Due to my limited knowledge and limited experience looking ar cells through a microscope, these videos can be a challenge. Differentiating cells from my Android screen is not much help. Without navigable clues, it's a challenge to understand what's going on.
Video #1 is video of blood cells from someone with "Long COVID" or "post-COVID."
Post/Long Covid comparison of before and after 6 MRT sessions.
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 31, 2022
Before pic.twitter.com/dsXX1pHlgB
The poster states that "the more damaged cells that appear on the slide, the sicker you probably feel."
What I find is the more damaged cells on the slide the sicker you probably feel. pic.twitter.com/ulwcfmVc5h
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 31, 2022
To my amazement, she includes a picture of "a pocket of . . . cells and can watch them vibrate." What's causing them to vibrate? She doesn't say. The spike proteins? The graphene oxide? Something else?
Sometimes I’ll catch a pocket of these cells and can watch them vibrate pic.twitter.com/8FyozySKiN
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 31, 2022
Next, she offers how to resolve the vibration and the clumping of cells. Is the clumping a prequel to clotting? Could be.
The solution? 6 sessions of MRT, or Magnetic Resonance Therapy and two lifestyle changes--drink more water and take a good multi-vitamin. This one has come highly recommended. It's cheaper if you buy in bulk. I'm beginning to like her work.
After 2 weeks, 6 sessions and two lifestyle changes- Drink more water and take a good multi. pic.twitter.com/DajYva2Djh
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 31, 2022
In this next image, she has marked the WBCs, or the white blood cells, pointing out how few of them there are. I wonder if there isn't a vitamin or mineral that can increase the number of WBCs?
There is still work to do, but lots of progress too. One thing I really want to drill into that the first sample had very few WBCs. The ones present looked like this pic.twitter.com/QzNvlD2Lr3
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 31, 2022
Next, she does us all a solid by showing what healthy cells look like after 6 sessions of MRT. It's nice to see results so that we can build appropriate expectations.
Here is what we had after 6 sessions pic.twitter.com/io9wW36TM9
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 31, 2022
Check this out. She adds sound. We can almost hear the cells talking to each other. I love it.
Happily doing their job… pic.twitter.com/I4GIeMPanu
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 31, 2022
This may be the best before and after lesson you could ever expect in a biology class. But Ms Anastasia goes beyond that. She points you to what MRT is and where to go to find a practitioner in your area. I wonder how often one could do this. And I wonder what the cost is. No worries. She's provided us with the necessary resources. Do you know how rare this is when someone furnishes her audience with these resources where you can go from knowing nothing about a concept to having all the resources to improving your health literally at your fingertips?
“Where can I see scientific research?” https://t.co/xdaMuMsSxS
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 29, 2022
Also here https://t.co/oRvLTmUAhT
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 29, 2022
Magneceutical. Check it out.
I’m glad they were helpful! https://t.co/yTpRHq7ipQ
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 31, 2022
Interesting.
I mean, seriously…. How can I better communicate to anyone than this paper has how critical it is we start looking at these concepts? If y’all keep waiting for a pill you better prepare to wait awhile. Get some snacks. pic.twitter.com/bbheXaCQJi
— Anastasis (@OrdersofM) March 29, 2022