
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
The Dr. Lodi Podcast empowers people to think for themselves and teaches people how to achieve optimal health, free from cancer and all other chronic conditions. Dr. Lodi shares evidence-based information and reveals the truth about cancer, health, and healing. As a medical doctor, clinical psychologist, nutritionist, historian, philosopher, and the pioneer of what has now become the definitive route for those unsatisfied with the modern cancer treatment system, Dr. Lodi will deliver information that you’ve never heard before. Tune in and discover what a True Second Opinion really means, how to Stop Making Cancer, why there is no such thing as “diseases,” and what you are TRULY capable of achieving in your life.
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
Episode 146 - 4.5.25 The Nightly Human Reset: Forgiveness Through Sleep
Sleep isn't just rest - it's your body's most extraordinary healing mechanism. Every night, regardless of what you've eaten or how you've treated your physical vessel during the day, your cells engage in a remarkable process of renewal and forgiveness. Unlike cars, phones, and other machines that deteriorate over time, we humans have this built-in reset button that allows us to wake up renewed and restored.
This podcast delves deep into the contrast between pharmaceutical approaches to hormone-related conditions and nature's more balanced alternatives. Aromatase inhibitors like letrozole, commonly prescribed to postmenopausal women with hormone-sensitive cancers, come with a staggering array of side effects affecting joints, bones, cognition, and mood. Meanwhile, research from the Journal of Biological Chemistry shows that phytoestrogens from plants like soy selectively trigger beneficial estrogen receptor pathways while avoiding harmful ones - a level of sophisticated targeting that pharmaceutical options can't match.
The discussion challenges numerous health misconceptions propagated by mainstream medicine. Did you know that Japanese people consuming traditional diets take in over 100 times more iodine than the FDA recommends, yet have lower cancer rates and longer lifespans? Or that wearing bras 24/7 restricts lymphatic flow and correlates with increased breast cancer risk? These inconvenient truths highlight how conventional medical wisdom often ignores or contradicts available research.
Perhaps most powerful is the paradigm shift offered regarding chronic disease. Rather than viewing conditions like cancer as invaders to be bombed with aggressive treatments, we're encouraged to understand them as adaptive responses by cells to unfavorable conditions. The solution lies not in warfare but in restoration - creating an in
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This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on Jan. 19th, 2025
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Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.
Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast
Welcome to the Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast. This is the show for you if you’re...
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Great, yay, cool. So listen, let's look at us. Here on this side of the world, we were just forgiven, yeah, and you folks on the other side of the world, in the US and Canada and Europe, you're about to be forgiven. So that's good news, right? So we were just forgiven and you're about to be forgiven. And so what the hell am I talking about? I'm talking about this phenomenon known as sleep. When you go to sleep, do you realize? You can crawl into bed exhausted, wiped out, bummed out, or just exhausted and happy, and you're going to wake up in the morning feeling great, what happened? Well, god, oh, I'm sorry for those who don't know about God, let's call it.
Speaker 1:Nature has this really cool relationship or deal with us. No matter what we do during the day, no matter what we eat, what activities we engage in, we go to sleep and we're forgiven, we're repaired, everything is repaired and it's a new us and that's a beautiful thing. That's a beautiful thing. So I know we take care of our cars, and really take care of our cars, and we've got to make sure our phones are charged, and we do all that stuff with these devices and machines, and then we don't even think about us. So, anyway, you are forgiven every night when you go to sleep for all the physical transgressions you engaged in, and if you're a human being, you're gonna do that sort of thing, yeah, so, um, anyway, yeah, and I'm not and I'm not just talking about our, our, our, our, our, whatever kind of person you are, whether you do nice things or not, nice things, I'm not not talking about that, I'm just talking about the physical reality is that we are forgiven. Bmws aren't. Even Rolls Royces, maseratis, they're not forgiven. We are Okay. So let's change our oil once in a while. Let's make sure we got our tires rotated, okay, well, let's do that, all right. So, anyway, welcome, I'm glad. Okay, okay, it's hard to believe. No beeping and, uh, everybody is ready to go. I think. Are we ready to go? Yeah, I guess we are okay. So now, ah, okay, go, we're gonna go, okay.
Speaker 1:So let me get over to this stuff here first, before I get started. I already started, but you know anyway, um, announcements yeah, so this is sunday night, sunday morning, slash 9-9-9. Now, it's now live, we're live now and, as you know, you submit your questions prior and then I'm trying to answer them and you submit it. You can go to the website slash live, and then you can find out where to submit your questions. Slash live and then you can find out where to submit your questions. And if you've got an active CFC situation going on right now, just give our clinic a call Oasis in Arizona or contact them by Internet and let's get things started. Okay? So, unless, of course, there's this and that and this and that and this and that, then this and that and this and that you can't. So I understand, because life is full of this and that all over the place. Everywhere I look there's a this or that. So I understand, I get it Anyway.
Speaker 1:But what would be really good with regarding these questions is if you could join me in the inner circle, right? So we have three groups Health and Healing, Parasite and the CFC group. For those of you who have just joined, this is your very first time we don't use ugly, ugly words. Well, it's not an ugly word, it's really a nice word. The word cancer means people that were born between June 21st and July 22nd, and it's nice. They're nice people. I like these people, I like all 12 groups of people, but it's just that that word got associated with chronically fermenting cells inside our body, somehow. I think it was an algebraic equation and the variable that caused it to happen, the enzyme that caused it to happen, it's this little ball of disgust, actually a big ball of disgust and rank. It's called Rockefeller. I don't know. I can say there's a Rockefellerian enzymatic reaction to humanity and it did all this stuff. Anyway, I'll go into that in exhaustive detail in my book that's coming up as soon as I get a chance to finish it.
Speaker 1:Anyway, so those three groups and the good thing about those groups if you're in those groups, we can interact, you can ask a question, I can, can ask back, because most of the time I get a question and and I really have all the information, so I can't really understand perhaps the full of the question or all that, although I usually know what people are asking, because I think, no matter what the question is, you're just saying no, no, that's good, that's what I hear, okay, so it's good Anyway, but these are these goods, these are good. So remember this thing here. This live stream is on on X used to be Twitter X and Tik TOK, the new Tik TOK at D R Thomas Lmd right Mythology doctor drthomasl by being the first speaker, but I couldn't get there, thank God, I mean, yeah, couldn't get there Anyway. So instead I'm going to be doing this virtual live alone and it will be this coming Tuesday. For you guys, at Eastern Standard, which I guess New York, florida, maine, massachusetts, is going to be 8 pm your time, which means what? 5 pm in the West Coast, right, and of course for me it's 9 am Wednesday, but anyway. So just to let you know, know that it'll be a live thing, and I don't know how you join it. Oh, you can find the zoom link in your recent on our every social media platform. All right, so it was posted, I guess today, sunday, may 4th, for you guys, we you know, we're confused here.
Speaker 1:We think it's mayth Instagram just told me something about my hand gestures. What am I supposed to do with my hand gestures? I'm Italian. If I don't, if I, I can't talk. If I can't use my hands, you know what I mean. If you handcuff an Italian, they can't speak, anyway. So, and then the other one, dr Jen Simmons. We've done a couple podcasts recently and it's airing now, I guess. Okay, so as of May 2nd, so you guys can watch that. It's good, I love talking to her. She's such a brilliant woman. Yeah, all right.
Speaker 1:So now I'm going to get into some questions. All right, sound like a good idea. Yes, it does, cool, okay, here we are Now. First question is from Andrea and the question is ketogenic diet. You guys remind me to do that later, because I've got to try to remind me again. Good morning, alice From Sydney.
