Typhoid Fever, MRSA Staph Infection, Cellulitis
Transcript:
We’re here in Ecuador and this is my friend Fox and Fox has some great stories about typhoid fever and cellulitis.
So we did it a couple of different ways, sometimes it’s hard to stick to the protocol or for whatever reasons we do it a little bit differently but it still often works and so the first time you got typhoid fever.
The first time they put me on antibiotics so I took the antibiotics and I took the CDS with it and it came back but I was also taking this supplement that turned out had some absorbic acid in it. That’s absorbic acid.
And then it returned maybe about three weeks later. But you felt really good for a while and we thought we’d gotten rid of it. Yeah and it was a slower heal, didn’t go up.
The second time when I had the typhoid I went with the MMS and I was taking big doses, starting with the protocol, stick with the protocol. We get big doses kind of like a malaria protocol, you know. They’re 18 at night. 18 drops at night. And then just pass out on it and that got better almost immediately. I noticed some days.
And you were tested and so you knew that you had it before and you knew it was completely gone. Yeah, no no the first time it wasn’t completely gone. I still had it in the system and then it resurfaced. And that was the typhoid, right? Yes, that was the typhoid so I battled that. That was two times. But after the second time you tested, right? Oh yeah, now when I went back to blood test after it all cleared. Yeah, all cleared.
And then the…
Then you call up again and say, I have?
Well what I had is I woke up, I had a bug bite, a symbol and I thought it was, you know, I mean when Lee thought it might have been a recluse or something. I was plastering and it got infected. My whole arm blew up. I was an emergency hemicellulitis.
And that’s when I came to see you. It was a thing from you know, prescribed me more antibiotics. And that’s a staff infection. It is a staff infection. And then, but it spread. I mean it started off cellulitis but I had staff. I had to cut my nails, sleep with gloves on, with a scratch.
Wow.
I did the protocol. So now we’re talking, we did the protocol 1000 with the three drops every hour. And I stepped to it. I, I, I stood because this was as cool. Yeah, the staff infection was on my side. I stepped in the protocol and I found, I don’t remember for how long. You might remember because I, I sent you messages. Talked about three weeks, but yeah, I did. It’s been a while so, but. I’m thinking I did a harsh two weeks and then zeroed off. And then got retested. No staff.
Okay. Of course staff. That’s great.
So I had a good experience. You’re telling the world now. So that’s great. So if you had advice to people about MMS, what would you say?
It, you know, it’s, um, I had success with it. You know, I, I was skeptical, you know, and I did because the first time I was too afraid, I would, I had, I took the antibiotics when I got diagnosed with typhoid. It didn’t work. You know.
Great. Appreciate you.
Of course it’s a good, it’s, it’s, you know, for the people that think, okay, the the antibiotics are the stronger, sureer way to go. And then if that doesn’t, you know, then MMS is a, is a weaker way to go. That’s, that’s what I, I actually believe that the MMS is the stronger and sureer way to go because it works on every kind of bacteria, every kind of. It doesn’t ruin your flora. It doesn’t ruin your flora. It works by oxidizing the pathogens. They can’t develop a resistance to it and, and most antibiotics work on, you know, maybe three bacteria or five different viruses and, you know, and they become resistant to itself. MMS is a safe, natural, effective way to go.
Yeah.