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Post by bygraceofgod on Apr 29, 2008 11:47:42 GMT -5
There is an increasing awareness of a possible link between moths and Morgellons.
Please give some detail if you have experienced moth activity. OK to PM me.
Thank you for your help.
God be with us all,
Grace
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Post by shubot on May 3, 2008 13:35:46 GMT -5
I have seen the dead moths covered with fibers, but not in great numbers. I have an occasional moth in the house that I make exit pronto.
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Post by candicecarfan on May 28, 2008 11:05:39 GMT -5
Now that you say it... There have been several instances where moth infestations have been in two different houses that I lived in. I had expected from the bird we had a s a pet, even though there food had been previously frozen. Then a friend of mine ( that has pets that jump all over you...think it may have come form her pets too! ) had moths in her house...not especially bad.....but she has no birds. Hmmm...I hadnt thought of that.
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Post by ricpalqueb on Jun 29, 2008 8:48:48 GMT -5
The house I live in is infested with moths..I ammoving next week cause I can't handle it . Also a lot of different spiders..a lot
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ruth
Junior Member
Posts: 60
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Post by ruth on Jun 29, 2008 13:41:10 GMT -5
i, too, have moths in every place i move to, almost like i bring them with me. i've cultured a moth from a skin particle. how this happened?
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Post by smoothdeb on Jul 18, 2008 0:47:53 GMT -5
Right after I "developed" Morgellons, my house became infested with every bug known to man. We hired an extermininator, because I had used all the pesticides and nothing worked. Dr. Hildy has said she thinks the pesticides is the source of my Morgellons. But anyway, when the pesticide guy came, he said all he could see was beetles and a moth or two. I have continued to see moths. As a matter of fact, moths may be the white things that fly in and out of my nose, laying their eggs in my ears and nose. They are micro-tiny, but I can see then. I always thought they were flies. They are white, lay clear eggs, and they the devil black fleck bugs evolve and cause pain. I think they can disappear, go subcutaneous, travel quickly to any part of the body they want, and form regiments. Cuz when I use a q-tip with Vermii to kill the eggs in my ears or nose, for instance, the regiments on the legs start in a rampage towards my neck. Yeah, moths. Makes sense. Deb in South Dakota
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Post by Awake on Jul 18, 2008 7:55:13 GMT -5
I know how difficult this must be to explain! i feel very sorry for you. This "thing" whatever it maybe has the ability to reponsed to attack and it will more around the body and more into places were it was not before.
Earlier on in my own experience of this monster it went into my ears and i would hear knocking and clicking sounds coming from inside my ears whenever i would lay down! That part of it has since died down, but i find it difficult to sleep because of the itchensss of the skin and "bitting" feelings which it creates. most nights i can't lay still.
-Awakening2012-
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Post by sadsack on Jul 18, 2008 14:41:56 GMT -5
I had moths in the "house from hell" where I got sick last year. They were flour moths that came in with a bag of bird seed. About 89 months ago a live baby moth flew out of my leg while I was extracting junk using my indispensible Neoteric cream. SS
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kammy
New Member
Posts: 41
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Post by kammy on Oct 23, 2008 19:03:47 GMT -5
I'm seeing little "fly gnats" in my environment from time to time. They kind of look like fruit flies.
Also, what I think those white things are - are the Morgellon 'worm', the thing that's leaving a slime trail and depositing all those 'seeds' in it's path. I've pulled several out of my ear that it was eating a canal in. Of course, Pathology said it was 'nothing'.
They are "C" shaped and look like dead skin. They might possibly be our own skin that they've used to house themselves in - that's why our immune system doesn't attack it?
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Post by downunder on Oct 23, 2008 23:45:49 GMT -5
Funny you should say that and the answer is - yes. Why funny you should say that? - well for quite some time I have thought that "I" am dealing with some form of silk worm - genetically modified probably.
Why? - check the life cycle of silk worms - the small oblong cacoons of fibre I often get off my body are incredibly similar to a stage in their life cycle. The egg of a silk worm is a black speck - check out the larvae - the pupae - colours/shape etc
Fungus gnats are the natural enemy of silk worms (and also "glow worms" are the larvae of fungus gnats). I have often wondered when "lately", because it's Spring here, why the fungus gnats fly into my hair - my crazy suspicion is they can sense the silk worm and are coming after it (or whatever the likeness of same is), in my hair or on body somewhere. The FUNGUS GNAT possibly then does something else which gives us the fungi side.
The fibre webs - not the oblong ones, also are very similar to the weaving of a silkworm. The grit could possibly be what didn't make it - check out the very complex way they mature and how crystalisation can occur if the right amount of protein etc that is required at a certain stage does not occur.
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Post by downunder on Oct 25, 2008 1:41:59 GMT -5
This is just "some" of what I have searched out - it's all telling me something I know. Secret of how the silkworm spins: "We identified key aspects of the process that should provide a roadmap for others to optimize artificial spinning of silks as well as in improved production of silks in genetically engineered host systems such as bacteria and transgenic animals," said Kaplan, also a professor of chemical and biological engineering www.innovations-report.com/html/reports/life_sciences/report-20905.htmlCatching silkworm's invisible enemy Silkworms infected with BmNPV become bloated and yellow with swollen segments, hence the name jaundice. Its milky hemolymph which is a fluid in certain invertebrates that functions like the blood in vertebrates becomes filled with small crystals which are actually polyhedral inclusion bodies. www.bar.gov.ph/barchronicle/2004/sep04_1-30_catchingsilk.aspfibrinogen enzyme: a natural enzyme produced from bacteria found. in the intestine of the silk worm. (being used in vitamin supplements and now being found a problem in heart disease)
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Post by downunder on Oct 25, 2008 14:31:17 GMT -5
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kate
New Member
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Post by kate on Jul 9, 2013 0:45:02 GMT -5
I have had an infestation of what i believe to be casebearing moths at my house. These are the moths in which the larva wrap themselves in fibers from whatever they happen to be eating, so they look like twisted thread except there is a tiny head poking out of one end. I cannot sit on my couch without them getting on me or in my clothing. I work at home and they are also around my desk. Cleaned and cleaned. Tried everything. Have an exterminator coming out. At first I thought it was a parasite but now I think it's these moths. I think my family thinks I'm crazy.
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