22 Comments

As I have remarked in previous comments, this very thing has happened to me twice recently.

After a 5 hr flight to Perth, Western Australia, I got scorched on a 38 C (100 F) day while wandering around Rottnest Island with no sunscreen. By that afternoon I had a sniffly nose which progressed into a sore throat and plenty of mucus to expel. Virus? Sudden Vitamin D overdose? Cosmic ray irradiation from my 20,000 ft flight across the Nullabor? Cabin pressure?

Only two weeks ago my wife and I went on a road trip, a mere 5 hr drive from home to central-northern NSW (near Kempsey). As an avid bush food forager, I gorged myself on wild warrigal, sea rocket and sarsaparilla shoots. On the Wednesday, my lower lip erupted into the hugest cold sore I can ever remember having (and I rarely get cold sores, this is the second this year I've had, the last would have been well before I was married in 2010). Was it overexposure to smilagenin? A sudden rush of nutrients from wild warrigal greens? Overexposure to solar irradiation (again, I refuse to wear sunscreen nowadays)? Bitten by ants during the night?

Who knows. Who cares. I survived and I didn't need no stinking herpes, flu or COVID vaccination to save my sorry hiney.

Expand full comment

As always a brilliant article.

Invariably their cockamamie theories are amplified to the point where a worldwide crisis is declared. The very nature of their dark theory of contagion can only lead to a world ruled by totalitarians.

New release. THE EMERGENCY. Unending fake public health “emergencies” enable global elites to maintain an iron grip on a worldwide population living in fear. Listen to Turfseer’s new song. https://turfseer.substack.com/p/the-emergency

Expand full comment
author

Thanks Turfseer! 🙂

Expand full comment

Last Spring I had lunch with one of my 5th grade students. This is around the time I fully believed viruses do not really exist and we don't pass-on colds to one another. I had a chance to test this new belief. The kid was visibly sick, sneezing and coughing. He ended up sneezing right on my and I could feel the wet hit my face. The next day his mother called-in to say he was out with a fever. If anyone COULD be contagious it was him. I didn't worry about it. I had been eating healthy and getting plenty of rest and fresh air. Never got a sniffle.

We all remember getting sick right after someone else got sick or when something's going around, but think about it: how many times do we NOT get sick when someone else is sick and exposing us to their so-called 'germs'? Too many times to count.

Expand full comment
author

"but think about it: how many times do we NOT get sick when someone else is sick and exposing us to their so-called 'germs"

Bingo! You hit the nail right on the head there Rob! Most people only remember the few times they may have come down with symptoms at the same time as someone else. They rarely focus on the many times they never became sick while being around those who are. We have been programmed to ignore those instances and/or chalk it up to protection from an "immune system" and/or a vaccine. It is powerful conditioning, but once one breaks free, it is easy to see the tricks that were played on us.

Expand full comment

The other thing that I’ve always been suspicious of is when they call someone a, “carrier” That’s a perfect example of breaking the rules of Koch’s original postulates. Someone completely asymptomatic tests positive for Strep, for example, so are deemed a carrier. They did the same thing with “Covid”

I’d love to ask where is the Science behind the carrier concept when they can’t even point to a single trial where symptomatic people infect each other? Show me the trials!

Expand full comment

In all the years I have gone on a vacation and come home, I do not recall ever becoming "sick". I used to drive from state to state picking up and delivering emergency freight ( on call 24 hours) and never got sick running all over the place. My sleeping habits were atrocious as well as eating habits for years and years.

It was taking a toll on my health and that is why I finally retired at age 65. I experienced more "colds and illnesses" while in retirement over the last 8 years than when I was working and being exposed to germs from different environments almost daily.

But I have downright refused to become infected by the covid bogyman. He's just a figment of modern medicine's imagination.

Expand full comment
Aug 11, 2023Liked by Mike Stone

I've experienced this numerous times in my life; Thanks, Mike!

On a totally different subject, have you or any of your various collaborators written about MS? My sister was just diagnosed, and while she's very aware of the problems with mainstream diet advice, is unfortunately not skeptical at all of the germ hypothesis (very vaxed and boosted). She's planning to retire, stick to her keto diet, and take some "immune suppressant" injections, one per week for 3 weeks and one per month thereafter. Not sure if I can advise her at all, but I'd like to have more understanding of the condition.

