The Dr. Lodi Podcast

Episode 117 - Dr. Lodi Live 10.6.24

Dr. Thomas Lodi

This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on October 6th, 2024.

Join Dr. Lodi’s FREE Q&A livestreams every Sunday on Facebook, Instagram, and Tiktok (@drthomaslodi) and listen to the replays here.

Submit your question for next Sunday’s Q&A Livestream here:
https://drlodi.com/live/

Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/DrThomasLodi/
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/drthomaslodi/ 

Send us a text

Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.

Support the show

This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on Jan. 19th, 2025

Join Dr. Lodi’s FREE Q&A livestreams every Sunday on Facebook, Instagram, and Tiktok (@drthomaslodi) and listen to the replays here.

Submit your question for next Sunday’s Q&A Livestream here:
https://drlodi.com/live/

Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/DrThomasLodi/
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/drthomaslodi/

Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.

Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast

Welcome to the Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast. This is the show for you if you’re...

Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

Join Dr. Lodi’s informative FREE Livestreams...

Dr. Lodi Live 10.6.24

[00:00:00] 

So, good morning. Welcome to Sunday Night Live. That's pretty bizarre, right? Good morning. Anyway, Sunday Night Live, Monday Morning Live, here on planet Earth where humanity is To or is already in the middle of one of the most decisive battles for its existence.

I hope you know what I mean, because if you don't know what I mean, I guess it's got to just keep not knowing. It's probably better now at this point, but you gotta know, you gotta know. Okay, let me switch these over here because otherwise I just, it's too weird. It's too weird. And. Although I like being weird, I don't like this kind of weirdness.

Okay, put this here then. That might be a little, a little more natural for me. Easy for me. Okay, yeah, okay, whatever.

Alright, so, anyway, good morning everyone, and, Good evening East Coast, U. S. Europe, if you're still up, and Sawarika, [00:01:00] namaste, namaskar, aloha. So, now, here's what I'm gonna do for the, I'm gonna do what I always do, and that's just that I'm real, and I'm, I like, I don't edit stuff, so if you're, if I say things that offend you, then you gotta figure out why you're offended.

And drop it and just go on, cause I'm just gonna tell you what I know. And I will not try to sound anything. Okay, I'm just gonna You got it? That's how I am. And that's the way everyone should be, just the way they are. Good morning, Nicole. And Melody. Good morning.

Yeah, but I mean, speaking of that, well, let's just, you know, be us. The effort of holding up your façade The effort of being, being something you think others want you to be, that effort is exhausting. And not only un un unnecessary Hi, Alice. Hi, [00:02:00] everyone.

Drinking nighttime tea, alright. Time to almost go to sleep. Anyway, holding up the facade and being something that you're not and all that sort of stuff. We've got to get over that. Okay. You don't have to be, you don't have to be the, you have to just be you and being you and being comfortable with being you and just good morning Phil.

I thought it was a skill day, but it sounds like it's mostly been in clinical use. If you could only have a safety kill day at home, home. Good question, Dale.

So, you might think this is irrelevant to the fact that you have CFCs or something. And you know, I want to get on with the, okay, but listen to hear this.

 Can't. Anyway, I

real quick, just for everyone's Perspective on growing up as a human being, you know, in any society, in any culture, from early on, you're told, no, stop, don't, no, stop, don't, no, stop, don't, no, stop, don't, in whatever language it is. And basically, that's telling you, somebody who can't even speak yet, who's pre [00:03:00] verbal, who's just acting out of pure innocence that you're not okay, and you're being rejected.

That's what it's saying. And so at an early age, before you have words, You're being rejected by who? Your parents? The only people you know? Your, your, your lifeline? And it's a profound, profound rejection. And Yeah, I think it's why we wind up requiring contracts. With everything we do, including marriage.

And we need contracts, because we don't believe anybody, we don't trust anybody. And then, and then we also learn as little kids, that that doesn't work. But when mama comes in the room, I have this face, Popeye, this face, we develop all these masks and we become these one day we become the mask and we think we're the mask you saw that movie by Jim Carrey, but that pretty true stuff.

Anyway, you become the mask. You become this facade, you become this persona that you think the world [00:04:00] needs to see. Isn't that weird? So our perception of their perception has defined the way we are going to present ourselves to the world. And we've got to confirm that we've got to conform to that particular persona, right?

And Oh God, if they, you know, do I look all right? What does that mean? Do I look all right?

Shouldn't the question be, do I feel okay? Am I okay? Shouldn't it be that? Now, how do I look meaning to other people? How am I? And if you realize the amount. energy and effort it takes to keep that facility. You're building this. So it's like, you know, actors, they get to get paid to go be this role and they do everything they can.

They spend a lot of energy to be this role to play this role. And so we've been working on ourselves like I'm gonna work on this role. You've been working on your role. We're all working on our roles for a long time. We think we got it down pretty well now. But the point is, is it takes a lot of effort to it to do it.

And that effort [00:05:00] could be used. Good morning, Tatiana. Good morning, Kathy. I can't see you guys, but you guys, I'm sure you're saying good morning, too, from everywhere. Instagram and TikTok, so I can't, I need this set up. The effort, what I'm saying is that,

you know, the time in my life, I remember when I was the most free. Free of myself. Free of my own requirements of myself.

Was when I was living on an ashram. And

wow. I can't, I can't even explain that feeling. But it was a feeling of that, that, that I never had, you know, it's, it's more than parents because remember parents are that as much as parents love you, they still want you to be something. And most parents are don't just hang out with you and let you be you, right?

Because there's, and remember, 90 percent of human communication is nonverbal. So we're, we're telling our kids stuff that we don't know. So anyway. [00:06:00] And that's because that's who we are. We're this, we're our, we're a facade. So we, we don't even know. We don't even know. This is basically, you know, when they talk about plant medicine, ayahuasca, LS, LSD, which comes from rye, ergot and mescaline and peyote and psilocybin and all these plant medicines what they do is they help you get rid of that facade.

And get down to who you are, what you are. And that's really important because

you know, many of us have never met ourselves. It's important stuff. I'm, and you spend a lot of energy holding up a mask. And I'm saying that energy could be used towards healing and it could not be. And it's also a negative energy. It's better to be holding up physical things, get yourself strong. So anyway, welcome to Sunday Night Live.

And welcome. We've got to do our, let's see, where's our stuff today? Our stuff [00:07:00] is this.

Okay, so the inner circle, Dr. Loewe's inner circle is growing, I guess. What I don't understand is

about the inner circle, it must not be, you know, I would appreciate some, everyone's comments about it because not many people have joined, so I'm thinking maybe I shouldn't do it. Maybe it's not a good idea, I don't know, how do I know? What's a good idea? My goal is this, to try to, There, there's so many, okay you know, we've, we've divided into CFCs, parasites, and then health and healing.

By the way, for those of you who it's your first day ever meeting someone weird like me, CFCs are chronically fermenting cells, which are what Rockefeller and MD Anderson, Sloan Kettering, and your favorite oncologist slash sorcerer with his long white, her long white coat cape, thank you. Calls cancer.

Okay, so it's not cancer, it's not Sagittarius, it's not Virgo, it's not Gemini, it's not Leo. Shall [00:08:00] I go on? No, I won't go on. So I won't go on, I won't keep telling you that. It is absurd to call it a Zodiac sign. And to get, and which gives you no information, and only makes you scared to death. Well, gosh. Is that their goal?

Could they possibly want to scare us to death? No, why would they want to do that? Oh, because if they're scared, I'll agree to anything. Standard of scare. Okay. I got it. You got it you guys. Okay, so if your first day We call it cfcs because that's what they are and it doesn't make you afraid It gives you something to work with and I you know, we're gonna get into your questions now.

So, Anyway, so my goal so anyway, so if you and there are people out there with other things, you know, other situations And so the reminder is this, that the

disease myth so permeates our culture,

that you all, I am included in you, us, we all [00:09:00] grow up with some fundamental, fundamental, a priori, it's not even up for consideration, the fact that there are diseases. Of course there are diseases, of course. And they're going to get us somehow. And so we're taught basically that, you know, Health? Forget it.

It's impossible. And disease is going to get you one way or another. That's the fundamental precept of our societies. Wherever you are. Unless you're fortunate enough to grow up in an indigenous condition. On some island somewhere. Otherwise or in a village in India or somewhere, but otherwise you grew up thinking with this myth

and we believe that you believe it. I believe it. We all believe it. And so thoroughly, [00:10:00] in fact, political politicians are running on, on slogans about getting insurance for the world, you know, universal insurance. Insurance. You're going, you're insuring yourself again because you're certain you're going to get sick.

You're planning on it. Yep, you're planning on it. And they I want to make, and so our society, our civilization has been designed such that it is going to insure that you become ill.

Well,

when we are in, when we are first come into this world, we're,

we're now born in institutions called hospital. And when we're born we are immediately slapped on the ass so that we can cry. There are other things you could possibly to make the baby [00:11:00] breathe to, to ensure that the baby's breathing. Cause that's the goal of it, right? There might be a few other things you might think of to make sure a baby's breathing.

