Dandruff or scalp irritation? Try BLOO.

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    @Hando-Jin this is valid and fantastic knowledge indeed. Saying that, I can't disregard my own experience, and it says that while t3 only in small doses, as Ray suggested, alleviates some of the symptoms to some extent. T4 is the thing that improves my symptoms much more; I still take around 4 mcg T3 twice a day.
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    @Mauritio said in Boron supplements: @CrumblingCookie I agree with you on subclinical fungal infections. They're very hard to get rid of. I posted a study about fungi hiding in the gallbladder when attacked. Let that sink in. It's just as bad when we look into CNS persistence of fungal infections in chronic brain disorders, Alzheimers and dementia: Tulane University & Tulane National primate research center, 2022 [image: neurosci-03-00019-g003.jpg] The potential contribution of pathogenic microbes to dementia-inducing disease is a subject of considerable importance. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurocognitive disease that slowly destroys brain function, leading to cognitive decline and behavioral and psychiatric disorders. The histopathology of AD is associated with neuronal loss and progressive synaptic dysfunction, accompanied by the deposition of amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide in the form of parenchymal plaques and abnormal aggregated tau protein in the form of neurofibrillary tangles. Observational, epidemiological, experimental, and pathological studies have generated evidence for the complexity and possible polymicrobial causality in dementia-inducing diseases. The AD pathogen hypothesis states that pathogens and microbes act as triggers, interacting with genetic factors to initiate the accumulation of Aβ, hyperphosphorylated tau protein (p-tau), and inflammation in the brain. Evidence indicates that Borrelia sp., HSV-1, VZV (HHV-2), HHV-6/7, oral pathogens, Chlamydophila pneumoniae, and Candida albicans can infect the central nervous system (CNS), evade the immune system, and consequently prevail in the AD brain. Researchers have made significant progress in understanding the multifactorial and overlapping factors that are thought to take part in the etiopathogenesis of dementia; however , the cause of AD remains unclear . “It has been suggested that Aβ functions as an antimicrobial peptide. Interestingly, C. albicans was found to be sensitive to synthetic Aβ and brain homogenates from AD patients that were capable of inhibiting fungal growth [178]. Additionally, it was demonstrated that Aβ protects against C. albicans in glial cells as well as invivo in nematodes [179]. ” “Alonso and colleagues provided extensive evidence that disseminated mycoses are potential causative agents or risk factors for AD [173,180]. Different fungal genera detected in AD brain tissue include Malassezia, Fusarium, Candida, Cladosporium, Alternaria, and Botrytis [181]. An analysis of CSF revealed significant levels of Candida albicans and Candida glabrata in samples from AD patients. Approximately >89.6% of serum from AD patients tested positive for antibodies to Candida compared to 8.8% for controls [173].” “The different species that were detected included Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Malassezia globosa, Malassezia restricta, and Penicillium. Furthermore, this group detected yeast and fungal proteins, including (1,3)-β-glucan, fungal polysaccharides, and mycoses, in the peripheral blood of AD patients, which suggests that a chronic fungal infection may increase the risk of dementia [173,180]. More strikingly, yeast-like cells and hyphal structures were observed in CNS tissue from AD patients using polyclonal antibodies against a variety of fungi [181]. Pisa et al. also provided strong evidence for fungal infection in AD patients [170]. Brain sections derived from AD patients showed that all were infected with fungi [170]. Fungal material was detected intra- and extracellularly in the neurons of tissues of AD patients, but no fungal material was observed in tissue from control individuals [170]. Moreover , fungal DNA and proteins were also found in brain regions including the frontal cortex, hippocampus, cerebellar hemisphere, and choroid plexus but not in control patient tissue. ”
  • Boron supplements

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    started with 5grams of borax per liter for my drinking water I did that for about a week but the awful effects were too conflated with others stuff I concurrently did so I cannot distinguish the boron effects. Will need to carefully try again. Anyway I had soon started itraconazole and then switched to fluconazole a week later, enhanced by first oral nystatin and then oral amphotericin B, with the ampho-b appearing to be much more effective than nystatin. Best decision in years! Yet still far from the overall condition being resolved.
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    @sunsunsun said in Still Haven’t Found a Perfect Food, Does It Even Exist?: there are lots of perfect foods all these issues you have made are meaningless in context of mogging , people who mog have high metabolisms and all these irritants dont matter Do you really want to be a mogger ?
  • The Top 5 Can’t-Miss Sport Supplements

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    @DavidPS Mildronate
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  • AHCC

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  • Why am i smarter when sick/histamine?

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    daposeD
    @lobotomize I was being sarcastic but, so, what I meant was, you are smarter meaning the brain is in like an excited lots of blood glucose from the cortisol adrenal realize. I’m not saying that’s a good thing or healthy but it does happen.
  • Trestolone

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  • moggy chicken log

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    sunsunsunS
    @alfredoolivas those pyroceram pots are the best
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    engineerE
    @alfredoolivas I don't think so because it's entirely possible to have a state of high dopamine and low prolactin. It might just act as a secondary mechanism apart from some other dopamine pathway solely to prevent a prolactin overload. The fact that it uses dopamine to prevent such an overload is an irrelevant implementation detail because it's not common you see people in a high dopamine but high prolactin state.
  • Weighted vests

