The Dr. Lodi Podcast

Episode 134 - 12.10.25 Life is a Happening: Control, Choices, and the Nature of Reality

Dr. Thomas Lodi Episode 134

Life can often feel like a whirlwind of choices and circumstances, leading us to question how much control we truly have over our destiny. In this enlightening podcast episode, we venture into the depths of personal agency, exploring how our thoughts shape our behaviors and how the unpredictability of life constantly shifts our understanding of control. Through thought-provoking discussions, we will dissect the relationship between thought and action—do we really decide our destinies, or are we merely responding to the world around us?

We dive into real-life stories illustrating how embracing uncertainty can lead to greater clarity and peace. Listeners will find resonance in the shared experiences that highlight the beauty of authenticity in navigating life's challenges. With humor woven throughout, the episode underscores the absurdity of our desire to control the uncontrollable, prompting listeners to reconsider their beliefs about agency and freedom.

By the end, we aim to empower our audience to adopt a more conscious approach to their choices and perceptions. Whether you're grappling with decisions, facing unforeseen circumstances, or simply curious about the dynamics of control, this episode provides insights and inspiration to cultivate a deeper understanding of your lived experience.

Don’t forget to subscribe, share your thoughts, and join our community for more engaging discussions about life, choice, and the fascinating interplay between them!

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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

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Speaker 1:

All right, here we are, sunday Night Live, and are we on yet? Huh, sort of, yeah, I guess we're happening All right. So I think I have to come. So I think that's what I got. Namaste, namaskar and aloha. Monday morning here in the bright, the bright side of the planet, and Sunday night still on the dark side of the planet. Anyway, good morning everybody and good evening everybody.

Speaker 1:

I hope by now everybody is starting to realize that you know what I really wish I could do. I wish I could see, I wish I could ask a question and see and get some hands. I'd like to get the answer to a question, a very important question how come nobody's here? Are you guys here? Anybody there on Facebook and listen LinkedIn, youtube, x? Are you guys there? Yes, no, no, no, it's a secret, right, keep it a secret. Let's keep it. See if anybody's on X or you, uh, uh, uh, what's it called Facebook? Just say yeah, hi, oh, oh, oh, yeah, hello, okay, yay, finally, oh, sorry, all right, thank you, nicole. Um, and of course, what's um? Melody? I bet you had an incredible dinner, incredible, I'm sure, sure it was an incredible of, uh, of beautiful, wonderful. I bet you had an incredible dinner. Incredible. I'm sure it was an incredible dinner Of a beautiful, wonderful salad or something. Yeah, so there's everyone. Jerry, joanna, cool, why not? Fantastic, everyone, okay, good, I'm so glad you're here. So, anyway, I wish I could ask a question and see the answers, but I can't. But I'm just going to ask it anyway. And hey, wow't see it. But how many people here can say pretty confidently that they have control over their lives? I will talk about hormone blockers. Yes, control over your lives. Anybody, anybody. Why not take T3? I'm not sure what you mean. Anyway, control over your lives. Yeah, hey, Kathy, fantastic, you're here from Texas First time. Good, good, good, I hope You're here from Texas First time. Good, good, good, I hope you have a wonderful time.

Speaker 1:

First question is who has control over their lives? Come on, anybody, anybody. You decide what you're going to do and you do it and it happens. Right, right, right, yeah. How many people are planning accidents? Do you plan accidents? You're planning accidents, right? No, do you plan non-accidents? Control over life for the last two weeks? Really Not at all.

Speaker 1:

First of all, when we talk about control over our lives, it means we're going to control over our behavior. Is that what we're talking about? Our behavior, what we do, or are we talking about what happens in our lives? What are we talking about? Let's say, we talk about our behavior. Okay, so I have control over my behavior. Right, I have control over whether I'm going to, you know, eat a donut or I'm'm gonna eat an apple. Right, I have control over that? Right, and so do we. Can we assume, then, that, before a behavior happens, I have to have the thought right, is that door we can? Can we agree on that or not? Can we agree on that or not? Let left.

Speaker 1:

The dead-end marriage got my smile back, absolutely. Well, hey, I'm, I'm like probably one of the only people of the way of the world who you say you got a divorce. I say congratulations. There is the ceremony, there's the uh, what do you call? Because there's only rare. I've only met, I really, one couple in my multiple, multiple decades on this planet, one couple who are really kind of, love each other, real respect, love, honor each other and kept their passion throughout the whole long time. Well, I mean anyway. So no compromise, no compromise, you know anyway.

Speaker 1:

So, um, here's the thing. If thought produces behavior, right, we're going to assume that. If thought produces, let's say, I think I'm going to go to the store. Therefore, I go to the store, right. So the question really becomes if thought, if are my thoughts produce my behavior? Where did my thought come from? Did you decide to think a thought or did the thought just happen, kind of like your heart beating? Are you beating your heart right now? Who's beating their heart? Anybody beating their heart? Who's digesting? Are you're beating your heart right now? Who's beating their heart? Anybody beating their heart? Who's digesting? Are you, like, purposely digesting right now? Can you tell me exactly how much lipase you're secreting and those that, and how? About those of you that have a thyroid, are you producing? Tell me how much thyroid you're producing at this moment? Ovaries, testes How's your pituitary doing?

Speaker 1:

The point is we don't know anything. We're doing. We're not doing anything. It's the wrong word. It's all happening to us, right. So it's all happening to us. Life is a happening. That's why in my era, in the 60s, we never said, hey, what are you doing, man? We said what's happening? Hey, what's happening? Because we didn't know what's happening. I don't know, do you know what's happening? Anyway, we're not doing anything, I don't know. For example, I was yesterday in the car in the red light and suddenly got hit from behind, had to tow my car away and everything. So I spent about three or four hours doing that instead of getting home to go to sleep, and so I mean so you realize that kind of thing can happen at any time. So, in other words, we are at the whim of what Happenstance, we're at the whim of what.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, I'm just giving you food for thought. There's no answers to this. The answer is eat, drink and be merry because, as Solomon says, that's it Right. You know, solomon, right? Yeah? So, just as a reminder to everyone, we are yeah, I've got it. You know, here's the problem. You guys are sending me really good questions here right now, live, and I can't answer them. I mean, if I do, it's not fair to the people that sent them in. So that's the, that's the format here. Right, they're going to send it. People send in questions to the website and I answer them.

Speaker 1:

But the groups? The reason we have the groups is so we can interact. You ask a question, I answer and I go away. I don't quite understand the twitter, but I can clarify and we can really interact. That's where I want it. So I really would love you guys to start joining these groups, because we're meeting weekly, I mean somehow, or twice a week for some groups. So it's really you know, that's how we, that's how we can interact and really really get you know. It's so much better than this.

Speaker 1:

But, by the way, I still don't know where my thoughts come from. I don't know what I'm going to say until I say it. Right, do you? Unless you have a speech written out? I'm telling you, unless you have a speech written out and you're reading the speech or you have it memorized, unless that's the case, you don't know what you're gonna say. To say it, you know, and if you don't know that, then you don't know that, but it doesn't mean that you know what you're gonna say before you say it. You know. In other words, your speaking is happening.

Speaker 1:

Why is he talking about my? I want to know about my thyroid. I want to know about my ovaries. I want to know about my. Okay, turns out it's all related. It's all related, anyway, so, okay. So now, ok. So this person is going to ask a good question about thyroxine, thyroid medication and adrenals, and I really want to talk about that. You guys got to join these groups so we can do this, my gosh, anyway, we need to have that other talk too, about doing and being. What's the difference between doing and being? Anyway, forget that.

Speaker 1:

Your brain finds a solution if you're in a situation that needs sorting your brain, your brain. So the brain does it, not me, my brain, my brain, which is a an organ that isending chemical messages to the next cell next to it, either epinephrine serotonin, norepinephrine, dopamine, so Somehow it sends different chemical messages. I can't see how that happens. So I'm not sure how the brain does it. The mind is controlling the brain. Let's say that's true. So my mind, I have a thought, yeah, so I'm afraid of something, and that it gives me a whole neurological, physiological response. True, what if there's nothing there? And I'm afraid because I think there's something there. There's really nothing or what. I'm just generally worried about stuff and I have nothing I'm really worried about and I'm still going to get that response. Anyway, we need to talk about this. By the way, I'm going to I've decided to finish this one book instead of the other ones and I'm going to get within two weeks it's gonna be out, yeah, anyway.

Speaker 1:

So these groups health and healing, parasite and cfc, cfcs are what everyone, everyone, let me see. And cfc, cfcs are what everyone, everyone, let me see. Are what people call what. What are cfcc's? Rc, cfcs are the ones.

Speaker 1:

Those of us who don't think that astrology has anything to do with whack. You know, it's really hard to say that it has nothing to do with it, but uh like, for example, I have a process going on in my prostate, I have a process going on pancreas, my liver, that's causing fermenting cells. Is that do? Is it have a relationship to, uh, people being born between july, june 21st and july? No, so we're not going to use that word. We don't use sagittarius, leo, we don't use capricorn, we don't use aquarius, we don't use Virgo or cancer, none of those signs that we use. We say chronically fermenting cells, because that's what they are, right, everyone. Yes, okay, good, it is not common to get a keloid after a mastectomy. No, not common. Some people form keloids and other people don't, and so that's a big discussion in and of itself. Yeah, so yeah, and, as you know, dr Thomas Lodi, on all of the platforms except for X. X is DR Thomas, dr Thomas Lodi, md.

