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Showing posts with label How we Hear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How we Hear. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 November 2014

Iodine Cures Cancers

We are about to upset the $50 Billion Cancer Industry.

Author Lynne Farrow asked me to post my research on how Iodine cures cancer.

First the real life stories from little Westport, Tn. I have been heavily promoting iodine to my friends & neighbors by handing out free books that I bought from Amazon to get the ball rolling. I am even shocked at the amazing results I have seen in such short times.

1) Kay was suffering terminal cancer & was sent to home hospice to die when doctors gave up on her rapidly spreading cancer. She was given a 3 month death sustenance. Cancer had taken over her uterus & vagina, and spread out from there. Kay's best friend had cured her own fibrocystic breast disease in less than a month with iodine (her doctor wanted to do mastectomy), and was enthusiastic when I showed her my research on iodine curing cancer. Kay started the Dr. Brownstein iodine protocol, and was totally cured within 9 months. X-Rays proved all cancer was gone. She called us this week to tell us how well she is doing.

2) Our neighbor Glenda was suffering from Breast Cancer that was getting larger each month. Her sister, our mail lady, had also cured her own fibrocystic breast disease with iodine in less than 1 month, and so started Glenda on the Dr. Brownstein Iodine Protocol, and now just one month later, Glenda stopped over for a visit to tell us that her breast cancer had shrunk by 90% -

So just in our little community, we have cured 2 cases of fibrocystic breast disease, 1 terminal cancer & a 90% reduction in a breast cancer. The word is spreading like wildfire and over 30 people in this little community have jumped on the iodine bandwagon. Lynne Farrow's book is being passed around from one neighbor to the next, and my own file, "Iodine References" has become very popular.
http://tinyurl.com/Iodine-Handout.
I've heard these people want their own book and have been ordering it.

Now this was to be expected because of reports from leading doctors that iodine cures cancers. Too bad that mainstream medicine is ignoring them.

Dr. Derry says,”One drop (6.5 mg per drop) of Lugol's daily in water, orange juice or milk will gradually eliminate the first phase of the cancer development called fibrocystic disease of the breast so no new cancers can start.”
http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fthyroid.about.com%2Flibrary%2Fderry%...


Dr, Derry - How Iodine kills Cancer Cells
http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fiodine4health.com%2Fbody%2Fbreast%2F...


Dr. Dach, photos of tumors shrinking with 50mg Iodine
http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fjeffreydach.com%2F2009%2F11%2F13%2Fi...


Iodine & Breast Cancer, Dr. Dach
http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.drdach.com%2FIodine_and_Breast_C...


There is much more in our "Iodine Recommended Reading," chapter Cancer.
http://goo.gl/G4dLP


Iodine is clearly a Miracle From God !

Grizz

Sunday, 24 August 2014

Your Guide to Care and Maintenance of Hearing Aids

If you are a new hearing aid user or even if you've had your hearing aids for a while you may need a guide 
to help you care for and maintain your hearing aids in top condition. Here are some of the main issues that 
you need to know and understand to get the most from your amplification.
In this post we address eight main issues:

  1) Batteries, 2) ear wax, 3) ear mold/venting issues, 4) moisture/corrosion/dirt/intermittent, 5) telephone use, 6) feedback, 7) static/noise, and 8) prevention.

If you need help with any of these you may consult the blogger at the given email.

Issues with batteries include the following: Dead and defective batteries, getting the most
out of your batteries, batteries in backwards, spent batteries, defective batteries, short battery life,
conserving battery life, safety issues with batteries.

Issues with ear wax include: earwax obstruction, preventing wax build-up, when and how to
remove wax.

Ear mold and venting issues include (comfort & sound quality): ear discomfort, causes
of ear discomfort, correcting a hearing aid fitting problem, plugged up vents.

Moisture, Corrosion, Dirt & related intermittent:Moisture problems, resolving moisture
problems, effects of moisture, dirty volume control, dirty battery, problem of oily skin.

Telephone issues: Poor telephone reception, telecoil circuit, successful use of the telecoil circuit,
other tips for improved telephone listening.

Feedback Issues: Hearing aid squeal (acoustic feedback), acceptable versus unacceptable feedback,
earwax and feedback, solving the feedback problem, feedback with new hearing aids, feedback and
telephone use.

Static and other unwanted sounds: Wind noise, background noise.

