by Glen O. Hartman
Even in our sanitary, hygienic and antibiotic ridden environment, you may have uninvited guests. Not the human kind, but uninvited guests known as parasites and, they can be dangerous, unhealthy and cause fat and weight gain. You have a high probability or harboring these parasites: bacteria, worms, fungii, and viruses; in your bowel tract. These parasites cause disease, weight gain, and even dis-figurement as they enjoy the free meals you provide them. Did you know that some roundworms can lay 25,000 eggs every day? A very high percentage of obese people provide a home for 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.
Your friend, the parasite, typically finds its way into your stomach through the ingestion of raw or under cooked pork, beef, or fish. They may also be in contaminated water or other liquid or on dirty hands. A lot of parasites enter your body un-noticed in your food hidden in teeny, tiny egg cases. The eggs pass through your stomach, hatch in your colon, and infect your whole bowel tract.
Much of the waste from parasites is toxic to the human body. Their toxic waste can make you sick, nauseous, or even be life threatening in the extreme. Parasites commonly enter the mouth via dirty hands or contaminated or undercooked pork, beef, fish and other foods. E-coli and salmonella are two examples of this mechanism. The parasite in adult or egg form pass from the mouth, through the stomach, and into the colon. There, the eggs hatch, grow and reproduce. The incoming adult parasites thrive. Some parasites lay 25,000 eggs daily. Altogether, adult parasites reproduce rapidly to form a colony. As the colony grows, its toxic waste plus other “junk” we ingest forms a plaque on the colon walls and lining. This plaque contains toxic parasite waste. The body tries to prevent the spread of poisons by laying down a barrier layer of fat. As plaque accumulates on intestinal walls, more barrier body fat is deposited.
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. It is nutritionally not the same food that our nourished our forefathers. The consequence is that we get weak, we have less resistance to disease and attacking invaders. Our parasites thrive on “processed” food. As our parasites thrive, their waste accumulates as toxic plaque buildup on the walls and lining of our bowel tract. Our bodies switch into protection mode to prevent poisons in the plaque buildup from affecting other vital organs and body processes. Your body starts laying down a protective barrier of fat to limit the spread of toxic poisons from spreading. Cycles of plaque buildup and protective fat barrier occur. As the ugly, bulgy layers of fat deposition accumulate, we become obese.
The purpose of this article is to create an awareness that weight gain may be caused by parasite infections. Maintaining a healthy bowel tract should be a key part of your health planning. Harboring parasites in your colon and digestive tract is not healthy and can cause all manner of health problems. Obesity is prevalent in current times. However, you can prevent weight gain or obesity with a preventive health program that includes screening for parasites on a regular basis. That is the real fat loss secret.
Maintaining colon health should be an extension of the maintenance planning we do for our dental, cardiovascular, and immune system health. We have the research data, the medicines and the treatment protocol to cure parasite infestations. However, all of this is of no value, if you are not parasite aware. Like exercise, diet, portion control and increasing metabolism, parasite control is important to weight loss and the elimination of a fat loss secret.