I stayed on a strict diet, avoiding my intolerant and allergenic foods for a couple years, and today I feel great. (It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done.) By the two-month mark my intestines relaxed and I was able to take in some pureed foods. In the initial stage of recovery I drank mostly raw milk and organic beef bone broth-hardly any solids for about six weeks. I had to travel twenty miles to get it, but it was well worth it. After getting on a waiting list I finally was called to pick up my fresh raw milk. Where I live, small dairy farms have sprung up on the outskirts of town. I knew my doctor’s advice would end up in endless pill-taking and I didn’t want to go that route. After reading about the options I actually had, which were horrible (tearing out half my intestines), I did all the research I could to find out how to heal my gut. Two years ago I was diagnosed with diverticulitis. I’m very pleased to be able to give my testimony for raw milk. Thank you, WAPF, for the part you played in the young man’s survival! The family could well have paid premium for their milk and we chose to donate to their son’s care as part of our ministry of our farm! So that’s a little success story on the health benefits of raw whole milk, even in a child with suppressed immunity due to cancer treatment! It saved his life! The oncologist couldn’t argue with success! The father explained the way they had gotten nutrition in their son when he was losing his battle with cancer and how he turned around using raw whole A2 milk. Now I didn’t tell you that the father of the child is a pediatrician and agreed to giving his son whole raw milk with open eyes and good base knowledge. Once he completed treatment and was in remission, his oncologist questioned the parents on what they did to change things with their son. As I said, he would not eat or drink anything else. For almost a year, they drove almost one hundred miles one way to get milk from us because their son would drink the milk and said it made his tummy better. His mother and grandmother had heard of the benefits of A2 raw milk and found us through our listing at. He could not tolerate the NG tube so they were losing the fight for his life. He was two years old when they found he had cancer and once treatment started, he quit eating. We offer milk free of charge to families with a critically ill family member-and a young child battling leukemia is now in total remission after living on nothing but our milk for almost a year during his extensive cancer treatment. We have a real “praise report” on our farm’s raw milk. I remember her asking my grandmother why she pasteurized her milk on the farm, it’s clear she drank raw milk. Here is a picture of my great aunt who lived to be just shy of her one hundred tenth birthday! This is a picture of her at her one hundredth birthday party. Why skim for Scootie? That is what we used day-to-day for ourselves.LIVED TO AGE ONE HUNDRED TEN (this letter includes a picture online) He was then given his morning canned food portion. We used about a tablespoon of organic skim nearly every day as a treat for him to have while we gave him his morning insulin injection. If she is of normal weight, then more frequently, in greater quantity and/or higher fat content is fine.Īs an example, my cat Scootie, who passed away several years ago from old age, loved milk and did fine with it. Give just a little, such as a teaspoon or two. If she is overweight, then milk, like any treat, should be fed only occasionally. How much and how often depends on your cat's overall diet plan. If it is not organic, then look for milk labeled "rBGH-free" or "artificial growth hormone free." Non-organic may come from cows that are given artificial growth hormones. I would strongly suggest that organic is the best choice. If a cat enjoys milk and suffers none of these side-effects from it, then I consider it a healthful treat. Lactose intolerant cats may vomit, become gassy or "gurgly," have soft stool or even outright diarrhea after ingesting milk. Not all adult cats are lactose intolerant, but many are.
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