Speaker 1:Where was Crocodile Dundee from? He wasn't from Sydney, was he? Wasn't he from the Outback or something? Okay, anyway, all right, we'll get it. Okay, listen, how do you deal with procrastination? Well, let's think about that. See, I'm procrastinating. No, you guys have some amazing questions. If you joined, where are you calling from? I'm calling from Thailand. Anyway, if you guys join these groups, we can like talk. I can't do that right now. I have to do this. Okay, this is from Andrea.
Speaker 1:She's saying I have the few sclerosis of my spine. Does the letters, all I'm currently thinking on, have any effect on it? I've been on it three years, wow. Well, yes, it does. Let me do this. Put this one here, it goes there. Yeah, and then these two are here. Okay, cool, this one. I'm going to do like that. I got one of these things on my computer where I can try to be organized. On my computer where I can try to be organized, it helps me go organized. All right, here we are.
Speaker 1:So does letrozole have any effect on the fact of diffuse sclerosis of your spine? Well, you know the word sclerosis means scarring. I'm not sure what you mean by that, because is this new? Has this diffuse sclerosis just come about over the last three years while you've been taking this? Because what happens if you have bone metastasis and they heal many times? The consequence is that there's scar material left over right Because you heal it, you know, just like any kind of wound. But so the letrozole could actually you could you know if it was actually effective in helping to eliminate some of those metastases. That could do it. But I don't know if you have this condition prior or not. But the letrozole now.
Speaker 1:Letrozole, as you all probably know, is what is known as a aromatase inhibitor, right and the way that works. Why does it why? Why would someone be on an aromatase inhibitor? Right and the way that works? Why does it why? Why would someone be on an aromatase inhibitor? What in the world is aromatase? Aromatase is an enzyme that takes and we'll turn it into estradiol and androstenedione into estrone, okay, and it blocks uh. So.
Speaker 1:So, um, if you take an aromatase inhibitor now see, especially in postmenopausal women, and the reason why it's prescribed for postmenopausal women is because postmenopausal women are not producing any estrogens in their ovaries anymore, um, and their adrenal glands are producing androgens like androsine dione and testosterone. So when those circulate and they wind up in some tissues that have fat cells, fat cells happen to have a lot of the aromatase enzyme, and so breasts are made of little sacs, lobules, that produce milk, and then they're made of ducts that carry the milk to the nipple, and then they're made of, and then they have connective tissue and they have fat, and that's what a breast is. And so the fat in there will, when it's exposed to those androgens produced by the adrenal gland, turns them into estrogens, and so when we look at a postmenopausal woman's estrogen levels in her breast, they're higher than in her blood. So you do a blood test that's not going to tell you what's going on in the breast. The breast will probably, will definitely have more, all right, unless you take an aromatase inhibitor and you block that enzyme and then you don't get that conversion as much, all right, and then you don't get that conversion as much. All right. So when we're talking about anastrozole, letrozole and a couple others, anyway, so letrozole is purported to be the one that is the most specific, just blocking that particular enzyme, not any other ones, whereas the other aromatase inhibitors could be having other effects. Okay, it's considered the most expected, specific, all right.
Speaker 1:Now, in that regard, you would say, well, that's great. Okay, that's great, because I have estrogen receptor positive CFCs. So therefore, if I can block the estrogen, I won't stimulate the growth of the CFCs. Well, that's true, and it's sort of true. So let me put it to you this way it's breast tissue which is actually part of the reproductive system. Okay, because reproduction doesn't only involve the getting pregnant and delivering, involve the getting pregnant and delivering, but it also involves caring for the baby and breasts for that. So it's all part of the reproductive system.
Speaker 1:And guess what is really involved in all of this? This 70% fat thing in our head called the brain is incredible. Thing in our head called the brain is incredible. There's no, there's no computer anywhere near it. And if ais could salivate, they would salivate when they think about brains, because they're incredible anyway. And since the brain is involved with the breast and the reproductive thing, right? Clearly, um then, um, the brain must have estrogen receptors too, and it does have estrogen receptors.
Speaker 1:So now, in fact, one thing to know about both anastrozole and letrozole is that they can result in something. I mean, you might not even think about it, but one of the side effects is visual hallucinations, repeated visual hallucinations, right? So I mean, I just want to show you something. I found this great article anastrozole but letrozole. We're talking about causing joint pains, muscle pains, numbness, increasing the loss of bone. So you get bone density decreases, right? You'll start to get what they call vasomotor responses. In other words, when the estrogen goes down, vasomotor means that your arterials open and close and open and close and all that, and you wind up getting hot and sweaty and flashes, right, they're called hot flashes. You also got genitourinary problems right, including decreased libido, vaginal dryness and actually something called dyspareunia. Dyspareunia is painful intercourse, so when a woman's having intercourse, it's painful, so that's usually a deterrent from having sexual intercourse. You know, you can also get urinary tract infections because there's genital urinary all that area.
Speaker 1:Well, as it turns out, it also there is a. It's called the SRC1, is produced in the brain. Okay, it's a chemical that does a lot of different things, all right, and it actually downregulates that. And you say, well, so it downregulates that. Well, what does that mean? That means we're talking about the hippocampus. Now, the hippocampus is that part of the brain that processes emotion and fear and things like that Big time with fear and different kinds of stuff. It also the hypothalamus, the hippocampus, the anyway, midbrain and brainstem all around there. Uh, it blocks this chemical SRC one right now, uh, which will have an effect on both estrogen and androgen male hormones.
Speaker 1:Okay, um, and why is that a problem? Because those are, because that's where we process, that's where we do a lot of our thinking and our cogitation. Ok, so what happens if you downregulate that? It's going to affect your ability to learn, your memory is going to be decreased, your moods are not going to be good, cognitive functioning will not be fluid, and also the mediation between your brain and your other hormonal systems it's called neuroendocrine that whole regulation gets disturbed. So it has a great effect on the brain. So not only are we seeing pain, problems with joints, muscles, genital, urinary, but we're also seeing problems and visual hallucinations. We're also seeing problems with memory, thinking mood. So it's pretty heavy duty stuff.
Speaker 1:So the thing is, if you don't have to use them, don't and here's the good news, you don't have to use them. Don't have to use them, don't, and here's the good news, you don't have to use them. Yeah, so, um, but I mean there's studies you just study in 2022 aromatase, let me tell you, let me say the way they write aromatase inhibitors are the gold approach. The gold approach, I mean, they mean gold standard anyway, they messed up on that to hormonal therapy for post-menopausal women with hormone responsive breast c, breast CFCs. They don't use CFCs, but I do. The third generation, aromatase and astrozole have been shown to be more effective than the SERM you all know the SERM, right. Selective estrogen receptor modulators such as tamoxifen right, okay, oh, by the way, there's a great word as tamoxifen, right, okay, oh, by the way, there's a great word. You've got to learn this word. Okay, because this is what this is. I just want to show you how.
Speaker 1:Not only does the medical profession make up what they call diseases, we get new diseases every year, just new ones. The DSM thing keeps growing. The Diagnostic Statistical Manual, it keeps growing. We've got more and more diseases. Okay, well, there's a new word. It's called pharmacovigilance, and the professional societies, like the American Medical Association and ASCO, and you know, are urging doctors to develop a pharmacovigilance.
Speaker 1:That means try to be aware of the side effects. They call them side effects, but you know what? They're not on the side, they're right in the middle. They should go middle effects. The truth is they're effects. So, of all the 35 effects that you get from taking this poison, one of them is going to be what you're looking for, like you know, blocking aromatase. The other 34 you don't want.
