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How birth control pills
and Hormone Replacements affect your skin (stretch marks and scarring,health
and general well being!
The First Week: Increased Libido
Three Months Later: Bye Bye Wrinkles
PMS Week: No Pain, All Gain!
A Month Later: Bigger Breasts
Can Men Use The Wild Yam Cream?
From the book "Hormone Heresy" by Sherrill Sellman
This jar of cream looks, smells and feels like an expensive cosmetic. Rub one-quarter teaspoon of the sweet smelling cream on different
parts of the body twice a day during the second half of my menstrual cycle. (You'll
read why the timing is so critical later.)
The First Week: Increased Libido
I started rubbing the cream on the soft areas of my body on day 9 of
my menstrual cycle.
(Day 1 is the day my period begins.) For that first week (days 1-8),
my body is producing all
the progesterone it needs. My ovaries, which produce the hormone, don't
need any help from their friends! I only start applying the cream when my body can't
produce enough progesterone to keep my hormones (specifically the ratio between estrogen
and progesterone) in balance. The exception being if I get cramping or bloating,
symptoms of my body having difficulty making the hormone transition. I apply the
cream directly to the pain or inflammation and receive immediate relief.
Even neck and shoulder pain.
The cream is applied transdermally, which means absorption through the skin.
Have you seen people on cruise ships with patches behind their ears? That was scopolamine,
which helps fight motion sickness. The nicotine patch works the same way.
If you are trying to get pregnant, don't use the cream until day 15 (after
you've ovulated.)
One of progesterone's tasks is to keep the egg in the other ovary from
being released. (If that happens, fraternal twins could result.) However, this job makes
progesterone a mild form of birth control. So women trying to get pregnant should start the
cream after ovulation just to be safe.
Progesterone has another job. It increases female (and male) sexual libido.
And that was the first thing I noticed. Suddenly, I became a very sexual creature.
My life is busy -- the kid, work, house work, taking care of the dogs -- usually I barely find
time to work out, much less make love. But the progesterone cream rearranged my priorities.
Forget the house work! The man in my life noticed a big change and vowed to pay
for all future jars of wild yam cream.
Adding the cream to my regimen also created a wonderful sense of euphoria.
What it did was even out my mood swings. It made my depressions less depressing but
made my "wins" so much more wonderful. I found myself losing my temper less because
I was not as irritable as usual. I now could handle the roadblocks life put in my
path with more equanimity. I had this wonderful sense of calm despite the storm around
me.
The timing couldn't have been more perfect, because I got downsized right
out of a job.
Instead of panicking, my typical reaction to money pressures, I calmly
crafted a plan to look for new opportunities. This was the first time in my life I didn't overreact.
I shook my head in wonder!
This new feeling extended through PMS week. With enough progesterone
in my system, my bitchiness just disappeared. Everything in the world seemed too wonderful.
PMS Week: No Pain, All Gain!
But the true test of the cream's efficacy came during the week before
menstruation with the working ovary. I typically start getting hot flashes seven days before
the onset of my period. That's when my family and my co-workers start avoiding me. The
day before my period the crippling cramps begin. For four days I live in a narcotics-induced
haze to quell the pain. But this time, none of this happened. When I got my period, I experienced
slight cramping. I rubbed one-eighth of a teaspoon of the cream on my abdomen every 30 minutes
until the pain subsided. In two hours, I felt nothing! No more pain killers. I
didn't even need an aspirin! The yam cream passed its acid test.
Women who have migraine headaches right before their periods can rub
the cream on the back of their necks every 30 minutes until they get relief.
Why does this happen? Because nature's natural balance is upset: the
system is rebelling against too much estrogen and too little progesterone. Scientists don't
really know what causes this imbalance. Either the ovaries just don't produce enough progesterone.
Or they produce too much estrogen. In my case, I had too much estrogen to start
with. Either way, the ratio is off, making your life miserable.
But the week before menstruation is exactly the time your body is counting
on the right amount of progesterone to be coursing through your veins. You see, one
of progesterone's tasks is to relax all your smooth muscle tissues, including the ones
contracting the uterus to dispel the unused uterine lining. Without this hormone, which is one
of the best muscle relaxers in nature, your uterus and other involuntary muscles will contract
with greater force than necessary, causing cramps and migraine headaches. Add the
progesterone and poof! The aches go away.
A Month Later: Bigger Breasts
I'm small and athletic. All my life, except during pregnancy, I barely
fit into a A cup bra. I wear lace teddies instead of lace bras because I really have nothing
to support. The instructions with the cream say to apply it to various parts of the body,
including the breasts. So I began applying the cream to my breasts every fourth day.
