The Ultimate Guide to Methylene Blue: Remarkable Hope for Depression, COVID, AIDS & other Viruses, Alzheimer’s, Autism, Cancer, Heart Disease, ... Targeting Mitochondrial Dysfunction)
C**A
Neuropathic Foot Pain Relief!
I bought some Methylene Blue sometime in 2023, but didn't really know how to use it medicinally. This book breaks down all of the conditions along with links to clinical trials where methylene blue has been used with tremendous results. I'm going to tell you right now, methylene blue has a horrible taste at a medicinal dose. I took my first medicinal dose yesterday morning with just a little water hoping to slam it down. It tasted awful. I dreaded taking a medicinal dose last night until it occurred to me to try mixing it with coconut milk to help camouflage the awful taste. I recommend The Friendly Farms brand from Aldi, as it has a creamier, more coconutty flavor. The coconut milk was a tremendous help as it tasted much less obnoxious. Now let me tell you what I took it for. I've had neuropathy for the past 10 years that has settled in my feet which means that I can't do a lot of walking, I can't do all the walking that I need to do, much less fitness walking. Anyway, after taking the medicinal morning dose, I noticed a couple of hours later that the pain in my feet was dramatically reduced. It has been at a level of 4-5 for the past 2 days after walking a store that I should have unloaded my electric scooter for. Seeing results with a single medicinal dose that this book outlines by body weight gave me great hope. After taking last night's dose right before bedtime, I can tell you that the pain in my feet is even more reduced. If you want to try the medicinal benefits of methylene blue, this is the book to own. I was not compensated in any way for this review. It's just a great book to have in your arsenal for reference.
L**N
Mark's books are life-changing
I recently heard about something called Methylene Blue and all the wonderful things it can do. So I searched for it on Amazon. I ended up finding a book on it by Mark Sloan. However, the search also turned up his book on Red Light Therapy. I ordered the Methylene Blue book and found it easy to read and I learned so much about diseases and cells. It also talked quite a bit about Red Light Therapy, so I decided to order that book before I went any further. It was also an easy read and so informative.My husband has a 40 year old injury to his lower spine and we had been able to control some of the pain over the years with Chiropractors and a natural anti-inflammatory. However, as we are getting older, he was starting to have constant pain. I decided to try getting a Red Light Pad from Novaalab and we started there. We both are using it every morning and it started making a difference in his pain. It also seemed to help us both in our overall well-being.After several weeks we decided to add the Methylene Blue to our routine and it seemed to improve his back so that he has little to no pain most of the time. It has been a life-saver. He also just got Shingles last week on his temple. They looked bad the first day. So I gave him a second dose of 20 drops of Methylene Blue that night. The next morning it was looking and feeling better. We went to the Doctor and they verified it was Shingles. So they put him on an anti-viral. However the Blue is also an anti-viral and we feel it gave him a great head-start on beating the Shingles. It is now almost a week later and he has had no pain and the Shingles have gone away. They never spread, which was our fear since it was so close to his eye.I recommend to everyone to read Mark's books as I feel they have changed our whole outlook on modern medicine. He has an EndAllDisease web page that is fantastic and it has so many great articles. I also ended up buying his Bath Bomb & Balneotherapy book which is also great! Thank you so much Mark, I have recommended your books to my family and friends. I am going to put this Review on both the Red Light Therapy and the Methylene Blue books by Mark.
J**H
đź’™ Great book, has some literary faux pas, but lifechanging overall.
