DWQA QuestionsCategory: Healing ModalitiesA practitioner asks: “I have a client who has become quite ill. He has had bad rheumatoid arthritis for years. In January he started getting mouth sores and little infections, and it has progressed rapidly… they did a bone marrow biopsy which eventually showed LGL, a more treatable leukemia…I would think the viral illness(es) still need to be addressed to alleviate his rheumatoid arthritis and now leukemia with secondary infections. Is this true? Would ivermectin be useful, or hydroxychloroquine, or both?” What can we tell her?
Nicola Staff asked 4 months ago
This is very much an extension of viral illness, that he is suffering from leukemia, and that does not bode well for the future and is a risk, in general, of having a chronic virus in the body. It is a continued risk factor for generating new illnesses. This can happen for any number of reasons—an adversarial circumstance in the daily life that stirs up trouble from old karmic unfinished business; some kind of new trauma that resonates with difficulties in a prior life may well line up the Law of Karma to exploit viral presence to get, in effect, a biowar going on a new front in a new organ system. That is what has played out here, to have leukemia added onto his rheumatoid arthritis, so going after the viruses has a high priority in terms of long-term benefit. One or both of these agents would be helpful for him personally.