When I had sores on my face I would dig out the critters using Sunspot ES, and the main critter would stay around the edge of the sore. It was hard and brown, translucent sort of with brown spots in between. Sometimes the whole lesion would get bigger before the area started to retract again. The center could be cleaned, but the hard edged critter would be dug down into the center and would remain around the edge despite using the Sunspot ES. This I used to treat by using Curaderm BEC5 cream twice a day after I got done digging out the softer center critters. I would put on a micropore bandage. And the outer edge would soften. Yet if the center thread with the thing which was anchoring was not gotten out then the hard critter edge thing would form again. But it would then be smaller. So over time the hard edge thing would get both smaller and thinner. Eventually the center stuff would stop and I could then get out the center/edge critter (which pretty much stays in a circle form as the sore gets smaller. May be the adult which lays the eggs, don't know). In this manner, and using these substances I could get the face stuff healed. Took anywhere from two to five months. And I had the help of herbals to dry it up, but it was still a slow process.
I have also used some black cancer herbal salves in other areas where not as concerned about scaring. This is a stronger cancer salve than those above and would reveal the lesion to have a central white/yellow worm like anchor with a black/brown thread in center approximately 1/8 inch below surface of skin. This I believe is the anchoring parasite and may either be the food source or the main spreader of the more immature forms, I do not know. We kept covering after the initial use of the black salve with a bandage which keeps out all air (vaseline underneath). Eventually the central worm thing would turn to pus and the area would heal, though there is some scaring it remains clear in those areas).
As I personally got this after eating fish I know that, in my case, morgellons may involve seafood parasites. One parasite which anchors like part of what I am seeing is a copepod. And the interesting thing is that I have found articles which have discussions of using these particular copepods as tags to follow fish migrations etc. Mention was also made that research was being done to add polymers to the copepod parasites to do this. Scary, yes? I do not know that this is the morgellons parasite, but since I got this after eating fish (violently iil within hours of eating fish) it does make me wonder, big time.
http://www.mar-eco.no/Shiptoshore/g...._gosars/15July :
"For example - the most conspicuous fish parasites in the deep-sea are parasitic crustaceans. Nearly all crustaceans, which parasitize on deep-sea fishes, belong to the copepoda. In contrast to their free-living relatives, they are visible to naked eye due to their relatively large size. They have developed different types of clamp and anchor organs to attach to the host. Recently, we have found many parasitic copepods from the families Sphyriidae and Chondracanthidae, with 3-4 large species. The deep-sea fish Rouleina attrita (softskin smooth-head) is usually parasitized by the anchor worm Lophoura sp. The Lophoura sp. anchors its head into the musculature of the fish. The brown or red body and the yellow or white egg sacs together measure approximately 4-6 cm and at first glance may be mistaken for an artificial tag. After egg release, the parasite dies off and leaves a deep wound behind. Mass development with these copepod infections seem to be one of the most important causes of natural mortality for young fishes in the deep-sea."
Go down to page 10 of this page to see discussion of copepods being used as fish tags with added polymers:
http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache...lnk&cd=1&gl=us
BTW don't know if I ever mentioned it, but some of the critters I have found have hooks, especially those I saw at the beginning. Long strings of large parasites hooked together. The things I am describing found around the lesions went down into the muscle tissue were hooked together. Still are if I find any, but are much smaller in size (now nearly microscopic). Herbal folk knowledge says that hooked parasites from fish are the hardest to get rid of parasites. I believe, especially at the beginning, there was more than one fish parasite. Some of them seem to have left as I do feel continuous herbal treatment for this is working, albeit very slowly. I have seen improvement and brain fog is minimal these days (more parasites out, fewer neurotoxins).
Another thought, maybe some fish who have copepods are also being affected by neurotoxins from something such as dinoflagellates. Or the copepods themselves are. I feel that morgellons syndrome in some people may be the tip of the iceberg for the environmental disaster which is affecting not only our land but our oceans .
best,
tcm