Bacteria and viruses are so small we can’t see them, but they can really mess us up.
It’s hard to fight invisible enemies, but it’s easier if we visualize them and picture them in our minds.
I picture these germs as tiny little blobs that take up almost no space. Millions of them together are still too small to see, but they are incredibly busy multiplying and spreading out as fast as they can.
Bad germs can get to us through the air or on our hands and fingers. Once they arrive, we need to stop them quickly. Otherwise we will probably be sick by the next day or even a few hours later.
The CopperZap® directions tell us how to stop bad germs that have just arrived, but how do we know when bad germs are arriving if we can’t even see them?
Visualizing can help. When a contagious person coughs, sneezes, or even just breathes, picture thousands of those pesky little devils being expelled out into the air.
Whether they make you sick or not depends on the “viral load” you receive.
Viral load is the amount of viruses that reach you. It could include any kind of airborne virus, including the ones that cause colds, flu, Covid or other ills.
If you are near a contagious person for just a moment, you may not receive enough viral load to make you sick. Your immune system may be able to handle small loads quickly enough.
But the viral load gets bigger the longer you are with a contagious person and the closer you are to them. You have to breathe, and some of the air you breathe contains their bad germs.
The viral load also gets bigger the more air they expel. Talking quietly does not expel much air, so it takes longer to get a big viral load in quiet conversation.
Loud conversation, singing, or shouting expels more air and a higher viral load. Air is invisible, too, so we really have to use our imaginations to visualize what’s happening.
A high viral load makes it harder for the immune system to catch up, if it even can, and takes longer. That’s why sickness can last for days or weeks, and sometimes damage the body in the process.
The viral load can also come from hands and fingers. Passing objects such as dishes between you may also increase the viral load.
The more people are gathered together, the higher the potential viral load. At a large dinner party, for example, one contagious person can infect many others. Same thing in an airplane with lots of other passengers.
That’s why it is so important to use your CopperZap® right after or even during such an event. If you receive a viral load, the sooner you use it the better. Pure copper kills viruses. Minutes matter, so don’t delay.
I wish we could see bacteria and viruses, but visualizing them should help us fight them off in time.
Happy Zapping!
Doug Cornell PhD
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