April 3, 2009
Have you ever wondered what body odor is and where exactly it comes from?
I bet you’d be surprised to know that body odor is often a sign of internal toxicity - and an indication of the need for colon cleansing. Have you seen any of the pictures on the Internet of rather enormous amounts of filth being released from the body through colon cleansing? Many companies that sell colon cleansing products will have some of these images for your viewing pleasure on thier Websites.
You might be shocked at the images of filth that most people carry inside their bodies these days. You might also be surprised to learn that most people carry ten or more pounds of uneliminated waste in their colon walls, and they’ve been adding to it since childhood. And at some point, it’ll start to produce an odor.
This may be new to you, so let’s back up a bit and look at why this is the case.
Well, modern diets aren’t exactly what nature intended for us to eat. Nature intended for us to be eating large amounts of fruits, vegetables, greens, beans, nuts, seeds, rice, and maybe an occasional fish or other animal - and importantly, not much else.
Since stoves and ovens didn’t come in the nature package, most of our food would be raw, or uncooked, and the fiber and enzymes in those foods still intact. It’s how our ancestors lived for millions of years, and it’s a diet designed to push the waste from our colon right out of our bodies quickly and easily. Did you notice that cheeseburgers, French fries, candy bars, and margaritas weren’t on the list? Neither was pasta or potato chips. In fact, eating the diet that nature intended for us is rather an anomaly these days, and for our parent’s generation as well.
And with this deviation, of course, there’s going to be an effect.
The effect is that waste doesn’t get pushed out of our bodies as quickly as it should. You might be surprised to know that in the few remote cultures on Earth that still follow a natural diet, it’s common for the people to have three bowel movements each day: one about thirty minutes after each meal. But in most cultures today, that too is an anomaly. When you see and understand how much filth most people carry in their colons today, you’ll understand why it’s common for people to produce a body odor, after just a few hours without bathing.


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