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Kids, ‘Flu and Asthma: “I’m the mother of two beautiful twin girls.  They are both 6 years old.  Last year my first daughter was suffering from ‘flu.  When I took her to the doctor they told me that she had asthma.  She was put onto a whole range of medication.  One day I explained to to one of your staff that my child is not getting better. In fact, she is getting worse and very fast.  She recommended your multi-vitamin, protein and CalMag-C. They started to use the products in November and haven’t had any ‘flu since then!  Also the asthma has disappeared! For myself, I am using your vitamin C and also the CalMag-C and if it is that time of the month, believe me I don’t have any period pains anymore! Thanks  for saving my kid’s life!”  AM Pietersburg

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The answer is a deficiency of tissue calcium. Here’s how it works.
There is some relatively unknown data about sunburn that I’d like to share with you in the hope that it will help if you or anyone you know who gets a tad too much of it – the sun, I mean.
The ultraviolet rays from the sun convert skin oil to vitamin D. Too much of it is referred to as hypervitaminosis D. What happens is that vitamin D’s opposing partner, vitamin F (another name for polyunsaturated fatty acids or essential fatty acids), is low in comparison to the amount of vitamin D.
Vitamin D’s job is to get calcium from your stomach and pull it into your blood stream and vitamin F’s job is to take it from your blood stream into your tissues. If you’re low on vitamin F, not only will the vitamin D pull calcium from your stomach, but it will also pull the calcium from your tissues back into your blood stream. It’s the F that gets it into and keeps it in the tissues!
So, should you get too much vitamin D and be deficient in F, your blood calcium level will increase while the tissue calcium levels will decrease. That is the reason that people who are in the sun a lot get thick skin. They don’t get enough vitamin F, which creates calcium deficiencies in their tissues. Hives – those big welts you get around the tender parts of your body from being in the sun too much – are a sign of tissue calcium deficiency.
Sunstroke is also a sign of low tissue calcium levels. Sunstroke is due to high blood calcium levels with low tissue calcium levels.
Excess vitamin D from extreme exposure to the sun is known to cause cancer. You may have read articles that recommend you stay out of the sun and that sunshine is hazardous to your health. Well, it’s only dangerous to people who are vitamin F deficient. Vitamin D is essential to good health and the sun is a great way to get it as long as you ensure you have enough vitamin F to balance it up.
Symptoms of low vitamin F levels include itching of the skin, the canker sores some people get inside their mouths or herpes breakouts in the genital area.
So, any time you have an itchy skin, get canker sores in your mouth or breakouts below the belt, hives or sunburn, you need vitamin F and calcium. Make sure your children have enough so they don’t suffer from their time in the sun.
Besides this, please ensure you get enough minerals, including salt and potassium to prevent dehydration and – I’m not talking about the junk stuff like what is purported to be electrolytes – as well as adequate water.

» Read more on “What Have Sunburn, Canker Sores & Herpes Breakouts Got in Common?”

Russian mother has success

“Recently we became happy parents.

“When I was getting ready to become a mother, I studied a lot of material but did not conceive what it means “colic” on babies. Nobody could tell me exactly why it happened and how I could handle them. When I found that my baby had colic I did not know what to do. I started to use different ways, including giving her special medicines, magnesium, bacteria, but she got worse.

» Read more on “Is Colic (Spasms of the Bowel) Necessary?”

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Approximately ten days prior to menstruation, when your ovaries are least active, your blood calcium drops steadily and progressively. This can result in premenstrual tension, nervousness, headaches, insomnia, and mental depression.

» Read more on “What Causes the Monthly Monster?”