Besides. Slapping them, but no, not us. Not us. You just like, welcome to Planet Earth. Anyway, so we're bo you know, that happens and they put stuff in our eye and they give us they, and then, and then, and then we, we get a, we get certified with this like an America, it's a social security card.

I don't know what it is in other countries, but you get certified as a commodity of state immediately. Now, before you leave, we're gonna give you an injection of something because you need it, because it's gonna protect you against something. That we made up. We made it up, yeah.

And you know, Hepatitis B, think we should, I think we should vaccinate infants the day they're born because, you know, you know how infants are today. You can't trust them. Unprotected sex, they share needles with the other infants. Right? Yeah, you gotta protect them. It's a good reason. I'm really glad [00:12:00] that we came up with that.

Anyway, somehow we got it. But you might notice that it doesn't matter. Did you decide that? I didn't. Nope, we didn't decide that. Who decided that? I don't know. Right? Okay. And yeah, we go along with it, right? Why don't we question? We don't question.

People in Canada, tell me why you live in Thailand, where you cannot have free healthcare. I honestly don't feel I need it. People in Canada, tell me, why do you Oh, oh, oh. Free healthcare? There is no healthcare, by the way.

Tell me one thing that you ever, ever, ever had in a hospital that's healthcare. What is health? Health is optimal functioning of the organism. How does that occur? It occurs by one way only, and that is by living healthy. And that means what? That means you're receiving all of your biological requirements that are necessary for your organism to function.

You're getting [00:13:00] all of that you need to function, then you will function optimally. Right?

And if you don't get what you need, what happens? You're not getting enough of this and you're getting too much of that. Your body's gonna have to adapt. And what do we call those adaptations? Diseases. As if they were something out there. But no, it's an adaptation. So what am I talking about? I'm talking about this.

What do we need? We need, we need air, certain amount of air, oxygen. We need to get rid of carbon dioxide. We need a good amount of water, 70 80 percent of our body's water. And then we need specific molecules from the environment. And that we have, are, we, humans, have divided them up into groups. And we call them macronutrients and micronutrients.

And the macros are amino acids, which are proteins, fats, and carbohydrates. That's it, three groups. And then there's all these other ones that make them work, that help with them. They're called vitamins and minerals that do all [00:14:00] of the other things. And so they're all from, they come from plants. And even the minerals come from plants, because the plants pull them up through the, through their stems, through the roots, they pull the minerals up, they get chelated to an amino acid, they get chelated to an organic acid, and then when we eat it, the plant, we can get them, because now they're bioavailable, they'll be absorbed.

Alright, it's really we can't get our minerals requirements satisfied by picking up a handful of earth and eating it. It's just we probably won't absorb as much as we need. So we kind of rely on the plants to get that for so when we're getting all of those nutrients that I'm talking about

and the air and the water,

that's one aspect of it. Now, let's say you're getting all your nutrients, but you're not getting anything else. You're not getting, the nutrients are not coming packaged in poison. You're getting them pure straight, right? The air is clean. Sunshine. We need sunshine. We need sunshine for [00:15:00] multiple reasons.

Psychospiritually, psychologically, emotionally and physically big time, big time. I mean, not only does it make vitamin D, but it has, I mean, it also makes our individual cells that do not produce their own melatonin. inside of their mitochondria so that they can as an antioxidant to protect their mitochondria.

They do not make melatonin for export. The only place that makes melatonin for export is the pineal gland. And then we do that at night and export, I mean, into the blood. So the melatonin your body's, your, each cell is making is not for the rest of the body. It's just for self. And sunshine actually makes that happen, oddly enough.

But I mean, there's that, there's many, many things more. I mean, okay. So.

Now, the other thing is if you're being human, we have psychological needs, right? And those psychological needs are what? We need to belong. We need to be loved. We need to love. We need to love. Feels good [00:16:00] to love. Feels good to be loved. Need, we need it. If we need to and as I said, belong. We need to feel respected.

We need to feel honored. We need that.

We need to be touched and we need to touch. There were studies done early on in in psychology where they would take monkeys and they would have the monkeys raised with either a mother. Or a wire, wire doll that has a fur on it. Look, that's kind of like a monkey. And then the other monkey was, was raised with none of it.

So the one that had the mother, of course, was the most balanced and happy and healthy. The one that had the, this other thing, but they had the fur that it could hold and grab onto was secondarily. [00:17:00] Number two, in terms of balance and health, the one that had no ability, no, not, it couldn't touch or be tired.

It had no interaction at all. It was the most crazy. So it's really important. That's why when we talk about early birth from the beginning, before you're born, before you're born, and by the way, a year before you even get pregnant, it's time to start cleaning your body up. Otherwise, whatever toxins you have, you're going to give them to the kid.

So now the kid comes out, you put it on your belly, skin to skin, keep that skin to skin, as long as you can, as much as you can. You know, maybe for the first year you could just hold the baby, you know, have a papoose where you have it on your front and you're connected. That is you can't, ima you can't, you can't quantify how important that is.

Okay. Skin to skin. But anyway, so we need that. We all need to touch that. We need to be loved, be loved, be be respected. We need to respect, we need to have a, a passion in our lives. Something that we do that satisfies. There's [00:18:00] there's a hunger in us of being and I don't quite know the word for it, but there's a, there's a passion, a hunger for us to be, be, have a function.

And so for people, and it doesn't matter what it is, you could, a mother, many women I know, that's, they want to be a mother, that just, that's very, very essential. And without it, they don't feel complete. They need to be a mother. And there are other women who need to have a career and not be a mother.

And whatever it is, it doesn't matter. We need that. Because, actually, what we're doing all the day, all day long and all that, it kind of defines us. And what happens to us when we get older? Think about what happens to us. Two major, major, major losses happen to us as we get older. Number one, okay, first of all, if you're like, if you're above 12, 13 then, two things.

If someone meets you, what do they say? What do you do? So what do you do means, what [00:19:00] kind of work are you involved in? Which means, why? Why do they want to know? Because that's how they define you. That's who you are. I'm a, whatever, carpenter. I'm a secretary. I'm a professor. Whatever. What you are, or what you do.

Or, or, well, anyway. That's what, number one. Number two, and actually, number three. That should be number one. And what I just said should be number two. Number one is your sexual identity. Sexual identity is like way more important than you might even imagine. And of course people that have, that are, you know, having problems with sex gender dysphoria, which as they call it, it's really phenotype, phenotypic dysphoria, it's not gender dysphoria, it's phenotypic dysphoria.

And I've gone over that before. And I almost got kicked off talking about, I'm not supposed to define terms. Come on, people don't know what you're talking about. There. Your phenotype is the way [00:20:00] your genetics are expressed. Your genetics are your genetics. You're not going to change your genetics no matter what you do.

Now you've got your phenotype. Here, you can change that. You can put this over here, you can put this over here. If you change your phenotype, you're not going to change your genotype. Anyway so, but our gender whatever it is

Your sexual identity is who you are. And I remember my mother, my mother was interesting. I was a teenager and some some girl that I was going out with was, was talking to her and it was, it was so angry that got the guys were looking at her and she, she says, that's all guys want. They're always looking at my ass.

They're like, yeah, that's all guys want. And she said, I, which I thought was pretty cool. She said you know, there's going to come a day. When you wish they were looking at your ass.

Anyway, she's a pretty smart lady. And it's true. We don't realize how important it is that we are sexual beings. So what happens when you get old? Your [00:21:00] sexuality goes away. And then you retire? Now what are you, what's left? What's left? And, did you ever notice something about when you get older? People don't touch you as much.

When you're young, everyone's being touched. You know, you look at young people, they're holding hands, they're hugging, they're jumping. Older, older. So you're not being touched as much. You're not, you have lost your sexual identity. You've lost your occupational identity. Because like, what do you do? I don't do anything.

I'm retired. Oh, I'm retired, huh? I'm out of here, right? Because I need someone who does something so that I can get that done for me, or I can network. Yeah, I want to network. You know, okay, so, I mean, those are the big deals. Those are the big deals. Here's the whole story that I meant to start with at the beginning, and that is none of this is who we are.

And if the journey of life is not to be, you know, get an occupation, then Produce kids and gather things [00:22:00] and then have a nice obituary. That's not, that's not it. That's the story of the evolution or the journey of the soul. And that's what we forget to look at. We forget to, we forget that there's a driver, not even a, we're not even drivers.

We're all passengers. We have a front row seat and the greatest story ever. Oh. And so. Anyway, I meant to say that if you, whatever condition your life is in, whatever it is, whether you are here because you're young and healthy and you want to stay that way, or some other condition that's not quite that way we, the most important thing we can do is to

find out and identify quickly that part of us, that aspect of us, which is eternal. Which will be here when the body's gone. Cause no matter how well we take care of it.

All right. Now I do, I love, it reminds me of a, of a line out of Bob Dylan. I don't know how many of you people know Bob Dylan [00:23:00] or understand him, but I, the guy was an incre, no wonder he got a Nobel prize. The guy was like, unbelievable. What he wrote, I couldn't believe it. But either paupers us exchanging things for what the other one wants, you know, we, we, I want what he has and we're down here.

