
Knowing what we are dealing with can greatly reduce the risk of contamination. We need to know whether we are talking about radioactive alpha and beta particles or X or gamma rays.
Alpha and beta particles are, as the word itself suggests, particles. Fortunately, they have a very small range in which they operate. Alpha particles radiate strongly, but they cannot even penetrate a sheet of paper. They become dangerous if they are ingested (through water, food and breathing). If they “take root” in the body, they can permanently damage the cells and thus trigger cancerous changes in the tissues in which they are located. The good news is that once they settle on the ground, their concentration in the air drops off quickly. But we must be careful not to consume contaminated water and food. If they are already in the body, we must “halve” them with chelators (zeolite, clay, pectin…).
Beta particles are very fast electrons, but fortunately they too cannot pass through barriers. Let’s stop the worse with cellophane. The strongest ones are stopped by a few millimeters of aluminum or wood. In practice, this means that most protective clothing and masks also protect against them, if of course they are not consumed. If our skin is exposed to them, burns and wounds can appear on it. In this case, it is important to apply poultices to the skin that can bind particles (clay, zeolite) and to care for the skin with natural preparations that prevent degenerative changes. We wash it with right-breasted lactic acid (whey, sour cream, molkosan), apply oils and ointments with St. John’s wort, calendula, aloe vera.
X-rays and gamma rays are waves. So we can’t pick them up or pick them up from the ground. They are like a storm passing through our garden, all broken, and after half an hour the sun shines again. The wind is nowhere to be found, and we are still cleaning up the consequences for a long time. In contrast to X-rays used in diagnostics, where the radiation is triggered “with the push of a button” and lasts only a short time, gamma rays radiate much longer. If we are safe when they “break down” and come out only “when the sun shines”, we have saved ourselves a lot of trouble.
If we are exposed to gamma radiation, where these rays hit the cell, damage remains that the body must quickly repair. Our internal repairers will need extra amounts of magnesium, vitamin D and other “spare parts” for this task, so the speed of cellular repair in different people will also depend on the supply of the necessary nutrients.
If we are successful in regeneration, the risk of degenerative changes will be small. Even in the Chernobyl disaster, not all residents had health problems. About a third of them got cancer. So I’ve always wondered what the other two-thirds did to keep from getting sick. The answer is relatively simple – they ate a lot of fermented food, ate apple cider and kept their spirits high. It may sound silly, but it is scientifically based.
Leave a comment