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    LukeL
    @engineer I can't use the entire weight because I somehow lost some of the sand bags (probably while I was moving, a former colleague once said "Moving three times is like being burglarized once"). The max weight is about 20kg now, That weight is good for exercises like pushups or body rows where you make quick progress and can carry more added weight. The vest I have is also pretty tight, so it doesn't bother me much with pushups. It's also good for weighted jump squats. I don't have a pullup bar right now, but I don't think I could ever reach multiple pullups with 20/25kg added weight. I could hardly do eight pullups without vest even when I was still young and in good shape. It's definitely a great addition.
  • The processing of MILK and unsaturation

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    LucHL
    @Mossy said in The processing of MILK and unsaturation: I don't worry about it. I consider what would be best, and I do all that I can, and then let it go. Well done, I agree. If you use a plastic bottle for carrying water, it shouldn't be a problem (short time). Of course no stagnation from the preceding amount (dry). No bacteria.
  • Cooking with Jennifer

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    MossyM
    @Jennifer Indeed.  I think that is a great perspective, being proactive.  There is so much value to simply doing something, when the mind is in a quandary. I used to eat yogurt quite a bit, and cottage cheese, but it's been a while for both.  Greek yogurt does really help make a soft, but semi-structured white bread.  Maybe it could be used in other breads, but I'm still learning.  Wow, that is quite a cheese inspired sandwich.  My brain is trying to section and place all the adjectives and descriptors to envision it....haha.  Yes, I can see my brother adding back in more balance, beyond the carnivore. No doubt, stress is the enemy.  How much we'd remedy if we dealt with that better.  But I think that's called life, and growing.  Really, there's no such thing as no stress.  Though, I do think we can make life harder than it is, and incur more stress than is necessary.  Part of the growing, at least for me, is avoiding the unnecessary, self-imposed, burdens.  Your experience with thyroid, and Peats quote you mention, is enough to forever keep me away from thyroid...haha.  The one positive I'll hold to, is your good experience with standardized NDT.  If I do try it, I'll keep that in mind, to use that first. Funny, and I get it.  I had a friend growing up who lived without street lights, and I liked the country feel, and he liked coming to town to my house.  And, for sure, the burden of rural life, is fighting nature to make life more comfortable.  When I come to my senses, I realize the country life is only romantic for the few who can afford only to live the good parts and pay others to live the bad for them.  In youth, the romance of it may be more prominent, as your energy carries you along, e.g., Jennifer of the Corn ; ), but I can see how that could give way to the desire for an easier existence.  Ticks would be a challenge.  I could guess ticks are most anywhere, but likely more where there are more tress.  Coincidentally, just recently, I read that an opossum eats up to 5,000 ticks a year.  In general, I know people tend to kill opossums, but maybe they wouldn't if they realized their worth.  In the smallish town I live in, they are prevalent, to the point of being a nuisance at times. I have a good childhood friend who was born in Massachusetts, I think Boston, which is my only very small connection to that region, apart of course from it being the foundation of our nation.  (That little fact.) Ok, I'm seeing a common thread here...cinnamon.  All roads lead to cinnamon.  I can't blame you, who doesn't like cinnamon?  I make a cinnamon raisin bread for my dad and I, and use quite a bit.  At least it seems a lot to me, 7 grams.  I am truly breading out these days, which is totally anti-Peat from my understanding, but as I cook for my dad, it's too easy to partake.  I'm currently making hotdog and hamburger buns, raisin bread, white bread, rye bread, flour tortillas, corn tortillas, and next up, English muffins.  Due to the heavy load, I've already had to cut back on my flour snobbery, due to cost and the inconsistency of the heritage flour.  I can't afford, time, energy, and money wise, to have a recipe fail, so until I can really fine tune how to get the best results with the heritage, I'll use King Arthur, organic for now.  Though, my goal is to have the heritage be the main flour.  I'm convinced the quality of flour in our "first-world" country is, ironically, quite poor.  The heritage I'm using is Sunrise bread flour and all-purpose flour, and have just purchased Doudlah Farms rye.   I believe Einkorn is even costlier than heritage flour, being considered an ancient grain, much older than just the 1930s.  From memory, I've read that Einkorn is a 14 chromosome flour, where the lower number signifies a more pure strain, so to speak, untainted, where today's modern flours are hybrid, cross-breed (if that's the right word), having over 40 chromosomes.  I used to buy spelt bread, I just wasn't a huge fan of the texture.  But I have considered trying it again, now that I'm in control of the bread making.  I'm guessing there's a way to make it better.
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    I started going to the gym again in early February (after avoiding it for 6 years) and simultaneously started using Tyronene for the first time. I do a drop of Tyronene before I do a gym session, and usually a drop afterwards too, both orally. I was hesitant to use Tyronene at first because of the reviews from people that say it works nowhere near as well as Cynomel and is a waste of money, but I've found it to be very effective for an easy boost.
  • Melanotan II log

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    engineerE
    @TexugoDoMel my copper intake is at least 2mg from a zinc + copper supplement, but also a little from GHK-Cu which is around 20% copper, so that's another 2.5mg * 20% = 0.5mg for 2.5mg Cu in total.
  • Bioenergetic Music/Music Theraphy.

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    ThinPickingT
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkP2CZybZcg
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    lobotomizeL
    @bio3nergetic you are right apologise i wrote that in a hurry
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  • Welcome!

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    @ThinPicking , Definitely. But I would like to talk with the administrator.