Speaker 1:

Okay, and that's all the platforms, right, and right now it turns out that, having been kicked off of TikTok and they're still there, they find something wrong with everything I say. So I don't think we'll ever get up. Build that back up again. Anyway, should we do some questions, you guys? Yeah, I think so, because that's why we're here, right? So now I got gotta find them. Come on, come on, ugh, what Is this? A Okay, gosh, okay, okay, okay, good, now let's go for this one here. I'm just trying to figure out who I am. I'm figuring it out Any closer. Okay, there we go. Yeah, can we do it like that Sort of? Yeah, all right, so cool.

Speaker 1:

First question is by the way, if you can't hear me, because I don't have this, I can't get these things to work. So I think I'm on the speaker, the microphone that's on the computer. So if you don't hear me, please let me know, because I get messages when I'm having Zooms with people that they can't quite hear me too well. I get messages from when I'm having zooms with people that they can't quite hear me too well. Ok, all right. So question is and, by the way, you know, you know that you submit your questions To the website, right, drlodycom slash live, right, or I guess you can go to the Instagram boxes. If you have an active form of CFCs and you want to take care of it, you want it to be taken care of, then. My clinic in Arizona and Oasis of Healing is still alive and well 20 years now. All right, so let's do the questions, okay.

Speaker 1:

Well, first question is from Maria Maria, and the question is does it does, block it? Green tea like 30%. Black tea, which is just a cooked version, is about 60%. However, if you have foods that have vitamin C in them, you're going to increase the absorption and there's all sorts of stuff. So it's a very complex answer and I'll try to talk a little bit about it. But just one thing to keep in mind is this when we're eating, the food we're eating should be.

Speaker 1:

I mean, if the food we were eating was in its, the way it grew, natural condition, it's got water in it, it's got liquid and you're chewing it, your saliva, and it's got water in it and it'll go down into your stomach and your stomach has got an acid, a very low pH, meaning a strong acid, and it will combine with that and it'll secrete certain enzymes as well in the stomach and other compounds That'll go into the duodenum, which is the upper part of your small intestine, more enzymes are secreted in your bile and you can get a very good, efficient digestion. What you don't want to do is you don't want to dilute everything, meaning you don't want to drink anything while you're eating. And the only reason you would want to drink anything while you're eating is because you're eating food that's already had the water removed. Through what cooking? Cooking removes it.

Speaker 1:

If you don't cook the food, if you, if you don't cook, you don't get thirsty. You'll notice that you don't get thirsty after a salad. You don't get thirsty after an apple. You don't get thirsty after an apple. You don't get thirsty after, you know, eating broccoli dipped in the cashew cheese sauce, you don't get thirsty. So drinking with meals is not healthy. It results in a diluted. You dilute what you're eating and you dilute the, the, the, the, the acids and you dilute the enzymes, and you did. You dilute it so that the actual digestive process is less efficient. So that's number one. So don't drink.

Speaker 1:

You don't drink with meals at all, anything right, and you probably should stop drinking at least 30 minutes before you eat anything. You know, stop drinking anything but but for, like, black teas and green teas, and coffee and cocoa, all those things that have the ability to grab iron, and so you know, maybe an hour before and then an hour after, know, let it all get absorbed, you shouldn't be drinking, right? So the you know. The thing is that the you know tea, what is this? What is this? You know teas, have you know tea has what are called tannins and polyphenols, right and so, and these are compounds that are found in food that can grab iron, right, they do grab iron, right, they do grab iron.

Speaker 1:

Um, so, uh, so, but we're talking about tea, coffee, cocoa, wine, has it? Some fruits have it? I mean, you know pears, grapes, berries, they all have polyphenols. Uh, nuts, some nuts, like you know almonds and walnuts, and so you can't get away from pecans. They have tannins and polyphenols, right, even even like legumes, like lentils and peas, you know they'll have it. Spinach has it? Herbs, spices.

Speaker 1:

It means, like, you can't, like, not get these, these substances and chemicals, in your, in your diet. If you're eating, however, keep in mind, if you're eating a healthy diet, mind, if you're eating a healthy diet, you're gonna get that. You're also going to get ascorbates, which are vitamin C, and they do the opposite. They increase iron absorption. How do they increase it? They increase it by changing the iron from ferric to ferrous so that it can be absorbed, and then they up regulate the ability of the body to absorb ferrous. So they really help out a lot by ascorbates, vitamin C, yeah, okay, and so you know now what are we talking about.

Speaker 1:

When we say polyphenols and tannins and all that sort of thing, we have to realize that polyphenols is a large classification of plants, right you know, which include tannins, catechins, flavonoids, phenolic acids and things like that. Now, flavonoids are in all I mean, ubiquitous, all plants, right, calanoids are ubiquitous all plants, and tannins are just a special subgroup of them, which, again, the activity of these different groups is their hydroxyl groups, the OH negatives, and that's their activities, which give them antioxidant properties, anti-inflammatory properties and also fighting CFC properties. So they're very important. And remember, we've talked about in the past how hydroxyl radicals are also the biochemical intermediate or end product that occurs in many, many chemical reactions in our body and that we accumulate over throughout the day. Hydroxyl radicals, oh negative, and they accumulate and they are extremely destructive and can cause all sorts of things, including CFCs and anything any kind of damage. And so our body has two fantastic mechanisms for eliminating that, for neutralizing it, and that is, we produce molecular hydrogen in our bowels up to 10 liters a day. That completely neutralizes hydroxyl radical. And then melatonin at night. Melatonin, each melatonin molecule grabs four of those guys for hydroxyl radicals. So day and night, we're just continually so. In that regard, they're not helpful, however, when they're connected to these different kinds of chemicals. And then they are actually extremely helpful anti-cfc and the oxen and all that sort of thing.

Speaker 1:

That's why, when you it, this is a. This illustrates the point that you can't figure it out. You can't say, well, this is good and that's there. Nothing is good and bad in nature. Nature, everything that exists in nature, exists because it's necessary. It's not good or bad, it's just necessary. There's no good or bad.

Speaker 1:

What does good or bad mean? Good means what? What does it mean? Oh, it's not bad. Well, what does bad mean? Well, not good I mean. What does it mean? I don't know what it means. Good means what? Anybody have this definition of good. Don't give me these weird answers. Give me that. Give me a definition of good. Come on, don't say this god likes good or no? No, no, this is not a romper room, this is not nursery school. Give me a definition of good and a definition of bad. There is no definition, it's a judgment. Judge ye not, lest ye be judged. All right, by that would she judge? I didn't say that, I didn't say that, I'm just repeating it.

Speaker 1:

Ok, where do we got here? Oh, my God. Ok, so, all right. So Phuket, all right, yeah, kathy, in Phuket. Yes, what a place to be. Can you imagine? How did you get there, kathy? I mean, how'd you wind up in all the places on planet Earth? You wind up in Phuket, I mean. Will of God, any other ones? Destiny, that's it. Providence, will of God, karma, destiny, same thing, anyway. Okay.

Speaker 1:

So, jerry, we gotta talk. Jerry, you gotta join the group. You got this really like specific questions and I got to help you. Okay, man, come on with the left right side. You know we got to talk. I'm going to try to get to that, but I got to answer these questions. Come on you guys.

Speaker 1:

Okay that there are these chemicals. Now, why do plants produce polyphenols? Why would they do such a thing? Because they're out in the Sun and the Sun has you ultra violet radiation, and we know that you be, you be V, uvb, ultraviolet. B is right, it's different than a and C, but but UVB can cause damages and because the plant can't go, get under the shade like you and I and a frog and all these other creatures that move around, they're called animals because they're animated. Yeah, that's why we're classified zoologically under the animal. We're not animals, we're like above the animal. Okay, so we're not plants, correct? Okay, we agree on that. We're not plants and we're not minerals. So animal Animate.

Speaker 1:

Okay, let's think of the origin of the word. The Latin origin of the word. It means anime. You mean move. You know of spirit, move. The Latin origin of the word it means anime. You mean mood. You know of spirit mood. We'll get it to the real etymology because it's going to make everybody come up with all kinds of.

Speaker 1:

By the way, most people don't really come up with any ideas. Most people are repeating what they heard. Most people are passing on hearsay. Most people don't read original documents of original what are called the classics. We don't read the classics, we read opinions about the classics. Everybody read the click on classics here.

Speaker 1:

Who's read Homer, the Iliad in the Odyssey, read that? Read the complete works of Plato, of Aristotle, pythagoras, sir Isaac Newton? Uh, how about? I mean, how about some of the 19th century? You know, you know philosophers, 18th century, like, how about we're so Rousseau? Have you read Rousseau? How about Thoreau? How about? Yeah? In other words, we don't read all the classics.

Speaker 1:

So our opinions are based upon people who have read that, and a lot of them are people that have read. About people that have read the classics. Of them are people that have read, about people that have read the classics. Freud have you read original Freudian work? Like he wrote the interpretation of dreams? How about Jung? Or Jungian? Read Jungian literature? So how about H P Blavatsky? Anybody read HP Blavatsky? Ledbetter, steiner, rudolf Steiner read original writings by Rudolf Steiner and Basant? Usually not, usually not.

Speaker 1:

So most people's opinions are what they heard and they were told that they should. They haven't examined themselves, and a life, a life unexamined, is unexamined. So, anyway, polyphenols are produced by plants to protect themselves from UV light, and we now know that we can. We even get that benefit passed on, because now this, they're very, very potent antioxidants and we get that benefit when we eat them. Yeah, polyphenols are essential to our lives. We couldn't survive without them. Okay, we get them.

