This post may be quite challenging, but I will be as delicate as possible. However, some introductory remarks will make a useful backdrop.
As you know by now, I have been walking in the same sandals for decades . . . and there were pivotal moments that contributed to where I am now. One of these was a visit to the Peace Museum in Hiroshima in the early sixties, 1962-3. Technically, I was an exchange student in Japan because the East-West Center had declined to accept my resignation. If I returned to Hawaii, my expenses in Japan would be reimbursed, but I applied to grad school in New England so the reality was I was on my own in Japan.
People in Hiroshima were incredibly eager to share their stories. I found them exceptionally friendly, open, and dedicated to showing the world the importance of avoiding nuclear war. If anyone sees the pictures of what happened, there is basically no escaping the impact on the psyche.
When the reactor in Fukushima was becoming increasingly threatening, I created the Institute for Invisible Epidemics. “Invisible” was defined as all the conditions likely to be overlooked by conventional medicine. Radiation is invisible and the testing equipment required is prohibitively expensive . . . if we are talking about the impact of exposure on the food supply or people. Obviously, the Atomic Energy Commission has the equipment, but how are we going to test the mushrooms and seaweed and dairy products with the gadgets available online?
IIE is not exclusively dedicated to radiation. In fact, I am just as concerned about Lyme disease, chemtrails, parasites, fungal infections, additives in our food and medicine, Morgellon’s disease, as well as autism and Alzheimer’s disease. The reason is that patients who have had exposure are seldom getting the relief they need so the conditions become chronic and debilitating.
One thing led to another and I became heavily concerned with what might be termed the militarization of medicine. Way back, I cannot remember exactly when, I read that 175,000 children under the age of five had arthritis. This was shocking, but statistics can hide a lot of details. There was no mention of the demographics, such as that these cases were clustered around Long Island and Connecticut.
As it turned out, Lab 257 on Plum Island was the source of Lyme disease. The distance between Lab 257 and the Old Lyme where the Plum Island ferry docked in Connecticut is 12 miles. Lab 257 was a level 3 bioweapons facility with ties to Operation Paperclip Erich Traub, a Nazi veterinarian and virologist who happened to be the former partner of the father of a friend to whom I made a deathbed promise. We either have to believe in Fate . . . or that the world is actually much smaller than we think. My friend was living in Holland and chose to be euthanized rather than to continue suffering from the double challenge of cancer and Lyme disease.
Another piece of this puzzle is that I had become acquainted with bioweapons through several more “coincidences”, one of which involved parasites. You will recall that the first time I looked through the eyepieces of a darkfield microscope, I saw parasites coming into existence. The person who owned the scope gave me a stack of books to read, and I stumbled upon a specialist at Bethesda Naval Hospital who described parasites as having a “mission aborting potential.”
The conquest of tropical regions of our Planet has been impeded by all kinds of illnesses affecting troops, basically everything from malaria to syphilis, a disease that spread rapidly in military camps and was almost always fatal in the first 70 years of the outbreak in Europe.
To-date, no one knows the origin, i.e., whether Europeans spread the disease during the Age of Discovery or whether they contracted it in the Caribbean. Why do these dots seem so unrelated? In fact, they are not. It took many years to discover the cause of Lyme disease. “Credit” went to Willy Burgdorfer who worked at a level 4 bioweapons facility in Montana . . . and who did his doctoral dissertation on borrelia spirochetes from Africa.
Now, let’s try to pull the dots a little closer together. The goal of the research on Plum Island was to create a disease that would affect livestock in the former Soviet Union. The problem, of course, is that diseases do not recognize borders so “blow back” is an international risk. This may be the explanation for what happened on Plum Island, but the Truth may be even more sinister. We do not really have the facts to prove anything one way or another. As I have gone to pains to explain, my role is do my utmost to help people who are victims. Justice is another department, and I leave that to the Lords of Karma.
Lyme disease is often misdiagnosed as syphilis. This is like adding insult to injury, but if we are seeking a cure, we have to find the cause. Both diseases are caused by spirochetes which are mobile and can pass the blood-brain barrier. The diseases begin with lesions that are visible on skin and they go deeper and deeper into the system and may cause neurological symptoms and eventually interfere with cognitive functions. Though spirochetes are classified as bacteria, they behave a lot like parasites.
