Fermenting Feed for Meat Birds

Well that was not effective at all, and required me to use my inhaler after. There was no movement at all to the egg no matter how hard I blew, I popped my ears, my cheeks and lungs hurt, so not worth it.
 
Usually, when a person is intolerant of dairy products, it is the pasteurized version that kills all the good stuff in milk.  Has she tried the raw milk you now drink? 


It's not the traditional intolerance you are thinking of. It causes severe behavioral issues with her, usually involving depression and severe anger. We've been feeding our baby raw milk since she was six months old, so we had plenty around for my eldest to try. Raw milk, real yogurt, homemade cheese, plus everything processed has the same effect on her. It is nearly impossible to keep a nine year old away from dairy, so a great many days are challenging. And there are no ways to medicate for it, especially since we'd never allow it. The severity is dependant entirely on her consumption. So where she might need a double dose of anti-depressants one day, it would be considered an overdose a week later.

Sometimes I wonder if an autistic child would be easier. You can know and understand they have an uncontrollable problem. With this, she knows it's bad for her and the effects it has, but she sneaks it anyway. It's a personal choice, and although she is almost nine, you can't blame her for wanting what everyone else has. But you have to hold her responsible for her behavior, too.
 
But...but...don'tcha wanna at least blow one boiled egg out of the shell, just once in your life??
big_smile.png

With my luck I would blow it right out a window.
 
It's not the traditional intolerance you are thinking of. It causes severe behavioral issues with her, usually involving depression and severe anger. We've been feeding our baby raw milk since she was six months old, so we had plenty around for my eldest to try. Raw milk, real yogurt, homemade cheese, plus everything processed has the same effect on her. It is nearly impossible to keep a nine year old away from dairy, so a great many days are challenging. And there are no ways to medicate for it, especially since we'd never allow it. The severity is dependant entirely on her consumption. So where she might need a double dose of anti-depressants one day, it would be considered an overdose a week later.

Sometimes I wonder if an autistic child would be easier. You can know and understand they have an uncontrollable problem. With this, she knows it's bad for her and the effects it has, but she sneaks it anyway. It's a personal choice, and although she is almost nine, you can't blame her for wanting what everyone else has. But you have to hold her responsible for her behavior, too.
I used to know someone who had a milk allergy that way. He was scary without milk.

I wonder if a milk craving could be satisfied by a good calcium supplement? just a thought.
 
It's not the traditional intolerance you are thinking of. It causes severe behavioral issues with her, usually involving depression and severe anger. We've been feeding our baby raw milk since she was six months old, so we had plenty around for my eldest to try. Raw milk, real yogurt, homemade cheese, plus everything processed has the same effect on her. It is nearly impossible to keep a nine year old away from dairy, so a great many days are challenging. And there are no ways to medicate for it, especially since we'd never allow it. The severity is dependant entirely on her consumption. So where she might need a double dose of anti-depressants one day, it would be considered an overdose a week later.

Sometimes I wonder if an autistic child would be easier. You can know and understand they have an uncontrollable problem. With this, she knows it's bad for her and the effects it has, but she sneaks it anyway. It's a personal choice, and although she is almost nine, you can't blame her for wanting what everyone else has. But you have to hold her responsible for her behavior, too.

Have you ever had her blood tested to see what she is missing? In rare cases it is caused by a hormone deficiency so they can't process the protein properly. If it is, they can tell next time they run a blood test for anything they could just add it to the list. Keep in mind the deficiency is really rare so it may not be the cause, but you never know.
 

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