Did your grandma ever whip up a plaster made of stuff from her garden and around the kitchen? Did anyone ever tell you to eat chicken soup when you have the flu?
There’s a whole body of information — sometimes called “common” knowledge — that has been passed down generation-to-generation. For centuries in the West, university-certified doctors were a luxury of the upper classes; the rest of us just had to make do with what we had. The lower and middle classes set their own bones, bled their own veins, and pulled their own teeth. An essential tool in these homespun doctors’ tool kits was herbs and other vegetation reputed to have healing powers.
http://www.experts-at.com/Gano/buy-coffee.htm
Now, it’s the 21st-century, and those of us blessed enough to have health insurance can see legitimate, university-certified doctors regularly, at a relatively low cost. Indeed, we have witnessed the victory of a certain kind of medicine, allopathic (what your usual internist likely prescribes to), over another kind, homeopathic (what we’ve been doing for centuries). And this is a very good thing: life expectancy is up, infant mortality is down, and no-one has to stick a live frog in their mouth when they have sore throat. Laboratory-manufactured medicines and advanced medical equipment have improved the standard of life for the great mass of people. However, it would be foolish to ignore the centuries of success our ancestors saw using homeopathic solutions to medical problems.
Increasingly, allopathic doctors are looking to homeopathic knowledge — that “common knowledge” our ancestors had to rely on — for solutions to common medical problems. They understand that you can’t “throw out the baby with the bathwater,” that potentially valuable cures could be lost if we ignore centuries of trial-and-error experiments with various herbs, roots, and fungii.
Take the case of Alexander Fleming, the man who discovered Penicillin. Dr. Fleming didn’t reveal the therapeutic benefits of Penicillium fungi by randomly licking toadstools and seeing which one made him feel better. Instead, he recognized that peasants had, for centuries, been brewing a broth from mouldy fruits and breads that was successfully applied to open wounds to stop infection. Alexander Fleming explained why what the peasants were doing worked, in allopathic terms — but it would have continued working whether he explained it that way or not.
Ganoderma lucidum the “Miraculous King of Herbs” that enriches Gano Excel’s beverages and dietary supplements, has also been used by common folk to deal with ailments for centuries. Western medical research has only scratched the surface of this powerful herb’s therapeutic benefits; we invite further objective, academic investigation and research, because we want widespread verification of what we already know to be true. Gano Excel is the world’s leading manufacturer of organic Ganoderma lucidum, and each and every one of us truly believe in the beneficial powers of our product.




![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.ruthsinformationabout.com/valid-rss-rogers.png)
Comments