Boiled beef odour

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Rochelle
Posts: 4167
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2020 10:00 pm

Boiled beef odour

Post by Rochelle »

For the second time I have had a patient with an odour of boiled beef surrounding her. I remember with the previous patient it did go with a good remedy. With this one I think it is coming from her psoriasis as I noticed when she lifted her clothes off so I could take a photo of her back. It is not a body odour smell. Has anyone else come across this odour as well? I can’t find anything in the rep near it unfortunately.
Rochelle Marsden MSc, RSHom, MNWCH, AAMET

Registered with the Society of Homeopaths

EFT(Advanced) Practitioner

www.southporthomeopathy.co.uk

https://www.facebook.com/southporthomeopathicpractice


Tanya Marquette
Posts: 5602
Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2001 11:00 pm

Re: Boiled beef odour

Post by Tanya Marquette »

Boiled beef?????
I guess I don't know what this smells like as I don't eat red meat.
Can you give it another description?
What about looking at a general rubric such as for
Bad odor
Are there any conditions which bring it on?
I had a situation of a bad body odor smelling like rotten milk.
Remedies didn't help but diet did. It seems that the lymph glands
around the breast would go on overload and sweat out this rotten
smelling, acrid ooze. It burned the skin very badly. It was related
to states of sluggish bowel or days when no bowel movement occurred.
The toxicity in the body seemed to collect and became noticeable
around the breasts and beneath the belly line in the area of the
ovaries. Calcium bentonite clay would detox the body fairly quickly.
Eating more green vegetables kept the problem at bay.
I don't think remedies were the answer in this case. Perhaps you
have a similar dynamic. Explore the diet and eliminative functions.
Explore the conditions under which the odor occurs. The client
will have to become more observant so give them some guidelines
of things to notice. When is the odor worse? How soon after eating
and after eating what foods? How does sleep, stress relate to the
development of the odor?
Stress factors may be part of a constitutional condition.
t


Rochelle
Posts: 4167
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2020 10:00 pm

Re: Boiled beef odour

Post by Rochelle »

The client can’t smell it. She is a 15 yr. old girl stressed with exams (but I have smelt this on her before) who is a vegetarian. Another word for boiled beef? May be stew!
Rochelle
From: minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:minutus@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of tamarque@earthlink.net
Boiled beef?????

I guess I don't know what this smells like as I don't eat red meat.
Can you give it another description?
What about looking at a general rubric such as for

Bad odor
Are there any conditions which bring it on?
I had a situation of a bad body odor smelling like rotten milk.

Remedies didn't help but diet did. It seems that the lymph glands

around the breast would go on overload and sweat out this rotten

smelling, acrid ooze. It burned the skin very badly. It was related

to states of sluggish bowel or days when no bowel movement occurred.

The toxicity in the body seemed to collect and became noticeable

around the breasts and beneath the belly line in the area of the

ovaries. Calcium bentonite clay would detox the body fairly quickly.

Eating more green vegetables kept the problem at bay.
I don't think remedies were the answer in this case. Perhaps you

have a similar dynamic. Explore the diet and eliminative functions.

Explore the conditions under which the odor occurs. The client

will have to become more observant so give them some guidelines

of things to notice. When is the odor worse? How soon after eating

and after eating what foods? How does sleep, stress relate to the

development of the odor?
Stress factors may be part of a constitutional condition.
t


Tanya Marquette
Posts: 5602
Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2001 11:00 pm

Re: Boiled beef odour

Post by Tanya Marquette »

LOL—it wasn’t a descriptor for the boiled beef that I was asking, but a
descriptor for the odor itself. Is it a rotten odor? Does her mother smell it?
If so, maybe she can help sleuth it out.
t
From: Rochelle
Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2013 8:38 AM
To: minutus@yahoogroups.com
Subject: FW: [Minutus] Boiled beef odour

The client can’t smell it. She is a 15 yr. old girl stressed with exams (but I have smelt this on her before) who is a vegetarian. Another word for boiled beef? May be stew!

Rochelle

From: minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:minutus@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of tamarque@earthlink.net
Boiled beef?????

I guess I don't know what this smells like as I don't eat red meat.

Can you give it another description?

What about looking at a general rubric such as for

Bad odor

Are there any conditions which bring it on?

I had a situation of a bad body odor smelling like rotten milk.

Remedies didn't help but diet did. It seems that the lymph glands

around the breast would go on overload and sweat out this rotten

smelling, acrid ooze. It burned the skin very badly. It was related

to states of sluggish bowel or days when no bowel movement occurred.

The toxicity in the body seemed to collect and became noticeable

around the breasts and beneath the belly line in the area of the

ovaries. Calcium bentonite clay would detox the body fairly quickly.

Eating more green vegetables kept the problem at bay.

