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KARMA CLEANSE WITH DETOXIFIED IODINE 6.76 oz (200 ML)

Edgar Cayce Online Products
2016
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Karma Cleanse with Detoxified Iodine

Open a window to a beautiful future.  Clease your body from within releasing Karma from your liver, gall bladder, and other cleansing systems.
Karma Cleanse includes Organic Detoxified Iodine and many other ingredients which have been time tested to detoxify and cleanse the body.

Iodine is the one trace mineral that can help protect the thyroid from radiation. Edgar Cayce selected these ingredients in his famous Cayce Blood Cleanser - Karma Cleanse which have been used for decades for tonifying and cleansing:

Liver
Gallbadder
Pancreas
Digestive system - stomach & intestines
Blood and circulation
Athritis related conditions
Skin
Immune system
 

How to Cleanse your Karma
In Chinese Medicine, Karma is related to various body organs such as the liver, gallbladder, pancreas, kidneys, stomach, and intestines Detoxified Iodine

Liver
Gallbladder
Pancreas
Kidneys
Stomach
Intestines

Karma Cleanse detoxifies your organs, releasing stuck Karma from your body.
This will assist in any other Karma Cleansing practice which you may be moving through, including Yoga Karma Cleanse, Ayurveda Karma Cleanse and
Taoist Master Sha Karma Cleanse, etc.
In Eastern cultures, ancestral weaknesses are carried over in the body organs.
Cleansing your Karma is a practice of cleansing one's body, mind, soul, & spirit. Karma Cleanse has 4 drops of detoxified iodine per teaspoon (2 drops per 1/2 tespoon serving) Detoxified Iodine
supports thyroid health.

History of Karma Cleanse - Edgar Cayce and Harry Hoxsey
On the 6th day of September, 1924, Edgar Cayce gave a reading for a male adult who was dealing with an advanced sarcoma, which the reading classified as a bacilli in the blood. Along with recommending the Abrams machine to produce the resonant bacilli frequency, or counter frequency if you will, Edgar Cayce suggested the use of an herbal tincture blend as a blood cleanser.
This blood-cleansing tonic includes detoxified iodine and fluid extract of wild cherry bark, stillingia, yellow dock root, poke root, burdock root, as well as syrup made with beet sugar.

Not far from Dayton, across the Indiana state line, lived a boisterous young man by the name of Harry Hoxsey. When Harry heard about this herbal blend he decided that someone should secure these ingredients and test out the concoction to see just how good of a blood cleanser it was. After all, if it worked for 4695, then it only stood to reason that it should work for others. As this was Harry's idea, he decided that he would be that person, and that is what he did. Keep in mind back then the term cancer was rarely mentioned, not because cellular malignancy had a different label, but rather because cancer was not that common. Anyway, Harry's motivation was two-fold. He would heal the sick of this devastating and incurable disease, and along with that become rich and famous.
For the next 25 years Harry would travel the countryside touting his miraculous blood cleanser which imparted unparalleled success. As the global incidence of cancer continued to rise, so did Harry's notoriety. (note: this was back in the early half of the 1900's)
Ultimately Harry drew unto him a number of detractors. Some were envious of his astounding cure rate while others simply 'wanted a piece of the action. But Harry's secret formula was closely guarded and he cleverly masked it's original inception with an elaborate story of how the ingredients "were originally passed down to him by his grandfather. The story went something to the effect that his grandfather, who was a veterinarian, observed one of his horses, which happened to have a cancerous condition, and what the horse happened to be eating in the pasture. Notes were taken, and when the horse cured itself, the formula was derived. Of course logically, there's no way all of these herbs would have been growing in a single pasture, not to mention the illusive iodine herb, but most people, on up to today, believed Harry's story. It was something about an animal's intuitive ability for self-preservation that really stuck.

Despite numerous attempts by the government and individuals to stop him, Harry Hoxsey eventually realized his dream of a cancer treatment facility which he located in Dallas, beginning in the early 50's. For approximately 12 years the Hoxsey hospital was the largest, and by far and away,the most successful cancer treatment institution on the planet. Records show that literally thousands of people were treated and recovered from a wide assortment of cellular malignancy with this simple tonic (who's ingredients were modified slightly from time to time with a given situation).

