The Dr. Lodi Podcast

Episode 159 - 10.8.25 Breaking Free from the Disease Paradigm: Restore Your Body's Natural Balance

Dr. Thomas Lodi Episode 159

The medical establishment has conditioned us to accept diagnoses as answers, when they're merely descriptions of what's happening in our bodies. "Severe ulcerative epithelial dysplasia" sounds impressive, but it only tells you that cells are changing shape, not why it's happening or how to resolve it. This descriptive approach serves the medical billing system perfectly while leaving patients without true understanding of their conditions.

During this illuminating session, we explore the fundamental misconception driving modern healthcare: the military paradigm that something must be targeted and eliminated. Whether discussing tongue lesions, cervical issues, or persistent fungal infections, the same principle applies – these aren't invaders to fight but symptoms of imbalance to correct. Your body isn't being attacked; it's adapting to its environment.

What conventional medicine calls "cancer," we recognize as chronic fermenting cells – cells that have lost mitochondrial function and shifted to fermentation for energy production. This process changes their form and function, but regardless of where it occurs in the body, the underlying mechanism remains the same. The medical establishment simply names the condition based on location, creating the illusion of distinct diseases requiring specialized treatments.

The path to healing begins with cleansing – a minimum three-week juice cleanse consisting primarily of fresh vegetables – followed by restoration of essential nutrients like vitamins A, C, D, E, melatonin, and iodine. Almost everyone is iodine deficient unless they regularly consume sea vegetables, affecting thyroid function and overall metabolism. After cleansing, eating uncooked plants in their natural state within a 4-6 hour window each day supports ongoing health.

Perhaps most crucial is abandoning fear-i

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Speaker 1:

Okay, so I guess we're on. All right, cool, let's go then. We've got the numbers climbing. I want to get everybody up here, get as many people on as possible, because this is a very good question that Nancy's asked and the topic was head and neck CFCs. Yay, sound is back on Absolutely fantastic.

Speaker 1:

I was just reading that by Emma and I was just wondering. It just suddenly occurred to me and I never asked the question, although it was in the back of my mind. Why do they call it the land down under? How did that come phrase come to be down under? What it's so weird? Because when you're on a ball in the middle of space, there is no down and around anyway.

Speaker 1:

So, uh, and one other point here. Um, it's another very important point, and that is this you submit a question here, or I get questions verbally in real time when we're doing the groups, because we interact, and that's the thing about the groups we interact. So it's like and if you have any kind of medical problem, I'm happy to help you go through it, and so it's like having weekly sessions or consultations twice a week, but anyway, I don't answer questions and yet I do. But let me qualify that if someone says to me how, or asks a question like how much of this do I take and for how long, I'm not going to answer that. I'm going to give the the understanding of all the variables involved in this so that you can answer it and answer many other things in the future. So my goal is really to give you understanding. I will give you the answers, but only when you're capable of understanding it, because I can tell by the question that you don't have the ability to understand what I'm going to answer until I've given you context and language. So anyway, just so you know, because I know a lot of people say no, that's what you're talking about. Why are you? I got 30 minutes on this question. So because the location and the hemisphere is, I know, but it's called the Southern Hemisphere. What if we called the Southern Hemisphere the Northern Hemisphere? Oh, I guess, because north of what you know, in space there's no north and south Anyway. So, yeah, so, anyways. So this is what, just if you knew. So this person was saying they had a biopsy of a tongue lesion which showed severe ulcerative epithelial dysplasia and they're trying to take care of it themselves, which is a great idea and taking antiparasitics and stuff and methylene blue, all right. So let me get back to the fact that, to the point I was making, fantastic Jason.

Speaker 1:

The point I was making, fantastic Jason, is that so you've kind of concluded that parasites might be involved in this, and that's absolutely true. We don't. Here's the thing about parasites. We've all got parasites and parasites are pretty ubiquitous. They're around and they're they're around and they're only parasites to certain certain organisms, right? So the parasite is an organism that is in or on another organism and deriving benefit and that organism is being harmed. That's the definition of a parasitic relationship, and we always think of the word, that, the, the phrase or the parasitic relationship in terms of human interactions. And maybe you know, a friend or a co-worker or a spouse or anything, or even parents and children, can have a parasitic relationship. So it's all based on the fact that one is achieving, one is getting benefit, the other is getting harm, so, anyway, so there parasites, and are they involved in whatever's going on that's impacting our well-being in our bodies? And is it a good idea to try and eliminate these parasites? Absolutely, that's fine. But here's what's happening. You're looking at this as if and I understand this this is how Rockefeller wanted it for you, rocky and the gang and, by the way, they're still around, rocky and the gang. They've never left. They've never left the original. Rocky is not with us, but his children are.

Speaker 1:

And what was it about? What was it in? I don't know when he showed up, but, yeah, bullwinkle, bullwinkle came into the picture and you all know Bullwinkle. So Rocky and Bullwinkle I don't know if you all know the original cartoon, but that's it. So Bullwinkle came into it. I think in the 80s, right, bullwinkle actually claimed to have started something you know, microsoft. I guess he did illegally on paper, but he, he made a lot of claims about, uh, his, uh, it prowess and all that sort of thing anyway. So bullwinkle came into the picture, so we got rocky in the game.

Speaker 1:

Um, anyway, what they want, and, and we all go along with it, there's a thing there that's causing it and I need to get rid of it. Whatever the thing is that's causing it, and that becomes the paradigm. So our paradigm is a military paradigm, our paradigm is to. I'm going to get rid of it. Now, when we look under the surface and we realize and we see what's going on in the time, in your case, we understand that there are multiple initiating events and supporting events that are allowing this process to happen. So what is happening?

Speaker 1:

Well, the diagnosis they gave you, as you put it in quotes, was severe ulcerative epithelial dysplasia, which says nothing. It tells you nothing. They make it sound like, wow, we are incredibly intelligent, yeah, very intelligent. So the severe ulcerative epithelial dysplasia is merely a description. That's like saying you know, if I have a cut, I have a big gash in my arm, my skin, and I named it. I said well, it looks like there is an opening in the skin, an opening in the skin with blood coming out. That would be the diagnosis.

