Hi Everyone,
I hope you’re doing well and enjoying seeing the world return to normal.
I have been receiving a lot of queries as to what I’ve been working on. If you would like a point-form update, here are the points (just below). If you’d like to read more, feel free to scroll down to that section in the post.
1. Clinics: My clinic schedule for the rest of 2022
2. New Location: We’re running a new clinic in Saskatchewan in November 2022
3. Blood worm video: There’s a fun blog article (with a live video) on blood worms,
4. Writing: Book 1’s Bestseller Status and update on Book 4: Muscle Testing for Metal Toxicity.
5. Vitruvian Press: My publishing company is opening up a new permanent office in Alberta.
6. Technology: Two Big technology breakthroughs. These are somewhat detail-oriented, but some people like that and many have been waiting for it. See below.
1. Clinic Updates:
Just wanted to let everyone know that I’ll be on a parasitology research project in Central America over December and January, so the times at the various clinics are limited. For convenience they are listed below, though some are all booked up now. You can check online for availability.
September 2022:
Olds, AB
Carroll, MB, Sept 21–24
October 2022:
Vancouver Oct 10–16 Next availability late January 2023
November 2022:
Bezanson, AB, Nov 12-13
Olds, AB Nov 15-23 Next availability Feb 2023
Manitou Beach, SK Nov 26-28 (as of Sept 15, 50% availability remaining)
2. Saskatchewan Clinic Nov 2022
For years I’ve been getting requests to hold a clinic in Saskatchewan. Until now everyone has been driving from there to the Olds location. Here is some good news: we will be at the resort town of Manitou Beach over the weekend of Nov 26-28. The treatment hall will be in the main hotel, I’ve booked a couple of the conference rooms.
For those of you how have been waiting to get in and don’t want to make the drive to Olds in the middle of winter, see you there. Here’s the link to the scheduling page to see the availability.
3. Blog article updates:
I’ve posted an article on Microscopic blood worms. It has a cool video I think everyone will really like.
Here’s the link to the blog article:
I will also embed the video directly into this post but I recommend that you read the article. It’s short, but puts the video in context.
4. Writing Updates:
Book 1: Experiments in Muscle Testing
Experiments in Muscle testing has stayed at the top of the charts in parasitology for 6 months now. Here’s a screenshot from Sept 15/22: Apparently the first place spot right now is held by a $118 textbook in fungal biology. I didn’t realize we had such an avid crowd of fungal biologists in Canada. They must be a bunch of fun guys…
That’s okay, I’d rather it was lower on the amazon charts because everyone was buying it from Vitruvian Press. That way they get a nice hardcover and the proceeds go to printing Book 4, which is out next year.
Book 4: Muscle Testing for Metal Toxicity
Book 4 is hideously behind. My favourite humorist Douglas Adams once wrote that he liked to have publishing deadlines because of the fun “whooshing sound” they made when he missed them. Now I know how he felt. That said, it should be published by the Summer or Fall of 2023.
If you’re curious to see how it’s coming along, here’s a preview of the two-page spread on oxygen. It goes into the oxyworms referenced in the blood worm video above.
5. Vitruvian Press Location in Alberta
I am pleased to announce that my publishing company Vitruvian Press is opening a new head office in Olds, Alberta. It will be in the same building as my clinic has been for the last 6 years, but we are moving to the front suite of offices.
This will double as the head office for Vitruvian Press, and the clinic location for my muscle testing clinics when I’m in town.
This will provide more space to stock the first editions of Book 4 (due 2023) and Book 3 (due 2024) as well as the next printing of Book 1.
6. Technology Breakthrough:
Over the past year I have made two significant breakthroughs that I think will explain a lot of unanswered questions for some of the more obscure cases I have consulted on lately.
1. Blood Worms. I have directed my focus to microscopic blood worms, having previously overlooked them or not thought that they were important. Well, they are. I have identified at least 8 classes of them. These organisms can exist in the hundreds of billions, they can proliferate in the blood, organ tissues, including the eyes, and the CSF (cerebrospinal fluid). I wasn’t finding them because I was muscle testing for the solid elements, not the gases. It seems that they metabolize the gases and in cases of a high burden, can cause the following symptoms:
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- Nitrogen: dry eyes, blood disorders
- Oxygen: celiac disease, lactose intolerance, gout, osteoporosis, osteoarthritis
- Helium: acid reflux
- Neon: hot flashes, night sweats
- Argon: blood clots, bleeding issues
- Krypton: high blood pressure
- Xenon: light sensitivity, brain fog
- Radon: neurological inflammation, brain fog
This has been an eye-opener because knowing how to test for them has enabled me to understand how to target them. It was an avenue I hadn’t previously explored and there has been a corresponding improvement in the results I have been seeing in the areas listed above.
2. Amoebas. As part of my blood worm project I have been doing some work in hematology (blood analysis). For years now I have laboured under the assumption that amoebas were only populated into us by our multi-celled parasites. It was true that they are: every multi-celled parasite hosts a single-celled amoeba and poops it out, and I don’t think that this is a controversial assertion. Worms, after all, poop.
However in a recent microscopic analysis of blood plasma I observed an amoeba that was even larger than the blood worms mentioned above. This was a real eye opener because it led me to explore a frequency range that I had disregarded, thinking it was unimportant. That range, it turned out, was the range that worked on amoebas. The resultant success in targeting them, that was relatively simple once I knew what to look for, enabled me to identify 15 classes of amoebas and see corresponding results in the areas they were responsible for causing symptoms in.
- Hydrogen: bloating from water and frequent urination
- Lithium: depression and mood disorders
- Sodium: salt cravings, thirst, dry mouth
- Potassium: low energy, chronic fatigue
- Copper: the shakes and poor muscular control
- Rubidium: inflammatory conditions like period cramps
- Silver: Raynaud’s, cold hands and feet, depression
- Caesium: more inflammatory conditions, especially neurological
- Gold: memory issues
- Fluorine: tooth decay
- Chlorine: rosacea, skin inflammation, salt cravings
- Manganese: headaches, brain fog
- Bromine: skin and scalp rashes
- Iodine: Hashimoto’s, low body temperature, hair loss, weight gain, eye issues
- Rhenium: rheumatoid arthritis and bone pain
So for those who have been asking, that’s what I’ve been up to for the last year on a research level.
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If you’ve read this far, thanks for your interest. Let’s keep in touch.