Arthrosis, commonly known as degenerative joint disease, is a chronic, degenerative condition characterized by the progressive wear and tear of joint cartilage.
The difference between arthritis and arthrosis is, as the name suggests. Arthritis is accompanied by inflammation, and arthrosis lacks the inflammation pattern.
Arthrosis is known as the inevitable consequence of joint deterioration due to the slow grinding of the cartilage. This implies that the older we are, or the more the joint has been used, the more it will deteriorate, leading to a disappearance of the cartilage, deformation of the joint, and the appearance of pain when pressure is applied.
Doctors look at it as the inevitable consequence of an aging process. Everyone who is familiar with my work knows that this is incorrect. We do not need health gurus to see the obvious. In nature, you will never see an animal, no matter its age, limping due to a deteriorating joint. The animal can have an injury, but not a chronic deterioration of cartilage, or deformation of a joint caused by damaged cartilage due to chronic overuse of the joint.
We notice a gradual decrease in mobility as we age, and we associate it with a gradual deterioration of the body. We apply this to every symptom that occurs and gradually increases in time. Most symptoms are related, but some, such as mobility, stand on their own.
The body can be well hydrated, clean, and healthy with limited mobility. When we stop using one joint, the joint locks in place in time, and it takes a physiotherapist to get it moving again. After my motorcycle accident, I was lying in bed for two months, and both of my legs were immobilized because of fractures. After two months, when I started to walk, my ankles were frozen stiff. It took me several months to get them moving again.
For cartilage to wear off, there has to be a lack of lubrication. As long as the joint is well lubricated, no matter how much or how often you use it, the cartilage will remain the same, serving as a cushion and a gliding mechanism, a bearing for the moving joint.
The joint lubricant is a drop of plasma supplied by the cartilage when pressure is applied during the movement. Only dehydrated cartilage will wear off as it loses the ability to lubricate itself. The first symptom of a dehydrated cartilage is discomfort during a prolonged walk. Without lubrication, the cartilage grinds against each other. This warms the joint up. The body will respond by delivering more plasma to the joint to cool it down. Water retention will occur. The joint will swell and become a bit less mobile. After a rest, the joint will feel okay, and it will not cause problems as long as the walks are short and less intense.
The more we use such a dehydrated joint, the body will try to inject plasma into the cartilage by creating a forced hydration through inflammation so that the cartilage can produce lubricant. This stage of a joint we call arthritis.
If we keep the use of a dehydrated joint limited, and as long as the body remains dehydrated and the blood thick, joints will not lubricate, and the limited use will not trigger an inflammation. A slow, gradual wear of the joint will occur, and the slow deterioration of the cartilage, then the bone below it, causing pain and water retention.
This process we can recognize in every joint of the dehydrated body with toxic blood. This is how scoliosis occurs. A hip dysplasia is caused by the same principle.
Sometimes, increased pressure on the joint irritates it, which can cause arthrosis even when the joint is not moving much. Such is the case with bunions.

The pressure from a shoe irritates the tissue near the joint. More blood is routed this way to cool down the irritated tissue. If the blood is dehydrated and toxic, more toxins will accumulate in such tissue. The tissue thickens and calcifies, producing a bunion. The entire joint becomes affected. Loses mobility and becomes painful.
A similar thing we can encounter on the elbow when a toxic individual leans the elbow often on a hard surface, such as a table during studying.
The only reason why arthrosis is more prevalent in the elderly is the cumulative nature of local tissue poisoning. People with toxic blood who are more active will develop arthrosis faster, but more likely, they will have arthritis first, since inflammation will be triggered to help the body cope with the cellular dehydration of the cartilage.
The important thing is to realize that the deterioration of the joint can be stopped, and the cartilage can recuperate once we cleanse the blood and stop poisoning our bodies.
Again, SHP to the rescue.
It is important to remind everyone that one of the major sources of toxicity in the body is bad emotions. Many pains are a direct result of emotional problems, and only by stopping the creation of those emotions can the pain be resolved, although the cleansing still has to be done through the blood cleansing process.
Love and light to us all