Speaker 1:

So, by the way, now for those of you who are like dedicated corpse eaters, I just want you to know that when you're eating the corpse Corpse eaters, I just want you to know that when you're eating the corpse and I stopped eating plants, I just eat corpse. Now, all right. There are people that say that yeah, I thought, yeah, yeah, only eat corpses, and all right, all right, okay, there ain't nothing you get from a plant that you can't get in a corpse. Get from a plant that you can't get in a corpse. Way true, if you're eating all like the whole animal, eating the organs and drinking the blood, you got to get all that stuff, because where did they get it from? They got it from the plants. Don't tell anyone, they got it from the plants, because when you eat animals, do you usually eat animals that eat animals?

Speaker 1:

Do you eat dogs or cats? I mean some people? Nah, we usually don't. We usually eat animals that eat plants, like, I don't know, cows, sheep, chickens, chickens. Don't eat. Chickens eat. If you saw what a chicken ate, I don't know if you'd ever eat a chicken again. They eat anything, including their sister's poop, whatever.

Speaker 1:

Whatever they eat it, they're great if you have scorpions. They were good for me in Arizona. Problem is the chickens were awake in the day and the scorpions were awake at night, so they had a hard time meeting but I helped them meet each other. Yeah, I was kind of a matchmaker in those days. Yeah, I'd get a scorpion and I'd introduce it to a chicken. One day I walked in and there's a chicken sitting. He looked like it was like a cartoon. His body was like blobbed all over the floor and then I found that it had gotten bitten by a scorpion and it was paralyzed. So I took my chicken to the vet. Can you imagine Cost like a hundred dollars to get IVs and stuff? And can you imagine taking a chicken? Most people say, ah, just kill it and eat it.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, if you want to get your polyphenols from plants, you've got to make sure you're drinking them. I mean, from animals, you've got to make sure you're drinking the blood. So, polyphenols, there's subgroups called tannins, flavonoids and phenolic acids, and under the flavonoids we have catechins like quercetin, and we have chemphorol. I'm familiar with chemphorol. I'm familiar with chemphorol. All of these things are different groups and they differ a little bit by the number of hydroxyl groups and what some of the central molecules are, but basically they have a lot of things. So the tannins, they have a central core of gallic acid or elagic acid, right, and that's what we find in green tea, right, and stuff like that.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, these guys can grab iron. To get back to the original question, they can grab iron, yeah, but so don't. But so you need, but they're really fantastic. So you drink the green tea, you just don't drink it with, with meals or after meals and you don't need anything. And fruit, really, fruit isn't either an appetizer nor a dessert. Okay, it's a meal in and of itself, all right. So just eat fruit. When you're gonna eat fruit, just eat fruit. But don't eat it, mix it, don't mix it up. Unless you're making green juices and things like that, and smoothies and you need to make them delicious. You're going to have fruits for that reason, okay, and then it's not it, because of the way you're doing it, it's, it's absolutely fine, all right. So, but this is just the way it is right, it's just, it's just the way it is.

Speaker 1:

So, um, and you, you understand that, uh, when we're talking about these, uh, these compounds, right, like, they're like an olive oil, right, there, you know, there's hydroxy tyrosol, which is an olive oil, powerful, powerful anti-inflammatory, powerful, powerful anti-inflammatory and also eliminates the environment in which CFCs survive, like it's pretty cool. And then there's, you know, there's other ones that actually cause apoptosis of CFCs. And then you all heard of lutein and zeaxanthin, right, those are carotenoids, part of the vitamin A family. They have powerful anti-tumor effects. And what aspect of it, of the molecules, have that anti-tumor effect? The hydroxyl parts of it. So we can't say, okay, hydroxyl radicals are bad, oh no, they're good. Neither, they're necessary and they have different effects in different environment, which is why you can't control or figure out nature.

Speaker 1:

You can't say I'm gonna stop, I'm gonna do a ketogenic diet. Well, there's nothing in the world that's more key ketogenic than water. Don't eat, just drink a ton of water. It's called the water fast. You'll be in ketosis within 48 hours. Within 72 hours you'll be in high ketosis. You'll be probably at therapeutic level where your glucose to ketone index is less, maybe one or a little bit less than one. You wanna get less than one.

Speaker 1:

So, and you're not gonna get there by any kind of food, I don't care which, unless you're eating like just you're just going around and picking off the fat around the. A pork, just eating the fat. A steak, you're just eating the fat. The bacon, you're taking it, throwing it the meat, just eating the fat. Yeah, I guess you could get there that way. Maybe I don't know, I've never tried, I mean, I've never had anyone.

Speaker 1:

We did it with plant based, you know. You know seeds, nuts, and so we still had to do one or two days of water just to make sure to keep us in therapeutic ketosis. Very hard to get, but anyway, the point is this after 41 days of water, fast, super, super, super ketogenic diet finger stick glucose. It was normal. Why? Because we need it. We, why, because we need it, we're gonna make it.

Speaker 1:

So those you can't say I'm gonna get rid of the glucose, you can't, you're dead. I'm gonna get rid of the glutamine, you can't, you're dead. Because they're so we can't do that. So we have to say wait a minute, I can't. You mean anything. A CFC needs my healthy cells need. So if I successfully eliminate it for my CFCs, then I've also eliminated it for my healthy cells. That's not cool.

Speaker 1:

So, in other words, what I want, if I could, if I could like get you to comprehend. One thing is, that is I want to restore your awe and respect for this body and for nature and just realize that the way it's all I mean. Okay, if you were to look into one cell, it's way beyond our understanding. What's going on and how it's happening beyond our understanding. What's going on and how it's happening Now? Imagine we've got at minimum 37 trillion, probably closer to 100 trillion, and then inside of us there's at least 100 trillion other organisms, and then on side of us there's another 100 trillion. And then put us in a context of an environment where, on the tape, everywhere, at the chip, there, there's all these cells and organisms. You can't see them, but they're there.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so now? So you, you need to know that there's no way on earth you can figure it out. You can say, ok, we don't know that. Here's what we need to do. We need to do and that's why we were imbued with, given, blessed with as part of our being is called instinct. God gave us instinct. Instinct is how we plug into the divine, it's how we know, that's how the spider knows how to spin the web. It's how the uh bird knows how to fly up in in formation, right, perfectly, um, it's all ants.

Speaker 1:

What are ants doing and what are they like? Are they all? Did they all like go to construction school? And now they know how to. They're extremely busy. Have you ever seen anything more busy than ants? I haven't. Bees are kind of busy, but, on the other hand, dogs aren't busy, but they're our best friends, right, anyway? But ants are busy.

Speaker 1:

By the way, do you think each ant is an individual? Is it an individual? Do you ever see an ant without the other ants? I wouldn't say ants are individuals. Some people might think they're individuals, but I think ant-ness exists and ant-ness happens because it's a necessity for the entire forest. This forest, this major ecosystem, requires ants. It's part of what it needs. It's like it requires trees. Forests require tree. I mean, this forest is defined by trees. Ants, all these things are everything that exists is exists because it has a particular set of functions that it, that it, that it has, and these functions are required for the whole to exist.

Speaker 1:

Understand that, anyway, and you know that expression you can't see the forest for the trees. Let's think about what that means. You can't see the forest because you're looking at the tree. But you know what we're doing now. You know what science is doing. Sorry, it's about scientific method. We're looking the bacteria in the wing of the fly that is on a leaf on that tree in the forest. Do you think we're going to see the forest? No, so we lose sight of the forest. We lose sight of what's going on. It's always very important, before you even answer a question or you want to come to any conclusion, step up, step back and take a look at the whole process and understand what is. At least understand that, because you cannot answer a question or evaluate a situation just looking at that, because you need to see it in its context. All right, and that's what I really try to do when I, when I teach, is give you context so that you can answer it.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, lutein and xanthine are parts of the carotenoids, the vitamin, what we call vitamin A, right, and we find. Where do we find these? We find these in dark leafy greens, peas, summer squash, pumpkin, right greens, peas, summer squash, pumpkin, right, pumpkin and pumpkin seeds, right sprout, brussels sprouts, broccoli, asparagus, lettuce, carrots, pistachios, but not chicken nuggets and not gizzards, and not you might find some in eyeballs If you ate eyeballs, but you can't cook the eyeball, so you're gonna eat the eyeball, eat the eye. Come on, come on, be a man or be a woman and eat that eyeball. Oh, I'm a carnivore, hey, carnivores, you think carnivores cook?

Speaker 1:

You ever see lions barbecuing? I've never seen a lion, you know, I've been been around, I've gone to all these places, these different continents. I've never seen lions barbecuing or tigers barbecue. They just don't do it. They're lost. Right, they should be barbecuing. They would enjoy it a lot more, I know, but anyway, they don't barbecue. So they wind up beating the eyeball the way it is. And guess what they? Oh, they're getting all the vitamin A. But where the animal get it oh my God, the plant, oh my God.

Speaker 1:

Oh, blasphemy, right, we shouldn't talk about that. I'll never get over this, you guys. I'll never get over the people that think we're carnivores. I'll never get over the people that think we're carnivores. I'll never get over it. You know why? Because we're not, that's. That's it, I'm gonna. I'm gonna block. If you block me, block, get out of here. If you don't think it's, you know, if you want to have a debate, let's talk about it. I'm ready to talk about that anytime. By the way, I'm coming, I finally got a good juice fast for car for carn for you corpse eaters, because you're not carnivores.