Speaker 1:

It's very important to understand that what they're calling a diagnosis is of no benefit to anyone except for them, because then they have the appropriate terminology nomenclature to place this into the algorithm. What is the algorithm? It's the instructions on how to proceed and basically, excuse me, what are the products and services that the doctor can sell? Did I say sell? Yeah, I did. Why did I say sell? Because the medical industry is a business. It's a business, it's a great business, they're making lots of money and, oh my gosh, it's a business. And really, as a reminder to us all. The goal of business is to make a profit, and there's no business that I've ever run into or heard of that puts any effort into attempting to decrease the number of clients they have. I've just never seen that, and so we have to understand that that's probably not what the medical profession would do, even though their stated mission and goal is such. So it's very strange, it's duplicitous.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, severe ulcerative epithelial dysplasia. What it's saying is that severe means we all know what severe means, right? Ulcerative epithelial dysplasia. Well, epithelial is refers to the cells that are on the surface, and they're on the, at the surface of um like, especially over a mucous membrane, which is what the mouth, oral cavity, the nasal cavity, the vaginal cavity, even into the rectum, and that in the rectum it goes up to about two or three centimeters, four centimeters, and then it turns into a whole different, but then there's a different kind of epithelial. So, anyway, the word epi means above or around, thelial is referring to the cells, so epithelial. So anyway, the word epi means above or around, thelial is referring to the cells, so epithelial so it's the uppermost layer of cells.

Speaker 1:

Dysplasia Dysplasia means that the cells are starting to, when we look at them under the microscope. The cells are starting to lose their original shape, they're losing their form, because when you look under the microscope, if you had liver cells, you could tell it was the liver, just by looking at it, by the morphology, by the, you know, and you can tell that these are kidney cells and you can tell these are heart cells and these are brain cells, skin cells, right? Because they all have a unique kind of morphology or shape, and that's. Remember, shape and form and function are just two ways of looking at something. Joshua, I look like Mr Bean, huh, robert, what's his name? Rowan, not Robert Rowan, but his name is Rowan, right? I've actually heard that before too. I've heard that. I've heard I look like who's the other guy? Anyway, so the digital, it's all happening. Biometric it's all happening, joshua, it's all happening. And if there was something we could do about it, we're not. Let me get back.

Speaker 1:

So, epithelial dysplasia as I said, the cells are starting to look, and let me give you some other terminology. So if a cell looks, if it looks like a normal cell, it'll look like a. For example, kidney cells all have the same, depending on where if you're in the tubes of the kidney, if you're in the glomeruli, whatever tissue bed a cell is in, it has the exact Atkins. There you go, rowan Atkins, it has the exact. Do you know? He has a PhD in astrophysics or something that's crazy, anyway. So they all have the same shape. Morphology, that means the size of the nucleus compared to the size of the cytoplasm and also the other organelles inside of it, that they all have their relative numbers and shape, and all of that.

Speaker 1:

Now what happens with dysplasia is that form starts to change, and the reason form is changing right is because function is changing All right. There's something going on metabolically Metabolism you might think of as the engine or functioning of a cell, the metabolism. So there's something going on metabolically that is requiring different processing, and so the form is changing to accommodate these new requirements. So that's dysplasia. Then we get to when it goes a little further. We get to metaplasia right, where it's like almost it's really dysplasia, it's really dysplastic. And then you finally get to the term that they call neoplastic, and neoplastic and anaplastic are referring to malignancies, cfcs, so it's a term that is used.

Speaker 1:

Now this is often a finding that women will find when you get a pap smear. If you have an abnormal pap smear, it will be that you have cervical dysplasia, all right, so that's all it means. So you're severe and it's forming an ulcer, and it also just means, you know, a cavitation in tissue. So it's in the epithelial layer right of the tongue and it's an ulcer and there is a lot of dysplasia. That's all that says. But it doesn't tell you. So to say that that's a diagnosis.

Speaker 1:

The value of a diagnosis would be that now, now I know how this happened and how to resolve it. That's it. Al Pacino Some people I've heard that before too Al Pacino, which would make more sense since we're both Italian, but I get it with the accents Anyway. So what we're talking about is a very severe ulcer that is dysplastic, and dysplastic means the shapes are starting to change. That's what it means. It doesn't tell you how you got it and how to get rid of it. So what value is it? The value is it's got the proper nomenclature. Therefore, it's got a number, the icd-9 or whatever we're on now I don't know the number, but anyway, there are now codes for diagnoses, and so if people that are working in that in the medical world now they've got to come up with a diagnosis that they in their book, which will have a number, a code, and in that code allows them to do what To bill it. This is sales folks.

Speaker 1:

So, nancy, what is important to note is that this process that's going on. What is important to note is that this process that's going on, rather than just so there's, in other words, what, what's what's going on that caused your cells in this area of your body to, um, start to change right, remember form function. So the reason they're changing the form is changing because it's requiring an additional function to change and function. Okay, so the form is changing right. So understand that it's very important.

Speaker 1:

So the question we should be asking is what's causing what's happening? Why is that happening? Rather than I want to get rid of it, because what do you want to get rid of? We still haven't identified what's causing it, but the way our minds have been programmed to to operate is that we want to get rid of the, the ulcer, is it? I think that's how we would be looking at it, right, because if there was a tumor, definitely we'd say that's it. We want to get rid of it, we want to get rid of this ulcer. So what's going on? What we, what's going on is that there is a um, for a variety of reasons, that no one will ever be able to even identify.

Speaker 1:

The cells in that area have lost their mitochondria. They've lost their ability to produce energy at a really quick, efficient way. So since they have, they've lost enough mitochondria about 60% of them. Then they now have to ferment. So this is the early part of a fermenting process. It hasn't reached the point at which they would call it Virgo or Capricorn or whatever, but once there are enough of these that have changed their shape completely in order to accommodate the new metabolic requirements of fermentation, then we will have cfcs.

