Home Colonics

Home colonics kits have become popular items among people looking to live healthier and more active lives. If you are interested in purchasing a home colonics kit, read this article first so you can be guided.

Why use home colonics?

The source of many of today's commonplace health problems are being traced to the large intestine, also known as the colon. This organ is responsible for absorption and digestion of nutrients from food. The colon also acts as a passage for the elimination of waste particles. However, today's high fat, low fiber diets of foods which are difficult to digest are clogging the canal that was designed to eliminate them.

This waste stays in the body, eventually decaying and becoming toxic. This toxic waste that has attached itself to the lining of the colon is absorbed with the nutrients in the food that we eat. The toxic moisture is then redistributed throughout the body through the circulatory and lymphatic systems, poisoning vital organs. Toxicity levels also weaken our imune system, rendering us defenseless from disease. Finally, colon cancer incidence seems to be increasing everyday. With no known cause or cure, it has become a frightening disease despite modern medicine's best efforts.

Some facts about home colonics

Colonic irrigation is not a reactive treatment. This means that colonics programs are not meant to cure diseases already present in the body prior to the beginning of treatment. Instead, colonic irrigation is meant to be proactive treatments which prevent the onset of disease.

How Do Home Colonics Work?

A home colonics kit usually comes with a large plastic tank, rubber tubing, a colonics cabinet, a colonics board which the patient lies on, and a refill kit which can be operated while lying down. The gravity tank is placed on the cabinet two to four feet higher than the colonics board which the patient lies on face-up. The tank is filled with water using the fill kit. The height differential between the tank and the board creates gravitational force, pushing water into the patient's colon through the tube at one pound per square inch of pressure. Water flows the entire length of the colon, usually four to five feet long. The water and the waste it carries flows out the exit tube and straight into the toilet.

A 45-minute session requires the tank to be refilled three to four times. Eventually, repeated colonic irrigations will break down encrusted toxic waste from the lining of the colon and empty it out directly into the toilet. Enemas, which are mainstream medicine's version of the colonic irrigation, only reach the first foot of the colon. There is usually a smelly and unsightly mess to clean up after receiving an enema, but this is eliminated with a home colonics kit.

 

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