Welcome, Guest
Username: Password: Remember me
Welcome to MMS Forum!

We encourage new members to post a short introduction of themselves in this forum category. Get to know your fellow board members and their interests and skills. Please come and participate in educating people about the healing miracle that is MMS, and join the movement to make it available to the World!
  • Page:
  • 1
  • 2

TOPIC:

Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 30 Oct 2011 11:48 #7753

  • TheWanderer
  • TheWanderer's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • New Member
  • New Member
  • Posts: 6
  • Thank you received: 0
Hello everyone.

I've just started brushing my teeth with MMS and was wondering on what the best approach would be. I've read on Jim Humble's books something along the lines of mixing two drops, adding 3 tbsp of water and scoop one tbsp over the toothbrush for brushing the teeth and gums.

Then I read on one of Mr. Humble's sites that he recommended mixing a 10-drop dose, adding half a glass of water (~100 ml - 4 oz) and pouring on the brush. What's the best take on this? I've seen that people are using the 10-drop variant (or a bit less, looks like a personal choice), should I do it too?

For my first time I followed the directions in the book, with the 2-drop dose and I noticed a bit of blood on the toothbrush and when I spat the liquid out of my mouth. I believe my teeth are sensitive (I saw blood when I washed my teeth before but it stopped when I changed my toothbrush). Does this happen often? I don't know whether it's because of the MMS or just the state of my teeth, but the blood kind of made me think of ways to make it stop.

I need to say that my teeth don't hurt and I've never ever found out how it is to have a tooth ache (nor I'm curious to find out!).

Should I go on with a 10-drop dose and 30 ml of water (I've also seen this mentioned on the forums). What course of action do you recommend?

Thank you all for your time and suggestions!

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re: Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 30 Oct 2011 12:36 #7759

  • Nir
  • Nir's Avatar
  • Offline
  • User is blocked
  • User is blocked
  • Posts: 147
  • Thank you received: 135
the way i understand it -

The 10 drops is if you want to make it for a few days and each day using a little bit of it just for brushing your teeth and gums (you need to keep it in a close bottle to keep it active for a few days)

The two drops with 3 tbsp is for the Daily Procedure For Dental, Respiratory and General Health -