Speaker 1:

You don't yet, and you don't need to, and you don't need to freak out and so. But so you, it's it's correct, and try to identify so paradox, a parasite cleanse would, of course, very but foremost is to clean the body, because whatever's going on there is going on everywhere, except that it is because of the multitude of variables that's happening at that part of your body in the top. All right, and so remember so chronic defermenting cells, whether they start in the ovary, they start in the kidney, the brain, bone marrow, it doesn't matter where they start. Regardless of where they start. It's still the same process and we name it by the location. So he has pancreatic COCS. They're not distinct in an individual. So it's very important individual, so it's very important.

Speaker 1:

Um, oh, you're very welcome, amara. I love it. It's my, my, uh, fun time, um, and I just hope we can wake up or get a lot more people to watch, because, uh, uh, you know, I, I, when I listen to what's online, I just no one's talking about this perspective anyway. So, um, we live in a world where the air we breathe is not even pure anymore. Uh, the water certainly isn't and the food certainly isn't. Whatever, we and we're we're living in very artificial environments, but it's just crazy. It's amazing that we all, that we even survive. That's's the amazing thing.

Speaker 1:

When I read that 50% of the people that means one out of two people in Great Britain, in the UK, will develop CFCs. You're welcome, natalia, natale, natale, yeah, anyway, yeah, okay. Let me stop here a second. I thought you were Katie Couric was last night, let me tell. I didn't get a chance to tell you, but we learned that the whole thing was a scam. Somebody had sent an email to us and it was a Katie Couric scam. It wasn't real. So I think the guy was trying to get our, to get our social media accounts. He was trying to get enough information about them to hijack them. What was it? Last year or the year before, we couldn't access Facebook for seven months. Somebody had it. They had hijacked it. It's just ridiculous. We're in the Wild West, only we're in cyberspace A CFC.

Speaker 1:

So you must be new, because a CFC is a chronically fermenting cell which is called by the Rockefeller, rockefellering, fellerian world who made, who developed, allopathic medicine? That's what they call cancer, and cancer, as you know, tanisha, is an astrological sign. It's nothing else. All right, what are they? They're chronically fermenting cells and we call it that just because there's no fear associated with that. This is a true statement and it's just what it is. But the other word that they use is just 100% fear, and fear does not allow you to heal. So we don't use that. So, nancy, we've got to get to that.

Speaker 1:

So, basically, the first thing we need to do is cleanse the whole body. You've got to cleanse the whole body. You do that with a juice. Cleanse right, fresh vegetable and enough fruit to make it delicious, but don't make it a fruit juice. Mostly vegetables. The standard recipe is cucumber, celery, kale, spinach, lemon and apple. You can modify that, make it so you look forward to eating. Don't drink it because you have to drink it, drink it because you love it, even during the juice.

Speaker 1:

Cleanse, if, if you, if your body can, if you don't get nauseous, you can take the ivermectin, fembendazole that you would add in like close to my for sure nitroxanide, which is, as you know, alinea, right, so that's what you would add in, that's what you would be doing for the parasite aspect. But I'll remember you've got to clean completely and since it's on your tongue, it's there, right, there, there's a some, there's some other great things you do, you have access to it, right, so it's it's. That's a much better situation than an, easier to deal with, than when someone has these kinds of problems going on with an, an internal organ. Then you don't have access to it. Um, you know so, um, I you've got hydrogen peroxide, six, 6% hydrogen, food grade hydrogen peroxide. Uh, if you can find a doctor to help you with ozone, you can use ozone in that area. Um, so there's lots of ways um, of of, of directly affecting it, but, but in reality we have to change it from within, systemically Now, and the way we do that now. This applies to whatever your question is. Remember this whatever we're talking about with one person applies to everybody who may be in a similar situation, regardless of when it started, where it started, all that okay. So after the cleansing, which includes the parasites and all that at the same time, what we're doing is we realize that vitamins A, c, d and E are essential and we don't get enough because we haven't been eating properly. The black salve you couldn't put on because the mouth is wet, it won't stay there.

Speaker 1:

Vitamin C Hopefully you've been watching long enough that you know that what we talk about here is to get your vitamin C, which is ascorbate. I don't like the word vitamin C. Whatever you think a vitamin is is how you're going to hear that. So I don't like. It's the same thing with idioms. So what I would call that? Yeah, I would take them together. Yes, but what it is?

Speaker 1:

It's a scorbate and it's a molecule that is essential for life and we don't. It's one of those molecules that we need to obtain from, we need to obtain from our environment, right, like oxygen, like water. We need it, we need. We're not going to produce it within. So we need to get it. It needs to be part of our diet and that's what it is. It's.

Speaker 1:

Corbate is essential for life, um, and it also, if you look at the um, the, the, the functions that ascorbate have in our body, it's mind-boggling. I mean, without ascorbates we can't make neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine. Yeah, right, and it's just incredible. So a few of those activities, consequences of the uh of ascorbate is to deal with CFCs. Anyone who has CFCs, had the person had high enough levels of ascorbate in their plasma, it couldn't have happened. You would not have gotten developed to that point. That's how powerful it is. So you want to get the level up to what is physiological.

Speaker 1:

So we recommend two grams of liposomal sodium ascorbate four times a day. Vitamin D at least 50,000 a day, same with the vitamin A, but we do the mixed carotenoids, not just beta-carotene, and the vitamin E is the topotrienols and tocopherols, because there's two kinds. So that's what we do and so you're getting enough of those because they're essential in your immune surveillance and more than just surveillance, you know being actively. And then there's melatonin Got to get that way up. And then there's the iodine thyroid. That has to be corrected.

Speaker 1:

Just in short, what I'm talking about is everybody is iodine deficient and the reason, all right. So the reason everyone is iodine deficient, is because we no longer get it in our food unless we're eating sea vegetables. All right, because sea vegetables have high concentrations of it. Not seafood, but you know different kinds of them and the Japanese and Koreans, and there's some coastal Chinese old school there I used a phrase one of those idiot phrases, so I apologize One of those traditional groups of people that are on the coast of China.

