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You Can Fear The Reaper, But Don't Fear Your Dentist Or Hygienist. AND WE NEED MORE COWBELL!!!

You Can Fear The Reaper, But Don't Fear Your Dentist Or Hygienist. AND WE NEED MORE COWBELL!!!
I just came back from a long overdue noon appointment to get my teeth cleaned, and I'm here to tell you, I lived through it all, including the what-ifs.

What if my mouth was the dirtiest, most plaque infested, and tartar, gross out mouth she'd ever seen?

What if I had so much plaque on my teeth, that they'd tell me to go see a heart specialist as soon as I got out of the office?

What if my blood sugar went low while I was in the chair?

What if it hurt like hell and I cried like a baby?

I lived through the embarrassment of knowing that the hygienist might need to arm herself with an industrial sandblaster in order to remove the tarter since it had been two years since my last cleaning. Sidebar: Turns out, no sandblaster was needed.

I lived through the fear of knowing that extreme plaque buildup on the teeth, equals extreme plaque build up of the heart arteries for people with diabetes. They didn't tell me to see a heart Doc, but they did tell me that I was a good brusher & had no cavities.

I lived through the fear of thinking that I might go low in the chair. I didn't. But if I had, I would have let Karen (the fantastical Dental Hygienist) know and I would have popped me some raspberry gluco-tabs.

I lived through the sound of each tooth being meticulously scraped, and my gums being banished of any tarter & plaque, and hopefully the slight inflammation that accompanies said tartar and plaque.

I lived through my fears of the dreaded what ifs!

Bottom line, I lived through all of it and have been through MUCH WORSE.

Yes, my teeth and gums are tender, and my jaw feels sore and tired. But guess what? I did it! And right then and there in the chair (unexpected rhyme alert) I decided that I'd never put off getting my teeth cleaned again.

Screw the fear; screw the embarrassment of having a professional clean my choppers, and screw the what-ifs of it all - I'm better than that!

Karen the fantastic Hygienist: Kelly, I want to see you in 6 months, I promise your next cleaning will be nothing compared to this.

Me: How bout I see you in four months Karen, I want to stay on top of this.

Karen The Fantastic Hygienist: Even better!! Schedule a cleaning in four months.

And I did.

So why am I telling you this?

Because as PWDS, we fear going to doctors, and we fear the 'what-ifs", at least I know I do. And I don't know about you, but I want to keep my pearly whites plaque free, just like I want to keep my arteries plaque free.

And YES, I want to keep my pearly whites!

Folks, you can fear the reaper (who doesn’t?) but don’t fear your Hygienist or Dentist. SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT TO GET YOUR TEETH CLEANED, TODAY.

PS: If you make an appointment to get your teeth cleaned, then start singing Blue Oyster Cult's "Don't Fear The Reaper" under your breath for the rest of the day, and tell your coworker that "We need more cowbell," then my job for the day is complete~

Chatting With Charlie Kimball About Racing, Diabetes, Pittsburgh...And Cupcakes~

Charlie Kimball

A few weeks ago I was contacted by Open-Wheel Race Car Driver Charlie Kimball’s publicist, who invited me to chat with Charlie at the Novo Nordisk  Display at the ADA Expo in Pittsburgh on September 12th. Unfortunately, my  schedule wouldn’t allow for the trip to Pittsburg that weekend, but I still wanted to speak with Charlie because he and his diabetes story seemed VERY interesting.  So yesterday we  had the chance to chat...about all sorts of things.

K2: Hi Charlie, thanks for giving me a ring!

CK: Hi Kelly, thanks for taking the time to talk with me. It’s so great to meet face to face,or talk with people over the phone and Internet and share Diabetes stories.

K2: Speaking of stories, you have a pretty amazing one.  You’re a racecar Driver who was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes a few years back. 

CK:  It’s a lot of fun, I love what I do, and I could have never have forgiven myself if I let diabetes get in the way of my dream of racing cars and my passion and enthusiasm for that. I would have never have been happy, that’s for sure.

K2. Well I really have to commend you on many levels. First of all, you didn’t let D stop you, which is huge. I mean it shouldn’t stop anyone –it’s a new way of approaching life.

Secondly, You could literally be a Rocket Scientist- and Engineer-I’m impressed by that! You were accepted into Stanford’s prestigious Mechanical Engineering program and said no Thank-you. You wanted  to race cars. I think that’s great! You must have known in your heart that racing was for you.

CK: There were some interesting conversations and some tense moments between my parents and I back in “03” when I graduated High School.  I was accepted into Stanford and I had to choose between engineering and racing cars.

