Weight Loss Secret: Checkout What’s Eating You
Posted on April 26th, 2009 in Health and Fitness | No Comments »
Its a fact, not a secret, that creepy crawlers can cause fat deposition and weight gain. The creepy crawlers, thats what they look like, are the parasites: the bacteria, worms, and viruses that may be inhabiting your bowel tract. These organisms are harmful to your health and abundant in our modern environment. Research shows that a high proportion of obese and not so obese people are hosting these harmful organisms.
You can hardly avoid these parasites, there are some many types and kinds. You have heard some of the most common: pinworms, hookworms, roundworms, giardia, e-coli, candida (a yeast), liver flukes, trichinella, and salmonella. You are the ideal buffet meal for these little creepy crawlers. They love you! You have a nice warm and cozy colon, offer little resistance to their presence and you serve 3 meals a day. For a parasite, what’s not to like? However, you eventually will manifest symptoms of parasite infection: constipation, abdominal pain, fat and weight gain, bulging belly, chronic tiredness, and excess gas and more.
If you investigate your possible parasite symptoms, prepare to be horrified. All are ugly. Some are armed with teeth, hooks and tenacious suckers. If you can stand to look, check out some of the parasites documented in the videos shown on the author’s site URL. There are cases of 30 foot long tapeworms being pulled out of a patient’s intestines. You can see a pile of white pinworms in one video or a tray of 9 – 12 inch wiggling round worms being pulled from another patient’s bowel tract. If you are obese or highly overweight, you may have a parasitic infection that is causing you to stack on the fat. Don’t shrink from this ugly critter challenge, become parasite aware.
So, how do you pick up a parasite? Many parasites enter as an egg hidden in raw or under cooked pork, beef, or fish. Or they may be ingested by drinking contaminated water or other liquid. Dirty hands can spread parasites to your mouth. You don’t check your food for teeny, tiny egg cases. Once in your mouth, its no big trick for tiny egg cases to pass on through your stomach and into your colon. Once in the colon, eggs hatch, eat, grow, and reproduce to form a colony of like invaders in your bowel tract.
The mechanism of weight and fat gain goes something like this. The parasite finds its way to your colon. Their waste and other ingested junk forms a toxic build-up on the walls of your intestines. This toxic build-up eventually forms a plaque that coats the interior walls and lining of your colon until the layer is so thick that your body starts making you fatter as a simple defense, a barrier, to keep the poisons from spreading throughout your body.
Plaque buildup on intestinal walls is a relatively new phenomena in the world of medicine and human anatomy. Much of our food, these days, is “processed”. That means we have added synthetic fillers, shelf life preservatives, additives, dyes, and un-natural chemicals to enhance foods we eat today. Our food bears little nutritional resemblance to that food which nourished our ancestors. Our colons and immune system get weaker, but our parasite pets thrive on our processed food. As they thrive, the waste (toxins) and “junk” in our colons buildup and form a plaque lining our bowel tract. The body reacts by laying down a protective fat barrier to keep the poisons from our intestinal tract from making us sick. Thereby, we enter into a cycle of plaquing and barrier fat deposition leading to obesity.
Rampant obesity is prevalent in America today. When you step on the scales and see your weight creeping up, you need to examine the possible causes. One of the first things to check is the presence of parasites in your digestive tract. If you have parasites, you aren’t healthy and are subject to all manner of diseases because your immune system has been compromised. It is time to emphasize health planning and include screening for parasites on a regular basis as part of your healthy lifestyle program.
Becoming “parasite aware” is not a one time exercise. It should part of our health planning program and given the same emphasis as dental, cariovascular, or immune health. We have the tools, medicines and diagnostic procedures to easily screen for parasites. Probably, a regular colon and parasite cleanse should be in our health plan too. Weight gain is a tip-off to a possible parasite infestation. Our job is to monitor weight gain and fat accumulation consistently over time. We know what our “healthy weight” should be. Screen for the increase in body weight, it may be a parasite infestation. That is our “fat loss secret”.









