Candida as Pathogen

Candida’s role as a pathogen

Candida albicans is part of the normal flora of the mucous membranes of the respiratory, gastrointestinal, and female genital tracts. A dry skin prevents the growth of the fungus, but damaged skin or areas where two skins touch or rub each other, is more susceptible to rapid growth of fungi.

When Candida fungi are overproduced, they break down the wall of the intestine, penetrate the bloodstream, and release toxic byproducts into the body that causes a leaky gut.

This leads to innumerable health problems, from digestive issues to depression. Also traumas can cause a weakened immune system, thus allowing Candida fungi overgrowth.

Your Dark Doppelganger

How do you get Candida Overgrowth Syndrome (COS)?

Although many manifestations of Candida overgrowth in the vagina, mouth, and skin, are routinely treated, COS is a completely different issue.

In essence: COS is the solidified parasitic matrix, woven from head to toe, that mirrors the human’s deeply corrupted neurological state of being: Your Dark Doppelganger.

COS’s innumerable and elusive set of signs and symptoms can make this disease hard to identify unless the patient and therapist suspect its presence and believe that Candida is a real, diagnosable condition.

To confuse matters further, COS often closely resembles other hard-to-diagnose disorders, such as fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, food sensitivities, irritable bowel syndrome, depression, and cancer.

Although the healthy gut bacteria normally keep Candida levels in check, the following factors can cause the Candida population to grow out of control:

  • Diabetes,
  • Hormonal changes,
  • Unhealthy pH levels,
  • Consuming lots of alcohol,
  • Psycho/Biological Traumas,
  • Weakened immune system,
  • Living a high-stress lifestyle,
  • Taking birth control pills, prednisone et al,
  • High diet in refined carbohydrates and sugar,
  • Eating a diet high in beneficial fermented foods,
  • Taking antibiotics that killed too many friendly bacteria,
  • Oral medications to control inflammatory and auto- immune conditions.


Trush

This can lead to one or most of the following symptoms:

1. Skin and nail infections, such as athlete’s foot or toenail fungus.
2. Feeling worn down, or suffering from chronic fatigue or fibromyalgia.
3. Digestive issues such as bloating, constipation, gas, IBS, diarrhea.
4. Autoimmune diseases such as thyroiditis, rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis, lupus, psoriasis, scleroderma, muscle aches, gingivitis, sinusitis and recurrent colds, GERD, multiple sclerosis, or cancer.
5. Poor concentration & memory, lack of focus, ADD, ADHD and brain fog.
6. Skin issues: ringworm, eczema, psoriasis, staph, blemishes, rashes.
7. Irritability, dementia, mood swings, headache, anxiety or depression
.
8. PMS, rectal or vaginal itching or yeast & urinary tract infections, thrush.
9. Male prostate, kidney, and bladder infections; decreased libido.
10. Sensitivities to common foods, chemicals, perfumes.
11. Alcohol intolerance, seasonal allergies, anger, sores, or itchy ears.
12. Strong sugar, alcohol, drugs, tobacco, and carbohydrate cravings.
13. Lime disease, which triggers auto-immune type symptoms!
14. Deep sleep & REM sleep deprivation. Eyesight degeneration.
15. Paralysis of the creative impulse. Inability to fully manifest.

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