How to Quickly Get Over a Cold
/Photo by Polina Tankilevitch from Pexels
By: Mark Sisson
No one likes a cold, and various colds of one origin or another are going around this winter season. One of the worst parts of the common cold is that it’s unpleasant enough to make daily life annoying but mild enough to force you to still go out into the world and maintain a normal schedule.
But you don’t want to have to do that. You don’t want to get anyone else sick, and you want to feel better—fast. How do you do it? How can you speed up your clearance of a cold, whether through actually expelling the virus from your body, getting rid of the symptoms, or both?
Let’s talk about that.
How to Feel Better Quickly When You Have a Cold
These are the basic, research-backed things to do when you have a cold and want to get over it fast.
Get enough selenium
Get enough zinc
Eat a bunch of garlic
Drink raw golden milk
Try nasal irrigation
Try povidone-iodine gargling and nasal rinsing
Drink bone broth
Eat spicy food
Get Enough Selenium
Almost every upper respiratory tract infection I’ve ever studied has selenium deficiency as an enhancing variable. Most viruses, for example, sequester selenium and utilize it to replicate and to weaken the host, leaving them wide open for further, deeper infection. The common cold is likely no different.
Eat Brazil nuts (one to three per day) and oysters and wild salmon. It is possible to overdo selenium, so don’t go overboard with supplementation. Just eat selenium-rich foods while you’re experiencing symptoms.
Get Enough Zinc
Zinc is the most important mineral for immune function, especially regarding upper respiratory tract infections. Depending on the virus, zinc has been shown to inhibit replication, lower binding, and block various physiological processes many viruses use to attack and ingratiate themselves with the host (you). And this isn’t just theoretical or based on cell culture studies. The best evidence we have shows that zinc supplementation reduces the duration of common colds in adults.
Read the rest of the article here:
View Article