How You Rot & Rust

Pictures of Blood - A Visual Look at How We Rot

Using a microscope in a health care practice becomes a most powerful tool to visually see the microbial activity in blood and learn firsthand about the ROT theory of aging and disease. To say it impacts patients is an understatement. When a patient visually sees the microbial activity taking place in their own blood, it gives them reason to pause and rethink their health attitudes - unless of course they don't care about their health. But if they do care, it makes a lasting and positive impact on patients like few other things. Looking at live blood under the microscope, with an understanding of what is going on, is an education in health beyond what words can impart.

The blood that used for observation under the microscope is simple capillary blood, expelled from the pinky through a simple finger stick. In order to not damage the blood, the finger is not squeezed, the blood is allowed to come out on its own and it is quickly placed on a slide with a cover slip.

Blood should be observed immediately after getting the specimen. The reason we do this is because it immediately tells us something - and that is; where is the patient "right now".

You see, as blood sits on a slide, it degenerates. HOW FAST it degenerates when out of the body, tells us HOW FAST the patient themselves are AGING and DEGENERATING.

The faster live blood degenerates on a microscope slide,
the faster the patient is aging and degenerating internally.

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