There are three steps in this short procedure. Each morning, make
up a 2-drop dose in a clean dry cup. Activate it with either 10 drops of
10% citric acid and wait 3 minutes or with 2 drops of 50% citric acid
and wait 20 seconds.
♦♦ Never use more than 2 drops of MMS1 for this maintenance
procedure.
Don’t add any water or juice yet. Two drops will give you a small
amount of chlorine dioxide fumes in the air in the cup.
Step One: Briefly Breathe the Fumes
Put your nose over the brim of the cup and breath in slowly once.
That’s all. See next paragraph. Then put your mouth over the cup
and breathe in once slowly and deeply. Do this very gently and
carefully at first. Take a couple of weeks to get used to it.
Caution: This can be dangerous if you overdo it. You must be very
careful. When you breathe in, if you feel a slight bite, you just got
too much chlorine dioxide. A tiny bite won’t hurt you – it tells you it is
reacting with your tissues.
♦♦ Remember, anything in too strong a quantity can hurt you.
Just one half cup of table salt would kill you. This procedure
is safe if you follow instructions.
Keep in mind that:
♦♦ Lung damage happens without your knowledge as there are
no pain nerves in your lungs. Damage your lungs and in about
4 hours you will be gasping for breath.
So when you do this procedure, use only a 2-drop dose in the cup
and breathe only two breaths. You will barely smell the chlorine
dioxide and one tiny bite won’t hurt you, but no more. Same when
you breathe it with your mouth deeply. A tiny bite in your lungs may
be too much, and since you won’t feel it, breathe less deeply at first.
But a 2-drop dose is not going to kill you.
 Never use more than 2 drops for this procedure.
You may cough a lot at first as your lungs start to clear out. Do it
slowly and give them a chance to clear. The MMS does not hurt or
harm lungs, but you can easily overdo anything. Coughing is always
normal. But go slowly. Be careful. Once you have this down and
working every day, you will notice the difference. So far, using this
procedure, none of us has had a single thing such as a cold, flu, or
pneumonia, and I can imagine that there are a lot of other things we
haven’t had.
About Getting MMS to the Lungs
Getting MMS to the lungs is not easy otherwise. When you take it by
mouth, the chlorine dioxide has to enter the blood in the stomach,
be carried around the body, and finally wind up in the lungs. But
the blood must pick up oxygen in the lungs and it doesn’t get to the
carbon dioxide side of the lungs except in tiny amounts. There is no
reason for it to go there. The carbon dioxide simply gets breathed
out.
So the amount of chlorine dioxide available to kill pathogens that
love the carbon dioxide side of the lungs is extremely limited. But
when you breathe chlorine dioxide in, it goes straight into the lungs.
It is probably hundreds of times more than would be carried there by
the blood. So every morning, you are scrubbing your lungs a little bit
cleaner with chlorine dioxide.
Remember:
♦♦ Never use more than 2 drops of MMS 1;
♦♦ Go gently and slowly; and
♦♦ Take a total of one breath through your nose and one through
your mouth.
Step Two: Brush Teeth and Gums
Add 3 tablespoons of water to the same 2 drops and stir a bit. Scoop
out one tablespoon and put it on your toothbrush to brush your teeth,
gums and tongue. Again, those people who say MMS is hard on
tooth enamel do not know what they are talking about. In rare cases,
it kills things that are on the enamel and that may look bad for a
short while, but it does not harm the enamel itself.
Step Three: Gargle
Once your teeth are brushed with the one tablespoon of MMS
solution, add about a quarter cup of water to the other two
tablespoons of water that are still in the cup and gargle. This will
prevent sore throats. Do this procedure every morning and you will
be very pleased with the results. Keep in mind that you should also
take your oral maintenance dose of MMS as described above. Stay
healthy; live to be 150.
The following user(s) said Thank You: dishpan, TheWanderer

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re: Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 30 Oct 2011 12:45 #7761

  • Nir
  • Nir's Avatar
  • Offline
  • User is blocked
  • User is blocked
  • Posts: 147
  • Thank you received: 135
About the blood - you probably have a minor gum infection, mms1 will take care of it very quickly - i had it too no need to worry :-)
The following user(s) said Thank You: TheWanderer

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re: Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 30 Oct 2011 13:05 #7763

  • TheWanderer
  • TheWanderer's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • New Member
  • New Member
  • Posts: 6
  • Thank you received: 0
Thank you Nir for your reply. I know about the rest of the 2-drop procedure, but I felt it was too wordy for me to put it on the forum :)

So I take it I should keep going with the 2-drop variant and maybe use the 10-drop one after a week or so, once or twice. Would that be ok?

I'm glad it wasn't just me with the blood problem :)

I'm considering buying some tooth soap from toothsoap.com for me to use after the three weeks are up. Would it be a good companion to the MMS? I understand that after three weeks I should use MMS twice a week or so. Am I correct?

Thank you once again!

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re: Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 30 Oct 2011 14:48 #7771

  • Nir
  • Nir's Avatar
  • Offline
  • User is blocked
  • User is blocked
  • Posts: 147
  • Thank you received: 135
you are most welcome :-)

If you do not do all the 3 stages of the Daily Procedure For Dental, Respiratory and General Health and you are only brushing your teeth then i do not see a real different between the two and i think you will get the same result either way. so do the one that is more easy for you to do.