Speaker 1:

I've never met a carnivore, I mean a human carnivore, never, maybe not even Jeffrey Dahmer was it. Was he? Nah? Nah, he ate the pieces, yeah. So, anyway, I've never met a human carnivore, a human corpse eater. Ghouls right, a ghoul is a someone who devours dead bodies, so, uh, but I've got the good juice cast because we all need to do juice cleanses. All of us need to do juice cleanses, right, so we know what the plant eaters will be, and I'm working on I'm going to actually make a presentation for because I feel like I need to do that right, okay, so we talked about the uh, the xanthine, the luthi, lutein, right, which are carotenoids, but they're also part of the polyphenol group, right, yeah, flavonoids, right, and that's why we take the last of alaska is a zeaxanthine, yeah, so they're all very similar, okay, the green tea has polyphenols, um, yeah, okay, uh, anyway.

Speaker 1:

So the answer is yes, that would bind it up, so don't drink green tea or black tea, which is even more strong, like double the ability to bind iron, um, and we're talking about non-heme iron. What I mean by non-heme iron? Hemoglobin has iron and hemoglobin is in blood, so in non-heme iron. But if you're drinking blood then uh yeah, because it takes place, you can probably drink a little bit of green tea while you're drinking blood. You can also drink some green tea, and drinking blood means, you know, I like my steak rare, you know what I'm talking about. Or medium rare. I want to see that pink. That pink is what? Diluted blood? No, yeah, white meat, red meat, white meat, red meat. What's the red blood? Okay, by the way, there's no white meat, it's just flesh that has had the blood vessels removed. Watch when they stab it and kill it, blood comes out.

Speaker 1:

I know you might think what's this guy talking about? Why is he talking about all this stuff? I'm talking about it because it's extremely relevant, because we're talking about people here who want to keep on breathing. We all will love it's like. Is that not one of our big like? I guess it's got it. It's up there, right? Is it number one with our big? I guess it's up there, right. Is it number one with our habits? Number one on my to-do list goes without saying. I want to keep breathing. Right, I like breathing. It's fun. How do we do that? How do we keep breathing and feeling good. I don't want to be breathing and feeling horrible. No, how do we do that? That's what we're talking about.

Speaker 1:

So that's why I talk about what I talk about and I use sarcasm. And I use humor and sarcasm because I mean, otherwise I can't get through right when I'm talking, when I've talked to people a lot of times and I can just see the big wall, they can't hear it Right. It'd be like talking to someone who's got earphones on. They're not going to hear it. So there's two ways you can shock them by saying something. Did he say that when they do that, they hear it? Or when you make them laugh, because when you laugh again, you open up Laughter and shock open you up for a second. We've got to use those. Those are ways. We have to use those, anyway.

Speaker 1:

So the bottom line don't drink while you're eating and don't eat fruit while you're eating other stuff or eat just fruit. And if you're eating food, that's human food, you won't be thirsty while you're eating. Ah, all right. So now here's a question. This is from maryland.

Speaker 1:

Please could you help my friend's mom. She has copd for those that you don't know, chronic obstructive pulmonary lung disease. She smoked 15 cigarettes for 45 years and she does not have a machine and it's getting worse. A machine I have I don't know if that's a typo or but I don't know what you mean. Can you give any natural advice, please? Also, can you speak about diminished hearing in one ear? All right, the clpd, and very good chance it's related to you know, smoking 15 cigarettes for 45 years. So something very natural to do is to stop the smoking. I mean, you know that reminds me I've talked about.

Speaker 1:

There's a book called Toxemia, explained by Dr John Tilden, published in 1915, and where I, I mean, I 100% with this guy. The only difference I would have with him and a lot of people is he says instead, instead of looking for cures, why don't we stop building disease? That makes a lot of intuitive sense. However, since I recognize and you, if you listen to what we talk about that there are no diseases, there are only physiological adaptations which we name as diseases. Okay, therefore, I wouldn't put it that there is. There are no diseases, there are only physiological adaptations which we name as diseases. Okay, therefore, I wouldn't put it that way, I would agree with them. I'd say so, instead of looking for a cure which makes no sense. There's nothing to cure.

Speaker 1:

Why don't we stop degrading our health? So the we're not building things that don't exist, no, we're. We're lessening our health by not allowing our bodies and our minds to have everything they need, because what they have, everything they need, we're optimally functioning, which is health. So instead of saying, instead of using the D word I don't use that D word unless I have to I just say let's not do things that will diminish our health. So, instead of looking for a cure, let's stop diminishing our health. And the way we stop diminishing our health is by procuring it, by supporting it. And how do we support health? By living according to our biological requirements and psychological requirements, living a life that satisfies our biological requirements. It really doesn't get any simpler than that. And then the question is what are our biological requirements?

Speaker 1:

Those ants we were talking about. They do not have to contemplate or study what it is. They should be eating when they should sleep. Do they sleep? Do ants sleep? That's a good question. Do ants sleep? They've got to sleep. I mean, some of them are taking a break, they must, but I've never seen sleeping colonies or sleeping areas. But of course I'm not up during the night. So I don't know what the answer doing at night, do and stop at night. Anybody know this? Answer, this question? Wow, now, that's something I've got to figure out for the but anyway.

Speaker 1:

So no, no creature needs to study what it is. They need to eat because they're connected to instinct. We talked about that a moment ago. They're connected to instinct. We're not. We're not connected to instinct. Why? Because we grow up with three basic imperative from our imperatives, from our parents, and that is no, stop, don't know, stop, no, stop, don't know, stop, don't. Write in whatever language, and we learn real quickly that our instincts are completely unacceptable. Don't touch yourself there, don't sit like that. Now, when your Uncle Charlie comes, I want you to All right. So yeah, again. So we are completely kicked out of the paradise of instinct. Metaphor there yes, we're kicked out of the paradise of instinct and we're stuck with trying to figure it out and it is impossible.

Speaker 1:

I think we should eat according to our blood groups. Okay, I'm going to explain that to the horses, who have seven blood groups, and, uh, dogs, seven or ten, eleven. All these different animals have all these different blood groups. Are they eating according to the blood group? No, it's not fair. How can we have to eat according to our blood group and they don't? Because we don't, Because there's no such thing, there's no relationship. Except the Amato made a ton of money, a ton of money. It's still considered like you know's. It made its way. It's right in there in the middle of all the things, and the vegetarian carnivore blood group, I mean, it's part of the thing it made it into. Somehow it's became part of the debate. So I'm, um, yeah, yeah, anyway. So we have these kinds of discussions.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I want to know what blood group are you that's going to tell me what you should eat. According to my blood group, I should be eating animals. So I wonder how I made it all these years, 55 years, not eating animal. How did I do that? How did I make it? Because I'm supposed to write quitting my blood group. I don't know, I don't know. You know, maybe my, I don't know, I don't know. Or there is there, I don't know. I should ask the amount, the motto. Yeah, he might know how I made it, but I got to find out what you know, because my cats my cat, I mean dogs. If you have a dog, check out, find out what blood groups they have. And horses If you have horses I know somebody out there who has horses, I know you love your horses Figure out what blood group they're on and feed them accordingly. Yeah, I know the horse doesn. Horses Figure out what blood group they're on and feed them accordingly. Yeah, I know the horse doesn't want to eat hamburger, but I mean, hey, what does the horse know? We know better. Okay, let's skip that. Okay, where are we now? The question was oh yeah, so the COPD. So just okay.

Speaker 1:

One thing is you just don't smoke anymore and you'll be amazed how much you recover. And then what else you're going to do. Everyone knows this you're going to do a cleanse and you're going to your death. Your biological dentistry. You're going to do a juice cleanse. You're going to do colon hydrotherapy. Clean out your live, uh, yeah, your colon. You do lymphatic work. Uh, you're going to do all this stuff, all the same thing. You're going to go to a. You do lymphatic work. You're gonna do all this stuff, all the same thing. You're gonna go to a, an enlightened physician, uh, and get your hormones balanced appropriately at everything right, and then, after you do your pro, her prolongs juice cleanse, minimum three weeks, then eat only human food, with 18 hours between last and first meals, from one day to the next, and go to sleep early and move, move around all day.

Speaker 1:

It doesn't change, regardless of whatever. Whatever problem there is with the garden, I've got to do the same thing and that is, I've got to make sure the soil is cleansed and I've got all the right stuff in it. You know I've got the worms and I've got all the stuff that soil needs, and I've got to make sure the soil is cleansed and I've got all the right stuff in it. You know I've got the worms and I've got all the stuff that soil needs and I've got to have the water and access to sun. We've got to do that regardless of what's going on in the garden and regardless of what kind of problems that's happening. So I got it and it's the same with us now.

Speaker 1:

I don't know what you mean, marilyn, but she does not have a machine, is getting worse. You mean, I don't know, jimmy, can I give any natural advice please? But that what I just get said. You know all that stuff. Pranayama, breathing, she'll hurt. You'll be surprised how much her lungs clean, or she's, I don't know how severe the COPD is. But you know, good, peel PD is things like asthma, emphysema. You run, you know, like a severe bronchial ecstasy, bronchitis, bronchitis, chronic bronchialectasis, bronchitis, bronchitis, bronchitis. You know, chronic bronchitis. These are chronically obstructive pulmonary diseases. So actually emphysema is a chronic restrictive pulmonary disease because it's a restriction, not obstructive.

Speaker 1:

But yeah, um, now diminished hearing in one ear. It was's your other question. Can I speak about it? Well, you know, it's interesting, unilateral hearing loss, call this, it's a diagnosis.