Speaker 1:And so, to make in keeping with the linguistic manipulation that everyone is so good at doing. Since who started all this linguistic manipulation? It's been around since humans have been able to talk, but the guy who made it, really brought it to uh, to an art form, was a guy named uh uh, bernet and ivy lee. Ivy lee and bernet, but, but ivy lee, by the way, was rockefeller's pr man, right, and since rockefeller was a pretty bad dude and everybody knew it, ivy lee came in and he developed this whole thing. He, he developed the photo op. He developed I mean, I'll go into that in the book. I do go into that in the book, but Ivy Lee is pretty cool and Bernay was so smart that he took the word propaganda, which they were using in World War One, and had a bad connotation, so he changed the word propaganda to public relations.
Speaker 1:Isn't that great. So, yeah, when you're getting public a public relations officer, it's your uh company is really the propagation. Uh, what's the word? What's that word again? See, I think it's the letrozole. I gotta get off that letrozole propaganda. It's your propaganda, uh, department.
Speaker 1:All right, anyway, this is a way of doctors to be aware of all the side effects. It's nonsense. They don't care, anyway. So here's what we're doing and I mentioned this last week and I'll mention it again every week that we've ever met and that is this when they say you're ER positive, what that means is to diagnose that you get a piece of tissue and you send it off to the laboratory where you've got the pathologist, who's a brilliant person, male or female, and those are the only two choices. There's no other. It's either male or female, I don't know, there might be some other monsters in the back. So they look under the microscope and they tell you exactly what they see.
Speaker 1:All right, so they get a piece of it, they do that and they send it off and they're able to, you know, give you uh and uh if they do this certain kind of staining. If it's, it's a dye that stains, uh, the nucleus and in the nucleus, where you have a lot of activity of the nucleoli and stuff like that, when there's a lot of activity, in other words, it's dividing, it's busy dividing the cells dividing, so a dividing cell will have more nucleoli, new dark areas right on the stain. So in order to get the diagnosis of positive, you have to have 1%. Let me say that again, 1%, no zeros, 1% of the cells have that staining. You're called ER positive. 99% are not staining like that, but 1% is diagnosed as that. Yeah, I know it's hard to believe, but it's actually the truth.
Speaker 1:And then the ultimate diagnostic what is it? Whatever the word is, the medical term is, the ultimate way to diagnose is if it is responsive to tamoxifen or electrosol. Anyway, it's madness, it's madness, it's madness, it's madness. And, by the way, you can be estrogen positive here in your breast and when it drains into the lymph node and the lymph node can be negative. So anyway, however, it is true that we see the condition. If it's an active breast, cfc or prostate. We see that go down to some degree with these drugs. So there is something going on there. We're not going to completely negate that. Okay, here's the idea.
Speaker 1:Now we know also that there are two kinds of estrogen receptors that we know of alpha and beta. We call them alpha and beta. Alpha why? Because when it's stimulated it does certain things like causing breast tissue to grow, tumors to grow and breasts and uterus. You know that's its job. And then the estrogen receptor beta does the opposite. It shrinks them down and our bodies, whether you're male or female, remember, males make more of one kind of one group of hormones and less of the other that females do, and females make more of this and less of the other. But we're all the same. Yeah, we're all the same. We're all the same. I know you don't want to hear that, but we're all the same.
Speaker 1:So if you ever don't like this person, it's probably because they remind you of you. No, no, not always. I mean, you know, William Henry Gates III does not remind me of me, anyway, and neither does Klaus the Sloth, but anyway. So ER beta shrinks. So we have three kinds of estrogens. We have estrone, estradiol and estriol. So the estrone and estradiol are strong agonists for the alpha, whereas estriol is a strong agonist for the beta, and they are secreted and produced at different times during our lives and our cycles, because that's the way biology is. Biology is cyclic. There's nothing ever consistent, it's always cyclic. Things are cyclic, just like you have day and night. You know they're cyclic. Okay, nature is cyclic. Okay, don't ever do anything all of that.
Speaker 1:So which, in that same philosophy, goes into hormone replacement, biologically identical hormone replacement. You always do it in cycles and you're thinking you know what? I've got colon problems here. Why am I listening to all this? Because it happens to be estrogen receptors all over the colon, all over the pancreas, all over lungs and yeah, and they're all there. And you know, uh, sometimes, if you have a thing on the pathologist, you did a, a colon resection, you took out the tumor of a colon, and the report back is that it's HER2 positive. Her2 positive, yeah, her2 positive. And so they, uh, they, they put them on those. You know? Herceptin, yeah. So, okay, don't.
Speaker 1:And and, like we were saying, there are estrogen receptors in the brain, there are androgen receptors in the brain. So we're talking about estrogens, we're talking about, uh, every like. There's no cell, there's no area in the body that's not going to have some sort of response to it. Okay, all right, so, um, that's very important, so, but here's the thing. So, knowing that there are two receptors, alpha and beta, wouldn't it be great if you could stimulate the beta, since it shrinks tumors? It turns out you can't, but certain botanicals can. Botanicals, you all know what that means, right? It's something that you get from. It's not boats, it's plants, anyway. So I'm going to read to you this here.
Speaker 1:This is a great article and I think you should all get the article. It's called Estrogen Receptor Beta Selective beta with a B. Estrogen Receptor Beta Selective Transcriptional Activity and Recruitment of Co-Regulators by Phytoestrogens. Yeah, okay, it's in the journal biological chemistry 2001. Estrogen receptor, just remember, just put in your search engine medscape, uh, either medscape or uh pubmed or something. Not google scholar, no, no, remember, you say the word google, you, you're really saying CIA, estrogen. Just put estrogen receptor beta, and then phytoestrogens, Estrogen receptor beta, phytoestrogens, and put, you know, journal of Biological Chemistry 2001. Anyway, I'm going to read to you a little bit of this. Here's a reading from the article. Very, I'm going to read to you a little bit of this. Okay, here's a reading from the article.
Speaker 1:Estrogens used in hormone replacement therapy regimens may, may, may, increase the risk of developing breast cfcs. Say what? Yeah, by the way, they're talking about pharmaceutical based, right? Okay, they're not talking about the natural stuff. Paradoxically, high consumption of plant-derived phytoestrogens, particularly soybean isoflavones, is associated with a low incidence of breast CFCs. Did I hear that right? Yes, I heard that right and you heard it right too. So, whatever you thought about soy, throw it away and listen.
Speaker 1:To explore the molecular basis for these potential different clinical outcomes, we investigated whether soybean isoflavones elicit distinct transcriptional actions from estrogens. Are they smart? They're so smart. Our results demonstrate that the estrogen-17 beta-estradiol, which is estradiol, effectively triggers transcriptional activity on both ER alpha and beta. In contrast, activity on both ER alpha and beta. In contrast, soy isoflavones, genistein, diazine and biocannin A are estrogen receptor beta selective agonists of transcriptional repression and activation at physiological levels, meaning in fermiti. So we have shown that isoflavones elicit distinctive.
