
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
The Dr. Lodi Podcast empowers people to think for themselves and teaches people how to achieve optimal health, free from cancer and all other chronic conditions. Dr. Lodi shares evidence-based information and reveals the truth about cancer, health, and healing. As a medical doctor, clinical psychologist, nutritionist, historian, philosopher, and the pioneer of what has now become the definitive route for those unsatisfied with the modern cancer treatment system, Dr. Lodi will deliver information that you’ve never heard before. Tune in and discover what a True Second Opinion really means, how to Stop Making Cancer, why there is no such thing as “diseases,” and what you are TRULY capable of achieving in your life.
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
Episode 120 - Dr. Lodi Live 10.27.24
This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on October 27th, 2024.
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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:
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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...
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[00:00:00] Anyway, I'm back here. It's I think I'm alive here on Sunday night. Monday morning. So just, I'm back on. Okay. So here's some news that I was predicting for the last few weeks. TikTok has finally banned me 100 percent forever because I talk about things like bee pollen and apropolis and what else was I talking about?
Parasite cleansing. And so they just didn't like that. They'd rather me talk about, you know, I don't know, trans something and things like that, I guess. So back on now. So anyway, here I am and no TikTok. So anybody, if you know anybody, I mean, if it, I don't know, I hope TikTok people are clever enough to figure out to get over here onto Instagram or YouTube or Rumble or whatever.
Anyway, incredible, incredible. So, anyway, so anyway, I got, and I got a new camera. So [00:01:00] someday how could I get banned from TikTok? What did I say? Did I say anything really controversial? Anybody remember anything controversial last week? I don't. Anyway. I'm back on Facebook. Back on now. Okay, good.
Alright, good morning everyone. Sawadee krap.
Anyway, that kind of, it's kind of weird for me to to go through that stuff.
Alright, so I, I got no, I got no warnings from TikTok. Except that So, here we are. I know, I know, I know a lot of you out there don't, don't like TikTok and, you know, I never liked it, I don't like, I don't, I don't use any of the social media personally, so to me, you know, it didn't matter but, they seem to be the most, concerned about what I'm saying, thank God.
It's pretty amazing. Anyway, let's not dwell on that anymore. I want to keep this going. I want to make this
bring this over here
[00:02:00] Okay. Yeah, isn't that weird tik tok? Oh my god. So Are we okay here on instagram? It's okay. So it made imagine instagram facebook are kind of cool
What can I say? But there was a lot of people there there was like 115 000 people who probably don't know that It didn't happen because they're, what's the word? Scrolling. So, anyway, sweaty cap again. Let's get, let's get into it. It's October 27th for you guys or me? Ah, it's 28th for me, 27th for you.
Isn't that weird? What's that remind us of? That reminds us of the fact that all of the stuff we have about dates and clocks is made up. Right? Because what time is it for you guys over there? Really? If you're in New York and Florida and you're in Chicago and you're in Buenos Aires, it's now time, right?
Now. Clocks do different things. They play games, calendars, keep going, but it's always now. And as far as I know, it's [00:03:00] always been now. So, the whole clock thing, all that time is made up. That's why I have a hard time with it. I have a hard time with fantasy. So anyway, so it. If you're looking to stream or, or, or join me at all, it's on, as you know, on X or Twitter, it used to be Twitter.
I, I, I think we've all gotten used to the word X or the designation X now. Anyway, so, that's at, at DR Thomas Lodi, MD for Mythology Doctor. And then all the rest, Facebook and Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn. Thanks again. It's all D. R. Thomas Lodi. Okay, that's it. Now I wanted to talk about the, just for a moment, the the groups.
I don't know how many of you have really joined up because I haven't, I don't, I don't know that kind of stuff. So, but anyway, so if you haven't, it's a good idea because I put, I'm, I'm actually doing a lot on those. I'm like twice a week I'm doing you know, PowerPoint presentations about something relevant to that group.
So the three groups [00:04:00] are health and healing, which is just about health and healing. It's just about eating, fasting cleansing, movement relationships spirituality, everything for what? For general health. What is general health? What is health? Health is optimal functioning of the organism. How does an organism function optimally when all of its biological needs are being met?
then it can function optimally. But for us humans, we're just a little more complicated. We've got to have a situation where our biological needs are being satisfied and our psychological needs are being satisfied and our spiritual needs are being satisfied. And when all of that happens, then we function optimally.
And that is what we call health. Okay. Now, so in that group, we're going to talk about all that. And the other group is on parasites, which is one of the reasons TikTok got rid of me, because I, Had the audacity to offer some therapies for it. Can you imagine? Then I really went over the, I went over the, way over the deep end.
I started talking about bee pollen. I know. I, I, it [00:05:00] was, it was you know, I'm really walking the line there, but I did it and they got rid of me. So, but the parasite group, so we're, what we're doing was we're talking about all things related to parasites and then the CFC group, which is what everyone knows what CFCs are, right?
I hope you do. Yeah. Okay. So CFCs are chronically fermenting cells. And what are those? That's what Rockefellers call them. You got it. Sagittarius or Leo. Some of them call it cancer. Some of them call it Gemini, but we call it chronically fermenting cells because we know that's what it is. That's what they are.
And we know that they're chronically fermenting for a reason, right? And so now that we know the reason we can, we can have a strategy to undo it. That's why we use CFCs. It's informational. It allows us to figure out where we are and where we want to get to, right? Okay, cool. Now like last week we talked about on the health and healing group.
We said, what is the best detox detox? What is the best detox? And how often should I do it? Blah, blah, blah, blah. And then on the, on the CFC group, we talked about CFC stem cells, which is pretty. Amazing, because you [00:06:00] all know, probably know, that it's the stem cells that can metastasize, right? Mature cells can't.
So, which is very interesting, since 0. 01 percent of a tumor, 0. 01 percent is our stem cells. Up to, you know, some of them it might go up to 1%. And maximum might be 2 percent at most, but it's usually around 0. 1. It would be average 0. 1%, which means that the bulk of the tumor is non invasive. It won't metastasize and the relevance, I think for, for a lot of what we do is that you know, there's a lot of talk now about liquid biopsies, right?
In other words, they take your blood, they look at the circulating tumor cells, and then they do all, they make an evaluation of them. They see what they're sensitive to and they, and they, and they, they come out with therapeutic options, right? Here's the problem. If only 0. 1 percent of them are capable of metastasis, then all the rest, we [00:07:00] have a 99.
9 percent chance of getting a cell on getting cells when we look at the circulating tumor cells that are irrelevant, that won't metastasize. And so to do any kind of evaluation and then therapeutic treatment, Suggestions based on that is like, maybe, maybe not. Right. So, those are all important things to do.
So anyway, we talked about stem cells last week. So, and this week on the parasite group, we're going to be talking about where can I get the medications parasites and on the CFC group, we're going to talk about. What about the repurposed medications? You all know about that. Metformin Atravastin, Doxycycline, Mebendazole.
Those are like the four main ones. Jane McClellan in How to Starve Cancer came up with that those four. She did a lot of really important research. And then the CARE Oncology Group in England did, does basically the same thing. And what they'll do is they'll work with you where, wherever you are and they'll, and they're going to send you these medications [00:08:00] as
ancillary. Whereas the, they're still saying that the main treatment is standard chemo radiation surgery. But Jane MacFarlane knows that, that's not cool. So, Anyway, you guys hey, thank you for being here. I'm just,
it's a very good thing. I'm under the belief that CFCs and parasites and fungus are very much related. You know, this is an this is concept here is, I wish we had, we should do a webinar on that. And basically what we're talking about now is polymorphism versus monomorphism. Morph means,
right, the morph,
Okay, we're back on. So morphology is the shape of something, right? And you, you know, there's in the, in the, in the in the vernacular of English we'll use such terms as, instead of using it as a noun, morphology, we say it morphed, it morphed into this, morphed under the, into that. Okay, so it [00:09:00] turns out that what people that look at the poly the poly The polymorphic, whatever concept is that there's only one organism, and depending on who you, what group you're working with, some call it a protid, or whatever, but it's a fundamental organism.
That changes what it, it's morphology changes depending on the environment, right? So one environment, it might be a bacteria and another environment. It might be, it might be a fungus and another environment. It might be an archaea. So there's, there's all sorts of microorganisms. Okay. And they kind of shape and they become what they need to become.
Instead of thinking that there are funguses and. Bacteria and what they call viruses there is what they're saying is they're all just different manifestations of an underlying fundamental thing that changes its morphology to accommodate and adapt to its environment, which is what everything does anyway.
