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When I first mention to clients that they need a minimum
of 12 colonics or many more enemas than 12 during a fasting or cleansing program
they are inevitably shocked. To most it seems that no one in their right mind would
recommend such a treatment, and that I must certainly be motivated by greed or some
kind of a psychological quirk. Then I routinely show them reproductions of X-rays
of the large intestine showing obvious loss of normal structure and function resulting
from a combination of constipation, the effects of gravity, poor abdominal muscle
tone, emotional stress, and poor diet. In the average colon more than 50% of the
hastrum (muscles that impel fecal matter through the organ) are dysfunctional due
to loss of tone caused by impaction of fecal matter and/or constriction of the large
intestine secondary to stress (holding muscular tension in the abdominal area) and
straining during bowel movement.
A typical diseased colon
The average person also has a prolapsed (sagging) transverse
colon, and a distorted misplaced ascending and descending colon. I took a course
in colon therapy before purchasing my first colonic machine. The chiropractor teaching
the class required all of his patients scheduled for colonics to take a barium enema
followed by an X-ray of their large intestine prior to having colonics and then make
subsequent X-rays after each series of 12 colonics. Most of his patients experienced
so much immediate relief they voluntarily took at least four complete series, or
48 colonics, before their X-rays began to look normal in terms of structure. It also
took about the same number, 48 colonics, for the patients to notice a significant
improvement in the function of the colon. In reviewing over 10,000 X-rays taken at
his clinic prior to starting colonics, the chiropractor had seen only two normal
colon X-rays and these were from farm boys who grew up eating simple foods from the
garden and doing lots of hard work.
The X-rays showed that it took a minimum of 12 colon treatments
to bring about a minimal but observable change in the structure of the colon in the
desired direction, and for the patient to begin to notice that bowel function was
improving, plus the fact that they started to feel better. 
A Healthy Colon
From my point of view the most amazing part of this whole
experience was that the chiropractor did not recommend any dietary changes whatsoever.
His patients were achieving great success from colonics alone. I had thought dietary
changes would be necessary to avoid having the same dismal bowel condition return.
I still think colonics are far more effective if people are on a cleansing diet too.
However, I was delighted to see the potential for helping people through colonics.
For me, the most interesting part of this colonic school
was that I personally was required to have my own barium enema and X-ray. I was privately
certain that mine would look normal, because after all, I had been on a raw food
diet for six years, and done considerable amount of fasting, all of which was reputed
to repair a civilized colon. Much to my surprise my colon looked just as mangled
and dysfunctional as everyone else's', only somewhat worse because it had a loop
in the descending colon similar to a cursive letter "e" which doctors call
a volvulus. Surgeons like to cut volvululii out because they frequently cause bowel
obstructions. It seemed quite unfair. All those other people with lousy looking colons
had been eating the average American diet their whole life, but I had been so ‘pure!'
On further reflection I remembered that I had a tendency
toward constipation all through my childhood and young adulthood, and that during
my two pregnancies the pressure of the fetus on an already constipated bowel had
made it worse resulting in the distorted structure seen in the X-ray. This experience
made it very clear that fasting, cleansing diets, and corrected diet would not reverse
damage already done. Proper diet and fasting would however, prevent the condition
of the colon from getting any worse than it already was.
I then realized that I had just purchased the very tool I
needed to correct my own colon, and I was eager to get home to get started on it.
I had previously thought that I was just going to use this machine for my patients,
because they had been asking for this kind of an adjunct to my services for some
time. I ended up giving myself over a hundred colonics at the rate of three a week
over many months. I then out of curiosity had another barium enema and X-ray to validate
my results. Sure enough the picture showed a colon that looked far more ‘normal'
with no vulvulus. That little "e" had disappeared.
What Is Constipation?
