
Persuasion is an art, especially with controversial topics.

It’s akin to when people tell you to “wake up.” I take it as condescending approach to communication that throws barriers up instead of inviting you to hear what someone has to say. There were a whole lot of “it’s an absolute / scientific fact” and statements like that. Some of the chapters in re seemed more like a used car sales shpeil than trying to provide helpful information about the copper / iron relationship in your body. I have switched to taking food based products for my Vitamin C and to Magnesium Glycinate supplementation, as well as removing any other synthetic citric and ascorbic acid ingredients from my diet and the arrhythmias have all but disappeared. This was an epiphany I only had because of reading re. Synthetic Vitamin C, and other supplements that contained synthetic citrates or ascorbates - they would eventually create arrhythmia issues. This resonated with me because one of those sensitivities I had identified in the past but didn’t make sense to me was when I ingested ascorbic acid or citrate ingredients. One is about how ascorbic acid (synthetic Vitamin C) interferes with - actually chelates - copper helping to create iron buildup in the tissues and organs, essentially rusting them out over time.

Morley hits on some current cultural nutritional norms that many “healthy” laymen are going to have a hard time with. It would be an oversimplification for me to say that it’s about the impact of the imbalance between iron and copper in your body, but that’s the main idea, and I think there’s a lot of merit in that hypothesis. First, let me say that I think re is extremely important.
