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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:35:18 GMT -5
This thread is to discuss silica's, silicon's and the fungi relationship to Morgellons. I believe they are the combination that is causing Morgellons to happen.
This makes my 4th Thread here, each thread represents a step closer to the truth. It has taken the input of many people to get to this conclusion today.
By steady and sound plodding, taking baby steps we have - at the MDR site come to the conclusion that the relationship between fungi and silica/silicon are the determining factor in what causes Morgellons to form inside the human body.
Many thanks to all the 'backyard' scientist pioneers at the MDR site. And, also to the community here at Lymebusters, you will not meet a better, nicer group of people! Each one of us, collectively - with one like-mind, have come to this conclusion.
This information came about at a time when our Medical Community did not recognize our illness. Our CDC is currently in the middle of a year's study into the cause of this disease.
We took the reins into our own hands out of frustration in waiting on information as to what our illness is and how to get well. To best of our abilities these are the conculsions we have formulated:
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:39:42 GMT -5
Ok, Jeany - here's Baraka's video again. Can we agree that this is a conidia that's starting this "Morgellons Forming" process? Let's see if we notice that this conidia appears to have a shiny crystal coating? YouTube - numba3 mpeg4
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:41:01 GMT -5
Experiment 3 - cultured on 4/18/09, photographed on 4/28/09 @100x Some are having trouble loading my pages due to not having enough memory or slow dial-up and it makes it difficult for them to view. So, I will start putting more links in - rather than photos. Here is the before picture - of the salt-like particle in the dish, taken on 4/24 @100x: my-stuff-dot-com.com/My Stuff/Personal/Morgellons/My Photos/4-24-09 4 18/04_24_23.JPEG[/img] Here it is at 10 days growth, taken on 4/28 @100x: my-stuff-dot-com.com/My Stuff/Personal/Morgellons/My Photos/4 28 100x/04_28_19.JPEG[/img]
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:41:41 GMT -5
{quote=Jeany}Kammy, could be we inhaled those fungal spores..probably. This fungus thriving in our bodies comes out or appear to be a desiccated form is due to exposure of oxygen/air and gets reactivated by water taking baths and showers over and over again.
Jeany
No. I'm saying these specks are coming from inside my body. Oxygen is my blood... but, no my specks don't represent what's been out in the air, except for the time they are on the slide until they are photographed - a few minutes.
Isn't everyone experiencing the same thing that is producing specks and fibers? That they are coming out of your body - dry, without the wet of the biofilm?
I'm growing the biofilms from these DRY specks. The biofilm is coming out of my skin 'freeze dried'.
My statement of - "I don't think I have any blood in this part of my ear." Is a true one. With all my picking, I have brought any blood!
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:42:14 GMT -5
You notice I found one BIG BALL spore in my 'specks' that I posted yesterday? And then at 600x... you think all these are possibly the same spore, just babies? I think they might be? What about that one exploding that I just posted, that is ugly stuff happening!? lol [/img][/center]
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:43:16 GMT -5
Jeany - we're getting close here... EXPERIMENT 3 - 6 Days Growth @100x In my opinion, there are 4 types of 'crystals' that come out of these lesions. #1 is the powder form as seen in the earlier Type 1, 2, 3 - 'mold/fungus' photos, what I call 'crystalline' because it's invisible. #2 is the another type below. This looks like a grain of salt in the dish, to the naked eye. With 20x mag., one has a very slight color to it - the other is pure crystal. [/img] my-stuff-dot-com.com//My Stuff/Personal/Morgellons/My Photos/4-24-09 4 18/04_24_26.JPEG[/img][/center] I've checked my work 4 times! These two objects, ARE WHAT THE CRYSTALS ARE. One is slightly smaller than the other. They both appear to look like shiny salt crystals in the dish.[/QUOTE] Remember when I asked what these 2 things have in common - that makes them both appear as crystals in the dish?1. They are both fungus. 2. They are both coated with silica. 3. Either they entered our bodies with silica or some other factor caused the silica to bind to them - to make them have a silicon coating?And possibly because of addition of the silica is what's causing the 'explosion' (Morgellons Forming) to happen? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SilicaSilicon dioxide "Silica is most commonly found in nature as sand or quartz, as well as in the cell walls of diatoms. It is a principal component of most types of glass and substances such as concrete. Silica is the most abundant mineral in the earth's crust." Diatomen.wikipedia.org/wiki/DiatomsMarine diatoms *HERE'S OUR MARINE CONNECTION."Diatoms (Greek: äéÜ (dia) = "through" + ôÝìíåéí (temnein) = "to cut", i.e., "cut in half") are a major group of eukaryotic algae, and are one of the most common types of phytoplankton. Most diatoms are unicellular, although they can exist as colonies in the shape of filaments or ribbons (e.g. Fragillaria), fans (Meridion), zigzags (Tabellaria), or stellate colonies (Asterionella). Diatoms are producers within the food chain. A characteristic feature of diatom cells is that they are encased within a unique cell wall made of silica (hydrated silicon dioxide) called a frustule." Jeany - we're getting close here...