Most people think they are not constipated because they have
a bowel movement almost every day, accomplished without straining. I have even had
clients tell me that they have a bowel movement once a week, and they are quite certain
that they are not constipated. The most surprising thing to novice fasters is that
repeated enemas or colonics during fasting begins to release many pounds of undeniably
real, old, caked fecal matter and/or huge mucus strings. The first-time faster can
hardly believe these were present. These old fecal deposits do not come out the first
time one has enemas or necessarily the fifth time. And all of them will not be removed
by the tenth enema. But over the course of extended fasting or a long spell of light
raw food eating with repeated daily enemas, amazing changes do begin to occur. It
seems that no one who has eaten a civilized diet has escaped the formation of caked
deposits lining the colon's walls, interfering with its function. This material does
not respond to laxatives or casually administered enemas.
Anyone who has not actually seen (and smelled) what comes
out of an "average" apparently healthy person during colonics will really
believe it could happen or can accurately imagine it. Often there are dark black
lumpy strings, lumps, or gravel, evil smelling discs shaped like sculpted hemispheres
similar to the pockets lining the wall of the colon itself. These discs are rock-hard
and may come out looking like long black braids. There may also be long tangled strings
of gray/brown mucous, sheets and flakes of mucous, and worse yet, an occasional worm
(tape worm) or many smaller ones. Once confronted however, it is not hard to imagine
how these fecal rocks and other obnoxious debris interfere with the proper function
of the colon. They make the colon's wall rigid and interfere with peristalsis thus
leading to further problems with constipation, and interfere with adsorption of nutrients.
Our modern diet is by its "de-"nature, very constipating.
In the trenches of the First World War, cheese was given the name ‘chokem ass' because
the soldiers eating this as a part of their daily ration developed severe constipation.
Eaten by itself or with other whole foods, moderate amounts of cheese may not produce
health problems in people who are capable of digesting dairy products. But cheese
when combined with white flour becomes especially constipating. White bread or most
white-flour crackers contain a lot of gluten, a very sticky wheat protein that makes
the bread bind together and raise well. But white flour is lacking the bran, where
most of the fiber is located. And many other processed foods are missing their fiber.
In an earlier chapter I briefly showed how digestion works
by following food from the mouth to the large intestine. To fully grasp why becoming
constipated is almost a certainty in our civilization a few more details are required.
Food leaving the small intestine is called chyme, a semi-liquid mixture of fiber,
undigested bits, indigestible bits, and the remains of digestive enzymes. Chyme is
propelled through the large intestine by muscular contractions. The large intestine
operates on what I dub the "chew chew train" principle, where the most
recent meal you ate enters the large intestine as the caboose (the last car of a
train) and helps to push out the train engine (the car at the front that toots),
which in a healthy colon should represent the meal eaten perhaps twelve hours earlier.
The muscles in the colon only contract when they are stretched, so it is the volume
of the fecal matter stretching the large intestine that triggers the muscles to push
the waste material along toward the rectum and anus.
Eating food lacking fiber greatly reduces the volume of the
chyme and slows peristalsis. But moving through fast or slow, the colon still keeps
on doing another of its jobs, which is to transfer the water in the chime back into
the bloodstream, reducing dehydration. So the longer chime remains in the colon,
the dryer and harder and stickier it gets. That's why once arrived at the "end
of the tracks" fecal matter should be evacuated in a timely manner before it
gets to dry and too hard to be moved easily. Some constipated people do have a bowel
movement every day but are evacuating the meal eaten many days or even a week previously.
Most hygienists believe that when the colon becomes lined
with hardened fecal matter it is permanently and by the very definition of the word
itself, constipated. This type of constipation is not perceived as an uncomfortable
or overly full feeling or a desire to have a bowel movement that won't pass. But
it has insidious effects. Usually constipation delays transit time, increasing the
adsorption of toxins generated from misdigestion of food; by coating and locking
up significant portions of colon it also reduces the adsorption of certain minerals
and electrolytes.
