Cells want fresh air and good food.
Originally, germs maintained a mutually beneficial relationship with humans and lived well. Numerous bacteria live in the body, but they are too small to be seen and are with us 24 hours a day. But this old relationship was broken with the advent of antibiotics.
Antibiotics made to kill and inhibit the growth of bacteria have a history of about 70 years. During this period, humans were freed from infectious diseases such as measles and tuberculosis. But did these substances make our bodies strong?
Antibiotics, which cannot distinguish between beneficial and harmful bacteria, indiscriminately kill all bacteria in the body. Even beneficial bacteria in the intestines that play a key role in immunity. Thanks to this, the bacterial ecosystem was destroyed, and instead of reducing infectious diseases, allergic diseases such as atopy and asthma and immune diseases such as multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis increased exponentially. In addition, more and more people are visiting the hospital even if they only have a cold, and as antibiotics are used even in livestock feed, the problem of abuse is being seriously raised.
Wouldn't the germs be very unfair at this point? It plays a role in the human body and strives to maintain health, but people who do not know their own body properly wield the blade of antibiotics, making noise as if only germs are the source of all diseases, and it is frustrating.
In the 20th century, medicine made remarkable progress, but there are many things that have been covered by its achievements. In particular, the wisdom of our ancestors who took care of the body was treated as a mere folk remedy, and more people tried to treat only the symptoms of the disease rather than treating the root of the disease. Little attention has been paid to the fact that many diseases are due to cell inflammation caused by our bad posture and bad breathing habits. It might be more accurate to say ignorant.