It is. While the prince and the kings are discussing what is real and what is not. Interesting. The guy was crazy. Crazy. Well, Princess and Puppets discuss what is real and what is not. Anyway, you know, the music today, I mean, it's really it's really yeah, that's what the the music today is like, yeah, yeah.

I mean, once in a while, you got someone that says something, some cool people, but all in all, it's,

what was that guy's name? Bobby Rydell. No, there were some guys. Anyway, it's like, it reminds me of of Stop doing that. Don't you want, don't, what do you think [00:24:00] the neighbors are going to say? What do you think they're going to say? I want, you need to strive to be average.

All right. Anyway, enough of that, you guys. Now that was a good question somebody asked me before and that was a kill day. Someone said, okay, so I talk about kill days and I talk about days of supporting. And we're talking about a CFC. So, on a day of supporting, for example whole body hypothermia is going to stimulate it.

Immune system. It's going to stimulate heat shock proteins. It does all sorts of wonderful things to and, and if you get enough, the heat shock proteins will it will in turn stimulate mitochondrial biogenesis. And if you get enough new mitochondria, you're no longer a CFC by definition. So it's a supportive thing.

So you don't, you wouldn't want to do anything killing on that day. Whereas IPT would be a killer. High dose vitamin C would be a killer. Ozone artesanate. So what killer at home? I mean,

there are indirect ways of killing

at home. You can't get high enough levels of [00:25:00] most anything orally. So orally you're going to wind up getting enough nutrients to support optimal physiology. And by the way, that's really our goal. Our goal is if we can support optimal physiology. then we're hardwired to become optimal. I mean, the other stuff will go away.

So that that that's the idea. So, you know, one of the major differences between conventional therapies, the conventional approach and what I consider holistic or realistic is is that while we're trying, our goal is not to get rid of anything. Our goal is to restore health. That's our goal is to restore health not to kill things because if you kill something you've got it's a military action and That's not what your goal because you can kill that But whatever is causing it underneath could manifest in another way and it will [00:26:00] it's got a manifest So the idea is to get is to and how do you do that?

You it's really simple you eliminate All toxins, because it's all toxemia. It's all toxemia. Please read Dr. John Tilden's book, Toxemia Explained, published in 1915. Get the original version. Don't get the watered down American version,

but toxin toxins accumulate. This, you have this adaptation, one of them is CFCs. I can't think of a kill one at home. That's a good one. I'm going to have to think about it. I don't think, I just don't think you can do it.

 Mean, specific. I don't think you can tell me you can take, you can take a poison. But that, you know, it's not specific. Oh, that's a good one. I'm going to have to really think about that. Amazing songs. MacArthur Park. How do those lyrics come from a 21 year old? Yeah. MacArthur Park, yeah, I mean, I mean, if you [00:27:00] go back to those, I mean, I, you know, I, I was driving, I went driving, by the way, it's Vegetarian Festival here in, in Thailand and Vegetarian Festival, as you can imagine, the whole country but it's pretty much in Phuket.

I was going to take pictures and stuff, but it's been raining so much, I couldn't even take pictures. But basically, it's a, it's basically the Vegetarian Festival. Sorry, the vegetarian festival here is based on a fact, it's no one really knows, but the, the, the story is that some Chinese people were here and they were going to

I forget what, how they were being attacked or I got to read up on that. But basically, whatever it was to protect themselves, they became vegetarian and survived, whatever that was. And that was it. And that was the message. Yeah. And so now they have this vegetarian person, but what I don't know, and I've got to read about it is the, they do these piercings, they put these things through their cheeks, like these long, this needle needles, like yesterday they were driving, [00:28:00] they had a pre, I was driving this way and they were going this way and they're like this, they're.

It's like they're in a trance. And then even the people that weren't doing it, they're going, I don't know what they're doing, they're in some sort of trance, it's probably reminds me of the, you know, in India where they walk on, you know, you know, you can get to a state of mind, I guess, where you're not really feeling it.

But it's very, very, but what I love about it is the only time a year that Thai food, because a lot of Thai food has got, it's got animal parts in it. It's the only time of year I can eat it. Because, you know, there's almost not, you have to ask, you have to ask, there's the word, the word, you know, vegetarian is manxavirat, and the word for vegan is jay, and gin is eat.

So when the waitress comes to the table, you say, pom gin jay, gin jay, gin jay, ko menu jay mai? Do you have a J a, a, a vegan menu? And then, they usually do, most [00:29:00] places do. But, again, it's not, what they have here, the, the, like, you look at the foods, they eat the noodles, and you say, wow, I wonder if that tastes good.

You can't taste it. But, this is like the one week out of the year. So, it's really weird. It's a really, like, healthy week for everybody else. For me, it's the opposite, because I eat things that I wouldn't normally eat. Just because they're vegan, just to try them out. And, because I can't eat them at the other time, so, it's interesting.

Anyway. So we were talking about MacArthur's Bark, yeah. What about, what about, I just got back from, I remember, I just got back from India, and a song had come and gone, and I hadn't even heard it, because I was in India, or I was traveling around the world, I hitchhiked after India, I was hitchhiking, hitchhiking around the world.

I came back, what was it called? American Pie. Whoa. And I heard that song. I think I, it was 72 or something. I mean, it came out in 70. I don't know. Anyway, and when they say

something about a guy being shot and his widowed bride. [00:30:00] That gave me some weird, a weird, weird, weird feeling. And then in 1981, when John Lennon got shot, I went, the day the music died. I went, Whoa. So there was some real music going on there. You know, how would Joni Mitchell, what did she think? Sing about my God, you know, John bias, Bob Dylan.

I don't know if you guys know Donovan. If you don't, you know, it's really a, because they're not just, it is not popular singers. They're like lit. It's literature. It's literature with music. Yeah. MacArthur's parks. Yeah. Anyway let's get on with this stuff. That so the word for festival, it's festival is Tegan.

So this week up till the 11th is te.

Chop chopped.

 Said I like it vegetarian. 'cause it's said one of the times I get to eat. So let's look at some of your questions, okay? Instead of rambling on, oh, by the way, what am I supposed to tell you [00:31:00] guys? About the inner circle, the power last week's member Zoom recordings, PowerPoints and summaries are available in your membership.

Okay, so last week it was, is there a natural way to eliminate parasites? We talked about, and then the CFC group is, why should you take extra melatonin? Anyway, that was and then this week tomorrow, health and healing group is the basics of a healthy life to prevent

And then the CFC group this week, we will be talking about vitamin C. How much, what kind, and for how long. Now so as you know, everything except Twitter, which is drthomaslodymd. All the other ones are drthomaslody and that's YouTube. Whatever. All of them. Instagram. By the way, if I get kicked off of any of those just go to Rumble. Rumble, I guess, will always be around. Guess it's the one that's not gonna be censored for a while. But if you're [00:32:00] in France, you can't get it, so what are we gonna do? We're gonna go, what did you guys say in France? You said there's, so what's it called? Univer. You gotta send that to me again.

That that platform You want me to join? Okay. 'cause I'll do it. Anyway, there's YouTube, you can go to the website. But if you join these groups, we're, we're on telegram. We're talking all the time. So that's another way to communicate. So you're tapering someone just, I'm tap, I'm taping the canyon years, you mean?

Ladies of the Canyon with Joni Mitchell, I think she wrote that. Ladies of the Canyon. Laurel Canyon. Topanga Canyon. I'm not sure what it was. That's where I grew up. So it was like right in the middle. Jim Morrison was there. He went to UCLA. Everybody was there. It was a pretty wonderful time to be alive.

See, I'm tapering off Xanax for 17 years of use. What can I use for sleep and anxiety? I also have tinnitus now. Alright, so there's a lot of other stuff going on. You gotta, you gotta detoxify, number one. You know, I'm not just for the Xanax, but I mean cleanse. You gotta do the whole cleanse. Not, mm, okay.

Then, the The whole thing with Xanax and all of [00:33:00] the benzodiazepines is that because they, they actually produce a physical addiction,

you know, smoking cannabis doesn't do that. Even cocaine really doesn't have a physical addiction. It's, it's total psychological, but one of the most powerful addictions there are. But, but, but, but, and what I mean by that is, for example, alcohol and, and benzodiazepines, when you stop them abruptly, you go into, you have seizures.

And they call them delirium tremens with, with And with with, with the benzodiazepines like Xanax, you can actually, you'll have seizures. Okay. Because why? Because what was the benzodiazepine? What were they originally designed for was to decrease the depolarization of nerves to for muscle, to relax muscles.

And they found that it relaxed this muscle too. And so, so you wean off that slowly. If you're taking, Okay. Let's say you're taking, I don't know, what, two milligrams? I don't know how much you were [00:34:00] taking. Two milligrams of it. Just cut it in half for a while. And then you cut them in half. For a week, two weeks, whatever it is.

Two weeks. And then you get the point fives. And you take those for a while. And then you cut them in half. And breathe in and out of it. Then you can start doing it every other day and you're done. So just do that. Meanwhile, what can you do for the anxiety? Well, if you're going to clean out all the toxins, get rid of the toxins, you're not eating anything.