Speaker 1:You already said that these data are consistent with the observations that Helix 12,. Our results suggest that isoflavones act as a natural CIRM selective ester receptor modulator. Like tamoxifen act as a natural CIRM, which may be safer than estrogens? Wait, you didn't mean maybe. You just said it can cause it and this doesn't. So why are you using the word may? You see how they use the word? They're using the word may because it's not a drug and they didn't patent it. I mean they patented, then it definitely does and it's may. So they just told you that, uh, hrt is associated with an increased risk and that this is associated with a decreased risk, and so now this stimulates the betas. But it may be all right, I just want you to realize their language. They use that to keep you not so into the, the plant you don't want. They want you to get into place. So it may be safer than current hrt regimens because they selectively trigger the transcription pathways of ER. Beta Estrogens in HRT also trigger ER alpha, which promote the proliferation of breast and endometrial cells.
Speaker 1:Don't want that. So what I'm saying to you is this Okay, then I got to get some soy, you got to get some soy. And who has to get some soy? Everybody, because we all have stomachs, right? Unless you had a visit by Mr Whipple or something. But you know, stomachs, bowels, bladders, female genitalia or male genitalia, they're all. We all have bones, we all have brains, and so that's why this is really important. So keep that in mind. Don't think that estrogens are for girls. Okay, don't think that, all right. And don't forget to be pharmacovigilant what a thing. Yes, he's a very pharmacovigilant doctor. We like him. Okay, now, this is from Renuka. So, andrea, I hope the soy is just one of them. The other one is flaxseed green tea. There's other things that are botanicals that will stimulate beta, so will estriol. So this is from Renuka.
Speaker 1:I had papillary carcinoma for the last 2.5 years. Usually people, when someone uses the word papillary, they're usually referring to thyroid. Thyroid has three different kinds of, not different kinds. There's different locations from which the CFC is going to thyroid. Thyroid has three different kinds of, not different kinds. There's different locations from which the CFCs can arise.
Speaker 1:I've tried many alternative therapies, like extended water, fasting, high-dose curcumin, the Ann Wigmore wheatgrass protocol, raw food, high vitamin IV, vitamin C, regular iodide, et cetera. The tumors aren't shrinking, but not growing either. I do struggle with being overweight, though I lose it and it all comes back. What can I do for the tumors? I feel frustrated and helpless. I get it, of course you do, and so let me say this first of all, renuka, and to everybody listening when people, when he says I've done this, this, this, this, this, I always say how did you do Extended water fasting?
Speaker 1:I'm not sure what that means. I do mean like prolonged water fast would be two weeks or more. Is that what you mean? And you've done that multiple times? Or do you mean you've done like two or three days multiple times, or what?
Speaker 1:And what's very important about fasting is what you're doing when you're not fasting. What are you eating when you're not fasting? All right, so anyway. And so the fact that you're struggling with and you said raw food as well, wheatgrass protocol, raw food, okay. Now if you wheatgrass, raw food and fasting, I don't see in those three, if you're doing those three uh things, weight will not be a problem. It's impossible. So what that tells me and tells you is that you're not quite doing the raw food enough and the fasting it's got to be irregular.
Speaker 1:And then wheatgrass is just a. Really it's like getting a powerful. You know it's nutrient, nutrients, a bunch of nutrients, really good, important nutrients. I can't stand the taste. I used to like it, but I now. Fortunately, if you don't like the taste of a plant like that, you can do a rectal implant enema, retention enema anyway.
Speaker 1:Um, now also, you know hydros curcumin. I don't know what you mean by that, because curcumin, if you take it orally, doesn't matter how much you take. You're only going to absorb three percent. You can't absorb a lot. If you add peppery you know some sort of pepper with it, you can increase maybe up to five percent or maybe 6 max, which means most of what you're getting is not even being absorbed. And then the other thing about curcumin once it gets into the blood it's very quickly metabolized by the liver and so it's really hard, even IV, to get adequate curcumin to, because'll tell you, it's probably one of the most. It's right up there with vitamin C, powerful anti-CFC and inflammation, and it's just magic. The problem is getting it in, getting it to the target. So what they've done is they've made the liposomal for injection IV so that when it gets into the blood it doesn't get metabolized so quickly and it gets over to the tube. So I don't know right.
Speaker 1:So there's many other things you've got to have that you should have been doing by now, runica, you should have gone to a biological dentist and made sure you don't have anything going on Extractions, root canals, metal in your mouth, anything like that? All right, you should have done a good, thorough juice cleanse. Just juice three or four liters a day of fresh vegetable juice, with enough fruit to make it delicious, and for three weeks, six weeks, however long you can. You're going to feel fantastic. You're not going to feel bad. You're going to be highly nourished, except for fat and fiber. So yeah, and then you do periodic water, fasting, that's. You know you're doing all this. You're doing colonics, or in India, you can do panchakarma enemas.
Speaker 1:Keeping these going, you're going to be moving around at all throughout the day and what I suggest you do is join our group and listen to our tuesdays we have either vanessa or darren on. You all know that. You'll remember that, vanessa or darren darren, I'll tell you how to move. You got to keep moving. Remember, when we stop moving, we're dead. When we stop moving, we're dead. Once again, when we stop moving, we're dead. So keep moving, keep moving.
Speaker 1:Did you ever see a time lapse video of someone sleeping? I don't know how someone can wake up in the morning and say I feel rested, because if you look at them sleeping, you know we move around a lot, so we're always moving. Okay, you've seen your dog, right, you go weird things, yeah, but move, move, move. So that's the other thing you got to be doing. And yeah, now, the other thing I want to talk about I'll talk about in a minute. It's a subject that nobody wants to talk about, not me. You wonder what that subject is? Okay, we'll get into that in a minute, all right, so, anyway.
Speaker 1:So now Renuka has the next question too, and that is about the topic is iodine. If I live in a place, india, where they don't understand iodine testing, don't do the iodine loading urine test, how can I check my iodine levels? I sometimes wear it, I am overdosing and I hear this could also be a source of papillary carcinoma. Well, ranuka, don't believe everything you hear, especially that. Now, interestingly enough, regarding iodine, because we're always talking about iodine, right, I talk about it all the time. I don't know why. I think you know I've been talking about it enough by now. People should be following suit. I think you know I've been talking about it enough by now. People should be following suit. I mean, there's a, I don't know who talks about it.
Speaker 1:So, anyway, it's very interesting that one of the first realizations about iodine and breast by the West, of course, was. It was a publication in 1924 where they found that the places in the US which is called the goiter belt, which is in the middle part of the country because it's far away from the ocean, and the ocean has iodine and comes from the rainwater. It's far away. So they have a lot of propaganda, they have a lot of goiters, and it was found out in 1924, and it was published that those people with goiters, if they got CFCs, had a higher mortality rate. So now, so then they found a red light. They realized that there was an association of low iodine, but it wasn't just breast Thyroid, I mean, it was also breast, it was ovarian, it was endometrial, it was ovarian endometrial uterus, colorectal thyroid and prostate also associated with low iodine. Yes, okay, Now Lugol's iodine solution has been used for about 200 years now, so I kind of must be safe, right, yeah, so one drop of the 5% will give you 6.5 milligrams of molecular iodine, the I2, not the iodide, and that the iodide is what the thyroid uses to make thyroid hormone, but the iodine is not. The iodine does so many things, but it's not having enough of it.
Speaker 1:The first phase of a situation that could result in CFCs is called fibrocystic. So women get like knots and feels like fibrous cords in their breasts and of course they become painful around ovulation and then they go down. It has to do with estrogen, so estrogen and iodine, and one of the ways to get rid of, eliminate the fibrocystic problem is with iodine. And for some reason they found out in the 30s. I don't know how they figured it out, but by painting the inside of the vaginal wall closest to the cervix with the Lugol's daily. It would get rid of the breast, fibrocystic breast, 100% of the time. But you don't have to do it vaginally, you can do it orally, you can put it on your breasts. There's other ways of getting it, but it only worked in women who still had their ovaries. If they had had surgery and lost their ovaries, then that wouldn't work. The vaginal painting, all right.
