Many people focus on detoxing either the lymph or the liver but not both together.
People receiving lymph massages often feel worse probably because the liver gets overwhelmed without proper support: They may be taking one or two supplement for liver detox and that is not enough.
People doing liver detox might not get it all out because the lymph has to deliver the toxic load to the liver, which does not happen automatically. The liver is a more logical place to start because it is closer to the exit into the toilet, rather than starting upstream at the lymph that can create bottlenecks downstream and then recirculation in the blood and back-up into the brain for brain fog or headache and all over the body for inflammation or other symptoms.
Let’s start with a basic understanding:
Lymph vessels drain the extracellular fluid all over the body to remove metabolic waste and toxicity so nutrients can circulate through the blood to enter extracellular fluid and reach cells.
The lymph system then dumps into the blood to be further processed through the liver to be dumped out the bowels.
The design of the lymph system seems odd until you understand at least two reasons why it is designed work with the liver.
You can see from the chart that left and right side lymphatic systems are completely uneven.
The right side extends down from the top of the head to only half way down the trunk.
The left side includes the whole lower half of the body.
One reason seems to be that the right side needs to focus on supporting the liver, since if the liver gets overwhelmed then the lymph system itself will back up.
The lymph system detoxes the organs of detoxification so it of vital importance to maintain.
The second thing is that the lymph ducts left dump into the blood under the collar bone into the subclavical veins. This may seem odd because your toes have to send toxins all the way up to the neck.
The placement of ducts dumping into blood is between the liver and brain as a compromise between the shortest way to the liver and shortest exit from the brain to minimize chances of blocks and bottlenecks in the flow of the process.
I have not seen this explained anywhere, I hope someone has.
I could not find a good picture of the left and right lymph system with a picture of where the liver is on the right side in the lower rib cage to explain the relations between the two. This is because people don’t think in terms of systems as connections between body parts through process flows. Processes can be visualized as liquid flows of circulation from blood to lymph, (and cerebral spinal fluid inside the spine and head).
This is a paradigm problem: Assumptions in our heads lead to questions and answers in a certain way.
The paradigm here is a fragmented and specialized mode of academic science that informs medical thinking. The focus more narrow for more detail, the view from the microscope, rather than see the big picture of how the parts work together.
I use a paradigm of applied science and statistics used by engineers called six sigma and I got my PhD studying it.
Engineering thinking visualizes things in terms of flow charts.
The only other practitioner I know that says that exactly is Dr. Perry Nickleston.
Engineering thinking is systems thinking that is consistent with holistic health. It is also human or customer focused, as opposed to specialty and expertise focused. Engineering measurement is supposed to align with human needs of the customer.
People receiving lymph massages often feel worse probably because the liver gets overwhelmed without proper support: They may be taking one or two supplement for liver detox and that is not enough.
People doing liver detox might not get it all out because the lymph has to deliver the toxic load to the liver, which does not happen automatically. The liver is a more logical place to start because it is closer to the exit into the toilet, rather than starting upstream at the lymph that can create bottlenecks downstream and then recirculation in the blood and back-up into the brain for brain fog or headache and all over the body for inflammation or other symptoms.
Let’s start with a basic understanding:
Lymph vessels drain the extracellular fluid all over the body to remove metabolic waste and toxicity so nutrients can circulate through the blood to enter extracellular fluid and reach cells.
The lymph system then dumps into the blood to be further processed through the liver to be dumped out the bowels.
The design of the lymph system seems odd until you understand at least two reasons why it is designed work with the liver.
You can see from the chart that left and right side lymphatic systems are completely uneven.
The right side extends down from the top of the head to only half way down the trunk.
The left side includes the whole lower half of the body.
One reason seems to be that the right side needs to focus on supporting the liver, since if the liver gets overwhelmed then the lymph system itself will back up.
The lymph system detoxes the organs of detoxification so it of vital importance to maintain.
The second thing is that the lymph ducts left dump into the blood under the collar bone into the subclavical veins. This may seem odd because your toes have to send toxins all the way up to the neck.
The placement of ducts dumping into blood is between the liver and brain as a compromise between the shortest way to the liver and shortest exit from the brain to minimize chances of blocks and bottlenecks in the flow of the process.
I have not seen this explained anywhere, I hope someone has.
I could not find a good picture of the left and right lymph system with a picture of where the liver is on the right side in the lower rib cage to explain the relations between the two. This is because people don’t think in terms of systems as connections between body parts through process flows. Processes can be visualized as liquid flows of circulation from blood to lymph, (and cerebral spinal fluid inside the spine and head).
This is a paradigm problem: Assumptions in our heads lead to questions and answers in a certain way.
The paradigm here is a fragmented and specialized mode of academic science that informs medical thinking. The focus more narrow for more detail, the view from the microscope, rather than see the big picture of how the parts work together.
I use a paradigm of applied science and statistics used by engineers called six sigma and I got my PhD studying it.
Engineering thinking visualizes things in terms of flow charts.
The only other practitioner I know that says that exactly is Dr. Perry Nickleston.
Engineering thinking is systems thinking that is consistent with holistic health. It is also human or customer focused, as opposed to specialty and expertise focused. Engineering measurement is supposed to align with human needs of the customer.
Eat to energize, detoxify & immunize.
Move to circulate, align, & relax.
Primal Rejuvenation Health Coaching
Find out what you get in a
Free Assessment
See how I support you fully in
Health Coaching Steps
I work over video: Facebook, Zoom, Google, from Michigan, USA
Hess.PaulC@gmail.com
Follow me on FACEBOOK:
choose “See First” to get all notifications. blog posts
INSTAGRAM
Primal Rejuvenation
Systematic
enough to make a difference
Simple
enough to implement
Sensitive
to individual needs
Move to circulate, align, & relax.
Primal Rejuvenation Health Coaching
Find out what you get in a
Free Assessment
See how I support you fully in
Health Coaching Steps
I work over video: Facebook, Zoom, Google, from Michigan, USA
Hess.PaulC@gmail.com
Follow me on FACEBOOK:
choose “See First” to get all notifications. blog posts
Primal Rejuvenation
Systematic
enough to make a difference
Simple
enough to implement
Sensitive
to individual needs