Evidence of Alarming Growth in Cognitive Impairment Among Adults
(thevaccinereaction.org)
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I'm a pureblood, but got covid (whatever it is) bad, really bad. My fave theory is that it's a weaponized parasite. Nebulized hydrogen peroxide is my favorite for quick and effective symptom remission, and I think it's a great detox except it's a pain to remember to execute consistently when you're feeling well. Because you really have to keep at it for a few weeks even after you're feeling well. For a while it was my only protocol, as I felt symptoms coming back with occasional pulsometer measurements.
The only "detox protocol" I went for, had me feeling marginally better, good energy overall, with the McCullough recommended bromelain+curcumin+nattokinase, but I felt a little silly taking 3 pills in the morning and 2 in the evening every day.
Then (when those pills ran out; I did about 45-50 days out of the recommended 60) I tried a nicotine patch, which was recommended by Dr Ardis: 7mg for 14 days. Haven't done anything else since, and haven't felt anything coming on since. I think this is the one that kicked it out for good, and it's extremely convenient compared to anything else. (I'm not a smoker, fwiw.) His theory is that nicotine strongly outcompetes the spike protein, and he had some studies behind it.
Given that I've engaged in various protocols and treated myself with h202 various times, you might reasonably think I'm an obsessive hypochondriac. I think I'm just unlucky to be hypersensitive to whatever covid is, because normally I hate any kind of medicine, but covid knocked me down serious enough in 2020 to scare me, and to make me hypersensitive to symptoms of fatigue and breathing difficulty. And it kept coming back (never getting me in a bad state, as I jumped on the symptoms quickly) after a few months. Obviously could be reexposure rather than latent long covid, as I live in a highly urban zone with plenty of "proud 7x vaxers" walking around. Anyway, hope that helps.
I got covid symptoms in Jan 2020 before I even knew what it was. I had a mild fever and mialgia for three days, which I spent mostly in bed. My sense of taste returned after a week, My cough went after two weeks. I didn't have any breathing problems.
Since then, I've been plagued with slight catarrh but nothing else. I'm taking the usual supplements including nattokinase, bromelain, L-lysine, NAC, D3, K2, magnesium, zinc, ginger, B12 and HCQ.
BTW has anyone found that NAC affects their libido? It is a possible side-effect.
NAC improves circulation, increases blood flow...
You might try the nicotine patch. I've ditched all the supplements since doing it, and feel fine. I don't have the Ardis links, but they're not to find.
I've never been a smoker, and nicotine makes me literally feel "green" and nauseated. Would doing a low dose patch really be worth it? I don't wanna get addicted to nicotine or anything
Couldn't say for you. I've never been a smoker except for a few cigars (maybe 5 cigarettes and 15 cigars in 30 years) on special occasions. The first time I smoked a cigarette I felt some nausea, but probably because I wasn't good at the technique, and never had an issue after that unless I "overpuffed" and downed a lot of smoke. The study said no cravings or addictions were created, and the dose is the lowest available in the program for which the patches are used to wean people away from an addiction (stage 1 = 21mg/ day, stage 2 = 14, and stage 3 =7, after which the stop smoking program expects you won't want more). I don't have a link to the study, but if you search GAW using Ardis as the search term (or just search for his website) you can probably get it in a few clicks.
I had no such sensations myself when using the patch.
I looked at the ingredients of the patch (over-the-counter) and was not impressed by those ingredients--which I don't recall at the moment. Perhaps I should "hold my nose" and give it a try anyway.
If you want to detox, it's by far the most convenient that I've read about. But I wouldn't bother unless you have a reason.