Over the course of the last 39 years, I have had bad systemic reactions to aluminium in vaccines, to two titanium spine implants, which both had to be removed, amalgam fillings as they had a galvanic reaction with my first spine implant, and bone cement used in surgery, which contains alumina.
Having possibly the best help on the planet between 2006 and 2009, I was diagnosed as hypersensitive to titanium. Hypersensitivity to mercury and aluminium are also now confirmed by multiple exposures.
Titanium hypersensitivity causes malfunctions of the autonomic functions of the body.
Aluminium hypersensitivity causes neurotoxic effects like ADHD, bipolar, schizophrenia, dementia, ptsd, and Alzheimer’s. Each is just a set of symptoms that indicates how much aluminium you are currently exposed to.
Mercury is also a neurotoxin and is associated with fatigue and flu like symptoms.
Dementia requires a higher level of exposure than adhd or bipolar for example, but once the metal is removed from the body, the patient is no longer hypersensitive, and more importantly, no longer has any symptoms.
If the patient was a baby or toddler when first affected, then their developing brain may have suffered permanent injury.
Some get relief straight away, upon removal, while others require a period of detoxification or chelation. From my experience as an inefficient detoxer, I don’t think speeding up detox is always a good idea. In some cases, cases like mine, it’s best to wait for the body to naturally detox out the metal, at its own speed. I am an inefficient detoxer for a reason. My metabolism knows the best speed to detox metals from me so as to avoid further harm.
Neurotoxic metals, or a hypersensitivity to them, causes neurotoxic symptoms, but my post today isn’t about aluminium, or mercury, it’s about whether we are controlled mainly by our mind or mainly by our metabolism.
Do we have free will or is it just an illusion. Is it our metabolism and not our own free thought that guides our actions? Is free thought even real, or is it just a product of everything we have read, heard and seen, and is it affected by our environment?
For the sake of simplicity, from here on, I will refer to the symptoms of metal neurotoxicity as metal intoxication.
Having had periods of metal intoxication at multiple times in my life, and also seeing the metal intoxication reversed, with neurological function completely back to normal, has given me insights into behaviour, thought, and even the words we choose to use. This confirms the role of environmental exposures.
I am not my intelligence, but an observer of my intelligence, so when going through these experiences, I was very much analysing what was going on with my actions and behaviours as well as those of others.
I was not normally an alcoholic when younger, but the years I suffered metal intoxication after being vaccinated with aluminium containing vaccines, I would be out partying for about 10 months. I would quit my job, and every chance I got was spent on sex, drugs and rock n roll.
Once the aluminium had detoxed out of me, I was back to normal. I was no longer an alcoholic and would get another job.
But what made me spend my time drinking. Was it my own free will?, or had my metabolism taken control. I also had about 4 amalgam fillings at this stage in my life. They usually caused no problems, but it’s known that aluminium potentiates it’s effects.
Drinking alcohol would have kept my methylation system busy, so it wouldn’t have been able to convert as much mercury from my amalgams from ethyl mercury to methyl mercury. This would have made me feel better.
Did my metabolism see the alcohol as solving a metabolic problem? Was it my metabolism that kept me reaching for the bottle on the years I got vaccinated?
After the aluminium had worn off, I no longer had the urge to drink and the aluminium wouldn’t be potentiating the negative effects of mercury and causing a problem.
Was my metabolism responsible for not reaching for the bottle anymore, as the metabolic problem had been sorted out a different way(the detoxification of the aluminium).
The answer came to me a few years later. A recent titanium spine implant that I became hypersensitive to, had a galvanic reaction with my amalgam fillings, which sped up the release of mercury vapour. I got acute mercury toxicity for many years.
Upon removal in 2009, a year after the implant was removed, I found I no longer enjoyed the taste of alcohol. To this day, it’s something I never have the urge to drink, and my theory is, it’s because I no longer have my amalgam fillings, which created the need to drink in years when vaccinated.
I no longer had a metabolic problem that was mitigated by alcohol keeping my methylation process busy.
I have since come across others who have gone off alcohol after amalgam extraction. They also stopped reaching for it, with no urge to do so. This indicates to me that the metabolism will take over our actions if they solve a metabolic problem.
The metabolism, will send the urge to drink to the mind, if it benefits the metabolism.
Amalgam extraction, should become integrated into the actions of organisations, like Alcoholics Anonymous groups. They would at least save some from thinking they are weak willed, which is not good for self esteem, and would be a great study into the effects of mercury and it’s affects on our behaviour.
