Is Liquid fasting effective?


- This is probably why water Liquid Fasting is one of the oldest remedies known to man and animal alike.
- Thus, environmental pollution or internal body pollution increases the need for water.
- This is a simple explanation of why water is natures most essential and effective detoxification substance.
- Elimination follows detoxification with the help of water.
- Water does that in many different ways including removing toxins through the lungs: when you breathe out, steamed water leaves the body carrying gaseous toxins.
- In the large intestine, it helps flush out solid waste.
- And through the kidneys and skin, it helps eliminate soluble toxins.
- If you do not drink enough room temperature water between meals, your food will move more slowly through the intestines, leading to constipation and toxic overload in the entire body, which will exhaust your liver.
- When your water intake is low, the body will compensate by lowering your urine and sweat output and drawing out water from the large intestine.
- In the large intestine, solid waste becomes more solid, causing the large intestines to become inflamed.
- Solid waste particles get impacted, trapping parasites, and bad bacteria in an ideal environment for their growth and production of more toxins. Not a pretty picture.
- With insufficient water intake, your kidneys cannot be flushed at their optimum rate, and they become overloaded with toxins and eventually lose their ability to function properly and clean your blood.
- When water intake is insufficient, you will sweat less, causing an even greater increase in the concentration of your body’s toxic load.
- Your body simply loses its toxin elimination mechanisms and goes toxic.
- When that happens, the body, if it is prepared to do that genetically, simply takes the toxic particles out of the bloodstream, wraps some fat around them, and stores them, stubbornly, under your skin.
- A very unsightly scene! And as a last resort, the body wraps some mucus around the toxic materials in the lungs and intestines in the hope that they’ll be coughed out or defecated out.
- If the body fails to do so, un-stored toxins overwhelm the system everywhere.