My parents have always been supportive of EVERYTHING I do. My dad’s an engineer and works in racing, which is how I was initially exposed to it. He was the one going to the go-cart track with me, because he loved it as well.  My mom was the one who was always saying. Please don’t race. You need to get good grades, you need to get into a good college, you need to have a safety net and a backup plan because there’s just no way this can turn into a career, this is just a hobby. She’s had to comeback on that a little bit now.  She helped “drive” me in school just as much as my dad did and that really gave me the confidence. Having Stanford on my resume is a big deal. People, even other race teams read that and are like: WOW, you got into to Stanford and turned it down, you obviously LOVE racing. That’s a big deal!” It’s helped me throughout my life.

K2: I’m sure it has- I’m impressed by both your driving AND getting into Stanford and saying,“You know what, that’s great, I can go back, but I want my dream!”

CK: That was the biggest point I had with my parents. I asked them how long has Stanford been around and how long will the racing be around?   I need to seize this while I can! 

I can always go back to school, and I plan to.  When I retire from racing and can physically no longer compete at the level I want to, I plan on going back to a university and getting a degree. Whether it’s Engineering or something completely different like Renaissance Art History, to broaden my horizons. I can’t very well have a family one-day and tell my kids that they have to go to college if I haven’t.

One of the things about traveling the world and living in Europe is that the education that I get has a lot to do with what I put into it.

A lot of the value from college isn’t necessarily the name of the school on the diploma, but the effort I put into the learning.

K2: Speaking of learning and Europe, did you feel it was easier to break the stereotype of the “Slow American Racer” or the Person with Diabetes Stereotype?  Which was easier to break?

CK: Um, that’s a really great question and I’ll have to think a little bit on the response to that.

K2: I’m REALLY curious about that.

CK:  I’m comfortable answering that.

 I think that the Stereotype w/ the racing was something that I found to be a bigger challenge because it had been confirmed in three of four sets of different situations.  American Drivers had gone to Europe and had expected something since they were exposed to something completely different and, as a result weren’t able to be successful. So as a result, there was a precedence set that I had to overcome.

Where with having Diabetes, I’ve been overwhelmed with by how positive the community as a whole is. To be honest, there wasn’t a precedence with Open-Wheeled racing with the US and Diabetes, so I didn’t feel like I had to overcome a stereotype that I couldn’t race because of the Diabetes. I believed in myself that I could do it. And that I was going be as good an athlete/Driver with Diabetes as without, so I just had to go out there and prove it to everyone else that that was true. Does that make sense?

K2: Yes, it absolutely makes sense-D doesn’t hold you back!

Now when you were diagnosed, what was the first thought that came into your head?

CK: To be honest, my first thought was: DIABETES?? Don’t older people get that??

K2: Actually, that’s VERY common misconception Charlie.

CK: I’m COMPLETELY up front Kelly; I was 110% ignorant about Diabetes.

My diagnoses was completely different that yours, I don’t have ANY family history of Diabetes. There’s nobody in my immediate family that has Type 1 Diabetes. And being diagnosed at 22 was more atypical. So I sort of had never been exposed to it. I didn’t really have friends or close friends that had it in High School or grade school.  But since my diagnoses and looking back at my school years, I remember thinking, “Oh yeah, that girl had diabetes.“  But had never really put it together with what it REALLY meant.’

I remember thinking, “Well that diagnoses can’t be right!”  And then I thought about racing. (I was diagnosed in England, and was living near Oxford at the time) and said to the Dr: I’m supposed to be on a plane tomorrow for Portugal for a race this weekend. That’s cool right?

And he said, NO.

When he said no it forced me to take a step back and think: What are the bigger implications of this diagnoses. If this is a big enough deal to keep me out of the car this weekend, then can it keep me out of the car indefinitely? What does this REALLY mean?

So at that point I went home from the Doctors office and spent an afternoon Googling and reading all types of horror stories on line. I was quite lucky that my dad was coming over for the race. So I went and picked him up from the bus station in oxford and we went to dinner and we sat down to dinner and I said: Dad I went to the Dr. today. And he said: OK.  And I said: I might have Diabetes. And then burst into tears. So once I started to share it, even with just my dad. I saw the value in talking about it and sharing it and now I’ve been able to take that on a greater scale w as many people as possible.

K2: GOOD FOR YOU CHARLIE. So many people have the opposite reaction when they’re first diagnosed.

CK: EXACTLY. Because I’d missed the race, we’d put a press release out, and explained about my diagnoses. I was working with a manager at the time who gave me great advice. He said: Don’t be afraid to talk about it. Treat the diagnoses like an injury and talk about it with everyone. And as soon as you recover, you’ll be back in the car and racing.

That forced me to get the story out and people started coming back to me and saying things like. “ I was diagnosed and I buried my head in the sand for a few weeks. But now I face it head on every day and I feel great!  Your going to have good and bad days, but if you take the same discipline that you apply to your racing and apply it to your diabetes, there’s no reason you won’t be back winning before you know!

CK: One of the biggest reasons why I partnered with Novo Nordisk and am doing all this media is that when I was first diagnosed, the support I received from complete strangers (D brethren so to speak) they reached out and TOTALLY supported me.

