Posted on 10/03/2024 1:51:23 PM PDT by week 71
Heart attacks were once thought of as a disease of age - but worrying new data shows they are increasing in healthy young adults.
Roughly 0.3 percent of Americans aged 18-44 had a heart attack in 2019 - but last year that rose to 0.5 percent, or one in 200.
While that may still seem like a relatively low number, it represents a 66 percent increase in cases in just four years, which doctors call 'alarming.' It also means that one in five heart attack patients are now younger than 40.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
You might study up on the COVID-19 Vaccine information from the Mayo Clinic:
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/coronavirus/in-depth/coronavirus-vaccine/art-20484859
Look at the chart in the article. Forget about the words in the article that are intentionally disguised to hide the relevant date these heart attacks began.
From the chart:
2019- .3%
2020- .3%
2021- .5%
That is all you need to know about what caused it.
Understanding Conditioning 2024
The most important exercise, is to understand what one is doing — and why they are doing it. The way exercise is usually taught, is just to do this and do that, and if you don’t like it, then you have to do more of it. So this conditioning is coercion rather than understanding — which is like getting a new toy, and rather than first reading the instructions for proper assembly and operation, one forces the parts together and destroys it in quick order — no matter how much force is applied.
The proper understanding of the human body is to note that the features that distinguish a human specimen from all the others — is the large brain, tool-manipulating grip, and feet that enables an upright posture. All human movements emphasize those functioning and expressions — whether they realize it or not. Some forms, have made it a deliberate study and discipline — which is the forerunner of health and healing (medicine).
Contemporary health issues often manifest at the extremities — where the circulation is poorest — as the most distant from the heart. However, the problem is not that the heart is not strong enough to push the fluids out to the extremities, as it is the muscles at the extremities do not help the heart in the circulatory process (function) by contracting in exercise to pump the blood out of the tissues that makes it easier for the always working heart to pump blood into that vacuum — which is the principle of fluid dynamics, or how fluid moves. That’s also how CPR works: you have to push the air out of the body, to allow atmospheric pressure (fresh air) to enter into that vacuum — and simply blowing more air into an already filled lung, is not going to do much good.
The heart is only a one pound muscular organ — while the rest of the musculature is 40–50% of the total bodyweight in most people. So the purpose of any exercise should not be to work the heart harder and faster, but to make the rest of the musculature aid in more powerfully optimizing the circulation — particularly in inactive and poorly conditioned bodies in which the skeletal muscles are doing nothing especially useful or productive. In that case, an intelligent and insightful person would ask, what can I do to best enhance my health for all other purposes — and that would simply and obviously be, optimizing the circulation that rids the body of toxic waste products (inflammation) and in doing so, create space for new nutrients to enter and keep the body at its highest health.
Understanding that, one would further realize that the greatest priority for doing so, should be at the greatest assets at the head, hands, and feet — and that doing so, implies the circulation through the rest of the body to get there. But that is not the case, if the focus and objective is merely to make the heart work harder and faster, or to focus on the core muscles closest to the heart. That does not recognize that the weakness of the circulation is at the extremities that in time, becomes the dementia and atrophy of the neck muscles, the weakened grip, the unsteady gait and balance which are the characteristic markers of individuals in declining health.
Any and all amounts of making the heart work harder and faster, or developing the abdominals and glutes do not address those problems — directly and powerfully — and in all probability, diverts those resources from where they would do the most good. Unfortunately, that is the popular paradigm of exercise that naturally fails for most people — no matter how much time, energy and effort they put into it — because it is flawed not to do what is most urgent to do as the priority.
Those are the exercises generally not done — if favor of everything else, that makes much less sense to — and will predictably be abandoned when one could benefit from the proper understanding and exercise most urgently — and beyond that, assure their lifelong highest functioning as long as they live. But that understanding is usually jettisoned in favor of some product or service that is more commercially lucrative as the ticket to health.
