DWQA QuestionsCategory: Healing ModalitiesCan you give us a tutorial on what signs would be consistent with an unavoidable detoxing for the individual, how to differentiate it from a drug side effect, and how best to manage it to maintain safety while balancing the need to accomplish an effective and thorough viral cleanout?
Nicola Staff asked 13 hours ago
We understand this adds some complexity to things but human life is already complex, and those complexities create many inconveniences and hazards of all kinds, financial and otherwise. We would say the majority of things experienced would be a feeling of being under the weather, sapped of strength, having a sick feeling which could be mild or severe depending on the individual. There might be specific regional symptoms or organ-specific symptoms like gastrointestinal problems leading to diarrhea or even abdominal pain in some cases. Nausea is a frequent accompaniment of many influenza infections, so feeling queasy might happen for some. Some detoxing symptoms might make a person feel sluggish, or to have a kind of brain fog, as is a frequent accompaniment of virus infections acutely. There might be symptoms like sneezing, asthma-like symptoms, respiratory irritation leading to coughing; there might be things like itching, feeling chilled, often without a temperature elevation; there might be muscular stiffness, discomfort, or weakness. In most cases, it will be manageable and often transient, not lasting for the entire dosing interval, but in all cases will resolve once the person stops taking the drugs. In severe circumstances, people can stop taking the drugs and allow a recovery period but then would have to start over with a new 3-week dosing because any unaffected viruses would have a chance to replicate and grow in numbers putting the person back where they started.