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monosodium glutamate
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Posted by:
lesley ®

11/19/2021, 14:51:40
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13 said it's a naturally occurring substance and not sure why some people get bad reactions to it.

I have been told that things like mushrooms and tomatoes and seaweed are all high in msg.

I love tomatoes, I eat a lot of them, I eat a lot of mushrooms, I roast things like cauliflower and Brussels sprouts just to intensify their umami - garlic, does garlic have a lot of msg in it, idk but I eat that too.

The thing people have trouble with is the synthesised msg.  I might be in a small category by having a near death experience on contact but I have noticed how most people right in that flush of enjoyment of the food with the msg enhancing it have gone red faced and a bit sweaty or gone grey faced and a bit sweaty.

None of that happens after eating fried tomatoes on toast.  It's all happy.  Peace and harmony reign.












Modified by lesley at Fri, Nov 19, 2021, 15:02:21

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and the peanut pusher
Re: monosodium glutamate -- lesley Top of thread Post Reply Forum
Posted by:
lesley ®

12/11/2021, 14:58:43
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I am now being crunched by the great divide between vaccinated and not vaccinated.  My nature is to go along with the vaccinated, I like to go along with what people do and I like the good levels of social distancing, I did not like the hug I received from an anti vaxxer.  Theoretically it's a nice thing to do, my cat has just died. Practically I felt like I was being assaulted - my feelings are being completely ignored under the practise of zealotry.  

even the simple acts of affection getting trampled underfoot.  I thought I was doing well, better than I expected but today I am missing my cat really badly.

omg I just got another hug.  I have been accepted as an honorary pet by a neighbour.  (double vax)

msg was having an adverse affect on so many people that it became an advantage not to include it.  I know almost nothing about the manufacture of snacks but I suspect they have come up with something very close to the original msg but having less side-effects.  ie I can taste it in the batter on the fish n chips but I am still okay.  except.  except.  the last time I ate it I was okay but got hives, the start of an allergic reaction.

What comes down the road.  That's what I find myself thinking. 

So I finally had my consultation with the specialist.  It was a psychological mugging and inspired the title of this post.

the linch pin of her platform is a scientifically conducted study that concludes early exposure to peanuts makes children more tolerant of them.

and well yes I think we'd all pretty much agree with that.  We adapt to our environment.

But I start to realise she has a big ticket riding on it.  Like it's the way to cure allergies.   

Anybody have a grandparent or parent who was allergic to peanuts?  It was rare in our generation wasn't it.  I don't know anyone, it seems to me that it is a modern problem.  My belief, based on knowing there was a post war boom of peanut growing and they used a lot of ddt in those days, is that it is likely to be due to the way the peanut was grown back then rather than just a wide audience of people lacking historical exposure to peanuts now eating them.

Either way it seems unwise to me to encourage children who are intolerant of peanuts to eat more of a substance that naturally they don't want to eat. 

By this stage I realised she didn't really have much understanding of what it is like to have anaphylaxis and was completely focused on her targeted treatment practise.  I also realised she lacked intelligence and yet still she was a doctor wasn't she, I just found it hard to recognise how rabid she was in her attitude to non-vaccinated people.  it started to sink in as she tells me that I would have to have recorded instances of anaphylactic shock, not just to one but to every covid vaccine there is to be eligible for a vax exemption certificate. 

It made me feel like I've been punched.  My input into the consult had been to go through my history of anaphylaxis. And I had hoped she might help me understand it all better. 

and then she follows up with I am no more likely to have anaphylaxis than anyone else.  On what basis, I manage to ask.  because 95% of people don't get it, she replies.  Just like Dr Deepak said before giving me the contrast dye.  

Haven't I just been telling you I'm one of the 5%, I asked, well yes she replies but it's voluntary and I can help if you need to do it.  I get a pen to write down her advice - take two anti histamines and two Panadol beforehand.

so that was the expert - specialist in both immunology and allergies.

and my question remains.  how is it that a factory can source it's ingredients from different natural substances and by following a chemistry-based recipe produce the same result time after time and yet there is also this element of wildly different results.












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ninety-five percent
Re: and the peanut pusher -- lesley Top of thread Post Reply Forum
Posted by:
lesley ®

01/05/2022, 18:41:46
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First I just want to point out that 95% does not include 1 in 20 people.

So of those one in twenty people who did get anaphylaxis, did they survive?

There isn't any point asking that question, nor is there any point in asking if a blood test is being developed to use first and I accept that quite easily - these are not relevant questions for 95% of people.

My Mullumbimby doctor hasn't retired yet.  He had the advantage of having been there one time in the hospital emergency room when I was brought in with anaphylactic shock from a tick bite.  I booked in for an appt with him and waited.  would he remember, it is over 30 years ago.  Yes he remembered.  And he's a nice man, we got talking.  He didn't want to give me the certificate, but he had to.  He would have done everything possible to help me get vaccinated.  

It's not that either of us, let alone the specialist I had spoken to previously, understand the chemistry enough to do anything other than guess but when I said to him I thought the vaccine might be designed to stick around in your body he said yes he thought it was and so when I said the thing that frightened me was that you couldn't just pull the needle out and wait a bit, I would still be in shock, he completely got it and started writing out the certificate. 

He would have liked to be more directly helpful but it still felt good - I felt regularised.  accepted by the medical community.

He was pretty amazing.  It required common sense, intelligence, a grasp on logic and good faith to make sense of the hospital records written by Dr Deepak after he shocked me twice with contrast dye.  I told him how both Dr Deepak and then the specialist had told me 95% of people are okay, but I think I'm part of the 5%, I'd replied.  And then as I was leaving he couldn't help it, he did the same thing.  95% of people are okay with the vaccine he said.

It's like telling a pregnant woman with red hair, and her red-haired husband standing beside her, that she is 90% likely to have a baby that doesn't have red hair.

Sure, in the general population I reply, but my chances are very different.

It's not hard to understand is it, is it? 

IMO, professional circles are just as full of concept cuckoos as religious circles.









Modified by lesley at Wed, Jan 05, 2022, 19:05:35

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