Re: Someone in the know please explain...
I am an experienced liver flusher, although I'm not sure I'm an expert; even after more than 30 flushes there are still questions and surprises.
Some of the gunk that gets released from the liver is kind of a semi-solid mass of waxy cholesterol, not yet a stone. I wonder if what you found may have been a stray bean that was caught in that mass and became coated enough to look like a real stone. Since this happened much later than your initial release of stones, it might have given the chloesterol sludge enough time to solidify around the bean. Another clue is the fact that you had been fasting, which slows down the digestive system a great deal.
Anyway for what its worth here is my theory: You had a great first flush releasing genuine stones from the gallbladder and liver. Hours later your newly opened biliary ducts were still draining cholesterol sludge and other toxins into the intestines. Along the way a wayward bean, perhaps caught by some mucus loosened by your MC, became coated with the waxy sludge. Since your system may have been moving a little more slowly as a result of your recent fast, the bean became coated with material much like a pearl is formed layer by layer until it appeared to be a stone when it came out.
Another thing (kinda gross) that makes me think this might be what happened is because the night before last, I had a painful gallbladder attack in the middle of the night. I finally took two teaspoons of
Epsom Salt to relax the bile ducts and ease the pain. In the morning I had a little normal colored diarrhea. Later in the day I passed some bright green material, not normal fecal material at all, even the odor was like bile. Also some corn coated in green was floating around. I think the
Epsom Salt relaxed the ducts enough to release some bile and other toxins and coated the corn I had for supper. Now I'm a little worried I won't get a good flush tomorrow night because of all the bile released. But I had to relieve the pain and
Epsom Salt is great for temporary relief from a gallbladder attack.