Anxiety, anxiety provoking foods later, later in the day, such as coffees and teas that have caffeine. So you don't drink them later in the day or in the mornings, but make sure your colon's clean, all that stuff. Make sure you've been moving around all day and you're, you got, you've got your, you know, your, your body is, has been worked out and used.

Okay. And then meditation is really important. You can, you've got to learn to do meditation, yoga, yoga as a way of focusing and concentrating and at the time of [00:35:00] stretching and moving, you know, you do Tai Chi, there's wonderful ways of doing that and getting, and getting, and getting connecting it all with breath in terms of substances to take to help along there's L3, which comes from we get it from tea.

It relaxes you, it stimulates GABA in your brain. There is kava, which is comes from a kava root, and numbing. They have kava bars in where was I? In Fiji, I've been to a kava bar, not Fiji Vanuatu. Weird, weird, dark, really dark, and, you know, and you'd think they're, like, doing something really sinister, and they're all sitting around just drinking this stuff, which makes you numb.

It wasn't much fun. I mean, you get really numb. I mean, I'm like, it's not fun. And you wake up with a really crazy headache. Wow. So, I mean, is consciousness that bad that you've got to do that? So, but you can take small amounts of kava and you [00:36:00] can take like I said, L3 amine and you can five, five HTP, which is just basically the precursor of I

think it's turned into melatonin, it goes through serotonin. But because the lights are out, so you gotta, you gotta make sure everything's dark. Do a mental detox. Empty your mind before you go to sleep. What kind of detox? We mean doing a juice cleanse for juice, juice. Celery, cucumber. Kale, spinach, lemon, and apple to make it delicious.

Don't just make it, just make it like, wow, I kind of get some more of that. You've got to love it. And if it's a little extra sweeter, okay. Whatever it is, you're not putting sugar in it. You're not putting. Maple syrup. You're just putting apples or if you want it, let's say you say, I'd rather have carrots.

Okay, then make carrots or I'd rather have beets, whatever you want to do to sweeten it up, make it delicious. But the lemon is there to take away bitterness that may that there may be in the plant. And [00:37:00] then the sweet takes with the sourness. And, but in there you have all the nutrition you could ever need.

You're getting, in one day, you're getting more nutrition than the average person gets at six.

Live restricted for some audiences. Okay, yeah, thank you very much. Oh god, I feel so protected by you. Thank you, TikTok. You're just, oh, oh, I love TikTok. You just, oh my god, you're so good to me. Thank you. You're protecting my audience. That's fantastic because you know, they need protection. They don't know what they're doing.

You know, they're idiots. They're idiots. Yeah, right. Right. Good. Tick tock school. You know, I may, you know, tick tock. You guys have to please realize that I'm going to be there someday. Cause they're trying, you know what they got me for? I was, I was talking about the most controversial thing on earth. You know what it was?

The health benefits of propolis. That's right. Can you imagine? I was talking about that on air. [00:38:00] How dare me talk about that health benefits of propolis. So I'll never do that again. I mean, I mean, I realized that's really like, it's horrible. Now, if I want to talk about whatever they, there are things I think on tick that are coming to me on TikTok.

They're like, what? This is allowed, you know, it's beyond controversial. That's okay. But don't talk about propolis. What else was I talking about? Oh, parasites. Oh my god, they took me out for that. So I've had two videos taken off. One more and I'm banned. I'm not suspended. I'm banned. So be prepared, TikTok.

Okay, I hope you're listening and I hope you realize that my days are tic

gonna be gone and you'll find me on Instagram and Facebook for a while until they tic toc knock me away. Because I'm saying really, really terrible things, right? I'm saying really terrible things. What am I saying that is so terrible? What? Can someone tell me? Can someone tell me what I'm saying is so [00:39:00] bad?

What did I say tonight? Let me see your, let me see. What did I say that was controversial?

Anybody?

Did I say something?

Hey, TikTok machine, AI, whatever you are, are you listening? Of course you're listening. Do birds have lips? Do snakes have hips? Is anything controversial? Tick tock.

Community standards? What the hell are the community standards? It depends on what community you're in. Oh, you mean your community? You mean the community you like? The community where everybody is a mask? Hi. Oh, very nice to meet you. very much. Oh, darling, you look so wonderful. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Is that the good, is that the community you're talking about?

The community where nothing is real, nothing to get hung about, right? Strawberry fields, right? Yeah, that's it. So, that's the community, right, TikTok? Propolis. Oh, don't talk about that. Oh, it's horrible. Oh, my God, Propolis. Propolis.

you [00:40:00] know, but anyway, just warning you guys, TikTok, that you've got some, whoever the hell is behind TikTok.

You know, it used to be that it's the Chinese. But it's not the Chinese. If you look up the ownership, it's owned by a lot of groups. And basically guess what, guess who owns it. Ehh, you got it. Who owns Facebook? Yeah. Who owns Apple? Who owns Instagram? Samsung. Who owns? Yeah, that's right. Same two groups. Same two companies.

We won't mention their names, right? Because we don't know,

right? There's two companies. You know the game of Monopoly? You guys remember Monopoly? It's over. They won. They left us, I think, Mediterranean and Baltic Avenue. That's what we got left. The whole world's playing with those two. Meanwhile, they have the rest of the real estate. I own my house. I own my house.

I own my house. Look at that. I'm not going to pay rent anymore. I own my house. You own your house? Hmm, okay. I'll tell you what then. Don't pay taxes this year on your house. And you'll [00:41:00] see who owns it.

You own it, you mean, or you mean you're, and now you're allowed to pay rent for it. Who are you paying rent to? The state.

Real estate. Land.

Do you guys all remember that song by George Harrison? It was on I think it was on Revolver or Rubber Soul. Anyway, it was called Taxman. If you haven't heard it, if you're too young, by the way, you know who the Beatles are, right? Okay. If you don't know who they are, look them up. And then there was this, Go listen to it.

Great song.

Anyway so I said something really, really bad, and I'm so, so glad. So we're still listening to TikTok. Everybody, and the government's here to protect us. We're just so lucky, you know, all these people look out for us. We're just so, so, so, so, Huh? Oh! Aren't we glad! I'm glad we don't have to think. You know, that would be inconvenient, right?

And we want convenience. Convenience is [00:42:00] all that matters. I want life to be so convenient that I don't have to do anything. I just sit in my chair and I just press buttons and things happen. That's it. That's extremely convenient. You know what convenience means? Convenience is another word for don't do it, don't let yourself be in a situation where you are uncomfortable.

Experiencing convenience, because that means you're not doing what you should be doing to stay alive. Convenience is preventing you from doing what you need. Because in the old days, before all this nonsense, we had to live. We had to walk here, we had to do this, we had to pick this up, we had to, we made clothes, we did, we knew how to live.

Now what do we know how to do? What do we know how to do? We know how to get online. We know how to share on the thing. We know how to shop. Oh! We know where to shop, how to shop. And now we don't even have to shop. We just go to Jeff Bezos. Jeff Bezos will send us anything we want. [00:43:00] What a guy. What a guy. But it's convenient. It's really convenient. You know, what's extremely convenient is So you're sitting in a room, you don't have to go anywhere, do anything. You just press buttons. How about you, people come and bring you things. Whatever you want. You think it, it comes to you. Is that convenient? Well, you're gonna wind up being extremely ill because you're not moving your body.

You're gonna be extremely ill. And you're also gonna be stupid because you don't know how to do anything. So don't be convenient. If it's convenient, then don't do it. Elevators are convenient, so they'll take them. Walk. Walk up the stairs. What are you feeling? I can imagine walking up the stairs. Why would you walk up the stairs?

Well, because you live up there. What if you're in the elevator and it breaks? Did you ever have an elevator break? Did you ever get stuck in an elevator? Try it. It's fun. A lot of fun. I got stuck twice. And, you know, I couldn't take elevators for a while. They were, it's freaky. So, anyway Convenience is [00:44:00] a word you want to eliminate.

Alright? You don't want convenience. You want it to be difficult to do, and do it. And you know what happens? You're gonna feel good, your body's gonna feel good, and you have, will have done something instead of ordered something

Did you? Yeah, I ordered it. I ordered it. I ordered it. Oh, you ordered it. Oh my god. In the old days, what do you think they did in 1890? 1890, any country you're in, what did they do? Did they order things? Did they go shopping? Nope. What did they do? They made it.

Mmm, made it? What a waste of time. It's a waste of time? What else are you gonna do? You're gonna rush over there and sit in a comfortable chair and do nothing? That's your goal? Your goal is to sit back and have a martini? Is that it? What, what, what, what, what? Come on, we have to wake up, you guys. Don't buy the story they gave us.

The story they gave us is a story of idiots with no courage and no [00:45:00] ability for critical thinking and this kind of people would be in a situation where you know, another, the whole, another group is taking them over and they don't even know it. They don't even know it. You know, that's what could happen.

Think about it. Wouldn't want that to happen, right? They don't even know it. Or if they do know it, they go, Eh, look, yeah, whatever. I don't want to talk about it. I'm too busy. Anyway, I know I've gone all over the place, so let me come back to where I am. Where are we? So you know about all that.

