Quote:
Originally Posted by imatrainwreck Well now I know....lol
One of the strangest things that I have had to deal with is that I go tanning almost everyday in a type of bed that is pretty much like black light. it makes everything white glow just like as if you were under a black light. Well, since dealing with this, I, too glow under the light. All of my hair glows, my feet, my hands, and then strange large patches all over my body and the pores on all those patches glow a beautiful hot pink. I'm quite lovely, I must say!
So I saw this today and thought how weird is that: Glowing Monkeys
IT SAYS: (and this is just cut out portions I found interesting, please go to article to read in its entirety)
"For the study, the researchers used a gene that makes tissues glow under ultraviolet light, as an easy way to see where the gene is present. They put the gene in a virus that would insert it into the DNA of cells, and then injected the virus into marmoset embryos."
"By normal light, Ruppy looks like any other beagle puppy. In ultraviolet light, she glows red. She's the first transgenic puppy, meaning she was created with some genetic material from another creature"
After reading this article....I have a lot of new wonders on my mind!!! |
Imatrainwreck (love that name, makes me LOL)
You know, I'm just gonna give it to you straight. I used to post voraciously about what Morgellons really is, but I've sort of given up. I know exactly why you glow in the dark, and I just thought I'd throw it out again, for what it's worth.
You have a bacteria called Photorhabdus luminescens which is a symbiant (necessary) bacteria for the nematode Heterorhabditis bacteriophora. This bacteria is luminescent (glows in the dark) - The bacteria and the nematode work in conjunction with each other - the bacteria breaks down the tissues (of your body, or in the case of insects, the insects' bodies) - so that the nematode can digest the tissue.
The reason this nematode has decided to inhabit our bodies is because at some point we got infected with the fungus Arthrobotrys. This fungus attracts the microscopic (fiber) nematodes which exist in so many things in our environment: especially cotton or paper products.
That's it in a nutshell.
I have sort of given up trying to tell people about this because nobody really seems to get it.
I don't mean to seem arrogant but I really do have this figured out.
That doesn't mean I have a cure, however.
But I do know there is a nematode, a bacteria (florescent), and a fungus.
Yes, you do glow in the dark. Do some research on Photorhabdus if you're interested in why you glow in the dark. It is an emerging pathogen in humans - even the CDC acknowledges it and says it could be caused by an infection with an intervebrate (a worm) -
Oh, well. I guess it's just too horrible for some to contemplate that they are infected with a worm - and it's big, too, growing to about 3 inches.
Feel your scalp. See how it raises up where the hairline starts? Your hairline isn't supposed to do that. Those are the dead bodies (and live bodies) of this nematode.
Sorry, Imatrainwreck, but I do think you're one of the people on this forum that might believe me.
I wish more people would research this. Just start doing some research on these three pathogens 1. Photorhabdus luminescens 2. Heterorhabditis and 3. Arthrobotrys oligospora.
I'm glad you're looking attractive though.
sar
By the way, these are genetically engineered - they have taken a nematode which used to be harmless to humans and turned it into a destroyer of lives. All in the name of agricultural advancement.
I'm sure there is a lot more to the story, and lots of other details of horrors foisted upon us by "science". But this bacteria really is the reason you glow.