Speaker 1:So now, like, if someone has inflammatory breast CFCs, which is kind of a real nasty one, you use even higher doses and you can give it IV. So don't go give Lugol's. It's got to be prepared specially by compounding pharmacists and you've got to have a doctor who actually knows what they're doing and then you can get IV. So I would not worry about you taking too much, okay. And I want you to remember something you have to understand that the inadequate amount of not getting enough iodine causes cells to shift.
Speaker 1:Because what iodine does? The iodine, the molecular iodine, one of the things it does, does many. I mean it helps, it helps estrogen metabolism, to the estrogens to be metabolized into healthy metabolites, but it also is part, if it induces apoptosis, apoptosis, apopt, apoptosis, which is programmed cellular, oh, that'll get on social media. I can't say the word Okay, programmed cellular expiration. Programmed cellular not alive anymore. Yeah, I don't know how to say it, I don't. You know, I got to always be kind to the social media because they really, they really care about our ears and our hearts and they want to make sure that you, you know that we don't harm each other with our words, even though they're going to use words like covid and pandemic and but let's not, we got to be careful, they don't. Okay, they don't have to be careful.
Speaker 1:Oh, sorry, the question was phoebe. Uh, yeah, what's he talking about, this guy? Uh, I'm talking about, uh, iodine, because she thought she was taking too much. And I'm just here to say you're not taking too much, don't worry about it. And I want you to remember that the average Japanese, from the time they're three years old, who's eating the traditional Japanese diet, is getting 13.8 milligrams a day Right now.
Speaker 1:I want you to understand something, too, which is very amazing, and that is the where is that? I found that I couldn't believe it, or was OK. So the recommended daily allowance by the Fraud and Death Association is that we should take we should be getting one hundred and twenty five micrograms a day. The micrograms okay, so that is, 0.125 milligrams, not even close to one milligram. And yet Japanese are taking 13.8 milligrams a day, and they are one of the healthiest populations we know, if they live 10 years longer than us.
Speaker 1:So you might want to think that maybe the guy's giving us advice because they told us not to eat soy and these guys are eating it and they're living longer. They told us not to take iodine. They might be twisting the truth. That's a nice way to say it. It's been medically proven that, so I just wanted to bring that up to you.
Speaker 1:So, what else, while we're at it, for women, what else can cause up to you? So, uh, what else? Well, while we're at it for women. What else can cause so iodine deficiency? Yes, can cause, can reason, can contribute to the development of cfcs in the breast and the prostate, colon, lung, stomach, pancreas. In case you're wondering now, uh, another thing is it's just mammograms. Okay, so if you get a mammogram, it increases the risk of developing CFCs. As I said, it increases from 1% to 3% per year depending on the technique. So if you're very, very strict and you get a mammogram yearly for 10 years, you've increased the risk to 10% to 30% of getting it, so that by the age of 50, 45% of women will have CFCs in the risk from getting the mammogram.
Speaker 1:Did he say that? He said that. I asked Dr Jen Simmons. Anyway, they don't tell you that. They also don't tell you that a woman who wears a bra 24 hours a day increases her risk of getting breast cms. And they found that women who wear them only 12 hours, but not to bed, lower their risk.
Speaker 1:So the idea there is that. Why is that? Think about that. Because a bra, now bras became what they are today.
Speaker 1:Well, now there's all sorts, but you know, the uplift bra came about from a movie directed by Howard Hughes, starring Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell and it was called gentlemen prefer, prefer, prefer blondes Big movie. I think it was the fifties, forties, maybe late forties, I don't remember. I mean, I wasn't there but I've seen it anyway. Jane Russell, I don't know. No, howard Hughes didn't direct it, but he invented the bra, the. He invented the bra, the uplift the bra. You know, in Howard Hughes Hughes aircraft. He was into flights and he was into getting things up in the air. Well, he did the same thing with breasts and he came up with the bra. So he had the bra, the uplifted bra.
Speaker 1:And yeah, we stream on everything to meet you. We stream on we. We stream on YouTube, instagram, rumble, linkedin, my website live, drlodycom, anyway. So we stream all over the place. We're streaming.
Speaker 1:So what happens is in the uplift bra, you're preventing the breasts from bouncing and moving. So when a woman would walk, naturally the breasts would move. Remember, we talked about you. Stop moving, you're dead, so keep moving. Anyway, you don't want to stop the breasts from moving because the breasts remember in what I didn't mention, when we're talking about the structure of a breast, you got ducts, you got little sacks, ducts, connective tissue, fat, and you've also got blood vessels and lymphatic vessels, and those lymphatic vessels cannot work. Remember, both veins and lymphatics require movement, muscle contraction, to flow. So you're decreasing the flow, you're getting stagnant breasts, all right.
Speaker 1:So if you wear a bra to work when you get home, take it off. You know, if you're not pendulous, if you don't have extremely large breasts, you can not wear them. And if you're worried about your what's the word Modest, if you're a modest person, they have those things you can put over your nipples, right, so that you can't see the nipple. And I mean so there are ways of doing it. We're now, and now they have bras that don't lift Right. They're kind of like, I think, maybe the sports bra. And now they have bras that don't lift right. They're kind of like, I think, maybe the sports bras. But those sports bras are designed to be anyway. You want to keep your breasts bouncing breasts.
Speaker 1:The other thing that I wanted to bring up and this is the thing I was not going to I didn't want to talk about, but I have to talk about it because it's just true and in fact this addresses a question by one of our members had recently asked me we always talk about male. To decrease a male's risk of prostate CFCs, the male needs to ejaculate 21 times a month. This is what the studies show. Okay, I don't know why 21 times, but just to be safe, you know. So, anyway, it turns out that and there's a study essays on sexual function as the cause of breast CFCs in women how correlation and cultural blind spots conceal causal effects.
Speaker 1:And so it turns out that sexual frustration in a woman produces a dissonance. You know, cognitive dissonance is when you get two opposing ideas in your head and you can't put them together, like what they did to us in 2020. Anyway, so sexual frustration has to do with this. These, what they're talking about in this article was between the absence or lack of sexual reward and the unconscious motivation to obtain sexual rewards. What is meant there? What is meant is that the woman's not being satisfied sexually, but she's not supposed to, right, according to most of our cultures and religions. And you know you're not supposed to enjoy it. I mean, we're just having babies here. Well, hey, you know what folks I know, having a bowel movement is just to eliminate stuff, but they're kind of enjoyable if you're full and same with urinating enjoyable and you finally get to urinate. So why can't this anyway? Well, that's okay, we don't mind that, and eating is kind of enjoyable. Yeah, well, that's fine, but not this anyway. So it turns out that prolonged sexual frustration leads into an aberration in the metabolism of sex hormones and related to development of breast, so that human female sexual behavior research links sexual frustration with the development of breast CXCs. By the way, women's sexual response is due to androgens, not estrogens, just like men. So when we talk about women, we need to make sure we're going to give them hormone replacement. We need to always make sure that we pay attention to the androgens.
Speaker 1:So, and what they're recommending in this article was that closer examination of the unconscious female copulation strategies. I hate these words, the words copulation, vagina hate these words, the words copulation, vagina, penis intercourse they're so clinical, like they're the they're. They're the opposite of arousing. That's what they usually weren't there. And copulation strategies what the hell's copulation? My cat? I have a cat, a male cat, and this guy's screaming on like yeah, you know he's like, he wants to and you know what? It's just part of his copulation strategy. Yeah, yeah, cats have copulation strategies. Ridiculous the words they use out.
