Let's Talk About Lyme

in naturalmedicine •  5 years ago 

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These are my thoughts on Lyme disease treatment. I'm using my own body to figure this out. I'd love to hear from others about what they do when they are bitten by a deer tick.

I've been told by a lyme specialist that I am one of the "lucky ones". My body has a very strong initial reaction to tick bites - they itch, boy oh boy do they itch. It's an itch like no other, so lucky me, I don't have to see the tick to know that I've been bitten by one.

Infected or not, the bites drive me nuts at first, and I go on the lookout for a rash. Just so you all know, that bulls eye rash you're told is a symptom? I get those too alright, another lucky-me symptom, but they only last for a couple hours, if that. They are very easy to miss, even if you are keeping a close eye on the bite. On lucky ole me, those bulls eye rashes then turn to a solid oval-shaped and deep red rashes, still itchy, with unique scabs near the center. There is again no denying that I was bitten by a tick, but now I can be sure without even a blood test that it injected spirochetes of some type into me.

Soon after being bitten, I put a mixture of oregano essential oil and colloidal silver on the site. That has so far always been the end of lyme symptoms for me. If I get it on there right away I do not develop a rash at all, and if I start putting it on when the rash shows up, the rash is the last symptom I see. This leads me to believe that treating the site immediately would go a looooong way toward stopping the disease. Thoughts?

I don't know why I didn't use my mixture this time but I completely ignored several bites on my thighs earlier this year, and the disease for the first time ever progressed beyond the rash. I developed PAIN in every part of my body that had ever been injured before. An hours-long debilitating exhaustion made an appearance late afternoon every day for a few days, and before bed the pain was so severe I could barely walk. Oh lucky me, I knew what it all meant.

This is when I called a lyme specialist and tried to make an appointment, but the doctor and I had a long phone conversation instead. First we discussed my symptoms and she said "yup that's Lyme" a few times. She suggested I get my primary care doctor to prescribe doxycycline for three weeks or something absurd that I knew I would not do. I won't take doxycycline; I have seen what it does to people. She said amoxicillin would be OK too, but doxy covers a broader range of infections. I thanked her very very much for all this FREE medical information.

I don't know why I ignored her advice but, lucky me again, I did. The symptoms completely cleared up in a few days and any urgency on my part to treat myself for Lyme withered.

Here's where the story gets interesting. I called the Lyme doctor back, confessed that I had done nothing but the symptoms had cleared up, and to my astonishment she said "If the symptoms have cleared up, do nothing." Shiver me timbers what is this I am hearing from a western doctor?! If you feel OK, you are OK?! Music to my ears.

So apparently this is the new strategy for Lyme - let your body handle it if it can. WHAT?! A western doctor who respects the body's power to heal itself?! The good doctor then suggested I get a course of amoxicillin to have on hand in case any symptoms do reappear, and in that event I am to take it only until the symptoms disappear! More new thinking from the west! Don't take an antibiotic until the antibiotic is gone, take it only until the symptoms are gone!

I believe all symptoms, especially fever and pain, are our bodies speaking to us by alerting us to illnesses and reassuring us that our immune systems are on the job. The good doctor went on to say essentially the same thing - if you have been bitten by a tick and have strong immediate reactions you are one of the lucky ones like me. Your body IS handling it and, if the symptoms disappear entirely, your body has won.

I would love to hear what you guys think of all this. What do you do when bitten? What would you do in my case? What do you think about this doctor's advice? Why do you think some of us are lucky and some of us not?


This is an entry to @naturalmedicine's discussion
https://steempeak.com/naturalmedicine/@naturalmedicine/do-you-have-a-natural-medicine-story-to-tell-come-closer-we-re-listening

Please come tell us one of your stories! And thank you for reading mine.


The image is of the clump of Japanese Knotweed out my front door. There is a LOT of it around here, just as there is a LOT of Lyme disease. The herbalists tell us that medicinal plants come to where they are needed. Knotweed is said to be an effective treatment for Lyme disease. I think it is beautiful, offers great food and cover for birds, houses a lot of wildlife, and suspect it to be very valuable to humans as medicine.

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@owasco you have found a gem of a doctor, keep her. When I lived in Missouri my Dad would get the bullseye from tick bites, he never did anything with it and just healed, he was not a believer in going to doctors. He might have had Lyme disease but never knew it.

With the advent of more and more chemicals being introduced into our bodies, deemed by the witchdoctors to be safe, our immune systems are shot. those of us who stay away from them altogether have a better chance of living healthy lives to our natural ends.
I know! She's outstanding right?

@owasco I hear you about the chemical we take, I wish I did not have to take the meds I take but there is no getting around it, I try to eat healthily, cooking our own meals and growing our veggys. Plus plenty of fish to eat.

I have been re-infected with Lyme many, many times since childhood. It was never treated. (This was the 60's and Lyme didn't become a "thing" until the late 90's...) I "appeared" to heal from it. And I would slowly resume life again.

Then I started having cognitive issues in my 20's. Started having autonomic dysfunction issues in my tweens and teens. Started having neurological issues in my 30's. Not dx'd until 2008. Tried 18 months of many treatments, nothing worked. But I had changed my food and that had the biggest effect. But all these issues are now permanent, non-reversible.

So I do the best I can to eat the best food I can raise. Here's the whole story:

https://steemit.com/introduceyourself/@goldenoakfarm/a-2nd-intro-or-how-i-got-started-growing-my-own-food

So my take: Be careful! It might not show up in a timely fashion.... But I do hope you are one who can heal from tick bites. Not everyone can....

As you have found, what we put into our bodies MATTERS. It either strengthens our immune systems or weakens them. Good food, good air, good water, good times. If more of us valued these four things, fewer of us would be sick. It makes me so sad to hear stories like yours. I suppose civilization has to go through this now and hope much good will come of it. xo

That said, I've decided to take the amoxicillin and hope that doesn't unleash a cascade of other illness for me. the good doctor also told me how, when, how much and what kind of probiotics to take while on the antibiotics, the very first time ANY doctor has said anything at all to me about probiotics. I think she is a keeper, an ally.

When I was dx'd in 2008, and they put me on antibiotics, I was already doing probiotics, had been for 6 months. So I just kept on doing them. Since then, sometimes doctors mention them, sometimes not....

That is fascinating! I have never been bitten by a tick, that I know of. We don't have too many in this neck of the woods. It's good to know what to watch out for, though. I wonder if deer ticks bite goats? I've never found a tick on a goat.

Oregano Oil and Colloidal Silver together would probably fix bubonic plague! LOL. I think you're on to something. Thankfully we have few ticks in Thailand.


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I'm terrified of lyme's disease, but also totally respect my own body's capacity to heal. I reckon if you whack it early with what ya got and have a strong immune system, you'll be good.

Ticks totally freak me out. I have a funny story though for you. When my husband and I were first together, we lived in a truck in a field with lots of deer, badgers and so on - a real tick haven. My 5 year old also was with us, and of course his new stepdad was learning for the first time how to be a father. Anyway, I must have been out or at work or something, and they were tidying up for tea - which involved the daily ritual tick check over - check groin, armpits, etc. We'd never got a tick yet but were told to be careful and were excercising due diligence. Anyway, my little boy discovered something that he knew SHOULD NOT BE THERE. 'Um, Jamie', he says, shyly and kinda laughing (he had a well developed sense of humour even at that age) 'I think I've got a tick'.

'Where?' Jamie says, reaching for the tweezers.

'ON MY BALLS!' my boy giggles, and both of them had to deal with it in the best way they could.

hahahahahahaha!
I can see that!
They had a unique bonding experience!