Okay, so where's our first question here? Okay, so we're getting some stuff here. Okay, so the first question is Ah. This is Tracy, and I sent you a message. I was asking about suspicious mole. Question. I really don't want to do a biopsy on some moles. Are there any treatments I can do to the moles [00:46:00] to prevent having biopsies done?

Yeah, well, okay, so, I don't know. You say suspicious.

So, CFCs, they've, they, they, they

categorize CFCs as basal cell, squamous cell, and melanoma.

And you know, the basal cells and the squamous cells are pretty,

They're pretty easy to see because they're, you know, they're like crusty and things like that. They're, they're crusty. And then the, the melanomas can be very, they can be extremely black or they can be like a, usually they're more of like different colors and stuff. And but yeah, you're absolutely right about biopsy.

You don't want a biopsy. Tell the guy to go biopsy his self. If it's a,

if it's a guy, tell him the biopsy is scrotum. And if it's a lady, tell her to biopsy her breast. Yep. And then when they've done that, then you'll let them biopsy you. Okay, I don't need a biopsy. Okay. So whatever you got, I'm glad you're asking at this point, whatever you go, what can [00:47:00] you do to just restore them?

Well, obviously you need to say, okay, wait, I there's a manifestation, something on my skin. I guess I should, how does things get to my skin? How does that happen? Oh, through my body. So remember, and this is another thing for cosmetics realize, and that all the stuff you're taking to outside, change your, Body.

You can't change it from outside. It's an inside job. Just like, if I'm gonna eat a protein, I can't do anything with that protein. I gotta break it down into amino acids, I absorb the amino acids, then they go into the amino acid pool, and my body will make its own proteins. Period. If I get another protein that's not mine in my blood, I will get something called anaphylactic shock.

If you want to have moist skin, you've got to be eating healthy.

Yes, I know, these oil things keep your water in. I know, it feels good and all that stuff. I get it. I get coconut oil. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Essential oils. [00:48:00] But what I'm saying is that for the most part, your body, anywhere on your body, whether it's your skin or your liver or your heart, your uterus, whatever your body's producing it out of what you have ingested.

So you gotta, it's time to do a really good thorough clean, but in terms of topical things you can put on, you can put on, you can get 35 percent hydrogen peroxide. You can dilute it in half and have 17. 0. 5 percent and then you can dilute that in half and have 18, 8. 75 percent and that's still pretty strong but you can put that on or you can try to get it down to 6 percent or you can go online and buy 6 percent food grade hydrogen peroxide and put that on every day, a few times a day.

Okay, that'll oxidize it. The other thing you can get is ozonated olive oil, ozonated olive oil. Very good, very good, ozonated olive oil. Alright, now and then the other thing you can do is, I

Now, iodine is, [00:49:00] and, and, and for those of you that were born before,

I don't know when it happened. Before 1980? I don't know. You might remember that when you had a cut on your arm or your finger or your hand, your, your mother would paint some iodine on it and didn't get infected. Hmm. Now, now in the hospitals, what do they use? They use iodine. Povidone, which is something they've done to iodine, and they use it on surgical, when they're going to do surgery, they use it to sterilize.

Iodine to sterilize. Iodine. We talk about iodine all the time. Remember, part of our regimen that we talk about, that we've all been through, Third is that we've got to manage our thyroid because our thyroid is we've got to do a talk on thyroid, you guys. I can do a webinar on thyroid. Thyroid, and I see, I've noticed now, like, all of a sudden there's a bunch of experts on thyroid and they don't know what they're talking about.

God, they get stuck on [00:50:00] one little aspect of things. Anyway, I'm just shocked. There's even a guy, you guys might watch him, he's always now he's really, you know, he wasn't always this good, but he He took lessons,

and he on how to be a, a social media guy.

And so now he's doing all the right stuff. Not like me, look at me, I'm here in this, I'm here, like, this is like where I work. No, no, outside, colorful shirt, big, buffed arms. Just happens to be talking to a bush about something. So anyway, so everybody, there's a lot of experts out there. The point is this, iodine is incredible.

It's, it's a forgotten molecule. I wrote this article years ago, I'll have to, I should put it on our website. It's called iodine and breast cancer, but it's not just breast, it's all of it. All right, so here's the thing iodine is a halogen, it's a group of, of, of, of, on the periodic table, that has a negative charge, meaning that it has extra [00:51:00] electrons that it wants to give, give, give.

That makes it an antioxidant, right? That also makes it an alkaline substance. So, of the halogens, iodine is the biggest one. Yeah, fluoride, chloride, bromide. Iodide, Fluoride, Chloride, Bromide, and Iodide. Once again, Fluoride and Bromide, Chloride, Chloride, Bromide, and Iodide. They all act the same.

And so they can be exchanged so that what happens is if you don't have enough iodine, which you don't because you don't eat seaweed all day because you don't live in Japan or Korea. So, what you do is you have an iodine deficiency. And they give you, oh, that's why they went to, in Morton's salt they put, What?

It's got 600 nanograms? Nanograms? That's the RDA. RDA means what? What's a good name, what's a good real, for that acronym?

Ridiculous dosing. Average? Ridiculous dosing. Anyway, the RDA is usually [00:52:00] enough not to get a completely full blown deficiency syndrome.

But it's not what you need for optimal functioning. And isn't our goal of the one, that's one of our main goal. Anyway, yeah, yeah, yeah. So, it's okay. So, so, so, so, so here's the thing about iodine. We yeah. Oh my God. Oh, thank you.

You see, you see, you see how kind they are. They know, they know that I hadn't had a chance in one week to play Jigsaw Puzzle. So, thank you, TikTok, I got to play my Jigsaw Puzzle. So Iodine. Listen to Iodine.

It's never mentioned, right? You never hear people talk about it. Right. You need your supplements. Vitamin A, vitamin D, magnesium, calcium, magnesium, mangan. Nobody. I don't understand why it's like way, way, way, way, way important. 'cause iodine is what the thyroid gland needs. Iodide two forms. [00:53:00] Iodine, which is two.

Two molecules of iodine. Two atoms of iodine together form molecular iodine, iodine, whatever. Iodine is the anion, which has to be connected to a cat ion. So you have. Magnesium iodide or calcium iodide or sodium iodide, just like you have sodium chloride salt. So it's in that class and that's what, so it's, so anyway, the iodide gets connected to thyroid, to the tyrosine molecules thyroid.

So there's T4, T3, four has four of them. Three has three of them and three is active. Four is not. So, force circulates, the body needs it, it's got to grab it, take it off, one of those iodines, with an enzyme called iodinase that needs, requires, something called selenium. It's a selenium dependent enzyme, enzyme that takes off that.

So the conversion of T4 to T3 requires that. Now you got T3 can dock onto the cell, and it goes right into the myocondria, and that [00:54:00] iodide, depolarizes the mitochondrial membrane and allows the mitochondria to make energy. So it is the energy thermostat of the body. Alright, and you want it to be right.

Why do you want it to be right? Because we're talking about which cells need thyroid. That's it. Every cell, including your immune system, your heart, your brain, every cell needs to make energy and the conductor is thyroid, alright? Now, that means it also has some pretty good control over the immune system, right?

Turns out to be one of the bosses of the immune system, one of the big bosses, right? Along with melatonin and the thymus gland. I mean, there we go. Anyway. Now, Ai

Dai is so, and I've told this story before, but listen to it again in a different light, and that is that autopsies performed in Japan after World War II on 115 [00:55:00] year old, 120 year old people. Finding that they had a tumor here and a tumor there and a tumor there, but they were small and they never grew.

They never spread. They did not die from that. They died from a heart attack or a stroke or something else. Why? Because they had iodine in their interstitial fluids. So iodine is sitting there kind of like, on patrol and the minute a cell becomes a malignant, it expresses a a, a cation on its cell surface and It merges with it, turns it into a salt, and that makes a hole and it dies.

So it can't grow. So, you need iodine not only for your thyroid and your breast, but you also need it for if you have excess and it gets into your interstitial fluid, which is where it should be, it will protect you from ever having tumor growth or metastasis. What else does it protect you from? Yes.

Sepsis. Other than that, you can't get infected because these guys can't colonize.

Kind of important, yeah. [00:56:00] Now, what we've learned is other things too. We've learned that, like, when you put topical iodine on, it turns out, and there's been studies with this it stimulates what's called the NRF2 and the ARE. Signaling molecules that turn on genes. Basically the means is they turn on the antioxidant genes, so they upregulate your cell's ability to protect itself.

Right? And they found that it was actually helpful for people who, like, they, for what they call photoaging, you know, people that get exposed to the sun, they get, so it was protective against that. So that, that's basically radiation poisoning is really what it is on, on some fundamental level. And it turns out to be protective against all of that.

Why? Because it's fundamentally, what is it? It's donating electrons and life is redox biochemistry, right? Life is the sharing of electrons, right? Okay, so that's what happens. [00:57:00] So protecting against the skin damage, UVB light, right? And

and it's it's the iodide dye that does it, not the iodide. Now when it comes to CFCs though, it's a It's even, it's even better now. Obviously the, one of the ways that it does with the CFCs is if you've got the, I, like I just said, you've got the iodide in your interstitial fluid, right? And the CFC can't grow because the iodide is like right there, right?