Speaker 1:Postmenopausal women are vulnerable for the self-fulfilling prophecy about post reproductive sexuality. So hormones go down Libido, goes down vaginal dryness, et cetera, and so you just naturally don't have sex. Is that okay? Well, no, it's really not. It's okay to have sex. In fact it's healthy, it turns out. It's healthy All right, for many, many reasons, and the and in fact, in fact the, the entire ejaculatory response of a male and of a female is really um important for all kinds of things which we we can do a whole course on that.
Speaker 1:But you know, here in thailand there's a um chine san, and uh, what's the other one called? There's? There's, there's two, two interesting massages that they have here. One is called chine san, what's the other one called? So, uh, the one is where they massage your internal organs and that's pretty. You know you're lying down, they just they. They find the way to get all your organs right and then it's really good to go get a colonic after that. It's really helpful. But they also do genital massage and that's not at all sexual at all. It's the opposite kind of hurts and it's for females. I forget the name of it because not everybody can do it. You've got to be really well trained.
Speaker 1:But do I read all the comments? Yeah, I try to read them when I'm done here, when I'm done, I get to read them. Yes, and our join, join the. Just go to drlodycom and there's three groups health and healing parasites and Join the. Just go to drlodycom and there's three groups health and healing parasites and CFCs, and join one Anyway. So these I mean it's not enjoyable. You think, well, I'll go. Genital massage what a happy ending. No, not a happy ending, it's kind of. I'm glad it's over the ending.
Speaker 1:So with the male, they actually are holding the testicle and very lightly putting pressure and moving the lymphatics. But lightly on a testicle is not fun, all right. And the females, I'm not sure how they do that, but and and usually the people that I've seen are like women that are older and you know, it's really like they've been massaging all their life. They're really thick hands and all that. Anyway, no matter what anyone's sexual orientation, that these women do, that would fit into no one's. There might be some freak, but you know, usually because they're not sexual, is that all?
Speaker 1:But it's very important and it has to do with blood flow and with because, because what we're? In fact, there was a place, chiang Mai, and they used to have women and men who come as a pre-honeymoon. They were going to get married and then have a honeymoon and they did these several sessions before just to get things flowing. Why do we need to get that flowing? Because we are repressed psychologically. From the time we're young we're like don't, don't, don't, don't, don't, don't, don't look at it, don't touch it. Girls sit like this. You know all this stuff. So that's what we grow up with. So psychologically we kind of constrict everything down there. We don't have good flow.
Speaker 1:All right, so one other thing about iodine. You guys, let me just tell you any skin CFC, melanoma, basal, squamous, even warts 7%, lugo, keep brushing it on like 10 times a day. Got to keep doing it. Don't worry, anuka, about the iodine, but you got to do your diet. If you're eating raw food, at least 90%. Listen, if I had CFCs I'd say 100%. Right now I'm going to do 100% until they're gone and then I'll go back to 80-20. But you know, it's just I want to get there. But anyway, do the best you can, 80-20.
Speaker 1:And when you do cook, make sure it's only steamed or boiled, nothing else. But get good with a dehydrator. Then you'll have the same taste of of cooked food. But it's not. You know, you'll still have all the? What do you call them? Oh, you're welcome talking about this. Yeah, um, you'll still have all the enzymes. Okay, a dehydrator, it's fantastic you get. Excalibur is one I have, but, and it's probably the most well known, um, so don't worry about too much.
Speaker 1:And I just want to want to think about the sexual thing with women. For some reason, I don't you know, and it all comes to these religions. It's such a bummer. I'm so glad I was born a man. Just because women are. Just, they're mistreated from the beginning and then they have to put up with men. God on top of it all. Anyway, I would definitely be a lesbian if I were a female, no question, but anyway, but the whole thing. If you go back to Rome, you go back to Greece. All the women have always been second class Women.
Speaker 1:Do you realize that women were given the same educational opportunities as slaves, unless they were from wealthy families, and then they couldn't learn certain things? They could only learn certain. Uh, they couldn't learn anything that would allow them to participate in society. And yet the entire social structure depends on the women having children, and for some reason, women are supposed to be.
Speaker 1:Think of the sanctity of motherhood. I mean it's, it's like you know, mother Mary, my mother, don't talk about my mother, my mother, my mother, my mother, my mother, right, it's probably the most sacred role in all societies. But guess what? I want you to try to keep this. Don't let everybody know this. But you know how you get to be a mother. Oh, my God, that's right.
Speaker 1:Someone's going to have an orgasm. If the woman might not, because she's not supposed to, someone had to have an orgasm. Can you imagine Disgusting. So the road to the sanctity and the sainthood of a, of a mother, means you had to have done something pretty natural. Isn't that weird? Now, why would god? Now, if god made it that way, then how come we are? You're saying it's bad, you realize, and then I mean it goes on and on and on. So, and by the way I go, I go into this in my, in my, in the book that's coming out. That's the problem. I go into this too much, it's going to be too long, let's go. So, namaste Renuka, and, by the way, aloha to everybody, and I'm going to show. I got to talk to you, I got to tell you why aloha is such a special word, and I will do that in a video and I'll post it. Aloha is just a very special word, aloha, okay.
Speaker 1:Now Murray, prostate CFT my PSA has spiked from 0.6 12 months ago to 3.8, up 12 months ago to 3.8 three months ago and it now is 4.2. The red flag is that I may have early onset of. I have been booked in to see a urologist at the end of May to investigate the potential problem. I am loath to go down the surgery and chemo radiation route if tests come back positive. I have been following reports that ivermectin and fenbentazole in combination can help to control or eliminate prostate disease, along with lifestyle changes. Should I try ivermectin and fenbentazole for the next month, prior to more PSA tests and scans, to see if I can reduce the CFC, if I do have CFC? All right, murray, murray, to see if I can reduce the CFC if I do have CFC, all right, murray.
Speaker 1:Murray, we need to change your vocabulary. Psycholinguistics, linguistic the words that we use form the scaffolding of our mind and therefore our perceptions and perceptions are based upon. They have something to do with sensory input. But then of all these synapses, the end perception is different. But I have to tell you something too, just like that perceptual set. What does that mean? You're set to perceive certain things, your mind is set to perceive certain things and you won't perceive things that don't fit. All right. I guess you could say closed-minded, rigid, but we all have a perceptual set. We've got. Whatever we've been through, whatever's happened to us, we have perceptual sets. All right. Now the scaffolding is our language. We change the language and we change the perceptions.
Speaker 1:And perceptions are reality to you. It doesn't matter if they're reality. If I, you know an alcoholic who's going through delirium tremens and they're seeing whatever they're seeing, it's real to them. The schizophrenic who's having an argument with someone we can't see, it's real to them. Okay, it's like that, right.
Speaker 1:The person who believed the whole Great Hulk story of 2020, it was real to them and they were afraid of this invisible enemy that was going to get them. So they were willing to inject themselves with poisons to I don't know to do what, but they told me to do it right. What do we know about fear? Fear will. When someone's afraid, they will follow suggestions by authority figures, even if they know they're going to hurt them. I'm not. This is not. I wish it was not true, but it's true, anyway, anyway. So we got to change your whole. You're looking for it was not true, but it's true, anyway. So we've got to change your whole thing. You're looking for it, in fact your language, you already got it. I want to help control or eliminate it. You already have it.
