
Definition Of Hyperactive

I suspect (know) there may be a bit more to it than this but as the old saying goes, there’s many a true word spoken in jest.
Stop Using Aluminum Foil
For a long time, aluminum foil has been a kitchen staple. Open up anyone’s utility drawer and you’re bound to find a roll of the silver thinly printed metal. Why? Because it is extremely useful and effective for many kitchen and household tasks.
Foil is often used to cover your casserole and other oven-ready dishes. But now research is showing that if you cook with aluminum foil, you could be exposing yourself to some pretty serious health risks.
In the article below, we will present you with the facts on cooking with aluminum foil. Learn what can happen and then make the decision to use it or not for yourself. But the research is pretty clear…
Simply put, if you cook with aluminum foil, you are playing with your health.
The first thing you need to know is that aluminum is bad for your brain. It is a neurotoxic heavy metal that has been linked to Alzheimer’s disease for years.
Exposing yourself to this metal can lead to mental decline. Prepare to suffer in terms of coordination, bodily control, memory, and balance. Sadly, many who suffer from poisoning with this neurotoxin, the damage is permanent. You could experience gaps in memory that can create a divide between you and your loved ones if this chemical does the worst it can.
Besides damaging your brain, cooking with aluminum foil can also negatively affect your bones. This metal can build-up inside your bones. This is bad because it competes with calcium for space inside your bones and often wins out over the essential mineral. Although an aluminum skeletal frame sounds like something from science fiction, are bodies are made for fact – not fiction. So, it simply won’t work well for us. You need calcium to prevent your bones from breaking in a fall.
From here on out, the risk of cooking with aluminum continues to grow. It is also bad for your lungs. Breathing in aluminum particles has been proven to lead to respiratory problems, like pulmonary fibrosis. Even if you grill with aluminum foil, you could be breathing in these particles and slowly destroying your lungs.
Aluminum cans have long been hailed as being risky. But for some reason, tin foil was overlooked for years. No longer…
If you accidentally ingest aluminum flakes, you risk these problems. While you’re not eating a ball of rolled up foil, when you cook with aluminum at high temperatures, parts of the metal are going into your food. High temperatures can create cracks in the metal causes particles to break off into your food.
Even if the minuscule pieces don’t break off, chemical leeching of aluminum can happen if you cook with certain spices or use lemons.
Dr Essam Zubaidy, a chemical engineering researcher at the American University of Sharjah, discovered that just one meal cooked with tin foil can leach 400 mg of aluminum.
“The higher the temperature, the more the leaching. Foil is not suitable for cooking and is not suitable for using with vegetables like tomatoes, citrus juice or spices.”
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends a provisional tolerable weekly intake (PTWI) of 2 mg/kg body weight for aluminium. This PTWI applies to all aluminium compounds in food, including food additives. The recommendation is based on a no-observed-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) of 30 mg/kg body weight per day, with the application of a safety factor of 100.
For adults, the estimated mean dietary exposure to aluminium-containing food additives from cereals and cereal-based products can reach up to the PTWI. However, for children, estimates of dietary exposure to aluminium-containing food additives, including high dietary exposures (e.g., 90th or 95th percentile), can exceed the PTWI by up to 2-fold.
The takeaway: If you cook with aluminum, you’re risking your health.
Make A Difference

Peyton Manning was waiting for his coffee — when he heard a teen boy being bullied at the next table… and silenced it with one sentence.
It was a quiet afternoon in a small-town café just outside Louisville.
Nothing fancy.
Locals. Regulars. A bit of small talk, the smell of cinnamon rolls.
Peyton Manning had stopped in during a road trip — hoodie on, sunglasses tucked into his shirt collar.
He ordered coffee and sat by the window, alone.
At the next table, a group of high school boys were laughing loudly.
One of them — Daniel — wasn’t laughing.
He was sitting small, hunched, shoulders tight.
He had a stutter.
And every time he tried to speak, one of the other boys interrupted, mimicked him, laughed.
“S-s-s-so what do you think, D-D-Daniel?”
“He’s buffering again! Somebody reboot him!”
More laughter.
Daniel went silent.
His eyes dropped.
His hand slowly moved to tear the paper sleeve off his cup. Over and over.
Peyton watched.
Didn’t say a word.
Until the loudest boy leaned over and said:
“You should just shut up if you can’t even finish a sentence.”
That’s when Peyton stood up.
Walked over.
And with calm, measured clarity, looked right at the group and said:
“I’d pick Daniel for my team every time.
And not one of you would make the bench.”
Silence.
The boys froze.
One stammered something. Another looked away.
Daniel just blinked.
Then… smiled.
Peyton turned to him.
Held out his hand.
“You’ve got more courage than they’ll understand for a long, long time.
And by the way… I stuttered when I was a kid too.”
Then he sat with Daniel.
Drank his coffee.
Talked football. Family. Life.
Before leaving, Peyton scribbled something on a napkin and handed it to him.
“For when you forget who you are.”
It said:
*“You don’t need to speak perfectly.
You just need to speak honestly.
And people who matter will always wait for the end of your sentence.
Proud to know you. — Peyton.”*
Years later, Daniel still keeps that napkin.
Framed.
Above his desk.
He’s now a youth counselor — helping kids find their voices.
Peyton Manning didn’t just shut down a group of bullies.
He lifted one boy up — and gave him the kind of voice no one could laugh away again.
(I had to look up who Peyton Williams Manning was – an American former professional football quarterback who played in the National Football League (NFL) for 18 seasons. Nicknamed “the Sheriff”, he spent 14 seasons with the Indianapolis Colts and four with the Denver Broncos. Manning is considered one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time.)
Don’t Let It Replace Family