Right. So, Now, the monomorphism, [00:10:00] which won out, just like the germ theory, what the monomorphists say is that there's only one shape. You have this one shape throughout your entire life cycle. Well, we know that's not true, right, when we just look at a a caterpillar becoming a butterfly. So we know that in there, they're, and they're in the adult stages.
And then we all know, if we, if we look at us embryologically, we see that when we're first there we kind of look like a fish. In fact, we even have gills. And then it's changing and, you know, we change and we go through all this. And we find it finally turns into a human, but it goes through all these stages, right?
And that's called uh,
I know, I know a lot of people haven't aware of this, but, but ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny and what that phrase means. Phylogeny is the phylum, right? So, phylum are large categories of when you categorize biological organisms, right? The really broad categories are plants, animals like that, right?
So the phylum So as the phylum, you know, it, it might have [00:11:00] fish, amphibians, reptiles, and then mammals. So if you look at us as we're developing in the embryo, we go through all those stages. So that's antogen, it recapitulates repeats antigen, recapitulates phylogeny. In other words, the, the phylum going from fish.
And anyway, that's what that means. So, so the, so this point here is that Cher, is the name Cher, Cher is saying that they're all the same. Now the only one is, is, is that the parasites. The parasites are the only, only organisms that we've able, we've been able to apply Cox postulates to. That is, you can take it here from someone who's not well, and put it into someone who is well, and they're going to get the same condition.
And you can take out Like secretions or whatever, find it and you'll find out it's the same organism. So we've never been able to do that with bacteria or, or anything else. Certainly not viruses, whatever they call, call viruses. Never been able to do that in 1918 when they had the what they call the Spanish flu or the, [00:12:00] what else they call it, I guess that was it.
The they've had a thousand people, they took out their secretions from their nose. They took out their snot, put it into a thousand people. Who were well health healthy and not one of them got sick and then they took out their sputum Not one of them got sick. They even used blood not one of them got sick So they were unable to show that this whatever they think is there is not an infectious agent Okay, they could never prove it and they never have all right.
So anyway, so there you go the germ theory which became a Biblical it's our bible. It's our it's our final foundation and it's questionable, pasteur he's he admitted He goes. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I guess I contaminated all all the all my experiments. Yeah, we never able to prove it You know and we'll show them A guy that was hanging out with him during those days used to tell Pasteur, look, it's not the germ, it's the milieu.
And it's right. So I'm going to check out this example. Suppose you have some incredibly delicious heirloom tomato seeds, right? [00:13:00] Generation after generation. Really delicious tomatoes. And you go plant it in the Sonoran Desert outside of Arizona, Phoenix. or the Saharan desert, you won't have tomatoes. You won't be eating tomatoes.
You're gonna have to get used to life without tomatoes. Why? Because the soil won't allow it. How important is the soil? Oh, by the way, let's take that home to us. We are gardeners and we have a garden, right? We prepare the soil. So, and we're going to have a harvest, whether we like it or not, whether we are in charge of what gets planted in there or we just let things fall into us, they're going to grow.
So when we have a harvest of any kind, whether it be insulin resistance or whether it be chest pain, any kind of harvest out of our soil, We have to understand has been attended to. It's been allowed to happen. Okay, this is really good because most of us are under the impression that someone else has got to fix this.
I don't [00:14:00] feel good doc. Can you fix me? Okay, I'll fix you. Yeah, I'm gonna give you this poison. But anyway we have to understand that it doesn't work that way. It's whatever we grow or don't grow. So we've got to pay attention to what seeds we're putting in there. And then we've got to pay attention to the soil and the soil is made up of what, what we eat, drink, what comes into our skin, what we breathe, all that stuff is contributes to our soil and our psychological state, right?
If I'm, if we're stressed all the time, that those the energy from that actually changes the environment as well. So it's, it's, there's a, There's, there's energetic changes to that soil. It can change the soil stress and all that as well as physical. So anyway, so. The great news is that even you go to a doctor, the best doctor, the top 100, this guy, this lady is the number one.
They can't change that. Only you can. Only you can. Which means what? It's your journey. It's not their journey. They're just guides. They might say, oh, go left here, go right there, but you [00:15:00] gotta walk it. Okay, that's really important. Alright? So, we gotta stop thinking, which we all do. That I need treatment.
I need to be fixed because that that's not even real. Okay, so I don't know how I got to that from that. But you understand what I'm talking about, right? So, and funguses, etc. Who, who, who prove that there was a lot of guys that were in the early days that actually Would have something become fungal or bacterial depending on the environment.
This is easily been Improving multiple multiple times. All right. Okay. So now where are we? Yeah, so not a lot of people today anyway, let's get in
Okay. Okay. Can't do anything. Just wondering how I can look more. I can't. Ah, okay. So,
that's what we're doing this this week. Those are the two topics. Remember, where can I get medications for parasites? And the second, and the CFC group, which will be on Thursday is what about the repurposed medications? And those are pretty important to talk about. Okay. Let's get into the [00:16:00] questions.
And I got to move this over here. Every time
I got an idea. Okay. Let me put that here.
Yeah. Is that okay? Does that work? Sort of. Okay. All right. Cool. All right. So the first question is from Trevor. And Trevor's the topic is colonoscopies and are they helpful? Well, all right. So,
My
opinion is that they're not helpful at all. And I, and I say that because what are you going to do with the results? You all know what a colonoscopy is, right? They give you some stuff to clean out your bowels. You drink it the night before and you have, it cleans out your bowels. Then you go in and the guy puts a tube, a, a, a fiber optic scope.
Three or into your rectum and goes up through into your colon and it's, it's got a camera on the end of it and they're looking at it. And what are they looking for? They're looking for anomalies, [00:17:00] things that are, shouldn't be there. And what they usually find is polyps. Polyps are little outgrows and they'll find a polyp and they'll biopsy it.
Why will they biopsy? Because polyps are kind of the way in which CFCs in the colon start to form. They start, they start out as polyps, right? And and just to get back into nomenclature it's coming out of the glands of the of the colon. So it's, therefore it's called an adenocarcinoma. And if it comes out of the glands of the pancreas, it's called an adenocarcinoma.
And the glands of the breast, it's called adenocarcinoma. And the glands of the lung, adenocarcinoma. So they're all, so in other words, that's just telling you that it's what, what kind of cell, the gland cell, rather than a surface cell, like a squamous cell, it's a gland cell. That's all it's telling you.
Anyway, so in the colon they start to form as polyps and then they biopsy it and they they do a quick look at it And they go that's fine but if it's not fine, then they [00:18:00] I mean if it's got the characteristics of a malignancy then they have that information Right, and i'm talking about just polyps because it's a tumor obviously it's a tumor but if it's polyps, so the information is this that this polyp is now becoming malignant.
So, what does that mean? That means that this group of cells is fermenting It's fermenting because it can't it doesn't have access to its mitochondrial energy production. It's fermenting Okay, these and that's what that means, right? and so obviously obviously if you saw here's an example suppose you had ants crawling in your house.
Okay Like you woke up in the morning and there's like army ants going in their house, right? Well, you can get like some sort of like sprays and poisons just start firing them but if you know insects, especially ants, they're gonna just get their way in anyway, the probably the most effective and Yeah, effective way to do it is to figure out where they're going What are they [00:19:00] eating because they're there to eat everything that is going somewhere is going on their way to eat, right?
Even us, right? And that we're always going to eat right and it's interesting in in thailand when you when you what a greeting is Have you you know, instead of saying hi you say have you eaten yet? Or yeah, that's pretty much have you eaten yet? And there's three answers i've eaten i'm gonna eat and i'm eating i'm gonna eat and what was the third one?
King cow Young lady gene. Yeah, I guess that's it. So those are the answers that that's how you answer people But I think what we've learned what does everybody think about this because your mother your family You Wives like to do this with their husbands and children, and that is make sure we're fed.
And so it's, it's, it's, when you talk about it, if you ask someone if they've eaten yet, it's, it's a demonstration of caring, you know, that's how it's viewed. You're demonstrating that you care. About the [00:20:00] person. That's just because our cultures, you know, so anyway Trevor Are they helpful but here's the thing if you find out you've got some chronically fermenting cells down there that okay So that maybe that's helpful.