Speaker 1:

So, anyway, eating enough sea vegetables because they concentrate it, like wakame can concentrate, which is a type of seaweed. Seaweed can concentrate 30 000 times more than is in the seawater. That's crazy, that's a lot. And so when you get, when you eat that, you're getting it. Not only you're getting the item, but you're getting it in the bioavailable form, right? And what I mean by bioavailable is that, um, you can't pick up some soil and eat it? You could, but I mean you're not going to get, you're not going to be able to absorb the minerals out of it. Very well, a little bit, right, yeah, the tocopherol and tocopherol are part of it. They come together and then you can find supplements with them, or you can actually find whole food substances they used to make it from. I don't germ whatever, but, yeah, this chair.

Speaker 1:

So because we're iodine deficient, because we're not eating a traditional Japanese diet, our thyroid gland cannot make thyroid hormone. Thyroid hormone is T4, t3, and the three and the four refer to the odd number of All right. So anyway, I'm not going to go any further with that, but you've got to adjust that and we talk about that all in many lives. I've talked about it and it's a constant discussion that comes up in the groups as well. So you've got to get that balanced. And then the adrenals. So that's what you got to do. You got to start like that, Okay. Okay. So, nancy, you're on the right track.

Speaker 1:

And then when you start eating, after the juice cleanse which I recommend, a minimum of three weeks, and a juice cleanse means you're drinking fresh juices that you've made or someone else has made, and like three liters a day, three quarts a day, and not eating any solid food. So it's a liquid diet and three weeks minimum. If you go all the way, like to eight weeks, it's going to be phenomenal. And then when you resume eating, you're going to eat real human food. So if you watch this series I'm doing with the human diet, you'll come to understand that All right. So that's very important to know and I'm not hiding it.

Speaker 1:

What is it? What is the? Uh, true human diet? True human diet? It's uncooked in its natural state, that's plants, which is everything from the root, stem, leaves, flowers, seeds and you know, big seeds or nuts, nuts and seeds, all that.

Speaker 1:

And by eating that, and you're going to eat that in a six-hour window at most that four-hour window is better and you're going to stop eating between about five hours before sleep. And you can do a lot of things with, like I said, 6% hydrogen peroxide. Okay, now this is from Didi Adenylcarcinoma cervical CFCs. What to do for this? Early stages. Okay, you're familiar with that. I think it was more common on typewriters, but they had Ditto. Ditto was a pair of quotation marks. In other words, the same thing I just said to Nancy regarding the tongue lesion. It's the same thing we'd say about cervical CFCs.

Speaker 1:

So let me take apart that diagnosis by the brilliant physician and the pathologist. He confirmed that it's adenocarcinoma. Adeno is anything that arises from a gland and carcinoma is anything that any CFC that arises from either endothelial or epithelial cells Whoa, okay. So listen, everybody, I can't. You've got to join the groups, one of the groups, so we can interact, because your questions are incredible and I'd love to answer them, but I really need to follow and respect the people that have sent in their questions already. I've got to respect that, you know. So, please, the graves, all that stuff that you're asking. Join the group so we can do that, or submit it for next week, okay, because I really want to answer these. People ask great questions. So join the group so I can talk to you. But remember, everything we're talking about here is relative to everybody. There's nothing that we ever talk about with anyone that is not relative to you, and you got to keep that in mind.

Speaker 1:

Okay, adenocarcinoma is a CFCs that arise from either epithelial or endothelial cells that are part of a gland. So you can have adenocarcinoma of the pancreas, of the breast, of the colon, of the ovaries and cervix, because these are all glandular organs, all right, and so what to do? So also, with the adenocarcinoma you have of the cervix? I don't know if you've had. If you said early stages, that means I'm hoping that you didn't have them. But you've got listen, since you know that it's that in the personal line you've got a biopsy. So I would stop there. I don't know your situation so I can't advise you what to do. But early stages means that I would think that you're talking about either what they call stage one or two, which is just they divide it into stages for the same reason. They put the diagnostics out there, and they do that because it allows them to justify whatever they're selling.

Speaker 1:

And again with the cervix, here's another situation where you have direct access to it so you can do things to it. And I don't know your situation, but crushed fresh garlic we use for cervical dysplasia. Remember the word dysplasia? If someone has a pap smear where it shows cervical dysplasia, we can actually, by using the crushed garlic, resolve that issue so that within one to two months, if you've got a repeat pap smear, you'd find out that it's no longer dysplastic. Within one to two months, if you've got to repeat pap smear, you'd find out that it's no longer disablastic.

Speaker 1:

Anyway. So again in the adenocarcinoma of the cervix, you can do the same thing. But I don't know where you're at, whether you've had surgery or what's going on, but that's what you can do locally. And you can also do other things locally. You can apply iodine to it Very important and you can use hydrogen peroxide on it. Try to paint it on if you can. It's not easy. But if you have one of those long, you know, like a Q-tip, but it's like elongated and it's got a lot of cotton but it's firm, you can either apply the 7% Lugol's or you can apply hydrogen peroxide 6% or many things you can. You'd cover the cervix with it. But remember, from the outside, dealing with a situation like this from the outside is limited in the total benefit you can hope to see. So it's really an internal systemic modification that has to come about, a restoration of the biology, a restoration of the physiology, so that the body doesn't need to do that. So good night everyone. Yeah, there's hope here, absolutely there's hope everywhere. Actually Now, and you know, the most important thing that you can all do is not to it's using their words.

Speaker 1:

Stop using their jargon, don't use their jargon, because their jargon uh, they've got it the way it is, the way their linguistic formula works is that it leads to its death. It's the. It's like being on the train to death. It's the death train. So jump off that train Using their words staging, whatever adenocarcinoma or osteosarcoma, whatever glioblastoma, whatever they're going to call it.

Speaker 1:

Don't use their terms or their staging or prognosis, or aggressive. So you know, oh, this is very aggressive. Well, they're all aggressive. So you know, oh, this is very aggressive. Well, they're all aggressive. I mean, even if they're slow growing, that just means they're doubling times, not as long as some other situations with CFCs. But you know, and then people saying that, well, isn't this more worse than that? Well, I'll tell you something I've never found any situation of cfcs that's not a bummer, right, that's not.

