11/04/2024
Good Vs. Bad Metals In Our Brain
Your brain is electricity. From early experiments with electricity—remember the key and kite from history—to the most advanced technology we have today, there’s a common thread: metal. Metal is used to deliver and carry electricity, to manipulate electrical currents, to pull electricity, to push it.
Now, if your brain is full of electrical currents, what must be involved? Metals. That’s right—our brains are largely about metals and electricity. It’s critical to understand this. Here’s the kicker: there are both bad metals and good metals at work.
On the one hand, our brains can harbor mercury, lead, arsenic, cadmium, barium, nickel, aluminum, toxic calcium, toxic copper, toxic chromium, tin, and more. These are the bad, industrialized, toxic metals.
On the other hand, not all metals in the brain are bad or unproductive. We rely on some critically important metals in our brains: trace minerals. These good metals include beneficial, non-industrialized forms of gold, calcium, copper, potassium, magnesium, chromium, palladium, vanadium, and more. One reason beneficial metals are there is to control electrical currents.
Rogue toxic heavy metals residing in the brain with the good metals wreak havoc—they create a battle in our brains: living metal against dead metal, life-giving metal versus life-taking metal, good versus evil.
For decades, Medical Medium information has redefined “toxic heavy metals,” classifying any and all industrialized, toxic metals that take up residence inside the brain and body as toxic heavy metals—because the damage any toxic metal creates has heavy consequences in people’s lives. Aluminum, for example, which is a “light” metal, is considered nontoxic by medical and other industries because it’s not in the heavy metal classification. In truth, aluminum is neurotoxic and damaging to the brain— so it’s toxic and has heavy consequences. That’s why I call it a toxic heavy metal.
Trace minerals are life-giving. They’re part of how our bodies are created. Toxic heavy metals are life-taking. They’re part of how our bodies rapidly age and degenerate. Good metals, in mineral form—trace minerals—contain information that comes from life sources of the planet and also life forces outside the planet, from the solar system and galaxy. These minerals play an integral role with the mineral salts in our brain and the sugar that carries minerals and electrolytes to our brain. Electricity in our brain is reliant on trace minerals as fuel.
Toxic heavy metals, meanwhile, can weaken, burn out, short out, twist out, interfere with, toxify, and denature our brain’s natural electrical currents, currents that allow us to think, feel, and function optimally. Why are toxic heavy metals so problematic? Because they are constantly interfering with electricity, which means they are constantly interfering with your brain’s receiving of and communicating information. They can be mind-altering and make decisions for a person by getting in the way of clear thinking.
The good news is that there are protocols and steps you can take starting today to fight off the bad metals and take charge of your brain. You can learn more in Brain Saver.