Deep into my second cycle on the yam cream, I began to notice my shirts
were becoming a bit tight across the front. Then I stared in the mirror. My breasts were
growing! Here, on the cusp of menopause I'm going through puberty.
Three months later, I'm spilling out of a B cup. One friend, who is flat
chested like me, has gone up two cup sizes.
However, another friend of mine paid good money for breast reduction
surgery. The last thing she needs is bigger breasts. She makes sure the yam cream goes
nowhere near her chest. Instead, she applies it to her stomach, inner thighs, neck and
arms. So far, she's noticed no change.
Why is this happening? Beats me! But I'd guess the correct amount of
progesterone triggers puberty-like reactions in women. Maybe age has nothing to do with it!
Three Months Later: Bye Bye Wrinkles
After 90 days of use, I had an unusual experience. My son and I were
having dinner at our favorite restaurant. He was dallying while the waitress impatiently waited
for his order. I said, "Son, please tell the women what you want."
The waitress stared at me in shock. "Son?" she said. "This
can't be your son!" The waitress thought I was his date! He's 17 and I'm 44. I was flattered, but I knew
this was an anomaly.
But then we went to New Orleans for his college interview at Tulane.
The waiter at the N'Awlins Cookery thought the same thing. That was twice in one month.
I never intended to have the cream make me look younger! Having my life
back was certainly enough.
Can Men Use The Wild Yam Cream?
I sold a jar of wild yam cream to a man in my office who wanted the jar
for his wife. Three days later the wife called on the phone. He was out of the office, so
I asked her how she enjoyed the cream. She said, What cream?
When he returned, I asked him what he was doing with the cream. After
he turned red, he explained that as he got older, he had trouble reaching orgasm. He wanted
the cream to help him out here. He felt extra progesterone would give him the boost
he needed. It must have worked, because he bought a second jar for his wife!
How Your Biochemistry Can Work For You
Why does progesterone make all this happen? Here's a basic science lesson.
Nature likes balance. PMS and menopause are caused by an natural imbalance,
typically too much estrogen and not enough progesterone. The result makes your
life a misery.
A Science Lesson
The science comes from Dr. Betty Kamen, who has a Ph.D. in nutrition.
Her wonderful book, "Hormone Replacement Therapy: Yes or No? How To Make An Informed
Decision
About Estrogen, Progesterone & Other Strategies for Dealing with
PMS, Menopause and Osteoporosis" is an easy-to-read and informative primer on the subject.
I will just excerpt the easy parts here.
Hormones are biochemical substances that are produced by your glands.
Even your ovaries are a gland because they also produce hormones.
Your body uses hormones to control other actions in your body. For example,
your thyroid controls your metabolic rate. Since most of those actions take place
far from the producing site (your thyroid gland is near the neck; your stomach digests food),
the glands deposithormones into the bloodstream. The hormones keep floating downstream
until specialized receptors recognize them. The hormones and their receptors are like pieces
in a jigsaw puzzle. They fit together exactly No other piece can take their place.
In the body, hormone
A won't fit into hormone B's receptors; Hormone A just floats by hormone
B's receptors in its search for a perfect match.
Your glands manufacture their own hormones. They use three basic building
blocks: amino acids, proteins and cholesterol. Hormones made from cholesterol are called
steroid hormones. Your sex hormones are steroid hormones made from cholesterol.
(Isn't that interesting.)
Before puberty, the adrenal glands manufacture all sex hormones. Between
puberty and menopause, the ovaries take over in women. Both glands split the job
after menopause. The testes manufacture hormones in men.
Progesterone is the natural building block for all the steroid hormones,
making bothestrogens (associated with females) and androgens (for males.) Your body
makes all the progesterone you need during the first eight days of your menstrual cycle.
The progesterone levels shoot up to halt ovulation and trigger menstruation
on about day 12.
They continue at a high level until eight days after ovulation. If fertilization
has not occurred, the muscles in your uterus contract to expel the rich uterine
tissue that would nourish a pregnancy.
Women who are prone to PMS typically suffer from low progesterone levels.
The natural solution is to return the two hormones to the balance nature intended
for your body.
During the second half of your cycle, if your body has more estrogen
than progesterone, it is important to try to recreate the correct ratio to eliminate the symptoms.
That includes:
1.Maintaining your body's ability to produce progesterone and/or
adding progesterone to the body naturally AND
2.avoiding foods that will keep your estrogen levels high.
Correcting the Ratio: Eating Right
Eating properly can go a long way in encouraging your ovaries and/or
adrenal glands toproduce more progesterone.
Here I'm on firm ground. My company, Meltdown International, uses a scientific
test that accurately measures your body's biochemistry. The test results are an
Owner's Manual to your body that includes a road map that leads you back to health. The
road map includeshow to eat properly to fix the problems. I call it the grocery store
solution, since you canfind your "cure" in the supermarket.