Speaker 1:

You know, they're hard, it's a difficult thing to do. You've got to really work at right, you've got to decide and you've got to know that what you're going, what you're, what you're doing, is the right thing. If you can't, you can't be afraid, you can't be thinking no, I'm not saying you can't you will probably be thinking I wonder if I should do this. I want you to get to the point of, yeah, that's what I'm gonna do, absolutely. Yeah, I'm glad I found this right, so that you know, stay, stick around when you I'll hopefully help you come to that understanding. All right. So again, dd, you cleanse, you do all the things we just talked about and also balance hormones. I didn't mention that with Nancy, balance hormones. So you need a doctor of some sort that's going to be able to help you on this journey. But join our group, join the CFC group, so we can help you. All right? Yeah, wow, that's pretty crazy. So this is a gym.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying that my 14-year year old granddaughter has an eating disorder of only eating five foods homemade bread, milk, fig, newtons and cheese. That's almost, that's only four. I missed one anyway. Well, even if we had the fifth one there. Keep in mind, though, the granddaughter will only eat these things. Now she keep in mind she didn't decide out of all the things on the planet that she could eat. She was given all of these things, and that's how she became. You know the situation she's in Right Homemade bread and milk, figs, cheese, fig mints and cheese, and she also has severe sensory issues.

Speaker 1:

Is there any way to reverse or minimize a low spectrum of autism? I'm not sure if that's her diagnosis, it's only a suspicion. What may be the best approach when food is the phobia? All right, well, lots of different aspects to this, and you're right In her situation and you said it was phobic In her situation, the manifestation of her confusion is that she's only eating certain foods. This is like an extreme form of what appetite is. We all know that appetite, lori. Somebody could tell Lori there how to join the group. You just go to drloricom open and you 'll be able to find it pretty quickly how to join the group.

Speaker 1:

All right, so we've talked about appetite versus hunger, right? Hunger is a physiological when the body senses all the different sensory apparatus functions we have in our body. That sense either a nutrient and or an energy deficit. It sets in motion a whole avalanche of biochemical signals that that that turn into physiological movement and you obtain food and then, once that energy and or energy deficit has been satisfied, you stop eating and drinking. That's physiological hunger. It's unlearned and it's easily satisfied because you'll be alerted to it when it's just mild. You won't get to a point of being malnourished, that won't happen. And then you have to try to replenish malnourishment. No, that won't happen. You'll be alerted to it along the way. So it's easy to satisfy and, as I said, it's nonspecific, it's whatever's in front of you that is appropriate for your species.

Speaker 1:

Now there's where the problem's coming, with humans, because humans don't eat according to instinct. They eat according to their cultures, because they were raised by families or not. But we're still in a culture and part of it and what the central, I think, defining part of a culture is the cuisine and it's the cuisine, the people that we sit, it's around the cuisine and it's the cuisine, the people that we said. It's around the cuisine, around eating, the partaking of food, where we share everything From our intimacies to our vulgarities. You know, business, lunches, romantic dates, seminars. Food is an aspect of everything. So whatever that culture considers as food is what you become addicted to. So that ranges from monkey brain to bull testicles, to the lining of the gut of bovine, to monkey brain, monkey brain, so in other words, a dead muscle of a corpse and two apples, and then to chemically modify I mean heat modified substances, boiled apples, applesauce. So whatever your culture defines as food is what you grew up and become addicted to.

Speaker 1:

So in this particular situation, this 14 year old girl was, it was, she was given these foods and somehow a lot her appetite locked into. So appetite the difference between appetite, hunger, is that hunger is learned and it's very specific, like in this situation. I gotta add that. But in other people it's called cravings and it's never satisfied. All right, so that's appetite. So her appetite has become very specific. So she's stuck in appetite. And you're also suggesting that she's got autism.

Speaker 1:

And another thing there is no such thing as autism. Did he say that? I said that. This guy said that. I did say it and I'll say it one more time there's no such thing as autism, it's Alzheimer's. They're not things, they're not autism. All of them were made up.

Speaker 1:

Patrick, we'll definitely get into it. I love that question. Okay, so autism didn't exist when I was a kid, alzheimer's didn't exist when I was a kid, lots of them. So we get new diagnoses. The Diagnostic and Statistical manual is growing, growing, growing. So, um, you know, now we have it's unbelievable. Um, some of the diagnoses are in you. You say what they're like normal responses to life, things that are happening in life that have now been medicalized. For example, pregnancy is now medicalized. You need to be treated by a doctor if you're pregnant. There's this thing as autism, and real. Quickly, let me just answer Patrick's question here. I just want to address this. You love to take LSD. My take on LSD is, and we can talk about this at some other point.

Speaker 1:

I think it's a very important methodology of helping someone quickly see through the what's the word, the facade. We have a persona, we have a personality and we become this personality. It's the Dr Lodi show. Whoever your name is, bob Smith show everybody's, it's our show. So all this, whatever we're doing, whatever we're acting, it's an act. It's an act and I know and I'm not going to get off the subject too much, but just to remind you that that's not who we are.

Speaker 1:

We're not this. I'm not my hand, I'm not my body, I'm not my arm, I'm not my eyeball and I'm um, and I'm not my mom, I'm not any. All these things I have, they're not my body, like my house, my dog, my car that I have. I have a body, I'm not. I have a personality. I'm not, you know, just so. That's what it does. So the lsd takes you into that place where just you and you don't often get there in life to find out, to, to experience I am. Anyway, it's a quick way in there. So remember, I grew up in the 60s, right when it was happening, right, purple haze, orange, sunshine, you know, yeah.

Speaker 1:

So anyway, what I want to tell you, ginger, is that your daughter does not have the low spectrum of autism. They made this up. First it was autism, then it became autism spectrum disorder, which is what they can just name anything they want and call it right, and they're toxic. There's different levels of toxicity, is what it is and that's all any of this is. There's different levels of accumulated toxins that are causing different effects that are modifying the physiology. That's what's happening.

Speaker 1:

So what do you do? You've got to get rid of the toxins so that your 14-year-old daughter needs to be cleansed Now. She won't grow along with this. So there's the problem. But fortunately she's young enough that you still not almost not but young enough that you could still actually almost force her to detox, and that means just giving her like fresh juices, but she's 14. Are you going to harm her? No, you're going to harm her. She's not going to do it that long.

