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Post by in tokyo on Jan 4, 2010 16:48:06 GMT -5
I wonder if anybody else has noticed that the wet pieces of non-skin or gel that grows over our lesions can be pulled into fiber strings as it dries? If I pull little bits of it with my fingernails, it develops into long fibers. I get a similar effect with the blood from the lesions, depending on how sick I am. M from Canada in another post mentioned that our blood was like jelly.
I got a further surprise recently (this is not pleasant to read, so a warning) when I had some sores on the inside of my mouth that wouldn't heal (caused after drinking red wine). I got angry and bit them, then examined the skin. The skin from the wound itself could also be pulled into fibers. When they're wet, they're stretchy and gelatinous. When they dry, they are the normal texture of our fibers. I don't know what this means, but just as a tidbit of information I'll submit it and it might be useful to someone else.
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Post by toni on Jan 5, 2010 13:21:42 GMT -5
Intokyo,
Yes, I think I know what you mean. I've had what sounds very much the same, and there's that gelatinous texture always in the specimens somewhere, and it can be pulled and stretched like you said right into fibers.
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Post by mfromcanada on Jan 5, 2010 20:16:14 GMT -5
in tokyo, thanks for the new information. I can pull several fibers out of one finger nail at at time. They seem to just keep coming.
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Post by fritolay66 on Jan 6, 2010 0:54:41 GMT -5
In Tokyo,
I have also been able to do what you described. Recently I suffered from Swine flu, and after the chills, the fever ran about 103. After that, my lips chapped severly, no sores, but the flaps I could pull on, and they would turn into very long fibrils of skin. Around an inch in length.
In the beginning of this ordeal, what I was encountering in my skin, was those within the lesions. They were tubular and semi-transparent, very tough, and seem like there were white pearls attached to them. If you pulled in the correct direction, they would come right out but only to a certain point and then they would break. These were all sub Q, not superficial.
As far as superficially, I have had the "skin" do the same thing in which was healing over lesions but sans the pearl things. Then about an hour or a day later, depending on the depth peeled, it would just regrow again. Had a horrible time fighting those in the beginning.
Frito
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Post by in tokyo on Jan 14, 2010 14:46:04 GMT -5
Thanks for your responses Toni, M from Canada and FritoLay!
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Post by ruth on Jan 17, 2010 12:47:41 GMT -5
frito, so much for burning the infection out.
i had wondered as i have low body temperature
and almost never run a fever anymore.
so far, every time i start to get the flu........... it'll check itself within 3 days. i think my mold must eat the virus and/or bacterias for lunch?
yes, my blood is like jello, too.
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Post by fritolay66 on Jan 17, 2010 22:29:50 GMT -5
Yea Ruth,
Fever I did not find helpful at all. In fact, my bout with the swine flu brought me more lesions. Small and scattered, but none the less new. Those are gone now, but I was not happy and it took some work.
In the case of my fungus, I am finding that with heat, it sporulates. I am finding data to support my observation. There are some fungi in which need heat to reproduce or cause the reproductive cycle to take place.
The summer heat, suanas, tanning beds, they all have made me quite miserable and do a number on my skin.
Frito
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Post by bannanny on Jan 17, 2010 22:54:50 GMT -5
Yeah... I've always had issues with the gel. I have the same thing goin on in my lips right now that you had frito... and I think you have goin on too mfromcanada, right? Anyway, you might find this video interesting tokyo. I took it of a tiny drop of gel that oozed from my finger one day and landed on my scope base while I was adjusting a sample I was lookin at. But you can see how it begins to form into strands the more I pull on it... This is what it grew into over a period of 2-3 months... But once I was finally able to lift it from the base, it repeated the process all over again with no help from me and grew into this in the same amount of time as it took the first growth to occur... I finally sent the scope to a researcher who told me it seems to be mutating once again for a third time. So replication, replication, replication, I guess. hugs ~~ bannanny
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Post by in tokyo on Jan 21, 2010 11:16:24 GMT -5
Thanks Bannanny, that's a GREAT video you took.
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Post by violet on Jan 21, 2010 12:12:45 GMT -5
I had a colonoscopy a couple of years ago after terribly painful abdominal pain and then bleeding. The colonsocopy was done weeks after the episode, and the physician who did it said he saw a place that was "stringy and mucosal," and, of course, guess what I thought it was. I didn't even mention the word Morgellons.
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Post by fritolay66 on Jan 21, 2010 14:37:01 GMT -5
Hey there V, nice to see you again. Missed your posting.
Frito
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Post by zabrubon on Jan 22, 2010 0:37:26 GMT -5
Intokyo, yes, I noticed the oozing from the lesions would have long fibrous stringy stuff. It was so weird. I also noticed that my blood was also the same way. It would be very stringy too. Sometimes if I studied this stringy stuff and pulled it very gently, a hair would come out of it. It was wild. I don't have it right now cause I am on meds. But I sure used too. Brings back memories. CB
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