The positive feedback I received from the Diabetes community was OVERWHELMING! Having the opportunity to give back and return the favor was a dream come true for me. Because not only am I continuing to do what I love, but I get the chance to help people while I do that- there’s not a more fulfilling life than that!

K2: We are a tight community and we definitely support out own-and everyone else to, but it absolutely gives you a different outlook on things. Once you have a chance to process it.

CK: EXACTLY. I work with Dr. Ann Peters at USC Medical and she said to me: The way I see it is the Diabetes Doctors  -the Endo’s, and all the people in the Diabetes community. We’re not heart surgeons, were not ER docs. We don’t come in last minute, crack chests, start hearts, save a lives.  We fight this thing day in, day out, minute in, minute out. Good and bad days. It’s more like a baseball season, you’re not trying to win every point, every game, and you’re aiming for a majority and your just trying to slide your averages. It takes a lot of love and a lot of care, and there isn’t a huge amount of money in it. Yet, it’s a very positive community because there’s so much passion involved.  

And that’s something I really relate to the racing. Is the passion involved and the discipline involved in the routine.

K2: Passion and discipline are absolutely true- but the great thing about being diagnosed today is that you get to go off and have a cupcake now and then, because things like that are no longer taboo thanks to the technology. It’s a great time to be diagnosed in that respect.

CK: I completely agree. One of the things when I first was diagnosed was I thought, oh God, people are going to think I’m a junkie because there’s going to be needles and vials and blood everywhere.  Your mind goes to the worst places. And she handed me the Levemir FlexPen. And I was like: look I just got diagnosed with Diabetes, I don’t need a pen! I need insulin, right?

I don’t use a pump because of the temperature in the racecar, and the temperature from being under my fireproof suit and clothing. And I’m hitting my goals with the Levemir FlexPen and Novolog. It’s flexible. When I’m headed out to a race I can just grab my Helmet and my Flexpen and I’m out the door!  SO different from what I envisioned my treatment plan being when I was first diagnosed!

The Technology has come SO far. I wear a CGMS and I Velcro it to the steering wheel so I can keep an eye on my numbers in the car and out. I have ranges I try to hit before I get behind the wheel.

 If my numbers start to come down a little to fast, I drink bubble mounted through the car, so I can get OJ through my helmet. It’s like a Camelback (like the cyclists wear) that's mounted in the car with a tube that runs out and up to my helmet and into my mouth.  So I have the microphone on one side of my helmet, and the drinks tube on the other.

K2: YES, I read about it- send me a pic! That’s great and highly creative. Is that like a little bit of your engineering talent coming into play?

CK: I think so. I was sitting with Dr. Peters- to be honest it was her ideal because she said: We need to be able to get you liquid during the race because we want to keep you hydrated, but we also need to be able to get you sugar if your getting low. The cars have drinks bubble in them with just water for hydration. We need to have one that’s for hydration and one that’s for sugar. And I said, the races are only about 45 minutes long, I don’t need the hydration - I'll just wear it for juice.  It took working with the team and finding a good location, and routing it into my helmet. The systems were all in place it just took a little bit of impetus.

K2: It just took some thought,deligation, and a little engineering!

Charlie's tricked out Juice Helmet! 

K2: What’s the # 1 Point you’d like for others to take away at the ADA Expo in Pittsburgh?

CK: The most important point that I want to make with PWD’s is that DIABETES DOESN’T HAVE TO SLOW YOU DOWN. My life is hectic; it’s fast paced on and off the track. Diabetes is with me in the passenger seat the WHOLE time. I’m in the Driver’s seat, not Diabetes. I’m still very much in control of my life, yet it’s always along for the ride, but it doesn’t slow me down.

With good management and good control, and the medical advances and technology, there’s no reason you can’t do EVERYTHING you want in life

 K2: I believe that once people come to terms with their diabetes, they receive gifts from their diabetes. What gifts has diabetes given you?

CK: When people hear that I was diagnosed with diabetes they always say: That’s to bad, or I’m sorry to hear that. My reply is: I’m not. Yes, if I could I’d give it back, and yes; I still have “bad” Diabetes days. But I do have more good days than bad at the moment.

I’m a better athlete with Diabetes than I was before. I’m more conscientious about my training. I’m more aware of my nutrition and how my body reacts to that nutrition. I’m more focused, and I enjoy EVERY SINGLE LAP in the car more because I nearly lost it because of the diabetes.

Having diabetes has given me an extra sense of APPRECIATION for what I do.

K2: That's BIG.

CK: I’m really excited about going to Pittsburgh, I’ve only ever been there once before and then it was for a really quick trip. I fully expect the weather to be better this time because last time I was there it was the middle of winter and there was a lot of snow on the ground! Being from Southern Cal, that shocked me a little bit.

I’m really looking forward to meeting everyone at the Diabetes Expo. I’m looking forward to meeting people, seeing the Divabetics in action .

