Pardon me a moment, but I'm feeling a tad cranky and need to vent. Maybe it's that time of
the month. I must admit it is a pet peeve of mine when someone proclaims something is "junk" (like someone's idea)
in an arrogant manner without citing evidence, or demonstrating knowledge of the relevant issues, other than
claiming they just know what they are talking about better than someone else. It squelches discussion, unless
someone is willing to be assertive like myself. Few are, as they think it's not worth it. Usually they're right.
Because then I personally feel obliged to spend time looking up research to fix someone else's irresponsible
statement, just because they wouldn't search for the studies. And yeah, I feel "scoffed at", which should be
unnecessary, even though that's just a trivial ego bruise. I almost never just say something without multiple good
reasons to do so, unless I'm kidding. If you are just expressing an opinion and guessing you should admit that, but
you act like you have some conclusive evidence. There, I feel better. Nothing personal. You are by no means the
worst offender.
Apparently there are a few studies emerging about homeopathic HgH.
http://www.findarticles.com/p
/articles/mi_m0ISW/is_2002_Feb-March/ai_82881786
http://www.metafoods.com/include/metafoods/mf
_hgh_studies.htm
http://www.vitaminusa.com/homrechumgro.html
My
nutritionist told me he saw a study where those who took homeopathic HgH after quitting the injectable form retained
HgH benefits longer than those who quit altogether. These studies don't prove anything, but they do suggest more
research is warranted, which means that the time for generating hypotheses is now. When I and my friend took
homeopathic HgH for a brief trial, both of us experienced immediate improvement in sleep and our voices lowered
permanently. The product is of course controversial, but the controversy has not been based on research so far, but
on theoretical misconceptions about how homeopathy works (e.g., that it must be based in "opposites", or that the
actual molecule content is what matters.)
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