If you are vaccinated, it is incumbent upon you to keep the
virus that is now in your body from spreading or shedding, or transmitting. You do this by taking nutritional supplements--vitamins D, C, zinc, A, B, E, magnesium, and others. Yes, this is a real thing. Get a multivitamin. People everywhere are getting infected from
the vaccinated. You've got to suppress the infectious ratio in your own body first so that you're not the cause of grief in someone else. If you’ve attended a
gathering with a sibling, that is even more likely that you’ll shed. For this reason, you are obligated to do a
few things. One, tell people you’ve been
vaccinated and tell them that the vaccines shed. Your doctor didn’t tell you. Your pharmacist didn’t’ tell you. No one told you. That information is not on the information
insert to the vaccine vial, but this is a real thing. Pfizer’s own documents do document this, highlighting specific risks to women where their menstruation wreaks havoc on them. But you’re a man, and they don’t share
anything regarding men. For this reason,
stay away from folks who are vaccinated.
If you have a family member who has been vaccinated, stay away from
them. Not forever but for at least 4
months; that’s how long their transmissibility lasts, actually 4-7 months. People who don’t know this will make fun of
you online in social media if you mention this, but there is information about
shedding online. Search "exosomes" and or "passive immunization" on DuckDuckGo. That’s how the
viral particles are shed--through exosomes; these act like pheromones. And the
likelihood of shedding rises if you're a genetic match to those around you. By genetic match, I mean family: more specifically, siblings. You need to tell
people. You may not have been given a
choice, but you must rectify that helplessness and grievance by giving others a choice if they want to
risk catching vaccinated COVID passively from you.
For solutions, search exosomes at Jennifer Depew, who is a Registered Dietician with excellent knowledge of chemistry. You know, I haven't found a search window on her site, so you can just use this, "JenniferDepew.com and Exosomes."
Jennifer has a few other sites: Twitter, Transcending Square, & EffectiveCare.info.
Okay, so which vitamins help to resolve purpura? Vitamin C, Hesperidin/Diosomin, and Rutin.