I mean that is helpful because now you're going to have to be really serious about whatever you're doing But unfortunately a lot of people are then going to submit themselves to the system which is going to
surgery do surgery chemotherapy And perhaps radiation and then what they call immunotherapy. So that's what they're going to do. And what we're finding is that a lot of people are actually
dying from that. That's what they're dying from. Okay. It's pretty crazy. So anyway
I should have a way of doing this. I can't. So, Trevor, I don't think it's, I think it's only helpful if you are not going to go get poisoned. If you, if you're going to say, okay, well now I need to get to a healing center where I can begin my [00:21:00] journey back to hell. Right? Alright? We want to get away from the military perspective.
I'm going to get rid of, I'm going to kill this guy, I'm going to No, no, because that, what you, it's not, it's actually, it's a, it's a, it's part of the harvest. Like,
knowingly poison yourself, right?
Some people do. Okay, so back here. Now, so that's what I'm saying, Trevor. I would not say that it's helpful other than that.
But it is very precise. I mean, I mean, it's probably one of the best ways to go in and see if you've got something. But the thing is, what are you going to do with the information? That's always the question, right? In fact, let's, let's extrapolate here. If you're going to get a test, like, your doctor recommends a test.
The question should always be, What are the possibilities that we're going that, that this test is going to alert us to, and what will we do? And if, if, if, if, if [00:22:00] that, if finding out whatever the answer is that you're, they're looking for is not gonna change what you're doing, then it's, there's no sense in doing it.
It's really just the academic. All right, so um, um always ask that question. Okay, we want to do this test. Okay, but then okay great Okay, you can do this test. What what what for what what are we going to do with it? Now the next question is by trevor again iver meckton and fenbendis all protocol. Okay, so trevor That is everywhere the the the question you're asking.
It's on my My website, drthomaslodey. com, there's a a webinar called Parasites and I had to use that word. Cancer it hurts any parasites can cancer but on that website it I mean on that that that that webinar goes through What they are what who are these parasites? What are they and then what are the different protocols we can use and so and also you don't want to just There's no like [00:23:00] first of all if you're going to take a medicaid here This is going back to what I was just talking about if you're going to take a medication Which ivermectin and benazol are medications.
So we're going to take them. Why? Okay. What is our purpose? You Okay. So, okay. Well, the kill parasites. Okay. So what does ivermectin and fenbendazole, these, these, these get rid of what kind of parasites? Worms. So, all the worms will not, some are better, you know, like prasequanto is, you know, so really, but, but ivermectin and fenbendazole or its cousin mebendazole or albendazole are all are pretty standard and they should be part of the, of the foundational program.
However. You need other ones. So you can't just do this. There's no, there's no doing that and there's no specific protocol of just those two. I would never recommend people say just listen, by the way, I got enough people here. Okay. You're all listening. Great. Okay. [00:24:00] There's a website out there that's got a video of me talking about parasites and they're saying Dr.
Lodi's protocol and they're selling stuff. I don't even, I never met them. I don't know who they are. So I hope that the implication is not that I've, I'm involved with that. I don't even know the name of the website. I'll find out, but whatever, by the way, the only thing that will ever be me. Is this stuff right if there's if you're getting me from a somewhere another source, then it's not me because I would have told you I would tell you right so Anyway, I don't know how I don't know how were they had they have such large Gonads now that's not That's non binary.
Gonads. It covers everybody. I don't know where they got such large gonads to do such things. Such arrogance. Such absurd arrogance. [00:25:00] Ahem. So the ivermectin prints up and then does all protocol. Well, it depends. You know. Ivermectin is pretty much we want those two or Mibendazole instead of Fembenazole as a part of the foundational program. But you've got to have more. You can't just have those two. But, you know, most people are doing like 12 milligrams of Ivermectin three times a day. Fembendazole, they're doing 22 milligrams three times a day.
But then the question is, Is that enough? Is that adequate? So when you start looking into the, to the research of this, you'll find out that, like, for example Niclosamide, Mabendazole, these medications, and Ivermectin, are being used alone in much higher doses for CFCs, lung CFCs, ovarian CFCs, so they've got multiple purposes, so if you're going to take this kind of stuff, which is a medication, you really should, you've got to understand it more, so it's important to be with a physician.[00:26:00]
practitioner who understands this stuff so they can help guide you. Don't just, I mean, just doing it, you can just do it if you want. Of course, it's still free world. I hope for a while in some places. But you know, realize that all of these medications need to get cleared. detoxified by our liver. So the more you're taking of them, which you need to do a lot of them at the same time the more burden you're going to put on your liver.
So you need to give it a break. So we do three weeks on, one week off. You can do four weeks on, one week off. You know, there's different regimens. And also you want to be taking supplements, botanical substances that will actually support the liver in healing. Such as alpha lipoic acid and anything from milk thistle, this plant, the plant milk thistle, which is some of the, the Ingredients in there are Silymarin, and then out of Silymarin they get Silybinum.
But anyway, they're all doing pretty much the same thing. They're stimulating the liver to grow and to regenerate. So it's important to be taking these, along with the B Complex when you're taking the [00:27:00] alpha lipoic acid. But those will help regenerate the liver, so it's important to take those. And then remember, it's always good, you need a week off, or whatever it is, you could be doing six weeks on and or something.
You know, n is sharing. The topi So my husband has a typic that started with slurred tremors. The tremors are
And his tongue has dyskinesia. Dyskinesia means kinesia is a muscle. That's a movement of muscle. Dys means not working right. So like if you had a dyskinesia of your arm, right? And you went to pick up something. So the tongue, so he's probably having slurred speech and stuff. He has no hand tremors, which you can have.
And Parkinson's can have no hand tremors, although that's a pretty path in the morning. [00:28:00] Most people feel it. You know, look for that, right? And that's a tremor at rest. It's not a tremor. So, with Parkinson's, someone, if they're going to point to something, they won't have a tremor. But when it rests, they have a tremor.
And then there's different kinds of tremor. Some people some conditions, neurological conditions, they have tremor with movement. Like cerebellar, cerebellar problems. You know, if you, that's why, during a physical exam, I don't know if you ever remember a doctor telling you to you know, touch your nose, touch his finger, touch your nose, touch his finger, you know, like that.
And the reason you're doing that is to see if you're going, because if you're doing that, we're going to think about your cerebellum as having problems. Anyway
so, he has been prescribed carbidopa and levodopa, but told he burns through it very quickly, and the neurologist is recommending deep brain stimulation. He's very strong. He works outside, but he gets no relief from facial tremors. He chews gum to help control mouth and tongue. [00:29:00] He is able to eat and swallow, but things are difficult.
He's lost a lot of weight. There's also a new treatment waiting for FDA approval that is in the, in a patch form and has a pump that releases low doses of carbidopa levodopa continuously. So it's not a new treatment, it's a new modality of administration. So we are drinking green smoothies, we are weaning him off of sleeping depression pills, and he takes high doses of melatonin and Cezanne to sleep at night.
Because that's the only time he gets rest from his facial treatment. I feel like there's more we could do. You There's more you can do on one side, unless you can do it on the other side. So, First of all I I I wanna Excuse me, I I gotta put the air conditioner on. It's too hot. Too hot.
Alright, there we go. It's gonna be noisy, but Otherwise I can't think if it gets too hot. So,
hey guy, I'm over here.
Hello? What's [00:30:00] going on with this camera?
Oh, there we go, okay. Okay, this goes right into a very important understanding about what they're calling diagnoses, okay? Remember, diagnosis is a name. So, for example, and so we assume if we get told we have Alzheimer's, if we get told we have diabetes, if we get told we have CFCs, it's as if it's true.
It's true. Well, especially with neurological conditions,
they are so blurred. And I'm gonna give you an example. When I was still practicing in New York, there was a, a woman, she was a CP, a very bright woman, and she got the flu shot every year. And one year she got the flu shot and she started
and she couldn't stop, you know, she was talking. So she had a neurological condition. And it was just not like, I think within the same day or. [00:31:00] 24 hours of the shot. So she you know, came to see me in New York. And oh, it had taken like a six months or so to, to resolve. They finally resolved. So she came to me afterwards because the next year she got another flu shot.
At this time it was permanent. She couldn't, couldn't stop. So she had gone to different neurologists all over New York city, you know, Lenox Hill New York hospital. I mean, all, all the time. Great hospitals. and Presbyterian Columbia, you know, and they all had different ideas. Some were saying that, ah, it could be
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which is Lou Gehrig's. It could be Parkinson's. So in other words, there's a blur there. Why is there a blur? Because there's no thing called Parkinson's. There's no thing called ALS. There's no thing called Alzheimer's. It's a cluster of symptoms. So what is a symptom? A symptom is something that you [00:32:00] subjectively experience, like already does.
pain, headache, itching. That's, those are symptoms. Then when we talk about signs, signs are something that your caregiver, clinician, should observe. They observe your blood pressures. They observe that you walk kind of like this. They observe that you're slurred speech. They observe blood test is an observation.
