Is Lorazepam a wonder drug which lessens the symptoms of environmental illness.
But is it being kept from us, out of fear the public will realise that all disease is caused by how our own genetic profile interacts with substances in our environment.
Environmental illness is symptoms caused by being exposed to something in our environment.
Allopathic drs however are not allowed to investigate cause, and are not even allowed to suggest an environmental cause of a patients symptoms. They are not environmental medicine doctors so it does not fit into the paradigm of allopathic medicine.
In New Zealand it is particularly bad, so much so, that patients can’t get an appointment with an environmental doctor, like a toxicologist. The regulatory environment has effectively banned them from practising in New Zealand.
This is why in New Zealand, doctors never test patients for glyphosate poisoning or for harm from metals or vaccines, or from any other environmental cause. They are not allowed to.
Lorazepam is a benzodiazepine commonly prescribed for anxiety. But it is also prescribed by some doctors, off label, for nerve pain or to suppress the central nervous system(cns). Suppressing the cns makes us less sensitive to everything in the environment.
I recently had the opportunity to see what happens when someone with asthma and executive dysfunction is given 1mg of lorazepam. It was quite amazing.
Once it started working, the patient exclaimed with much excitement that they can’t ever remember finding it so easy to breathe. He didn’t require his asthma inhaler that day either. The executive dysfunction also disappeared and the patient got up and spent the day doing chores and being happy. He had never felt so good since he was a child and he could breathe, and spent the day busy.
Asthma can be a terrifying condition and all it took to stop it was lorazepam, for a whole 12 hours. The swelling in the patients face that was often present, also went down and he looked great.
This indicated to me that his asthma and executive dysfunction are an environmental illness, as suppressing the cns makes us less reactive to the environment. Less hypersensitive to it.
Most days that I go out, I see many older people with swelling on their face which usually starts at the top of the nose and goes to their cheek bones, in a curve down each side of the face.
This is an indicator of environmental illness and could be confirmed by taking lorazepam to make them less sensitive to the environment, and observing what happens.
I am also prescribed lorazepam. Because my condition is quite severe, I’m on 5mg per day. It stops my oxygen saturation plummeting and helps with the swelling of my tongue, throat and face, although I require adrenaline to stop my lymph system being swollen all the time.
I use to be prescribed lorazepam each time I went to Bali as the heat makes allergies and hypersensitivities more severe, so it was a no brainer that it would help. It was just very difficult getting a doctor to listen.
Not having to suffer from plummeting o2 saturation, or tachycardia everyday makes it worth it. It also keeps my throat and tongue from swelling up causing an anaphylactic type reaction and it’s easier to get rid of fluid in my lungs from my bodies detox process trying to deal with the bone cement.
Unless I can get the bone cement removed from my back, I will have to be on lorazepam the rest of my life.
If you’re an asthmatic, have you ever tried lorazepam, and what was the outcome. Or, if you have swelling in your face, that your doctor may have said is due to age, what happens when you take lorazepam.
I do wonder, that when it can help so many people and help diagnosis, then why isn’t it being prescribed more widely.
Is it being purposely limited so that it doesn’t become obvious to the public that their illness is related to environmental causes? That would not surprise me after what I’ve witnessed in the health system.
With my asthmatic friend, the outcome wasn’t so good. He went to his doctor, told him he had tried 1mg of lorazepam and how it affected his asthma, how it worked much better than the inhalers.
Unfortunately he left the doctors empty handed, when it could have improved his life so much.
I’m interested in what you think about this?
What experiences have you had?
Avoid it. It is addictive and habituating which means its effects lessen over time. Mark is a special circumstance
OMG Benzos are SO dangerous. Be careful. You are absolutely nuts to promote this. I am literally on a plane right now to help my 44 year old PhD nephew who is completely bedridden and on medical disability because of the damage Benzos have done to his body. Beware.