Speaker 1:

It's either called unilateral hearing loss or there's another diagnosis. It's called same single side deafness, single-sided. And they distinguish between our unilateral hearing loss and single-side deafness. Single-side deafness, and they distinguish it. It's clear it just in the words. Right, but not a definition. A single-sided deafness means there's absolutely no rubber. That here, yeah, you can't hear it all, get that. And the hearing loss means you just lost. Yeah, okay, but they, they distinguish. Mmm, don't get confused, we're not confused, you're confused because you brought up this question, by the way.

Speaker 1:

Now, why do people get single-sided, unilateral? Here you go right, all right. I mean, how do you get it? Well, you can have a lot of wax build up. You can actually get a ruptured tympanic membrane, eardrum Infection. You can get otitis externa, which is the outside of the external auditory canal, is infected. Or you can get a middle. You can get a middle ear infection, otitis, media, head injuries, media, you know head injuries, vascular complications that you get. You know what are. Vascular complications mean your blood vessels are getting plugged up with junk and and the end, the lining, the endothelial cells, are becoming rigid. So it's vascular or it can be.

Speaker 1:

And there's something that they call sudden sensory neural hearing loss. Sensory neural meaning that there's a sudden at the cellular level of the ear, sudden loss. Now I guess they believe that happens right, just suddenly stops, okay. So what's amazing is they don't even look at the okay, they name the possible relationships of causes, but then that's it. When they talk about treatment it's not something completely different. But, by the way, so unilateral hearing loss can be congenital, meaning it's there at birth. All right, that can happen, okay.

Speaker 1:

And come now there can be something they're called benign. They're called benign gross because they're not malignant growths, but it's a neuroma, it's a. In other words, it's like a, like a lipoma that grow. You know lipoma on the nerve. It's called neuroma. It's called an acoustic neuroma because it's on your acoustic nerve, in your, in your, of you know, you have cranial cranial nerves, right? So there's an acoustic neuroma, uh, cranial nerves, right, so there's an acoustic neuroma, uh, and they say autoimmune, autoimmune diseases. Again, that's the, again, there's no such thing, but that can cause it.

Speaker 1:

And then I love this, the other, the other cause and this is found in a lot of almost they're saying that it's idiopathic. What's the cause? Well, it's idiopathic. Do you know what idiopathic means? Anybody know what idiopathic means? Anybody know what idiopathic means? You can't hear my audio. Can you hear my audio? Can you hear my audio? Can you guys hear me? Anyway, idiopathic means the doctor is an idiot and the patient is pathetic. But they don't, that's how I remember it, but anyway, in other words, but they don't, that's how I remember it, but anyway, in other words, they don't know. But nevertheless, about 60,000 people a year get unilateral hearing loss. So their answers are mechanical they're going to give you hearing aids, they're going to do this and that and this and that, they're going to give you crutches, instead of figuring out how it happened.

Speaker 1:

Well, the way it happened is what we talked about. It's the vascular and you know your um, if you have growths or anything. All of that is happening because of the accumulated toxicities and so you've got to cleanse. You've got if you got it it's an ear, a sinus, anything like that. You've got to, for sure, look at your biological dependence, get a biological dependence. So we have to take a look at wholeness. Don't separate whatever your symptoms. You're focusing your symptoms on one aspect of your body, like unilateral hearing loss. But it's not just that. Whatever is happening that's causing that is part of a systemic process, because our body is one system, it's not multiple systems, which doesn't even make sense and it's hard to define. Our body is one system, okay, so just please remember that. Okay, so don't look, for you know you've got to cleanse, you've got to get your blood vessels working and you can't only improve your vasculature or blood flow in one part of your body. You can't do that. It's all or nothing. It's the way it is. All right Now, I hope All right. All right, um, now, anyway, I hope all right. So, if you can, uh, please, uh, right, you know, keep that in mind. Okay, with the unilateral hearing loss.

Speaker 1:

Next question from Kat, currently NED. I thought your name was Kat. Your name is Ned. Huh, is it Ned or Kat? I'll call you Kat and I'll assume NED is an acronym meaning no evidence of disease. Well, that's good, guess what? There's no evidence of disease anywhere on the planet ever. Why? Because there's no such thing of disease. Well, that's good, guess what? There's no evidence of disease anywhere on the planet ever. Why? Because there's no such thing as disease. I'm going to come up with a new acronym. It's called NEI. You know what NEI stands for? No evidence of illusion. We've got to have that right. There's no evidence of an? We've got to have that right. There's no evidence of an illusion, right, all right.

Speaker 1:

So, uh, and sleep, great, thank you. They're different from humans, I, I would imagine. They take short naps throughout the day and night, which is called polyphasic sleeping pattern, amazing, amazing. So they like, do they? They must step out of the herd, right, and sleep. That's amazing. The ants do sleep, I'm good, I'm glad. So they're busy night and day, right, and they just, they like, individually or in groups, go take naps and come back and join the amazing all right, so, okay.

Speaker 1:

So now, um, so you got no evidence that, okay. So apparently you had CFC's and they treated you, uh, somehow. And now they can't find it. So they changed your name from cat to ned. I think cat sounds better.

Speaker 1:

But anyway, now they found a non-bleeding gastric ulcer. You know why? Because they're looking for stuff like that. Why would they find it? Did you have symptoms? You had symptoms of pain Gastric ulcer. So gastric ulcers, as compared to duodenal ulcers, small intestine Gastric ulcers usually when you eat something you'll kind of relieve the pain With the duodenal. When you eat something it makes it worse. It's kind of a broad way to distinguish him.

Speaker 1:

So so Kat says I'm juicing and with lowered acidic foods, taking marshmallow gluten means the carnosine, mababendazole. I had been taking Berberine, resveratrol, quercetin, green Tea, oregano, but cut them out for now. Any additional advice to heal ulcers? Just finishing 10 weeks of PPI and don't want to continue? Good, and it's not caused by H pylori. Okay, kat, I've got to free you from the grip of their. It's called the Rockefeller back arm twist. The Rockefeller back arm twist. I feel like I gave you the words.

Speaker 1:

So PPI is a proton pump inhibitor. What is a proton? A proton is a proton. I mean no one knows what a proton is a proton. I mean, no, no one knows what proton is. But it's got. Proton usually has a couple of electron electron and you gotta have two electrons to satisfy the outer orbit stuff anyway. But a leg is protons make it.

Speaker 1:

Proton is basically a hydrogen ion cation, which is what acid is. So a proton pump inhibitor blocks our stomach from producing acid. Good idea? No, why? Because without a very low pH, meaning a strong acid, we are in big trouble. So if you're going to avoid foods that have any acid in them, like lemons, vinegar and oranges, I mean, that does not have any relationship and blocking your acid production is not helpful. So what do we have to do? We have to heal the ulcer.

Speaker 1:

One of the most healing, healing, healing substances in the world is aloe vera. If you can eat, you can take and peel. Get fresh aloe vera, big fit that you know thick, juicy leaves, just peel off the skin, blend them in a blender, put something in it to make it taste good and drink that. That's very, very good. The other thing is whether or not they found H pylori or anything like that. Colloidal silver, and I would get the Argentin 23 from natural immunogenics. It's only stuff I use and Because healing us silver is not only antimicrobial but it's it's a gut healing. It's a healing properties as well. But the other thing about it is that it Excuse me, I was up late last night with this accident I had.

Speaker 1:

I didn't have it. It had me Make that clear. I was just sitting there at the red light, but okay. So the question is, how does the stomach get an erosion in it? Right, the stomach. How does it get an erosion? And there are multiple factors. But when we talk about h pylori, right, as being causative, it's not really the ray, it is. When we have a, an entire ecosystem I'm not just wait, we have one, maybe you might want to call it one huge ecosystem inside of our body and within them are smaller ecosystems, depending on the environment. So, like such like as our mouth, I think we have six or seven different little areas of different ecosystems of microorganisms. So in our stomach, like in all parts of our gut, are all sorts of microorganisms and when they're in balance, when they're in harmony, we have no problems.

Speaker 1:

My blood type was B, I'm a B. Am I supposed to eat? It's nonsense. Can you tell me what? Okay, what about a chimpanzee, who's a B? Or a bonobo? Or a gorilla? That's a B.

Speaker 1:

Idiopathic means the doctor's an idiot or a bonobo or a gorilla. That's a bee, come on, come on, come on, come on. Idiopathic means the doctor's an idiot and the patient's pathetic. Because the doctor doesn't know and the patient's there thinking you go to a doctor and ask them for help. There's already the problem. First of all, you shouldn't have to go to somebody else to ask them how you are. Hey, excuse me, hey, can you tell me how I am? That person might be able to tell you how they are, but not how you are. Anyway, I know him. Oh and Laurie.

Speaker 1:

So it's not a matter of believing in eating fish or meat. I don't believe in anything except Santa Claus. I do believe in Santa Claus. Well, I believe that I used to believe in Santa Claus, not for very long, but anyway for a while there I believed it, but that's about it. So here's the thing about eating and all that stuff. We should not believe in anything. We should find out about the truth. So we either know it or not. Believe means I don't know, but I believe in it. Right, I don't want to believe anything, I want to know.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so this dysbiosis in our in our stomach winds up these H pylori, because they kind of really like acidic environments. They can hang out there and most other organisms can't live in an acid environment like that. Okay, so now all the other stuff you're taking is great, it's great, it's great, but we need to restore your gut, your bio, healthy bio, and the way we do that is only one way, and that's by eating the food. That if we want a certain ratio and proportion of microorganisms to exist inside of us and that this particular ratio of different, differing proportions of microorganisms are going to be producing are necessary for our optimal functioning, then we need to feed them what they need and then they'll be there in those proportions. If we feed them differently, they'll change proportions. And guess what they like? Yep, yep, yep. I hope you were saying plants, plants, fruits, nuts, seeds that's what they like and they don't like them. They don't like them cooked. Yeah, you know, that's what they like.