But now we found, and do you know when this was first, they realized this like back in the twenties. So back in the twenties. They saw, wait a minute, so the guys in the, in America, the guys in the Midwest who are getting goiters because there's no iodine in the soil at all. There used to be iodine in the soil, not anymore, but that's why we gotta eat seaweed.

Guys, those people with goiters had more CFCs.

Huh, well which, wait, are you sure? Yeah, yeah, which ones? Ah, breast, prostate, [00:58:00] endometrial, ovarian, rectal, thyroid, Oh, you mean the main ones, yeah, yeah. So, low thigh iodine and an increased incidence of those? Hmm. In 1924? Yeah, 1924. I see, huh. And we don't know about this? Nah! Okay, so, So anyway, it's essential.

It's essential in our normal physiology, okay? And so, it turns out that, what does it do? It's anti inflammatory. Right? Donates electrons. It's pro differentiating. What does that mean? That means when you're an embryo and you're, and when you first, when the sperm and egg first meet and you got one cell, that cell is everything, right?

It divides into two. They divide into four. They divide into eight. Keeps dividing. And then at one point, certain cells turn off all of the genes in their DNA except for liver. And these cells turn off all other genes except [00:59:00] for heart. And these cells, in other words, that's called differentiation. Instead of being all things to everybody, they become just one thing.

That's called differentiation, okay? So every cell in the body can be anything, but it's not. It's being liver, kidney, skin, whatever. called differentiation. All right. When you get CFCs, part of the process is you lose that differentiation and part of the histological description of a cell that they biopsied is whether it is well differentiated, poorly differentiated or, or moderately differentiated or poorly differentiated poorly differentiated means we can't tell what it was moderate.

I think it's a And well differentiated, oh yeah, that came from the breast, oh yeah, that came from the finger, alright? Alright, so, so what puts that back? Iodine. So iodine won't let that happen. What else does iodine do? It stimulates apoptosis, apoptosis. What is [01:00:00] apoptosis? It's programmed cellular. It's where the cell commits suicide, but that's the word.

That's the way they say it. It's stupid. It's not that it commits suicide. It's it recycles itself, but the greater good. What the hell?

What?

Where am I? Okay, so, someone was trying to call me. Yeah. Okay, so, Alright, so that, okay, that's what iodine does in our body, right? So, but you paint it on, and you're gonna get, you know, you're gonna get direct killing from the iodide, all right, and at the same time you're gonna get upregulation of your, of the antioxidant enzymes that are in that cell to protect the cell.

So, and iodine, the amount of iodine in our body is, the total amount in our whole body is about 20, 25, 30 milligrams, right, in our whole body. And 50 to 70 percent of that is found in our body. Non [01:01:00] thyroid tissues. So it's got use elsewhere besides thyroid. Got that? Now we've talked about it before that well, okay So in order for iodine to get absorbed it's got to get two sodium molecules and it's called sodium iodide And then so we there are certain cells that have what's called a sodium iodide Transporter system.

So the thyroid has it, of course The breasts have it because you got to get the iodine into the breast so that the baby when it's nursing gets enough iodine to make enough thyroid so it doesn't, it wasn't necessary for cognitive development. Otherwise you, you, the baby will actually be retarded. It's called cretinism.

All right. And then but as it turns out, there's, it's not only those two. Right. It turns out that they're, they're the. Okay, so, okay, so when you eat iodine, you get it in food or whatever, you take it, it gets picked up in the small intestines like [01:02:00] everything does then duodenum, right, and it gets picked up by a special Same thing, sodium iodide transported in small intestine, so it needs sodium.

And the do you call it? The it gets, and then when it's transported in the blood, it gets to the saliva and the, and the salivary glands and the stomach. And as it's being circulated, it kind of stays, it collects in the stomach, in the mucosal lining of the stomach and the salivary, right?

As well as the breast. That's where it kind of stays, a lot, because they can pick it up. Because they, all three of those, saliva, stomach, breast, have this transport system. Now I want to draw your attention to something. So, a violated warning. I, your live flagged for hate speech and hateful behaviors.

Repeated violations could result in your life being continued. Had hate speech. All TikTok, I'm going to ask you what that was later. You can tell me what that is, okay? [01:03:00] So I had hate speech on TikTok. So they, they, I've been violated, I violated and continued. I could be, I could have my my I, my head chopped off.

And I think, I think who knows, who knows how, how far they could go. Now. What I was trying to say is and I'm glad you told me that because it was very important. I hate speech. I hate, I love everything. Everything. I love everything. I love everything. I love it. I love the New World Order. I love Klaus Schwab.

I love Bill Gates. I love him. I love the World Economic Forum. I love them. I love, I don't hate it. I love everything. So

just real quickly, so the iodine has, right, like I said, it's anti inflammatory. It's anti, it's anti it stops differentiation. I mean, it re different, it makes things go back to re different, back to differentiation. It's antibacterial. It stimulates apoptosis, right? It's blocks growth. It does all the things you want it to do, right?[01:04:00] 

Now, the fact that it gets, we've got these transporter systems in the, Thyroid, the breast and the stomach, is extremely interesting if you consider the fact that the breast meridian, which is the molar just before the wisdom tooth and down here, just after the bicuspid, the cuspid, the first molar there, they are on the same meridian as the thyroid and the stomach. Isn't that interesting? Thyroid, stomach, and breast are on the same meridians. And then they also just happen to have this iodide transporter. Just an interesting thing.

But 23 percent of the iodine in our body actually is what they call the gastro salivary pool. Going like that. Saliva into the stomach, gastro, [01:05:00] right? Okay, so we have those sodium iodide transporters, right? And so what's happening is the iodine forms a it's secreted in the mouth on the mucus that's protective.

So the mouth is kind of protected by that. The same with the stomach. It's a protective thing. forms of protective layer, right? The, the fact that it was whatever doesn't get absorbed through the mouth is going to go down the stomach and get absorbed. And it keeps, it keeps a pool of about 23%. So up there, right?

And they now realize that iodine is actually probably in every tissue. We just, you know, we don't really know all of it. We haven't figured it out yet. Right? And as I said the and how does it get iodine? Well, one of the ways that it gets iodine is that When T4 is converted to T3, right?

Through that deiodinase enzyme, takes [01:06:00] off the enzyme takes off the iodine with selenium. It's got an iodine right there, so that's how, one of the ways it gets iodine. And it turns out, so what it does, what the iodine does, is it actually reacts with the, with the sulfur groups, the thiol systems. Such as glutathione and theoreduxin, which are the two main intracellular antioxidants.

They work with iodine, and iodine helps keep, maintain the redox homeostasis of the, of a cell. That's how important iodine is. We don't talk about it, but that's how important it is. Maintains Redox homeo status with glutathione and theo redoxin. That's pretty. So, so what and now it turns out that, and, and we've talked about this before, I've, I've recommended that all women should put a couple drops on each breast of 5%, maybe 10%, 5%, because one of the things it does is it ensures the the metabolism of the estrogens to the healthy metabolites and [01:07:00] not the ones that possibly cause problems and.

The the other thing about the and that's iodine, that's the molecular, that's not the iodide that's delivered to the mitochondria. Iodine, O2, I2. So there was actually a study where they gave five milligrams a day of the iodine. To women with CFCs, breast CFCs, and they found that their PPAR expression was increased.

And that, why was that? Because that's part of the molecular patterns of of CFCs. Anyway, it's so, and what that was, and the result was they saw a decreased proliferation. They saw a decrease in estrogen's effects because it competes and blocks estrogen. Yes, it does. Iodine. Yes, yes, yes, yes. And, and increases apoptosis.

Alright? So, And then, if you remember, Iodine is also what we use for fibrocystic breasts. So women have very painful, you know, during the cycle, [01:08:00] they're probably around, starting around the 12th, 13th of their cycle. It gets more, it starts to grow and gets tender, very tender. Up to until the time they have immense, immense their menstrual, their menses comes out

you know, and, and, and they've got that, you know, that's a painful one. That's painful, but, but if you can feel it, it feels naughty and it's just like little, it's not grand, it's larger than granular, but it's like cysts, it's fibrocystic, right? And we've talked about this old therapeutic modality where you paint Lugol's, right?

on the inside of vagina as close to the cervix as possible on both sides of the wall. And really what you're looking for is the iodine to get absorbed. And it does, it gets absorbed. It goes up there and it eliminates fibrocystic breasts. That's pretty amazing, right? So they found that so anyway, so, anyway, so when we look at the molecular iodine that We should [01:09:00] have per day. It turns out to be, it's around 0. 07 to 0. 09 milligrams per kilogram of body weight. So translated for the average you and me, it's about 3. 2 to 4 milligrams per day. just the iodine, not the iodide. That's why I earlier was kind of like shocked that Morton salt gives us a few hundred nanograms, right?

So therapeutic iodine for breast CFCs.

And as I said, it causes, it'll cause the cells to go through apoptosis, all that sort of thing. You're putting it on a mole, you're putting on a, a red directly on, and plus you're cleaning up by inside. You're doing, you're doing you know, colonic cleansing. You're doing. Juicing and all that stuff, you're going to just, you know, that's going to go away. So anyway, when they for example, they had these rats and they gave them breast tumors. And that's cool. So they gave them breast tumors and they [01:10:00] they put 0. 05 percent iodine in the water for one group and none in the other. The one that got it, they had 37. 5 less percent, less of tumors developed or grew.

