Transfer factors are not a vitamin, mineral, herb, or phytonutrient.  Transfer factors are in our
blood and they are inherent in every mammal on earth.  Mothers give transfer factors to their
babies when they nurse them for the first few days of their lives.  So what is it?     A transfer
factor is a peptide, which is an arrangement of amino acids that act as a chemical messenger
in the body.  Within the peptide, there are 40 to 44 amino acids that make up codes to
describe germs and diseases that the transfer factor has come in contact with, but your body
might not have.  Our bodies read these peptides (transfer factors) just like we read words on a
page.

What does this mean?  Let’s take a look at this amazing product through an analogy:  Many, if
not all of us, have gotten lost at one time or another while driving.   You know what your
destination is but you can’t find it so you drive around and try to figure out what to do. You may
start feeling anxious because you are late, so you drive faster, but you are still, very lost.  Now,
if you had a map in the car, wouldn’t it make a huge difference in your ability to reach your
destination?

Are you getting the picture?  If the body’s immune system’s destination is an illness developing
in your system, then the immune system’s “map” to the illness is the transfer factor.  Your
ability to stay well is dependent on your immune system’s ability to quickly identify and
eliminate the “bugs” that we all come into contact with.  Transfer factors also educate your
immune system about the germs before they invade your body, providing it with an advantage
over the invaders.  If the body’s immune system is not strong, then it is not going to respond
quickly and a person will get sick or even die.

This can be even more serious then getting the flu, since cancer cells are known to produce
false markers that are designed to fool the immune system and exhaust it as it frantically
attacks the wrong cells.  Transfer factors are the intelligence of the immune system and when
your immune system is well educated it can figure out what to kill and what to stop reacting to,
such as in the presence of an autoimmune disease.

Do we physically feel everything that our immune systems do for us?  Not necessarily.  Our
immune systems are important for many functions, including detoxification, handling stress,
aging and keeping us from dying of degenerative diseases.  We can’t feel a cancer cell start to
reproduce, but a healthy immune system detects it right away and eliminates it before a tumor
grows.  This is the ultimate kind of “early detection”.

Transfer factors are as important to your body as eating the right kinds of foods.  Remember
to take them everyday and protect your body, for yourself and for your loved ones.
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***The information on this website has not been evaluated by the FDA.  This information is not intended to promote any of
these products as a medical cure.  Nutriments do not directly prevent, treat or cure diseases or destroy germs.