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1. If diabetes is a "Silent Killer," what symptoms might indicate that I have it?

 

 

 

 

Diabetes is Greek and means "passing through." The unrealized symptoms are drinking fluids a lot, and urinating a lot. The body is smart. It is trying to wash the disease out of the body.

2. If I am obese, will I become a diabetic?

 

 

 

 

Being obese does not make you diabetic, nor does being a diabetic make ypu obese  Both result from misusing the body's digestion system. Losing weight to reduce obesity can also reduce your glucose reading  as you reduce eating  some of the foods that cause diabetes. 
3. Is the body waiting to age to develop diabetes, and I shouldn't worry now?

 

 

 

 

The body is not waiting for you to age in order to develop diabetes. Baby Boomers had an 72% increase in the number of diabetics last year, the highest of any group, including seniors. You may be a member of the non-identified as-a-diabetic group that are part of the million plus diagnosed as a diabetic each year.

4. Can Children, as pre-teeners, become adult diabetics?

 

 

 

 

An 11 year old girl was on the cover of Time magazine recently as an adult diabetic. Read the issue.
5. Is diabetes caused by a gene and is everyone in a fanily doomed to get it?

 

 

 

 

 

 

When a small group of doctors were asked whether a glucose reading of 181 (well above a safe 120) was caused by a gene, they agreed it was the only possible cause!  When told the patient’s reading had dropped to 106, the doctors were asked if the gene died. No, said the puzzled doctors, genes don’t die. The traditional diagnosis for minorities that genes caused their diabetes is no longer valid.
6. Can medicine control, or eliminate diabetes?

 

 

 

 

The medical community’s position is that diabetes cannot be cured, but only controlled to some level. This means you are still a diabetic, and subject to its dangers, including blindness. The word is getting out that Lahey Clinic patient Charlie Masison has cured himself, and others, without Medicine. 
7. If not nedicne, what fighters can combat the diabetes enemy?

 

 

 

The body can generate fighters to fight the diabetic free radical fighters.  These fighters are developed from vitamins, minerals, and herbs.
8. Are there particular foods that I should not eat to avoid diabetes?

 

 

 

 

 

You can start by avoiding the foods that begin with the word "white." These include white rice, white potato products, white bread, and white floor products. White potatoes get on the "bad list" when their outer layer (skin), is removed to make mashed potatoes, chips and fries. White rice was brown when grown, and white floor was wheat. Both had their outer layer removed.

 

9. Are multivitamins good for me?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Not really. Multi-vitamins serve some useful purposes, but they are not helping people cure diabetes. They do not contain enough of the vitamin to really help. Visualize a 30 day supply in a bottle. Now see 14 different vitamins in each of the 30 capsules. There is not enough of a vitamin in each capsule to significantly help in the fight against diabetes.

10. If my glucose reading is less than the safe 120, can I ne sure that I am non-diabetic?

 

 

 

 

 

No, because about 10% of us are blood type hypo (not hyper) glycemians. Their safe glucose reading is 70, not 120.  A hyperglycemic with a glucose reading of 146 has a body under attack.  A hypoglycemic  with a reading of 96 (also 26 points too high) also has a body under attack, and needs to be on a treatment plan.

11.What role does exercise or stress play in diabetes?

 

 

 

 

 

Stress can be a minor contributor (5-10%), but consistent stress  can become a significant cause of diabetes. The best help is the use of your mind.

Exercise helps reduce diabetes because it takes glucose from your bloodstream, and this reduces the number of free radicals.

12. Which body parts does diabetes harm the most?

 

 

 

Diabetes is the #1 cause of blindness in the USA. It is the #4 cause of heart attacks. It also is a significant cause of kidney failure.

13. Can I communicate with anyone who has been cured of diabetes?

 

 

 

 

 

Charlie Masison determined the causes of adult diabetes, and then developed a cure. He has a passion for helping others. That is why he wrote "Winning the Fight Against Diabetes" and travels around the country giving 90-minute seminars. It is best to use E-Mail to contact him. Click here to get in touch today.

 

14. Does Alzheimer's have a link with diabetes?

 

 

 

 

Dr. Susan Del Amonte, of Brown University Medical School, has identified a third type of diabetes, and states that her research idnetifies it as Alzheimer's. It may be that if we can cure diabetes, we can avoid Alzheimer's.