And if they didn't have it, they in their rest. It didn't have it. It didn't, they didn't get it. It didn't grow. Even though they, they, they had implanted the it, it is a xenograft. They actually put it, put it on there. Yeah. So that's pretty crazy. Right. And they saw that it was related to the PAR gamma expression, so. Now there's a, there was a group of people stuttered and, and where they were using Lugol's specifically because Lugol's got, remember it's got both, they were using both 5 percent and 10%. Okay. They saw that it actually affected 43 different genes in the cell cycle for growth and proliferation and differentiation.

 Lot of those genes were upregulated by [01:11:00] estrogen. So that's how it undoes the estrogens effects. Okay? So, by Lugol's solution, interfering with the upregulation of these genes that estrogen would do by binding to an estrogen receptor, when you're estrogen receptor positive, upregulation that would happen, doesn't happen.

So that's why we call it, that's the anti estrogen effect on gene expression. Alright? It really dissolves melanomas, it dissolves basal cell, it dissolves squamous cell, I don't know what you have going on there. And but I would do ozone. You can do all of those in it, olive oil. You can do and then another, another time, a few times a day, but strong, like at least 6 percent peroxide.

I tried to get a little stronger. You want eight, 10 percent peroxide, hydrogen peroxide a few times a day. And then iodine ozone, it'll go away. It'll go away.

So now [01:12:00] next question is, I know I talked way too much today. Okay. Copper. Okay. So this is from Diana.

Wait a minute. This is from Diana. Where is that? Boy,

 Had, I know that was there a minute ago anyway. Okay. So Diana says, is copper something we should stay away from if we have CFCs? You know, that's a good question because

For years now,

there's been a therapy called tetrahydramolibdate. I don't know if you've heard of it, but it's a, it's a specific copper chelator, grabs copper. And the way you measure it is I mean, and then you try to get the

ceruloplasm, which is a

protein made in the liver that, that binds copper, get that low. And then you can, they found that if they get it below a certain amount that the tumors don't grow Because the whole, the idea there was that it [01:13:00] Copper is very involved in new blood vessel formation. Well, it turns out that copper is a lot more than just that, okay?

It actually is necessary, copper is necessary for the development of tumors, right? Tumorogenesis, right? It's also involved with the growth and metastasis.

So it's, and, and, through being a cofactor in the signaling molecules that stimulate those processes. Thank you.

So, so copper induces like angiogenesis, you know, new blood vessel growth by increasing the expression of the pro angiogenic genes. It increases the expression. It also does the is involved in, you remember chemotherapy did that too. It caused epithelial to mesenchymal transition, EMT. So it takes a mature CFC, which cannot metastasize and turns it into a cancer.

[01:14:00] Stem cell mesenchymal Cfc now it can't metastasize. So it's emt epithelial to mesenchymal transition. It does that right? And then so, so they were using tetrahydrolytic to chelate that. Oh, excuse me. How do we get copper normally? We normally get it from food and the richest

The way to get the most copper is eating organ meats, which I can't imagine Doing but I know there are people that do it organ meats And shellfish, they seem to have a lot of copper. So if you're used to eating those things, you might want to slow down a little bit. Right. However, it's essential to life and we need about 0.

8 up to two milligrams. a day of copper for normal functioning. It's essential to certain minerals, all right, at certain enzymes. So like I was saying, ceruloplasm, which is that protein made in the liver about [01:15:00] 75 percent of the copper is bound to that. And that's what you measure. If that goes down, that means you're lowering it.

And then there's you know, 25 percent is, is bound to albumin.

And so they go through and it kind of goes through the liver and the liver metabolizes it and everything like

that. What's been noticed is that there are significant number, there's a significant amount more copper in tumors than non tumors. And they found out what it's doing. And now especially that's lung, prostate, breast, gallbladder, stomach, and thyroid. The big ones, right? So now and why? Well, because it turns out that copper is necessary for a lot of the key enzymes.

That CFCs require, right? So it activates, I mean all, all the ones you've heard of, A TKE, you know, E-R-K-A-K-T activates MAPK, you've heard of that Ma MA kinase. It activates PI three K is [01:16:00] necessary. Do you realize, and PK one and the EEG f. Epidermal growth factor, MAP kinase, MIC, those couldn't work without copper.

So those pathways that are, are all require copper. So the answer to your question, is it stay away from it? I'd say, now definitely don't take extra. Now it also promotes HIF1 alpha, remember that's how we heal wounds, but that's how you, that's what, and the way we heal wounds is by simulating tissue growth and tissue Increased blood vessels, which is what you don't want to happen to a tumor, which is why we have a group of dioxygenase enzymes that require ascorbate to stop it.

So that turns off HIF 1 alpha. Well, copper turns it back on. Now, we all know that there's something called necrosis where a cell is killed and it just, it dies. And it spills out and gets, you know, all of its enzymes and stuff come out. It can cause a [01:17:00] problem. In fact, that's what tumor necrosis syndrome is, is when the cell is dying too quickly and I mean, the CFCs are dying too quickly with the tumor and it's spilling out all of its enzymes and people are getting sick.

Tumor necrosis. The other way of killing is of cells dying is through apoptosis. That's where it recycles itself. And then not long ago, we learned about a new way of doing, it's called spheroptosis where iron is involved that actually stimulates the whole process of apoptosis, but it's iron. So it's called spheroptosis.

And now we know there's something they called a coup. Proto co Coup Proptosis Coup Pro is the name for iodine. Right? So I I mean for for copper. So copper is really Cupra, right? So we have coup prick and Cora coup prick is the three plus, just like ferric is three plus for ferric iron ferric and ferus is the two plus.

So we have coup prick and coup press. Ferrous, ferrous is iron. So, both [01:18:00] iron and copper are both involved in because they have that three plus and two plus valence condition. That, and, and, and, and it's the transition between those two that generates all sorts of free radicals and stuff, that's why they're both able to independently kill cells.

So one's called cuproptosis. The other one's called ferroptosis, and then we have apoptosis, and then we have We have, what do you call it? Necrosis, right? Right, right.

And, the way the cuproctosis works is very interesting. It goes right into where the cell's making energy through the the the Krebs cycle. It goes right in there and blocks it. Messes it up. Right? Okay. Now, the way, now, on the other hand, it's now being used to help eliminate CFCs. Copper 2. Because, the way it gets into cells is it forms what's called an ionosphere.

An ionosphere is a tunnel in a cell membrane, which is basically lipid [01:19:00] soluble, meaning something that's water soluble cannot get through. So it forms this opening and it can get through, like, like a, like the Panama Canal or something.

And so, the, the, they're using, what they're doing is they're, they're using these, the copper and its ionosphere to go in Destroy tumors, and it's becoming a big deal. Now, one of the things that's, that does this is very interesting. Disulfiram, I think it's called. I think that's, anyway, it's the drug that you take sulur.

Yeah. If you're an alcoholic and you take this drug and, because what it does is it blocks down what do you call it? It's called anabuse, right? Anti-abuse, but I think it was sulfa anabuse. Anyway it breaks down it, it, it, it blocks acid aldehyde, which is intermediate from being brought, broken down.

And [01:20:00] because it doesn't get broken down, if you're drinking alcohol, it doesn't even, you get, you feel terrible. You, you, you want to say, I'm not drinking that anymore, right? Well, it turns out that it also helps with those ionospores making those copper ionospores 125 to 500 milligrams a day. It's well tolerated.

If you don't drink, it's not a problem, right? It's not going to anyway,

they're using copper nanoparticles. Now, the only place I know to get copper nanoparticles is a place called Sovereign Silver. And that's, I mean, it's called natural immunogenics. Which has the best, the only colloidal silver you should ever get called Argentin 23.

They also now have been for a few years, been making nano copper. And we have to figure out is how are we going to get that combined with something to make the ionospores and just really go after it. And then we'll have our kill day. Whoever asked that question, then we'll have our kill day. All right.

So

and as I said, because it goes because the cover goes through the [01:21:00] mitochondria, it's going to get a CFCs that have a higher medical mitochondrial you know, functioning, you know, like melanomas and breasts and leukemias and glioblastomas and things like that, you know, now let's go to the next question because we are running out of time.

Okay. This is from Casey. I have late stage breast CFCs. I've had a mass for over a year. It was 10 by 10 by 3 for 8 months, but it's getting, it is getting smaller slowly. But 4 months ago,

it, it invaded the skin and has been pink and tender and thick on the top of the breast. Not red or dark colors and no ulcerations. The lymph on the left side are enlarged and can hurt. Arm is tender and puffy.

Chest wall is tight. Ribs and shoulders, bones are tender. I've not had a biopsy or any conventional treatment or surgery. CA 15 3 was 2, 000 three [01:22:00] weeks ago. I've done so many natural and alternative things over the past 12 months. I have ordered thioacetate alpha what? Niclosamide and hopefully Valastat too.

