Dandruff or scalp irritation? Try BLOO.

  • Photo of earth from NASA looks fake ?

    The Noosphere
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    lobotomizeL
    @gg12 image is fake proves chem trails and powershortages simultaniously?
  • Progest E Love Thread

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    Milk DestroyerM
    @AL Could be progesterone antagonising testosterone? I don't think you should worry but maybe lower usage of the hair oil?
  • DMSO the MOGGY solvent

    Literature Review
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    alfredoolivasA
    @dapose Maybe I should let the solvent evaproate, and then fill the bottle up with DMSO???
  • Tuinone a new product by Georgi

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    daposeD
    @sunsunsun said in Tuinone a new product by Georgi: tuinone sounds like the name for an italian sports car I think it sounds like a vintage guitar brand!
  • 2 Votes
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    E
    The late and great Travis believed that boron is antifungal and that's why borax often works against arthritis. I wonder if reasonable qualities of borax could help kill fungi in the body. Travis believed so
  • Things that help with cancer

    Literature Review
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    MauritioM
    https://bioenergetic.forum/post/63678
  • Biotin and liver cancer

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    MauritioM
    @engineer interesting I'd like to see that study. Georgi cured cancer by giving mice high doses of biotin (HED ~200mg), other b vitamins and aspirin. And there's also a few long term studies on very high dose biotin for MS and i don't recall that they saw any increased level of severe side effects (like cancer).
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    MauritioM
    @cs3000 I interesting ! Oleanolic acid sounds interesting, too. I took ursolic acid today for the first time. And it caused some hair loss but also a profound sense of relaxation that haven't felt in a while.
  • Solvents used for BlueSky chemicals

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    B
    Yes confirmed, I asked some years ago, that is what they use.
  • moggy chicken log

    Experimental Logs
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    engineerE
    @sunsunsun https://haidut.me/?p=1997 and also stress https://haidut.me/?p=1003
  • 1 Votes
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    ThinPickingT
    "Phytates are not a health concern for those who eat a varied and balanced diet. However, for those on a poor, monotonous diet, high levels of phytates increase the risk of mineral deficiencies, which is why various techniques are used to reduce phytate levels in food." I guess the question is, why would someone take to a variation of a "a poor, monotonous diet". And could that include some interpretations of advisories found around bioenergetics.
  • does glycine increase need for caffeine intake?

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    alfredoolivasA
    @LucH Why is your AI so fucking chill?
  • 1 Votes
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    alfredoolivasA
    @jamezb46 I remember 18 nor T, but were we talking about a different steroid? Wasn't 3beta-hydroxy-pregna-1(10),4,9(11)-trien-2-one mentioned by Patrick Arnold in a phone call to Ray Peat?
  • Oat bran really helping sibo

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    gg12G
    @sunsunsun bruhnem like 10 min boil milk then add oats lower geat stire for like 5 min
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  • Cooking with Jennifer