Speaker 1:And then at the end you say, if I have it, but you already have it in your mind and you're looking at PSA and it's going up, and so you're going to go to the urologist Now. So you're going to go to the urologist and they are CFC hunters. So they're going to do the ESA. If they find anything on a digital exam, they'll do a digital exam. It's a rectal exam to feel your prostate. If they feel anything at all, they're going to go in and do a biopsy. They do a biopsy and it is cfcs that will just have spread it around. And then you've already decided that the only things you can do are chemo. And so you're looking at the ivermectin and the fentanyl to get rid of this thing that's got into you, that may have gotten into you. So you're looking for weapons to fight this thing. This is your mindset and you're not at fault.
Speaker 1:Murray, you grew up in america or western world somewhere, and that's the whole story. The story is they're gonna get us, they're out there, there's diseases all over the place and there's that big one. It's uh, cfc, cfc and that one that gets into you, oh my god, you, you gotta throw bombs at it. That whole thing is just wrong. It's just wrong If you're developing CFCs and if the PSA happens to be an indication.
Speaker 1:It's not always okay. You can have a high PSA for other reasons. You can have just an enlarged prostate and, especially if you don't ejaculate 21 times a month, you're going to have an enlarged prostate, you're going to have a prostatic congestion, you're going to have a problem, and that's just one of the things. So you can't just look at that. So, yes, iron magnesium, and you want one other one, and you also probably want nitroxamide. That would be a great thing, as long as your liver is okay, and all that, and you do it for an extended period of time in cycles. Now, yeah, yeah, they're fantastic for cfc and parasites, of course, but that's not all.
Speaker 1:You've got to stop making it if you are producing it, if you're, because just not something that got into you, it's something it's your body is, the cells are are adapting to situations that are not in their favor, and they're becoming firm, they're fermenting. So you want to situations that are not in their favor and they're becoming firm, they're fermenting. So you want to stop that process. Because if you don't stop that process and you keep using tools or weapons to get rid of it, it's going to be a never ending battle until you're dead. And usually, if you go down the route, the route of the conventional warlocks and witches, you're going to wish you were dead.
Speaker 1:You get to the point where I don't the point where and it's not because of the CFCs, it's because of what they're doing, all right, and, by the way, surgery doesn't help. You said you're loathe to do surgery and chemo radiation. Well, that's good, because they don't even help. They don't help. I'm sorry, that's not true. It's not that they don't help, they make it worse. Yeah, they make it worse. So that would never be an option. It would only be an option if you wanted, if you were. You know, assisted suicide, I guess we can call it, but anyway, it's not an option. So what the option is is to get healthy, restore the balance in your body.
Speaker 1:Okay, keep your prostate empty, stop eating animals. Animals and prostate CFCs just really go together. It goes with all of them, but particularly this one. Stop eating animals and anything that came out of an animal, right, don't eat animal. You know secretions, like you know. I don't know what are the things that come out of animals besides urine and feces yeah, sweat and what else? Half of the animals produce milk. Just don't take anything. Eggs come out of animals. So, like, just leave the whole animal, let them be. You know, love them. Don't eat them, take care of them or at least don't hurt them. If you don't like them, okay, great, you know, I don't happen to like certain people.
Speaker 1:I might kill them and eat them anyway, change your diet, go to sleep early, start moving around all thing and do a cleanse, check out your teeth, go to a biological dentist, do all that and cancel your appointment with the, with the, with the guy. He's going to find a problem. I promise he's going to find a problem and, uh, you don't need to have a diagnosis. Diagnosis is us, is as a spell, it's a hex. You don't want to be diagnosed, you want to just say right now you know what I feel like I need to clean myself, I need to rebalance my life, that's all.
Speaker 1:And don't think about the. You're checking your PSA. You better check your CEA and you better check your CA 19 that night. And you better check your CA-19-9 and you better check your alpha-fetoprotein. You better check all the no, no, no. Live healthy. The best insurance is to live healthy. Clean up, Keep things flowing. You don't have CFCs, and if you do, they're going to go away because you're not going to let them continue. Okay, it's very simple. Now change your mind. Don't use these words. Don't use that word. It's an astrological sign. Stop using it.
Speaker 1:So, in order to keep to ejaculate 21 times a month, you're going to have to have some testosterone. So you're going to have to have someone intelligent. I did say that right? So I mean, there's some out there, I think, and you got to get them to help balance your hormones. Oh, no, you can't give them testosterone. Why? Well, the risk? Risk the guy that's in Gold's gym who's got bulging and an erection all day. He's got a lot of testosterone. He doesn't have it. So what are you talking about, doc? Listen, they make no sense. So I don't need iodine and no testosterone replacement, and no HRT either.
Speaker 1:Okay, now this is Terry. Terry says I would like to get the parasite cleanser. Have dogs and cats? Oh, for your dogs and cats? Well, that's easy. You just go to a veterinarian and they have both ivermectin and fenbendazole for dogs and cats. There's a certain dosage per kilogram of body weight. That should be easy. In fact, I think you can even get Fembendazole for dogs online. That shouldn't be hard at all. Terry, brianna, so, brianna, here's a draft letter. Dear Dr Thomas Lloyd. Thomas Lloyd, are you talking to me? I hope this letter finds you well.
Speaker 1:I'm reaching out to seek your expertise in helping my daughter undergo a natural detoxification process and remove parasites and heavy metals from my two-year-old daughter body, whoa, could you please advise on the best course of action, including one natural cleaning methods and protocols, two parasite removal strategies, three, heavy metal desalination plans, preparation steps for my daughter before starting the detox process? Whoa, okay, well, listen, two-year-old daughter, you think she's got heavy metals and parasites already. It's possible, I mean. I mean she does to some degree, of course, but is there something that's making you? You're very specific with parasites and heavy metals. So I don't know. So your daughter's two years old.
Speaker 1:First of all, being that young, her body's eliminating things. Very well if she's fed properly, if you feed her food and human food is sorry, I'm so sorry. Sorry for those who don't want to hear it. Close your ears. Uncooked plant food, which includes nuts, seeds, fruit and plants, stems, roots, leaves. What else? Roots, stems, leaves, trunk flowers, fruit, yeah, um, that's our food. So I know if you so, if you're feeding her, that she'll be, and she's two, so you know you can blend it up, put it in the blender, blend it up, make her soups and stuff like that Avocado spinach soup delicious.
Speaker 1:A lot of raw almond butter, a few tablespoons. Blend it up with a little some water and broccoli Really good. You can make a lot of good soups for her. That would clean and she's doing the cheese. So you don't have to give a two-year-old enemas or colonics, because if you just feed them right, they're going to be moving nicely.
Speaker 1:Make sure she's running around all the time. Put her to bed. She goes to bed Period. The time is an hour after sunset. Well, no, it depends on where you live. Wait, let me take that back. Eight o'clock, latest. Eight o'clock, all children go to bed, okay, and guess what? Who goes to bed with them? Mommy and daddy, yeah, um, and you don't have to tell a kid to move, because that's what they're going to do all day long. They can't sit still. Kids are like not, you know, they're natural.
Speaker 1:Now, regarding heavy metals, with her at her age, unless she's had some bizarre exposure, you can pretty much take care of that with some really good botanicals, like chlorella, what do you call it, the drops. Anyway, let me see. Let me see if you guys or anybody's telling me, is anybody Recommend following me? Is anybody? What do you recommend? To follow you? Bed bras will now last me the rest of my life. Bed bras, no bra, let the air be your bra. Nobody knows what's that stuff, anyway, I forget, anyway, anyway.
