This article is a continuation of An Analysis of Rheumatoid Arthritis: Part 1 – The Disease
When it is clarified that the rheumatic swelling in the bones is caused by tin, and that the tin is sticking to the bones, so to speak, because the bone marrow contains a tin-loving bacteria, it follows that the most obvious source of that bacteria is a parasite.
If the parasite were in the lungs you would have a chronic cough, or asthma. If it were in the intestines you might have SIBO, H. Pylori or chronic acid reflux. But when the organisms are in the bone marrow you will have pain, awful chronic burning pain right inside the bones, and we use the word arthritis to describe that. With the 20th century penchant for classification came the diversifications of forms of arthritis: standard arthritis, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, etc. These different terms are simply quantifying different combinations of parasite species in the bones. RA seems to be associated with a higher than normal count of hookworms, since hookworms poop a particular bacteria that in turn, particularly likes tin.
Parasites
Here’s how parasites work, in a nutshell:
While probably everyone unwittingly hosts a tapeworm and members of the filarial parasite family, absolutely everyone has each of the following species groups: roundworm, hookworm, fluke. These seem to co-exist peacefully amongst themselves, in the same way that cheetahs, leopards and lions can all live nearby in the African veldt, or seagulls, crows and pigeons can all inhabit the same green space in an urban area. In the same way Roundworms, hookworms and flukes feed on different, non-competing nutrient sources inside the human body. It seems for the most part that they make their presence felt based on what kind of waste they excrete. A hookworm might excrete waste full of tin-loving bacteria, a roundworm may excrete iron-loving bacteria and a fluke usually excretes arsenic-loving bacteria. And if you get a species of roundworm that excretes a different type of bacteria, such as calcium-loving bacteria instead of the more ordinary iron-loving bacteria, then instead of osteoarthritis you could develop osteoporosis.
An understanding of arthritis is rooted in the bacteriology, but to understand bacteriology we need to view it on the one hand with reference to the parasite that is continually propagating the bacterial colony, and on the other hand from the perspective of which type of heavy metal the bacteria uses for its own metabolism.
There are thousands, possibly millions of types of bacteria in parasites so nobody is going to quantify them all and from a medical diagnostic standpoint, there is no way to know which ones you are high in. But the heavy metal can be measured and the parasite can be measured. So understand that the bacteria are the reasons you’re experiencing the arthritis, and that you can temporarily starve the bacteria of their favourite food (in the case of R.A., tin) by taking metal chelators like DMSA, DMPS, EDTA or the herbal forms like charcoal, chlorella, spirulina, wheat grass, etc. but that the long term solution to the issue is to forget the bacteria, ignore the heavy metal and simply manage the parasite layer. This collapses the symptom permanently by resolving the root problem, which is that the bacterial colony keeps getting replenished.
Relationships
From this perspective then, we can understand the relationships between various parasites and the bone conditions caused by the bacteria they excrete.
ROUNDWORM >>> BACTERIA >>> IRON >>> ARTHRITIS
ROUNDWORM >>> BACTERIA >>> CALCIUM >>> OSTEOPOROSIS
HOOKWORM >>> BACTERIA >>> TIN >>> RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS
BONE FLUKE >>> BACTERIA >>> ARSENIC >>> FIBROMYALGIA
Anyone interested in doing medical research to explore the consistency of my observations can simply cross-reference the above medical conditions with their associated metal toxicity. Everyone diagnosed with fibromyalgia should test for elevated arsenic levels. I’m not saying they don’t have Fibromyalgia, they do – but I’m adding some layers into the condition. Fibromyalgia is arsenic toxicity; Rheumatoid Arthritis is Tin toxicity. And now we understand more clearly why the toxicity is presenting itself.
We can even use this methodology to fill in the blanks of understanding for other bone conditions:
??? >>> BACTERIA >>> ??? >>> GOUT
Understanding Gout simply requires quantifying the prevailing metal toxicity associated with the condition and then identifying the parasite that’s pooping out the bacteria that’s allowing that metal to stick to the host. King Henry the 8th would have loved to learn about this.