Doing coffee enemas and colonics. IV vitamin C, 50 to 100 grams. with ALA Orally.

Started almost all of your protocols recently. My question is, do you suggest that I keep at all this for a few months,

or should I be reaching for something more intense already? Such as low, low, IPT, low, you know, low dose chemo, or other IBs like B17 and DMSO?

Do you know if I can expect any physical symptom changes like less pain and the body starts to gain the upper hand? Or could I need blood work to [01:23:00] know where I stand? So,

Casey

all right. So you mentioned that you've done a lot of alternative therapies, and often, more than often, the majority of people that are doing a lot of different protocols are not doing them in their, sufficiently, like, not enough dosage or frequency. To no fault of their own, because their practitioners don't know and they don't, they don't know.

They just think, well, I want to give a good vitamin C. I want to give all these different things and they don't realize how to maximize each therapy. Be better to give three therapies than 12 as long as those three were maximized. So you were getting the results you wanted to. So that's the problem. So I wouldn't say I wouldn't conclude you should not conclude that I have done these therapies.

And therefore they don't work, because that's not the truth. Okay, [01:24:00] now,

the vitamin C, I imagine if you're doing the protocols you're doing must be sipping 7 to 7, or you're taking the sodium liposomal sodium ascorbate.

And you've ordered the thymus and alpha 1, excellent, okay, and I close the mine, right, because you're getting that, yeah. And hopefully you've got at least two others, like, Ivermectin and Phenbendazole or Mebendazole. So you have three

anti helminthics, anti worms. And you want to get one or two anti protozoals in there because they like protozoa is like, like, fatty tissue. So that's why they like breast and brains. Right? Toxoplasmosis. So, but you're doing, you're doing great. And you have, you take the ALA orally, that's great.

Now, I would recommend that you take the ALA every day, three times a day. 300, 400 milligrams. Thanks. and take DCA every day.

Start with 5mg per kilo and then for the total dose that you're going to divide up and then you can go up to 10. [01:25:00] See how high you can go? 15? You start getting numbness, you back down. You're going to be taking, with that, right? You all know that. You're going to be taking the Benzo Ben What's it called again?

It's Thiamine. Benzo Benoftamine? Benoftamine? I don't know. I just want regular names. Anyway. It's a

it's a

basically it's a lipid soluble vitamin B1, which is thiamine, which gets used up, so you want, so if you're taking that, B1, along with ALA, that's going to protect you from the potential Parasthesias from the DCA, but that for sure.

Now, as far as getting the methionine and keflin to, to, to affect the tumor microenvironment, that's a harder peptide to get. I can get it, here. And You know, I guess we're gonna have to just ship it out to people

or I can connect them with the [01:26:00] place I get it so you can go directly. It's not, I don't know. We have to figure that out.

So I'm hoping Casey that you've taken care of your mouth. You've gone to a biological dentist. You've done a three D code being CT and you're a hundred percent sure that you've taken care of all root canal, all, all capitations and You don't have gingivitis or periodontitis or anything like that.

You've done a thorough disc cleanse. Because whenever things are growing, we know one of two things is happening, or both. We haven't got all the toxicities. And number two, the immune system is being inactivated by the tumor microbe. So we're working on that with the TA1. And the other thing we're going to do is, we're going to, five times a day for two minutes, we're going to stop thinking by listening to our breaths, very deeply, intimately.

And with a hundred percent two minutes, but

we need the methionine and keflin. We need the thymus and alpha one. And you know, the other ones are nice too, but the other one peptides, if you can get GHK and epitalin. But it's most important [01:27:00] is, is the MED 5 and the TA1. Now the fact that yours is growing, so there's that. So I think your tumor microenvironment is definitely a problem.

It's inactivating your immune cells. The thymus, I don't know how old you are, but it doesn't matter because you're sick, so you're probably not making enough of the amino acid, the peptide from your thymus gland to activate your T cells. Okay, so you need that. You need that. You need that. And you've done a cleanse.

One's not enough. You gotta keep cleansing. Colon. Lymphatic work. Going to bed early. Having, I hope you have healthy relationships. And you're eating human food.

Do you know if I can expect any physical symptom changes, like less pain? Yeah, right, once you get, yeah, absolutely, because the pain is coming from, you know, pressure, compression of the the, the tumor on nearby structures, you know. But, yeah, that's gotta happen. So, [01:28:00] again, you gotta be eating soy. Remember, soy is going to stimulate beta receptors.

So, there's estrogen involved in this. It's gonna Even if there's not, you still want to shrink it. And that's what it does. Beta soy, miso, tofu, edamame, tempeh, natto.

Okay. Every day, flax, three tablespoons of flax, ground up flax seeds in your smoothie. Open up milk and. Two tablespoons two handfuls of broccoli sprouts in a nut milk. But whatever you want, strawberries or pineapple, whatever you want to take it, make it delicious. And that, and you're going to be doing chia seeds, six tablespoons a day, because those two things there together are going to give you enough healthy fats to make your new membrane, your, the membranes of your new cells able to hold 70 millivolts, which is what you need to kill CFCs.

But so the vitamin C I wouldn't know I would not stop doing that but you got it [01:29:00] no, you've got to redo your cleansing you got to cleanse again and Adding a b17 IV is I Be better to maximize vitamin C Make sure you got enough vitamin D that your blood levels 100 make sure you got enough vitamin a that your blood level is Upper than the subnormal in the upper 90s Make sure that you're doing you're taking a vitamin C in either liposomal sodium ascorbate or 777 and or both combination so that you're fasting ascorbate level is at least 50 millimoles per liter 50 at least 50.

Okay, then your IVs vitamin C's will really work

I hope you have a good colon hydrotherapist. You're good, you're cleaning that out.

Melatonin at night, the iodine, you're taking care of your thyroid, your adrenals. You got to get that all balanced. Very, very important. Okay, we've talked about that. And I'm assuming you've heard, you've been [01:30:00] listening and you know that. Alright, so yeah, you can expect, we gotta just get, but I hope you've done all the, the mouth and everything.

Now we just gotta get that tumor microchip. By the way, hyperthermia, whole body hyperthermia for sustained several hours is going to change the tumor microchip.

Alright, now, and Wendy. Oncologist wishes to prescribe stage 4 breast CFT positive receptor for her 2. Positive receptor for her 2. Stage 4. Her two positives. Fomara. She wants to prescribe Fomara. To block gastric. Asked her if it worked and she replied that she didn't know.

She would follow it up with Esqually, which has heart side effects, so it has to be monitored every two weeks. I refused both before. Am I correct in my judgment? Yes. Yes. Now, you are correct. So you're not Estrogen Receptor Positive, you're just HER2, and she wants to give you [01:31:00] Fomara, which is an an aromatase inhibitor to block Estrogen.

Okay, so, I'm not sure what she's thinking there. I agree with you. I would have asked her, does it work? And she said she didn't know. At least she's honest. When you say Esqually do you mean Kisscallie?

Esqually. I think you mean Kisscallie. I don't know. But you know, Kisscallie is that, it's given to women. With aromatase inhibitors, right? Because it blocks the the cycline dependent kinases. And 6, right? Right? CDK, it blocks them. And together, that stops the cell division. And then if you stop, and then if you decrease the estrogen.

So that's their whole idea. I think that's what you mean. The only problem is, Kiskalin is used with HER2 negative, not HER2 positive.

Oh, but your 4 rest, right? Positive receptor, [01:32:00] HER2 negative. Okay, I'm sorry. I read, I misread that. Okay. You are HER2 negative and your estrogen receptor positive. So that's why she wants to do it tomorrow. And the kiss colleague, I think, which is standard. It's not that she wants to do it. That's all. She doesn't know anything else.

She's not that smart. So I mean, you know, there's other

areas, like aromatics, right? Aromatics. But it doesn't matter. You can do that for a while. However,

understand that there are other ways of dealing with it. That is soy. Soy, soy, soy, soy. Flax. Flax, flax, flax. The way I said it. Three tablespoons a day. Ground, fresh flax. Miso. Eat a bunch of miso. Get natto. Learn how to love natto. Eat natto a few times. Tofu. Miso. Get a lot of soy. And the mame. green tea.

All these things are going to not only stimulate the beta, but also block the alpha. So it's very [01:33:00] good. Now the iodine, very important. You really should be putting iodine on your breast. I don't know. I, if I were working with you, I would get a lymphocyte subset. I would also get a

a urine metabolite, hormone urine metabolites to see how you're metabolizing it, but make sure you're getting lots of cruciferous vegetables. So when you make that flaxseed smoothie, you're going to put in two handfuls of broccoli sprouts, right, with a nut milk and then whatever, strawberries, whatever you want, peaches, whatever.

Make it delicious. That you need. Those are magic, magic, magic. Alright. I'm sorry, but we're over now. Okay. So anyway, I talked too much today, but couldn't help it. I mean, I talked too much about stuff. You didn't ask, but, but you needed to know it anyway, just like I needed to hear it myself. Goodbye. Sawadee kap. Aloha. Namaste. Namaskar. And I'll see you next week.

Thank you [01:34:00] for coming. Bye bye.

There are we, there we go.

People on this episode