Okay, so there are, there are signs. and symptoms. Symptoms are subjective. Okay. So now, so that's, they're subjective, right? Because if I tell you I have pain you're going to, and this person has pain. Is it the same? Well, that's why we have a scale on one to 10. What would you say? 10 being the worst one being none.
Where do you fall? And people will always, you know, I'm six, I'm an eight, I'm a nine, you know, whatever it is. So that we try to quantify that symptom, but it's really again, it's subjective. designation. [00:33:00] Right? Because whatever this person's experiencing and they say, I'm a six and this person says they're a six.
We're not, we don't know if that's the same. It's not the same as doing a blood test where I can see, okay, your hemoglobin is 12. Your hemoglobin is 12. Okay. So that's that. Okay. So now here's the interesting thing. When you look at the how do you diagnose Parkinson's, right? Okay. So, let me read to you here So the International Parkinson's and Movement Disorders Society The MDS developed the most current criteria for diagnosing parkinson disease disease as if it's
Okay. All right. So, so what they say is that here's the here's the criteria for diagnosing in other words putting the name on it Emphasizes the importance of a clinical diagnosis based on patients symptoms and medical history What does that tell you if they're making a diagnosis meaning they're saying you have this thing [00:34:00] And it's based on what you tell me you're experiencing
Or your medical history? Well, you know, at 12 years old I had this and, and then I had so your history is what you're telling me and the symptoms. That's the most, I mean, there's nothing physical. Well, yeah, I mean they're either, they're physical things. 'cause the physical parts that are, that, that, that, that, that, that identify Parkinson's are, you know, are tremors, rigidity.
Rigidity. Right. They're rigid. And the Brady Kinesis, Brady means slow. Slow. Kinesis is movement. Muscle Brady Kinesis. Right. So they move slowly. And they also have a bradykinesis and what was that third one they have?
Oh, that's it. Okay. Sorry. So bradykinesis or dyskinesis, which means brady means slow and dyskinesis means like that, right? Those are, those are supposed to be the physical signs that help the doctor make the diagnosis, right? Okay. However, those same objective [00:35:00] findings are part of many others and also one other thing with with Parkinson's is just there's a cognitive decline thinking but this we see this with ALS we see this with Alzheimer's so all of these things so it depends on in other words there are no things that's all i'm trying to get to there are no things called Parkinson's there are no things called that we're just doing it Right and we're giving it so when that lady that I told you about the CPA when she went to Lenox Hill She had ALS when she went here.
They told her she had this. Okay, I'm trying to get that right So my point is with you Karen Sharon,
how do they know why are they saying he has that? All right. Why are they saying he has this? Why are they calling it that what did they base it off? All right now
Now the treatment for these things are exactly what you're talking about, right? Dopamine. So the whole idea of [00:36:00] the fundamental biology of Parkinson's is that there is a dopamine, neurotransmitters and it's kind of like what makes us feel good. And
it anyway, so it, what happens actually, there's a part of the brain called the substantia substantia nigra, which gives me what that means. You'll never, you'll never, you'll never get it. Ah, you got it. Okay. Substantia. Hmm. Substance. So it's a substance nigra, meaning black, dark. So it's a black, there's a, in other words, in the brain, there's this area that's,
okay anyway, what happens is that part of the brain for some reason gets damaged, and dopamine is not being produced, and the receptors for it are not quite strong enough anymore, and so that's what happens. So what they do is they give you L Dopa, which is a medication that turns into dopamine when you get it in your body.
So they're increasing dopamine, dopamine, dopamine, right? What happens, the body finally gets used to it. Like the body, if you're giving the body [00:37:00] anything, a lot of anything, it begins to, at first it works, and then it begins to not work. And the reason it does not work is because your body adapts to too much or whatever.
Because your body is on its own schedule. It's on a schedule of the schedule of divine necessity. It's doing what it has to do. Alright, and if it feels like there's, and if it senses there's too much of this, it just becomes resistant to it. Eating too much glucose, sugar, pasta, potato bread, but his body becomes insulin resistant.
So even though I'm eating it, it's not gonna get in there. The body is going to run the show, right? So that's what happens with with Parkinson's when people say that it's no longer working. So, what we need to find out is how did, what, wait a minute, what, what is, how did this happen? Michael J. Fox, how, how did this happen?
He was a young man. How does that? Well, there's a lot of evidence showing that it was pesticide related. Pesticides can
cause that, right? And they're not 100 percent of people. But why not 100 percent of the people that we see with Parkinson's? Because there is no such thing as Parkinson's. It's a cluster [00:38:00] of symptoms and perhaps associated with some objective finding. It's very, very vague, right? So I'm trying to get to you.
Okay. Now
Anyway
so these, these, these pesticides being exposed to them, and we know what they are, you know, Paraquat Lindane, if you don't know what Lindane is, Lindane is that medicine they give to people who, in the old days, I don't know if they still do who have scabies, right, and they put the Lindane on, and it kills them.
It's pretty powerful stuff, right? Lindane's nasty, right? And Retinol, and there's some other horrible, horrible pesticides that are actually associated with Developing all the symptoms and some of the science of what they call Parkinson's Which if you just move over the clusters a little bit augment them and you're gonna say, oh no, this is ALS Oh, this is MS multiple sclerosis.
Oh, this is so anyway, so let's find out why this is happening and pull the plug Let's stop it from happening because that would be the real way to work with any condition. [00:39:00] So they're not doing that So when we look at it deeply Parkinson's, what we find out is that the cells in the substantiation, nigra are no a no longer able to produce glutathione very well.
And glutathione, as everyone knows, is the main anti antioxidant neutralizer in our cells. All of our cells of our body, our liver has a lot because it's detoxing for the whole body. Right. Okay. So, it's a, it, it, it, so, so the glutathione is not being. Produce that much. So what I used to do when I was in New York is when I had more of an, you know, originally a more eclectic practice where I worked with a lot of different diagnoses and then I narrowed in on oncology because that's always been my, my, my interest.
And but I have people come in with Parkinson's and I'd give them intravenous glutathione and within two minutes, everything was okay. Well, what does glutathione, what does glutathione [00:40:00] do again? It detoxifies. Oh, so that means that whatever was causing that is toxic. Yes. Oh, okay. Because they're saying it's genetic predisposition.
Alright, so what, so what are the genes for Parkinson's, right? Are there genes for Parkinson's? And guess what the studies show us? Well, no. But, but, because we're gonna stick, you know, we're like loyal to the to our, to the, what is it? The homeschool, the home Home team. We're loyal to the home team, so we're gonna say that there's a, there's a, you know, maybe not quite understood exactly what, but there's a genetic predisposition.
And I don't know what that means, a genetic predisposition. That means your genes are predisposed to doing something? Well, that's true. Your genes, every gene, is predisposed to doing multiple things depending on the situation. So, what are we talking about here? They don't know what they're talking about and they got us believing that they do.
And so we're following them. So anyway that, [00:41:00] that, that's, that's really important to know. Okay. So now, where are we? Okay. I went, I wanted to, okay. So basically when I say it's Parkinson's or any of these neurological conditions are due to toxins. Now we are being inundated, right? I mean, we haven't done, we haven't found anybody in the last couple of years who doesn't have off the charts of Glyphosate.
We haven't found anybody that doesn't have off the charts of bisphenol A, which is from plastics. And then there are other, other chemicals from plastics, and there are other
toxins that are not from chemicals that are not from plastics. We're just full of it. We've got all these things. Well, they accumulate and they, when they get into the cell, the cell has to protect itself with glutathione. So, we were looking at, so what you might consider then, Sharon, is, finding a practitioner who knows and can help you with that and just, he's got to get IV IV [00:42:00] glutathione.
Problem with glutathione is you can't take it orally because remember it's going to get, it's, it's three, it's three amino acids put together. It's called tripeptide. We cannot absorb more than one amino acid. So it's got to be broken down into the three constituent amino acids and then they're absorbed separately.
And when they get into the blood, they go wherever they're going to go. There's no, there's no. Enzymes sitting at the entrance of the, of the blood vessel that's gonna reassemble it back into glutathione. That's the problem. So you're not gonna, you know, I could be taking glutathione, but it's, it's not gonna ever get to my cells.
