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Parasites – Breakthrough New Information!

31 years.
Over 7,000 bodies.


And I’m about to say something publicly that would have gotten me fired any time in the last three decades.
I almost didn’t say it. My wife told me to leave it alone. My former colleagues would call me a disgrace. The county medical examiner’s office could still pull my pension review.
But I’m 62 years old. I’ve been carrying this for 31 years. And I watched too many people die while I kept my mouth shut.

Almost every body I opened in 31 years had the same thing inside it. And I was never allowed to put it on a single death certificate.

Worms. Colonies of them. Burrowed into the intestinal walls like roots in concrete. Surrounded by this thick, gray coating over the organs — biofilm, it’s called — like someone had poured mucus over everything.

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Enlarged livers. Swollen intestines. Tissue damage that had been building for years. Sometimes decades.

Never what I actually found.
Never the truth.
I want to tell you about the one time I tried to tell the truth. And what happened when I did.It was 2011. Fourteen years into the job. I was experienced enough to know what I was looking at and still naive enough to think honesty mattered.
His name was Richard.
Richard was 49. High school basketball coach. Married 23 years. Three kids — two in college, one still at home. Big guy. The kind of man who made a room feel safe just by being in it.

His wife told the ER he’d been complaining about stomach problems for years. Bloating after every meal. Exhaustion that didn’t make sense for someone his size and age. Brain fog that was getting worse. Waking up in the middle of the night drenched in sweat. His doctor said stress. Then IBS. Then “you’re pushing 50, your body changes.”

Richard died on a Sunday morning. Collapsed in his kitchen making breakfast for his youngest daughter. She was 16. She watched it happen.

Cause of death on the ER report: multi-organ failure of undetermined origin.

He came to my table on Tuesday.
I made the incision. Opened him up.
His intestines were swollen to nearly twice their normal size. His liver was enlarged and discolored — damaged so extensively it barely resembled healthy tissue. And everything was coated in that gray film. Thick. Dense. In some areas you couldn’t see the organ underneath.
I lifted a section of the small intestine.

Colonies. Massive. Worms burrowed so deep into the wall they’d broken through in multiple places. Spread into the abdominal cavity. Tunneled into his liver so thoroughly it looked like something had been mining through it for years.
Something had.

I documented everything. The parasites. The biofilm. The extent of the colonization. The intestinal wall penetration. The liver damage. I wrote it all into the official autopsy report.
Cause of death: multi-organ failure secondary to chronic parasitic infection with extensive biofilm colonization.
I filed it on a Wednesday.
By Friday, I was in the chief medical examiner’s office.
He didn’t yell. That would have been easier. He was calm. Professional. Almost gentle about it.
“This report is going to create problems.”
“It’s what I found.”
“I don’t doubt what you found. I doubt the wisdom of documenting it this way.”
He laid it out for me. Richard had been a patient in the county hospital system for eleven years. He’d seen four different doctors. Complained about symptoms dozens of times. Not one of them ever ordered parasite testing.

If my report stood, Richard’s wife would sue. The hospital would face an investigation. Medical licenses would be reviewed. Malpractice insurance premiums for the entire system would increase.
“You’re telling me to change it.”
“I’m telling you to reconsider your language. Multi-organ failure is accurate.
The parasitic findings are… contributing context.
Not all contributing context needs to appear in the final determination.”

“His wife deserves to know what killed her husband.”
He looked at me for a long time.
“His wife will be told that his organs failed. Which they did. We don’t speculate about contributing factors that were never diagnosed during the patient’s lifetime. That’s not our role. Our role is to document the proximate cause of death. Not to perform retroactive diagnoses that create liability for the living.”

I sat there.
“And if this happens again?”
“You document the proximate cause of death. Like everyone else in this office.
Like everyone in every coroner’s office in this country.”

He stood up. Meeting over.
“You’re a good coroner. Don’t make this a pattern.”
That was the sentence. The one I heard under the professional language.
Do this again and you’re done.

Richard’s wife got the same answer every family gets. Organ failure. We don’t know why. We’re sorry.
I saw her once after that. In the grocery store. She was buying frozen dinners for one. Her eyes were red. She didn’t see me.
I went home and sat in my car in the driveway for 20 minutes.
And then I kept signing death certificates for 17 more years.