For this reason, the ancients were closer to the truth than most modern advice and practices for lifelong health and functioning throughout — in their fragmentation and specialization of exercise equipment and practices that head in this wrong direction. What the ancient observers understood, was that the essential pathways and connections to the center of the body, was the health and functioning at the head, hands and feet — which evolved into reflexology, acupuncture, wing chun, dance, rhythm gymnastics, etc.
Those are the fine motor skills of life — rather than the gross. When individuals maintain those fine motor skills throughout life, they remain productive and capable throughout their lives — while those who only cultivate the gross motor skills, lose those fine motor abilities — and become less able to live independent and productive lives. That is the end-game — and not just the “15 minutes of fame” followed by a prolonged lifelong decline — as the familiar pattern of premature and largely unnecessary aging.
So when one observes that the neck muscles are atrophying, those are the muscles that must be engaged and activated specifically and directly — and not simply making the heart work harder and faster. That is also true for the deteriorating grip strength. One must activate and exercise those muscles specifically and directly — and not do more treadmilling or swimming — or anything else. The same is true for foot and balance problems. One must articulate the foot muscles — and not simply do more bench presses, deadlifts, squats or anything else — thinking to achieve the desired results.
The head, the hands, and the feet, are not simply stumps — used to punch, kick and head butt — but are the primary tools of human expression, functioning, and productivity — whether that be art, dance, writing, music, athletics, etc., but modern life has reduced much of those activities to simply watching television or a computer screen requiring very little movement — particularly of the head. Not surprisingly, the neck muscles atrophy — a sign that the circulation is very poor to those areas beyond that. The brain requires all the resources it can get — to take care of the rest of the body — autonomously (automatically) — just as the heart functions autonomously. That is not where the conscious effort should be applied to.
The conscious (voluntary) effort should be specifically and directly directed to where those movements and actions are not automatic and modern life has made unnecessary. That is where one makes the greatest difference in optimizing the circulation and ensures their greatest quality of life and functioning. Everything else is a diversion and distraction from that greatest purpose.
My first guess is people were infected with COVID-19 and treated it like a bad cold. They didn’t know that the virus creates havoc with the heart.
I would like to hear more about this.
Population Decline Will Change the World for the Better!
A future with fewer people offers increased opportunity and a healthier environment!
By Stephanie Feldstein
May 4, 2023, 5 min read
China’s population has fallen after decades of sky-high growth. This major shift in the world’s most populous country would be a big deal by itself, but China’s hardly alone in its declining numbers: despite the momentous occasion of the global population surpassing eight billion late last year, the United Nations predicts dozens of countries will have shrinking populations by 2050. This is good news.
Considering no other large animal’s population has grown as much, as quickly or as devastatingly for other species as ours, we should all be celebrating population decline.
Declining populations will ease the pressure eight billion people put on the planet. As the population and sustainability director at the Center for Biological Diversity, I’ve seen the devastating effects of our ever-expanding footprint on global ecosystems. But if you listen to economists (and Elon Musk), you might believe falling birthrates mean the sky is falling as fewer babies means fewer workers and consumers driving economic growth.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1L10kMWklpj6OMwKeOprL38uMgO5_GurYA95ZRFFmNiA/edit
“Alarming rise of ‘super-fit’ slim young people suffering heart attacks as experts reveal theories for the surge”
That cohort has terrible eating habits.
We started seeing people with cancer getting cured or greatly improved when we were curing covid with ivermectin. In the last two months we had two people with Turbo Cancer start taking it and are seeing really good results.
What could it be???
Something besides the clot shot?
In the YOUTUBE VIDEO, two guys get colon cancer at the same time. Flash ahead to one is sent home to die, no more chemo treatments possible. The other colin cancer victim is working on replacing a roof- he is now cancer free
What's the difference in the two? One took a round of chemo and then stopped but did the underground supplements. He is fit and cancer free.
So the guy sent home to hospice die starts the supplement doses, and with another scan already paid for and scheduled, he gets another scan. IIRC, half of the cancer is gone but the doctors (sometimes called IDIOTS WITH MEDICAL DEGREES) assure him that the residual chemo is responsible but the cancer WILL COME ROARING BACK!