So the one they take is Nyl cysteine. NAC Sistine is one of the amino acids that makes it glutathione. Right. So, and it's the rate limiting one. 'cause the other ones the glutamine and the glycine are the other two, mean less are in abundant. throughout the body. Easy. The cysteine, that one is hard to get.
So if you give intravenous NAC, that means the cells are going to get [00:43:00] that and that now they'll be able to make more glutathione. And indeed they do. And we use that in the ICU when we have people who come in with liver failure because they've overdosed on Tylenol, which is acetaminophen. And that it, it stimulates their liver to make a lot more glutathione and they, they recover from just giving them IV cysteine.
So it works. Orally, it's, it's harder to get those levels orally when you're taking NAC and, and a syl acetyl cysteine. Now remember all those, the an acetyl, that's just part of the name, but the fundamental thing is the cysteine. And the cysteine has these, they call sulf hydro groups and you don't need to know all that.
But that, that's where the and that's very, that's critical to glutathione doing its job. Alright, so. So we need to upregulate Sharon, we need to upregulate, we have to increase his ability, your husband's ability to produce glutathione in all of his cells, but especially in the substantia nigra, and number two, we need to stop whatever is poisoning it.
So does it [00:44:00] make sense? Makes sense. Are they doing that? No, they talk about it. No, so whatever this they're going to do. It's not that you think they're saying Look, we've been giving them dopamine and we've been giving them l dopa and all that and it's not working too much anymore Okay, we're going to come up with something.
We're going to give you a patch that gives you the same thing
It's not really they're not that clever. I wouldn't call them creative. So anyway by the way And this this is pretty interesting parkinson's increased from 1990 to 2015 118%. Now, if there's a genetic predisposition, how does that, how does that work? It doesn't make sense, you know, cause genes are passed on, right?
So whatever my grandfather had, I should be having, why should it be more people having it? So that's that number one. Number two, if it's increasing, why is it increasing? What happened between 1990 and 2015? Well, just look at several things. [00:45:00] Look at injection schedules for kids. Look at the amount of pollutants, chemicals in the air.
Atmosphere in the soil, in the food. Just look at that. It kind of correlates with this. But we're not going to talk about that because well, um, And in fact, in the last 50 years, it's just in the U. S. It's increased by 50%. So, what I would like to say is, There's been an effort to
disable us. And when I say effort, I mean effort. For quite a while now. And it's sort of become cumulative, okay, because we used to have this stuff we're getting exposed to, that stuff we're getting exposed to, but they kept adding on to it, so now we're, there's a ton of stuff being exposed to, so when they look at the, the chemicals in a, in a, in a lactating woman, a woman who's pregnant and has, is feeding her baby, I forget how many chemicals, 180, [00:46:00] there must be more now because I haven't looked at the data recently, but a lot in the amniotic fluid from where the baby's, where the, the, the embryo is The fetus is swimming and living full of these chemicals.
So we're born like toxic. So What are we gonna get? We're gonna get an accumulation of toxins more Rapidly and more profound. That's what we're saying. Okay. No. All right. I just want you to understand this
I don't know why I keep losing connection.
Huh? Okay
Okay, all right, so now
So here we have a thing that they're calling Parkinson's, which is kind of iffy, right? What is, does he have it? Does he not have it? Okay, so somehow they concluded he has it. There's no it, but he has it. And we're going to give medication to increase the amount of dopamine in his brain. And then it's effective.
Then we find out what? We find out why doesn't the brain have, why isn't it getting rid of those [00:47:00] toxins? And Yeah, and then can this one go down a little bit? Yeah. Oh, yeah, there we go. You know, when I walked up here and I came back. Oh, that's why, because it was following your face. But then it stuck, got stuck there.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay, I'll just make it not follow you, just keep it. Okay and we got a new camera, so hopefully it's working better. And uh, um, the what We know now it's, it's toxicity, it's toxins. We know that, right? We know that because if we increase glutathione, which cleans out toxins, you're back to normal.
Ah, so that, that, there is the answer, right? So how do we increase glutathione? One way is to take the NAC or keep taking it. But if you already have this condition, you, you can't well you can, if you were to get IV NAC, that would probably do it. However, remember what happened in the substantia nigra is it's no longer able to produce it.
So even if you give a lot of NAC, it's not going to do it. You've got to give the molecule glutathione and that's IV. The only other way to get it, what [00:48:00] I used to do in New York is I had a compounding pharmacy make rectal suppositories of glutathione because you could absorb that. And cause there's no digestive system to break it down into.
Separate amino acid. And that worked, but not as well, obviously, as I did. So, anyway, there are other ways of working with it. What we gotta do, just so your husband needs a thorough, thorough cleanse.
Thorough. Juice cleansing, colonics, lymphatics, you know, binders. You know, just needs to be clean. Quite a while. So you got to find someone who knows what they're doing. Do that. Okay. So yeah, and you don't want to keep because they're not what they're going to do. They're going to finally get the point where nothing he they do is going to work because they're just like, they're like at the end.
They're not looking at how the path got there. So that, so just believe me, they're not going to, they're going to get to a point where they can't get any success and they're going to say, I'm sorry, it's all we can do, which is what they'd like to [00:49:00] say.
Alright, now, here's one from Karen. Karen says, I'm a nurse for over 40 years, studying holistic for 20 years. I'm leaving the medical mafia for truth. Yay! I lost my mom 50 years ago to CFCs. My daughter, a single mother, has breast CFCs. She chooses holistic. Are there scholarships to Oasis? I am, I love that, mother MTHFR positive.
Is there a link to CFCs with MTHR? I'm a mithril artist. And could you explain if, if you are a fermenter, are you prone to CFCs? And how do you know? What is the treatment? Why do they tell us to eat fermented food?
Keep us in prayer as she has not spoke to me since her diagnosis a year ago. Huh? I'm not, you're not [00:50:00] speaking to your daughter? Okay. Okay. God will heal. I believe in miracles as a witness to God. Thank you. Okay. So. All right, so god already gave gave the miracle it's an amazing thing this body we're walking around is miraculous i'm telling you Cut it and it heals pretty miraculous And the immune system if you turn it on, I mean if you stop blocking the immune system, it'll clean up anything within a week All right, so we got the miracle, but we got to get out of the way of it happening.
That's what we got to do Okay, so, I don't know Okay, so
Okay, so, so, so, Karen regards to a scholarship at Oasis I, I'm not sure how that would work, and I usually don't deal with that part of a thing, so, I, I think it, in my understanding, because [00:51:00] I'm not good at this stuff, is that, you know, is there a way to lower the price, and I know we do that, so, but I don't know, so we'd have to get you in touch with the administrative people there.
Now, as far as the MTHFR, right, okay. I have a problem with that. I have a problem with that. That was discovered in the 80s and then they didn't really get around to it until late 90s. And then by, by the 2000s they felt, okay, yeah, there's definitely this, this, this. Oh, and it seems to be associated with all this stuff, heart condition, metabolic syndromes.
Okay. And so what it is, is that it's an enzyme. They're saying that they're saying, okay, so a gene can have several different ways of expressing itself.
And so, they're saying that these people have, it's a polymorphism, polymorphism. It's, I can't, it's okay in genes, but it's not okay, yeah, they use this word and so [00:52:00] some people have different expressions of a gene. So, the people that have MF, MF, MF, MF, MF, MF, MF, MF, MF it's a problem with folate
Metabolism. Okay. So full eight is one of the B vitamins, you know, and a very, very, very significant because it's involved in making a lot neurotransmitters. It's involved in making a nucleotides, you know, genetic material. And so it's really, really an important one. Okay. So that's that. All right. So, um, uh, where's, okay, here we go now.
And so basically all this gene does that produces this enzyme, right? Is it takes folate from one
form during its metabolism in our body to be used for different things to another form. Okay. And if, okay, so some people that are positive for this condition, they [00:53:00] found do have an increased risk of breast CFCs, right? And however, if they take a lot of folate, it doesn't, not quite as profound significant.
Okay. Okay. Now but, and they said, eh, well, you know, it's. Also a little bit associated with esophageal CFCs, but not with ovarian and anyway, so yeah, that's that Okay, that's the association. So the answer is according to them. I mean if you if you believe their their their stories
Yeah, if you believe their stories, that's what there is an association So that was the answer to your question. There is if you can't believe it. I don't think what I think has happened is I think our DNA our genetics have been bombarded and they've been coming more and more bombarded over the last you know, especially 50 years, the last 50 years, the accelerated exposure to toxins is amazing that we're all alive.