Speaker 1:

I would do a week at the first time and then get her back to eating real food, real food, real food. So if you put that out, listen, she's eating bread, milk, chicken and cheese. If they're not available, and the only thing that is available is food that you put there, eventually she'll eat it. Now, yes, there are situations where somebody won't, and then they'll actually die by not eating. You've got to know that she needs to be cleansed.

Speaker 1:

It's essential cleanse her um and colonics all that. She's on medication, you. But you've got to do this with the guidance of someone and I'd be happy to help you to join the group um, so that we can, I can talk to you and if I need to find out more, you can't just, you know, realize I can't just come up with an answer. You know what you should do, um, you know, come up with an answer of what you should do, you know. But I can tell you about what you should do, and that is again. You cleanse and start eating the right thing, right, the right thing. You know it's right and wrong. Start eating food that will, it can be converted into flesh, blood or energy.

Speaker 1:

But forget the word diagnosis, because it's a nonsense, as Rocky and his boys, rocky and his boys, they need to, all those guys, and even Bullwinkle. Bullwinkle is, I think, the number one financial supporter of the WHL, anyway, but my conclusion is this about Rocky and the boys yeah, anyway, but my conclusion is this about Rocky and the boys They've been, and their descendants, and Bullwinkle is. Well, let me ask a question why are they still breathing, anyway? So, ginger, your granddaughter is toxic. She's not only toxic in her body, but now she's into some psychological aspect of it, so she's even so. Either the consequences of the toxicity also have behavioral aspects to it, which is true, but there's also something psychologically that's not being satisfied, and I don't know what that is. So her again. Sure, just as our body adapts, so does the mind adapt. These adaptations are again what we call disorders or diseases. A lot to do there, ginger. Okay, this is Marius.

Speaker 1:

I've been trying to heal from a drug-resistant ringworm on my torso for over eight months now. I've been on fluconazole and itraconazole and now terbinophene. I've used topical clotrimazole, terabit, bifidin, homemade antifungal apple cider. I've changed my diet to exclude grains, sugar, now eating mostly organic salads, soups, fish, meat, eggs, lots of homemade yogurt, sauerkraut. Nothing seems to be helping. So I'm thinking perhaps there's something else affecting my ability to heal for the fungus. What would you suggest? What combination of medications would be best? In my case? I'm thinking the parasite cleanse to hopefully improve my immunity long term.

Speaker 1:

All right, so, uh, that's a very um, you said a lot. It's a very complicated question or situation, right? Okay, so there's a ringworm on your torso and I imagine you, you know for sure that, right, I'm sure, if you, if you, if you're saying that I'm sure it's not, you just expect, you know, I don't think it's just a suspicion you must have gone to a dermatologist who did a biopsy and told you that's what it is, or you just scrape it, look under the microscope. And so you've taken these antifungals, both orally and topically, and they're not working because the environment in which they live, which is your body, is supplying all they need. So your body is home, your body has got all the food they need a place to sleep, a place to entertain. It's what they need. Why should they leave? There's some stuff coming in here, but they can deal with it, okay, so what I'm saying, what I'm suggesting, is this you need to make your body no longer hospitable, no longer the place to be, where there's no longer the food they need, there's no longer the comfort that they derive from living in your body, living on your body. Right, because you can't, I want to change the military paradigm that the Rakina's boys have given us and realize that the situation is an organism is only going to be in a place where it is being fed.

Speaker 1:

Right when I live and this is really one of the bummers I live in, this large I live in like a they call it a muban Muban in Thai. It's like a village and it's got condos and houses and stuff like that. I don't know if it's twice a month, I think it's got. It's got condos and houses and stuff like that and I don't know if it's twice a month, I think it's twice a month. They just start, they, they spray this. It's unbelievable. When I hear them, I have to close everything. It's unbelievable. And I've got this and I've taught, I've gone everywhere. You know, I just can't. Anyway, they spray this stuff. I've got to move, anyway.

Speaker 1:

So there's insects around. I'm on the equator, near the equator. That's pretty crazy, but anyway, I found ants the other day outside on the balcony. Why? Why were the ants there? Where did they come from? I don't know where they came from, but they were there. Why were they there? There was a piece of food. There was something they could eat. Somebody had left something. There was food. Where did they come from? There's no ants around here, but they came here.

Speaker 1:

So, anyways, what I'm saying is that if you have ants in the house, if you have whatever, why do I have this? So they found food. Why does that stray cat always come? I keep giving it milk and stuff like that. Why doesn't it go find a home? Because you're giving it milk? So somehow you're making your body, you're allowing your body as a good host right to these fungus, so anyway. So instead of going to war against it, make that not able to be there and what I mean is in a healthy okay. So microorganisms are the substance of life.

Speaker 1:

They are doctor of what. Wait, what is this? I see these all the time. It's amazing. When you're shaking your chin. Reply to Daniel, this is interesting when you're applying.

Speaker 1:

Don't talk to Dr Lodi like that, bro. Ah, what did Brent A say? I'm sorry, I was very interested because I need to see Brent A. Anyway, brent, are you having a hard day? Brent, I'm glad I have people on here. So, brent, you didn't like what I said. And then the question is doctor of what? Thanks, dave, I want to do it. Doctor of what? Well, maybe, anyway. So where is that guy here? A doctor of what? I'm not sure what that question means. Anyway, in the Rockefellerian nomenclature, I went through the hazing and all that to join the fraternity of MDs, mythology doctors. Anyway, you shouldn't worry about that, friend.

Speaker 1:

All of us, our concern is what Is to restore health and harmony in our body and then also in our relationships and on the planet. That's our goal. Our goal is not to find another reason to fight and to be fragmented. And don't go there, save yourself. Don't look for something to get angry about. Incredible, all right.

Speaker 1:

So getting back to Marius, so you're eating mostly organic salads. Mostly means some organic salads. The rest is not organic, or the organic is an adjective for all of them soups, fish, meat, eggs and fermented stuff. Nothing seems to be helping. So here's the thing you're eating a lot of different substances, some of which are part of the human diet and but a lot of it is not.