The most successful cure for spirochetes involves a substance found in guaiacum, a tree that grows in the Caribbean. It is highly endangered which is why I got permission from Oxford University Press to republish some old research in a museum quality edition . . . and why when you go to make donations to IIE, you see an image of the book cover.
Now, some more dots are connected. Everything we thought we knew about guaiacum depends on whether or not we understood how to process the gummy exudate and to use it properly. Cases of 100% cure were found when patients were able to travel to the Caribbean, but the European imitations of the Caribbean treatment had a so-so efficacy.
Lyme disease is pervasive. The infection rate may be as high as 99% in some areas, especially New England, and it has been found in penguins in the Falkland Islands. Remember, it was a veterinary biological weapon at the outset, but we humans are after-all a kind of animal though allegedly one that exists higher up the evolutionary ladder.
I will digress a moment and mention that I have made arrangements with a number of people in Mexico and the Caribbean to plant trees, but this is a very long-term project since the first harvest would be no sooner than 15 years from now and perhaps more like 30 years. In scheme of things, this is still realistic because diseases do not necessarily disappear. We still have both malaria and syphilis so think it through.
Changing hats for a moment, I would like to mention that when a disease becomes epidemic, the herbs that are effective in treating the disease may become scarce, endangered, and, of course, expensive. This is true whether we are talking about cancer or something that is contagious.
Okay, now the delicate part . . .
In studying the treatments for syphilis, I investigated the historic protocols and tried to differentiate the symptoms related to the disease and the side effects of the treatments.
Having a passion for the arts, I did a lot of biographical studies, including of Gaetano Donizetti whose mad scene I posted last night. In the opera, Lucia’s madness is brought about by her brother who forced a marriage on her when she was in love with someone else, Edgardo. She murders her husband on the wedding night, and, in most productions, comes down the stairs in a blood-stained nightgown with knife in hand and mortifies the guests who are still wining and dining in celebration of the union. Of course, everyone is shocked, but they see that her mind is out of order.
As mentioned in the first video, Donizetti might already at the time of composing Lucia have had neurological complaints. He picked up the disease in France and underwent treatment for years. At a certain point, his health was so bad that he tried to compose as much as possible before his sand ran out. I have not found a complete account of the treatments, but ointments with mercury were common in the mid-19th century so it is hard to distinguish between the deterioration attributable to the spirochetes and the symptoms related to the toxic chemicals like arsenic and mercury, which, for the record, are still mentioned as treatments in the medical texts used in universities today.
The problem with Lyme disease is that co-infections make the treatment very much more complicated.
I realize I have been all over the map and some people may think that many of the dots are irrelevant, but I am often dominated by curiosity . . . and the dots are actually connected. In fact, I made a rather extensive study of the effects of neurological decline on how creativity is expressed. This, of course, led to linking a few more dots that will help to keep the mind in order when toxic metals and creepy critters cross the blood-brain barrier.
Often, there is some “stuck” place where people are fixated on a particular sound, often one that is very high pitched, like the eerie sounds of the glass harmonica which were brilliantly portrayed in the video I posted.
Taking care of the mind is very important. To-date, I have posted on removing toxic metals, decalcifying the pineal gland, and now I want to cover some herbs that protect memory and cognitive function. One of my best formulations is Brahmi Elixir. It contains both Brahmis, bacopa and gotu kola, as well as boswellia that is very specific for tumors. It does contain Tamarind as well as three very important Rasayana herbs that are antioxidants: Amla, Ashwagandha,and Guduchi. Anyone who feels vulnerable to cognitive decline should consider this formula.
Copyright by Dr. Ingrid Naiman 2023 || All Rights Reserved
Image Credits:
Hiroshima Peace Museum: Luciano Mortula | Dreamstime
Ixodes ricinus: Daksel | Dreamstime
Excellent information. Though there are subjects in life that may be a little delicate or uncomfortable, it is necessary to shed light on these subjects. If we do not know, then how can we heal? You have done exceptional work in bringing many of these issues to Light in your unique and fascinating way. Thank you, Ingrid for your wisdom and incredible ability to bring understanding to the many issues you address and help us along on our journeys of life. Many blessings of Light, Love and Peace to you on your own journey of love and compassion.