Amazing that we make it past the age of 30. [00:54:00] Amazing what we're being exposed to. And then not, not, not only the chemical toxins, but the electromagnetic toxins. We are actually a walking miracle. The fact that we are, our body has been able to adapt to such changes. extreme conditions, but we have so, and then because of that failure in folate metabolism, folate metabolism, D vitamin they, they wind up getting an increase in another intermediate called homocysteine.
And when they get high homocysteine, that is associated with coronary artery problems, birth, birth anomalies, autoimmune and all that. All right. So I think that now I looked into it. And I, and I wanted, I wanted to know, is this, how did this get into our system? I mean, we only discovered, how do we, I mean, what, what about the guys in 1920?
Did they have MTHFR? Well, they weren't testing for it, so they don't know. So they can't possibly know, right? [00:55:00] About 1960, because they didn't know about it. But yet, if you look at the research, they're going to tell us that it has been in our gene pool. For about 2. 5 billion years,
I'm not, this is not an exaggeration. That's what they think. 2. 5 billion years. Now, if you look closer and you say, okay, so show me, show me where you got like a fossil of DNA or something from a thousand years ago, 500 years ago. And show me that. Well, he can't find that. Wait a minute. You said that this is a polymorphism.
In other words, this is, and it happens it's in, it's been an art. Okay. So therefore. If we're looking at all these people about 500 years ago, we should find one. So there's, but they say the, the, the cumulative evidence, their, their words are amazing. Cause I think, I think they convinced themselves. So basically they have not been able to find it [00:56:00] anywhere.
So my question is this, what's going on? How did this happen? And how did we discover it in the 80s? What we've been doing? What are we doing from there? So let's look at what happened in the 21st century the 20th century, right in the 20th century things We got more and more and more and more toxic and less less less.
That's real food less less less water air got Everything changed and as though this popped up. I don't think there's an it that it existed before and they're They can't prove that it did they haven't been no no evidence. They can't find dna from the skull of a Um,
um, a mummy or whatever that had it.
And, you know, and they also say, oh, it's very interesting. If you have this polymorphic, what are they calling it? What are they called? Anyway, it's a genetic anomaly. You have it, there's an increase in bipolar conditions. There's an increase in schizophrenia. There's an increase in chronic pain. And there's an [00:57:00] increase in autism. What? First of all, autism, by the way, didn't exist when I was growing up. You know, what else didn't exist when I was growing up?
Alzheimer's. You know what else didn't exist when I was growing up? ADD, ADHD. Didn't exist. Didn't exist. And when Alzheimer's first got named, when we first started hearing about Alzheimer's, the original definition was pre senile dementia. What does that mean? Well, they would, they expect people when they get older, they're going to get dementia.
That's, you don't have to get dementia. They expect that. However, pre senile means before you're old. So that's what it used to mean. Now it's changed. Now it's everything. Everybody's, you know, everything. It's what they call a waste paper waste basket diagnosis, all right? So everybody's got Alzheimer's.
Any cognitive decline in the elderly is now being called Alzheimer's. Because there is no Alzheimer's. There's none of this stuff, okay? So, anyway. Great, thank [00:58:00] you. By the way, when they're saying 2. 5 billion years ago, we got, we had this gene in our gene pool. What they mean is folate metabolism. Yeah, of course. So does frogs. They have to metabolize folate.
Anyway, I'm just telling you that I don't go along with it. Don't buy it. Don't buy it. Don't say I have this. I don't have anything. I mean, you've got a divine earth suit and all you gotta do is give it what it needs. That's all you gotta do. You're not different. Don't let them, don't let them pull you into that weird corner.
Okay? Now, now it says, could you explain if you are a fermenter that you are prone to CFC?
Now being a fermenter
We are capable of doing that, right? Now, anaerobic bacteria, these microorganisms, because they don't, anaerobic means without oxygen, and means without, without oxygen, they can't, but they can't produce energy with what they call [00:59:00] oxidative phosphorylation, because they don't have oxide, which is oxygen. So they're anaerobic.
So they ferment, that's what they do. So we have a lot of anaerobic organisms in us. Yeah. They are living in areas where we don't have much oxygen.
Unlike at the roots of your teeth and stuff like that, there's a lot in there.
Anyway, they ferment. So yeah, those are fermenters. And yeah, in ourselves, we have a built in mechanism that when we run out of the ability to process oxygen that we start fermenting. So we're so I'm not sure what you mean. If you're a fermenter, we're all able to ferment.
So we have organisms in our gut and our mouth that are capable of fermentation. And yes, our cells are capable of the fermentation. That's why we have, we're even having this whole talk now. We have this groups because we've got people who are chronically permitting, so I don't know what this is mean, but, and, but when they tell you, they tell you to eat, what do they tell you?
Cause I don't even know the things they're telling you. Oh. Okay. Could, could, sorry. If you're a fermentor or you're prone to CFCs, we're all [01:00:00] fermenters. So I don't, I don't, I think that's kind of like the wrong question. And why do they tell us to eat fermented food? Well, the reason we eat fermented food is because we're gonna get the bacteria, the microorganisms produce the fermentation.
Right? And why do we want them? Because we, they're health. They're, they're, they're healthy for us. We need them. They're, I mean, they're good, good for us. So if you look at any indigenous culture, they all have. some sort of fermented food in their ancestral diet, diet, right? You know, so you have in the Eastern Europe and around there, Europe, they have what are called sauerkraut because, you know, they found it in Germany, but it's not just Germany, right?
And then in Korea, they have kimchi and, you know, and then a lot of places have yogurt, which is ferment. So fermented, fermented food is, it's been an important part of human dietary,
part of the human diet. And that's because. And that's why so nowadays we take [01:01:00] probiotics. Well, that's what those are, but it's reading fermented food. Those are probiotics. So yeah, so, so you, you, you, yeah, okay. So, anyway, your mom, your, your, your daughter single and she has regressed CFCs. We've got to figure out how to help her. I am I hope you can have her join the CFC group because I'm going to be putting, I'm going to be giving, it's just being in the final stages of being finished. I've already written it.
They're just putting it in a form that that they want to. And then it's a plan. It's a basic plan for everybody. What, when, what time to wake up? When to eat? When to go to the bathroom? What else to do? So it's a plan. Supplements. Everything. Okay, so it's the basic, the fundamental plan. I'm just going to make it available to everyone.
So join that group, the CFC group. And you're going to get that. Because if you're going to be, if you're going to stay at home, you can do all these things to get started. Good. Remember, the only thing you're [01:02:00] going to get at a healing center in terms of interventions is going to be intravenous, you know, vitamin C's artesanate, curcumin, coercitin, ozone, you know, things like that,
right? That's what you're going to get at most clinics. And at our place, you also get colonics, you get lymphatic therapies, you get teach you how to make food. I mean, it's way more than that. But. Really, the truth is, if you could learn to do this, so what the idea is, is people come to Oasis in Arizona, we come to Oasis, and you go through six weeks or eight weeks, you know, it's not going to be resolved at that point, it's just we're on the way, we're on our way now, and now you know the plan for living, okay, because the plan for living is going to prevent from making new ones, so that this, this process doesn't go on, that's that you got to learn, and when you, so someone asked me.
What's your success rate? I have my six of [01:03:00] my success is that I have, I have successfully given you enough information to change your basic database, what you knew, what, you know, I want to get, I want to help you eliminate those things that you thought you knew that were not true and learn and give you some real knowledge.
That is, and, and it's all. Reference to research, research, et cetera. So change your database, give you the skills because now you know what food is. You say, okay, now how do I make that kind of food? Well, how, where do I find it? How so we, we teach you all that. We even take you shopping. We teach you how to shop.
We teach you how to read labels. We teach you how to, how do you do this? How can I do this? And what if, what, what equipment do I need? Every year you get it all. And then you get training on making the various different aspects of it. And, one of the most, though it may be the most important thing you learn, how do you make it delicious so that you love it, so now it's part of [01:04:00] your cravings.
How do you change your craving for steak or pizza to a kale salad or a raw vegan? How do you do that? Is that possible? Yeah. The best things I've eaten have been that. You gotta have people that know what they're doing. Anyway, so we can make it. So that's the thing. So you're going to learn, change your knowledge base.
