Bentonite Clay Properties - Intestinal cleanse
helping spiritual awakening
The notion of eating clay
to produce internal healing
will no doubt
strike many as farfetched if not a little primitive. But natural
clay, especially
the form known as bentonite,
has not only been used medicinally for centuries by indigenous
peoples around the world, but has, in recent years, been increasingly
prescribed by practitioners of alternative
medicine as a simple but effective internal cleanser to assist in
reversing
numerous health
problems.
Clay
is a great healer,
according to clay
expert Ran Knishinsky in The Clay
Cure (Healing
Arts Press, 1998), who quips “I have been eating dirt
every day for the past six years.” Indeed, in over 200 cultures
worldwide, every day people eat or drink
clay—the medicinal form of “dirt”—as
both a nutritional supplement and detoxifying agent,
observes Knishinsky.
It is not ordinary “dirt”
of course. The name bentonite
refers to a clay
first identified (or named) in cretaceous rocks
in Fort Benton,
Wyoming. Although bentonite
deposits occur worldwide, many of the largest concentrations are
found in the Great Plains area of North
America.
Bentonite
clay is not a mineral
but a commercial name for montmorillonite,
the active mineral
in many medicinal clays and which comes from weathered volcanic ash.
This name derives from Montmorillon, France, where the medicinal
mineral was
first identified. Sometimes mineralogists use the term smectite
instead to describe the same substance.
A VOLCANIC
DETOXIFIER Bentonite
clay, a medicinal powdered clay
which is also known as montmorillonite,
derives from deposits of weathered volcanic ash.
It is one of the most effective natural intestinal detoxifying agents
available and has been recognized as such for centuries by native
peoples around the world. Whatever the name, liquid clay
contains minerals
that, once inside the gastrointestinal
tract, are able to absorb toxins
and deliver mineral
nutrients to an impressive degree,
says Knishinsky. Liquid clay
is inert which means it passes through the body undigested.
Technically, the clay
first adsorbs toxins
(heavy metals,
free radicals, pesticides), attracting them to its extensive surface
area where they adhere
like flies to
sticky paper; then it absorbs the toxins,
taking them in the way a sponge mops up a kitchen
counter mess.
There is an electrical aspect
to bentonite
clay´s ability to bind
and absorb toxins.
According to Yerba Prima, a company based in Ashland, Oregon, which
markets Great Plains® Bentonite,
the clay’s
minerals are
negatively charged while toxins
tend to be
positively charged; hence the clay’s
attraction works like a magnet
drawing metal shavings. But it’s even more involved than that.
Once hydrated (combined with water),
bentonite
has an enormous surface area. According to Yerba Prima, a single
quart bottle can represent a total surface area of 960 square
yards or 12 American football fields. Bentonite
is made of a great number of tiny platelets, with negative electrical
charges on their flat surfaces and positive charges on their edges.
When bentonite
clay absorbs water
and swells, it is stretched open like a highly porous sponge; the
toxins are
drawn into these spaces by electrical attraction and bound fast.
In fact, according to the Canadian Journal of Microbiology (31
[1985], 50-53), bentonite
can absorb pathogenic viruses, aflatoxin (a mold), and pesticides and
herbicides including Paraquat and Roundup. The clay
is eventually eliminated from the body with the toxins
bound to its multiple surfaces.
According to Sonne’s
Organic Foods of North
Kansas City, Missouri, a company that markets Detoxificant (a liquid
montmorillonite),
“There is no evidence that bentonite
has any chemical action in the body. Its power is purely physical.”
Bentonite
clay’s adsorptive and absorptive qualities may be the key
to its multifaceted healing
abilities. Knishinsky reports that drinking
clay helped him
eliminate
painful ganglion cysts (tumors attached to joints and tendons, in his
case, in his wrist) in two months, without surgery.
According
to Knishinsky, benefits reported by people using liquid clay
for a period of two to four weeks include: improved intestinal
regularity; relief from chronic constipation,
diarrhea,
indigestion,
and ulcers; a surge in physical energy;
clearer complexion;
brighter, whiter eyes;
enhanced alertness; emotional uplift; improved tissue and gum repair;
and increased resistance
to infections. “Clay
works on the entire organism.
No part of the body is left
untouched by its healing
energies,” he notes.
A medical study by Frederic
Damrau, M.D., in 1961 (Medical Annals of the District of Columbia)
established clearly that bentonite
can end bouts of diarrhea.
When 35 individuals (average age
51) suffering
from diarrhea
took two tablespoons of bentonite
in distilled water
daily, the diarrhea
was relieved in 97% (34 of the 35 patients) in 3.8 days, regardless
of the original
cause of the problem (allergies,
virus infection, spastic colitis,
or food
poisoning). According to Dr. Damrau, bentonite
is “safe
and highly effective” in treating acute diarrhea.
Knishinsky’s research suggests that the regular intake
of liquid clay
(typically one to three tablespoons daily, in divided doses) can
produce other benefits including parasite removal from the
intestines,
allergy and hay
fever relief,
and elimination of anemia and acne.
For example, clay
helps anemia because it contains both types of dietary iron
(ferrous and ferric) in an easily assimilated form; it reduces
discomfort from allergies
by quickly neutralizing allergens that would otherwise produce
allergic reactions; and it reduces heartburn and indigestion
by absorbing excess stomach
acids.
However, bentonite
clay’s forte is probably its role as a general internal
detoxification
and cleansing agent.
According to Keith Payne of White
Rock Mineral
Corporation in Springville, Utah, clay
scrapes and cleans the lining of the colon.
“As the colon
becomes cleaner, its ability to absorb minerals
and other nutrients increases, making the minerals
even more bioavailable, thus giving more energy.”
White
Rock’s clay,
called Bentonite
Minerals™,
contains 71 trace and ultra-trace minerals,
including many that are probably unknown to most consumers, such as
ruthenium, tellurium, and thulium. Trace minerals
enable the body to absorb nutrients—“they are the bonding
agents in and between you and food,”
explains Payne.
Bentonite
Minerals are
derived from an ancient seabed formation in Utah; according to
geologists, the clay
formed when a layer of volcanic ash
fell into what was, long ago, a shallow inland sea. “As the ash
filtered through the seawater, it collected pure minerals,
forming a layer of highly mineralized clay,”
says Payne.
The best way to
drink bentonite
clay is on an empty stomach,
or at least an hour before or after a meal or immediately before
sleeping at night,
says Knishinsky. Typically, clay
is available as a thick tasteless, pale-grey gel, but it also comes
as a powder or
encapsulated.
Generally, it is advisable to start with one
tablespoon daily, mixed with a small amount of juice; observe the
results for a week,
then gradually increase the dosage to no more than four tablespoons
daily, in divided doses. Drinking
clay can be an
annual spring cleaning of your gastrointestinal
tract or it can be a symptom-focused, self-care
method.
from:
http://www.alternativemedicine.com/digest/issue27/27044R00.shtml
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