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Post by kammy on Jun 28, 2009 12:31:13 GMT -5
WOW! Toni! Great video...so milk seems to dissolve PA, ...if it is PA, huh? and the black specks still remain? hmm...maybe cuz they are fungus particles... Oh, I know..me and my fungi...LOL What do you think this specimen is? Thanks btw for participating here! Jeany Uh huh... I think the specks are more 'baby' P.a.'s, just like in my 1st video where I show that P.a. balloon deflating and leaving a trail of biofilm and specks behind. It looks like one P.a. seed can birth 200,000 baby specks? Or, maybe you're right, Jeany... maybe, that's baby fungal spores trapped inside the P.a. seed... using the seed as an incubator? What a strange disease this is? I don't get it Does anyone else? If what we have is as simple as skin culture to look for P.a. - what's the deal, what's all the hubbub about? Get us some medicine!, this isn't 'rocket science'... uh... ;D
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Post by toni on Jun 28, 2009 13:19:47 GMT -5
Thanks ;D Kammy, those dark specks you have ( I sure don't know and haven't yet found anything to share as input). But, what I can share regarding some of my black specks, (which I think there's two different kinds going on)... Is this one for instance that I pictured in detail last year, because (these use to be ALL over my face every morning I woke up in 2006). Each morning, I woke up looking like someone took a pepper shaker to my face. I had zillions of these tiny tiny black specks all over me! When I'd try to lift them off with the needle, they'd INSTANTLY sink right back (melt) into my skin! But this one I got before it did that. Here are pic demo's of one of my black specks. lymebusters.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=rash&action=print&thread=7557You'll see the pictures as you scroll down, how the flip side of this tiny black speck appears to look like my (colors too of my stainless steel needle). I don't get it either... at all.
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Post by bannanny on Jun 28, 2009 15:45:50 GMT -5
I don't ever remember seein those pics toni. But I have some that look very similar to yours. Here's one of 'em... Here's yours... Gotta admit, they look pretty similar eh? I can't remember where mine came from... but it was either my face or my head. Thanks for bringing up the Ginseng again toni. I'd forgotten about it... I'll get me some this week! hugs ~~ bannanny
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Post by toni on Jun 29, 2009 7:38:21 GMT -5
Bannanny,
They sure do look similar...like they're made of the same stuff.
I know you and I have alot of the same things going on too. And you had these coming out of your face and scalp also?
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Post by toni on Jun 29, 2009 10:06:28 GMT -5
Oh yes Kmarie,
I'd not read that in so long, I fogot about it.
Right, ( I'd thought by the way these were sinking in and out of my face) I thought they might be spores or something, because the black specks were all over my face every single morning.
And everytime I tried to lift one of the specks so very carefully off with the tip of a needle (they're very tiny) just as soon as I got close with the needle tip.....they'd sink/melt right back into my skin.
So I thought (spores) because they're not critters, as they do look like graphite or similar as that doc said.
But...graphite wouldn't melt in and out of the skin either.
I didn't tell him that part.
Imho, the black specks are the mystery. Because I sure can't imagine what can surface ontop the skin, (appearing to be hundreds of graphite particles) then melt right back into it. Then reappear.
These black specks are what I can enduce too out of any place on my skin (with the glycolic) - and then the milk/yog on my scalp.
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Post by mrcommonsense on Jun 29, 2009 11:22:47 GMT -5
The black specks good be "Magnetite" which bacteria can create from Iron ... Could this be happening on our blood?
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Post by toni on Jun 29, 2009 11:51:39 GMT -5
See here's what's (weird) about these black specks.
They sink into the skin like a hot knife would go through butter.
Then they surface again, and then sink in...
Any mineral I know of or anything for that matter...can't do that.
What do you think would or could even have that capacity?
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Post by bannanny on Jun 29, 2009 15:16:20 GMT -5
If I remember right toni, I got it out of my head. I think they're identical tho.
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Post by kammy on Jun 29, 2009 16:43:25 GMT -5
Very interesting discussion, guys! Someone asked me if I had abandoned the TP thread in light of this new information and I just wanted to clarify.
WHATEVER this 'seed', sphere is (now believed to be P.a.) is also being found in some of our paper and cotton products. That has not changed.