Sometimes, extremely constipated people have almost constant
runny bowels because the colon has become so thickly and impenetrably lined with
old fecal matter that it no longer removes much moisture. This condition is often
misinterpreted as diarrhea. The large intestine's most important task is to transfer
water-soluble minerals from digested food to the blood. When a significant part of
the colon's surface becomes coated with impermeable dried rigid fecal matter or mucus
it can no longer assimilate effectively and the body begins to experience partial
mineral starvation in the presence of plenty. It is my observation from dozens of
cases that when the colon has been effectively cleansed the person has a tendency
to gain weight while eating amounts of food that before only maintained body weight,
while people who could not gain weight or who were wasting away despite eating heavily
begin to gain. And problems like soft fingernails, bone loss around teeth or porous
bones tend to improve.
The Development Of My Own Constipation
The history of my own constipation, though it especially
relates to a very rustic childhood, is typical of many people. I was also raised
on a very constipating diet which consisted largely of processed cheese and crackers.
Mine was accelerated by shyness, amplified by lack of comfortable facilities.
I spent my early years on the Canadian prairies, where everybody
had an outhouse. The fancy modern versions are frequently seen on construction sites.
These are chemical toilets, quiet different than the ones I was raised with because
somebody or something mysteriously comes along, empties them and installs toilet
paper. The ones I'm familiar with quickly developed a bad-smelling steaming mound
in the center--or it was winter when the outhouse was so cold that everything froze
almost before it hit the ground in the hole below. (And my rear end seemed to almost
freeze to the seat!) The toilet paper was usually an out of season issue of Eatons
mail order catalogue with crisp glossy paper. Perhaps it is a peculiarity of the
north country, but at night there are always monsters lurking along the path to the
outhouse, and darkness comes early and stays late.
When nature called and it was daylight, and there was no
blizzard outside, the outhouse received a visit from me. If on the other hand, when
it was dark (we had no electricity), and there was a cold wind creating huge banks
of snow, I would ‘just skip it,' because the alternative--an indoor chamber pot,
white enamel with a lid--was worse. This potty had to be used more or less publicly
because the bedrooms were shared and there was no indoor bathroom. I was always very
modest about my private parts and private functions, and potty's were only used in
emergencies, and usually with considerable embarrassment. No one ever explained to
me that it was not good for me to retain fecal matter, and I never thought about
it unless my movements became so hard that it was painful to eliminate.
Later in life, I continued this pattern of putting off bowel
movements, even though outhouses and potties were a thing of the past. As a young
adult I could always think of something more interesting to do than sitting on a
pot, besides it was messy and sometimes accompanied by embarrassing sound effects
which were definitely not romantic if I was in the company of a young man. During
two pregnancies the tendency to constipation was aggravated by the weight of the
fetus resting on an already sluggish bowel, and the discomfort of straining to pass
my first hard bowel movement after childbirth with a torn perineum I won't forget.
Rapid Relief From Colon Cleansing
During fasting the liver is hard at work processing toxins
released from fat and other body deposits. The liver still dumps its wastes into
the intestines through the bile duct. While eating normally, bile, which contains
highly toxic substances, is passed through the intestines and is eliminated before
too much is reabsorbed. (It is the bile that usually makes the fecal matter so dark
in color.) However, reduction of food bulk reduces or completely eliminates peristalsis,
thus allowing intestinal contents to sit for extended periods. And the toxins in
the bile are readsorbed, forming a continuous loop, further burdening the liver.
The mucus membranes lining the colon constantly secrete lubricants
to ease fecal matter through smoothly. This secretion does not stop during fasting;
in fact, it may increase because intestinal mucus often becomes a secondary route
of elimination. Allowed to remain in the bowel, toxic mucus is an irritant while
the toxins in it may be reabsorbed, forming yet another closed loop and further burdening
the liver.
Daily enemas or colonics administered during fasting or while
on cleansing diets effectively remove old fecal material stored in the colon and
immediately ease the livers load, immediately relieve discomfort by allowing the
liver's efforts to further detoxify the blood, and speed healing. Fasters cleansing
on juice or raw food should administer two or three enemas in short succession every
day for the first three days to get a good start on the cleansing process, and then
every other day or at very minimum, every few days. Enemas or colonics should also
be taken whenever symptoms become uncomfortable, regardless of whether you have already
cleaned the colon that day or not. Once the faster has experienced the relief from
symptoms that usually comes from an enema they become more than willing to repeat
this mildly unpleasant experience.