Next scan, he is cancer free! One of his missions now is to inform the world that the idiots with medical degrees are in many cases- programed fools.
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IN August, one of my friends tells me he has prostate cancer and he is doing radiation. I spend a little time with him showing him cases like the Florida (former) marine who is cancer free. He tells me he will try it.
A few weeks ago, my friend tells me that radiation has been stopped and the doctor says to him "He has never seen a cancer shrink so fast!!!!!!"
My response was that next time you are in town, you are taking me out to dinner at the restaurant of my choice.
In the link is a suggested cancer treatment doses list.
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PUBMED a couple of years ago was full of studies of IVERMECTIN being used to treat cancer. If you are getting chemo, for example, some of the studies showed that the chemo worked better in combination. Someone in the gubermint IMHO has removed MANY links that were once listed in PUBMED.
Even if the more precise numbers were at their extremes of 4.5% and 3.5%, the increase is 28%, which is still quite alarming.
Did that cohort change their eating habits?
If a 28% increase is quite alarming, what is a 120% increase?
Interesting. Do you have a source for that?
My mother, at 85, has a dance group she attends every week. She also rides a bicycle almost every day, takes walks, swims, drives a stick shift... While there are problems with her spine (she’s shrunk well over an inch the past few years) which lead to occasional leg pains, she’s generally holding up well. Does a lot of sudokus, crossword puzzles etc. too, to stimulate the brain.
I took IVM during my bladder cancer treatments and am cancer free and were surprised how well I did. Still take it once a week.
I had a stable aortic arch aneurysm and some stenosis in my aortic valve. It was stable for years. After the clot shot x two the stenosis rapidly advanced but the aneurysm did not. I required open heart surgery and now have an artificial aortic valve. They also replaced part of my ascending aortic arch since they had me open and this might prevent a future surgery. Did the clot shot do it? I do not know and my doctor does not know. Myocarditis can cause stenosis. Myocarditis is one of the side effects of the Covid shot.
Correlation is not causation but it is a clue to what is the causation but is not definitive.
I am the original source for this information — as self-evident truth that can be tested (verified) by anyone inclined to do so. That is what “science” is — and not looking for authority to tell them so, which is what you’re asking. If you want to be the first to know an original idea, then there will be no other source to turn to. But if you want to be the last to know about anything, there will be many sources — usually all plagiarizing and repeating what the original said many volumes ago. That is how most physical fitness experts come upon their knowledge and “expertise” — but by then, is usually all wrong.
I was also the source for the insight that mouth-to-mouth resuscitation was totally unnecessary and would preclude people from giving first aid in the age of AIDS. Some people are the original thinkers on any subject matter — but they leave a logical path for thinking through and testing these ideas — to arrive at their own independent conclusions — because it is worthless if I or any other person says it is true, when it obviously doesn’t work — and especially doesn’t work for you, which is the only thing that matters. That is reality.
Having been regarded as “one who spoke with authority,” among the “experts,” your description of your mother’s condition and activities are fairly common — by as I’m pointing out, the reason “mental” exercises will ultimately fail to achieve the objective of keeping the mind (brain) healthy is the problematical lack of flow produced by the movement of the head that causes an alternating muscle contraction and relaxation as indicated by the atrophying of the neck muscles in most older people, and even most people in the population at large.
Even if one is bike-riding, there is very little or no movement at the wrists or the neck — and so if done for hours at a time, daily, one notice numbness developing at the hands — extending up through the arms. The same thing is also happening to the head — but less noticeable. Treadmilling is also the same thing. No movement at the wrists, neck/head — which is what is specifically indicated and required to maintain the health of those critical extremities of the body.
The beauty of forums like Free Republic is that there are no “fact checkers” with the presumption that they know all that can be known, and so they censor, suppress, edit, and all the shenanigans of publications maintaining their control and preeminence in that field — and limiting the discussion to only what they know — and wish to confirm. Science is not only proving one’s hypothesis but also disproving it as well.
You've got to do your ropes and ladders. And chop wood and stack it! Great exercise.
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