Unfortunately for Harry his corrosive nature along with his tendency to flaunt his fiscal success left him vulnerable to legal affronts from the ever-growing medical cartel, and during a court case in me early 60's he was blindsided by a stacked jury and was forced into submission. He considered moving his hospital to another state as the charges brought against him were of a regional manner, but soon opted to relocate the facility outside the U.S. when he realized the magnitude of his opposition.
The Hoxsey clinic in Tijuana was the first American cancer treatment center in Mexico. Forty years later it remains it's most successful. Thousands of people recovered from cancer during Harry's stint in Dallas, and tens of thousands more have sought refuge from the standard medical paradigm since that time by crossing over the border. Considering the present scope of the problem this is a mere drop in the bucket.
The Abrams machine has long gone out of production, but as Harry Hoxsey continues to demonstrate from his grave, the Cayce blood cleanser is, and can continue to be and effective tonic for alleviating the root cause of malignant cellular activity: blood toxicity. Individuals could start percolating this relatively simple herbal blend which could then be dispensed to those in either a predisposition (marker) state, or a cancerous state. If enough people benefited from it a homegrown industry could eventually replace the allopathic model. Conceivably this single idea could derail the trillion dollar cancer treatment industry, not only salvaging the health and well being of millions of people but potentially avoiding an almost certain economic collapse which will likely precipitate from the present belief system. Perhaps even more important, if a grass roots movement of this kind actually did demonstrate it's viability, no doubt it would become a model for addressing other health/ illness issues, as well as pave the way for future political, economic, and social reform. As I see it we're at the crossroads. We can either get our butts off the couch and into the lab, or we can have them handed to us in a sling. Of course there's always the option of the gazillionaire who is going to finance a facility to put this idea back in motion, but I don't think I want to wait around for that to happen. What's say we move this party forward and get on with the process of evolution.
Karma Cleanse includes our Detoxified Iodine.
Save by buying Karma Cleanse for all in one bottle supplement.
Edgar Cayce selected these ingredients in his famous Cayce Blood Cleanser - Karma Cleansewhich have been used for decades for tonifying and cleansing:

Liver
Gallbadder
Pancreas
Digestive system - stomach & intestines
Blood and circulation
Athritis related conditions
Skin
Immune system

See below for botanical highlights of Karma Cleanse ingredients, and their nourishing, tonifying, and cleansing benefits for your whole body.
Karma Cleanse includes Detoxified Iodine. Detoxified Iodine is the one trace mineral which is used to assist in protecting the thyroid from radiation.


Each teaspoon of Karma Cleanse includes 4 drops of Detoxified Iodine
Suggested dose: One-half tesapoon, twice a day.
If you are taking both Karma Cleanse and Detoxified Iodine, be aware that Karma Cleanse contains the equivalent of 4 drops of Detoxified Iodine per teaspoon. You will want to adjust your dosage of Detoxified Iodine.

Ingredients: Wild cherry bark, stillingia, yellow dock root, poke root, and burdock root, along with 3/4 ounce of detoxified iodine, and enough simple syrup (heated water with beet sugar)
 
Wild Cherry Bark - Prunus serotina (Ehrh.)
Synonyms: Virginian prune, black cherry, black choke, choke cherry, rum cherry
 Prunus is a large tree, up to 30m tall, and is widely distributed in woods throughout North America, especially in the Northern and Central states. It produces alternate stiff oblong or ovate leaves with serrated margins and small white flowers growing in lateral racemes. The bark is rough and nearly black on older trunks, but that used is younger, smooth, glossy and reddish brown with white lenticels and underlying greenish-brown cortex. The fruit is a nearly spherical, purple-black drupe, around 1.5cm in diameter, ripening in late summer and autumn.

Parts used: dried bark

Constituents: cyanogenic glycosides including prunasin; volatile oil, benzaldehyde, coumarins, benzoic acid, gallitannins, resin, an enzyme (prunase).
Actions: antitussive, expectorant, mild sedative, astringent, digestive bitter, tonic, pectoral, stomachic Indications: irritable and persistent cough of bronchitis, pertussis, cough due to increased irritability of respiratory mucosa. Nervous dyspepsia.
Therapeutics and Pharmacology: Prunus is an important cough remedy.
The cyanogenic glycosides are hydrolysed in the body to glucose, benzaldehyde and hyanocyanic acid, otherwise known as prussic acid.
Prussic acid is rapidly excreted via the lungs where it first increases respiration and then sedates the sensory nerves which provoke the cough reflex.
Due to its powerful sedative action, it is used primarily in the treatment of irritating and persistent coughs when increasing expectoration is inappropriate, and thus has a role in the treatment of bronchitis and whooping cough and in the racking cough of debility or convalescence.
It can be combined with other herbs to control asthma.
Both the cyanogenic glycosides and volatile oil help to improve the digestion, and Prunus may be used as a bitter where digestion is sluggish.
The cold infusion of the bark may be used as a wash in eye inflammation and as an astringent in diarrhea.
     