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:46:55 GMT -5
{Quote = Jeany} Kam, remember the video where you could see the "knobs" and the fast producing tracks? Do you mean that one? That could be AO...Maybe because it was exposed to air it dissipated so quickly? I guess we have enough proof? for AN? Hey, we need BO's help on this....he's been off for quite awhile but he'll be back soon. Unfortunatelly I can't find any pics of that other frog fungus..only histological photos. Jeany {QUOTE=Jeany}OMG, what about using DE then?? Are we feeding them now with this stuff? Jeany [/quote]
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:49:08 GMT -5
I know this looks like an 'acorn' dividing in this photo - but in my dish - to the naked eye - this is in a crystal, shiny, like in salt form. This is AN? in the division process. my-stuff-dot-com.com//My Stuff/Personal/Morgellons/My Photos/4-24-09 4 18/04_24_23.JPEG[/img]
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:50:01 GMT -5
I don't know that much about "DE", I didn't research it. It has appeared to be beneficial to me? Is it made from silica?
I can't say... but, what causes silica to build up in the human body? What foods, environmental factors cause silica to be produced? That's what's feeding Morgellons?
We can possibly slow it down by eliminating these silica producing factors.
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:50:45 GMT -5
Silica is used almost everywhere. Here look. * Inexpensive soda-lime glass is the most common and typically found in drinking glasses, bottles, and windows. * A raw material for many whiteware ceramics such as earthenware, stoneware and porcelain. * A raw material for the production of Portland cement. * A food additive, primarily as a flow agent in powdered foods, or to absorb water (see the ingredients list for). * The natural ("native") oxide coating that grows on silicon is hugely beneficial in microelectronics. It is a superior electric insulator, with high chemical stability. In electrical applications, it can protect the silicon, store charge, block current, and even act as a controlled pathway to allow small currents to flow through a device. At room temperature, however, it grows extremely slowly, and so to manufacture such oxide layers, the traditional method has been heating of silicon in high-temperature furnaces within an oxygen ambient (thermal oxidation). * Raw material for aerogel in the Stardust spacecraft * Used in the extraction of DNA and RNA due to its ability to bind to the nucleic acids under the presence of chaotropes. * As hydrophobic silica it is used as a defoamer component. * As hydrated silica in toothpaste (abrasive to remove plaque.) * As a high-temperature thermal protection fabric. * In cosmetics for its light-diffusing properties and its absorbency. * Liquid silicon dioxide (colloidal silica) is used as a wine and juice fining agent. * As a glidant in pharmaceutical products silicon dioxide aids powder flow when tablets are formed. * In the production of tires * Thermal enhancement compound used in thermal grouts for the ground source heat pump industry. Jeany
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:52:57 GMT -5
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:54:20 GMT -5
Jeany, It's as if these diatom cells are binding to the fungual cells, causing them to become crystals. Diatom - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia"Diatom cells are contained within a unique silicate (silicic acid) cell wall comprising two separate valves (or shells). The biogenic silica that the cell wall is composed of is synthesised intracellularly by the polymerisation of silicic acid monomers. This material is then extruded to the cell exterior and added to the wall. Diatom cell walls are also called frustules or tests, and their two valves typically overlap one other like the two halves of a petri dish. In most species, when a diatom divides to produce two daughter cells, each cell keeps one of the two halves and grows a smaller half within it. As a result, after each division cycle the average size of diatom cells in the population gets smaller. Once such cells reach a certain minimum size, rather than simply divide vegetatively, they reverse this decline by forming an auxospore. This expands in size to give rise to a much larger cell, which then returns to size-diminishing divisions. Auxospore production is almost always linked to meiosis and sexual reproduction. Decomposition and decay of diatoms leads to organic and inorganic (in the form of silicates) sediment, the inorganic component of which can lead to a method of analyzing past marine environments by corings of ocean floors or bay muds, since the inorganic matter is embedded in deposition of clays and silts and forms a permanent geological record of such marine strata. The study of diatoms is a branch of phycology, and phycologists specializing in diatoms are called diatomists." What process other than this would turn a fungui into a crystal?
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:55:24 GMT -5
Diatom - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaIn the open ocean, the condition that typically causes diatom (spring) blooms to end is a lack of silicon. Unlike other nutrients, this is only a major requirement of diatoms so it is not regenerated in the plankton ecosystem as efficiently as, for instance, nitrogen or phosphorus nutrients. This can be seen in maps of surface nutrient concentrations - as nutrients decline along gradients, silicon is usually the first to be exhausted (followed normally by nitrogen then phosphorus). When silicon content approaches a concentration of 2 mmol m-3, diatoms typically represent more than 70% of the phytoplankton community. Raven (1983)[11] noted that, relative to organic cell walls, silica frustules require less energy to synthesize (approximately 8% of a comparable organic wall), potentially a significant saving on the overall cell energy budget. Other researchers[12] have suggested that the biogenic silica in diatom cell walls acts as an effective pH buffering agent, facilitating the conversion of bicarbonate to dissolved CO2 (which is more readily assimilated). Notwithstanding the possible advantages conferred by silicon, diatoms typically have higher growth rates than other algae of a corresponding size.[6] Diatoms occur in virtually every environment that contains water. This includes not only oceans, seas, lakes and streams, but also soil."Jeany, we need to figure out how to reduce our dietary silica, silicon to kill the diatoms?
