I haven’t been formally diagnosed. I had something on my skin that looked weird. I’ve checked what it could be. Obviously I want nothing to do with the “doctors”, so I manage it myself.
I found the photos showing: Yes, melanoma / No, not melanoma, so I’ve learned that it’s probably: Yes.
I have ivermectin (pills) purchased for my family, so I’ve tried. I didn’t want to swallow it because I would eat my whole stock before it gets to the place I need. It’s easier to dose it externally.
First, I’ve tried to break a pill into hundreds of pieces, put it on the spoon with a water and then on my skin. It wasn’t easy to keep the IVM where I wanted it.
Then I thought: I can buy a horse paste (literally), because it’d be easier to put it on the skin, so it sticks where I need it too. I’ve bought it for around £9 ($11).
I was putting it on the skin in the morning, for the whole day and removing it before going to bed. Every 1 or 2 days, depending if I forgot or not.
After 2-3 weeks my enemy gets smaller, more flat and changed the colour from brown-ish to gray-ish. I no longer feel this weird “skin anxiety” when touching it. I started to ignore it and no longer worry.
I will repeat the process in couple of days to see if it disappears completely.
Just wanted to share with you guys, so you know that it helps.
I’m so glad you all share the information here. This was my 3 cents.
God bless!
I had shingles and one of shingles' side effect is six months of tender, hurting skin where the rash was. I used horse paste. It was gone completely in 48 hours.
I have a friend who gets a prescription ivermectin creme for her rosacea. The brand name is Soolantra. She gave me a tube when she needed ivermectin pills and I traded her. I used the Soolantra the same way you did the horse paste--for shingles. Works great. I should have thought of using the horse paste that way. Great idea!
I actually just got some of the ivermectin cream from buyivermectin24 online, it's a white cream and I got the 3 pack. I've been putting it on a few spots on my leg that I've noticed the last few years they've slowly have gotten bigger (they don't look like melanoma though), also on my face where I think what I have is rosacea. Never got it diagnosed or anything, it's like skinny red veins on my cheeks. I figured I'd give it a try. Also trying it on my mosquito bites to see if it helps. Kind of hard to tell yet if it's working or not as I just started using it a few days ago.
Do you think this would work on acne as well?
I'd sure try it. If acne is a viral infection, then it should definitely help. I'm on the fence about the whole virus argument on stuff, but I know that when my own immune system is taxed, I get shingles. I also know that the last route out of the body for something that shouldn't be there is the skin. If your body can't get something out through the waste path or through coughing or sneezing or sweating it out, then it will have to get out via the skin. That's why a common phenomenon for people who are allergic to milk is eczema. I'm not a doctor, but with that said, I sure wouldn't hesitate to try ivermectin creme on acne if it were me.
Very interesting... on rare occasions, I get a herpes lesion on my lip somewhere. I usually use an essential oil or a bunch of Calcium Lactate with Vitamin F. I shall reach for the paste next time.
Acne usually expresses an allergic reaction to something you've ingested or breathed in or touched. Viruses typically are parasitic in nature, so I was asking from the acne=parasitic infection standpoint
https://illuminatelabs.org/blogs/health/heart-and-soil-review
Organ meat pills... I have been taking them the past few weeks and keep researching on them. Ran across this one about acne
She has before photos..
Organ meat pills? I am not familiar with those
Soolantra (Ivermectin cream) was prescribed for my son by a Dermatologist for Demodex Mites (a form of Acne). So I think horse paste would work just as well since it is Ivermectin.
It sounds as though the rosacea never resolves though. Is this the case?
My mother-in-law has been using it on her rosacea and says that it is working. She didn't think so at first, but then she said she put it on a little thicker and that has been working. She's dealt with rosacea her whole life so she's happy to finally have something that seems to be curing it.
That is just wonderful! I hope it continues to resolve.
Mine did, 30 years ago. Totally different "rosacea," though, in my opinion (the only one that counts if I'm the one suffering). Was diagnosed with "rosacea" in my early 30's that i had never dealt with previously. Splotchy face and forehead particularly when hot, sweaty and/or working, or having a drink, beer, etc.
Went to my doctor...he sent me to dermatologist where I was prescribed an expensive metronidizole cream and was told I'd need it the rest of my life. It didn't help at all. Didn't go back to the dermatologist.
Researched online about rosacea and found a doctor in Australia who'd been doing studies on rosacea and he had theories on there maybe being a connection between h. pylori bacteria and rosacea. He had been testing certain combinations of antibiotics to be taken along with strong antacid.
I convinced my DO, after presenting him with much info I had printed out from the Australian site, to prescribe me the two antibiotics and the prescription antacid that were recommended by the Australian doctor/researcher. After completing that course, I had no improvement.
The Australian doctor/researcher had alternative combinations of antibiotics to try so I told my DO that I wanted to try again. He refused, saying, "what you don't know can be dangerous." I suggested back to him that what he doesn't know can be dangerous as well and I insisted that I wanted him to prescribe me the alternative combination. He again refused and I left never to return to that DO.
I found a new primary doctor and explained everything to him about what had been done and what I wanted to do. He agreed. I went through the alternative antibiotics course and I have not had "rosacea" again since...about 30 ago years, now.
I've been putting "rosacea" in quotes because I believe it can be one thing for one person but something totally different for the next person, and, I also believe, as I believed 30 years ago, that the doctors really don't know all the causes of what they put in their catch-all "rosacea" diagnosis. There are countless bacteria that doctors don't know a damn thing about. Yes h.pylori was the focus of the Australian doctor/researcher's study, however, that doesn't mean there aren't countless other bacteria being effected, either ridding some and/or boosting others, by the antibiotic combos he suggested, or, by the copious antibiotics thrown at me in my life before my "rosacea."
Looking back, after living through this covid bs, it seems a distinct possibility that ivermectin may have been all I would have needed to end my case of "rosacea."