Candida Story
If you really want to recover from candida, the best thing you could
do is step back and focus on your total health, not the candida. It is
just the tip of the iceberg, and just an indication that you have many
lifestyle, diet, and health issues to consider.
This is just one guy's story, and I don't mean to imply that
what I am going to say, applies to everyone, or maybe even anyone. Also,
I think there are many roads that lead to Rome, that is, copying what
I have done may or may not be best for any particular person, just things
to consider.
My Past
I was born with horrible skin allergies and rashes, for which I was
given steroids. I continued to have skin problems throughout life. I developed
bad allergies early in life as well. I was lethargic, shy, unathletic
and withdrawn. I was constantly sick and had occasional headaches. By
college and law school I had full fledged sinusitis. I had a huge gut
and digestive problems, could not focus, always had bowel problems. After
law school I was functioning on steroids, allergy meds, Advil and lots
of coffee, but I was getting worse, and fast. I was not even 30 years
old. It started to ruin my career, and then I knew I had to do something.
I started going to sinus specialists because that was my worst symptom,
and was also causing the headaches. I figured that was my real problem.
After 3 or 4 specialists who couldn't help, I was getting desperate.
I read sinus survival, which mentions candida as a cause, but I was in
denial as I did not want to consider that I was dealing with a very chronic
and hard to deal with problem. So I ignored it for awhile. Since I had
lived in china and liked Chinese medicine, I tried a local Chinese doctor
for acupuncture. It felt great and brought temporary relief, and made
me question why acupuncture could help, but my doctors couldn't. You
know the feeling. She also gave me something called isotonix opc-3, grape
seed extract, which totally relieved the symptoms as long as I kept taking
it. I was happy with this for awhile, because it was relief, and that
was enough.
Since that supplement worked, I started trying others, everything, you
name it. Antifungals, vitamins, enzymes probiotics, juicing, cleanses
you buy in a store... I was spending a lot of money, and while I felt
better, I was not satisfied with being a supplement juggler. I tried the
candida diet. When I was told I could expect to live the rest of my life
that way, it really depressed me, for a long time. People on the list
I followed at the time basically told me I just had to face it, but I
refused, and started spending hours a day reading anything I could. I
went down a lot of promising roads that brought a little help, but never
really cured me or gave me a real understanding of how and why I got sick,
and how I could get healthy. I really hated the candida diet. I think
that alone drove me on to find an answer.
I had seen liver flushing discussed by people on that other list, and
found the CureZone that way. It took months before I allowed myself to
consider that my liver might be a problem, that it was more than just
a little GI tract/sinus thing. It seemed like such a leap, with no real
science backing it. But I wasn't making real progress, so I was desperate
to try anything. I did the Hulda Clark flush, and I got tons of stones,
hundreds of large stones. And I felt relief that I had not in years. I
knew the worm had begun to turn (though the relief was less than a week,
then gone).
I did three more, all the Clark cleanse, no colon cleansing. After the
fourth, something wasn't right. I got a stone stuck in the colon,
and it made me sick. And the juicing was tearing me up, even though I
didn't know it. Someone told me to ask Dr. Andreas Moritz about it,
and I did. He told me to stop juicing and that I had a stuck stone. Both
proved correct, and I then knew that the guy knew his stuff. Though honestly,
at first, I thought he was a bit far out. I'm a lawyer, not an artist
or some touchy feeling type. It took some time to open up to what he said
on his list every day. But I took a chance, spent $7 bucks on his book,
"key to health" and it turned out to be the best $7 I ever spent.
On his advice I got two professional colonics, which got out tons of
crap. It really helped. I bought a home colema system to use before and
after flushes, no more stuck stones for me. I started slowly implementing
the advice found in "key to health" and before I knew it, I
was well on my way.
What worked:
Some of these things I learned from Andreas, some from other people.
I did the following very general things.
Got all chemicals out of my life: soap, dryer sheets, deodorant, creams,
toothpaste, everything I could think of. I exercised, ate a whole foods
diet, worked on my happiness, and generally cared about myself. Some of
the specifics are as follows:
-continued liver flushing with colema board (still going)
-used colosan to cleanse the small intestine (big help)
-followed Andrea's eating guidelines (big help)
-used Miracle II baths for sweat bathes and detox - great product
-quit drinking any liquids with meals or after for 2.5 hours
-in bed every day by 10:00... very important for the body
-meditation every day
-yoga every day
-sunbathing as much as I can - important for health
-hot cold showers
-only eat when hungry, never overeat, chew food to liquid
-no antifungals at all, hard on body, bad for liver
-quit probiotics and enzymes- body can become dependent
-cut back on meat- when eaten, only organic
-lots for fresh veggies and rice
-fruit on an empty stomach, never in the evening
-kidney cleanse (Moritz)
-cut stress out of my life wherever possible
-dry skin brushing followed by sesame oil massage, then hot/cold shower
I think that covers most of the major stuff, although I know I have
forgotten things. The eating guidelines are so detailed that I cannot
possibly go into them here, just have to check out the book for that.
It sounds like a lot, but I don't do it all every day, and I didn't
start everything all at once. I am a married lawyer, but found a way to
make time for this. If I can, we all can make time for ourselves. Besides,
now I could not live without these things they have become such a part
of me.
Of course not all of this may be necessary. What is more important is
how you view your health and how you view disease. At first I too saw
candida as some invader that didn't belong. Now I have changed my
opinion entirely. I see it as part of the body's back up digestive
system. I think (and learned this from others) that the candida is protecting
you from toxicity resulting from your inability to digest foods. As such
killing candida is counterproductive, and could be harmful. I won't
go into much here, because its controversial, but the curious can search
in the "Ask Andreas" archives about possible dangers of antifungals,
even naturals. If you take them, you should hear every opinion about them.
Cleanse the body's vital organs and focus its digestive powers,
and there will be no need for candida. Its just a symptom, not a disease.
The key in my mind is to work with the body to address whatever underlying
problem is interfering with your health. American lifestyle obviously
does not help. Once a liver is clogged up, it makes it very very hard
to get healthy again without unclogging it. This can take time, and many
flushes. No its not easy, but the rewards can be great.
I really wish there was an easy way out, but I don't think there
is. But this doesn't have to be work. I love my life now, and the
things I am doing to get healthy. I wouldn't go back for anything.
And yes, I do cheat. I have a few beers here and there, eat sugar and
pizza. But all in all, I stay on the healthy path. I apologize that this
seems so disorganized. But in the end it probably doesn't matter.
Each person will have to make changes that suit their own life, they just
need to think hard on what those changes could be, and keep an open mind.
The candida dogma is out there, some of its helpful, but some of it is
just dogma. Something may bring temporary relief, but long term harm.
We are all guinea pigs in this. So when I consider something new, I consider
whether its something that assists the body to heal itself, or is it a
crutch or worse.
Each of us is the cure for our own problems if we want it to be. Giving
up on anyone curing me was probably the best thing that could have happened
to me.
John
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