2 minute read
Emergency Natural Medicine?
THE extremely succesful medical missionary, Mamon Wilson, writes:
“Cayenne is a special herb… We had an experience with an elderly man several years ago. We were in a service just singing and praising the Lord; and he slumped over on the floor. He was having a heart attack. We were having a training school at the time so all the students started scrambling for the cayenne pepper because that’s what we had drilled into them. We gave him the cayenne pepper and he revived in less than 60 seconds.
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What is the difference between cayenne pepper and nitro-glycerine? Nitro-glycerine has a lot of side effects that we don’t need…God has given us cayenne pepper, which produces the same effect as nitro-glycerine and the best way to take it is similar to nitro-glycerine “If someone is having a heart attack and has passed out, we simply take ½ teaspoon of cayenne pepper and put it under his tongue. It will revive him in less than 60 seconds.”[4]
I 'd previously informed my mother, who suffers from coronory artery disease, that a heart attack can be stopped by cayenne pepper. After having chest pains one day she recalled this and placed a couple of cayenne capsules beneath her tongue. She says that indeed the pain stopped.
*AN IMPORTANT NOTE In order to stop a heart attack with cayenne pepper, the pepper must be at least 90,000 heat units. Cayenne pepper is not your average red pepper, but it must be “cayenne” also known as African bird pepper.
BEE STINGS/INSECT BITES For venomous bites activated Charcoal is definetly God’s antivenom agent in cases of emergency. For fire ant bites, mosquito bites, chigger bites, poison ivy, and various other venemous bites, charcoal will do wonders.
Dr. Agatha Thrash, M.D., explains, “Fire ants leave a sterile abscess under the sting from the venom which kills a tiny area of tissue. An ordinary band-aid, wet slightly and rubbed with a charcoal tablet until it is entirely black , and applied as a mini poultice combats ant stings.”[5] This can be done as noted above for mosquito bites, chigger bites, and poison ivy.
Dr. Thrash, in discussing the use of charcoal with regard to a bee sting, says: “Many years ago we had a young co-worker who was stung on the finger by a yellow jacket. He spent one sleepless night due to pain, and was about to go into his second when he decided that he would apply a charcoal poultice. At that time none of us had used charcoal poultices for yellow jacket stings and didn’t know what to expect. Within five minutes the pain was gone and he slept all night. Since that time whenever anyone is stung by a bee, wasp, or yellow jacket, we promptly apply a poultice which will prevent either swelling or pain.”[6] Dr. Thrash also points out that the treatment of choice for a brown recluse spider bite is charcoal. In fact there is no other recognozed treatment except “wide surgical excision.” There is no known antidote.