Fat Loss Secret: Get Rid Of Your Creepy Crawlers

If you are overweight or obese you need to know about what heretofore has been called a fat loss secret. In fact, you may be playing host to one or more uninvited guests known as parasites according to recent medical research. These creepy crawlers and alien invaders may have landed in your bowel tract. Their uninhibited colonization of your colon can cause some nasty symptoms and can be life threatening.

You can hardly avoid these parasites, there are some many types and kinds. You have heard some of the most common: pinworms, hookworms, roundworms, giardia, e-coli, candida (a yeast), liver flukes, trichinella, and salmonella. You are the ideal buffet meal for these little creepy crawlers. They love you! You have a nice warm and cozy colon, offer little resistance to their presence and you serve 3 meals a day. For a parasite, what’s not to like? However, you eventually will manifest symptoms of parasite infection: constipation, abdominal pain, fat and weight gain, bulging belly, chronic tiredness, and excess gas and more.

Parasites are alien, gross and ugly. Can you imagine the reaction of the woman who was shown a 30 long tapeworm that the doctor had just removed from her intestine? Or, consider the reaction of a man in his twenties when the doctor pulled out a handful of roundworms 9-12 long out of his intestines still wiggling. Many doctors will testify that these examples are not unusual. If you can stand to look, you can see parasites in action in the videos shown on the authors site URL below.

Your friend, the parasite, typically finds its way into your stomach through the ingestion of raw or under cooked pork, beef, or fish. They may also be in contaminated water or other liquid or on dirty hands. A lot of parasites enter your body un-noticed in your food hidden in teeny, tiny egg cases. The eggs pass through your stomach, hatch in your colon, and infect your whole bowel tract.

Fat and weight gain occurs over time as your body tries to protect you from the parasitic waste and other “junk” (defined below) inhabiting your colon. Parasitic waste (toxic) and “Junk” forms a plaque on your intestinal walls effectively shutting off the flow of nutrients through the intestinal walls. As the toxic plaque builds up on the colon and intestinal walls, the body lays down a barrier layer of fat, to prevent the spreading of poisons to the rest of your body.

This aforementioned plaque buildup is something relatively new in the world of medicine and human anatomy. Its danger is compounded since the 1960s by the newer synthetic foods, shelf life preservatives, additives, dyes, and chemically enhanced foods we eat today – the “junk” referred to earlier. Much of our daily processed food intake is hostile and nutritionally dead bearing little resemblance to that food which nourished our ancestors. The average American does not get enough fiber to eliminate all waste buildup in our bowel tracts. Our bodies cope with this influx of waste and “junk” by adding layers of fat. Eventually we become obese as our bodies contend with parasites, their waste buildup, plaqueing, and consequent barrier fat deposition.

Obesity is rampant in America today. Research data indicates a very high proportion of overweight and obese people do have some form of parasitic infection. The purpose of this article is to create an awareness that parasitic infestations of your bowel system can cause weight gain. In fact, maintaining your colon health could lead to significant fat and weight loss. A healthy colon does not have parasites.

Those of us who value our health understand and emphasize diet, portion control, calorie counting concepts and exercise in our daily regimen. However, that’s not all that we need to do create a healthy lifestyle. We need to be parasite aware. We need to screen ourselves for parasite infestations on a regular basis. We have the medicines and cleansing protocols to get rid of our parasites for good. We need to recognize that weight gain is not healthy and one big cause is a parasite infestation. Ridding ourselves of parasites is not a fat loss secret but prudent colon maintenance.

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