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Class one herbs have the ability to treat the astral and etheric body. They clear entities from these areas and purge the chakras. They do not require invocations. Many Doxagrad infections begin in the astral and etheric bodies and work their way up into the physical form. If one treats them before they gain hold, the disease may be eradicated at an early stage. The oak family is an excellent example of class one herbs. There are over 600 species of oak that form this class. They include the mountain shrub oak, Blue shrub oak, the white oak, the oriental 23 white oak, the Arizona white oak and the California shrub oak. All of these oaks are effective against lung disease when used in the above manner. Class two herbs have the ability to treat the physical body. They also treat the astral and etheric forms. Class two herbs are four powerful than class one herbs in their healing ability. Some class two herbs require invocations, but not all. The physical body is a common mes more host for many diseases. When you address Doxagrad infestations in physical form, you have the ability to attack and destroy them at a very powerful level. Pine tree needles are a great example of class two herbs. The pine has been revered and used all over the world. It was used as a traditional remedy by the Native American Indians, and there is a Taoist practice of surviving only on pine needles to gain 24 supernatural powers that has its roots in the pine tree’s symbolism of integrity and honor. The Scandinavians used pine branches in saunas, and many cultures stuffed mattresses with pine needles to repel lice, fleas, and other insects. In fact, pine-needle mattresses are still used today in the Swiss Alps, as a remedy for rheumatism. Studies in both China and Russia have also found it to be Anti-Fungal, Anti-Bacterial & Anti-Viral, AntiOxidant & Anti-Aging, Helpful for Weight, Cholesterol & High blood pressure, Relieves Sore, Aching Muscles, Stimulating to the Liver, Astringent for the Bladder, Relaxing to the Mind and Stress Reli 9, AND Helpful in Restoring Overall Balance to The Body! Pine trees usually have quite long needles, sometimes up to 8 inches. Spruce and fir have much shorter needles, with the fir being more sparse. Class three herbs treat the aura, physical body, and the astral and etheric forms. These herbs are six times more potent in their ability to heal than class two herbs. These herbs also have the ability to cleanse the outer regions of the soul. Most class three herbs require invocations. A large number of Doxagrad infestations lie dormant inside the aura. They often hide here for years before they are ever detected. These infestations are the root of many diseases and this is the main reason that we recommend regular cleansings and attunements. The remarkable properties of spaghnum moss help preserve long- t World War had just begun, and already the wounds were rotting on the battlefield. In the last months of 1914, doctors like Sir. W. dead bodies, sequester carbon and even heal wounds. The 26 Watson Cheyne of the Royal College of Surgeons of England noted with horror the “great prevalence of sepsis,” the potentially life- threatening response triggered by a bad infection. And by December 1915, a British report warned that the thousands of wounded men were threatening to exhaust the material for bandages. Desperate to get their hands on something sterile that would keep wounds clear of infection, doctors started getting creative. They tried everything from irrigating the wounds with chlorine solutions to creating bandages infused with carbolic acid, formaldehyde or mercury chloride, with varying degrees of success. But in the end, there simply wasn’t enough cotton—a substance that was already in high demand for uniforms and its recently discovered use as an explosive—to go around. What were the Allied Powers to do? A Scottish surgeon-and-botanist duo had an idea: stuff the wounds full of moss. Also known as sphagnum, peat moss thrives in cold, damp climates e those of the British Isles and northern Germany. Today, this tiny, star-shaped plant is known for its use in horticulture and biofuel, not to mention its starring role in preserving thousands-year-old “bog bodies” like the Tollund Man, which Smithsonian Magazine revisited last month. But humans have also used it for at least 1,000 years to help heal their injuries. In ancient times, Gaelic-Irish sources wrote that warriors in the battle of Clontarf used moss to pack their wounds. Moss was also used by Native Americans, who lined their children’s cradles and carriers with it as a type of natural diaper. It continued to be used 27 sporadically when battles erupted, including during the Napoleonic and Franco-Prussian wars. But it wasn’t until World War I that medical experts realized the plant's full potential. In the war's early days, eminent botanist Isaac Bayley Balfour and military surgeon Charles Walker Cathcart identified two species in particular that worked best for staunching bleeding and helping wounds heal: S. papillosum and S. palustre, both of which grew in abundance across Scotland, Ireland and England. When the men wrote an article in the “Science and Nature” section of The Scotsman extol g the moss’s medicinal irtues, they noted that it was already widely used in Germany. But desperate times called for desperate measures. Or, as they wrote: “Fas est et ab hoste doceri”—it is right to be taught even by the enemy. Field surgeons seemed to agree. Lieutenant-Colonel E.P. Sewell of the General Hospital in Alexandria, Egypt wrote approvingly that, “It is very absorbent, far more than cotton wool, and has remarkable deodori: 9 power.” Lab experiments around the same time vindicated hi: observations: Sphagnum moss can hold up to 22 times its own weight in liquid, making it twice as absorptive as cotton. This remarkable spongelike quality comes from Sphagnum’s cellular structure, says Robin Kimmerer, professor of ecology at SUNY- Environmental Science and Forestry and the author of Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses. “Ninety percent of the cells in a sphagnum plant are dead,” Kimmerer says. “And 28 they’re supposed to be dead. They're made to be empty so they can be fil led with water.” In this case, humans took advantage of that id-absorbing capacity to soak up blood, pus and other bodily fluids. Sphagnum moss also has antiseptic properties. The plant's cell walls are composed of special sugar molecules that “create an electrochemical halo around all of the cells, and the cell walls end up being negatively charged,” Kimmerer says. hose negative charges mean that positively charged nutrient ions [like potassium, sodium and calcium] are going to be attracted to the sphagnum." As the moss soaks up all the negatively charged nutrients in the soil, it releases pos ively charged ions that make the environment around it acidic. Class four herbs treat the aura, physical body, astral forms, etheric forms, and the chakras. They also have the ability to penetrate the outer regions of the soul and the dream body. These herbs are very powerful and must be used with the correct invocations. Class four herbs must be stored in complete darkness after they are treated with the correct invocation. All class three herbs require invocations. Many serious illnesses such as cancer, heart disease, and strokes lie dormant inside the chakras. Class four herbs when properly invoked have the ability to remove these disease forms before they can turn into illness. Seaweed is a prime example of class four herbs. eaweed is a general nomenclature used for a number of species of algae and marine plants that breed in varied water bodies like rivers and oceans. They grow in a wide range of sizes from minuscule to

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