Mark, you politely plead with us as your readers, via a final page in your book, to take a moment to leave an honest Amazon review, so I will honor your request. I will start with my more critical/ negative remarks.Though they are not ubiquitous enough to throw the entire book off-center, I noticed enough editing and aesthetics errors to kind of annoy me. There are numerous orphans and widows: you should not separate a heading and its subsequent paragraph---nor especially a chart--- onto different pages just to conserve book print length, this is very tacky. There are also a few misspellings, and many of the included images have blurred details, almost as if they were stretched beyond original resolution or a very poor facsimile. These details suggested, at least in my mind, a mediocre publishing budget at work---which may very well be the case. And if so, I'm still thankful enough for you to have made your personal sacrifices to get the book pushed through and ultimately in our hands for our improved health, but these details accrue a sort of cringe-worthiness over the course of reading an entire book... And why are there no labeled/ numbered chapters? The book's organization is simply a bunch of headings, not very much in the way of defined chapters, which I found irritating (and, again, kind of low-quality, from a book etiquette point-of-view).Similarly, name misspellings always strike me as especially egregious, since a person's contribution to material should warrant fastidious ensuring that their name is spelled correctly. If "Georgi Dinkov" (pg.27, 42, 70, etc) is a close research colleague, how could you misspell his name only a handful of pages later ("Gyorgyi Dinkov," pg.53)? It screamed out to me "Did you even hire an editor for this book?" While the detail is small, its nuance in a scientific book whose premise is very serious suggests mediocrity/ challenges your credibility to overlook small details, which do matter. Did it get in the way of me learning about MB? No, but if I had been Mr. Dinkov and read that you had spelled my name two different ways, I would feel like maybe I wasn't significant enough to your research, and would probably decline to collaborate whenever a future bestseller of yours was in the works... Most people may read this and think I'm being far too picky, but I think anybody with a writer's mind and a sensitivity to language will indeed understand the delicate importance of small details like these that others may overlook.I was taken aback by your mention of dairy as "nutritious" (pg.53)... Clearly, you haven't learned about the silent poisons lurking in animal products/ could take some lessons from Dr. John McDougall, as there is NOTHING nutritious about dairy, when you look into its poisonous activity in the human body, vastly outweighing any supposed benefit. There are places where the veganism argument is obnoxious and unwarranted, but this is worth mentioning in soapbox fashion here since I feel like those who take deep-enough interest in revolutionizing their health via MB supplementation, are also those who care to be better stewards of the planet and their own physiology & health by upgrading away from baseline standard American diets; i.e., other whole-food vegans like myself. (So I politely implore you to read some of Dr. John McDougall's books and assimilate his incredible wealth of expertise on this subject, as I believe they will take you to the next level and make your voice more credible when readers see you do not simply tow the line of mainstream dietary myths.)The advocation of a sterile gut/ suggesting wipeout of the microbiome (pg.95) does not seem at all natural or beneficial. I (and I imagine innumerable other readers) need significantly more research cited to accept this, as it took me hugely aback and sounds totally outlandish. While I could accept most all else in your book, this felt like a very informationally-offensive and off-base idea.While I was very disheartened to hear of Nitric Oxide's dangerous true nature, I am very grateful to receive this elucidation and put it into my 'health paradigm toolbox'. Thank you for writing so extensively about dismantling its mythhood throughout the entire book; this helped make a very good case against NO. I am already warning friends & family to stay away from NO supplements and superbeets, etc.I literally could not put your book down: I read it in one hours-long sitting, which I never do! The subject matter was just so captivating, like reading about an amazing newfound hero to mankind! It filled me with excitement to welcome MB into my daily personal care regimen, and I visited the link at the end of your book and purchased my first bottle.With regard to the light of hope for MB you have shone on Dementia/Alzheimer's, it's so unfortunate that this book came out too near the time I lost my Granny to advanced Dementia and I had not yet discovered its wealth of insight. Reading your material about MB for Dementia, I found myself retrospectively fantasizing about how wonderful it would have been, armed with this new transcendental insight on MB, to halt her heartbreaking decline into senility and perhaps have added lucid, wholesome years to her life and maybe she would have lived to her 100th birthday this year, instead of only 98... Here's to hoping that your book can do that for others, though. I have great hope for its reach!The excitement your book gave me instantly inspired a spirit of curiosity to read your other books, and see what other knowledge I can glean from you. It's obvious you are very passionate about empowering people to take their health into their own hands, and I look forward to seeing what else I can learn from you. Thank you for your contribution to mankind's health and upward vibrational shift.
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