It is interesting to note that many of these conditions will coexist with silver toxicity, which can be traced back to giardia (beaver fever) but that giardia, being a protozoan parasite is unlikely to be at the root of any of the symptoms since protozoans coexist with the metazoan (flatworm/roundworm) groups but aren’t typically at a high enough count to account for a symptom. In fact there is evidence that hosting protozoans can suppress the action of the metazoan worms, since worms can get giardia too. The enemy of your enemy is your friend, as the saying goes.
However, an important factor to consider is that you’re unlikely to get a symptom unless your bones are hosting all 3 metazoan parasites (roundworm/hookworm/fluke). It takes all three co-contributing to the overall bacterial load, and then the highest quantity of bacteria does probably indicate the species that is A) at the highest count, B) grown to the largest size, or A+B.
So with rheumatoid arthritis, where there is pronounced tin toxicity, you probably also have roundworm and fluke, and may also have giardia, but you probably have hookworm as the largest contributor to the overall symptom set. And of course these are all in the marrow of the bones being affected, intestinal hookworm would not give you R.A..
How can a parasite fit in a bone?
Bones aren’t as solid as you think. They’re actually quite porous, and the pores are full of both yellow marrow and red marrow. The yellow marrow is concentrated more in the center, the red marrow fills the outside of the bone and is part of the nutrient delivery system.
The adjacent image illustrates just how much red marrow is in the bone. And where there is marrow there are spaces. Parasites can be very small. The pork roundworm is only 1mm long, a fully grown hookworm is 1cm. Flukes grow into the available size of their environment.
It may be a disconcerting thought, since we think of the bones and being solid, and of parasites as being intestinal-only, but parasites can easily fit into the spaces in the red and yellow marrow of the bones.
How did they get in?
The organisms themselves are too soft, even with their nasty little parasite teeth to be able to bite and burrow through bone. This is why they’re stuck in the bones to begin with, because they can’t get out. So if they can’t get out, how did they get in? The only logical possibility is that they washed into the bone as an egg, before they hatched, since the egg form of the parasite is itself small enough to wash in. It would wash in with other nutrients through the red marrow.
Blood vessels penetrate the porous bones to deliver nutrients. Parasite eggs are easily small enough to float in the bloodstream and wash into a bone as the blood circulates in and out.
Once the eggs wash into the bones they hatch, grow and are now stuck in a bone prison.
While intestinal parasites can crawl anywhere in the 30-foot long intestinal tract, and can even chew through the organ tissue walls and migrate elsewhere in the body (skin, organs, etc), parasites in the bones are stuck in the bones. And their poop is stuck there too. When the amount of parasite bacteria in the bones outpaces the ability of the body to eliminate that bacteria, there is a clogging effect. A clogging of the bacteria and of the metal. The bone is clogged. In the case of R.A., eventually the bone warps and burns from the inside out. It’s horrible…but treatable if you address the parasite layer.
Where do parasites eggs come from?
Where do any parasite eggs come from? With this question we’re back into a familiar realm. The usual 3 vectors: flesh, feces and milk, and a 4th possible vector: mosquitoes.
Ironically for all those decades we were subjected to milk commercials in the west (e.g. milk is great for your bones) we were missing the point. Unless it’s UP pasteurized, milk is a great source of parasites eggs and they can wash into the bone marrow as easily as the stomach. Seen from this perspective milk may be good for the bones but it is also a great source of arthritis.
And what are the sources of flesh and feces in our culture? It could have been anything. Except in this case you were unlucky enough to have them wash into the bones.
One interpretation that makes a lot of sense is that you’ve randomly picked up a particular species of parasites that has particularly inflammatory bacteria, or got an unusually high count of it, and then instead of hatching in the intestines so you could get bloating like everyone else, yours washed into your bones.
It really is the luck of the draw, it’s best not to take it personally or get hung up on it. If you’ve got a high enough count of parasites in your bones that you’ve developed an arthritis condition, it’s bad luck, deal with it: get the parasites out.
How do you get parasites out of the bones?