That’s the thing people don’t understand about a system like this. They imagine some dramatic cover-up. Men in suits. Shredded documents. Secret meetings.

It’s not like that.
It’s one conversation in an office. One sentence. “Don’t make this a pattern.”
And you understand. You adjust. You write organ failure. You go home.
Nobody orders you to lie. They just make it clear what happens if you tell the truth.
And so you stop telling it.

After Richard, I never documented parasitic findings again. Not once in 17 years.
But I never stopped finding them.
Every week. Body after body. The same swollen intestines. The same coated organs. The same colonies burrowed into tissue that should have had decades of function left.
Men. Women. 30s. 40s. 50s. 60s. Some younger. Every one of them with years of dismissed symptoms in their charts. Every one of them tested normal. Every one of them told nothing was wrong.
Every one of them full of parasites that nobody found until they were on my table. When it was too late.

That’s what I carried for 31 years.
Here’s the part where it stopped being something I carried and became something I couldn’t ignore.
My wife, Diane.
We’ve been married 34 years. She’s 60. Retired teacher. Walks three miles every morning. Healthiest person in any room she walks into.
About two years ago, she started with the bloating.
Not bad at first. Just enough that she’d unbutton her pants after dinner. She joked about it. “Getting old.” I didn’t joke back.Then the fatigue. Diane has never been a nap person. Suddenly she was falling asleep at
4pm in her reading chair. Every day. Couldn’t stay awake.
Then the 3am wake-ups. Like clockwork. She’d lie there in the dark. I’d feel her turn over. Turn back. Stare at the ceiling. This went on for months.
Then the brain fog. She’s the sharpest person I know. She started losing words. Forgetting appointments. She called our daughter by our granddaughter’s name three times in one week and laughed it off.
I wasn’t laughing.

I’d read these symptoms in charts. Hundreds of charts. Thousands. They were the same every time. Bloating. Fatigue. Sleep disruption. Cognitive decline. Sugar cravings.
And they all ended the same way.
On my table.

Diane went to her doctor. Blood work. Stool sample. The standard panel.
Everything came back normal.
Of course it did.
I’ve opened over 2,700 people who tested normal their entire lives.

Standard tests only detect parasites floating loose in stool at that exact moment. The ones burrowed into the intestinal walls — inches deep, protected behind biofilm — don’t shed. Don’t show up. Don’t exist as far as the lab is concerned.
The tests are designed to miss this.

I sat in our living room that night watching Diane struggle to remember the name of a movie we’d watched the week before. And I felt the full weight of 31 years of silence.
I knew what was inside her. I’d been looking at it in bodies my entire career. I’d documented it 2,700 times in a private log that nobody would ever read.
And I’d never said a word. To anyone. Because one conversation in 2011 taught me what happens when you do.
But this was Diane.
I wasn’t going to write organ failure on my wife’s death certificate.
I tried the herbal protocols first. Wormwood. Black walnut. Clove. Everything the online forums recommend.
Three weeks. Nothing. Some cramping. No improvement.
I should have known. I’ve seen what these parasites look like embedded in intestinal walls. Herbs that pass through the digestive tract don’t reach them. The biofilm is too thick. Too established. Everything just bounces off.
I tried a course of fenbendazole next. A veterinarian friend helped me get it.
Same story as everyone reports. Better by week two. Energy came back. Bloating went down. I thought it was working.
Three weeks after finishing: everything back. The bloating. The fatigue. The 3am wake-ups. All of it. Worse than before.
Because the fenbendazole killed the exposed parasites. The ones floating loose. But the ones behind biofilm — the ones I’d been finding in bodies for 31 years — survived. Their eggs survived. Protected inside the intestinal walls. And when those eggs hatched, a new generation took over.
That’s the cycle. Two weeks of hope. Then a crash. Every oral treatment. Every time.
I was out of ideas.

That’s when I called Frank.
Frank Novak. He’d been a coroner in the next county over for 38 years before he retired. Old school. The kind of man who said exactly what he thought regardless of consequence.
Frank was the only coroner I’d ever known who talked openly about what we find in bodies. Not publicly — but between us, privately. He’d bring it up over beers. “Another one today. 44 years old. Intestines looked like a sewer pipe. Wrote cardiac event.”
He’d shake his head. Take a sip. Move on.
I called him and told him about Diane. Told him what I’d tried. Told him none of it worked.

