Maybe the crashes come because we still have some of the original onset causes waiting in the wings.
For me, so far (a bit over a year) I have stopped crashing since taking GcMAF. I still have to be careful to not overdo, but when when I do go outside my activity limits I don't crash anymore. Course I haven't tried riding a marathon, and that might do it, but so far so good.
As far as the GcMAF yogurt, Dr. Cheney makes it available to his patients who have done the training and Dr. Enlander has developed another version of it for his patients. Other than that, I don't know where you would get it in the States.
Best,
Sushi
Thanks for your response Sushi. I distinguish between two types of crashes: 1) a relatively small one, which can last from a day to two or three or four weeks and 2) a nightmare which lasts for over a year, and way more, even two or three years. And this one consists of lots of bed time, and lots of sick feeling and lots of toxic feeling. And then this is the one which so deconditions you that you have to crawl out of the hole again, slowly trying to move about, and once again going through the pain of getting your muscles to move from being strings to something a little more substantial, though still not near normal.
Now I can sort of figure out why number 1 comes, overdoing it a bit (which is nowhere near normal folks' activity level), but crash type 2 is totally beyond me. And if it is that something from the initial collapse resurfaces, then why can't the physicians find it!!
As for the yogurt, I asked one of the prominent CFS physicians, and he said it was just Bifidum. Well, if it is 'just' this, a super good probiotic is worth gold. I have been reading Natasha McBride Campbell's Gaps book and she says pill form probiotics are useless on the whole. She argues for making your own yogurt. A good probiotic would help most of us. Still, I would really like to get some of this maf - yogurt.
Why are things moving so slowly with this illness? We are all young people, and it has been such a waste of what we could have brought to the country and to the economy.