VR Ulcerative Colitis Conquering WITHOUT SURGERY - Part 7: Winning
Uploader Comments (burgmail)
All Comments (16)
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if the fiber bothers you in the cabbage juice, use a paint strainer bag that you can buy at home depot. juice the cabbage and stain the fiber out with the bag. Hope that helps
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great vid, red cabbage is full of glutamine hence the healing properties, off to get me some in the morning!
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Thank you for actually trying your best to help with sharing your success stories for free instead of trying to scam suffering people like lots are trying to do on here. Lots of people appreciate you! All the health and God's blessings to you! Thanks again!!
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@whitbyjet65 Yes, moving to raw foods will take some getting used to but I've been transitioning slowly for quite some time. I need to take your advice and stay off seeds, as that might not necessarily be easy for me to digest at the moment. I am reading David Klein's book as we speak. Awesome about your meds, I hope that you can stay off them. I would love nothing more than stop taking meds but I need to carefully move in that direction, as it took me 9 months to get back to a healthy state
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@massybird Well done! Transfering to raw food is tough but I think it'll be worth it. After 4 days on it, my bowel feels amazing. The pain has gone & I'm only visiting the bathroom once a day. I'm avoiding seeds & nuts at the moment until my colon heals. Have you read David Klein's book? Good luck. (PS I took myself off the drugs against my doctor's advice but I'm feeling far better)
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@whitbyjet65 I'm glad to hear that it's working out well for you! After a hospital visit last year (9 months ago) I have been juicing religiously and the results have been great! My new goal is to completely get off drugs, I'm currently taking 1-2 Lialdas per day. The meds make me break out like crazy, so I'm hoping I can get off them soon. To that extent, I'm switching over to complete raw diet, currently on second day. Check out liferegenerator's older videos on YouTube for inspiration.
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@massybird Me too. Cabbage juice stopped a flare-up within 24 hours. the drugs didn't touch it. I'm ow experimenting with a raw food diet. Western doctors just refuse to listen to me though, they just want to pump me full of drugs.
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04:22 favourite bit
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isnt cabbage what is used to make saurkraut ? - which is proported to have v high probiotic content
anyway ye, cabbage FTW :D
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I agree... I was perched rather precariously up that tree, I just wanted to show it to people, ended up being quite a scenic sweep (laughs).
burgmail 1 year ago
I wonder if you'd have any issues with buckwheat flour? I'm originally from Madawaska County and don't suffer from Ulcerative Colitis but really appreciate you taking the time to relate what you've been doing and trying. Thank you!
tdcmoncton 2 years ago
Thanks for your comment! I've previously ben told of buckwheat flour, but I've yet to try it. (I've also been told of mesquite flour, which could be very tasty... :) ). My primary alternate gluten sources have been spelt (apparently an _old_ variety of wheat, at times I have issues with it but not always), kamut (the first time's okay, but if I try it again soon after, hmmm...), and rice flour (though I find items baked with rice flour tend to go bad/mouldy quickly). I'll look into buckwheat! :)
burgmail 2 years ago
I'm from Ste-Anne de Mawaska originally. I have a recipy for ploye (the most appropriate match in english is buckwheat pancake) but it's more like a very soft flatbread.
tdcmoncton 2 years ago
I've had ploye before actually (with cretons), and didn't know it was made with buckwheat! That might explain why I was able to "cheat with wheat" that day... though I have to admit, I did eat wheat flour too that day (there were "pork pies" that were hard to resist). I'll have to check out buckwheat flour some more... Mesquite flour sounds interesting too (I read it in a magazine, seems it's good for gluten-intolerant people) :)
burgmail 2 years ago