K2: Oh those Divabetics are a crazy fun group- I’ve seen them in action!

CK: The ADA Expo in Pittsburg is going to be a great way to interact and learn from others PWD’s stories and hopefully, they learn from mine. I’m excited to share my racecar and share my story, show people my racing helmet. I’m constantly learning about Diabetes and what works for my Diabetes.

K2: That’s a great way to think. Plenty of people think they have nothing more to learn when it comes to diabetes. I’m with you, I think you can learn something new everyday!

CK: They day I stop learning is probably the day I stop living.

K2: I like the way you think Charlie!

Now, for a car question Charlie: Seriously, do I really need to switch into 4th if I’m only going 24 miles per hr?

CK: I don’t. OK I drive a stick a manual. Doing what I do, I like to be an active driver .

So I drive a manual and my rule of thumb is: 1st  gear up to 10mph, 2nd gear up to 20 mph, 3rd for 30 mph and 4th for 40mph, and 5th above that. That works for me.

K2: I figured if anyone would know, you would.

CK And just a final point Kelly. My favorite cupcake is Red Velvet Cake with white Cream Cheese for future reference of course.

K2: REALLY? For future reference that sounds delicious!

CK: Yeah, I love cupcakes to. I was having a debate with my sister (whose getting married next summer,) and I think she should have a Cupcake Tree instead of a wedding cake. I think she’s on board, but her fiancé still needs some convincing !

It was GREAT talking with Charlie- I learned a lot,and not just about gears! Charlie is a man of many tastes and goals. Who lets nothing, including Diabetes steer him off track. BTW- All racing puns were TOTALLY intended!

If your in the Pittsburgh area on Saturday, September 12th. Be sure to stop by the Pittsburgh ADA Diabetes Expo at the David L. Lawrence Convention Center between the hours of 9 & 4 and give Charlie a big hello! If you can't make it to Pittsburgh, you can follow Charlie on Twitter @racewithinsulin

Big Pharma targeting teenagers with their dangerous Gardisil vaccine

Big Pharma targeting teenagers with their dangerous Gardisil vaccine
The Health Sciences Institute is new to me, but I now receive their regular newsletter. For those of you who would like to subscribe, write to them at dailyhealth@agorapub.co.uk


This is one of their newsletters, copied here in full....


"This is a warning for all parents and grandparents: Drug giant Merck wants to inject every one of your young girls and boys with Gardasil (Cervarix in the UK), the controversial human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine. 

It's controversial, of course, because it's been shown to prevent a few types of human HPV, but it certainly is not a "cervical cancer vaccine," as it's sometimes touted.

In addition, the total reported adverse side effects (including deaths) linked to the vaccine are staggering.

But all those drawbacks don't bother the mainstream media. Not a bit! It's like major media outlets are playing whack- a-mole — always on a worldwide lookout for the slightest shred of good news about these HPV vaccines to pop up, and then...WHACK! they hit us over the head with it.

Spanning the globe 

Starting down under...

In a new Australian study, researchers found that Gardasil use helped reduce the number of cervix abnormalities in young girls by "as much as 50 per cent."

That sounds pretty impressive. But buried in a lower paragraph is the laughably unimpressive truth: Among vaccinated girls, the rate of high-grade cervical abnormalities was 0.42 per cent. Among unvaccinated girls: 0.8 per cent.

The difference was just a few tenths of a single percentage point! And yet when you twist the maths, it comes out like a great headline and a big win for these vaccines.

In another recent study, Austrian researchers tested more than 100 men for HPV infection and found that about 10 per cent had high-risk HPV, but none showed clinical symptoms of infection.

CNN, a global news channel based in the US — one of the media's most generous Gardasil enablers — reported on the research, and offered this quote from the vice chair of the urology department at the University of Kansas: "Not only girls, but boys should be vaccinated because of these findings."

Wow — that's a huge jump to THAT conclusion! The study didn't involve vaccinations in any form. And yet based on the results of his very small study, he's ready to vaccinate every boy.

Of course, CNN's report doesn't let out a peep about the avalanche of daunting side effects linked to these vaccines that were reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. The same was true earlier this year when CNN covered a Gardasil study that appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine.

In that study — partly designed and funded by Merck — results showed that Gardasil was about 60 per cent effective in preventing HPV genital warts in young men.

Now, you expect trials like this to have the drug company's fingerprints all over it. But CNN didn't mention anything about the study authors and their significant Merck affiliations:
    * Seven authors were employees of Merck and owned Merck stock or stock options * Five authors received Merck grant support * Five authors received speaking fees or fees for board membership from Merck * Six authors received travel reimbursement from Merck * One author had "an approved, filed, or pending patent" related to subject matter discussed in the NEJM article
Well it's just one big happy Merck family, cranking out a study with (surprise!) wonderful results for the Merck product.