Edgar Cayce recommended wild cherry bark for pulmonary conditions and as an aid to digestion.
It was also noted for its role in cleansing and building blood.     Wild cherry bark was mentioned in 312 readings between 1921 and 1944.  
Cayce Quotes on Wild Cherry Bark
1012-1 . . . The first ingredient, the Wild Cherry Bark, is a direct activative force upon the pneumogastrics and the pulmonary system.    
643-1 . . . Wild cherry bark is an expectorant and a purifier as combined especially with other ingredients for the blood supply.    
808-3 . . . The taking of those properties indicated for the allaying of cold and congestion - as in the cherry, the horehound - will not only aid digestion but stimulate the circulation for the upper portion of the head and through the bronchial area, thus giving a better flow of circulation for the throat and the gums...    
2790-1 . . . The active principle from the wild cherry bark, with the other ingredients, is a stimulation to the lungs, throat and bronchials, and those organs above the diaphragm.    
5653-1 . . . To this we would add Wild Cherry Bark (this is to act as an active force with the gastric juices of the stomach, as well as a carrier for the rest of the system, acting with the respiratory system)    
457-3 . . . The Wild Cherry Bark is for cleansing the blood supply.    
3724-1 . . . The action of these properties combined within the system are to act on the effects acquired in the lung forces within clarifying blood. The action of certain properties is to rebuild the Hemoglobin within the blood to give more Leukocytes to the blood, as we find in the bark of Wild Cherry and Sarsaparilla.    
5681-1 . . . Wild Cherry Bark (Preferable that taken from the North side of the tree) ... 4 ounces 

   
Stillingia - (Stillingia sylvatica)
Common Names and Synonyms: Queen's Delight, Queen's Root, Silver Leaf, Yaw Root
 Background:This plant grows in sandy soil from Maryland to Florida; along the Gulf of Mexico, and westward toward Colorado. The leaves are elliptical and leathery, having almost no base where attached to the stem. Yellow florets appear on the spiked stems from March to August, or longer where the weather is warm.

The plant must be fresh to be effective.
The resinous, milky juice in the yellow-brown root stalk has an unpleasant smell and bitter taste.

Native to North America, stillingia has been used extensively to treat syphilis.

