Archive for July, 2012

Enzymes, Wolf Spiders, Little Blue Wasps, and You

Saturday, July 21st, 2012

The battle was fierce. The wolf spider was fighting for its life. The little blue wasp was fighting for the next generation. Suddenly the spider went limp. It was still alive, but it was incapable of moving its limbs.

How had the wasp done it? All venom, whether wasp, spider, or snake, works by stopping certain enzymes from functioning. The wasp’s venom stopped the spider’s motion by filling the receptor site of the enzymes that made motion possible.

Your body uses such tricks also, even though you don’t have venom. Your life is controlled by a complex series of enzymatic actions which are turned on or turned off as the occasion demands. Everything we do, think, or feel is the outcome of enzymes synthesizing or breaking down other molecules. Healing injuries, resisting disease organisms, and growing are enzyme driven.

Your body has a limited capacity to produce enzymes and is designed to make use of “captured” enzymes such as those found in raw foods. If you eat raw foods or use supplemental food enzymes with cooked meals, your body saves on the enzymes it needs to produce. It can then invest those savings in certain immune cells to “sting” disease organisms to enzymatically overcome them to keep you healthy.

By Ellis Hein

Beneficial Bacteria, My Toe, and the Spot on My Temple

Friday, July 6th, 2012

That spot had been on my right temple as long as I could remember, but now it was getting noticeably thicker and began to develop a crusty sort of covering. It was very tender and would sting if disturbed. But this story must begin with the big toe on my left foot. Yes, there are many threads that had other and more distant beginnings, such as why I lost that toenail in the first place. But those threads will remain untold.

The problem that begins this story seemed like the usual case of an in-growing nail, which can happen when a new nail grows. Remedy: trim the offending corner and encourage the nail to grow up and over the toe. But the problem persisted. My toe was obviously infected and swollen.

I brought the swelling down, but then a circle of skin near the corner peeled off and felt like a burn. That was when I remembered that part of our skin’s ability to repel infection lies in our symbiotic relationship with beneficial bacteria. So I began mixing some water with a commercial blend of acidophilus and AFA algae powder and applied this twice a day to the affected parts of the toe. (Both the acidophilus and the AFA algae are beneficial bacteria. Acidophilus forms symbiotic relationships with us while AFA algae provides our body with a full complement of nutrients.) The improvement was rapid, but not complete. That was when I noticed that spot on my right temple where the pigmentation has always been funny.

I began to pray about that spot. I don’t mean throwing a lot of words at God, but I quietly waited before Him to know what to do. My instructions: after doctoring the toe, apply the dregs of the acidophilus/AFA algae paste to the spot on my temple.

Within two weeks, all that remained of the spot on my temple was a small bit of scar tissue. Oh, and the toe? If you want to know, I discovered a small piece of loose toenail hidden in the corner that was a continual source of irritation.

Ellis Hein

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