Occasionally enemas, by filling the colon and making it press
on the liver, induce discharges of highly toxic bile that may cause temporary nausea.
Despite the induced nausea it is still far better to continue with colonics because
of the great relief experienced after the treatment. If nausea exists or persists
during colon cleansing, consider trying slight modifications such as less or no massage
of the colon in the area of the gall bladder (abdominal area close to the bottom
of the right rib cage), and putting slightly less water in the colon when filling
it up. It also helps to make sure that the stomach is empty of any fluid for one
hour prior to the colonic. Resume drinking after the colonic sessions is completed.
If you are one of these rare people who ‘toss their bile', just keep a plastic bucket
handy and some water to rinse out the mouth after, and carry on as usual.
Enemas Versus Colonics
People frequently wonder what is the difference between a
colonic and an enema.
First of all enemas are a lot cheaper because you give them
to yourself; an enema bag usually costs about ten dollars, is available at any large
drug store, and is indefinitely reusable. Colonics cost anywhere from 30 to 75 dollars
a session.
Chiropractors and naturopaths who offer this service hire
a colonic technician that may or may not be a skilled operator. It is a good idea
to find a person who has a very agreeable and professional manner, who can make you
feel at ease since relaxation is very important. It is also beneficial to have a
colonic therapist who massages the abdomen and foot reflexes appropriately during
the session.
Enemas and colonics can accomplish exactly the same beneficial
work. But colonics accomplish more improvement in less time than enemas for several
reasons. During a colonic from 30 to 50 gallons of water are flushed through the
large intestines, usually in a repetitive series of fill-ups followed by flushing
with a continuous flow of water. This efficiency cannot even be approached with an
enema. But by repeating the enema three times in close succession a satisfactory
cleanse can be achieved. Persisted with long enough, enemas will clean the colon
every bit as well as a colonic machine can.
Enemas given at home take a lot less time than traveling
to receive a colonics at someone's clinic, and can be done entirely at you own convenience--a
great advantage when fasting because you can save your energy for internal healing.
But colonics are more appropriate for some. There are fasters who are unable to give
themselves an enema either because their arms are too short and their body is too
long and they lack flexibility, or because of a physical handicap or they can't confront
their colon, so they let someone else do it. Some don't have the motivation to give
themselves a little discomfort but are comfortable with someone else doing it to
them. Some very sick people are too weak to cleanse their own colon, so they should
find someone to assist them with an at-home enema or have someone take them to a
colonic therapist.
Few people these days have any idea how to properly give
themselves an enema. The practice has been discredited by traditional medical doctors
as slightly dangerous, perhaps addictive and a sign of psychological weirdness. Yet
Northamericans on their civilized, low fiber, poorly combined diets suffer widely
from constipation. One proof of this is the fact that chemical laxatives, with their
own set of dangers and liabilities, occupy many feet of drug store shelf space and
are widely advertised. Is the medical profession's disapproval of the enema related
to the fact that once the initial purchase of an enema bag has been made there are
no further expenses for laxatives? Or perhaps it might be that once a person discovers
they can cure a headache, stop a cold dead in its tracks with an enema, they aren't
visiting the M.D.s so often.
The enema has also been wrongly accused of causing a gradual
loss of colon muscle tone, eventually preventing bowel movements without the stimulation
of an enema, leading finally to flaccidity and enlargement of the lower bowel. This
actually can happen; when it does occur it is the result of frequent administration
of small amounts of water (fleet enemas) for the purpose of stimulating a normal
bowel movement. The result is constant stretching of the rectum without sufficient
fluid to enter the descending colon. A completely opposite, highly positive effect
comes from properly administered enemas while cleansing.