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:56:14 GMT -5
We've asked Steve Frey to come in and look... Steve you can take this over to your thread and discuss it - if want to?
I don't think we're going to grasp this complicated subject matter too easily, but you might understand it a lot quicker and be able to translate it?
What I'm thinking is - these diatoms are what is driving the Morgellons Engine? That I suspect they are the reason for the many, varied colors of the rainbow and the sheen that we're seeing, too?
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 11:58:03 GMT -5
What we saw in Massena's photograph was a silica sheath over the infection bulb and connecting hyphae?
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 12:00:16 GMT -5
I have it all too, we all do... the goo, the specs, the crystals. Here's some pics for you to look at. I don't know that asperguillis can create all of these things myself... or arthro. I'm sticking to the gel being the possible (and I say possible) crux of morgellons. A gel that produces colored particles which in turn form into segmented tubes. The gel can also elongate and form into transparent strands... everything else seems to be produced by this gel too. That's just how I'm seein it tho... I'm just giving back here. Below is a hardened form of the gel which is creating the segmented tubes (even in its hardened form)... In it's crystal form... still creating tubes In it's liquid form, it still creates the tubes... The only thing I've ever come close to matching these tubes to is Bacillis Subtilis macrofibers... I'm not saying you guys aren't doin some really great research, but I think you might be jumpin the gun when you state that you know what Morgellons actually is. I think you should leave those words out of the whole thing for now. Just my opinion tho and I hope I haven't upset you by stating it. I'm on your side here, always remember that ok? hugs ~~ bannanny
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 12:01:44 GMT -5
1. What 'busts up' excess silica?
2. What could you put on a lesion that has silica coming out of it?
3. What causes our internal silica production to go 'out of whack'
4. Why are only 2 of them in heavy silicone and the others aren't? How do my crystals compare to other people's?
5. It's believed that the crystal formations turn into "The Starwar Spaceships". These "Spaceships" appear visually to be made of the same thing that the connector 'Infection Bulbs' are made of. So, everything has a silicon coating or is a silicon particle? As per Massena's photo showing the silicon protective coating on the 'infection bulb'.
6. The diatoms are the building blocks for the silicon. Are we in some sort of diatom overload?
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 12:03:14 GMT -5
So, we've been told that we have inside of us - fibers that appear like in the semi-conductor field. Giving us the impression that we've been nano-ized. That these are nano-machines inside of us!
Well... it looks like things in nature can ALSO look like a silicon powergrid?
We can't even prove the bio-engineering aspect yet.
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 12:04:01 GMT -5
{Quote Jeany}And what about this one? See the silica crystals? It's a black fungus clump with white crystals (silica) attached. I always thought this kinda looks like a marine sponge...sea cucumber?
Fungus with attached silica or bound to them in nature....:confused:
But I think in the body possible.
Jeany[/quote]
OHHHHH! That's what those white formations are that I'm seeing... I didn't understand what I was seeing. (Jeany can you bring that photo over? of the black fungus with the white silica growing on it?)
This happens at about week 6, everything starts getting a silicia coating, I've got several photographs that I haven't shown - because they're kinda' boring looking... that show this silica forming in the dish. It just starts taking over most areas... where it wasn't before, it starts making little mountain mounds in places that eventually end up touching and covering the entire area... let me find a photo to bring in here?
You remember I made the comment about Baraka's videos being sped up in time? I didn't want to put myself in a pigeon hole - but, I was going to say - based on the 'milk of magnesia' background (which I now understand to be silica forming) in his videos (which he said could be the lighting?), I'm seeing happening at 6 weeks.
I don't know if it's true or not - it appears that Baraka's videos go in 3 minutes what is happening inside the body in 6 weeks. But, don't quote me on that, we're not sure how sped up his photography is - we know what we see in his videos is not happening that fast in real time? We'd be jumping out of our skins, if the hyphae network was growing that fast inside of us!?
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Post by kammy on Apr 29, 2009 12:04:42 GMT -5
Wait a minute. The Petri Dish doesn't have the same properties that the human body does.
In other words - whatever is causing these fungi and 'others' to have an overload production of silica is 'programmed' inside of them. This excess silica has nothing to do with ANYTHING we're doing wrong that's causing this. In other words, This silicon production doesn't have anything to do with the human body - it would do this in any 'body' that was capable of supporting it, ie: the Petri Dish.
Let me find a photo of silica being produced at 6 weeks in an area that previous didn't have any?
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