Speaker 1:

So any degree to which we don't do that is the degree to which we'll have a mild dysbiosis period. There's no other way. And I'm taking probiotics. But if they can't find exactly what they want to eat, they're going to keep going Anyway. Okay, but if they can't find exactly what they want to eat, they're going to keep going anyway.

Speaker 1:

I you know I wish it wasn't that way, really, because I listen. You know what I wish. I wish eating pizzas was like the best thing in the world for you. Do you know how healthy I could be if eating pizzas made you healthy? I know I would be like the healthiest person in the world, and you know pizza and pasta. If those things could make you healthy, oh my gosh, I would be, I'd live, for I would never. I would go beyond 912 years, only 12 years, yeah, but um, they, we wind up with a, with a bio, uh, dysbiosis, extremely extreme. And don't take proton pumps, inhibitors, okay, you don't want to, at least in your. You don't want to lessen the acid in your stomach. Your stomach needs to be acidic, so so that ulcer needs to heal. I'm telling you aloe, aloe, aloe and the gluten means a good idea too. Aloe and gluten, but aloe, aloe, aloe, drink a lot of it.

Speaker 1:

Maria, a 55-year-old male, discovered during an ultrasound, initially and later by CT and MRI, that he has a large hepatocellular adenoma around 7 cm Centimeters. Ah, he's been taking veniafax vaccine, throwing 25 milligrams a day, clopidogrel 75 milligrams and bisoprozole for the last 17 years. In the past five years he's also added flecainide for the arrhythmia and wow and some statins for his cholesterol. He's also a heavy smoker and very regular alcohol drinker. Obviously, the safest solution offered by the doctors is surgical removal. Could it be treated by some other way before he proceeds to surgery, and mainly to prevent the adenoma from transforming? Okay, wow, wow, wow, all right, so let's, let's look at this. So we're talking about a guy who is taking all these different medications, drugs, poisons, right, I mean okay, for 17 years, right, and he's also, I mean, you covered them all. I mean not all of them, but I mean the fact that you, uh, he's taking statins which are it's crazy, um, it's crazy, I mean, okay, it's crazy, I mean okay, okay. First of all, those drugs you mentioned at the beginning right, the Venlafaxine, whatever. I don't know how they say that. They're stupid for making these words up. They should make them simpler. Venlafaxine, I guess, venlafaxine, whatever, all right, it and the other ones are antidepressants.

Speaker 1:

Why is he depressed? Let's not ask that question. Is he depressed? What is depression? Is depressant, feeling sad or melancholy? I mean, what is it?

Speaker 1:

It could be that I mean, I'll tell you something, if I were eating really unhealthy and I was maybe overweight and I was drinking a lot. I didn't. I'd probably be kind of bummed out, and I don't think that is needs to be. I'd probably be kind of bummed out and I don't think that is needs to be like chemically hidden from me. I mean, if I'm not feeling good about my life and all that, then it's time for me to say wait a minute, what do I need to do? How can I this? If I don't, if I don't, okay.

Speaker 1:

So that's we have to realize like pain is a symptom, telling us stop, whatever, something right. Itching is a symptom, headaches me, that's a pain, but anyway, uh, nausea is a pain, is a a symptom. Vomiting is a symptom. These are symptoms of our body saying it's, letting us know that it's out of balance. We have to restore balance. That's all we have to do, all right.

Speaker 1:

So now, if I'm depressed so I'm assuming that he was like extraordinarily depressed maybe, but they you know, doctors give antidepressants for many reasons, but same reason they give antibiotics. They give antibiotics just because here, take this in about. You got a runny nose taking it. Oh, you're not feeling, or I can't find any reason why. Yeah, I'm, your thyroid looks fine, I don't. And you say that you're still here, take these antidepressant anyway. So that that's so here. So he got on these antidepressants and then you wound up having heart arrhythmias and he's getting, so they. They gave him a flecain I and he's drinking and smoking and an anti-cholesterol, the, the Lipitor and those kind of things would. Anyway, he's taking those drugs. So all this stuff is poisoning him and poisoning it. He'll never get better. He'll never get better, right.

Speaker 1:

And so the adenoma, by the way, this kind of especially, you know, this kind of adenoma is what's important to understand about An adenoma is just, it's a gland that has grown, but it seems to be benign, in other words, it's not a malignant, right? Okay, that's what I have, no thanks. Now this particular type of adenoma is where is this here? We'll move this here. No, oh, there we go, okay, anyway.

Speaker 1:

So this particular type of adenoma is, I think it's in the liver, happens often with women who are on birth control pills and things like that. I mean, when it happens, it's a rare condition, but you know something that that happens in the, in the liver, like that, and you know what they call it, right, they call it hepatocellular adenoma, because hepato refers to liver right, cellular refers to cell. Adenoma means a growth that's growing, a glandular growth that's benign. They also call it a hepatic adenoma, they even call it a hepatanoma. It's all the same thing. It's all the same thing. It's all the same thing. Anyway, it's rare, benign.

Speaker 1:

It's due to elevated systemic estrogens, which we find in women taking birth control pills and things like that contraceptives. If you're drinking alcohol and eating in such a way that you get central adiposity, in other words, you get overweight in the belly, this increases estrogen. Both of those conditions can increase estrogen which we get. Men get what's called man boobs. Man boobs are just from that, and so let me. This is so, so that's a good reason why that's happening. So, in that regard, I would, I would.

Speaker 1:

