Re: What jobs can you do with EHS?
Posted by Jinna on
URL: https://www.es-forum.com/What-jobs-can-you-do-with-EHS-tp4031790p4031890.html
Karl, I'm glad you chimed in.
I hope you can have some idea to help Plop or other members who are EXTREMELY ES.
Let us know, I'm for supporting such initiatives (like buying some products etc).
I'd rather buy directly from guys in need than pay for international organizations and do not know where my money goes...
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Oh, as for a place to live, some Xmas ago, an Italian friend of mine invited me to visit the town where he grew up. It was Narni. You can google it.
We stayed in an farmhouse, in a hilly area (Italy is pretty hilly).
I swear that NO CELL PHONE worked. Nothing, zero.
I also swear that I haven't got a good night of sleep like that in MORE THAN A DECADE.
My daughter could not keep her eyes open, she fell asleep EVERY NIGHT we spent there, in LESS THAN 5 MINUTES! We simply turned off, all 3 of us.
Like a button ON -OFF.
No wifi, no phone, no computer, nothing. The house was in the middle of the hills, so it caught no signals.
So, I guess, it is still possible to live in the middle of a mountain CHAIN, in a house without neighbors, and then be healthy there!
It's still Europe!
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I love the activity in Asia, or in Latin America.
I grew up in Brazil, and while there are many disadvantages to live there, well, there are PLENTY of disadvantages to live here.
I haven't met any person that is electrosensitive there, not even in big cities like Sao Paulo, where part of my family lives.
They have simply no single idea the problem may even exist.
When I'm there, for some reason, my ES symptoms drop down.
I guess, there are less cell phone towers, or other reasons for that...
The advantages to live in Brazil, in my opinion, is the social contact, the fresh fruits and veggies (even if Brazil has all the GMOs...). And the liveliness.
Europe looks dead in comparison.
My daughter did not like traveling there in the past. Now that she is older, she loves going to Brazil.
there is some energy there that you do not find here.
But it's not easy life there, either. Cost of life is high, lots of security problems...
As I travel there in the last 30 years, in and out, I can see the trend long term.
All civilization diseases come to Brazil after. First, you'll see the problem in Asia (like Japan) and the US, then West Europe, then the rest of the world.
Gluten problem. Sun allergy problem. Hyperactivity and autism problem. MS in younger people. etc....
You can see that each of these problems always starts to be serious in the most developed to least developed nations.
When I lived in Japan in the early 90s, I saw all these people suffering from severe eczema, ears were badly formed, extreme multiple odd allergies (to pollen, to sunlight, to whatever....).
I thought sun allergy was a joke.
Allergy to sunlight was unknown in Brazil back in the 90s.
In Japan, was almost a common place, many people had sun allergy (their faces got swollen just with bits of sunlight).
Now some people also have there, in Brazil, but not as widespread as in Japan.
ES is a civilization disease / problem. It will come there, but it's still not a big issue.