Herbalists also use this herb as a blood purifier, digestive aid and immune enhancer.
Stillingia in the Cayce Readings
Edgar Cayce recommended Stillingia as a blood purifier and digestive aid, especially with reference to stimulating the liver, kidneys and spleen.     Stillingia was mentioned in 201 readings between 1924-1941. Stillingia utilization peaked in 1928 with another notable increase in 1935.  
Cayce Quotes on Stillingia
4742-1 . . . In Stillingia, we will find as a diarrheic [diuretic?] for the digestive forces of the body (in a quantity which will be told you is very little, or not much dose but this we want as the IMPULSE, NOT an active force; for the active FORCES will be created by the manipulations and the adjustments!).    
5664-1 . . . aided by those of the Stillingia and Sassafras as the CLARIFIER of the blood stream and the tendency of theallaying of nerve pressure.    
1019-1 . . . the Stillingia, which in this combination makes for an activity to the kidneys for purifying or cleansing same,
thus building or purifying the blood supply and adding to the gastric flow.    
839-1 . . . the Stillingia as an emit and an active force with the gastric flow ...    
404-4 . . . Other properties, as in the Stillingia, make for that activity with the pulsations between the liver, the heart, the kidneys,
in such a manner as to STILL the circulatory forces there.    
5522-1 . . . This to aid the respiratory system, also sarsaparilla as a cleanser diathetic, and a purifier, as is also the stillingia and the properties as are in the other carriers.    
5509-1 . . . Stillingia - an active force in the functioning of the liver, as related to the pancreas, and IS a stimuli TO same ...
5683-1 . . . The Stillingia is as a sedentary action for the glands of digestion, or the lacteals, WITH those that will make for a better coordination of the muco-membranes in the intestines, that will clarify poisons from the body. (That's in the Syrup of Rhubarb, see?)    
5559-1 . . . the stimuli - both in the Stillingia and in the alcohol content, WITH the Ambergris - for the gastric forces of the intestines and stomach.    
4721-2 . . . (Question) What is the condition of the spleen?
(Answer) Taxed through the strain mentally and through the nerve system general. Stillingia and Calisaya, especially, for the liver and spleen.    
816-2 . . . The active forces of these ingredients are as these: The Sage or Senna is as an emit activity upon the organs of the digestive system, and toning with the Stillingia, the Gin, the Ambergris, the active forces in the pancreas; especially; as well as astimulation for the cleansing through the alimentary canal; cleansing also through the active forces upon the hepatic circulation.
Yellow Dock Root - (Rumex crispus)
Common Names and Synonyms: Curled Dock, Narrow-leafed Dock
 Background: Native to Europe and now widely distributed in North American, yellow dock has traditionally been used as a mild laxative and liver cleanser.
It was also used externally to relieve insect stings.
Today, herbalists use yellow dock as a blood cleanser, tonic and builder.
It is also used to stimulate the liver and gallbladder and aid in digestion.
The characteristic of this plant is the light green narrow leaves, curled at the long edges, a stem 2 or 3 feet high, and a deep root which is bright yellow when the outer bark is scraped away.
The roots are gathered in the fall, thoroughly cleaned, split lengthwise, and dried.

A tea made from yellow dock root is mildly cathartic and promotes the flow of bile.
Yellow Dock in the Cayce Readings
Edgar Cayce recommended yellow dock root as a digestive aid and blood purifier, working especially with the liver and pancreas.     Yellow dock root was mentioned in 265 readings between 1911 and 1944. Yellow dock root utilization peaked in 1924 and decreased markedly with only a slight increase between 1932-1935.
Cayce Quotes on Yellow Dock
1012-1 . . . The Yellow Dock acts with the DIGESTIVE fluids themselves.    
643-1 . . . The yellow dock root is an emit and blood purifier, an active principle with the secretions of the liver.    
4650-1 . . . We find these conditions, for the condition to produce the proper secretions to the pancreas and to give thecorrect functioning of the liver these elements are added in those of the Burdock and Yellow Dock root, you see; for that of the liver and to reduce the high hepatic condition is given the Black root and Yellow root . . .  
Poke Root - (Phytolacca decandra)
Synonyms: Pokeweed, Pigeon Berry, Poke Root, Coakum, Pocan
 Background:Poke is a toxic herb which may be eaten after long boiling. Medicinally, poke is used as purgative and anti-inflammatory. Poke grows in shady soil across eastern North America. The green or purple stems bearing simple leaves and white flowers that give way to purple staining berries, was used in small doses by the Indians as a blood purifier. The roots were crushed and roasted. This plant must be properly cooked or it can be toxic.

Constituents: Poke root's main constituents include triterpenoid saponins, alkaloid, resins, phytolacic acid, tannin, formic acid, fatty oil and sugar.
Medicinal Action and Uses: A slow emetic and purgative with narcotic properties. As an alterative it is used in chronic rheumatism and granular conjunctivitis. As an ointment, in the proportion of a drachm to the ounce, it is used in psora, tinea capitis, favus and sycosis, andother skin diseases, causing at first smarting and heat.
The slowness of action and the narcotic effects that accompany it render its use as an emetic inadvisable. It is used as a cathartic in paralysis of the bowels. Headaches of many sources are benefited by it, and both lotion and tincture are used in leucorrhoea.

