Kambo, Nanotech and Blood. Help us Magic Frogs!
A before and after study of one person and two Kambo sessions.
Kambo is a poison substance secreted by a cute tree frog from the Amazon jungle, known as the Phyllomedusa. Like many of you, I’m constantly on the lookout for nanotech antidotes. I’ve looked into supplements; consciousness-raising techniques; and electrical and magnetic devices that might help us rid our bodies and bloodstreams of nanotechnology. Why not study the effects of Kambo?
Applying Kambo involves having someone burn it into your skin. In addition to being mildly painful, you generally have to pay your attacker for the service. If that weren’t enough, the experience is usually followed by generous amounts of vomiting. I did it three times, myself, when I first arrived in Ecuador, and found it a harrowing, but pleasant experience. Weird description, I know. But, I really can’t describe it any other way.
Kambo isn’t a psychoactive substance. (That’s what they tell you.) Why, then, did I enjoy the process of vomiting for the first time ever? And, why did I have an overwhelming desire to become a tree frog? (I don’t really believe it’s not psychoactive. If that’s true, it’s not true for me at least.)
What started as a South American healing tradition, is now being used by people in many places to facilitate detoxification. Many people report positive emotional and spiritual effects as well. It can also help people break their addiction to certain substances.
Here’s a short video with medical information about Kambo:
Poison sounds awful, until you find yourself entertaining the idea that maybe – just maybe – something seemingly gross and poorly understood by the conventional modern mind, could defeat something infinitely grosser and harder to comprehend: self-assembled nanostructures in the blood.
With this in mind, I posted an ad on a Telegram group, requesting volunteers for a study of how Kambo affects the blood. Two months passed without results. (Maybe it was the word: “blood”). I would have participated in the ‘study’ myself, but I have Arrythmia now, and Kambo speeds up the heart, so it isn’t recommended for people with heart conditions.
When someone, who hadn’t seen the ad, expressed a willingness to participate, I was thrilled! I’m going to call my Kambo participant ‘Sandy,’ partly because it’s a good unisex name, and partly because I don’t know of a single Sandy in this community. If you live here in Southern Ecuador, and your name is Sandy, I heartily apologize.
In the interest of saving readers’ time, I’ll get straight to the punchline. Kambo produced mildly hopeful, but strangely confusing, signs of promise. My observations suggest that Kambo may, indeed, have the capacity to make changes related to the population of nanostructures in the blood. However, at this juncture, I haven’t found evidence to suggest that it has the power to eliminate nanostructures from the body entirely. If you’re curious and hungry for more details, hop aboard the magical frog ride and read on.
Sandy had planned to take Kambo a total of three times, one week apart. I knew I couldn’t test Sandy’s blood after the third session, due to travel plans, so I asked Sandy to come in before and after the first session, and once after the second session, which took place a week later. (I was hoping any changes would be cumulative.)
I asked Sandy to fast for four hours before coming in each time, to help eliminate food-related explanations for any blood changes I saw. Looking at blood after a four-hour fast is easier than looking at the blood of someone who has just eaten. When food is in the early stages of digestion, the blood is typically littered with tiny white moving dots, called: Chylomicrons. When a lot of these are moving around, it looks like the blood has been hit with a snowstorm.
WHAT HAPPENED
The first time Sandy came in, I saw a large number of objects in Sandy’s blood that bore a resemblance to what some researchers refer to as ribbons and strands. There were also other oblong shapes that looked a bit more unusual. See pictures and videos below:
Picture #1 - This is probably a ribbon. Nothing too unusual. There were two or three of these in Sandy’s blood. (Feel free to let me know in the comments section if I’m using the wrong words for certain nanostructures.)
Picture #2 (Something a bit unusual).
This one didn’t look like much on low magnification, but things got a lot weirder when I zoomed in.
Picture #3 (above) is from the same object.
Picture #4 shows yet another section. Maybe I’ll call this one: ‘Snake Hanging from a Twig.’
Before I continue, I want to confess an overwhelming desire to travel back in time. If only I had another chance to clean that slide! (The one used for Pictures 1-6) I had just gone to a nearby shop to purchase a new cleaning cloth. Unfortunately, the beige cloths I normally use were out, so I bought a black one. That proved to be a fatal mistake! The cloth left bluish-purple streaks and particles in its wake that were invisible to the naked eye. By the time I realized what had happened, there was nothing I could do. Sandy was gone.
I should have examined the slide under the microscope before applying the blood sample, but didn’t, due to tight time constraints. In addition to bluish-purple marks, the new cleaning cloth left strange gold and rust-colored particles, as well as a few green and blue ones, which could only be seen in darkfield. (I think you can safely ignore the bluish-purple patches in Pictures 3 & 4 above.)
Video #1 (The same structure in darkfield.)
There were a few white particles moving around in Sandy’s blood, which could have been left over Chylomicrons from his earlier meal. They can be seen in the video below, mixed in with some fairly common intracellular parasites, and other blood anomalies. These anomalies often appear in aged blood that is undergoing: ‘Pleomorphic Growth.’ WARNING TO THE QUEESY. If you don’t like snakes, you might want to skip the next video.