I don't think remedies were the answer in this case. Perhaps you

have a similar dynamic. Explore the diet and eliminative functions.

Explore the conditions under which the odor occurs. The client

will have to become more observant so give them some guidelines

of things to notice. When is the odor worse? How soon after eating

and after eating what foods? How does sleep, stress relate to the

development of the odor?

Stress factors may be part of a constitutional condition.

t


Rochelle
Posts: 4167
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2020 10:00 pm

Re: Boiled beef odour

Post by Rochelle »

No it is not rotten. I think it was coming from her psoriasis. Mum smells of perfume!!
Rochelle
From: minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:minutus@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of tamarque
Sent: 17 April 2013 13:54
To: minutus@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Minutus] Boiled beef odour
LOL—it wasn’t a descriptor for the boiled beef that I was asking, but a

descriptor for the odor itself. Is it a rotten odor? Does her mother smell it?

If so, maybe she can help sleuth it out.
t
From: Rochelle

Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2013 8:38 AM

To: minutus@yahoogroups.com

Subject: FW: [Minutus] Boiled beef odour
The client can’t smell it. She is a 15 yr. old girl stressed with exams (but I have smelt this on her before) who is a vegetarian. Another word for boiled beef? May be stew!

Rochelle

From: minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:minutus@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of tamarque@earthlink.net
Boiled beef?????

I guess I don't know what this smells like as I don't eat red meat.

Can you give it another description?

What about looking at a general rubric such as for

Bad odor

Are there any conditions which bring it on?

I had a situation of a bad body odor smelling like rotten milk.

Remedies didn't help but diet did. It seems that the lymph glands

around the breast would go on overload and sweat out this rotten

smelling, acrid ooze. It burned the skin very badly. It was related

to states of sluggish bowel or days when no bowel movement occurred.

The toxicity in the body seemed to collect and became noticeable

around the breasts and beneath the belly line in the area of the

ovaries. Calcium bentonite clay would detox the body fairly quickly.

Eating more green vegetables kept the problem at bay.

I don't think remedies were the answer in this case. Perhaps you

have a similar dynamic. Explore the diet and eliminative functions.

Explore the conditions under which the odor occurs. The client

will have to become more observant so give them some guidelines

of things to notice. When is the odor worse? How soon after eating

and after eating what foods? How does sleep, stress relate to the

development of the odor?

Stress factors may be part of a constitutional condition.

t


Tanya Marquette
Posts: 5602
Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2001 11:00 pm

Re: Boiled beef odour

Post by Tanya Marquette »

What I find in Radar are rubrics for offensive body odor
and odors that are characterized as sour, pungent, sweetish, etc.
And then there is the SKIN, PERSPIRATION, offensive.
Or maybe look for remedies for toxicity
t
From: Rochelle
Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2013 9:06 AM
To: minutus@yahoogroups.com
Subject: FW: [Minutus] Boiled beef odour

No it is not rotten. I think it was coming from her psoriasis. Mum smells of perfume!!

Rochelle

From: minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:minutus@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of tamarque
Sent: 17 April 2013 13:54
To: minutus@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Minutus] Boiled beef odour
LOL—it wasn’t a descriptor for the boiled beef that I was asking, but a

descriptor for the odor itself. Is it a rotten odor? Does her mother smell it?

If so, maybe she can help sleuth it out.

t

From: Rochelle

Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2013 8:38 AM

To: minutus@yahoogroups.com

Subject: FW: [Minutus] Boiled beef odour
The client can’t smell it. She is a 15 yr. old girl stressed with exams (but I have smelt this on her before) who is a vegetarian. Another word for boiled beef? May be stew!

Rochelle

From: minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:minutus@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of tamarque@earthlink.net
Boiled beef?????

I guess I don't know what this smells like as I don't eat red meat.

Can you give it another description?

What about looking at a general rubric such as for

Bad odor

Are there any conditions which bring it on?

I had a situation of a bad body odor smelling like rotten milk.

Remedies didn't help but diet did. It seems that the lymph glands

around the breast would go on overload and sweat out this rotten

smelling, acrid ooze. It burned the skin very badly. It was related

to states of sluggish bowel or days when no bowel movement occurred.

The toxicity in the body seemed to collect and became noticeable

around the breasts and beneath the belly line in the area of the

ovaries. Calcium bentonite clay would detox the body fairly quickly.

Eating more green vegetables kept the problem at bay.

I don't think remedies were the answer in this case. Perhaps you

have a similar dynamic. Explore the diet and eliminative functions.

Explore the conditions under which the odor occurs. The client

will have to become more observant so give them some guidelines

of things to notice. When is the odor worse? How soon after eating

and after eating what foods? How does sleep, stress relate to the

development of the odor?

Stress factors may be part of a constitutional condition.

t


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