This humble food extract puts bone drugs to shame

Written By: Sayer Ji, Founder
According to research published in the British Journal of Pharmacology in 2008, alendronate (Fosamax), raloxifene (Evista) and estradiol (estrogen, E2) are inferior to the phytoestrogen genistein commonly found in fermented soy*, red clover, kudzu, fava beans and coffee, in preserving bone mineral density (quantity) and strength (quality) in an animal model of menopausal osteoporosis.
Genistein has been extensively researched for its potential therapeutic role in osteoporosis prevention and treatment, as well as a mind-boggling 170+ additional health conditions. It is likely the main reason why soy, and particularly fermented soy, has been regarded as both a food and a medicine in Asian culture.
What makes this finding so groundbreaking is that genistein is a food derivative, whereas the three categories of drugs compared to it in the study are evolutionarily and biologically alien chemicals (xenobiotics) with profound, unintended adverse health effects. For example, the class of drugs known as bisphosphonates which include Fosamax have been linked to over 40 adverse health effects.
In essence, this study calls into question the multi-billion dollar “osteoporosis” and “osteopenia” industry’s most lucrative commodities. Foods and food extracts, of course, do not lend themselves to being patented, which is why this study will likely never receive the multi-million dollar funding required to bring it to the level of a human clinical trial. Moreover, natural bone loss associated with aging has been over-medicalized.
*non-fermented soy contains genistin, whereas friendly bacteria in our gut or in cultured foods such as miso biotransform it into genistein.
The true value of this study becomes apparent when we look at the drugs in greater detail. Alendronate (Fosamax), for instance, was originally used to soften water in irrigation systems used in orange groves. It has the ability to ulcerate and puncture the stomach, which is why it is suggested it be taken with water and the person stands or sits up for half an hour. It has been linked to at least 19 serious adverse health effects, including bone fracture itself!
© January 23rd 2012 GreenMedInfo LLC. This work is reproduced and distributed with the permission of GreenMedInfo LLC. Want to learn more from GreenMedInfo? Sign up for the newsletter here www.greenmedinfo.com/greenmed/newsletter.
For the rest of this article please go to
https://tinyurl.com/54h4btjp
Sex between vaccinated and unvaccinated, Dr. Charles Hoffe.
Best line from the video about spike protein damage?
“Some people are very very tough and don’t seem to notice it until they sometimes unexpectedly stop breathing.”
Watch video: https://x.com/XPHOENIXDRAGON/status/1912197229974007902
Terra Preta

Terra Preta, or “black earth,” is a man-made soil found in the Amazon rainforest, created over 2,000 years ago. Known for its exceptional fertility, it stands out from the nutrient-poor soils typically found in the region. Unlike other soils, Terra Preta can sustain agriculture for centuries and even regenerates itself over time.
This soil was made by mixing charcoal, bones, and organic waste into the earth through a process called pyrolysis. The charcoal improves soil structure and supports microorganisms that enhance fertility. Despite extensive research, modern science has not been able to fully replicate its unique properties.
The impact of Terra Preta is clear when comparing crops grown in it to those in natural rainforest soil. Crops in Terra Preta grow taller and healthier, while those in regular soil often struggle.
Greatest Cooking Show Ever?
VO2 Max Is The Best Biomarker of Longevity

Strength is second.
Click to view the video: https://x.com/KevinHenrikson/status/1912174170542391589/photo/1

