How Chlorine Dioxide brought a doctor and young boy back to health.
“What if I told you that people have been needlessly suffering and dying from diseases like cancer, AIDS, Lyme disease and a virtually endless list of viral and bacterial infections?”
So begins The Universal Antidote, a documentary on the untapped healing potential of a substance called chlorine dioxide. Among the illnesses on that opening list, it was the word Lyme that stopped me. I wrote a book on Lyme, a disease which, when advanced, is a devious and unforgiving infection that can destroy lives.
…Dr. M was her own first chlorine dioxide patient, and she bought it like many thousands do in scores of countries worldwide—without a prescription (none is needed) and online. Following the book’s protocol, she gradually increased her dose from a single drop diluted in water to thirty-three drops daily, sipped over the course of the day. After three months, “I felt amazing,” she said. “I felt, like, as good as I’d felt in ten years.” And she still does.
…Dr. M’s own experiment, “on myself,” she said, involved slowly building up her chlorine dioxide dose to avoid unpleasant Herxheimer’s reactions, which occur when the body’s ability to eliminate killed pathogens is overwhelmed.
“I’d read enough to feel confident that a slow, measured ramp-up titrated to my symptoms would not hurt, and could potentially help,” she said. At the same time, “We’re doing things to support detoxing from all the junk that we’re stirring up. And we’re not pushing so hard that they’re just getting too much die-off, like, too much killing at once.” Among these are a binder to help eliminate toxins, Epsom salts, chlorine dioxide baths, and glutathione.
I decided to highlight Lyme disease in this article—at the risk of raising false hope—because Dr. M is not alone. Her journey aligns with testimonials of other Lyme patients, including one who was able to clear herself of an intractable tick-associated infection called bartonella after rounds of other therapies. I fully acknowledge these are anecdotes.