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I have absolutely no idea what I would do if they found an outright cure.. I've had 38 years of it.
But it would be nice to find out Jaylee

I have absolutely no idea what I would do if they found an outright cure.. I've had 38 years of it.
But it would be nice to find out Jaylee![]()
Scary to read indeed...The human race produce's insulin from the pancreas ! Do these fanatics not realise this, but we became Type 1 because our own bodies attacked the organ and destroyed it so no more insulinScary to read :-o
Tell it to this guy- http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2010/12/25/can-meditation-cure-disease.htmlType 1 diabetes is not reversible.
Ah, w[h]ere does it says this guy has Type 1?
Plenty of things can reduce insulin requirement in a Type 1 diabetic. That is light years away from curing or reversing Type 1 diabetes.Yes there is a type 1 diabetic who has cured his diabetes and saved his leg from gangrene!
Here are some links -
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2010/12/25/can-meditation-cure-disease.html
I personally am not on his level yet, but after changing my diet and lifestyle i have dropped my insulin intake significantly!et
A raw vegan diet has done wonders for me although im not exercising enough, i still have a good hb1ac at 7.0.
My goals are to start meditating an hour day and exercise about the same amount.
I have managed to quit drinking and smoking so the next step shouldnt be too difficult i hope, ill keep you posted either way.
Wish me luck
Plenty of things can reduce insulin requirement in a Type 1 diabetic. That is light years away from curing or reversing Type 1 diabetes.
I have to say the Daily Beast is not a reliable source for any kind of news, let alone biology or health science. DB deliberately courts controversy to drive clicks.
I accept that high level Tibetan adepts can do some pretty surreal and impressive things. But that is hardly a repeatable procedure for ordinary people. And, as I said in the other post, there is no mention of this Rinpoche having Type 1. I know from personal experience that meditation can improve Type 1 by reducing insulin requirements. Claiming meditation can cure Type 1 diabetes is another matter altogether. And this Rinpoche is not doing ordinary meditation. He is doing some extremely advanced internal practice that probably takes twenty years to learn, if you are brought up as Tibetan monk and have pretty much nothing else to do except practice.
Hi Selim I found 2 more videos for you i hope this helps and inspires you as it did for me.Hello everyone,
I read many books about diabetes.
One of them says that "EVEN TYPE-1 DIABETE IS REVERSIBLE" and body can return its normal glucose levels.
I dont believe that "TYPE-1 IS REVERSIBLE"
Is there anyone who has stories that "TYPE-1 IS REVERSIBLE"
Thanks
Heard an interesting interview with Sayer Ji today on the Reversing Diabetes Online Summit. He runs the greenmedinfo site - he basically combs the pubmed site for information on real food and alternative supplement research papers and cross-indexes them on his site. He has quite an interesting selection on beta cell regeneration for those interested in checking it out:
http://www.greenmedinfo.com/keyword/beta-cell-regeneration
In the interview one of the things he talked about was c-peptide and its protective role re. various diabetic complications (neuropathies, beta cell regeneration) and mentioned a new study about flax seed oil helping with c-peptide production. The really scary part was where he said (at least for the US, not sure about elsewhere) was that not only is c-peptide not included in manufactured insulins, but that they are produced from GMO yeast. I think that's the first time I'd heard that piece of information.
Kind of makes it difficult to be a diabetic and be against GM, and more or less impossible to be a diabetic, a vegetarian, and against GM.Yeah insulin was really the poster child of the whole GM revolution. It was more or less the first commercial product of GM. Humulin in 1978, followed by other synthetic human insulins (genetically identical), then followed by the genetically altered human insulin analogs like lispro and aspart that we use today.