Speaker 1:

So the first thing you got to do and everybody's going to do with any kind of illness is to cleanse. By taking large amounts three liters, three quarts a day of a good combination of vegetables and a little bit of fruit for an extended period of time, we'll cleanse the water in the aquarium so that your cells can do what they need to do, but you're feeding it. Remember you're feeding this thing. You've got to understand that, whatever you're feeding it, remember you're feeding this thing. So you've got to understand that, whatever you're eating, it's eating and it likes it. It's not going anywhere. It's not going to go anywhere. You can't shoot it. You can cut it out if you want, but you're not going to get rid of it because you're feeding it. Accept that, understand that. Understand that it's very, very important.

Speaker 1:

If you're, if what you were eating in your body, uh, was different, that wouldn't be happening. It's like, uh, have you heard of a? The diagnosis they give you is impetigo. You see, people tell them they get it's, it's, it's, it's a, it's a staph, it's a recurrent staphylococcal infection. I don't like that word, but I had to use it in this situation, uh, where they get and when you have lesions on your skin of staph. They're little pustules like pimples, they look like pimples where a strip would look more like a, just a redness, erythema, but anyway. So, uh, in epitigo, people get, get these really horrible outbreaks of large colonies of pustules in different parts from a staph and the reason is it's being fed.

Speaker 1:

So, instead of getting rid of it, restore your body's physiology and what will happen is, as part of the physiology, is that the microorganisms they're on our skin, they're on your abdomen or your torso. So your torso has got several zones of different microorganisms, so the ones that are near your armpits versus the ones that are near the pubic area and in the middle. So they're mildly different. So they're going to have moderately different species. But there's all kinds of species of microorganisms and 10% of what's approximately of our biome, anywhere where there's our skin or internal gut biome, is made up of funguses because they are part of the system. You need them.

Speaker 1:

So, anyway, in your situation here, there's an extreme imbalance. You've got like an overgrowth. That's the way it's happened. So if you restore the physiology and biochemistry, that can't be happening. And what will happen is when, and instead of trying to kill this microorganism, if you because remember the other microorganisms on the skin, which are bacteria and other funguses, archaea in a different ratio and proportions relative proportions it would be a very healthy, vibrant, beautiful skin.

Speaker 1:

So whenever we see a change in this, because we've changed the relative proportions of these microorganisms, how do you restore it? By eating human food, getting rid of the garbage, getting rid of the trash, getting rid of the waste and eating real foods and nourishing the body and what you're also going to nourish. You're going to be nourishing those organisms that are. When they predominate, they produce substances that prevent the other ones from growing. They actually have their own mechanisms of keeping a healthy relationship, relative proportions, and it's a biochemical relationship.

Speaker 1:

And just for example, you've all heard of acidophilus, so there's different kinds of acidophilus, but the word acidophilus when we're talking about our gut, biome acid, so they're acid-producing bacteria. How does that help? Well, because the pH of your colon and distal, or most, yeah, your distal Let me say a word, because I don't know how else to say it the distal, the last part of your small intestines and your colon, it's the pH of like 6.7, which is acidic. It needs to be that way. Vaginal pH is acidic, all but about four to five days a month, and you know. So we think that we need to be alkaline and, yeah, our inter interstitial fluid, our blood, needs to be alkaline 7.4, 7.35 to 7.45. But other parts of our body need to be different pH requirements. Our stomach needs to have a pH of about 1.5, right, but anyway, part of the apparatus that contributes to the final pH are the microorganisms. All right, so the acidophilus will produce acid which certain other organisms can't survive in. So that's how they kind of biochemically police each other. But you've got to feed those guys. You've got to feed them, Okay. So look at it that way.

Speaker 1:

Understand, marius, that you can't be going after the food you're eating. Are we okay now? Yes, Are we back yet? Still can't hear me. We are back, we're okay now. Great, Unbelievable. Anyway, I'm not going to get into that. Sounds great, fantastic. Thank you everybody. Yeah, yay, so, anyway, so you've changed your diet to exclude all grains and sugar, great. But now you're eating mostly, well, it's great, fantastic. Thank you, christine. I don't hear you. Anyway, this is kind of slow when it comes in, so I'm never sure. All right.

Speaker 1:

So the foods you're eating are not you're eating dead animals. You're eating dead fish and I don't know what are in the soups, but it's boiled. You need on the 14th, marius, on the 14th, there's going to be a webinar on cooked food is poison. You need to watch that. It'd be very helpful for you. So it looks like what you're eating a lot of stuff that you're eating. The salads are fantastic.

Speaker 1:

But I mean, and the kefir, the sauerkraut, and you can make those, you can have fermented drinks like that without using milk from cows or goats. I don't know, has anyone ever made dog milk yogurt or rat milk yogurt or gorilla yogurt? That would be great, right, gorilla yogurt? It's all pretty bizarre. So here's the thing Make the yogurt out of almond milk, brazil nut, all right, and then of course, fermenting vegetables, that's all. They're all very, very important. That's good. I'm glad you're doing that.

Speaker 1:

But see if you can get away from the um milk from other animals. Parasite as a part of this whole thing, the apparently absolutely part of it. Right, and that would be. And you're taking so a little, a little confused. You said I'm, I'm thinking to do a parasite cleanse to hopefully improve my immunity long term. So a water keeper, wow, fantastic. Is milk bad for us? Patrick's asking. Or dairy, all right, just quickly address that, because that's a really, really important situation. We'll get away from bad and good. We're just going to realize that milk is the great. Thank you, hemi. Perfect.

Speaker 1:

Milk is the food produced by each mammalian species. Mammal species, mammals have milk. Frogs don't have milk. There's no frog milk and there's no fish milk. So okay, so it's only mammals that have milk Now, so each species has their own particular formula.

Speaker 1:

But the protein because to supply the nutritional requirements and nutritional needs of that species, all right. So there's differing, varying amounts of different aspects to it. So I read your questions and I get all right. So, for example, we're at the bottom.

