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DrugDiscovery's avatar

Hey Cynthia,

I think the original long-haulers (the pre-inoculation folks) are the ones that can clearly claim that sort of sequela. One of my friends' brother was sick in 2020 and does have persistent health issues that have been identified with long-covid. At the same time, I have another neighbour whose life was saved by her 7 y.o. by calling 911 when her mom was barely conscious, suffering from "stage 3 covid" (hypoxia, fever, etc.). This neighbour survived, and is out-and-about as if nothing had happened. On the other hand, another neighbour is on disability, most probably jab-injured. The jabs muddled the waters: if I were an MD (I'm not) who had the fortitude to treat long-haulers and the jab-injured, I would consider long-haulers post jabbination as "Jab-injured" first: the jabs inform the body to make the very same stuff that the original pathogen brought in.

I hope you have been recovering well, and wish you all the best!!!

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Cynthia Sue Larson's avatar

Yes, I agree it seems those of us earliest afflicted also seem hardest hit. I like your thinking about stating "jab-injured" right up front and center, to keep the spotlight on what seems to be a nefarious campaign to unnecessarily injure people. The injuries may not at first seem related to the jab, yet there's such a huge increase in all cause mortality, especially increases in coronary events, strokes, cancer and diabetes--and all increasing after jab roll-out.

Thank you for your kind wishes for my recovery. I've now been symptom and relapse free for almost two years (it'll be 2 years this summer), and I see myself as a canary in the coal mine, having been an early experiencer of much of what the spike protein biotoxin appears to be activating in so many people.

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DrugDiscovery's avatar

Some folks I follow claim that chelation therapy (i.v. EDTA) seems to be quite effective at clearing the spike. Not many docs offer that. If you know other people with long covid/vaccine injury, one DIY therapy involves Nigella sativa (many common names: black seed, black cumin, nigella, ...). The main chemical component is what we call in the biochem business a "promiscuous binder": the main chemical in Nigella binds to a lot of proteins, including Spike. The theory behind it is that by binding to spike, it inactivates it. I buy the "black seed" on my own grocery store, that has a well stocked Indian (from "India", the country) spice isle. Look for it, and add to your or your friends diets. 1 tea spoon of ground black seed a day. I find the taste a bit too much, so I divide it. My wife likes it, so she does not. A "black seed oil" is commercially available, but way more expensive. On another note, one of my Persian students (from Iran), gave me a flaks of "black seed oil" to use on an injured knee, and it has been very effective!

IMy apologies for any horrible typos. I'm writing without my glasses!!!

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Demianovich's avatar

Black seed oil is wonderful, a great daily tonic, I find it tastes nutty, not bad at all ... Check out Nattokinase, it's being mentioned a lot lately (Dr. Peter McCullough among others), they say it is also a great help in detoxing.

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Aku's avatar

Yes, 2020 long haulers are clearly worse hit.

I am one of these people.

Recovery is only possible through isolation. I think the original covid messes up the immune system so that its reaction to even flu/cold viruses is different. Because I'm recovered, but if I go into a public space I always get sick.

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