Many people would find out they aren’t who they thought they were, and this can be a very scary prospect for some.
Metal intoxication has some very interesting and common traits. Talking fast, being argumentative, and like a dog at a bone is a sure sign of metal toxicity. I’m sure half the people on Facebook have metal intoxication, as many seem to fit the bill. They usually can’t help themselves from getting the last word in, no matter how it makes them look.
Another question to come out of my experiences, is whether it’s our metabolism that is deciding to lower or raise different nutrient levels in our body, in order to keep us from dying.
In 2020, after I developed titanium and aluminium hypersensitivity and bone cement implantation syndrome, I became hypersensitive to every other chemical in the environment, including to emf/emr. I was hypersensitised to the emr of sunlight and had to keep out of it. I was also hypersensitive to the emf of people, especially those also currently suffering from metal intoxication.
I also developed cardiac symptoms and autoimmune issues, although I prefer to call it a hyper immune response.
In April of 2020, my dr told me that if nothing was done soon, I might not make it. Surgery was urgently booked to remove the implant only, but a few months before this my vitamin c started plummeting. The lower it went, the better I was.
The lowering of my vitamin c, also lowered my tryptase levels, and this made me less hypersensitive to the environment.
The anaphylactic shock and severe anaphylaxis was not as often or severe. Was it my mind that decided to lower my vitamin c, or was it my metabolism. I ask this question because my vitamin c levels are down to zero and I’ve been unable to tolerate taking any vitamin c from any source.
With my dr recently putting me on hydrocortisone tablets, I’m hoping they will solve the metabolic problem keeping my body free of vitamin c. I was adrenal insufficient and the hydrocortisone has made a big difference. I can now brush my teeth with toothpaste without my oxygen saturation plummeting, so I’m hoping it will allow me to start raising my vitamin c levels again.
So was it my metabolism flushing the vitamin c from my body, to take care of the whole, to keep me alive? I believe it was, as no matter how hard I have tried to raise it over the last few years, it has always ended in failure.
My metabolism has been stronger than my mind, because it knows best.
This leads me to the thought of how we look at deficiencies in the human body, for they may not be deficiencies at all, but an attempt by the metabolism to function at its best with the pressure it’s under from the metals etc, and that once the bone cement is removed, it will solve that metabolic problem and my vitamin c would rise.
I say this with precedent, as I’ve come across implant allergy patients with lymes disease. After the implant is removed, the Lyme disease disappeared, as though the body now had more resources to fight it.
I could go on, with other stories of addiction to painkillers, that once the problem of pain was mitigated, I no longer reached for the codeine, with no withdrawal symptoms.
From all these experiences, and those of many other implant allergy patients, I’ve come to the conclusion that it’s our metabolism that has more control of our actions and behaviours than our mind, for it’s the metabolisms job, to keep everything functioning the best it can, with the environmental stress it’s under, and the resources it has.
In these instances, is it a good idea to let the metabolism do what it needs to do instead of fighting it with supplements?
When my vitamin d plummeted after having a dental filling put in that had titanium dioxide in it, I went to the dr and he checked my vitamin d. It had plummeted, and he prescribed me vitamin d. The symptoms, which were neurological in nature, were gone in 5 days.
Was it my metabolism that caused the symptoms of very low vitamin d in order to push me to go get some? To alert me to the issue that it had a problem it couldn’t solve on its own?
In my experiences it has been the best thing to listen to the wisdom of my metabolism, and it’s kept me alive until another solution to the metabolic problem it’s facing at the time is found.
Like the hydrocortisone hopefully. I have started taking vitamin c again, with no bad effects so far. Whether the hydrocortisone will solve that metabolic problem, will be known in a few weeks.
This also brings up the issue of the behaviour of children. Are they being naughty, or are they suffering an environmental exposure from the neurotoxic metals in vaccines and dental work.
It certainly pays to keep an eye on their behaviour for a few months at least, after any dental work or injections of any kind.
Terrific observations. I have said for time now that mental diseases are actually physical diseases because the brain is just a physical organ in the body. Your observation relating it specifically to metabolism is astute. And our metabolism is affected by every man-made toxin (and even a few natural ones) we come in contact with whether thru food and drink, eye and skin contact, air in the lungs, or to your point, implants into the body.
Just curious, but did you determine your hypersensitivity to titanium with specific tests, or personal observation?
Medicating with alcohol is a common pattern.
Vitamin D is more important than all other supplements put together.
Look at a few posts in vitamindwiki.com to be sure of this