Although the therapeutic use of urine is known to have been practised for thousands of years and the subject came (back) into the consciousness of many people in Central Europe at the latest with the well-promoted books by Carmen Thomas at the end of the 1980s, the method is still mostly limited to external treatments, enemas/rinse and traditional drinking according to the traditional 3-sip variant. Many impulses for this can be found, for example, in the works of Malachow, Abele and Osterhagen/Schuler. 1 2 3 Some literature on this ancient principle is even only available in antiquarian form.
Many proven uses of one’s own urine are, for example, micro-enemas for infection-prone, “weak” children, nose drops for (pollen) allergies and recurrent sinusitis or ear drops for otitis externa.
On the other hand, you don’t really need any books at all to make use of the natural process of fluid and substance regulation through excretion via the kidneys. Making friends with your own Shiva Water is a deeply individual, introspective journey and any interference or prescriptions of method can diminish the wonderful potential that is there for yourself. For this reason, it is better to surrender to the quiet feedback with this body fluid independently and creatively-virtuously at your own pace.
The injection method presented here leads on the one hand to more safety through sterile filtration and on the other hand to great variability of treatment options due to the preparation of the urine with DMSO and/or procaine.
Acceptance
External applications of one’s own urine, especially for beauty/skin care, are now practised by many people without talking about it, for fear that the very idea might cause disgust in other people. By the way, the feeling of disgust when it comes to one’s own urine is already to be considered a symptom, which gives us important clues about the body, mind and soul of the person concerned. A separate treatise could be written on this alone. A bon mot in this context is the much quoted statement that by drinking one’s own urine one automatically switches to a vegetarian or vegan diet because it tastes and smells obnoxious after eating meat. Does nature have its wonderful modulating mechanisms at play here?
Cultural and traditional conditions naturally also play a major role in the acceptance of bladder contents, because word has spread in the meantime that urine, especially that of children and pregnant women, is a valued raw material in regions outside Central Europe and is collected on a large scale to be used, for example, to make medicines or cosmetics.
This already indicates that urine is by no means just coloured water, but contains all kinds of atomic and molecular substances in a hydrolysed and aquadised state. These include, for example, urea, salts/electrolytes, uric acid, hormones and hormone metabolites, amino acids, cell components, etc. This purely analytical view of urine, which is the subject of physiology books, will not be taken up further here, because its comprehensive, astonishing effects cannot be adequately explained with this alone. Beyond the material information, there is further information in this kidney-filtered blood plasma that cannot be measured and counted and therefore often eludes our imagination. This applies to all body fluids.
So, on the one hand, one can argue that the contained urea keeps, for example, the facial skin supple or promotes wound healing, but one will not grasp the overall effect of the golden water with this selective material perspective.
We may remember, among other things, that the production and intermediate storage of urine happens in the centre of our body. From a microscopic point of view, the kidneys represent a kind of levitation arrangement (loops), as it was used macroscopically, for example, by Schauberger and many others to energise the water. Furthermore, the urinary bladder represents a spherical electrode from whose surface manifold current paths emanate into the body and which can therefore be regarded as a reactor. Not to mention the intermolecular imprints and energetic patterns that are carried throughout the body as the blood plasma circulates.
So, for example, when urine is applied to the cleansed skin of the face or floods the mucous membrane of the nose, we always have at least three effects. Firstly, the local material effect, secondly, the local informative effect and thirdly, the holostic informative effect through feedback.
Methodology
In the vast majority of applications of one’s own urine, including injections, only the fresh, still warm urine is used directly. In addition, there are processing variants, such as evaporation, centrifugation or mixing with oxidising substances.
The most frequent question in connection with the therapeutic use of urine is: “Isn’t it dangerous to reintroduce what the body excretes, especially when consuming medicines or doing detoxification therapies, etc.?”
This is typical of the human mind. It looks for, and holds on to, the exceptions. Of course, one does not use urine for therapeutic purposes if one has previously taken water-soluble chelating agents to bind and eliminate transitional and heavy metals! And of course, one also does not do this if medicines are taken that appear predominantly as water-soluble toxic metabolites in the urine! And, as I said, not after eating meat either. Yes, fish is also part of meat, to prevent another common question.
The second most common question related to the use of urine is: “Is it necessary to take the morning urine and pay attention to the midstream?”
This is also typical of the human mind. We immediately look for rules and by making “it” complicated right at the beginning, we get excuses why we (can’t) do “it” right now.