    The Kitchen
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    MossyM
    @Jennifer Ok, so indeed, truly finger food.  That phrase passed right over my head first reading it.  Makes sense now, what you made.  Pancakes I have been thinking about, and that will probably be sometime soon for my dad and I. No worries, you didn't scare me off of thyroid, my body did.  Somewhere along the line, my body became hyper-sensitive, and everything makes me feel off.  Though, I have a long list, and large collection, of supplements I'm going to try again.  Next up is CoQ10.  After not being able to take the tea you recommended, due to side effects, I'm looking for something else for gum health.  I'm still going to try the tea again, but as a rinse.  And I do agree, some stress is good.  There no doubt is truth to the adage that we should do things that challenge us.  Most of my challenges are the unadventurous kind these days, but even so, challenges still. Surfing is hard, at at least it was for me. Though, there is nothing quite like it. I have friends who surf, but I've never taken to it.  I'm decent at sports, in general, but water, strangely, changes things for me.  These days, though, not a lot of outdoor stuff, a part from yard work.  I do have a friend wanting to go mountain hiking, which is another item on my to-do list. Well, maybe I have that wrong then, at 5,000 year.  Maybe it is a shorter time frame.  Funny about the turkey.  I used to have similar experiences as a child, picking up raw milk and eggs from the local farms, and seeing the peacocks strutting their stuff.  Male birds really do think they are rock stars...very funny. Yeah, I really like cinnamon as well.  I just made cinnamon buns for my dad and I, and doubled the cinnamon from the recipe.  Every time I make something like that, I say I won't be doing this again...haha.  That is more complicated than the cinnamon raisin bread.  I couldn't understand the rolling process, strictly by the written recipe, and I started to have something that looks like a sci-fi, cocooned creature.  I know it's not rocket science, but I was attempting to follow the recipe to a tee.  I'm one of those strange males that likes to follow instructions...sometimes .  And, to justify myself a little bit, I went online, to see the same recipe, and they've corrected many of the instructions.  They originally said the I should lay the dough out in a 6" x 13" rectangle, and it should've been 16" x 12"!  And they reduced their cooking time by 15 minutes...no wonder the buns were over cooked. I definitely prefer sprouted, so thanks for sharing that.  The only thing I have sprouted currently is oatmeal, because I can get it at a good price.  As well, I couldn't find sprouted and heritage together.  Do you have an opinion of which would be preferred out of those two: modern wheat but sprouted, or heritage but not sprouted?  My thought is the latter would be preferred, as the claim is that heritage or older wheat is more digestible, along with better nutritional value from modern wheat.  Also, there is the glyphosate factor.  I actually really like the taste of millet, though my only experience with it is as a side with a meal.  I stopped eating it, along with most grains, about 9 years ago.  So maybe I'll look into that again.  I still do try to limit my grains, apart from bread.  I tend to eat potatoes, not grains, with meals.
  • 0 Votes
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    B
    This picture of VDR knockout mice being "lean" and "obesity resistant" is taking some of the trees for the forest and claiming it's the whole forest. If you are insulin resistant, generally force-feeding a lot of carbohydrate substrate without any other measures is probably not a good idea. Are carbohydrates bad? No. Vitamin D has been skewed, I am sure intentionally, as a general calcified public is also "paradoxically" calcium deficient, or more aptly on a very low calcium:phosphate ratio, focusing on inflammatory, active D (1,25) paints the perfect, evil picture of vitamin D overall and is frankly wrong. Hydroxylases tightly regulate local conversions to 1,25 from 25. What interrupts this regulation? Calcium deficiency, estrogens, PUFA. In other words pre-inflammatory state. Knockout mice, barring all other factors of health - which is usually the game here in these worthless studies - will not experience this inflammatory, dysregulated system. And looking only at this narrowly through a lens, you derive your conclusion you are looking for: manipulating the meaning and function of things. In reality, in the real world, the better method in avoiding these inflammatory responses is, you guessed it, sufficient calcium, low PUFA, in turn keeping estrogen in check, and being careful of other inflammatory things. Much like the knockout mice scenario, removing some apparatus to prove something is bad, when that something itself is hijacked and fed into a detrimental cycle is a sleight of hand, not proof. Vitamin D is not the problem, and VDR knockout doesn't prove it is, only in that if 25 is converted via inflammation. Lipopolysaccharide derived MKP-1, inhibition by inactive D already shows vitamin D is an anti-inflammatory, but not 1,25. And 1,25 is one of the resident experts of inflammation, when conditions of health are not met. Get tho9se conditions met and D does what it does that is good for us. By the way, progesterone and methylene blue also help Also, "constant milk intake" is an absurd, hyperbolic suggestion. I am certain nobody here has an IV of milk coursing through their veins 24-7. You have some milk throughout the day, then we all fast whether we know or not: it's called sleep.
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    sunsunsunS
    does the free acetyl also have this interactions with CAII?
  • Boron supplements

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    engineerE
    I have been taking 10mg boron for a couple months and I'm wondering if it's triggering aromatase due to low SHBG and high total T. Any thoughts on if this could actually be the case?
  • Bioenergetic Music/Music Theraphy.

    The Noosphere
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    ThinPickingT
    https://youtube.com/watch?v=2KPTiSYuzwg