Hi Johan,
Jim has a special protocol 1000 for Swine Flu (H1N1) which you should know about. Here is what he says in his new book:
Excerpt from Jim Humble,
The Master Mineral of the Third Millennium (Get it now
www.miraclemineral.org)
Protocol 1000 for Swine Flu (H1N1)
In the event you are using the Protocol 1000 for the pig flu (swine flu, H1N1) and you don’t notice an improvement in the first 4 days or less, you should add MMS2 to the protocol. Start out with one or two capsules and use as many as 4 capsules a day, taking one every other hour. Separate the capsules from the MMS1 doses by about half an hour. Do this faithfully and you should be well long before 3 weeks are up.
The swine flu goes to your lungs and can cause you to cough up blood. I had it and several have called or sent emails to mention that they had it. From what people say, it sounds like the worst flu yet. But they said they handled it with MMS.MMS treats it successfully. Just don’t take too much MMS --remember the rules.
If MMS makes you feel worse:
• It is working, but you are taking too much. You must decrease your doses. If you try to tough it out and continue taking too much, it can kill you. Decrease your dose to one drop an hour and if you are already taking a drop an hour and it is still making you feel worse, reduce to half a drop an hour or a quarter, or an eighth. But:
• Do not stop taking MMS, especially if you have the swine flu. It is OK to stop for an hour or several hours if the MMS did indeed make you feel worse. Stop only until you are feeling like you were when you started the MMS and then start back at a smaller dose.
Read this data again. Be sure to continue on an hourly dose, and continue to increase the dose if you can. If necessary, reduce all the way to an eighth of a drop per hour. But increase the dose as soon as possible. As I already said, add MMS2 if you are not improving. For more about MMS2, please see Chapter 16. For overcoming the MMS Bad Taste Using Gelatin Capsules, see Chapter 12.
The main difference about this protocol is that you have to be really careful with the swine flu of taking too much MMS. This happened to Jim when he got Swine flu in Mexico and taking too much made him worse. So I would advise going very slow with the birds at first, even though Avian is a different strain.
In the latest video on CDS from Mark (
www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10150991514880160.) he says that 1 cc/ml of the CDS is equal to 4 drops of activated MMS. Mark (or maybe it was Jim) also says that they gave injections of 1 cc/ml and it stung for a couple minutes but then went away.
You would need to give the birds hourly injections for 8 hrs a day, and like Jim says they should be well in less than 3 weeks. Doing it for 3 weeks should be perfectly safe just like it is in humans. You could also trying using a needless syringe to inject the dose into the birds mouth. I have a lady doing that for her dog with cancer. When I took the CDS undiluted it burned a little, but the birds might accept it that way or with a little water added.
For dosing, I would use the recommended 3 drops (.75 cc/ml of CDS) for birds that weigh the same as a normal human. However, I would start with 1 drop (.25 cc/ml) an hour for the first day, then 2 drops (.5 cc/ml) the second day. Here is what Jim says in his book about dosage for overweight people, for the larger birds:
Dosage For Overweight People
If you are overweight, start with 2 drops for the first dose and work up to 3 drops plus one drop for each 25 pounds of body weight over 175 pounds. Overweight people have more trouble overcoming flu and other diseases, as the pathogens hide in fat tissue. Follow the protocol guidelines and don’t make yourself nauseous by overdosing. Reduce the number of drops when you feel nausea coming on, or if you experience diarrhea or severe fatigue, then increase the number when you feel you can.
Normally, don’t go over the 3 drops plus one drop for each 25 pounds of body weight over 175 pounds. Before using MMS, please See Chapter 13, MMS Protocols.
I would just watch carefully for signs that the birds are nauseous or feeling worse and reduce the dose if that happens. It seems like with flu that overdoing it is the main tendency.
Please let us know how it goes,
Michael