We got to change the diet and cleanse and do all that. It's very, very important, colonics. Everything you got to change it. It's going to stop drinking, stop smoking, or not, I mean or not and not, and then don't. But if you want to like, resolve this, you've got to clean it up. You've got to clean it up. Okay, you've got to clean it up. Okay, you've got to clean it up. Now, one thing to keep in mind is that you know fatty liver, you know fatty liver comes from again from the same eating problem. So, again, cleansing, cleansing and eating human food is going to restore the integrity of the liver. However, remember that a fibroadenoma, or what they're calling a hepatic adenoma, can be confused with the Echinococcal cysts that we see with tapeworm. Okay, and I mean these cysts can get big. Do you realize that cysts that they stay in there for decades can actually have liters, not just one liters, of fluid, be very, very big? So I mean, there's a lot of other potential things that could be, but you know we've got to get the estrogen. You know, get his hormones balanced and have him stop, you know, lose the central adiposity, all those things to diminish that Balance his hormones. He's a 55-year-old male, so testosterone is low and the belly fat is going to convert, whatever a lot of the testosterone into estrogens. So we've got to change all that, 've got to restore the balance. All right, so now, but let's also look at the possibility of parasites. Okay, because there are parasites. So a customer, the dog, tapeworm, and the one thing about these parasites is that they they originate in the original, original host are animals that eat animals, so meat-eating animals. It comes out in their stool and that's because these animals that are meat-eating animals, you know the real ones, you know cats, maybe even hyenas, I don't know Some dogs, raccoons, but they eat the organs of these animals. When they eat the organs, that's where they'll, because that organ will have the cysts in it. They'll get the cysts from eating that organ. Sheep, rodentsents, whenever they're eating, and there's kind of three different like species of these types of tapeworms. But they can not only get liver, they can get into the lung, they can get up the brain. They can not only get liver, they can get into the lung, they can get into the brain, they can get spleen, they can get the heart, they can get into the kidneys. Yeah, these cysts been with humanity a long time and we, we, we found them in. You know, not me, but archaeologists have found them in mummies, found them in. If they found any kind of preserved corpse, if you go back back from the Roman era and stuff like that, right, and we know that you know Hippocrates and Galen and all them talked about it. He says, and of course, very interesting in in those days they would treat it with garlic. Excuse, yeah, with garlic. Yeah, garlic was one of the main main treatments, right. And now we're a little bit different. We say if it's over a certain, if they're over a certain size, we've got to do a surgical removal of it. But then we add albendazole or mebendazole and we got to take it for maybe a couple years, uh, or sometimes they'll even add prosecuanto. So, um and the reason it. But if it's an adenoma, like they're saying it is, uh, the problem with that is that it it can bleed and if you could, you can die. If it bleeds, if it's big enough and it bleeds, you can die. So If it's big enough and it bleeds, you can die. If it's a cyst, that's another thing. You've got to get rid of the cyst. Remember, this condition goes way, way back. It's even discussed in the Talmud. A Jewish scripture there was, you know Jewish scripture. So, and there was a. They found a 8,000-year-old corpse in Siberia. You know, siberia is part of Russia. That's really cold. 8,000-year-old corpse, that had it. So yeah, we were but were. But you know that corpse could have gotten it from the water or something that, from the feces of an animal. Who knows how to have it? And here's are there any other parasites that can cause cysts. Yes, lots of them, okay, you know, there, I don't know if you've heard of larva migrans, right, there's visceral and ocular larva migrans. There's, again, different kinds of tapeworms, right, there's all kinds of tapeworms that can do it. And the you know from Trichinosis, the pig, okay, that organism I don't know if you've heard of, try try Panasomas, try, try Panasomiasis, where people get the Chagas disease with a really large, like livers, large megacolon and stuff like that. They can cause cysts, right, which is why I think most cysts in the body are parasites and I think we. That's why doing a thorough parasite cleanse three weeks on one week off, three weeks on one week off, with multiple different antihelminthics, which are worms and antiprotosols, is very important. Do a good, thorough one initially and then do at least three, two months, three months a year, okay, okay now. So for your, for Maria, for your 55 year old male, this is really he's just got to clean up I need, and he's gonna rhythm, you know, I don't know what kind of an Arabic and a be an arrhythmia he has, but a lot of arrhythmias come from ischemia, cardiac, and ischemia means lack of blood flow. The blood flow, lack of blood flow is due to plugged up arteries and or spasming arteries. These are the arteries that are feeding the heart muscle itself, right? So that you know that that's that's one part to cause these electrical disturbances. So is he, you know. The question is is he really, is he willing to do this? Is it? Means he willing to change his life? That's the hard part. A lot of people aren't right. So I mean, because you were talking as if he were not ready, maybe as if he would do what, because, you know, is there anything else other than like surgery and stuff like that? Okay, so you know. The other thing is this if, if he's got, you know, flecainize, you know, usually used for atrial fibrillation, but any kind of cardiac arrhythmia can be related to wisdom teeth. So if the wisdom teeth have been removed, which most people are, and they're removed by a regular dentist, they didn't take out the periodontal ligament, so they wound up getting a cavitation which is like a bone infection above that area, and they won't know it because it's not painful, it's not swollen or anything like that, but that will cause an arrhythmia in the heart. So that would be. He's got to go to biological. So it turns out that everybody has to do the same thing Go to biological a real one who knows how to read 3D cone beam CTs, do a thorough juice cleanse and then eat human food and just, it's always the same thing. It's amazing, I mean I'm amazed. It's okay these adenomas can turn into can turn into the CFCs, but it's not. I mean it's not common, but it definitely does happen. So, yeah, you don't want that to happen. You also don't want it to bleed. If it is an abnormal, that's not a cyst. So we've got to. I would just I'm assuming it's everything and clean out biological. Do it all change? All right? Now, this is from Peter. Since I started using all where yeah, I become a Mabenda Mazzola, but Ben is all black seed oil with other supplements, I experienced a great relief and improvement. My pains have almost disappeared. Swollen lymph nodes are no or not. Swollen lymph nodes are no. My energy and strength are back. My appetite is fantastic. I'm now doing weight lifting. Skin color is better, okay. So I know the alternative treatment is pot responsible. But should I discontinue chemotherapy and stick to my alternative treatment? I still have two cycles to go and probably radiation sessions. Well, peter, yeah, I mean, I don't know your situation. I can't give you advice at all because I don't know your situation. But, um, I do know that chemotherapy ensures later metastasis. So that's what I know. I know that and you can come to our group and I could share a zoom on zoom. I can share research to show you, but it's like not a secret. So should you stop that? So should you stop that? We've got two more cycles to go ahead. I don't know where you're at at all, so it's really hard for me to advise you. But if you join the groups I can talk to you more clearly and understand and give you some direct advice. And understand and give you some direct advice. But in general, chemo is going to cause problems down the road with like really aggressive metastases. Yeah, someone knocking at my door. No, okay, all right. So now here we are. So let's go looking at Tasha. I was diagnosed with DCIS, er positive in grade three, stage zero. The only treatment option I was offered was, let's think, offered was less thankful. I am concerned about its spreading if I do this. I have WFPB, wfpb. Can anybody help me with that? Anybody help me with WFPB? You don't like pasta, you're lucky. Anyway, I don't know what you mean, but you're a vegan. Are there any other treatment options than surgery? Yeah, and you've got stage zero. Okay, now remember, let's go back to basic mathematics. A whole food plant-based? Wow, wow, wow. That's what W? What is it what? Wfpb? Wow, yeah, this is a question I've been having Is when did we start saying plant-based? What does that mean? You know, I thought when I first heard that, that when you're saying plant-based meaning that, well, basically I eat, eat plants, but I eat other stuff as well. Non-plan, right, otherwise, why would you say based? You just say plants. A plant by plant based means basically plants, but or mostly plants, I don't know. So, okay, good, so here's the thing. I'm uh, you've got dcis, ductal carcinoma in situ, meaning it hasn't gone anywhere, it's still just there, it hasn't disrupted any of the architecture. So it's stage zero. Zero, when I remember my mathematics meant nothing. Now's the time to do a thorough cleanse. Make sure you go to it. Go to Emma, dr Emma in Glendale California. Get the best biological dentist, get that done. Do a cleanse, do colonics, do all that sort of thing. Take the vitamin C, ad and melatonin and balance your thyroid and your adrenals. Do all the stuff that we talk about and you won't need. There's, first of all, surgery is not going to do anything except damage you. It's going to damage you, I promise. I mean it's trauma You're going to lose. There's physical trauma and what you'll find out later is that there's psychological trauma Because, no matter how much, no matter how you look at it, when a woman loses one breast or both, she'll never feel the same. She just doesn't feel the same psychologically. It doesn't matter if they've been, you know you've had augmentation therapy or plastic surgery and all that. It's just psychologically. Psychologically. Don't do that to yourself. You don't have to. There's no reason. The fact that they offer this do you know the data? There's a lot of data that shows that all the unnecessary Okay, but by calling stage zero and giving it a diagnosis and making it treatable by surgery. Do you know what's happened as a result of this? How many women have died? Why do they die? They get the surgery and then sometimes chemo and they get the morbidity from that and the surgery now will cause maybe metastatic spread, most likely, and if they do chemo, so the complications that go on from the beginning to getting pulled into. This is what kills people, not DCIS and not FCIS follicular carcinoma, f-c-i-s follicular carcinoma I think that's the one. They don't even recommend surgery. The answer is listen, if you were my patient or my friend or my spouse or my daughter, whatever relative, I would say don't do it, and you can resolve this. It's just you've got some, you got your. Just you got some cells that are beginning to ferment. You just make it unnecessary. You got to make it unnecessary. Okay, all right, what a prospect. I mean, yes, yes, it will spread surgery, spread it and both surgeries and there's the literature's full of that, I mean. I mean, I could pull it up right now. There's just a lot of literature to show that, right. So now you know there was a question before about estrogen receptor blockage, right? I guess you're talking about tamoxifen and some of the other ones. Okay, so my thoughts on that and I've said it many times and that is instead of doing this, instead of using a synthetic agent to block estrogen receptor alpha, there are natural ways to do that. Estriol, which the body makes, is a beta agonist, which is an ER beta agonist which shrinks tumors, and it a little bit sits on the alpha. But because the beta is so strong, the net effect is beta shrinking, but because it's sitting on the alpha, it's blocking Nothing else can sit on it. Same thing happens with soy flax seeds. So that's how I would do that, 100%. Just a moment, I think someone's knocking again um, um, um, okay, wow, you know, it's like going to the hospital, right? You go to the hospital and they tell you about all these things that are wrong with you here. I got somebody here to fix my roof and I didn't know there was anything wrong with my roof. So now I know there's something wrong with my roof. Amazing, that's. My answer is that you were Tasha. You're positive, of course you are positive. You have the breasts. Breasts are sensitive breasts, estrogen and breasts. You know, come on, don't listen to their words. The things are. You've got some mild fermenting cells. Just make them not need to ferment. It's very simple. Just do it and know that it's the right thing to do and join our group so that I can show you research and stuff, because you've got to realize that I'm not just making stuff up. All right, very important. Hey, what happened? Come on, you know this is so sensitive. If I move my mouse I lose the whole paper. Anyway, where are we here. Ok, what are your thoughts on Herceptin? I appear to be experiencing long-term anemia from it. Okay, that is blocking Our cells, have little antigens that can get stimulated on our cells to have