Reader Q&A

Snake Bites and Snake Venom

Understanding Venom, Fear, and the Body’s Healing Intelligence – Why Adding More Poison Is Not the Answer

Disclaimer: This article is provided for educational purposes only and reflects a Natural Hygiene (Terrain Model) perspective on health and nutrition. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any condition, and does not constitute veterinary or medical advice. The views expressed are independent of the conventional medical or veterinary industry, and all decisions regarding animal care or personal health care are the responsibility of the owner/individual.

Question:

What would you do if you got bitten by a venomous snake like a rattlesnake or cottonmouth? What are your thoughts on anti-venom injections from the hospital? Would you use natural remedies like pulling salves or get medically treatment?

Answer:

I would fast and go to bed. If the body has been exposed to one poison, there is no benefit to be had by adding a second poison, or a third or fourth. Since antivenom just injects more poison into a poisoned body to stop the symptoms created by the body from eliminating the first poison, there is really no benefit to adding that poison.

All natural remedies would make a healthy body sick. Why would they have any benefit to a sick body? Two wrongs don’t make a right. We cannot poison a poisoned body back to health.

As soon as a toxin or poison enters the body, our body immediately takes action against the toxin or poison. Immediately upon getting bitten, our body is already taking action to remove the snake venom, repair the tissues, and heal itself.

The body takes action against the anti-venom. The body takes action against the salve. The body takes action against the natural remedy. All action requires energy. Would you rather your body concentrate its energy on removing the snake venom, or divide its energy between the venom, the poison from the anti-venom, the poison from the salve, and the poison from the natural remedies?

Personally, I would rather fast and rest so the body can get the snake venom out as quickly as possible without having to squander its energy to take action elsewhere.

On a side note, here is a picture of one of the Agkistrodon piscivorus (Venemous Northern Cottonmouth) I relocated from my front steps last spring. Snakes are fascinating, its too bad that humans have created so much fear around them. If we could stop freaking out about things for a moment we could probably make life much nicer for ourselves and all the creatures we were charged to protect.

If this perspective challenges what you have been taught about emergency care, it will help to understand the broader principles behind it. You may want to read Healing Stories – Broken Bones, Severe Injuries and Fasting to see how the body repairs even dramatic trauma when given rest and proper conditions:
https://www.therawkey.com/healing-stories-broken-bones-severe-injuries-and-fasting/

For a deeper look at medical interventions that introduce foreign substances into the bloodstream, see Blood Transfusions:
https://www.therawkey.com/blood-transfusions/

And to understand why intravenous fluids are not as neutral as they appear, read The Dangers of Saline Drips:
https://www.therawkey.com/the-dangers-of-saline-drips/

All of these articles build on the same foundation: the body is the healer, and our role is to remove obstacles rather than introduce new burdens. If you want a deeper understanding of how and why the body initiates crises in the first place, read The Nature and Purpose of Disease – Part 1:
https://www.therawkey.com/the-nature-and-purpose-of-disease/

Reader Q&A

Ointments, Herbs, Poultices, Antibiotic Creams, and other Suppressants

Disclaimer: This article is provided for educational purposes only and reflects a Natural Hygiene (Terrain Model) perspective on health and nutrition. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any condition, and does not constitute veterinary or medical advice. The views expressed are independent of the conventional medical or veterinary industry, and all decisions regarding animal care or personal health care are the responsibility of the owner/individual.

T.C Fry on why using herbs/remedies or pharma drugs to “heal” is not healing but suppression:

Question:

I think you’re wrong about all healing being self-healing. I’ve personally seen a woman who had a leg ulcer for over a year. Topical application of comfrey poultices healed it in less than ten days. How can you deny that?

Response:

I do not deny that the leg ulcer healed, and I do not deny that the comfrey poultice was the agency that precipitated the healing process of the leg ulcer. But the body is probably worse, not better for the treatment.


What happens physiologically to cause the ulcer in the first place? Why do they sometimes persist only to heal later? What happens when the agency of toxic materials such as in garlic, aloe, comfrey, or in pharmacological preparations are applied and the ulcer is healed?


The comfrey poultice neither caused nor healed the ulcer. The body created the ulcer in the first place just as it creates a boil, fever, pimple, or other so-called infection. The body creates these conditions as outlets for an extraordinary load of toxic materials. As long as the body is burdened with toxicity that it cannot eliminate through normal channels, it will utilize vicarious outlets, i.e., outlets other than normal. As long as the practices introduce into the body toxic materials and the sufferer’s habits are such as to cause the body to retain its own metabolic wastes, then the body will protect itself against a death-dealing situation by getting rid of its problems any way it can.


An ulcer is created in two ways. First, a lesion can be created by the body through self-autolyzation of its tissues. The body causes the self-digestion of a hole to the surface in the case of a boil or pimple. It is the body that forces toxic materials into the hole it has created to the surface. It is the body that creates the tremendous pressure necessary to keep the pus and debris near the surface in the form of a boil until drainage or expulsion occurs.


Just so it is the body that causes the ulcer in one way or another. Probably the leg ulcer was caused by the body’s collection and concentration of poisons in a given area until the cells and tissues of the area were totally destroyed. Then the body utilizes the open sore as a drainage outlet much as a teakettle will discharge its steam through a blown hole after the hole is blown. When aloe vera, comfrey, or certain pharmaceutical preparations are applied, they do not solve the body’s problems. Herbs and drugs have not the intelligence or power to create cells and new tissue to bridge the chasm or gulf that constitutes the ulcer or lesion.


What happens is that the poultice or drug application applied to an open sore poses a new danger. Absorption of poisons from the outside causes the body to change strategy. Where it had been exuding poisons to keep them low, the body is now absorbing poisons there. To obviate this new threat the body closes up the dumping ground and seals it off from the outside by scarring it over.


Though the body healed the ulcer, it is now worse off than before. It is retaining the toxic material previously expelled through the open sore or ulcer. Either it must now create a new extraordinary outlet or suffer the retention of the toxic materials it previously expelled through the ulcer.


Had the ulcer sufferer fasted, the ulcer would have healed more quickly than with the application of a poultice. Moreover, the body would, under the fasting condition, be free of the input of toxic materials and toxigenesis due to enervating habits. Under this condition it can accelerate expulsion of toxic materials through regular channels. Once the level of toxicity has been reduced below a certain tolerance level, the body will promptly proceed to heal the ulcer. Healing takes place much more quickly under the fasting condition than any other. While fasting, the body can concentrate its energies and its material resources to the healing process, thus affecting healing much more speedily.


So, the comfrey poultice did not do anything other than become a source of irritation. The body “closed up shop,” so to speak, at the ulcer site and did business elsewhere. Keep in mind that all healing is a body process and never that of drugs. And let us not mistake the drug nature of comfrey. It contains pyrrholizidine and allantoin, two quite toxic alkaloids or glycosides.