If Your Gallbladder Was Removed

If Your Gallbladder Was Removed
The likelihood is that the gallbladder failed because the body was robbing Peter to pay
Paul. The body does whatever it has to do to keep you alive and disease free.
The gallbladder is gone because the body did not, does not, have what it needs.
The body robs Peter (the gallbladder) to pay Paul (the living organism) for survival. When
the gallbladder can no longer be robbed, it becomes a liability and must be removed.
Without the gallbladder, the body has lost a source of buffering minerals; a source that is
not really a proper source. With the gallbladder gone, where will the body get needed
buffering agents? The body has lost one of the tools it was using to maintain a semblance
of health. Removing the gallbladder does not solve the underlying problem. In other
words, the problem has not been fixed. In fact the problem has been made a little worse by
destroying and removing an organ that was capable of providing alkaline buffering
elements.
The likely culprit: An acid ash diet. Read the write-up below.
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A1Normally
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The gallbladder is the storage area for liver bile, which is normally pH 7.1
to 8.5, or alkaline. After it has been concentrated in the gallbladder, the
pH plummets to as low as 5.5, or acidic. Still, why? What caused the
concentration?

Research tells us that concentration happens when water and
electrolytes are reabsorbed out of the gallbladder; electrolytes such as
sodium, potassium, and chloride salts (that conduct electricity).

This re-absorption of water and minerals out of the gallbladder causes
the bile to become viscous (thick), and eventually crystals form and
coalesce, become hard, hence gallstones. Over time, the gallbladder
loses all function and becomes a liability.
the gallbladder is an alkaline organ. It does not produce
acid. However, in our culture, it is an acid organ. Why?
The body went after alkaline buffering agents (sodium, potassium, and chloride) because
they were needed elsewhere, and the gallbladder had them. So when acid ash in the
intestine and kidneys needs buffering, and the body can't find sufficient buffering
elements, or can't extract them fast enough from bone, push comes to survival shove and
the body borrows from the gallbladder.
When the gallbladder is gone, where does the body get buffering agents? Maybe it doesn't.
What happens then? I don't really know. But theorizing a little brings me to ulcers.
This is Appendix G from 'A Healing System'
Perhaps the acid simply burns through the intestinal wall, or kidney infections occur.
However, it is a good bet that something will happen, and the body will not like it, and
neither will the patient.
The solution is a diet heavier on alkaline ash foods. The recommended daily ratio is at
least 70% alkaline ash and not more than 30% acid ash foods.
This same pH balanced diet might also reverse osteoporosis, stiff joints, and even arthritis.
This is Appendix G from 'A Healing System'