All the research here comes from Dr. David Watts, another Ph.D. in nutrition,
who is the research director of one of the six federally approved labs licensed
to perform this test, the Tissue Mineral Analysis.
No Junk Foods
First, junk foods have to go. If you can use very little sugar and not
much salt, you'll go a long way toward returning your body to its natural balance. That means
avoiding processed foods and eating more fresh fruits and grains (complex carbohydrates).
More Zinc
Second, eat foods high in zinc. Zinc is one of the controlling nutrients
for progesterone
production. The old wive's tale about oysters being a great aphrodisiac
is scientifically
correct, since oysters are loaded with zinc.
This may not be politically correct, but lean protein has the greatest
single impact on zinc absorption. Lean protein consists of lean meat (top round, not greasy
hamburgers), lean pork, chicken and turkey (without the skin), fish, shellfish and eggs.
If you are a vegetarian and suffer from PMS, you might want to start eating protein two days
before PMS isscheduled to begin and then stop when your period begins.
Cut Out Copper
You can lower estrogen levels by slashing your copper intake. Copper
keeps estrogen levels high. The following foods are high in copper in relation to zinc. Avoid
these until you get your menstrual/menopausal problems under control:
1.Almonds
2.Avocado
3.Baker's Yeast
4.Bran flakes
5.Brazil nuts
6.Chocolate
7.Crab
8.Grapes
9.Liver
10.Lobster
11.Haddock
12.Herring
13.Mushrooms
14.Peanut Butter
15.Pecans
16.Sesame seeds
17.Shrimp
18.Sunflower Seeds
19.Trout
20.Walnuts
I know you'll have no trouble giving up liver, but chocolate, lobster,
mushrooms and
grapes? Sigh.
How do you know if you have too much copper? Brown spots on your face
or skin are a good sign. This means the liver has filtered out so much copper it is depositing
the excess amounts in your skin. If your nipples turn from pink to brown, that's
another sign of copper poisoning. Of course, a Tissue Mineral Analysis (TMA) is a good way to
know for sure.
Judging from the hundreds of TMAs I've seen in the last five years, American
women are severely toxic with copper. It's my guess this is why we're having a
much harder time with
PMS and menopause than our grandmothers did. We have to get our copper/zinc
ratios in balance, ladies!
How did our generation get so toxic with copper? Birth control, for one.
Copper is a primary component of the Pill since it helps control the ovulation cycle. Most
IUDs are made ofcopper, too. Today, you might be using these forms of birth control.
But so did your mother!
You might have been born with too much copper to start with. And now
you're adding more!
Which means your system may have much more copper than it needs.
There are other sources of copper poisoning. Copper pipes also leach
the metal into drinking water. If you have a swimming pool, your green algicide is pure
copper. And if youlove your copper pots, guess what? They're seasoning your food, too.
Here are the aches and pain of copper toxicity: frontal headaches, depression,
fatigue,constipation, emotional volatility, weight gain and food cravings. Sounds
like PMS to me!
Avoid external sources of estrogen
Another consideration: Avoid external sources of estrogen, which means
dairy products and beef that were commercially raised. These animals are loaded with estrogen
and other growth hormones on the feed lot. These hormones remain in the flesh and/or
milk and can be absorbed by your body when you eat them. Hopefully your liver will
filter them out. But some might get through. You need less estrogen, not more!
Myself, I don't eat dairy products, except for plain yogurt. I get my
chicken from an organic farm (The Good Earth Farm in Celeste, Texas) where I know they are range
fed and killed the day before I purchase them. Most of my vegetables come from the Good
Earth Farm, one of only 16 organic farms certified by the state of Texas. And I only
buy beef at Whole Foods, a health food market in Texas whose integrity I trust in these matters.
The store guarantees its beef is naturally grain feed with no hormones.
Correcting the Ratio: Adding Progesterone
Of course, the progesterone cream takes up where Mother Nature left off.
I'm sold on the natural solution, the wild yam cream. But what about artificial forms
of progesterone? Will they help? Not as much. Because one of your liver's most important functions
is to break down foreign hormones by returning them to your digestive tract. There,
they bind with other substances so they can be excreted, not absorbed. Birth control
pills became a reality when scientists found a way for the artificial estrogen to be absorbed
by the intestines. But this is not yet true with estrogen replacement hormones, making them
difficult to administer by mouth. It's tough to fool your liver!
I swear by my wild yam cream. It has turned my life around -- naturally.
As Mikey said on
TV, "Try it, you'll like it." order
our Super Strength Progesterone cream with Wild Yam for you or someone you love.
The Strongest Hormone balancing Cream on the market
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