"HPV vaccine effective in men" was the no-grey-areas CNN headline.

Now for the reality check

About 2,000 boys and young men received a Gardasil vaccine, and about 2,000 did not. Three years later, 36 in the Gardasil group had external genital lesions, and 89 had the same in the placebo group.

That's a difference of only 53 cases, which is pretty insubstantial given the total number of subjects and the fact that we have no way of comparing the levels of sexual activity of the two groups.

Meanwhile, at some point, 36 men must have said something like, "Wait, I got the vaccine and STILL got genital warts? What's up with that?"

Good question, Merck. What's up with that?

Mothers and fathers, grandfathers and grandmothers – don't be fooled by the media's ridiculous whack-a-mole game. This vaccine is in no way worth the risk for your young boys and girls.

Big Pharma companies - top list for government fraud

Big Pharma companies - top list for government fraud
The Health Sciences Institute (HSI) have recently announced that Big Pharma companies are up to a variety of "underhand fraudulent activities". Their newsletter said that in a recent 'Public Citizen' report, in the US, it was revealed that drug companies have drawn False Claims Act penalties of nearly $20 billion - the vast majority occurring in the last five years. 

They said that the biggest culprit was Pfizer, who had to pay up a settlement of more than $2 billion for one infraction, the illegal marketing of Bextra, their now-defunct painkiller.

However, three other companies joined Pfizer in what HSI described as 'the elite upper echelon of the Big Pharma Fraud Club', which paid out a combined $10.5 billion in in fines over just 20 years.

* Eli Lilly
* GlaxoSmithKline
* Schering-Plough. 

Apparently, one common swindle involved Big Pharma overcharging cash-strapped state funded pharmaceutical suppliers as much as 12 TIMES the cost of a drug. 

Yet given the wealth of Big Pharma companies, these financial penalties are relatively small. The risk of getting caught is soon repaid by the huge level of drug company profits. So big are these profits, raising the fines substantially will probably not act as a deterrent against fraud of this kind.

HSI suggest that Big Pharma fraud, in all its manifestations, should be dealt with through criminal law because, as it says, these practices put everyone at risk - but 'does a great job of boosting drug company profits.

But in the name of profit, Big Pharma CEOs, and senior executives, have been putting us all at risk long enough. And as HSI say, what they are doing is criminal - and they get off by writing relatively small cheques from the company's account.

So if any reader is still taking ConMed drugs, please consider. Are you taking them for your health? Or in order to boost the profits of wealthy drug companies?

A case of Angina - treated with homeopathy

A case of Angina - treated with homeopathy
Sanket Taldevkar sent me this case, someone he has treated for Angina. I am pleased to publish this, on his behalf, in order to show the nature of the homeopathy interview - the precursor to enabling patients to access safe and effective homeopathic treatment. It is published just as he sent it to me, and demonstrates just how effective homeopathy can be in the treatment of Angina.


Not every homeopathy works in the same way, but notice how the emotional symptoms of the patient have been considered in equal measure to the physical symptoms of Angina. This shows how homeopathy qualifies as a truly holistic therapy. 

The mind, and our emotions, are central to our physical health.


CASE OF ANGINA
MALE. 40 YR/M

STRESS TEST POSITIVE, SER.CHOLESTROLE BORDERLINE. AND HYPERTENSION

D: WHAT IS YOUR PROBLEM?
P: PAIN IN CHEST SINCE LAST TWO MONTHS.

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT CHEST PAIN, HOW IT STARTS?
P: SINCE LAST TWO THREE MONTH I HAVE NOTICE MYSELF WHENEVER I WALK FAST OR DO MY PRACTICE PAIN STARTS [PT IS CLASSICAL DANCER AND TEACHER BY PROFESSION]

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT THIS? WHAT HAPPENS TO YOU EXACTLY? WHEN U WALK FAST OR DO UR PRACTICE?
P: MEANS WHEN I START MY MORNING CLASS I FIND PAIN IN CHEST WITHIN 10 MINS.

D: TELL ME ABOUT THAT TEN MINS WHAT HAPPENED EXACTLLY?
P: FOR FIRST 10 MIN I FEEL PAIN IN MY CHEST, THEN I HAVE TO TAKE REST FOR HALF AN HOUR THEN ONLY I CAN PRACTICE FURTHER, BUT AGAIN WITH SOME EFFORT PAIN RETURNS, AND SAME THINGS GOES ON.

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT THAT PAIN?
P: IT IS IN CENTER OF THE CHEST.

D: CAN U DESCRIBE THE TYPE OF PAIN
P: IT’S KIND OF PRESSING.

