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It seems that not only has the menstrual cycle of girls started in earlier and earlier age, so do the complications and discomfort that sometimes follow this process.
More and more young girls experience health issues more resembling menopause than the normal beginning of menstrual cycles.
Young girls are experiencing a mood-swings, cramps, cold sweats and fever.
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After leaving their doctors office the young girls come home loaded with medications. From diuretics, anti-inflammatory drugs, and analgesics, even hormonal supplements are being used.
Many doctors, realizing that the hormonal balance had changed, they try to offset it through supplementation of what they think are the missing or miss-balanced hormones. This is what I call messing with the autopilot.
Doctors are like children steering a plane that is controlled by an autopilot. All they are doing is making the autopilot work harder or messing it up so bad that it freezes and stops performing.
Here is a video where we discuss menstruation from puberty to menopause.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFO0b0UZ6Sc&w=570&h=320]
There is much more that can be discussed on this topic and we are going to return to this topic.
Is there something that we can do to prepare young girls from having the discomfort when the menstruation comes?
I had answered this question many times in the past. Obviously, the clue is in keeping the body clean. This we achieve through proper hydration and proper diet.
I will make a quick summary of how to go about it in the addendum.
Love and light to us all.
The addendum is being mailed to the family that occasionally contributes to my work through their donations’
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Hello Darko
This is timely. This is a recent article from the BBC:-
‘I had a hysterectomy at 28 because my periods made me suicidal’
For a couple of weeks every month, Lucie seemed to become a different person – one suffering from countless mental and physical problems – and she couldn’t understand why. She spent years looking for a doctor who could provide an answer, and it took a hysterectomy at the age of 28 to cure her.
“I would know that things would change before I even opened my eyes in the morning. It was just like this weight had been put on me,” says Lucie. “I did go to the doctor at one point and tell them that I thought I was possessed.”
Before puberty hit, Lucie had been a calm, happy, carefree child. But from the age of 13 she started to suffer from severe depression, anxiety and panic attacks.
Read the rest here:- http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/stories-43242003