Subject:  (High) RE EMF/ES -- Sounds "far out".... (fwd)
Date:     Tue, 28 Jul 1998 111229 -0500 (CDT)
From:     "Roy L. Beavers" <rbeavers@llion.org>
To:       emfguru@hotmail.com
--------------------------------------------------



---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 28 Jul 1998 09:00:52 +0200
From: "High, Ingrid" 
To: "'Roy L. Beavers'" ,
    "'hammej@niseeast.nosc.mil'" 
Subject: RE: EMF/ES -- Sounds "far out".... (fwd)

Dear Jeff,
unfortunately (!) generally, but fortunately for you, you are on the
right track when you start looking at environmental causes.

The first thing to do is to check her normal environment for closeness
of anything electric - especially in the bedroom since one tends to
spend more time there than anywhere else. I mean: waterbed;
alarm-radio-clock; energy-saving-lampbulbs (the same as striplights);
electric heating / underfloor heating in an adjoining bathroom? - what
is immediately surrounding the bedroom - outside wall? transformer?
intake of electricity? room below - especially eventual strip-light in
it? on the other side of the wall where the bed is? Then do what you can
to remove these things to a distance of at least 6-7 feet from the bed.
If you have a waterbed then the plug must be pulled out at night, it is
not enough to just switch it off.

If it is electricity then you will find when you are now starting to
think about this as a reality (which it is) that she gets worse in
certain places / at certain times, and better at others. Modern cars can
be bad. The best check is how she is in a place after a couple of days
where there are no immediate close electric appliances (nor TV / radio /
telephone transmitters). 

The symptoms that you relate can also come from amalgam (leakage of
mercury)/ metals in the mouth/body. This is also tied in with
electromagnetic radiation since release of mercury will increase when
near appliances emitting electromagnetic radiation - but the person who
is mainly ES will react much more directly.

There could be other causes, but the correct thing is to look into her
environment - not inside her!

As an immediate help she probably will benefit from a good regimen of
vitamins and minerals of the anti-oxydant group (vit. C, E, B6, B12,
betakaroten, selenium (unless you live in a selenium rich area), zinc,
magnesium). An ordinary vitamin-mineral mixture is not the right, the
proportions are different in these two mixtures, and she must not get
too much iron. If she can get hold of a god antioxydant-mixture, she can
start on what is recommended as the daily dose, then build up to taking
3 times this, which she takes for 4-6 weeks, after that trapping down to
the recommended dose again.

best wishes,
Ingrid High
(in addition to fulltime work in computing also fully qualified
homeopath; recovered amalgam-ill; member of the central committee of the
norwegian organisation against amalgam; ex-protection officer at my
firm)

>-----Original Message-----
>From:	Roy L. Beavers [SMTP:rbeavers@llion.org]
>Sent:	Monday, July 27, 1998 3:43 PM
>To:	emfguru@hotmail.com
>Subject:	EMF/ES -- Sounds "far out".... (fwd)
>
>
>.....Message from Jeff (new to the list) below ... suggests that
>ES is a possibility.....Jeff, it always "sounds far out" the first
>time one faces the realities of EMF exposures.......Hope some of
>our ES people will contact Jeff directly.....guru......
>
>---------- Forwarded message ----------
>Date: Mon, 27 Jul 1998 09:32:27 -0400
>From: hammej@nosc.mil
>To: RBEAVERS@MAIL.LLION.ORG
>Subject: EMF/ES
>
>     Sir
>     
>     My wife has experienced many 'episodes' over the past 8-12 years of 
>     her life (she's 22, turning 23 in August).  These episodes, as her 
>     doctor calls them, have a sensation of desa vo (sp).  She feels 
>     'tingly' and is somewhat disoriented depending on the intensity of it. 
>     She says they have become more frequent and intense over the past few 
>     years, but has dismissed them until November of this past year.  I 
>     convinced her to see her doctor about them, since they were 
>     interrupting her sleep (sometimes, several times during the night).
>     
>     Recently (back in March of this past year) she's gone through several 
>     tests - from injecting dye into her and checking her vesels in her 
>     brain, to MRI to a catscan and looking at her heart (and probably 
>     others that i do not remember).  All looked fine, but the doctor said 
>     the episodes may be 'minor' siezures.  They had said she may be 
>     experiencing anzioty attacks and refered her to a psychologist and was 
>     put on 2 medications to calm her.  they helped to reduce the episodes, 
>     but not significantly, and had side effects, so the doctor took her 
>     off them.
>     
>     Then, yesterday, on the way back from greenville SC (her mom's place) 
>     to charleston (where we live), she had a siezure in the car while i 
>     was driving.  To say the least, it scared me.  She was taken to the ER 
>     and blood work and another catscan and EKG was run.  All fine.  This 
>     doctor suggested that she may have a sleeping disorder where her sleep 
>     cycles are getting disrupted and may have brought on the siezure.  It 
>     lasted only about a minute or so (seemed like a long time), but didn't 
>     seem as severe as i've seen on TV.
>     
>     Today i saw a paper on the web about electrical hypersensitivity.  It 
>     sounds 'far out', but the symptoms (some of them) sound like somewhat 
>     of a fit, and the fact that health agencies have been known to 
>     attribute 'its causation to psychological dysfunction'.
>     
>     I am interested in looking more into this subject and getting more 
>     information.  If you have any suggestions or anything for me, it would 
>     be much appreciated.
>     
>     Thanks
>     
>     a concerned and loving husband
>     Jeff Hamme
>     hammej@niseeast.nosc.mil



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Reprinted with permission of Roy Beavers, http://www.feb.se/EMF-L/EMF-L.html