them grow, grow, okay. So epidermal, uh, epidermal means the outside of the dermis, right outside of the skin, epidermal. So think about it, the breasts. Breasts are basically skin. Okay, mean, there are aspects of this. The skin has its appendages, the appendages of the skin, or hair glands, sweat glands, african glands, sebaceous glands, there's different kinds of glands. So those glands and a breast itself is, is a gland in that it produces something, right, a gland produces a substance and excretes it, and so, of the breast has these little sacs that lead to the tubes and the tubes take it out to the nipple, and that's, that's the function of the breast. And then, of course, there's fat and connective tissue and all that around it to hold it and we have breast and uh, so, um, now, so there are growth factors. There's one, two, three, four, five, I mean, uh, growth, epidermal growth factors, they, they call them right. And there's five, six, seven, I can't remember, but anyway. So the second one, epidermal growth factor two, is the one that has, they say overexpressed, right, and so that makes you HER2 positive, because HER2, her1, her3, they're all the same as the epidermal growth factors. So, in other words, this is happening and the reason that's happening, the reason there's been an epigenetic change, modification in your cell, is because your cells are responding to the environment they live in. So whatever a cell is doing, it's doing it in response to its environment. If you change the environment, you'll change what the cell does. It's really that simple. So again, yeah, you're getting anemia. It's rare, but it doesn't matter if it's happening to you. It's now rare, it's happening. So that's why it's time to get off of this and you've got to have the confidence to know that that's it's not not a problem. So hopefully, you've done your biological, then you've cleaned that, you've done all that. You're eating healthy, then you stop it. But if you haven't, then you, you maybe you wean off it and then you just get clean, get healthy, make yourselves not need to do that. Because they're upregulating epidermal growth factor. Two, because for some reason that they need to do that and we don't understand the way cells operate. They operate under some divine, incredible thing, so we will never understand it. We need to know that All right, so we will never understand it. We need to know that we need to restore a balance, integrity, provide what's necessary and get rid of the garbage. That's really. It always comes down to that. So, deb, yeah, those are my thoughts. You don't need this. Believe me, you weren't born with a Herceptin deficiency. La Vona, my cousin, has stage four colon CFSAs. I'm trying to find a way to help her. She's really sick. I don't know if she's sick from chemo or whatever, but yeah, she's got to join our group or you join it with her or for her or something, because there is so much you can do and you got to get started right away, from biological dentistry to everything. I don't know. I don't know where where she's at. So it sounds like she's very sick. I just don't know if it's sick from what. So I've got to talk to you. I can't, I can't for her. Okay, so, um, her okay, so um. Elaine, uh, what are your thoughts on dr wendy sullen's view that all estrogens are fueling breast? Cms cup of flax equals 20 birth control pills. No, I don't agree. I don't know who she is, but I don't agree at all. I don't agree at all because there are two estrogen receptors alpha and beta. Alpha make things grow. Beta makes things shrink. So if you stimulate the alpha, you're going to grow. If you stimulate the beta, you're going to grow. If you stimulate the beta, you're going to shrink. Flax stimulates the beta. Soy stimulates the beta. So how can I, how can I say that? How does she say that? I don't know how she says that. It's just not true. Debbie, I hope you're listening and I hope you might want to have a talk with me. Send me a note. Wow, elaine, tell Debbie, we've got to talk. I mean, wendy, I'm sorry, wendy, dr Wendy, not the same, I'll show you the research. I'm not. Yeah, I'll show you the research. I'm not. Yeah, I'll show you the research. Yeah, I mean, I wish we had a zoom right now so I could show you the research. Let me see, I can't, baby. I don, I don't know. I just want to read the article for you. So uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, okay. So what do we got here? Let's look at this. Here we go, okay, all right. So okay, let me just read a little bit. The name of this article is 2018. It's called the Effect of Flaxseed in Breast Cancer a Literature Review. It's a breast cancer. I'm going to have to use their word, sorry. Breast cancer is one of the most common CFCs and the second most responsible for CFC mortality worldwide. In Portugal, approximately 27,200 people died of CFCs, of which 1791 were women with breast CFCs. Flaxseeds have been one of the most studied. It is rich in omega-3 fatty acids, alpha-linolenic lignans and fiber. One of the main components of flaxseed is the lignans, of which 95% are made of the predominantly cycloisolaric lauric resin. All die glucoside, which is converted into enter a lactone and enter a dial, both with anti-estrogen activity wait, wait, did I say that, anthony? Yeah, it's with us and structurally similar to estrogen. They can bind to cell receptors, decreasing cell growth. They can say that once again. They can bind to cell receptors, decreasing cell growth. Some studies have shown that the intake of omega-3 fatty acids is related to the reduction of breast CFC risk. In animal studies, alpha-linolenic acid has been shown to be able to suppress growth size and proliferation of CFC cells cancer cells again and to promote breast CFC cancer cell death promote death. Other animal studies found that the intake of flax seeds combined with tamoxifen can reduce tumor size to a greater extent than taking tamoxifen alone. Additionally, some clinical trials showed that flax seeds can have an important role in decreasing breast CFC risk. I, I mean, that's just one study. I mean there are, let me see the in the. Here's another. Just one work. You're just one more, because I, you know, I'm always saying things that people think that I just make it up and I just got promised you I don't make it up. Here's 2018 again, and the effect of flax seeds in breast cancer. Well, that's the same thing. I just read, okay, just published differently. Okay, pubmed here's PubMed. Here's a PubMed. Here's a PubMed. Here's PubMed. Here's PubMed. Here's PubMed. Okay, you guys, ready, ready, ready, ready. Dietary flaxseed alters tumor biological markers in postmenopausal breast CFCs. Anyway, the conclusion was flaxseed, the richest source of mammalian lignin precursors, has previously been shown to reduce the growth of tumors in rats. Anyway, they did all this. They had a reduction in K67 labeling, which you all know. K67 means it's aggressive. Anyway, there's nothing but the opposite of what she's saying. So I don't know what to say to her, uh, except that I'd love to talk to her and I help her, uh, point her in the right direction, for for, uh, you know how to things to read so that she can learn how to do this. Okay, learn a little bit more. It's very important. Okay, now, what? Here's a question with them, from Kim. It says when bug, but bug, bug, bed, bed bugs bite, do they lay eggs under the skin of the host? No, it's not. It's, it's not the same. You know when we think of, like, if you're thinking of what do you call it? You know, like, you know, we've talked about the ectoparasites like the bot fly, and it lays eggs and the larvae go into under the skin, right, so, all right. So that's not something that happens with the, what do you call it? With bed bugs? You know, so I mean. But when you say you have bed bugs, have you seen them? I meanbugs, have you seen them? I mean, are you seeing them? The eggs do not enter you, the host. They'll lay their eggs close to you, they'll lay their eggs there. They don't, they can't enter you, okay, and you know they. They're not like. You know, like some of the worms, they only make about seven or eight eggs a day instead of up to 70,000 that those other guys do. Anyway, they can live on the beds and they can live in the areas that are moist, but, believe me, the eggs cannot enter you. But what you've got to do is get rid of these guys. You get rid of them by washing the sheets. Really, put peroxide in the washing machine, get 6% peroxide, put that in and then bathe yourself. You can do peroxide baths and stuff like that and then you change your clothing and, just like people that have lice, they have to change their clothing and stuff like that, right? So, yeah, um, yeah, but wow, that's, it's a bummer, but you can get rid of them. That's one of the easier question. Let's do the last question. It's by Marina. What could be the reason for low ferritin? But normal iron Ferritin is 13,. Iron is 170. Saturation and binding capacity also low. White blood cells borderline low at 3.5. It's been like this since I remember. Otherwise, no health issues, very active in healthy lifestyle, organic, raw vegan for decades. Yay, marina, wow, you go. Yeah, well, it's a low ferritin when looking at the bell-shaped curve of the average person who is not a healthy person like you. So you can't really whether. Okay, you may be low, but you may be healthy. Since you're healthy, you are healthy, I mean. So that's now we know. Okay, and your iron is about 117. Is that always that high, that's high. But I mean, if it's not, you know so the ferritin is iron storage. So if the ferritin is not storing, and although ferritin is an iron storage and it also goes up when you're having an acute inflammatory condition, so you're not having neither, your ferritin iron ratio is like perfect, more than perfect, I mean don't worry about it. I mean don't worry about it. If you've been eating for decades this way, then you know, unless you get like exposed to really high lots of 5G or you get exposed to, you know, ionizing radiation, you know like a Fukushima or something, unless you get some sort of like that, unless you get a lot of that you're going to, you know, have no problem with anything. Yeah, so I wouldn't even check anymore because you don't remember. You, you're in such a, you're such a healthy, you're in a healthy group. So you have no peers, no references, references. There's no reference range for you. You are the reference range, okay, because there's. You don't have a healthy group, all right, it's like yeah, you know, like cholesterol numbers is like. You know, I've always been considered to have low cholesterol because I don't eat other creatures' cholesterol. I'm sure you have a low cholesterol too. Anyway, folks, that's it for today, thank you, and let's do this again next week. But come on, join these groups so that we can interact, because there are all these great questions that I feel so badly that I can't get to them, and I want to get to them. It's crazy that I can't get to them. Where are you? Wait, wait, wait, get out of here. Where are you? Where are you? Come on, what? There we go. Okay, yeah, here we go. Okay. Yeah, you look good. Bernice, you want to stay away from them. Uh, how do we join the groups? Joel patty, you are just good. You join the group by going to drlodycom and right there, you'll see it right when you get on the page. It's three different groups. You can find it right there, drlodycom. Okay, good, so you're on x. I'm still just now seeing you guys from the. Uh, oh, my god, so there's so much. I mean, whoa, my god. So cheryl's telling me that here that they're giving dogs antidepressants. You know, hey, I don't understand. Oh, margie, I'm sorry, I'm making you yawn. I was kind of sleepy today, I'm sorry. Yeah, it's terrible. Let's see Blood type. Dad smoked heavily for years. He was 84 when he died. So listen, I think the most important thing we learned today ants sleep. That's amazing, amazing. I've never seen a sleeping in. Wow, did they dream? Hey, sweaty cop, namaste nam, namaskar Aloha, and I have a fantastic week and don't believe anything out there, anything. Don't believe anything. Say thank you very much, show me the research, or you look it up or something. Don't believe because Is not true. None of it's true. Ninety nine, point nine percent of what you run into is not true. Ok, true, 99.9% of what you've run into is not true. Okay, and so that's the problem. So you've got to become your own researcher. You've got to have a library, you've got to read, get books, get away from digital stuff, because digital stuff is going to be the end of us. It is the already. But read these books, you know, I mean, you know, I mean, you know. It's a great book. Did you guys ever see this book? Here it's old Eating animals. It's a great book. And here's a book too great For a lot of the questions that we all have. Ah, here, clinical microbiology, made ridiculously simple. All right, just to get you into some of that. Oh, here's another very important book you should all read. Okay, because your doctors don't know it and they should. It's called the Safe Use of Cortisol Amazing book Written by a doctor, of course. Anyway, where's my other book? There was another book I wanted to share with you guys. We should do that one day, we should just do books. Where is it? Anyway, some of my original, the original of parasite books there I was reading, just so you have, just so you have a background in. I was reading just so you have, just so you have a background in understanding, because the subject has been around for a long time. Just to show you here, like here's this and here is this. These are old books, I mean 20 years ago, anyway, anyway, anyway, anyway, okay, you guys, all right, oh, here's a good book I'm reading now. All right, wadi Kapp Next week.

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