The difference between helpful and potentially harmful enemas
lies in the amount of water injected and the frequency of use. Using a cup or two
of water to induce a bowel movement may eventually cause dependency, will not strengthen
the colon and may after years of this practice, result in distention and enlargement
of the rectum or sigmoid colon. However, a completely empty average-sized colon has
the capacity of about a gallon of water. When increasingly larger enemas are administered
until the colon is nearly emptied of fecal matter and the injection of close to a
gallon of water is achieved, beneficial exercise and an increase in overall muscle
tone are the results.
Correctly given, enemas (and especially colonics) serve as
strengthening exercises for the colon. This long tubular muscle is repeatedly and
completely filled with water, inducing it to vigorously exercise while evacuating
itself multiple times. The result is a great increase in muscle tone, acceleration
of peristalsis and eventually, after several dozens of repetitions, a considerable
reduction of transit time. Well-done enemas work the colon somewhat less effectively
and do not improve muscle tone quite as much as colonics.
Injecting an entire gallon of water with an enema bag is
very impractical when a person is eating normally. But on a light cleansing diet
or while fasting the amount of new material passing into the colon is small or negligible.
During the first few days of fasting if two or three enemas are administered each
day in immediate succession the colon is soon completely emptied of recently eaten
food and it becomes progressively easier to introduce larger amounts of water. Within
a few days of this regimen, injecting half a gallon or more of water is easy and
painless.
Probably for psychological reasons, some peoples' colons
allow water to be injected one time but then "freeze up" and resist successive
enemas. For this reason better results are often obtained by having one enema, waiting
a half hour, another enema, wait a half hour, and have a final enema.
A colonic machine in the hands of an expert operator can
administer the equivalent of six or seven big enemas in less than one hour, and do
this without undue discomfort or effort from the person receiving the colonic. However,
the AMA has suppressed the use of colonics; they are illegal to administer in many
states. Where colonics are legal, the chiropractors now consider this practice messy
and not very profitable compared to manipulations. So it is not easy to find a skilled
and willing colonic technician.
Anyone who plans to give themselves therapeutic enemas while
fasting would be well advised to first seek out a colonic therapist and receive two
or three colonics delivered one day apart while eating lightly and then immediately
begin the fast. Three colonics given on three successive days of a light, raw food
diet are sufficient to empty all recently eaten food even from a very constipated,
distended and bloated colon, while acquainting a person with their own bowel. Having
an empty colon is actually a pleasant and to most people a thoroughly novel experience.
A few well-delivered colonics can quickly accustom a person to the sensations accompanying
the enema and demonstrate the effect to be achieved by oneself with an enema bag,
something not quickly discoverable any other way.
How To Give Yourself An Enema
Enemas have been medically out of favor for a long time.
Most people have never had one. So here are simple directions to self-administer
an effective enema series.
The enema bag you select is important. It must hold at least
two quarts and be rapidly refillable. The best American-made brand is made of rubber
with about five feet of rubber hose ending in one of two different white hard plastic
insertion tips. The bag is designed for either enemas or vaginal douches. It hangs
from a detachable plastic "S" hook. When filled to the brim it holds exactly
one-half gallon. The maker of this bag offers another model that costs about a dollar
more and also functions as a hot water bottle. A good comforter it may make, but
the dual purpose construction makes the bag very awkward to rapidly refill. I recommend
the inexpensive model.
The plastic insertion tips vary somewhat. The straight tubular
tip is intended for enemas; the flared vaginal douche tip can be useful for enemas
too, in that it somewhat restrains unintentional expulsion of the nozzle while filling
the colon. However, its four small holes do not allow a very rapid rate of flow.
To give yourself an enema, completely fill the bag with tepid
water that does not exceed body temperature. The rectum is surprisingly sensitive
to heat and you will flinch at temperatures only a degree or two higher than 98 Fahrenheit.
Cooler water is no problem; some find the cold stimulating and invigorating. Fasters
having difficulty staying warm should be wary of cold water enemas. These can drop
core body temperature below the point of comfort.
