Study Can Cleansing Eliminate Body Odor? a lot more



Let's talk about body odor. Not because it's an interesting subject; only because we're not really supposed to have it. Body odor is often a sign of internal toxicity - its odor leaking through our skin.

How do I know? Well, I've cleansed my internal body thoroughly and except for rare occasions, I haven't had body odor in several years - which wasn't the case before I began cleansing. And the rare occasion when it appears is when I'm detoxifying, in which case I can smell that toxic mess as it's making its way out of my body.

Maybe you've seen pictures on the Internet of huge amounts of filth being removed from the body through colon cleansing? You may have also heard that most people have ten plus pounds of old fecal matter stuck in their guts at any given time. And at some point, it's going to start to smell.

Have you ever wondered why the average person begins having body odor somewhere between thirteen and sixteen years of age? And why is it that don't they smell prior?

The answer: It takes right about that amount of time to clog up our insides enough to produce an odor by not bathing for a few hours. For most people, thirteen to sixteen years of largely unnatural eating habits does the trick just fine. For most, it'll then be another fifteen to twenty years to take that stored toxicity in the body to the next level and produce what we call health problems. But my point is: We're really not supposed to smell from the inside out.

Bad breath is another sign of internal toxicity. To understand this, you need to know that it's a straight shot from your mouth to your colon - and the reverse path is also true. So, bad breath (unless it's garlic produced) is a common sign of a toxic colon. I'll let you figure out the implications of what you're really smelling.

Morning breath is common, and since I've cleansed deeply, it also hasn't appeared in years. Why is morning breath so common and why does it occur? Let me explain...

Our bodies detoxify themselves as we are sleeping. They take this time to detoxify us because we're not digesting food and therefore we have extra energy to direct to detoxification.

So, each night, our bodies work to detoxify us from our daily incoming load of chemicals and previously unaddressed toxins. And each morning, we can smell the toxins on our breath that have been loosened for removal. The white coating that is common on tongues in the morning - those are toxins your body is releasing.

Morning breath is actually a mild detoxification symptom - or a symptom people experience when they are detoxifying. And the heavier the toxicity situation, the greater the symptoms. So, the more toxic your body is, the more pungent your breath in the morning will be.

The good news is that you can cleanse your body internally to remove much of that toxicity, and along with it - you'll remove your body odor.

One nice thing about cleansing your body enough so that you no longer have a daily odor is that deodorant is no longer needed.

Eliminating deodorant is important because most deodorants have aluminum as an ingredient. That may not seem like a big deal until you understand that aluminum is generally associated with brain atrophying diseases, including dementia and Alzheimer's, and that ninety percent of what you put on your skin makes it into your bloodstream. This makes eliminating deodorant an important step in the right direction - if you want to remember your grandchildren on your eighth birthday.


Kim Evans is the author of Cleaning Up!, which outlines a powerful and easy to do at-home body cleanse, including thorough colon cleansing [http://www.cleaningupcleanse.com/ultimate-body-cleanse]. It'll remove more stored toxicity than you think is possible!




Can Cleansing Eliminate Body Odor?

Body Odor