6. Bob
Jan 24, 5:32 am show options
Newsgroups: alt.support.asthma
From: "Bob" <drbob4prevent...@hotmail.com> - Find messages by this
author
Date: 24 Jan 2006 03:32:26 -0800
Local: Tues, Jan 24 2006 5:32 am
Subject: Re: Edgar Cayce's Asthma Treatment
Reply | Reply to Author | Forward | Print | Individual Message | Show
original | Report Abuse
- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
ARoberts wrote:
> > On 23 Jan 2006 10:50:15 -0800, "aroberts" <a-rober...@comcast.net>
> > wrote:
> >>>Hi Everyone!
>> >>>I developed multiple sclerosis in 1991 and, over a two year period,
>> >>>gradually overcame it using an alternative treatment suggested by Edgar
>> >>>Cayce, a man many regard as the father of modern holistic medicine.
>> >>>Cayce also suggested a promising alternative treatment for asthma. For
>> >>>more information, visit
>> >>How about posting it here? You know, gratis.
>> > Well, he is retired you know. The nursing career ran him ragged, the
>> > massage therapy career must have rubbed him the wrong way, a being a
>> > chiropractor finally cracked him up.
>> Too bad that he wasn't a proctologist; business would have always been
>> looking up.
>Yes, butt an end to that ca-rear would have rectum. Go finger...
Yes, you may sphincter self that this is always the case. However, Dr.
Sigmoid Freud was noted in the anals of medicine as being a villi
absorbing practitioner. Flush with success, he combined proctology
with psychiatry, and used the shingle : "Odds and Ends". Ultimately
though, his practice was limited to a few old Crohns, and even with
those, he had to cecum out. He finally put a tape barrier across the
door to his office (using a rectocele, of course) and crypt away to
take a sportsman's holiday, because he was regarded as an excellent
fissure-man. For this, he would usually polyp his two-layered
overalls, also known as duo-denims, and thereby would feel right at
home at that canal as well.
Later in his life, he was reduced to performing colostomies (not really
his bag) for indigent patients and was considered to be "an enema of
the state", an appellation that was mercifully, Fleet-ing.
Bob - 26 Jan 2006 00:49 GMT
>> >>>Hi Everyone!
>
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>>> Too bad that he wasn't a proctologist; business would have always been
>>> looking up.
>Later in his life, he was reduced to performing colostomies (not really
>his bag) for indigent patients and was considered to be "an enema of
>the state", an appellation that was mercifully, Fleet-ing.
Ah, I always wondered about that de-Sig-nation...
Thanks for rectifying that for me.