Make sure the flow clamp on the tube is tightly shut and
located a few inches up the tube from the nozzle. Hang the filled bag from a clothes
or towel hook, shower nozzle, curtain rod, or other convenient spot about four to
five feet above the bathroom floor or tub bottom. The higher the bag the greater
the water pressure and speed of filling. But too much pressure can also be uncomfortable.
You may have to experiment a bit with this.
Various body positions are possible for filling the colon.
None is correct or necessarily more effective than another. Experiment and find the
one you prefer. Some fill their colon kneeling and bending forward in the bathtub
or shower because there will likely be small dribbles of water leaking from around
the nozzle. Usually these leaks do not contain fecal matter. Others prefer to use
the bathroom floor. For the bony, a little padding in the form of a folded towel
under knees and elbows may make the process more comfortable. You may kneel and bend
over while placing your elbows or hands on the floor, reach behind yourself and insert
the nozzle. You may also lie on your back or on your side. Some think the left side
is preferable because the colon attaches to the rectum on the left side of the body,
ascends up the left side of the abdomen to a line almost as high as the solar plexus,
then transverses the body to the right side where it descends again on the right
almost to the groin. The small intestine attaches to the colon near its lower-right
extremity. In fact these are the correct names given for the parts of the colon:
Ascending, Descending and Transverse Colon along with the Sigmoid Colon or Rectum
at the exit end.
As you become more expert at filling your colon with water
you will begin to become aware of its location by the weight, pressure and sometimes
temperature of the water you're injecting. You will come to know how much of the
colon has been filled by feel. You will also become aware of peristalsis as the water
is evacuated vigorously and discover that sensations from a colon hard at work, though
a bit uncomfortable, are not necessarily pain.
Insertion of the nozzle is sometimes eased with a little
lubricant. A bit of soap or KY jelly is commonly used. If the nozzle can be inserted
without lubricant it will have less tendency to slip out. However, do not tear or
damage the anus by avoiding necessary lubrication. After insertion, grip the clamp
with one hand and open it. The flow rate can be controlled with this clamp. Keeping
a hand on the clamp also prevents the nozzle from being expelled.
Water will begin flowing into the colon. Your goal is to
empty the entire bag into the colon before sensations of pressure or urgency to evacuate
the water force you to remove the nozzle and head for the toilet. Relaxation of mind
and body helps achieve this. You are very unlikely to achieve a half-gallon fill
up on the first attempt. If painful pressure is experienced try closing the clamp
for a moment to allow the water to begin working its way around the obstacle. Or,
next time try hanging the bag lower, reducing its height above the body and thus
lowering the water pressure. Or, try opening the clamp only partially. Or, try panting
hard, so as to make the abdomen move rapidly in and out, sort of shaking the colon.
This last technique is particularly good to get the water past a blockage of intestinal
gas.
It is especially important for Americans, whose culture does
not teach one to be tolerant of discomfort, to keep in mind that pain is the body's
warning that actual damage is being done to tissues. Enemas can do no damage and
pose no risk except to that rare individual with weak spots in the colon's wall from
cancers. When an enema is momentarily perceived unpleasantly, the correct name for
the experience is a sensation, not pain. You may have to work at increasing your
tolerance for unpleasant sensations or it will take you a long time to achieve the
goal of totally filling the colon with water. Be brave! And relax. A wise philosopher
once said that it is a rough Universe in which only the tigers survive--and sometimes
they have a hard time.
Eventually it will be time to remove the nozzle and evacuate
the water. Either a blockage (usually fecal matter, an air bubble, or a tight ‘U'
turn in the colon, usually at either the splenetic, or hepatic flexures located right
below the rib cage) will prevent further inflow (undesirable) or else the bag will
completely empty (good!) or the sensation of bursting will no longer be tolerable.
