Any evidence to support your medical advice there Spud? Reducing inoculant is important but how does staying off the internet help? Flushing out with toothpaste?
I have quite a lot to say about this, but I need to get it right, so will start at the beginning. The chap who founded the Osteopathic profession, Andrew Taylor Still, wrote that he first had the idea when, as a practicing doctor, he found that his headache subsided when he rested his head on a swing in the garden. He realized that there was a mechanical component to disease.
Fast-forward about 120 years: I had a stinker of a cold about 5 years ago. The streaming nose dried up at night, and only started again when I became active. So during the day I tried lying still on my back, and realized that as long as I didn't move my head, my nose would dry up and be fairly comfortable.
So having studied Osteopathy between 1992-96 (sadly no longer practicing) but not ever treated a virus, I thought, if you can reduce the
symptoms of a cold in the above way, could you prevent the
initial infection using the same principle?
When I feel the slightest symptoms of a cold I try to replicate that posture in some way, and I think it does help to prevent getting the full-blown infection.
So far I've only had one bad cold since that time, whereas I used to get one every year.
Since Covid 19 causes respiratory infection, like the common cold, I am interested in whether it can be prevented using a similar mechanical intervention.