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT PRESSING
P: MEANS I CAN FEEL PRESSURE IN CHEST, THAT TIME I COULDN’T SPEEK PROPERLLY

D: WHAT HAPPENS TO U AT THAT MOMENT?
P: IT IS VERY DISTURBING TO ME

D: DISTURBING MEANS
P: MEANS I COULDN’T FOCUS ON MY PRACTICE

D: TELL MORE ABOUT THIS, WHEN IT IS DISTURBING THE MOST?
P: ITS DISTURBING BECAUSE I CANT COPE UP WITH RHYTHEM, MANY OF THE TIME I BARE THAT PAIN TILL THE POINT IT GOT WORSE AND TRY TO MAINTAIN MY STAMINA. PREVIOUSLLY WHEN THERE WAS NO SUCH PAIN I USED TO PRACTICE 2 TO 3 HRS A DAY NON STOP BUT NOW I HAVE TO TAKE REST IN BETWEEN.

D: WHEN U DECIDE TO STOP DANCING AND HAVE REST?
P: SEE I CAN DANCE TILL HALF AN HR BUT AFTER THAT I CAN FEEL I AM NOT CO-OPING WITH THE RYHTM THEN, THAT TIME I FEEL PAIN IN MY CHEST?

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT, WHEN U NOTICE THAT U R NOT CO-OPING WITH RHYTHM
P: THAT MOMENT I AM PUSHING MYSELF TRYING HARD BUT I CAN’T, DUE TO PAIN

D: HOW IT FEELS TO U AT THAT MOMENT WHEN U R PUSHING URSELF AND TRYING HARD BUT CANT
P: I FEEL VERY ANGRY ABOUT MYSELF

D: WHAT THE ANGER ABOUT?
P: WHY I CAN’T CO-UP WITH THIS

D: THIS IS WHAT U THINK RIGHT
P: YA

D: BUT WHAT IS THE ANGER ABOUT?
P: ANGER ABOUT MY POTENTIAL.

D: TELL ABOUT POTENTIAL.
P: POTENTIAL, CAPACITY TO SUSTAIN YOUR ENERGY [Hg: CLOSING ALL HIS FINGERS AND MAKING IT LIKE PUNCH]

D: CAN U EXPLAIN ME THIS
P: ITS LIKE THINGS ARE IN YOUR CONTROL, AND YOU ARE IN HARMONY WITH IT [Hg. SAME AS MENTION ABOUVE]

D: WHAT IS THIS YOU ARE SHOWING WITH YOU HAND?
P: IT’S CONTROL

D: EXPLAIN ME THE WORD CONTROL
P: CONTROLE IN THE SENSE, IT GIVES ME SATISFACTION.

D: WHAT IS CONTROL FOR YOU?
P: FOR ME IT’S VERY IMPORTANT.

D: HOW
P: FOR ME, TO GIVE MY BEST PERFORMANCE I HAVE TO BE IN VERY DISCIPLINED MANNER. BECAUSE IN DANCE ITS NOT ONLY THE MUSIC, NOT ONLY THE DANCER BUT DICIPLINE OR YOU CAN SAY HARMONY IS MOST IMPORTANT.

D: TELL MORE ABOUT HARMONEY, DISCIPLINE, PERFORMANCE
P: I CAN SAY HARMONY AND DISPLINE ARE THE MOST MOST IMPORTANT ASPECT OF ANY PERFORMER, AND NOW A DAYS I AM SRUGLLING WITH THIS.

D: HOW IT FEELS TO YOU?
P: IT FEELS LIKE GOING DOWN.

D: TELL ME ABOUT YOUR FEARS
P: GENERALLY I DON’T HAVE ANY FEAR BUT NOW DAYS I FEEL LIKE I AM NOT ABEL TO DANCE LIKE BEFORE I DID.

D: WHAT IS THE FEAR ABOUT?
P: FEAR ABOUT LOOSING PERFORMANCE DUE TO PAIN. MEANS WHEN YOU ARE IN FRONT OF AUDIENCE YOU HAVE TO GIVE YOUR 200% THEN ONLY YOU GET APPRECEATION AS A PERFORMER. AND TILL THIS DATE I AM DOING MY BEST I AM PREPARING MYSELF FOR NATIONAL EVENT.

D: SO WHAT IS MOST THING YOU ARE CONCERN ABOUT
P: WILL I ABEL TO MAINTAIN THIS, BECAUSE AT NATIONAL LEVEL COMPETITION IS VERY TUFF ONE MISTAKE AND YOU ARE OUT OF THE LIST, EVRYONE GIVES HIS BEST. AND I DON’T WANT TO MISS THIS DUE TO THIS REASONE

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT THIS
P: FOR A BIGNEAR IT’S NOTHING TO LOOSE, BUT FOR PERSON LIKE ME IT’S COMING DOWN FROM YOUR LEVEL.

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT COMING DOWN.
P: BASICALLY IT’S A FEAR OF FAILURE AND DUE TO SMALL MISTAKE

D: TELL ME ABOUT YOUR MOST STRESSFUL EVENT IN LIFE
P: I THINK 6YR BACK

D: WHAT HAPPENED THAT TIME?
P: I STARTED MY DANCE CLASSES WITH MY FRIEND , BUT AFTER A YEAR IT DIDN'T GO WELL, AND THAT TIME I WAS NEW IN THIS TOWN, SO I UNDERGONE LOST OF DIFFICULTIES , MEANS I EVEN DON’T KNOW HINDI OR MARATHI AT THAT TIME.

