Anyone consuming raw milk from healthy free range, grass feed cows, goats?
I've been reading about it and watching youtube videos for a while about how good raw milk is for our bodies. I live in a state where raw milk is "illegal", so I may be purchasing me a goat here in a little while. First though I'm gonna ask a few people around here that may still be milking a cow for themselves.
But I've heard many times how milk is very similar to blood. "And quoting from George Cheyne, he wrote, "Milk and sweet sound blood differ in nothing but color: milk is blood." "
and here's another tid-bit from this page.
"To cure disease we should seek to improve elimination, to make better blood and more blood, to build up the body resistance. The method used tends to accomplish these things. Blood conditions rapidly improve and the general condition and resistance is built up and recovery follows. In several instances, Osler (Principles and Practices of Medicine, by William Osler, MD eighth edition) speaks of milk as being nothing more than white blood. Milk resembles blood closely and is a useful agent for improving and making new and better blood. Blood is the chief agent of metabolism. Milk is recognized in medical literature almost exclusively as a useful food and is admitted to be a complete food." Here's a link to that page with that information. Milk Cures It's basically a page describing how raw milk was used to treat some certain illnesses.
I've also read how it has the main amino acids that our bodies use to make ourselves. It has the essential eight and with the essential eight our body is able to produce the rest of em. The ones that are called essential are named so because we need to get em from our enviroment, then the remaining are made from the essential eight. "Our bodies use amino acids as building blocks for protein. Depending on who you ask, we need 20-22 of them for this task. Eight of them are considered essential, in that we have to get them from our food. The remaining 12-14 we can make from the first eight via complex metabolic pathways in our cells."
Here's a link to this page. A Brief Overview Of The Health Benefits Of Raw Milk
I suppose I just wanted to share and learn from those that are consuming raw milk. I've yet to find a source but I will soon. And I wanted to share info for all to learn from so we can all one day go to our source of food and be able to consume living foods that support our bodies natural abilities. The more we all learn the more options we'll have to generate a civilization that promotes life.
I've been reading about it and watching youtube videos for a while about how good raw milk is for our bodies. I live in a state where raw milk is "illegal", so I may be purchasing me a goat here in a little while. First though I'm gonna ask a few people around here that may still be milking a cow for themselves.
But I've heard many times how milk is very similar to blood. "And quoting from George Cheyne, he wrote, "Milk and sweet sound blood differ in nothing but color: milk is blood." "
and here's another tid-bit from this page.
"To cure disease we should seek to improve elimination, to make better blood and more blood, to build up the body resistance. The method used tends to accomplish these things. Blood conditions rapidly improve and the general condition and resistance is built up and recovery follows. In several instances, Osler (Principles and Practices of Medicine, by William Osler, MD eighth edition) speaks of milk as being nothing more than white blood. Milk resembles blood closely and is a useful agent for improving and making new and better blood. Blood is the chief agent of metabolism. Milk is recognized in medical literature almost exclusively as a useful food and is admitted to be a complete food." Here's a link to that page with that information. Milk Cures It's basically a page describing how raw milk was used to treat some certain illnesses.
I've also read how it has the main amino acids that our bodies use to make ourselves. It has the essential eight and with the essential eight our body is able to produce the rest of em. The ones that are called essential are named so because we need to get em from our enviroment, then the remaining are made from the essential eight. "Our bodies use amino acids as building blocks for protein. Depending on who you ask, we need 20-22 of them for this task. Eight of them are considered essential, in that we have to get them from our food. The remaining 12-14 we can make from the first eight via complex metabolic pathways in our cells."
Here's a link to this page. A Brief Overview Of The Health Benefits Of Raw Milk
I suppose I just wanted to share and learn from those that are consuming raw milk. I've yet to find a source but I will soon. And I wanted to share info for all to learn from so we can all one day go to our source of food and be able to consume living foods that support our bodies natural abilities. The more we all learn the more options we'll have to generate a civilization that promotes life.
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