Speaker 1:

We have only 5% of the calories derived from human milk is in the form of what is called protein, and proteins are a grouping of amino acids, right, a hundred or more. If there's less than a hundred, it's called a peptide. If there's more than a hundred, it's called protein, and that's what they are. So when we're talking about the protein derived that we get from milk because, remember, we're getting nourished as infants and young, whether it's a goat infant or a human infant we're getting nourished by the milk, and the milk is supplying all of the requirements we need for the rapid, rapid and healthy development and growth. That's what it's for. So it's got everything we need in relative proportions. So it's a little different. So our requirement is 5%. All other creatures require much more and the rat requires the most 49% of its caloric intake, of the calories that it gets from its mother's milk is in protein.

Speaker 1:

Now the protein is in basically two forms casein and whey. So now casein really makes tissues grow and develop really quick and double the body. Well, that's really important. When you're just a newborn, you need to get up to a certain weight and strength to be able to survive on your own. Um, but that's not real. You don't need it after that. In fact, that's not what you want. You don't want things to rapidly grow, because that's what cfcs do, and there's a lot of evidence to show that the casein can result in cfc.

Speaker 1:

So you don't, yeah, and you don't need it. It's baby food. Again, it's baby food, and so whether you take some of that baby food and you allow it to ferment and you do what's called cheese and all that, so you don't need dairy, you don't need that. After you're weaned, after you're weaned, you don't need milk. So here's the rule. The rule of thumb should be this when you take off your diapers, put down the breast or the bottle or whatever way, you're getting milk. Now you don't have any option in those times because you don't even know you are yet. But I mean that would be it All right. So we don't need it and no other creature, no other mammal drinks, continues to drink milk after they're weaned, and they certainly don't go to their neighbor. Uh, you know, you know, like the horse doesn't when it's weaned, doesn't go to the neighbor's dog that just had puppies and drink it. I mean, this is just an abnormal thing. So the answer is, yeah, we don't need it, it's not bad for us, but we don't. We'd say bad, bad what it is, it's. It's, it no longer fits with our physiological requirements and does cause problems, including CFCs. So, yes, all right. So keep that in mind, all right, so keep that in mind, all right.

Speaker 1:

Eggs, how many times have you done cleansing, vince? I don't know who you're asking. Are you asking me? Are you talking to me? I mean, if you've done cleansing yourself, do you do per month, Vince? Is that going to help you talking to me? So my answer is going to help you in your life. Somehow I've done water fasting for 50 years, cleansing, been doing this a long time.

Speaker 1:

I don't recommend anything that I don't do. I don't do nothing I don't do. I don't do nothing I don't do. I mean, I wouldn't tell you to do anything that I don't do. And, by the way, everything I recommend. I recommend for money my mother when she was alive, my kids today, anybody and myself. So yeah, so money was basically. Bottom line is you got to cleanse and change your lifestyle, period Okay and reestablish a healthy floor.

Speaker 1:

Now this is Jack Hi. My mom, 70-year-old liver tumor still increasing after chemo, has done 22 cycles, should stop chemo. What do you recommend? Thank you, all right, so she's got a primary liver tumor. Are you saying it's a primary? It's a hepatoma, as they call it, in other words, it's not metastasized from somewhere because the liver is a site of metastasis from multiple different organs. So if you're saying it's a primary tumor, and you'll know that because they're measuring something called alpha-fetoprotein, so anyway, it's still increasing after chemo, well, that's yes.

Speaker 1:

When chemo, when standard, high-dose, maximum-tolerated chemotherapy is given, the hope of the oncologist is that the tumor or tumors will shrink into to the point where they're no longer excuse me, they're no longer detectable. It doesn't mean they're gone, it just means they're no longer detectable. It doesn't mean they're gone, it just means they're no longer detectable. And then they're happy because you can't see. But we do know that with maximum tolerated chemotherapy given in the appropriate way and this is well documented. Well documented, they enhance every one of the six steps necessary for metastasis. So if you get high-dose chemotherapy, you are ensuring to get metastasis or continued growth for sure. So in this case you didn't get that. You didn't get the shrinking of the tumor.

Speaker 1:

Now I don't know whether this is metastatic or whether it's primary or what, so I don't have really enough information. If you were in a group, I could talk to you. I'd ask you all these questions. We could really work this out. So what do I recommend?

Speaker 1:

I recommend, jack, everything that I've just said to everyone else about cleansing, and I'm sorry I didn't mention the biological dentists. You've got to go, especially with the tongue. You've got to go to the biological dentists. You've got to get a 3D cone beam CT and you've got to have a real biological. That's a real biological dentist certified by the IAOMT. Very, very essential, important, all right, all of that, that's what you've got to do. So that's how I would deal with that.

Speaker 1:

Your mom, she's 70. Now the other thing is she's got to do the cleanse, the cleanse the juice, cleanse colonics, and remember something about the liver and the colon. The colon is one of its job. Probably it's one of its most important job they're all important, you know, speaking Western, I don't like to speak Westernese but is to reabsorb water, because there's a lot of water that winds up in what we're eating.

Speaker 1:

Once you chew and swallow the food, it becomes chyme, c-h-y-m-e, and chyme goes through different phases depending on where in the intestines it is, and it's been mixed with different kinds of solutions in the body as well as whatever water was in the original thing that you ate. So now that water that the body is using to to digest and assimilate this, the body doesn't want to lose. So there's different parts of the of the gastrointestinal system that reabsorb water. So all of all, the all the water that needs to be reabsorbed out of the food so the body doesn't lose water, 85% to 90% of it is absorbed in the small intestines. When it gets to the large intestines, the remaining 10% to 15% needs to be absorbed and that usually takes about six hours and at that point there should be a valve, but that's not what happens but in any case, so that the colon will always be absorbing.

Speaker 1:

So if you've got retained feces in other words it hasn't been evacuated you haven't had a bowel movement. You didn't have a bowel movement. Six hours after everything, that particular meal arrived in your colon and it's still there. The colon is still going to extract the water. That's what it does Now. Part of that is the veins that drain the tissues. Remember, arteries deliver nutrient, oxygen-filled blood. The cells utilize it and then the waste and whatever excess of the cells.

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