Herbal anti-parasite medications rarely work and when they do, they only work on intestinal parasites, not bone parasites. And then they only work on 1 or 2 species of parasite overall. I’m not aware of one that works on hookworms or flukes, for example.
Pharmaceutical anti-parasite medicines could work but probably won’t due to 2 main factors: 1) the dosage that your particular parasite needs will generally be higher than you’re actually taking, and will sometimes need to be a dosage that is unsafe to take. 2) parasite medications are not designed to soak into bones at any dose, so while you may eliminate some organisms in your intestinal tract, you are unlikely to touch the organisms (in the bones) causing the actual symptom.
Electromagnetism: this is the only universal solution, as well as the best. In general the bones are easy to get at, electromagnetically speaking, and I have been noticing consistent success in this area, keeping to the where/what/how methodology.
Here’s an example of the treatment format that has been working:
Where? Bones
What? Hookworm
How? Leonard’s Electromagnetic treatment
Retest Where: Bones
What: Roundworm now, no longer Hookworm.
Conclusion: the treatment worked on hookworm since hookworm is gone, but there was a second contributor in that area (Roundworm). Fine, that’s within the normal pattern of what we’re expecting to find. Now let’s get roundworm out.
So we repeat the treatment, then keep retesting with Where/What/How in mind until the Where (bones) tests clear. This needs to be done for all the symptomatic areas.
But are they all clear?
Considerations
There are a number of considerations here but in general it’s a simple process;
- All the arthritic bones need to be treated, and there are 206 bones in the body. The good news is that usually only a few bones will be affected, but the converse is also true: the more bones that have the worms, the more bones will be symptomatic and each symptomatic area will need to be treated.
- Multiple species of parasite can, and usually do do-exist in the same symptomatic bone. While it is tempting to assign importance to one species over another, unless you have the time to eliminate one species at a time, and then wait and see if the symptom goes away, the mentality needs to be eliminating as many species as possible. When all species are out, there should no longer be a symptom.
- Sometimes the bones can look clear following the treatment but not actually BE clear. Every parasite doesn’t show up in every muscle testing analysis every time. Muscle testing is preferable to a bone biopsy, it’s less invasive and probably more accurate but it can miss a species buried away in the background of a symptomatic area. In this case they bones will need to be re-tested on day 2, or some other day following the treatment as a night’s sleep and the passage of time will create an environment where the remaining organism will finally express itself. So a certain amount of retesting is required, but that’s still preferable to a bone biopsy, particularly when you remember that even if a biopsy identified the species, the resulting prescription anti-parasite medication wouldn’t soak into the bones.
- Finally, once the organisms are out, it’s not a bad idea to muscle test to see which bone minerals you’ve become deficient in and supplement for a few months. There’s really no point in supplementing while you still have the parasite as you’ll just be feeding it a concentrated form of its favourite minerals (that’s why your bones were deficient in that mineral to begin with). But once it’s out, supplementation can accelerate bone regeneration. The top 3 bone minerals (to muscle test for) are strontium, silicon and calcium, usually in that order BTW.
The Cure
And that it, it’s relatively straightforward. Get your parasites out of the bones and then let them heal. But there are politics to the word ‘cure’, aren’t there? I’m not supposed to use the word cure. How about resolution? The resolution to R.A. is to get your parasites out.
The problem through all these centuries, from the first scribes recording rheumatism on the Ebers papyrus in ancient Egypt to the fashionable 19th century socialites who took laudanum (opium) to manage their rheumatica has been the lack of a language of parasites. There has been no way of finding them and no way to get them out. To this day some people don’t realize parasites exist in the intestinal tract let alone that they cause arthritis in the bones, food allergies in the intestines and asthma in the lungs.
I think if more people with parasites in their bone marrow got clear of them, there would be more of a public dialogue about the extent to which parasites are at the root of arthritis, and this might generate the momentum to re-examine the word arthritis, and re-evaluate whether it deserves to be considered the cause of the symptom it was originally only intended to describe.
And this leads us into the larger dialogue about using electromagnetism to treat parasites, which is space age medicine.