Expand full comment
author

I have not written about MS, and I'm not certain of anyone who has. I'm sorry I'm not much help on that one. 😔

Expand full comment

do you know why someone gets shingles, or know of anyone who is writing about it? any resources about "herpes" which have a non-mainstream perspective? ( i have dawn lester's book and did not find anything except that skin eruptions are a means for the body to expel something, but this is too vague for me; shingles is located in a pretty specific part of the body. unless i missed it, it's a big book) i wonder if it's related to your liver...

anyway, i always thought a main goal of illness is a time to rest, a cry from the body to take it easy, because that is the result, that's what you end up doing. hopefully.

Expand full comment
author

There could be many reasons why someone experiences the symptoms of shingles. It is most likely not a singular cause. I do plan on delving into herpes simplex more in the future. Here are the articles I have on chickenpox/shingles:

https://viroliegy.com/category/chickenpox/

Expand full comment

thank you! and i will read them

Expand full comment

Diet was why I used to get shingles, right over my liver and right side. I eventually narrowed down the culprit to commercial, non-organic kale by a 2-year long process of eliminating certain foods for two months. Can't say whether it was pesticides sprayed on those greens or their natural affinity for heavy metal absorption (especially thallium and cadmium), but once I banished kale from my diet, the shingles stopped and I've never had them since. Wild warrigal greens (Tetragonia tetragonoides, an Australian/NZ plant) replaced kale in my diet.

Expand full comment

yeah i had a bad case recently and i am not even fifty years old yet. it kind of freaks me out. it was horrible and i do not want to get it again!

Expand full comment
Aug 11, 2023Liked by Mike Stone

Also look through Sam Bailey's videos because I'm pretty sure she has one (or more) addressing this. Sorry I can't look them up for you at the moment and provide a link.

Expand full comment

thanks for the info!

Expand full comment

GNM may posit a territorial boundary conflict or a self-dirtying conflict. Both of which can be discerned in the context of coercively injecting unknown toxic 'stuff' to maintain permission for 'social inclusion', along with toxic shame.

I could probably find a link.

The release of the conflict allows the process of restoring to normal function.

Expand full comment
Aug 4, 2023Liked by Mike Stone

Great Stuff, Mike. Thanks. Sharing.

Expand full comment
author

Thanks Greg, I really appreciate it! 🙂

Expand full comment

I thought your article might have been on a similar subject to that of an undermined 'zeta potential' raised by Andrew Moulden and further explored by amidwesterndoctor on this:

https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/why-does-every-vaccine-often-cause

amidwesterndoctor writes in a conscious and considered way and yet comes out as believing viruses exist but aren't important (!¡?¿) - but that's not at all the point I want to raise but the mechanism of blood sludge as Moulden called it - leading to temporary ischaemic events or 'mini strokes that affect the tissue or organ. Colloidal suspension is a property of zeta potential of charge carrying capacity of blood or indeed cellular functions. The electromagnetic domains of water structuring are inherent to the biofield at nanoscale - and I sense upstream to the genetic code model as the actual interface for informational energies of exchange.

A battery can lose capacity to carry charge such as to be more easily discharged, by stress burdens that call on energy.

I sense that our living or psychic interface for this is acting against the grain or out of tune with our own being - for example as the result of mental override of our own balance points.

The symptoms may come on after the stress is resolved (as with GNM) and as part of parasympathetic repair/rebalance.

I find midwesterndoctor difficult to persist with despite some good points as a result of the very blind spots he/she professes to be vigilant against. But that's part of our world right now. Parallel 'realities' operating alongside each other. I can only rest in what doesn't require propping up to register as coherent & comprehensible to me.

But I felt to prompt the zeta-potential angle as a universal underpinning to any or many forms of disease symptom.

Somewhere in this - I sense the vortexing capacity of the heart.

Frank Chester has a unique set of angles on how the heart can lose its shape/function as vortexer.

(I read btw that blood testing for platelets routinely vortexes blood to declump false positives).

Anyway this is a hanging out post in a sense of companioning. Which as i feel it would serve the realigning in natural function as distinct from leaning out of true to fit into 'deadlines'.

As we are psycho-physical beings any merely physical lineage of cause-effect may yet reflect inner conditions or even prompts and communications via external events or symptoms. But this is in the living of life, not in creating models to define, predict or control it.

Expand full comment

'It takes around three to four days to get over the worst of the 'flu.

With the help of 'flu medications, it takes around three to four days

to get over the worst of the 'flu.'

(Old Wives Tales)...

Expand full comment
Comment deleted
Expand full comment
author

Thanks DPL, I appreciate it! We are definitely making progress, hence the massive pushback we get on Twitter. 😉

Expand full comment