Re: Root Canal - Front Tooth
For starters, I did not experience the kinds of dramatic results reported in the journals of people like Hal Huggins,
Hulda Clark , etc., ....the kind where a person was on their death bed and as a last resort, they had a particular tooth or teeth removed and then immediately got better.... has not been like that for me. With one exception, the beneficial results have been subtle.
Also Keep in mind that at the time, I was not struggling with any significant or long-term illnesses ... at least, none that I was aware of. Instead, there had been a variety of quirky problems develop off and on over several years. These had always defied being pinpointed by doctors to any particular cause. There were many. Just a couple: frequently experience head rushes out of the blue for no good reasons that I knew of; blisters would form on the roof of my mouth out of the clear blue; increasing problems with bouts of "racing thoughts"; had developed the habit of waking from a sound sleep, heart racing, the sensation of adrenalin rush, labored breathing, and odd / bizarre upper GI distress. The best that orthodoxy ever did for the latter was put me through a series of odd diagnostic exercises, at the end of which they advised "you have GERD, try to avoid this list of (about 300) foods, take these pills ("proton pump inhibitors") for the rest of your life". I kept coming back hoping they would look further for a valid cause. Eventually they took a different approach, started to suggest I had too much stress, should focus on having less stress, not take life so seriously. One day the normal HMO doc was out and the stand in suggested I take some new pills - a sleeping pill that included a bit of anti-depressant. I can't remember the name, but it was the one that had become quite infamous a few years back because it was being prescribed widely to the masses, and was eventually suspected as leading many of the users to develop suicidal and or homicidal tendencies. I took that pill for one, maybe two nights, noticed a significant change (negative) to my overall demeanor, and then threw out the rest. That was the last time I sought orthodox diagnosis for my condition of "too much stress".
Were any of these quirks caused by, contributed to, or made worse by mercury or other dental poisons? I dunno. I might know if we actually had a medical industry to rely on to do legitimate studies of the kinds of health hazards produced by the various medical/dental poisons routinely used. I and most everybody else would be in a better position to answer these kinds of questions. Instead, we are pointed towards the dark and encouraged to continue looking there. Anyway, with this being my basic background "baseline" I did the cleanup mainly as an effort to head off or get out in front of any potential near future illnesses that are suspected of being the result of routinely used poisons - namely mercury, dispensed by orthodoxy.
This kind of preventative effort is of course a slippery slope to justify / explain to some other people. Many people have been conditioned to not consider the need to make significant changes in their life - like radical changes in the pursuit of better health, absent "facts"...."evidence" or (my personal favorite) "proof" that warrants doing so. This might give the appearance of a person being rooted in sound principle, but a related problem is, these same kind of people have also been conditioned to routinely get their facts, evidence and proof mainly from a single source - the monopolized media apparatus, which is in part contributed to by the orthodox medical apparatus, an apparatus which continually guides people to looking in all the wrong places where they find that there are no such facts, evidence or proof, and until such time as they are reported by way of trumpeted news, people are encouraged to not perceive having valid reasons for making significant changes in their orthodox-guided lives. At the time of cleanup, I was in decent health... not great health, not even good health, but decent.
After cleanup, there was no great or dramatic improvement in anything. The exception to this was the peace of mind effect. It took a while (2 to 3 years) to notice that there had been a consistent reduction in many of the quirky symptoms previously experienced. It's now been many months since some of them last erupted, but there have been other factors totally outside of dental cleanup that may have had impact. I guess one way to look at this is that many people have developed a systematic way of handling health. At some point they develop some kind of illness that defies explanation. It might go on for a while and possibly get worse, like, maybe manifest pain here or there. They point to an area in/on their body, then without question they agree to have an organ removed from that area. To me, I do not necessarily go for that approach, but I do think there is something to be said for doing certain things without question and without any publicly agreed to factual basis to back up the act. As mentioned earlier, the system pretty much eliminated, a long time ago, the threat that they would at some point need to go down the trail legitimately seeking to uncover the factual basis behind the diseases caused by orthodox practices, to include medicines and dental procedures likely to be the highest on the list of trails they already decided to not go down. Taking a page out of this kind of thinking, then turning it upside down, this then became the basis I needed to make the decision to have all metals removed; they won't study it's harmful effects, therefore I won't have them in my mouth. Of course, this is not conclusive, but since the system seems intent on having people/patients with one or both hands tied behind their backs, while blindfolded, it is about the best I can do for now. The peace-of-mind factor is difficult to fully gauge or assess, but just as a result of having done all of this cleanup and gotten it behind me, right away I felt a sense of relief.