I need to run more TP tests and I have not examined cosmetics/skin products yet.
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Post by bannanny on Jun 29, 2009 17:09:41 GMT -5
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Post by stevefrey on Jun 29, 2009 18:37:08 GMT -5
See here's what's (weird) about these black specks. They sink into the skin like a hot knife would go through butter. Then they surface again, and then sink in... Any mineral I know of or anything for that matter...can't do that. What do you think would or could even have that capacity? The same kind or organism that can transcend a latex glove, an organism that can disassemble itself into single cells then put itself back together again, this gives it the ability to move like a liquid, Science knows of two organisms on the planet that can do that, the sponge and the placozoan, aka Trichoplax adhearens, personally I think they should be classified together for that reason but I didn't write the rules. The description "weird" could not be more appropriate when used to describe the sponge, it is truly the weirdest organism in existence, not to mention the oldest multicelled animal. the sponge's cells can move around. And they do. "The cells of the sponge migrate as soon as the prey is trapped," Vacelet says. "After 24 hours, the prey is completely covered by sponge cells." The cells grab bits of meat, absorb them into their cytoplasm and move away to start digesting. The creature has no brain, no heart, no stomach, no muscles-- yet it is a voracious killer all the same.
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Post by toni on Jun 29, 2009 20:56:19 GMT -5
Steve,
Yes I've watched some video's on those and they sure are incredibly weird too!
Do they have "black particles like this"?
I mean these are super tiny, and hard as rock. (were you able to see my link above) I put peroxide on one of the black specks too, and it just bubbled, yet didn't harm the speck. The speck is also extremely odd too, because the one side of it looks like "flint" to me, and then the other side, reminded me of "stainless steel" when it's burned with fire. ( you know how stainless steel gets that rainbow coloring going?)
I sure don't know what to think of this.
I'll get the link (please look at these pics).
And I had 100's of these black hard as rock tiny specks every morning all over my face, just like (the sandman) took black ground pepper and shook it all over me.
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Post by toni on Jun 29, 2009 20:57:49 GMT -5
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Post by ibzahp on Jun 29, 2009 21:57:46 GMT -5
Toni I get a lot of black specks that look like that. I also get stuff that is more "tarry".
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Post by bannanny on Jun 30, 2009 15:53:04 GMT -5
"The sponge has no heart"...
that sounds about right!
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Post by kammy on Jul 16, 2009 9:50:22 GMT -5
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Post by bannanny on Jul 18, 2009 20:41:37 GMT -5
Check out the link above lilsissy... what kammy's finding is leading to the polymer aspect. Wish I could understand all this stuff!
hugs ~~ bannanny
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Post by lilsissy on Jul 20, 2009 0:37:05 GMT -5
Thank you, Bannanny and Kammy
Jen
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Post by lilsissy on Jul 20, 2009 18:11:22 GMT -5
Pseudomonas is used in the production of polymer. www.chim.upt.ro/project_description.htmMore than 120 kinds of carboxylic acids hydroxylated at the 3-, 4-, 5-, or 6-position, all in the (R)-(-)-configuration if they possess a chiral center at the position of the hydroxyl group, can be incorporated into the polymer [31]. According to the length of the side chain, two types of PHAs can be distinguished: short chain-length hydroxyalkanoic acids, with an alkyl side chain having up to two carbon atoms, are produced by Ralstonia eutropha and many other bacteria [4]. Typical members of this type are poly(3-hydroxybutyrate,), PHB; poly(3-hydroxyvalerate,) PHV, or copolymer poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate), PHBV medium chain length hydroxyalkanoic acids, with an alkyl side chain consisting of at least three carbon atoms that are produced by Pseudomonas oleovorans and other pseudomonas. Typical members are poly(3-hydroxyoctanoate), PHO, and poly(3-hydroxynonanoate), PHN [5] Wonder have they given us this gene, look it causes hair projection. B.T.W has anyone else notice the very fine white peach fuzz hair we all have on our skin seems thicker now. Start looking in bright light at peoples faces . Maybe power of suggestion but I don't think so. Picture here, www.biomatnet.org/secure/Fair/S493.htm
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Post by lilsissy on Jul 20, 2009 18:25:05 GMT -5
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