesn't matter how muchCalcium you take).
> > Stephen. Regarding this point, the Magnesium Miracle book by Carolyn Dean, MD, recommends a calcium to magnesium in a 2:1 ratio, and mentions that most people overdose on calcium relative to magnesium. It has been shown that microwaves result in calcium efflux from brain tissue. * You need magnesium to properly absorb calcium. * Calcium constricts, magnesium relaxes. |
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