This post on parasites will differ a bit from the longer Substack post written last year. If you missed it, you might want to start there to get a broader view of the risks and strategies for reducing risks. Today, I want to address two issues that might be relatively new to my subscribers. The first is the introduction of parasitic infections via the recent jab that involves roughly five billion humans on this Planet. The second is the method of action of the various remedies, often not at all what one thinks.
Due to the desire to control what people think and believe, the facts about both Covid and the vaccine are not being discussed in most mainstream media publications. You can find the facts on selected free speech platforms and websites that cite specific scientific studies. The truth seems to be that some severely misguided individuals believe that using attenuated or dead parasites in vaccines will somehow improve immunity. I will restrain my Mercury/Mars conjunction and not go into why this idea is almost beyond absurd. This said, the “contamination” is apparently not limited to the recent investigations that focus heavily on Pfizer and Moderna batches but might go back many years.
If you are a lay person, you might start with a search on Rumble. Experts will find very disturbing studies on highly scientific sites . . . so the issue is not that some people are prone to exaggeration but rather that the testing of various batches has resulted in alarming discoveries.
In my June 2023 post, I mentioned that I first saw blood parasites when a medical professional left his microscope at my house and temptation got the better of me. I had been curious for two decades, but the scopes are expensive so I had to convince myself that I could not possibly damage the scope if all I did was turn on the light. What had first appeared as a white blob broke into many discrete objects that were translucent under the intense light of the scope. I understood that this was important new information so rushed to connect a VCR to the scope and began recording. I got up every 15 minutes during the night to see what was happening and saw the development of a little heart and various internal organs and then a quest for something to eat, definitely a gestation and development process that is familiar to all of us.
A mixture of guilt for submitting to temptation and excitement overwhelmed me, and I wondered what the earliest time would be to call the owner of the microscope. His first words were, “I hope you recorded everything.” Later that day, he came with an armload of books on parasitology and said, “Find a match in these books.” I read over 3000 pages in ten days because, to be honest, what I had seen was fascinating.
It was quickly evident that there are thousands of varieties of parasites . . . and over the next decade or so, I became so familiar with them that I could tell where people had traveled. An example may help to understand this better. There was a patient in Europe who was on the equestrian Olympic team. She looked majestic on her horse and was radiant despite living with a death sentence over her head. She was said to have ovarian cancer and only months to live. I found many abnormalities in her blood, including a parasite that was vaguely familiar. I asked, “You haven’t perchance been to Nairobi, have you?” It was similar to parasites of patients I had seen who had been to Nairobi, but not identical. She said she lived in Mombasa for 12 years so you see that close as the two places are, the parasites were not quite identical.
It’s been many years now, and I have taught quite a number of practitioners how to find the parasites. They were ubiquitous even before the recent campaign to vaccinate unsuspecting people.
This said, my expertise is mainly with blood parasites so we are talking about microscopic parasites as opposed to the ones normally discussed in books on tropical medicine and by those influenced by the writings of Hulda Clark on liver flukes.
What I can say with absolute certainty is that parasitic infections do not increase the efficiency of the immune system. Rather, they impose an extra burden on a system that already has a lot of challenges.
Remedies
Many traditional parasite remedies have been in high demand since the advent of the alleged pandemic. What is curious and should have specialists thinking is that while natural remedies often have a wide range of action, until recently no one was taking Ivermectin for the flu. What is the secret here?
This question is a little hard to answer, but based on my now quite lengthy studies, I would say that the mechanism for action is not what people might believe. The technical term for an herb having antiparasitic properties is anthelmintic, but the language suggests that a parasite will ingest the herb and die. I have not actually seen any evidence that suggests this happens.
However, before describing what I have seen, I might detour a little and discuss a few approaches to intestinal parasites. For instance, pumpkin seeds are often included in the list of remedies, but the supposed reason is that they have sharp edges that damage the skin of the parasites so that the parasites die from injuries rather than toxins.
With something very popular like green walnut hulls, the chemistry is sedative so the drowsy parasites cannot cling to the walls of the intestines and they get flushed out.
Now, let me go to the blood parasites where I have actually observed the entire process, often over a period of months. Very hot spices are irritating for the parasites and then they are vulnerable. Then, a single white blood cell organizes hundreds or thousands of red blood cells to immobilize the parasite. Then, she approaches the parasite and the red blood cells open corridors for her to blast the parasite with a mist that blisters the membrane. Oozing begins. She repeats this in numerous places. Then, she leaves and parasite begins to die.
What happens next depends on the functionality of the immune system. If friendly bacteria are available, they devour the soft tissue of the parasite. If people are taking antibiotics or they do not have sufficient friendly bacteria for some other reason, the parasite decomposes through fermentation. This explains why mixing and matching can be counterproductive. For instance, when parasites are dying, it is not uncommon to have mild symptoms of an infection, rarely enough to stay in bed, but doctors may prescribe antibiotics based on symptoms rather than true understanding.
In general, with blood parasites, all will die with 36 hours but grogginess due to die off may persist for 5-6 days. This is why the protocol I developed has three steps: Arjuna’s Arrows to weaken the parasites, Dragon Dreams for the 4-6 days when grogginess is the main symptom, then Phoenix Rising to bring the system up to par. As noted in previous posts, parasites can lay a lot of eggs and sometimes they are clever and hide the eggs under membrane linings or even in the brain. These eggs are not necessarily affected by remedies so they will hatch and the protocols have to be repeated, preferably for 2-4 months but occasionally for several years.
In the case of intraerythrocytic parasitic infections, the culprits are safe until the red blood cell ruptures and releases the merozoites into the plasma. Without a microscope, one does not know exactly when the rupture occurs, but it tends to correlate with the appearance of more discomfort and symptoms, sometimes even a fever.
Copyright by Dr. Ingrid Naiman 2024 || All Rights Reserved
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So impressive when you can see this under the scope! I was at the event recently when they advertise 90 days detox, but I would rather to use your system. Thank you for this post!
Love this, Thank you Ingrid.