Dr. John R. Christophers "Cold Sheet Treatment"

Excerpt taken from The Cold Sheet Treatment by Dr. John R. Christopher

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To do this program properly, you should have at least two people.  This 
treatment takes time, and is best to do in the evening so your patient can 
sleep through the night after the treatment.  It is wise to make all your 
preparations before you proceed with the Cold Sheet Treatment.

 
Cold Sheet Treatment Preparations:

Iced Sheet
Take a large double sheet and soak in ice water.

 Diaphoretic Tea
Prepare a gallon of diaphoretic tea.  This can be any good sweating herb,
 preferably yarrow.  But it can also be blessed thistle, chamomile, pleurisy 
root, boneset, thyme, Hyssop, garden sage, catnip, spearmint, or any other 
good, diaphoretic herb.
For one gallon:
1 cup of diaphoretic herb
1 gallon or 4 liters distilled water
Preparation:  Pour boiling water over herbs, cover, allow to steep (not boil)
 in a warm place 30 minutes.  Strain and sweeten with honey if desired. 
 Keep warm until used.
 

Garlic Paste
To prepare a garlic paste for an adult, use 1 part garlic and 1 part 
petroleum jelly.  Reduce the amount of garlic for a child or small infant 
to 1 part garlic to 3 parts petroleum jelly.  For an adult, you will want about 
1 cup of paste.
Crush or finely grate peeled garlic cloves.  Blend with an equal amount
 of petroleum jelly.

 
Hot Bath
Fill a hot tub of hot water.  Add to the water, according to your 
tolerance, one or all of the following diaphoretic herbs, ginger 
being the most mild, then dry mustard, with cayenne as the most 
stimulant.  Use 1 ounce of each herb.

 
Bed with Plastic
Prepare a bed by placing a rubber or plastic sheet over the mattress,
 with a cotton sheet over it.  Have several natural blankets on hand,
 such as wool or cotton.
 

Enema
4 tablespoons catnip, sage, or red raspberry cut or powdered herb
1 quart distilled water
Preparation:  Bring distilled water to a boil and pour over cut herb.  
Steep for 30 minutes.  Strain the herb and set in refrigerator until 
tea is cool.  Pour tea into enema bucket or bag.  Lubricate the end 
of the enema hose to be inserted into the rectum.
 

Garlic Injection
1 cup apple cider vinegar
1 cup distilled water
3 or more cloves of garlic
Preparation:  Combine vinegar and water.  Grate, squeeze through garlic 
press, or puree in blender 3 cloves of garlic until finely crushed.  
Blend in water and vinegar mixture.  Put mixture into syringe and check 
flow.  If flow is loose, add additional crushed garlic.  Continue adding 
as much garlic as you can, making sure the mixture flows from syringe 
without clogging.
 

Cold Sheet Treatment:

 
Step One:  Cleansing Enema
Give the patient an enema using catnip, sage, red raspberry or some 
other herb, but preferably catnip.  You will want to administer this 
enema cold.
Important Note:  Do not use enemas except in the case of emergencies.

 
Step Two:  Garlic Injection
In herbology an injection is never a needle; it is a syringe type 
application into an already existing orifice of the body, i.e. the 
rectum, ears, or nose.  Insert the prepared injection into the rectum 
with a syringe.  Use the full pint for an adult and less for a child. 
 Have your patient retain the injection for as long as possible before voiding.
 

Step Three:  Hydrotherapy
After the patient has voided the garlic injection, help him or her into 
a hot bath prepared with diaphoretic herbs.  Have the water as hot as your
 patient can possibly tolerate.  Cayenne, dry mustard, and ginger will
 increase the perspiring of the patient by opening the pores wide.

 
Step Four:  Diaphoretic tea
Do not give cold drinks.  Instead, give them cups of hot diaphoretic tea, 
such as yarrow or another type.  You will want to stay with only one type 
of tea.  Have your patient drink as much as possible.  This will keep the
 patient from a dry fever.  You should give them a cup to drink about every 
10 to 15 minutes.
Your patient may get lightheaded and feel like fainting.  If so, place a 
cold towel or washcloth on their forehead.  Leave the patient in the hot 
bath as long as possible, at least 45 minutes (may reduce for a small 
infant).  You will know when to get a child out when perspiration starts 
to bead up on the face.  At this point, give them 10 to 15 more minutes.
 When your patient is ready to leave the tub, you will need to lift him or 
her out, as they will be unable to support themselves.  Fainting can occur 
when you pull the patient out of the bath.  Keep a cayenne tincture on hand 
in case your patient goes into shock.
 