Video #2 (Sandy’s blood BEFORE Kambo Session #1)
The ordinary blood anomalies in the video don’t concern me. But, the moving, multicolored shapes in the upper right, look like they might be what Dr. Ana Mihalcea refers to as Nanobots. I’m not at all certain that’s what they are, but for lack of a better term, I’ll call them that for now.
When you see tiny moving particles in blood the possibilities are numerous. Are they Symprotits? Chylomicrons? Bacteria? Intracellular parasites out for a swim? It’s hard to say. But I know a change when I see one. And, there WAS a change in Sandy’s blood after the first Kambo session.
THE FIRST KAMBO SESSION
Video #3 (Sandy’s Blood AFTER Kambo Session #1)
What on earth was happening? Did the white dots drink too much coffee? Are we witnessing a dot seizure of some kind? The dots were moving a lot faster, and more frantically, than the Chylomicrons I’d observed earlier. They seemed brighter. Were they simply Chylomicrons gone rogue, or something else entirely? Were they technological in nature? (Adjust the video to full screen view and let me know what you think.)
Were they forced out of Sandy’s red blood cells as part of the detoxification process? Did the Kambo shock them? If they were nanostructures, I certainly hoped so. Was this the key to short-circuiting the little buggers? If so, would there be less of them after Sandy’s second session?
As I continued to look through the AFTER sample, I noticed an absence of ribbons and strands. They were gone! I was very excited about this, until…. I saw Sandy’s blood after Kambo Session 2. (The ribbons and strands were back). Don’t worry, things will improve a bit later on.
Something good had happened during Sandy’s first Kambo session. When I looked at Sandy’s blood prior to Kambo Session #1, I hardly saw any white blood cells. In fact, I only counted two in the entire sample. That’s a scary finding! It could mean Sandy’s health was in danger.
I relaxed as soon as I focused my microscope on Sandy’s second blood sample. It looked like Sandy’s white blood cells were having an international convention! There were now an abundance of them frolicking happily in Sandy’s blood.
THE SECOND KAMBO SESSION
Do you want the good news, or the bad news first? Lucky for you, a good part of the bad news has already been mentioned. When I looked at Sandy’s blood after Kambo Session #2, there were plenty of strands and ribbons to greet me.
The following video shows a strangely grotesque ribbon-like structure being attacked by three white blood cells: (one on the upper right, one lower down toward the middle, and one on the left).
Video #4 - (Strange ribbon being attacked by White Blood Cells after Session #2)
Speaking of strange structures and white blood cells, the one below reminds me of a saucer from outer space perched on a white blood cell. If you look closely, there’s something else of note: it’s what you don’t see. Many, if not most, of the white dots seen previously are gone! What’s left are dimmer, slower moving blobs that are fewer in number. If the moving white dots were a type of technology, which they very well could have been, it looked like Kambo was winning the war. Hooray!
Video #5 - How’s this for title? ‘Spaceship on a White Blood Cell.’
To summarize:
Kambo Session #1 led to the elimination of ribbons and strands in Sandy’s blood. A great number of White Blood Cells were released, and brighter, faster-moving white dots appeared.
Kambo Session #2 saw the re-emergence of ribbons and strands. The reason for this is unknown. These could have formed during the previous week. If so, and enough of them were created, perhaps they had overcome Kambo’s detoxification powers. But, that’s just one guess. The population of moving white dots declined after Session #2, and an unusual structure appeared.
Before concluding, I want to mention a few outside circumstances that could have influenced the results:
The video of moving particles in Sandy’s blood, before Kambo Session #1, was taken after the blood had aged for a few hours and was already in the ‘Pleomorphic Growth’ stage.
Sandy’s blood dried very quickly after the Kambo sessions. This prevented me from seeing and recording the blood in the same stage it had been in prior to Kambo. The second (Video #3) was taken after only two hours, whereas, the first video (Video #2) was taken after almost three. Would looking at the blood at the same stage have changed the appearance of the mysterious white dots?
More animal protein had been added to Sandy’s diet in the week between Sessions #1 and #2. Cows and chickens in Ecuador have to receive certain vaccines before their meat is sold. Had Sandy ingested so many ribbons and strands that Kambo couldn’t eliminate them all? I have seen nanostructures in local beef and chicken blood in the past.
Another possibility is that a slight difference in the timing of the first two blood tests could have made a difference. Sandy returned 5 1/2 hours after the first session and 7 1/2 hours after the second. Had the extra two hours changed something? Could new ribbons and strands have been reassembled in that amount of time?
If the fast moving dots seen after Session #1 were a type of nanotech, could they have assembled themselves into ribbons and strands, explaining the appearance of those, as well as their own absence? That’s an awful thought indeed! Clearly, more studies are needed.
I am encouraged by the fact that strands and ribbons disappeared shortly after the first Kambo session. The disappearance of fast-moving white dots after Session #2 is also a positive sign.
If given the opportunity, I’ll continue to study Kambo and report on what I find. In the meantime, I hope other people will be inspired to study the effects of this potentially promising substance.
Like EDTA, would this protocol need to be done regularly? It seems most everything we ingest and/or apply has been tainted with hydrogel filaments, quantum dots, self assembling tech, and/or synthetic biology.
Strange how I had never heard of Kambo until last night during a suspected alien abduction case and now I read about it the very next day.