I changed the way i do my teeth now. i use organic NO FLUORIDE tooth paste to clean the teeth, then i take 2 drops of activated MMS1 + 1/4 glass of water and i just use it all as a mouth wash and after that i rinse my mouth with clean water. some times i brush with MMS1 but usually I prefer to brush with a tooth paste :-) i have no idea what is a tooth soap :-)

you write - I understand that after three weeks I should use MMS twice a week or so. Am I correct?
I do not know what protocol you are using the MMS if any, or only your teeth? ... so it is hard for me to answer that....
The following user(s) said Thank You: TheWanderer

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re: Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 30 Oct 2011 16:13 #7778

  • TheWanderer
  • TheWanderer's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • New Member
  • New Member
  • Posts: 6
  • Thank you received: 0
I was talking about using MMS for my teeth. Sorry for the mistake. I guess your variant is also good and I will be using it if you don't mind :) I was also thinking of getting fluoride-free toothpaste, but I am now considering tooth soap (see toothsoap.com - I plan on getting the liquid Spearmint one). When I get it I will use MMS as a mouthwash as you do.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re: Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 20 Nov 2011 18:43 #8341

  • TheWanderer
  • TheWanderer's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • New Member
  • New Member
  • Posts: 6
  • Thank you received: 0
Hello. I'm back with a short update. Currently I've been using the MMS for five days straight specifically for detal care.

Honestly, I got a bit scared because five days ago my front teeth began feeling kind of strange. They don't hurt or something, but are beginning to be pressure-sensitive, meaning I can't chew on them and not feel something strange, I can't describe it exactly, It's like a feeling that if I got punched I would lose 3 or 4 teeth.

I couldn't even chew on bread and not feel like this so I've avoided eating with them and also began using MMS for 3-4 times a day, 10 drops.

The bleeding appeared only the first time, then disappeared, I only saw minor traces of blood the second day and now I don't see any. This is one less worry to think about :) Four days in and I could chew on bread.

Today I tried to chew on something harder but got the previous response so I backed down. I currently use a 10-drop dose twice a day and I want to plan ahead so that I can get my teeth in working condition.

I've already placed an order for a tooth soap and I'm waiting for it to arrive. Will continue using 10 drops twice daily for another five days and then go with the 2-drop variant, while incorporating brushing using the tooth soap.

Considering the fact that I may have a more powerful infection, I want to buy another product in about a week. Three of them are on my mind, ordered by price (I plan on getting all three of them sooner or later):
- Peri Gum: I don't know if any of you have used this product, but it has a good reputation online for bringing back gum tissue and also in combating gum infections (which I think is my case). I am tempted to buy this first as it's the most affordable for me - I can get it next week
- DMSO: no info needs to be added regarding the product, other than I could get it in about 3 weeks (I'll order it from phhealth.co.uk - 35 GBP including shipping). If you are aware of a another store that sells DMSO in Europe please let me know - I'd like to avoid the websites outside the EU for the customs.
- Waterpik: it would take a month and a half until I scrape enough money to get a good one - do I really need this now or could it wait? I thought I should get one because I don't think I can hit the infection at present. Could use DMSO instead?

This is it at the moment. What is the best course of action for me to take? What suggestions do you have for me regarding my situation?

Thank you very much for having taken the time to reading my lengthy post.

*Edit* I've realized that I opened this topic in the wrong sub forum. If someone would please move it in the appropriate section I would be grateful. Sorry for not looking deeper in the forums beforehand.

Cheers!

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Last edit: by TheWanderer.

Re: Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 20 Nov 2011 23:25 #8344

  • Lorhen
  • Lorhen's Avatar
  • Offline
  • New Member
  • New Member
  • Posts: 9
  • Thank you received: 0
I am a bit concerned about something. What if you have several metal crowns in your mouth. Many of us have at least a few of these. Also many have amalgam fillings still. If MMS activates or oxidizes metals wouldn't brushing your teeth with it cause metals to activate and cause harm? I thought that MMS attacked heavy metals and destroyed them so it would seem dangerous to put MMS in the mouth. Please ease my mind on this somebody..? Thanks!
Lorhen

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re: Brushing Teeth with MMS - Best Practices? 21 Nov 2011 11:10 #8351

  • Alanti
  • Alanti's Avatar
  • Offline
  • Senior Member
  • Senior Member
  • Posts: 57
  • Thank you received: 8
Hi Lorhen,
I think it is a bad practice to use ClO2 iin presence of metals and especially amalgam due to the reactions between such components.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

  • Page:
  • 1
  • 2