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Date: | Tue, 22 Jan 2002 13:02:47 -0800 |
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Wes said
> I've never done one of those cleanses, and indications are that
> I don't need to. I find it fascinating about the possibility
> that "mucoid plaque" exists in people's digestive tracts. Some
> insist it does exist, some insist it does not. I don't really
> know for sure, but it does make sense how the digestive tract
> could get "dirtied up" due to years of eating an unnatural diet.
> If the rest of the body can get toxified, then why not the
> digestive tract, which the food passes through, get clogged up
> as well?
>
> One thing I did experience though, in this regard, was following
> the first time I did a fast, a few years ago. After breaking the
> fast with some raw food and stimulating a bowel movement, I released
> a bunch of blackish, smelly, gross "stuff" into the toilet. I don't
> know if that would qualify as mucoid plaque, impacted fecal matter,
> or whatever, but whatever it was, I was glad to get rid of it.
The folks who say there is no impacted fecal matter point to pictures of the
pink and squeaky-clean insides of sick people. And yet we hear these
stories of horrid black gunk all the time. How about this: Why couldn't
the horrid black gunk be secreted over a very short period of time as a way
to dump unwanted toxins? Maybe our intestines can go from sitting there
pink and empty to storing nasty black gunk for quick elimination in a matter
of hours if given the proper incentive. Maybe?
C
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