Preventive hearing aid maintenance: Spare set of hearing aids, hearing aid disuse and longevity.

Wednesday, 4 December 2013

HOW WE HEAR

                                

                          How We Hear?

First, here are the parts of the ear:
                  

                                          
  • The outer ear
    • The outer ear is made up of the ear flap and the ear canal up to the eardrum.
    • The ear flap is also called the auricle or pinna.
    • The eardrum is also called the tympanic membrane.
    • The outer ear protects the middle and inner ears.
    • The middle ear
    • The middle ear is made up of three tiny bones and the Eustachian tube.
    • The Eustachian tube connects the middle ear to the back of the throat. It opens and closes to make the pressure between the inner and outer ears the same.
    • Three tiny bones connect the eardrum to the inner ear. The bones are called the hammer (malleus), anvil (incus) and stirrup (stapes).

  • The inner ear
    • The inner ear is made of the vestibular apparatus and the cochlea.
    • The vestibular apparatus is three looping canals. They control your balance.
    • The cochlea turns sound into electrical signals that get sent to the brain. The cochlea is spiral-shaped.

Now, here's how sounds get from the outside to our brains.
  1. Sound moves from the outside to your outer ear.
    • The outer ear passes sound to the middle ear.
  2. Your middle ear passes sound to your inner ear.
    • Sound makes your eardrum vibrate like a drum.
    • The vibrations pass to the three tiny bones behind the eardrum. (These are the hammer, anvil and stirrup.)
    • The bones pass the vibrations to the inner ear.
  3. The vibrations go to the cochlea in your inner ear.
    • Tiny hair cells in the cochlea pick up the vibrations.
    • The hair cells turn the vibrations into electrical signals.
    • The electrical signals are sent to the auditory nerve, and then the brain.
  4. Your brain decides what the sound is.
    • The auditory cortex is the part of the brain where the signals are put with other information. The other information could be what you see, and your memories.
    • This helps us to "know" what we're hearing. (For example, you hear a car honk and think, "That's a car honking.")

 

How Our Hearing Changes As We Grow?

A child's hearing changes a lot until he is 4 to 8 years old. 
Your child can hear things even before he's born. 
After he's born, here's how his hearing changes:

At birth:
  • Responds to loud noises                                                   
  • Turns to the sound of his parents' voice
3 to 6 months:                                                                      
  • Can hear softer sounds
  • Can tell one sound from another
  • Still can't hear all sounds

 

The Sounds We Hear

Facts about sound
  • Sound travels through the air as waves you can't see.
  • The faster the waves are, the higher the sound.
  • How fast a sound travels is called its frequency.
    Frequency (or pitch) is also how high or low a sound is.
    • High-pitched sounds (like a squeal) have a higher frequency.
    • Low-pitched sounds (like thunder) have a lower frequency.
  • Frequency is measured in hertz (Hz).
  • The bigger the waves, the louder the sound.
  • The loudness of sound is measured in decibels (dB).
What people with normal hearing can hear?
People with normal hearing can hear from about 0 dB to 140 dB. 
Here's how loud those sounds can be:

Sound
Loudness, in dB

Whisper
About 20 dB
Refrigerator humming
About 40 dB
Normal conversation
About 60 dB
Noise of traffic in the city
About 80 dB
Lawn mower
About 90 dB
Chainsaw
About 110 dB
Firecracker
About 140 dB
People with normal hearing can hear sounds as low as 20 Hz. 
Some can hear as high as 20,000 Hz. Here's how high or low those sounds can be:

Sound
High or low sounds, in Hz

Thunder
20 Hz to 80 Hz
Talking
250 Hz to 6,000 Hz
Opera singer hitting a high note
2,000 Hz

What children with hearing loss can hear?     
    http://www.speechbuddy.com/blog/hearing-loss/types-and-degrees-of-hearing-loss/
  • Each child's hearing loss is different.                                                    
  • Some children with hearing loss can hear some sounds.
  • How well a child can hear affects how well he can understand when people talk.
  • Some children can hear sounds at a lower frequency better than at a higher frequency.
    • Most words are made up of high-frequency sounds.
    • "S" and "f" are high-frequency sounds.
      These are harder to hear.
    • If you can't hear high-frequency sounds, understanding what people say is hard.
    • Vowel sounds like "u" have a low frequency. 
      These are easier to hear than high-frequency sounds.