|
|
|
|
|
So glad to be here with you, dear one.
|
|
|
|
Jay's Tick Battle
This was a challenging summer. After we moved from our old farmhouse into our new home in this historical building in the village, Jay suddenly fell ill. At first the doctors were confounded because his urinalysis and blood tests showed no bacterial growth, no trace of influenza or COVID, yet he clearly was very sick and slipping dangerously close to sepsis right in front of us in the hospital emergency room.
|
Of course none of them understood that Jay had been zapping back at home! A few days later the CDC called to let him know that he had anaplasmosis, a tick-borne disease that can be deadly. They gave him a prescription for an antibiotic, which gave him the potentially brain damaging side effects that the drug insert warns about and advises to stop taking the medication. This toxic reaction to the antibiotic brought Jay from one emergency to another. Once again, Jay returned to the Hulda Clark Zapper and recuperated as he zapped daily. Let Jay tell the story in his own words.
|
|
It has now been over a month since the beginning of this whole ordeal. Jay is feeling much better. You can tell, because he's being silly, playing ukulele, and feeling grateful to be alive. For a guy over 60, Jay sprang back to health pretty fast. He continues to tap into healing frequencies through zapping and playing music, and invites you to do the same. If you are curious about zapping, Jay offers an entire year with a money back guarantee on the Hulda Clark Zapper. You have a whole year to use the zapper and decide if it works for you. If not, return for full purchase price. The only way to know if zapping will help you is to try it. Give yourself a year of zapping and find out if your life is better. More info at ClarkZapper.com
|
|
|
|
|
Water Woes 💧
|
|
We used to have a natural private well at the old farmhouse. Now that we live in a village, like most folk in cities and suburban areas, we are on the public water system which is fluoridated, chlorinated, and ammonia-ated (chloramines).
|
|
We don't want to drink or cook with chemical laden water that smells and tastes bad. We want to avoid drinking commercial bottled water because there may be solvents used in sanitizing and preparing the bottle. Much of these watery concerns are based on the information found in the books by Dr. Hulda Clark:
|
|
|
|
"Drink a pint of water upon rising in the morning, and a pint of water between meals.
|
|
Do not buy “special” water. Use your cold tap water only. If you don't like the taste of your own tap water, get it from somebody else's tap. Use only glass or reused polyethylene jugs. Polyethylene is opaque, not clear. It has already lost its plasticizer into the water that stood in it earlier. (Somebody drank it!) Purchased water has traces of solvents from machinery and sterilizing equipment used in its bottling. Your own tap water is not pure (indeed it may have 500 toxic elements), but it never contains solvents in amounts I can detect.
|
|
|
|
Traces of solvents are worse than traces of other toxins.
|
Water filters are not the solution. They trap the pollutants and then allow a tiny amount to enter the water on a daily basis. Chronic toxin consumption is much worse for your health than periodic surges of toxins. You can use a small filter, that gets changed every month without much risk. This would dechlorinate the water, at least, and improve the flavor...
|
Bottled water is popular, and tasty, and has appealing advertising, but it is just not safe. Why is it easier for everyone to spend dollars per day, for the rest of their life, buying water instead of insisting that their water pipes are metal-free?
|
Another reason not to drink water from bottles, however convenient, is that it is stagnant and is soon contaminated with our own bacteria from contact with mouth or hands. Staphylococcus (Staph) and E. coli are commonly seen. The solution is not to add still more chemical disinfectants, the solution is to drink from a flowing source, such as our faucets. If you must carry water, use glass containers; plastic is porous and much more difficult to wash clean (sterilizing in a dishwasher is effective, though).
|
By drinking a total of four pints of water in a day, the kidneys will notice the assistance. (Any single herb tea without added salt or sweetener counts as water.) The urine will stop having any odor and will become very light colored."
|
We searched online and asked a few old timers in the area about finding a local spring to get drinking water. Turns out, there's a great one nearby. The place we go to shares the latest water test online. Hundreds of people drink this water that is along Route 17, which is one of the oldest roads in Maine. The natives made this road thousands of years ago to get to the Kennebec River for the fishing and beaver trade. This natural spring has been a place to get a refreshing cool drink of water for thousands of years. I feel the ancient elders sip along with me during every ice cold mountain thirst quenching drink I enjoy. The spring water is free and a healthier choice.
|
If you live near any mountains or hills, search online to see if there are any natural springs that provide drinking water in your area. If you're not sure, have the spring tested to see if it's safe to drink. It's a small price to pay to know you're drinking the best water that the earth has to offer. After that, the water is free. What could be better than being smart, healthy, and frugal? It is also a good reason to get some fresh air, exercise, and even socialize with like-minded folk at the watering hole.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Skip the Gator for Cucumber!
|
|
As the summer heat rages on, here is a reminder to drink lots of water. Add slices of lemon and cucumber for assistance in flushing out toxins and a rush of electrolytes, antioxidants, and nutrients. Much better for you than sports drinks full of sugar substitutes, dyes, and bright colors. Use the Food Zappicator for 10 minutes before drinking to get more health benefits. For more information, visit the Food Zappicator page at ClarkZapper.com
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thank you for reading our newsletter. We hope we inspired you to take better care of yourself and your loved ones. Feel free to forward this to anyone you think may need this information. Until next time, take care!
|
|
Jay & Hazel
|
|
|
|
|
|
|