He was quiet. Then:
“You’ve been looking at this wrong for 31 years.”
“What do you mean?”
“You keep trying to kill them. Swallowing things. Hoping it reaches them. It doesn’t. You know it doesn’t. You’ve seen the biofilm. You know how deep they burrow. Nothing you swallow reaches what we find on our tables.”
“So what does?”

“You have to break down what’s protecting them. The biofilm. That’s the fortress. As long as it’s intact, the parasites behind it are untouchable.”

“What breaks it down?”
“Ricinoleic acid. It’s about 90% of castor oil. One of the only natural compounds shown to dissolve biofilm matrices. Not just kill parasites — break down the walls they hide behind.”

I waited.
“But you can’t swallow it. Stomach acid destroys the ricinoleic acid before it reaches the intestines. What survives gets diluted across your entire digestive tract. Not enough concentration left to penetrate a biofilm wall that’s been building for 20 years.”

“Then how do you deliver it?”
“Through the skin. Transdermal. You apply castor oil directly over the abdomen with compression and heat. It absorbs through the dermal layers. Bypasses the stomach entirely. Body heat activates it. The compression drives it inches deep — directly into the tissue where the parasites have built their fortresses.”

He paused.
“And you wear it overnight. Six to eight hours. Parasites are nocturnal. Most active between midnight and 4am. That’s when they feed. That’s when they reproduce. That’s when they release the toxins that wake your wife up at 3am. You deliver ricinoleic acid during the exact window when they’re active and their biofilm is most permeable.”

“Frank. How long have you been doing this?”
“Eighteen years. My wife does it too. She’s 76 and hasn’t been to a doctor for anything other than a checkup in over a decade.”
“And you never told me.”
“You never asked. And honestly? I figured you’d think I was crazy. A retired coroner telling people to wrap castor oil around their belly at night. Nobody wants to hear that from the guy who cuts open dead people for a living.”
He was right. If he’d told me five years ago, I would have laughed.

But I wasn’t laughing now. My wife was awake at 3am every night with the same symptoms I’d read in 2,700 charts. And every medical approach I’d tried had failed.
I went to the store that night. Bought castor oil. Soaked a t-shirt. Wrapped plastic wrap around Diane’s midsection before bed. It was a disaster. Oil leaked through everything. The plastic wrap came undone within an hour. Diane woke up at 1am with the shirt bunched under her ribs, oil soaked through the sheets, pillow stained. She looked at me like I’d lost my mind.

We tried again the next night. Same result. Oil everywhere. Nothing stayed in place.
Third night, Diane said, “I know you’re trying to help. But I am not doing the plastic wrap thing again.”

I called Frank the next morning.
He laughed before I finished the sentence.
“Yeah. Everyone tries the DIY version first. I ruined four sets of sheets before I figured it out.”
“So what do you use?”
“There’s a company that makes packs specifically for this. Designed for overnight wear. Materials that actually hold the oil. Compression that stays put. My wife’s been using theirs for years.”
He gave me the name. EdenLabs.
I ordered one that day.

When it arrived, I understood immediately why the t-shirt and plastic wrap didn’t work. This was built for what Frank described. Organic cotton and bamboo fibers that held castor oil without leaking through. Adjustable compression that stayed consistent all night. No plastic. No mess.
Diane put it on that night. Applied the oil. Wrapped it snug.
“This is actually comfortable,” she said. She sounded surprised.
She slept through the night.
First time in months.

Week one: More bathroom activity than usual. Diane noticed. Didn’t say much. But something was moving.
Week two: The bloating started going down. Not suddenly. Steadily.
By the end of the week, Diane stood in front of the mirror and said, “My stomach is flat. When’s the last time my stomach was flat?”
I couldn’t remember either.
Week three: The 3am wake-ups stopped. She slept through the night. Every night. I’d wake up at 3 out of habit and look over at her. Sound asleep. Breathing steady. Still.

I can’t describe what that felt like. After months of lying there feeling her toss and turn. Knowing what those wake-ups meant. Knowing what I’d seen in 2,700 bodies that started with the same symptom.
Silence at 3am. It was the most beautiful sound I’d ever heard.
Week four: Diane’s sister came for dinner. Halfway through the meal she stopped and stared at Diane. “What’s different about you? You look ten years younger. Are you sleeping better?”
Diane smiled and looked at me.