The question can be answered like this: You have a practice and a patient has an appointment with you at 2:30 pm. You have the idea to give a regulation impulse with the help of the own urine injection explained below and now it is impossible to collect fresh morning urine at this time of day. Should this treatment option be abandoned now only because of the “wrong” time of day?
Of course, urine contains different information at different hours according to the organ clock. But is it “better” at 7 am than at 3 pm? In any case, it makes sense to plan the “urination” and the immediate injection with it, regardless of the time of day, as far after the last meal as possible, in order to use the material and non-material information from the autophagy phase.
And the thing about the midstream? This is more of a rule from the world of laboratory medicine, as this is the way to avoid microbiological artefacts in the analysis of urine samples as much as possible.
In the method to be presented here, however, the fresh urine is first drawn through a sterile syringe filter during preparation, in accordance with international guidelines for “good working”. This eliminates bacterial contamination of the injection fluid produced in this way.
Practicalities
But enough of the excuses. In medias res. Let us take the hollow sabre in hand. The necessary tools for the injections of one’s own urine and their execution are very simple. But how did it actually come about?
After healing practitioners were prohibited under German law from continuing to use invasive autohaemo methods, the idea of simply switching to urine as an individual and holistic carrier of information seemed obvious at the same moment. What began in this way as a quasi emergency alternative quickly developed into an independent and versatile treatment method that can be used variably and creatively both intramuscularly and subcutaneously.
Depending on the amount drunk, the urine is often hypertonic, i.e. has a slightly higher salt content than the tissue water. This is natural, as the kidneys are designed for concentration. This means that the re-injected urine can temporarily and reversibly “pinch” a little at the injection site. This is already part of the “stimulus effect” that the fluid triggers in the tissue and which then spreads from local to systemic.
In this context, one thing on the side: did nature actually intend that we often pee colourlessly? In other words, does the fad of stubbornly “drinking lots and lots” really make physiological sense? There are doubts about this now, as a recent study by Y. Yamada shows.4 Looking at nature, the whole thing is suspect anyway, because the excretion of a lot of low concentrated urine, and thus the senseless, permanent occupation of the kidneys, is linked on the psychosomatic level with the aspect of “fear”. With exam anxiety, for example, you have to run to the loo all the time. Since our entire organism is based on the interrelation between mind and body, physically induced processes can also have an effect on the emotional world and the subconscious! It therefore makes sense, as with other nutrition, to adapt drinking behaviour to the individual and the situation.
Preparation
Should the fresh urine be injected intramuscularly or subcutaneously, at several sites and where? Depending on this, the syringe size and the injection needle are varied. Otherwise, the tools are the same.
Material: Clean glass, DMSO Ph. Eur. and pipette
Disposable syringe 5, 10 or 20 ml (inject or other)
Cannula yellow, 20 G (Sterican or others)
Syringe filter 0.2 to max. 0.35 µm, for aqueous liquids, individually sterile packed (Fa. www.alchemist.de or others)
Cannula grey, 25 G or purple, 24 G, for s.c. blue, 23 G, for i.m. (Sterican or others)
The urine is collected in a glass that has been made as dust-free as possible beforehand and has no adhesions inside, such as detergent residues, i.e. surfactants, or fats. Dust quickly clogs the fine pores of the syringe filter. We do not want to inject surfactants or other foreign, water-soluble substances. So either rinse the glass with hot water only or with alcohol and let it dry completely afterwards. Further disinfection is unnecessary, as we will work with the sterile filter afterwards. For understanding: The filter pores with a diameter of approx. 0.2 micrometres, allow atomic and molecular components of the urine to pass through without any further, but retain particles, bacteria, cells and cell debris, for example. Furthermore, the diameter of the glass should not be too small so that the syringe in one’s hand can be easily immersed.
If pharmaceutically certified DMSO is to be added to the urine before application, the desired amount is now dripped into the glass and mixed well with the urine by swirling. The DMSO, as a “channel opener”, can improve the diffusion and effects of the urine, as well as enhance its information. About 5 drops of DMSO Ph. Eur. per 10 ml of own urine have proven to be effective, i.e. about 2.5 ml DMSO in 100 ml total mixture.
Now put the selected syringe, the filter and the yellow needle together, in this order, dip the tip of the needle into the freshly obtained urine and draw it vigorously through the filter into the syringe. Depending on how dust-free you work and how many particles and cell debris are in the urine, you can usually produce between 3 and 7 ml of sterile-filtered urine before the filter is exhausted.