D: HOW IT FEELS TO YOU AT THAT MOMENT?
P: NOTHING, I TOOK IT AS A CHALLENGE AND WORK HARD AND STARTED MY OWN DANCE CLASSES. BUT NOW IT’S OK I DON’T THINK MUCH ABOUT IT.

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT YOUR HOBBIES
P: THE ONLY THING I LIKE IS DANCE.

D: WHAT YOU LIKE THE MOST ABOUT DANCE?
P: EVRYTHING ABOUT DANCE, FOR ME IT’S INNER SATISFACTION WHEN YOU GET APPRICIATION.

D: HOW IT FEELS TO YOU WHEN YOU GET APPRICIATION?
P: THAT IS THE ONLY THING FOR WHICH ANY PERFORMER DOES EFFORTS, ITS NOT ONLY ONE EVENT YOU HAVE TO MAINTAIN THAT THEN ONLY YOU ARE GREAT PERFOMER

D: DO YOU GET ANY DREAM?
P: SINCE 4-5 MONTHS I HAD VERY HORRIBLE DREAMS

D: TELL ME IN DETAIL.
P: MEANS, I SEE AM STANDING IN A RAW FOR AUDITION, SO MANY PEOPLE ARE THERE THE ONE BOY WHO IS RECEPTIONIST CALLS EVRYONE INSIDE EXCEPT ME.

D: TELL ME MORE ABOUT IT
P: I FEEL VERY RESTLESS THAT MOMENT, SO I DIRECTLLY RUN INSIDE THE AUDITION HALL, MUSIC AND ALL STRATS BUT I FORGOT MY STEPS, AND THEN I WAKE UP .AND THEN WHOLE DAY I KEEP THINKING ABOUT IT.

D: HOW IT FEELS TO YOU?
P: IT CREATES ANXIETY IN DAY TIME, EVEN THOUGH I AM PRACTICING.

D: WHAT IS THE ANXIETY ABOUT?
P: ANXIETY ABOUT LOOSING OR MISSING STEPS, THAT IS ONE MORE PROBLEM FOR ME, WHENEVER I AM GETTING READY FOR AN EVENT I FEEL VERY RESTLESS. I KEEP DOING STEPS AGAIN AND AGAIN SO AS TO AVOID MY ANXIETY.

UNDERSTANDING OF THE CASE : PT IS SUFFERING FROM PAIN IN CHEST, ON INQUIRING ABOUT PAIN WE COME TO KNOW THE BASIC PROBLEM FOR HIM IS , HE IS NOT ABEL TO MAINTAIN HIS STAMINA FOR PERFORMANCE .THIS IS THE MOST TROUBLING FOR HIM.
KINGDOM MINERAL: BASIC ISSUE IS ABOUT STRUCTURE, BECAUSE ON ASKING ABOUT PAIN THERE IS NO ISSUE OF PLANT SENSITIVITY OR THERE IS NOTHING SPECIFIC SENSATION WHICH INDICATES PLANT KINGDOM, SAME WITH ANIMAL THERE IS NO ISSUE OF VICTIM AGGRESSOR OR COMPETITION OR BASIC SURVIVAL ISSUE.

HERE PT IS STRUGLLING WITH HIMSELF, HE PERCIEVS PROBLEM AS A DISTURBANCE IN MAINTAINING HIS PERFORMANCE, AGAIN WITH MINERAL HE HAS PROBLEM IN PERFORMANCE NOT ABOUT SECURITY, POWER, OR IDENTITY SO IT INDICATES ROW 5. IN ROW 5 HE HAS STRUGGLING TO MAINTAIN WHAT HE HAS ACHIVED TILL DATE SO IT, NEED TO MAINTAIN IT SO IT’S COLUM 11

REMEDY GIVEN ARGENTUM METALLICUM 200 / ONE DOSE

F/O: 15 DAYS. BLOOD PRESSURE: 140/100
PAIN ON EXERTION IS STILL THERE, COMPLAINS PAIN AND BURNING MICTURATION, WITH FEVER.
ADV. DRINK LOT OF WATER, AND EXERCISE WITH IN NORMAL LIMITS SO AS TO DEVELOP COLATERAL
TREATMENT: SL ONE DOSE

