The Lost Book of Remedies - pdf - Claude Davis The_Lost_Book_of_Remedies | Page 13

But even in death, my grandfather taught me valuable lessons. The third remedy that I'll show you was one that I learned 3 days after he passed on, and it was called Red Beak Powder. At his funeral, around 5,000 people from all over the country came to pay their respects. Our small town of Springfield didn't have enough hotels to accommodate them, so everybody offered a place to stay. One of them was Mary, a 72-year-old lady from Texas who told me what my grandfather did for her many years ago. She was suffering from high blood pressure, a condition that is becoming very common, especially among seniors today. The medication was keeping her blood pressure and cholesterol under control, but it didn't cure her. She had to take the drugs every day for the rest of her life. Mary told me that as the days passed, she was getting tired a lot easier without doing any more work than usual. After a few months, her drugs had an effect she never anticipated. They caused life- threatening liver damage and brought her on the edge of cirrhosis. So please read this part very carefully because if you are taking drugs regularly, you are exhausting your liver. When you feel tired without any reason, it's usually the liver trying to tell you that it needs some rest. The liver was never intended to process the chemicals inside drugs. This is why most people who have been taking pills for a long time are drained of energy, which ought to be there to fight the disease. Pharmaceutical companies are not evil incarnate like some people think, but they're no charities either. Their drugs do work most of the time, yet they are designed to extract the maximum amount of money from their customers. From you. So, if they can treat the symptoms but not the root cause, then it's perfect. Because they want to keep you hooked for life. But your liver and your wallet might not appreciate it. The doctor told Mary that she needed to cut the medication altogether. So, her impossible choice was between dying from liver damage or risking a heart attack or stroke due to high blood pressure.