Step Five:  Cold Sheet Therapy
After you have helped the patient out of the bath, wrap the large double
 cotton sheet, dripping wet from being soaked in ice-cold water, around 
the standing patient.  With just the head and the feet protruding, pin 
the sheet down the side.  Help your patient into the prepared bed that 
has been covered with plastic and with a cotton sheet.  Then place dry 
cotton sheet covers over the patient while they are still wrapped in the 
cold sheet.  Add additional natural fiber blankets over the top of the 
sheet for warmth and to continue the sweating routine.

Step Six:  Garlic Paste
With your patient lying down in bed, thoroughly massage their feet from the 
ankles down with olive oil.  Allow as much of this oil to be absorbed into 
the skin as possible, covering the soles, sides, and entire foot area.  
After you have massaged each foot, prepare a strip of cotton that is wide 
enough to cover the bottom of the foot with A inch of the garlic paste.  
When this is done, place the strip of cotton with the past on the sole of 
the foot, then take a roll of two-inch gauze and gently wrap the foot to secure 
the strip of garlic to the foot.  With this in place, gently pull 
over the foot and gauze bandage a large white cotton wool sock to hold 
everything in place.
Do not allow the paste to get up on the sides or on top of the foot.  Put 
it only on the sole.
Put the bandaged feet back under the cold, wet sheet and pin the bottom of 
the sheet together so that the patient will be in a wet sack.  You will 
want to use a large double sheet instead of small because it will allow 
your patient to roll or turn around without being too closely confined.

 
Step Seven:  Sound Sleep
In most cases, your patient will sleep soundly all night in the cold sheet.
  You do not have to worry about them wanting to get up to urinate because 
of the large amount of tea they drank.  While the body is in the cold, wet
 sheet, the subconscious mind will build an artificial fever to warm the 
body.  From this incubation process, the patient's body will use the fluid 
from the ingested teas and accumulated moisture from their bath to warm the 
outside of their wet body.  While this is being done the body breaks loose old
 toxins, drugs and medicines, mucus and poisons which have accumulated and 
carries them out of the body through the sweating process.  Your patient 
will lie all night in a deep sleep, sweating out the poisons of their body.
When your patient wakes in the morning, they will be refreshed and invigorated 
from having such a thorough cleanse.  The large, white sheet, which was 
wrapped around your patient, will no longer be wet. In addition, it should 
no longer be white.  It will often be stained with toxic residue secreted 
out of the body during the night.
 

Step Eight:  Sponge Bath
After your patient awakes out of the deep sleep, take them out of the bed 
and sponge them down thoroughly with a warm mixture of 1 part apple cider 
vinegar and 1 part distilled water.  You will probably want 1 quart of 
solution, so use approximately 1 pint of each.  This removes any remaining
 toxic residue from the outer layers of the skin.  It is very important 
that you do not leave toxic residue on the skin.
Put fresh clothing on the patient and fresh bedding on the bed.  Now you 
will want your patient to go back to be and relax for a while to regain 
their strength.

 
Step Nine:  Juice Therapy
Your patient should by this time have a desire for something to drink or 
to eat.  This is a critical moment for your patient; what they eat will 
either retain or cause them to lose their health.  They may even have 
cravings from the past.  They may desire a steak, a full meal, processed 
beverages, ice cream, or other junk food.  Do not respond to these desires. 
 Instead give your patient fresh fruit or vegetable juices (juices from Dr. 
N.W. Walker's Fresh Vegetable and Fruit Juices or Wheat Grass drink in School
 of Natural Healing, pp. 610-614), or bottled fresh grape juice, apple juice,
 etc, with no additives.  Each mouthful of juice should be swished or chewed 
thoroughly to mix it with the saliva for good assimilation.  In addition, 
chewing your juice will prevent an unpleasant sugar reaction if your patient 
is hypoglycemic or diabetic.
Do not mix the patients juices.  If a different juice is desired, wait at 
least one half hour before using a different one.  After a few hours, if your
 patient is very hungry, let them have a little ripe fresh fruit, but it must
 be chewed to a liquid before swallowing.  During the day it is good for your
 patient to have as much distilled water as desired and some good herb teas.
 It is best to keep your patient on juice therapy for one to two days to 
allow thorough cleansing of the digestive organs before going into the 
Mucusless diet.

 
Step Ten:  Teaching Your Patient
After a bad siege of body malfunction, it is wise to instruct the patient 
why they were in this condition, and what to do from this point on to 
prevent a reoccurrence of the disease.  Your patient may get immediate 
relief from the Cold Sheet Treatment, but if they do not change their 
health habits, they will not be able to retain their health.