Go sit on the toilet and wait until all the water has passed. Then refill the bag
and repeat the process. Each time you fill the colon it will allow more water to
enter more easily with less unpleasantness. Fasters and cleansers should make at
least three attempts at a complete fill-up each time they do an enema session.
Water and juice fasters will find that after the first few
enemas, it will become very easy to inject the entire half-gallon of water. That
is because there is little or no chime entering the colon. After a few days the entire
colon will seem (this is incorrect) to be empty except when it is filled with water.
This is the point to learn an advanced self-administered enema technique. An average
colon empty of new food will usually hold about one gallon of water. That is average.
A small colon might only hold 3/4 gallon, a large one might accept a gallon and a
half, or even more. You'll need to learn to simultaneously refill the bag while injecting
water, so as to achieve a complete irrigation of the whole colon. There are several
possible methods. You might try placing a pitcher or half-gallon mason jar of tepid
water next to the bag and after the bag has emptied the first time, stand up while
holding the tube in the anus, refill the bag and then lie down again and continue
filling. You might have an assistant do this for you. You might try hanging the bag
from the shower head and direct a slow, continuous dribble of lukewarm water from
the shower into the bag while you kneel or lie relaxed in the tub. This way the bag
will never empty and you stop filling only when you feel fullness and pressure all
the way back to the beginning of the ascending colon. Of course, hanging from a slowly
running shower head the bag will probably overflow and you will get splashed and
so will the bathroom floor when your wet body moves rapidly from the tub to the toilet.
I've imagined making an enema bag from a two gallon plastic bucket with a small plastic
hose barb glued into a hole drilled in the bottom or lower edge. If I were in the
business of manufacturing enema bags I'd make them hold at least one gallon.
A word of caution to those folks who have a pattern of overdoing
it, or tend to think that more is better. This is not true when it comes to colon
cleansing. Do not make more than three attempts to fill and clean the colon with
an enema bag. Usually the colon begins to protest and won't accept any more fill-ups.
When having colonics on a colonic machine it is a good idea to continue until the
water comes back reasonably clear for that session. It is not a good idea for a faster
to have colonics that last more than three-quarters of an hour to an hour maximum,
or it will be too tiring. Even non-fasters find colonics tiring. After all, the colon
is basically a big muscle that has become very lazy on a low-fiber diet.
I've personally administered over five thousand colonics,
taught several dozen fasters to self-administer their own and stood by while they
gave themselves one until they were quite expert. In all that experience I've only
seen one person have a seriously bad result. This was a suicidally depressed water
faster that I (mistakenly) allowed to administer their own colonics with my machine.
This person not only took daily colonics, but allowed water to flow through their
colon for as long as two hours at a time. Perhaps they were trying to wash out their
mind? After several weeks of this extreme excess, the faster became highly confused
and disoriented due to a severe electrolyte imbalance. They had to be taken off water
fasting immediately and recovered their mental clarity in a few days. The loss of
blood electrolytes happened because during colonics there occurs a sort of low-grade
very slow reverse osmosis.
Curing With Enemas
It is not wise to continue regular colonics or enemas once
a detoxification program has been completed and you have returned to a maintenance
diet. The body should be allowed its regular functioning.
But because enemas immediately lower the toxic load on the
liver, I do recommend people use them for prevention of an acute illness (you feel
like you are coming down with something), and for the treatment of acute illnesses
such as a cold. I also like to take one if I have been away traveling for extended
periods, eating carelessly. But do not fall into a pattern of bingeing on bad food,
and then trying to get rid of it through colonics or laxative. This is bulimia, the
eating disorder discussed earlier.
The Sheltonite capital "N" Natural capital "H"
Hygienists do not recommend any colon cleansing, ever!. They think that the colon
will spontaneously cleanse itself on a long water fast, but my experience learned
from monitoring hundreds of fasters is that it doesn't really. Herbert Shelton also
considered colon cleansing enervating and therefore undesirable. Colon cleansing
does use the faster's energy but on the balance, colon cleansing saves more work
on the part of an overburdened liver than it uses up.
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