As a poultice it causes rapid suppuration in felons. The extract is said to have been used in chronic rheumatism and hemorrhoids. Authorities differ as to its value in cancer.
Poke in the Cayce Readings
  Edgar Cayce did not describe a specific action for poke.     Poke is mentioned in 49 readings between 1922-1943 with peak utilization between 1924-1926.     Poke was recommended as a food (poke greens in 8 reading during the later years) or as an ingredient in a complex compound. When prescribed in a compound, the most frequent form was prepared (tincture, extract, essence or fusion     Although a wide diversity of formulas were given that contained poke, the most common substances mentioned in the same readings with poke were as follows:
Yellow Dock, Wild Cherry, Sarsaparilla, Stillingia, Tolu, Calisaya, Burdock Root, Mandrake, Potassium Iodide  
Cayce Quotes on Poke
3741-1 . . . Then to bring the better results to the body, and to correct these conditions, we would first give that in the system that would give the correct incentives to the organs of elimination to function properly; that is, prepare the system first for thecorrections in the dorsal region,
and then stimulate all excretory system, and the nerve centers that are released, and we will bring the better conditions to the body.
Taking, then, this first: Syrup Sarsaparilla, Syrup or Fluid Extract Wild Cherry Bark, Fluid Extract Stillingia, Fluid Extract Yellow Dock Root, Fluid Extract Poke Root.

Add to this sufficient simple syrup to make 12 ounces. The dose would be teaspoonful three times each day, until the greater, or until three-fourths of this has been taken.
Then, through deep manipulations, osteopathically, reduce the condition in the dorsal region, 6th and 7th, 8th and 9th, reflexly.
This will stimulate also the whole excretory system. At the same time taking those vibrations of the violet ray, using the heavier applicator, for three minutes each evening. Do not take this while medicinal properties are being taken, but after all of this has been taken. Begin with osteopathic treatments before the whole quantity is taken.    
4818-1 . . . Then, to reduce the condition and to bring the normal forces to the body, we would first take those properties in the system that will give the correct incentives for the eliminations, then correct the condition in the cerebro-spinal nervous system, giving the correct functioning of the body and the correct vibrations through the adjustment of these conditions and bring about the normal forces.

Taking, then, this: To 4 ounces of simple syrup, add Syrup of Sarsaparilla, Elixia Calisaya. Fluid Extract Stillingia, Fluid Extract Yellow Dock Root, Fluid Extract Poke Root, Fluid Extract Capsici.

Shake solution well together before the dosage is taken. The dose would be half a teaspoonful taken three times each day. When two-thirds of quantity has been taken (and at the same time keeping the intestinal tract open, full, free, that we may reduce the eliminations and the excretory forces may be functioning nearer the normal), begin with the deep manipulations in the whole cerebro-spinal system, adding the light rays to the lower dorsal and the lumbar and sacral region, of the Alpine Rays. These we find will give the correct vibrations and the eliminations necessary to produce the adjustment and coordination through the body here, [4818].  
Burdock Root (Arctium lappa)
Common Names and Synonyms: Beggar's Buttons, Thorny Burr, Gypsy's Rhubarb, Fox's Clote, Cockle Buttons
 Background: Burdock grows wild throughout much Europe and the northern United States.
Traditionally, burdock was used as a blood purifier and to treat skin sores.

Today burdock is also used as a systemic cleanser and is particularly noted
as a liver purifier and hormone balancer, especially in cases of skin, arthritic and glandular problems.

The large-leafed plant bears thistle-like red or purple flowers set in a round, fruiting head, covered with burrs. Burdock grows wild along field borders from July to September and the burrs cling to the fur of any passing animal or to a person's clothing.
The idea for the product known as Velcro came from the sticking quality of the burrs.
Active Ingredients: Burdock root contains: Approximately 27-45% inulin, mucilage (up to 75% of the root is carbohydrate in the form of fructo-oligo-saccharides (FOS) including inulin); 0.06-0.18% essential oil with so far 66 identified components; antibacterial polyacetylenes; bitter substances (i.e. lactones); 1.9-3.65% polyphenols including caffeic acid, chlorogenic acid and other powerful flavonoid-type antioxidants; sitosterol and stigmasterol.
Burdock in the Cayce Readings
According to the Cayce readings, the intended action of burdock was as a digestive stimulant to the stomach, intestines, pancreas and liver.     Burdock was mentioned in 160 readings between 1911 and 1944.    
Burdock was always recommended with other substances in a compound, never by itself.  
Cayce Quotes on Burdock
1012-1 . . . The Burdock is an activative force with or in the juices through the hydrochloric area, or in the pylorus.    
4650-1 . . . We find these conditions, for the condition to produce the proper secretions to the pancreas and to give the
correct functioning of the liver these elements are added in those of the Burdock and Yellow Dock root