When purchasing the sterile syringe filters, it is essential to pay attention to the designation “for aqueous solutions”! Their diameter should also be at least 2.5 or better 3 cm. The price increases significantly with the diameter, but with the larger ones it is logically possible to filter more fluid in one operation without having to attach a new filter, which is inconvenient and also does not contribute to savings.
Attention: After sterile filtration of the urine, with or without DMSO Ph. Eur., the filter with cannula is removed and discarded! Then the desired amount of procaine solution can be drawn up additionally with a fresh cannula.
The addition of 1- or 2% procaine solution is especially recommended for subcutaneous injections, as here the native urine often “tweaks” a bit, but this disappears quickly even without procaine. With procaine, however, we can bring additional neural information into play, independently of its pain-relieving properties. This is also valuable, for example, when treating scars subcutaneously with this mixture. Since the aqueous procaine solution further dilutes the mixture, it is added to a maximum volume ratio of 1:1. So if there is 3 ml of filtered own urine in the syringe beforehand, a maximum of 3 ml of procaine solution is added.
In total, we now have the sterile-filtered urine with or without DMSO Ph. Eur. and with or without procaine solution in the syringe. Finally, the desired fresh injection cannula is attached and we can start.
Injections
Intramuscular or subcutaneous? Local or systemic effect? The boundaries of regulatory and regenerative stimuli emanating from injections with urine, DMSO and procaine are completely blurred.
Example: A damaged muscle is to be treated with the prepared mixture. Although injected locally into the affected muscle, healing impulses are often additionally detected in completely different areas of the body.
Even the execution of the injections themselves may advantageously cross borders. For example, a treatment that is initially started intramuscularly can then be transformed into a subcutaneous injection by gently withdrawing the needle from the muscle fascia, so that part of the syringe filling is finally deposited as a fluid cushion (“bump”) near the surface of the skin.
Thus, the choice of cannulae is also individually variable, with purple tending to work well for subcutaneous and blue for intramuscular work. Neural therapists in particular have their preferred cannulas at the ready anyway. Beginners tend to want to use very thin cannulas (e.g. brown), but then find that they bend easily. If, for example, “tough” scar tissue is to be punctured, it is better to choose larger diameters. Brown cannulas, on the other hand, are also available in a short version with a length of 12 mm, which is suitable for fine work on the face. Because the topic of wrinkle treatment with own urine is also part of the repertoire.
The results of an injection treatment with auto-urine are often amazing. For example, a middle-aged woman regained her sense of smell within a few hours after a simple intramuscular injection of her own urine (deltoid muscle), which had previously remained silent for almost a year after an episode of feverish infection.
In another case, considerable mental limitations caused by scars in the head area disappeared after subcutaneous treatment of these areas with own urine.
Conclusion
By injecting our own “kidney-filtered blood plasma” into various parts of the body at different depths, we offer the organism a stimulus that says something like: “Oops, that doesn’t belong here at all, but there is interesting information in it”. The system then goes into regulation locally and delocally and this can trigger a wide variety of healing impulses and contribute to the regeneration of even long-standing symptoms.
The procedure is simple, the material is inexpensive and with the help of sterile filtration, infections in the tissue are practically excluded if the usual hygienic procedures for invasive applications are otherwise observed.
The main indications are dysregulations in the immune system, metabolism, nerve and organ functions and cell formation. We experience and recognise dysregulations in the area of the immune system especially during this time, triggered by natural or artificially induced infections or antigen flooding and described, for example, as complications or “long syndromes”. Likewise, the symptom area of injuries, scars, pain in the entire musculoskeletal system can be opened up with the injections of one’s own urine.
By additionally mixing the one’s own urine with approx. 2.5% DMSO Ph. Eur. and/or procaine solution in a ratio of up to 1:1, this combined method is a versatile tool for the treatment of a wide range of acute and chronic symptoms and diseases.
Literature references:
1 G. Malachow, Urine Therapy, Phoenix, 1999.
2 J. Abele, Die Eigenharnbehandlung – Erfahrungen und Beobachtungen, Haug, 1995 (Treatment with one’s own urine – experiences and observations).
3 B. Osterhagen and H. Schuler, Shivawasser – Selbstheilung mit dem Superharn (Shiva Water – Self-Healing with the Super Urine), A. Zupan/Munich, 2010
4 Y. Yamada, National Institute of Biomedical Innovation Osaka, Variation in human water turnover associated with environmental and lifestyle factors, Science, 11/2022, Vol 378, Issue 6622, pp. 909-915
Contact:
Dr. Hartmut Fischer
Natural scientist, healing practitioner
www.medizinzumselbermachen.de
www.pranatu.de
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