The Wonders of Pee! - Detoxification Series #4 - Part 1
Pros, Cons, and Possibilities
What a waste! Somebody get this guy a glass!
I stood before a man on his deathbed; seeking answers that would help me live. After nearly four years of living with MRSA, a friend told me her terminally-ill boyfriend had the answer. He’d suffered with the same thing years before and had cured it. Now, he had something else. If you’re wondering if I felt guilty, weird, and out-of-place. The answer is yes to all three. But, if he had the answer to how I could get rid of MRSA, I had to be there, and I had to ask.
After introducing myself briefly and asking how he was, I worked up the courage I needed. “I’ve been told you have the answer to treating MRSA. How did you do it?” “Well,” he said. “You have to use your own pee.” The thought of it — the mere suggestion — filled my senses with the memory of that smell. I could feel myself recoiling.
“What do you do with it?” I asked, half afraid of the answer. “Well…,” he said. “You can put it on the infection. That helps. But, it’s best if you drink it.” A sensation of shock travelled up my throat, sped past my vocal chords and increased the volume of what I bellowed out next: “DRINK IT?”
“You can try a few teaspoons at first, if you want,” he said. I knew I had to do it. After all of the money I’d spent, all of the traveling, to see this Shaman and that one, the enormous sums of money I’d spent on doctors, hospitals and tests… My PEE???Something I’d been carrying with me the whole time???
Dr. Ed Group, who does frequent interviews on how to detoxify the body from nanotechnology, and other dangerous substances, believes urine therapy has the potential assist us in maintaining our health, even at times such as this. He promotes urine therapy and a number products, to help people detoxify from nanotechnology and other dangerous substances.
Urine therapy is an interesting thing. People generally have strong feelings about it, but not many people try it or research the pros and cons. It’s the kind of thing that’s easier not to think about, unless… you’re rather desperate. A lot of people are getting to that point right about now.
The pros and cons primarily revolve around a few basic points:
What urine contains, and whether these ingredients are mostly good or mostly bad.
Concern about the implications of reintroducing a substance to your body, it has worked to eliminate. (This includes concern about reintroducing and nanotechnology that has come out as waste.)
Lack of scientific evidence that it works. (There is actually quite a bit.)
The disgust factor.
Down below, I’ll dive into what we know about using urine for health purposes, and some grey areas, where there’s still room for debate. An shocking number of benefits associated with urine therapy have been reported. But, like most health treatments, there are some side effects and potential risks that should be explored. As with any health treatment, the more you know, the better.
Free subscribers, who don’t have the funds to become paid ones, can find a lot of information on urine therapy online. One of the best places to look for information on the benefits, is Dr. Group’s Urotherapy Research site at: https://urotherapyresearch.com/# Click on ‘Books and Research,’ and you’ll find a wealth of free downloadable publications on the subject.
If you stay with, I’ll do my best to cover the pros, cons and controversies in as nonbiased a way as possible, to help you decide if your own golden fluid is something to be savored or tossed down the deepest hole you can find.
I’ll warn you from the outset that I’m pretty sold on the idea. I’ve looked at the facts; tried the therapy; looked at urine under the microscope and come to the conclusion that urine therapy is worth doing — in my case anyway. Mixed in with the vitamins, minerals, antibodies, and other special substances in urine, is nanotechnology your body has chosen to eliminate (in the likely case that you have some floating around in you somewhere). That is the truly awful part of the equation. Don’t worry, there are plenty reasons for hope.
Urine therapy treats many, if not most, common health conditions caused by nanotechnology. Substances found in urine are already being used by the medical community to help with allergic reactions, heart attacks, thrombosis, stroke, hormonal issues, and other maladies. Studies show that urine, and/or its components, can even help with brain health and cancer.
Facts about the way urine interacts with our bodies give me reason to hope it might be part of the answer. When the body is exposed to an allergen, or an outside toxin, such as: venom, a disease thought to be caused by bacteria or a virus, or another threat, it produces antibodies to protect us. These antibodies are released in the urine following exposure, and can constitute a perfect form of medicine for the ills affecting us.
It may be a long shot, but… if the body recognizes nanotechnology as a toxin, it seems theoretically possible at least, that it might produce some substances geared toward disabling and eliminating it. (A day after I wrote the last sentence, I found out Dr. Group was already doing research to see if this is the case.) In: “BREAKING: Can Urine Build A Bio Defense System Against Nanotech? Dr. Ed Group” YouTube, INSPIRED uploaded 13 June 2025 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUaJio6_hL8 Dr. Group says:
“What we’ve found is when people have been doing the urine therapy for six months, their body, through the epigenetics — like what Bruce Lipton talks about — their body is developing biodefence systems against the nanotechnology.”
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