November Newsletter




Dr. Yuen has been saying for a year that it is the pathogens in our skin and the backs of our throat that need correcting.  These pathogen colonies cause referred pain in other parts of the body and then the pain leads to a medical diagnosis of a 'serious' health condition. 

[amprotect=1,5]He has also said that Oxyfresh has the ingredient that corrects this so that we don't have to spend our time correcting pathogens. It's called stablized cholorine dioxide and it cruises through your blood like a mini tornado blowing apart pathogens. I'm not kidding. 

So you can spend your energy remembering to do corrections for pathogens or just gargle with Oxyfresh mouthwash and use the toothpaste. Dr. Yuen uses the toothpaste for facials, he told me.

I have to admit that sounds too sticky for me, so I'm not advocating toothpaste all over anybody's face.  But Dr. Yuen is  right about so many things that sound strange the first time I hear them that I might try the toothpaste facial some day, just to see what happens.  Anyone who globs toothpaste on his or her face is welcome to email me with the results. Again, I am not advocating it, mind you.

I'll tell you what the people in third world countries use for facials—the inside lubricant of condom wrappers.  It's the same idea, really. There's an antibiotic in the condom wrappers that kills skin pathogens so pimples are kept to a minimum. 

The bottom line is, you and I don't need an antibiotic for skin pathogens. Stabilized Chlorine Dioxide blows apart pathogens (fungi, yeasts, molds, bacteria, viruses) and Oxyfresh skin creams, mouthwash and toothpaste have this ingredient. ( They call it Oxygene.)

Heres a sobering bit of information:  A recent study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that of the 36 children who died from H1N1 from April to August, six had no chronic health conditions, yet all of them had a co-occurring bacterial infection found in skin and the nose–staph, we call it.
 
And, after reviewing data from 77 swine flu deaths, including the cases in Buffalo that involved bacterial infections resistant to antibiotics, medical experts say that bacterial infections may be a significant swine flu complication.   77 flu deaths is not very many, though, and certainly should not spark panic in people who normally panic. It's just information, after all, not Gospel. 

Now, you and I know that any physical conditions are non physical in origin, and yet they often benefit from physical corrections.

 So, call Dorothy, our Yuen Group coordinator of Oxyfresh.  She'll set you up as a distributor or a wholesale purchaser—your choice

Dorothy    oxyace@aol.com[amprotect=1,5]