Okay. Now I know I got to do this instead of that, then give you the skills to do it. This is how I do it. And the knowledge, and then you got to have one third thing. There's a third thing you have to have, and that is you have to have the experience during that time of feeling better in one way or another, more energy or whatever, the reason you have to have that experience is because if you don't have that experience, then the change in database and the training are theory and theory doesn't take you to.
So what we need to do is give you the experience to say, well, [01:05:00] only I want this. I feel better. I'm clearer. I have more energy. Then, then, then, then, then, then, then. So those are the three things you have to get. Once you have all of that you can go and we can, you can, we can find somebody to give you the other little things and you already know you've got to do colonics, but you've learned, you know, so all the other stuff you can learn.
So really the main, I think most important part of, Coming to a center like ours. Oh, by the way, there's none like us anywhere. I wish there were because listen, there should be no competition between people that are working in this field. There's unfortunately plenty of people with CFC. So, I mean, this competition is absurd.
We should be helping each other. do better. Sharing our information. That's why I share it all. I mean, and I'm told by you shouldn't give so much information. Why not? What am I going to do? Charge for it. You know, charging for knowledge makes me feel kind of weird. It's not my, [01:06:00] do I own knowledge? No, I, I learned it and I passed it on.
And if I get knowledge and I don't do anything with it. So anyway, I don't agree with those sorts of things, but anyway, I think we should all be sharing knowledge, helping each other to help each other, helping each other to help each other. That's what we should be doing.
Okay. So now so Karen, have your please have your your daughter join this. Now, here's another, here's the next question by Tanya and she's saying, I take Dr. Mercola's Velasta, did he get it to Velasta too? How much, how did he, are you sure it's Velasta? Does he have Velasta, you guys? Because Velasta is astaxanthin, which is a carotenoid part of what we call vitamin A produced by algae, other things too, but algae.
And, but it's been modified to have a glucose on it, with a glucosidic bond. And, that's Velasta. Velasta's not something in [01:07:00] nature. So this company makes it, so I don't know how they would have the lead, do they?
Anyway, how much should I take daily? Okay, Mercola has Velasta 12mg capsules. I hear you talk about Velasta, but I can't find the price. Podcasts where you say how much to take I think you said at one time in the inner circle group that you were going to Put together the top most important supplements for cancer.
Yeah, I did. I did. That's what I'm talking about. Tanya dosages and where to get it. Yeah, that's still happening. Yeah, it's it's I I I did it It's just they're putting it into final form. Yeah, I get so overwhelmed trying to take all the supplements I work full time which involves travel at times and raise a 16 year old granddaughter So it's hard to do all the juicing supplements were offered, but i'm doing it.
Yay Well, Tanya,
I hear you and I understand. It is overwhelming.
Dr. Lodi, could you please talk about Oh, MS. Okay, multiple sclerosis. I thought it said me. It said, could you please talk about me? Anyway, okay, in a second.
The reason we're overwhelmed is [01:08:00] because on the internet, you're going to find as many people saying you should do this as people saying you shouldn't do it. And if you haven't been trained, you're going to say, what should I do? Right? And, you know, You know, and people say they do nutritional counseling, et cetera.
And they, and they mean is vitamins, minerals, supplements. That's not nutrition. I mean, I've never seen a vitamin tree. Have you seen vitamin tree?
I 88 cut a almost 90 cut, maybe 90 countries. But I've never found a vitamin tree. I'm looking down, I'll let you know. And I don't, cause so the word supplement means in addition to that, which is inadequate. So the more adequate your diet is, it doesn't need to be supplemented. So that's the main thing.
So now once it is, assuming you have an adequate diet, the supplements requirements are very low. Iodine, and then you get your thyroid going. Iodine, iodine, iodine, iodine, iodine. Ah, vitamin A, [01:09:00] C, and D. Okay, you need to max those out because we're not eating, we're not eating it, we're not getting enough sun, and we're just, we're not doing it naturally.
So you got to max those out to their maximum, because they all have a powerful influence on the immune system. Vitamin C is even, it has a powerful influence on everything. So those you want to max out. And you want to max out melatonin, because we make less and less and less and less and less. And our pineal glands are being fluoridated.
So, okay, a calcium fluoride. So, therefore melatonin. And
in terms of supplements. Then of course, you want to take some hydrochloric acid before you eat, because we're probably not making enough stomach acid. So you want to, you know, 10, 15 minutes before you eat with it. And then you will need some digestive enzymes, right? You want to make sure that they're they have the enzymes that you need if you're a vegan, if you're which is not what most enzymes are, they're most, they have a lot of proteases, but if you're not eating big chunks of what do you call it like, if you're not eating [01:10:00] big chunks of dead muscle or big chunks of dead organs, if you're not eating that kind of concentrated animal protein then you don't eat all these proteases, but you do need cellulase and you do need, you know, lipase amylase.
So you got to make sure you get the right kind of supplement digested. As I mean, you take a bunch of them after you eat,
make sure it's unable to access camera.
Has the camera gone off? I see it. Wait a minute.
Why did it say that? I don't know.
Okay. So now
I wonder how Mercola is getting Volasta because that's, I mean, he made it, this guy made it, the guy that owns the company, Volasta. Brilliant guy. I mean, I, I, I have one of the best two hours conversations in my life with this guy. Brilliant. So you figured out how to get it where it needs to get.
Remember, Velasquez, Estaxanthin, which we need, is going to give you a [01:11:00] lot of electrons. Remember, life comes down to, are you still,
losing connection? You know,
isn't paranoia when you're imagining that people are after you? Imagining, right? With TikTok happening, all these things always happening, am I imagining still? Anyway. So, so he takes, he takes acid xanthine and connects it to glucose. Why? Because our cells will pick up the glucose. And when they do that, they're going to pull in the acid xanthine.
It's going to give us all this wonderful electrons and which are going to help us keep things detoxed, right? Okay.
And, and other things, but it's really, really important. Now, CFCs have extra insulin receptors cause they need 19 times more glucose. So they're going to pull up a lot of it. And when that goes in there. And they wind up getting too much in their pH, in other words, they get so alkaline they're dead. I mean, it's ingenious, but [01:12:00] he designed it, so how could Mercola have it?
I gotta look that up. Anyway, so you're taking 12 milligrams, here's the way it works. In terms of milligrams, you take one half of your body weight. Usually it's kilograms, but you can say pounds. One half of your weight in pounds. Multiply that by 1. 5. Alright, so if you weigh 100 pounds, you get 50. 50 times 1.
5 is what? 75? So you take 75 milligrams a day, and you can take it in divided doses with food or at a single dose with food. Alright? And your feces will turn red, so don't be shocked. I mean, don't think you're bleeding or something like that. Okay, now.
Alright, so this is from Ingrid. I'm healing from a hormone sensitive breast CFC. So I had the tumor removed and won chemotherapy. Okay. I've turned down radiation and tamoxifen. How do I continue and what supplements [01:13:00] should I do? Don't do re and regarding the fact that it's hormone driven. It's a little bit confusing, I know.
I live in Sweden and since I've turned down treatment, I have no support from doctors. But they care. They care. You know, we've got to really come up with some definitions here. What does caring mean? I'm also alone with three small children and my economy is really tight. Yo, I know, you know, and it's going to be made tighter.
They're going to make sure that it's tighter. So Ingrid,
first of all, Ingrid, did you get, wherever you got to go, you go and you get a 3D cone beam CT of your jaws and have it read by somebody who knows what they're doing. The only one I know in Europe is Dr. Jose from Spain. And he's basically an oral surgeon and he does amazing work, gets it on [01:14:00] every level.
So he's, he's the guy and whatever is found on that 3d combing CT, he'll be able to help you with. So that's the guy. And he also knows because he's, he's, he lives in Europe. He also knows medical practitioners. So he would know. Who to go to for some of these intravenous IVs and stuff like that.
But, however, you got to get rid of the toxins. I hope you've done a thorough, a minimum of, if you've got kids and you're by yourself, four weeks, eight, six weeks, at least six weeks juice cleanse. Do enemas every morning.
And then you just got to take those basics I said. Iodine, you know, like 25 milligrams a day. You got to get Ioderol or you got to get glucose. Now, you also got to check your basal body temperatures to assess whether or not your thyroid is functional. And how do you know if it's functional? Because your, but your, your temperature, when you do it five mornings in a row, before you get out of bed, the average will be less will be more than, or at least 36.
8. If it's at least 36. [01:15:00] 8 centigrade Celsius, then your thyroid's working good. If it's below that, that means you need thyroid. Take an extra iodine lift you're doing, will, will, could, and will. Slow down the thyroid output. So, especially while you're replenishing, taking 25 milligrams a day, it's going to knock that down a little bit.