Speaker 1:So there are lots of botanical ways of chelating. Remember, vitamin C is a chelator, these things. So you want to be giving her. If you're giving her a whole food, a whole plant food diet, she's going to be crazy healthy. And you know you can take vitamin C in powder, sodium ascorbate and put some in her different juices and stuff like that, just to give her some extra, because she should be eating real food which will have what we need in it. So I'm really uh, kind of uh wondering what? What happened? So the parasites?
Speaker 1:As I said, she can take ivermectin and fembendazole, but it's got to be dosed appropriately and I would have to look it up for your daughter. Let me just see if I can find it real quickly here. Okay, so because, remember, ivermectin is being taken all over the world by children for river blindness and other things 150 micrograms per kilogram of body weight. Children weighing 15 or more children weighing 15 kilograms or more can receive ivermectin. So onchocerosis, which is the river blindness. So they also give it for scabies at 200 micrograms per kilogram. So children weighing less than 15 require a dose determined by a doctor or has safety data for this age or a limit determined by a doctor. Doctors don't know anything. But anyway, you really need to talk to somebody because I don't know why you're so concerned about a two-year-old having these specific problems.
Speaker 1:So join the groups. Get in our group, the Health and Healing group. Get in it and I can talk to you this week Tuesday, my Tuesday, your Monday, tomorrow. Now here's one. I can talk to you next. This week, tuesday, my Tuesday, your Monday, tomorrow. Now here's one. This is Liz.
Speaker 1:It's about biological hormone replacement. I decided not to take them after having breast CFCs. Does that mean that I will never heal? It will continue to come back. I'm over 60. Is it mandatory to take them to survive? I follow a strict, healthy protocol. Why can't that be enough? And age naturally the way God intended Agreed 100%. However, if we were doing what God intended, we wouldn't be reaching menopause and andropause at 60, maybe at 90 or 110. We have an accelerated rate of menopause and andropause and we know that because we see groups like the Hunzas, where the women delivering children at the age of 65, men getting them pregnant at 110. We have a very accelerated program here.
Speaker 1:But understand too that when you go into menopause, it's not just that you stop having periods and it's not just that you have vaginal dryness and low libido. You also have osteoporosis, cognitive decline, risk of coronary artery problems, risk of stroke. Yeah, and then you'll shrivel up, but, like you know, according to my age, I should be shriveled up in uh using a walker by now, but I don't want to do that, so you don't have to. No, I'm just saying that, uh, I would. And if you had cfc's? Because you had cfc, so that's why you didn't want to do it, because you're you is well, the estrogen caused it. It was an imbalance. You probably most likely were estrogen dominant, meaning you didn't have the proper balance. You probably didn't have enough iodine, and then I don't know about your personal life, but there's a lot of things that go into it what you ate and all that sort of thing but it wasn't caused by a hormone, an imbalance, and all you want to do now is make sure you do restore the balance, because menopause again is putting things out of balance. It's taking them out of healthy cycles. So so, luigi, I'm 19 years old and I'm planning a 15-day water fast.
Speaker 1:Do you have any book recommendations to help guide and support me during this time? Yes, the Science and Fine Art of Fasting by Herbert M Shelton. The Science and Fine Art of Fasting by Herbert M Shelton, and also oh yeah, well, anyway. Another one is Fasting Can Save your Life by Herbert M Shelton, and also, oh yeah, well, anyway. Another one is the Fasting Can Save your Life by Herbert M Shelton. The Miracle of Fasting by Bragg. I'm glad you asked, because that's really what you need to be doing, especially the first four or five days, so you don't think you need to eat. It's very important, oh yeah, and for those of you when I was saying, when I answered the question about drinking urine and stuff, I read, this is probably one of the original books on. So it's not that I'm not, I get it, I don't get it. See the color of that book? Nah, I can't see myself drinking anything the color of that book. Anyway, yeah, there's. Those are the books.
Speaker 1:And the thing about water fasting is that the hardest part is the first. Well, the hardest part is to decide to do it. Second hardest is the first three days and then you're fine. But you got to drink lots of water. You got to drink at least three liters a day. Drink three liters a day, a couple of times a day. Get some sea salt, celtic sea salt, himalayan. I heard the Himalayan is not really Himalayan and that the pink is not. I don't know. Try to get some good salt, like a half teaspoon twice a day and a little bit of water. Chug it. Make sure you're drinking a lot and peeing a lot. Read the first three days. Read so that you can say yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, instead of boo.
Speaker 1:Question two melatonin, sleep. I'm struggling to fall asleep and I want to try melatonin. Where can I find the best quality and do you recommend taking 30 minutes or two to three hours? Okay, yeah, either Melatonin. There's so many places online and we got to find a good. Actually, if you come to our group, because the people in our group have been doing this research, we've got a list of resources of where to get, like all good stuff. But the companies I like are Gero Now, nlw, what else? I haven't bought anything really recently. It gets sent to me so I don't know and you can get.
Speaker 1:But, yeah, start taking it and it's not just for sleep, it's for your immune system, it's for detoxing, it's an antioxidant. And in terms of when do you take it, if you're taking capsules, maybe you can take a few capsules and don't worry about getting too much. You hard to get, it's impossible to get. You know, start out with low dose, maybe three milligrams, and then five and ten. You want to go up maybe to uh, you know 50, 60 if you can, but it might be too much. Good, your age could make you too sleepy. Um, it's a powerful benefit to us, but I don't know, our pineal glands have been really assaulted so we might not have it Anyway. So you would take the pills, maybe an hour before. If you're doing sublingual, you'll do that just as you go to sleep, but not two or three hours.
Speaker 1:And then the third question was alcohol addiction for your mother. She's addicted to alcohol and you're worried about her. Is overcoming alcohol as impossible, and what steps would you recommend for her and me? Okay, well, the first step for your mom is to realize she has a problem, and the second step is to want to not have the problem. So if she hasn't, a lot of times people are in denial. They won't acknowledge that they have it, or if they do, they say so what? But if she knows she has it and she wants it, then that's the first step.
Speaker 1:Now, depending on how long she's been at, I would recommend going to AA, alcoholics Anonymous. They've been around for a long time. They have a great program. These are people that have been through what she's been through and worse, and they can help her. There's no professional out there that knows what they're doing None of them. You go to AA and you can go to the Al-Anon, which is for the family. So there's groups for the family who are having to deal with someone in their family, whether it's a spouse, a child or a mother or a friend, and so you guys get together and you go through and share how you can help each other. But this is where you get the information, and the same with narcotics. They have Narcotics Anonymous. They have Overeating Anonymous, gamblers Anonymous. These things work because you're with people who have been through it and there's a 12-step program and these 12 steps are good for all of us. All you have to do is have that first step.
Speaker 1:I realized I was helpless. You can say that. I realized I was helpless over eating cooked food. I'm helpless, anyway. Food, I'm helpless, anyway. Good, I'm glad you're doing it fast. That's fantastic at age 19. All right, you guys, we didn't get too many. Sorry, I didn't get so many. I got to answer these questions at some point. You guys have so many questions, anyway, so many. Ah, okay, listen, I don't know how we're going to do this. We got to have this every day. If I did this every day, we could probably get some answers. Anyway, have a fantastic week. I'm sorry, rgcc, no, no, and then no, no, no, no, no, no. Waste of money. All right, sawadikap, namaste and aloha, everyone. See you next week. Unless you join the group, then I'll see you tonight or tomorrow. All right, okay, sawadikap.