I couldn’t say anything. I was thinking about every family I’d lied to across my desk. Every husband. Every wife. Every child. All the ones whose person had the same symptoms Diane had. The same dismissals. The same negative tests. The same progression.

The only difference was I knew what to look for. And I found it in time.
Week six: Brain fog gone. Energy back. Diane walked four miles that morning and came home and reorganized the garage. The woman who was falling asleep in her chair at 4pm six months ago was reorganizing the garage at noon and asking me if I wanted to go for a bike ride after lunch.
The sugar cravings disappeared. The joint pain she’d developed faded. She said she felt like herself for the first time in two years.
Because she was herself. She’d just been carrying something inside her that was stealing everything — her energy, her sleep, her clarity, her health — one night at a time.

I’ve been retired for six weeks.
I don’t open bodies anymore. I don’t sign certificates. I don’t sit across from husbands and wives and tell them I don’t know when I do know.
But I think about it every day.
I think about Richard. His daughter watching him collapse in the kitchen. His wife buying frozen dinners for one. The report I wrote and then erased because one conversation in an office taught me to keep my mouth shut.
I think about the 2,700 entries in my private log. The families who never got the truth. The husbands and wives who sat across from my desk and heard “organ failure” when the answer was right there in my autopsy notes.

I think about Diane. How close she came. How her symptoms were identical to the people in my log. How her tests came back normal just like theirs did. How her doctor said the same things their doctors said.
The only difference is I knew what to look for. Most people don’t.
That’s why I’m saying this now. Because I can. Because there’s no chief medical examiner to call me into his office. No pension to threaten. No career to end.
I’m retired. And I’m done being quiet.
The bloating. The fatigue. The 3am wake-ups. The sugar cravings you can’t control. The brain fog that makes you feel like you’re losing your mind.

Those aren’t separate problems.
Those are warnings.
Something is living inside you. Building walls. Stealing your nutrients. Releasing toxins into your bloodstream 24 hours a day.
And the longer you wait, the deeper it digs.
Your tests will come back normal. Your doctor will say stress. Or hormones. Or aging. Or IBS.

I’ve read those exact words in the charts of people I’ve opened up on my table. Hundreds of them. People whose organs were destroyed by parasites that nobody found because nobody looked.

The tests are designed to miss this.
Parasites burrow inches deep into the intestinal walls. They hide behind biofilm — thick, protective shields that block your immune system, block lab detection, and block every supplement you swallow.
Nothing you take by mouth can reach them. Stomach acid destroys it. What survives gets diluted across your entire digestive tract. The biofilm walls stay intact. The parasites stay protected. The eggs stay embedded.

That’s why every oral cleanse fails. That’s why you feel better for two weeks and then crash. You killed the exposed ones. The protected ones survived. Their eggs hatched. New generation. Back to square one.

The only compound shown to break down biofilm is ricinoleic acid — 90% of castor oil.
Delivered through the skin.
With compression and heat.
Inches deep into the tissue where parasites have built their fortresses.
Overnight, during the exact window when they’re active and vulnerable.

That’s what EdenLabs makes. A castor oil pack designed for overnight wear. Organic cotton and bamboo that holds the oil without leaking. Adjustable compression that stays in place all night. No mess. No stained sheets. Comfortable enough to wear every night.
One purchase. Reusable for months. No subscription. No recurring shipments of things that don’t work.
90-day money-back guarantee. If nothing changes, every penny back.
But they’re a small company and they sell out constantly. If they’re out of stock when you click, sign up for the restock. It’s worth the wait.
Every night you sleep without this is another night they feed. Another night they reproduce. Another night they dig deeper. Another night their biofilm fortresses get thicker.

I’m not carrying that anymore.
I’m 62. I’m retired. And for the first time in 31 years, I’m telling the truth.
The bloating won’t go away on its own. The fatigue won’t lift. The 3am wake-ups won’t stop. Not until you break down the walls they’re hiding behind.

Stop feeding what’s feeding on you….

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  1. Yvonne

    I strongly recommend watching the “documentary” series The Blacklist on Netflix – it explains just so much along this vein of deception for humanity. Yvonne