F/O AFTER 3 DAYS: BLOOD PRESSURE 140/100, PAIN IS STILL THERE, BUT UTI IS BETTER NOW, NO FEVER
TREATMENT: SL ONE DOSE

F/O AFTER 15 DAYS. BLOOD PRESSURE 130/100, PAIN IS THERE BUT NOW PT CAN DANCE TILL 1HR.
TREATMENT: SL ONE DOSE

F/O: AFTER 15 DAYS PT CALLS ME AND SAID THERE IS LOT OF PAIN IN CHEST SINCE MORNING.
ON ASKING ABOUT THIS HE SAYS HE GOT AN INVITATION FROM ANY GROUP TO PERFORM THERE AND FOR THAT HE DID HEAVY PRACTICE. BLOOD PRESSURE: 140/110
TREATMENT: ARGENTUM 200 ONE DOSE

F/ O: AFTER 15 DAYS PAIN IS REDUSED, BLOOD PRESSURE 130/100

F/O AFTER 30 DAYS PAIN REDUSED, BLOOD PRESSURE 130/90, SER CHOL.IN NORMAL LIMITS. THIS TIME STRESS TEST NEGATIVE
PT IS PREPARING FOR NEW EVENT BUT NOW HE IS NOT FEELING ANY ANXIETY, NO RESTLESSNESS, DOING HIS PRACTICE. THERE IS NO DREAM AT ALL SLEEPS WELL.
PT STILL ON TREATMENT

Homeopathy - the real Evidence Based Medicine

Homeopathy - the real Evidence Based Medicine
What is the best form of medicine? What sort of medicine would you prefer?

* A therapy, such as homeopathy, based on simple principles or laws, that gives patients' safe remedies, and bases its practice, and develops its practice, on observing the outcomes of those remedies with patients?

* Or a drug-based medical system, that tests its drugs for effectiveness and safety on the basis of 'Randomised Controlled Tests', or RCTs, which are then regularly withdrawn after being given to millions of patients and found to be ineffective, dangerous, or both?

When you consider how often, and how regularly Conventional Medicine (ConMed) gets it wrong about the safety and efficacy of their drugs, and gives patients drugs that either don't work, or cause further disease and even death, it is quite amazing (see, for example, this website that lists many of the banned and withdrawn ConMed drugs):
http://s-scrutton.co.uk/Banned_Pharma_Drugs/Banned,_withdrawn_drugs.html

So there is, of course, only one sensible answer. Patients, first and foremost, want to be safe. They don't want to take drugs that not only fail not make them better, but actually cause further disease. They just want to be better!

One of the latest admissions of error concerns Hypertension, and 'high-blood-pressure'. It has emerged that 25% of people diagnosed with this condition don't actually have it!

But patients with hypertension are still given ConMed drugs - usually Statins. Most people know only what they have been told about Statin drugs - they are very effective - and entirely safe. But of course, they aren't! They are now associated with the following disease-inducing-effects (DIEs) - even though some conventional doctors are still telling us they are 'entirely safe'.

* Diabetes
* Serious skin infections
* Prostate Cancer
* Serious structural muscle damage (that can cause death)
* Certain cognitive problems.

Statin drugs, and ConMed generally, is a bad deal for patients. It tells us that HPB is bad for you (even this can be seriously questioned). It devises a test for HBP and then discovers it is getting it wrong with at least 25% of patients. Then it provides people who are probably not sick drugs that can make them very sick!

And ConMed then claims that it is entirely based on 'evidence'!

Well, in fairness, I suppose it is. It is just that the evidence of RCTs are not reliable. In fact, they have proven to be so unreliable they rarely tell us about the dangers of drugs until millions have taken them, and suffered their DIEs.

In stark contrast, homeopaths can give patients remedies knowing they will do no harm - the basic principle of the Hippocratic Oath that all doctors subscribe to. And if the remedy matches the symptoms of disease it is treating, they will treat the illness successfully.

How do we know what the patient's symptoms are? Simple! We ask them!

How do we know the symptom-picture of remedies? Simple! We test, or prove the remedies on people (knowing already that the process of potentizing remedies makes them entirely safe), and we observe the outcomes with patients. All this evidence has been put together over the last 200+ years - and is contained within the Homeopathic Materia Medica, and the Homeopathic Repertories.

The skill of the homeopath is to learn the complex and complicated techniques of 
matching the symptoms of both patient and remedy.

So where do RCTs enter this picture. Well, they don't! Homeopathy does not need RCTs to examine, or re-examine, what homeopaths have been doing for centuries. Why should we make use of a technique that has proven to be worthless when applied to ConMed drugs? ConMed, and Big Pharma drug companies have been using them for decades to confirm that drugs are safe and effective when, in fact, they have eventually been proven to be ineffective and dangerous. Statins have yet to be banned, or heavily restricted, like so many others. But it will come, as with all the others.

So drug-based ConMed is not 'evidence-based' medicine - because the so-called evidence that supports it has proven itself to be totally unreliable.

The real 'evidence-based' medicine is homeopathy. We  know our remedies. We know what they do. Patients routinely benefit from homeopathy, and do so in complete safety. But the real evidence comes from out patients - people who were ill, and get better after homeopathic treatment.