So, you've got to be taking thyroid hormone to keep yourself having adequate thyroid function while you're doing, while you're doing that, okay? After you get all your thyroid all your iodine deficits replaced, takes about a year, year and a half, then you go down to a maintenance dose of, which is 12.
5 milligrams and melatonin.
A D C iodine melatonin and then minerals. You got to get a mineral complex. It has selenium, zinc, manganese, magnesium, molybdenum, boron. Yeah. And you can get a multi mineral complex. You got to get that. Okay. So you got to get all those things and then eat, eat what God made through, I mean, through [01:16:00] nature, but nature is not, not, not God.
So just eat, eat that. All right. So, you know, if it, if you want to put it in your mouth, say, did it grow this way? If it grew that way, okay, I'll just clean it off and then eat it. It didn't grow that way, and that's one to avoid it. Why? Because right now, it's showtime. Right now, yeah. You don't ease into it when you have CFCs.
I mean, you could if you have to, but, and there are people that just simply can't do it. I had, I've had, I've had people here
stop eating.
And now, and that doesn't work, you know, so they were, you can't stop eating. So, okay, well, eat whatever you want then. I mean, I get to, you know, there's all that. But I'm just saying. If you want to do your best eat the food that God put here for, and do all that, go to sleep early, go to bed by eight latest nine,
take 180 milligrams of [01:17:00] melatonin. Not right away. You start up, go slowly. It's hard to get if you're in Europe, it's hard to get when you're in Europe because of the codex alimentarius. So, you're going to have to go. So I think you might have to make a trip somewhere to get all this stuff and you need the last, you need all this stuff.
Cause the last is really important, by the way, it's part of the, it's part of the. Fundamental supplements is that too. How much vitamin A? You take about 40, 50, 000 units a day and then you check your levels because you want to be at the upper limits of, of the normal range, the upper limits, like the last one, 2 percent of them.
That's where you want to be. And your vitamin D, you want to be up around a hundred. You can be over, it's fine. 120, 130. You don't want to be below 70. be 71. So you take, so you can start out with 40, 000, 50, 000. 50, 000 of the vitamin A, 40 or 30, 000 of the vitamin D, and then check, and as soon as you get to those levels, then figure out how much you need to stay [01:18:00] there.
C, you're going to be taking all day long. You're going to be taking it all day long. You're going to sip 7 to 7, and you're going to get the sodium ascorbate liposomal sodium ascorbate, and you'll take 2 grams 4 times a day. You do all this so you have plenty of vitamin C, because it is, talk about miraculous, it's miraculous.
I'm miraculous, and it's such a simple thing. It's, if you saw, if you see the molecular structure, you're gonna say, it's so simple. It's basically glucose modified. It's just got a couple little things.
So that's where we go, guys. Whenever things are getting weird, go back to your breath. It's our, it's the root, it's our spiritual root to God.
Alright, good, okay, so, let's get back. We were talking about some questions. Alright, so we're back on, you can see in here now. Alright, good. His time passed away. I think his time passed away. My time? No, no, still got some time. It's still now. [01:19:00] Okay, now let's go. Where are we? All right. Okay. So, okay. So, you're healing and hormone sensitive.
Okay. So, the question is, and one of the questions you have, What you should have is what about, what about estrogen receptors and all that? Should I take all that stuff? And the answer is that, and we've we've done this many times and
we're actually gonna have all the answers posted on our website
someday. I mean, I've answered this question a lot of times, but basically this is, you've got estrogen receptor alpha positive meaning that it's, it's it's sensitive to estradiol and has strong and mainly, and the beta will shrink it, the. And so you want to do things that will produce beta to shrink it.
That's soy, flax cruciferous vegetables, cauliflower, cabbage. Okay. All that stuff is going to really give you to get to the estrogen receptor beta, which will shrink it all down [01:20:00] and it blocks the alpha. So I would not take a drug to block it because that drug is going to cause other problems too.
All right. So, all right. So. All right, so that's what we, that's what we want to do you guys. It makes sense. Okay. Now you know,
okay here this is a Renata a Choloma growing out of my left calf, I guess. Had 12 radiation treatments in the middle of the tumor. It's dead, but around it is still, around the dead part is active. They said only months long chemotherapy will kill it. Alright. So, if the center part is dead, that's pretty normal.
That's what happens. They outgrow their blood supply, because the blood vessels of tumors are like spaghetti and they have no smooth muscle. They can't, you know, they're just, they're just not, they're like really, because they're, they're, they're manufactured hastily. And so they're not [01:21:00] really good blood vessels.
And so they break easily. And when they break, there's an area of doesn't get oxygen that dies. and so it's got an area in the process, but that stimulates the whole process to go on. So it kind of relies on that. So that, that, that, that, that's nothing. It's still active around. That's what they do. So if it's still active, that means one of two things, no matter where you have CFCs, if it's not responding to whatever you're doing, either because it's kind of at a, at a, at a standstill or getting bigger,
we haven't gotten rid of all the tuxes. We've got to go back and do it everywhere. So whatever you do get, if you had your teeth taken care of, go get another comb paint. Find out what's going on. Number two, start a cleanse. Do a six week juice cleanse. Do colonics. Look up on a map to see what the 5G density is of your area, wherever you live.
All right? Find out where that is. And find out if you've got a lot around there, [01:22:00] you might have to move. Now, the other thing is you can go online and get the only, the company I've been using myself, personally, is a company called Lambs, L A M B S just for some Faraday clothing. Faraday t shirt, Faraday underwear, Faraday cap, and Faraday pants, right?
And pretty much protect yourself as much as possible. And put if you can't move, get to learn how to build a, you can get some Faraday fabric and make yourself a little bed, a cage around your bed and all that, right? So there's ways of doing it. Anyway, so, you've got to do that. That's one very important thing for toxicity is we've got to be aware of that.
And then eat or eat organic food and make sure you know who grew it and or you grew it. And because at this point, we just don't know what's coming in our food. But we do know that there's things we don't want. I'm telling you, we do know that we can no longer trust. We do know that.
And then we gotta wake up the immune system and we gotta wake it up. We wake it up by turning our mind off, learning how to be silent two [01:23:00] minutes, five times a day, listening to your breath. You gotta get good at that. Two minutes, five times a day. All right. Until you can do it. And then you gotta learn how to do that.
You gotta learn to turn it off. And getting good sleep, eating healthy foods, keeping your colon clean, all that stuff is going to enhance the immune system. Taking medicinal mushrooms like maitake, shiitake, all of them, turkey tail, you know, all of them, agaric dysplasia, all of them. And then we need peptides.
We need thymus and alpha 1, and we need methionine and keflavin. Okay, those will help restore our immune system. Very, very important. So we gotta restore the immune system and go back to getting rid of the toxicities. And as soon as we do, it'll come, it'll go away. Really, that's it. That's it. That's it.
It's not more military force. That's not what it is.
Why is it not responding? Because it's being fed by the immune system. So if it's being fed and the immune system is not getting it, where are you going? If it goes, the military thing is not going to work. And the military thing never works anyway. It [01:24:00] might slow things down, but that's it. For a while, in this area.
So, that's that. That's what we've got to find out. That's what's going on with you. That's what's going on with anybody who's doing it. So everybody, please remember that. Okay? It's not that this didn't work, that didn't work. It's just that I haven't yet gotten rid of all the toxicities. And my immune system is being shut down.
I've got to wake it up. Remember that's really it. I'm telling you. Okay now Our time is over I guess yeah, sorry, you know today was a really weird day. I apologize. I wish I Knew what I was doing here. But anyway, and tiktok's gone So I know you guys I will see you next week I'm going to be here and you guys find your friends with tiktok and say listen, did you notice?
I'm not up there anymore. He's not up there anymore instagram facebook Rumble. LinkedIn. That's about it. Yeah. Go there. Alright. There's lots of alternatives. But Rumble, you know, I think is going to be around a while. And X. I'm also on X. Huh. And you can live [01:25:00] stream there. Okay. So please do that. And I will see you next week.
And sawadikap. Take care. Be careful. Because
it's war. They've declared war. They didn't tell us. They did. Anyway, take care, be careful of you and your loved ones, and remember, let's be human. Get our feet back on the earth. Let's eat the food that the earth gives us. Let's, let's get back to earth. We're earthlings. We're not Africans, Americans, Germans, Russians, Thai.
Earthling. Let's get back to that, okay?