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October 22, 2024 50 mins
Leading  nutritionist & radio show host, Nancy Addison talks with Marsha Paisley, a friend, and healthy food advocate. Marsha went to Loma Linda University and has a master in Public health. Marsha teaches practical education to adults like gardening, healthy food preparation, how to simplify our life, and how to avoid addictive eating. They expand on some new things they has been using personally that have had great benefits. Marsha's referral # 1488875

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Any health related information on the following show provides general
information only. Content presented on any show by any host
or guest should not be substituted for a doctor's advice.
Always consult your physician before beginning any new diet, exercise,
or treatment program.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
Welcome fabulous people to Organic healthy Lifestyle And I'm Nancy Addison,
your host, and I'm starting off my show with a prayer,
and if you will please join me, I ask, Almighty God, Creator, Redeemer.
We are here gloriously in your presence, and we pray

(00:57):
for the sake of our nation in our world. We
pray that you would break into our lives and heal
the divisions that keep us from realizing the fullness of
your love and grace and peace on earth. By the
power of your Holy Spirit, open our hearts to fully

(01:18):
experience the love, joy, and peace that you have given
us through Christ Joshua, so that we can see again
a beautiful future that is shaped in love and your grace.
Grant us the patience to act with kindness to our neighbors,
and give us hearts filled with generosity and faithfulness to

(01:39):
seek your truth as we strive for justice and righteousness
in all ways, in all lands throughout the world. We
ask that you grant and fill all the leaders of
every type, in every place, in every country that there

(01:59):
is on this planet. Fill them with courage to lead
people with righteousness, truthfulness, honesty, love, and gracious graciousness in
every way, so that everyone will benefit and everyone will
have abundant, healthy, joyful lives. Grant to each of us

(02:25):
the eagerness to do justice and the strength to maintaining
self control, so that we may use our freedoms in
accordance with your gracious will in every way. And we
ask this for everyone listening now and everyone listening in

(02:45):
the future. We ask this in the highest good of
all concerned. Thank you. And so it is. And I'm
just going to read something. I'm going to read Psalm
twenty three four. Yay, though I walk through the valley
of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil,

(03:07):
for thou art with me, thy rod and thy staff
they comfort me. It's such a beautiful passage. And so
I wanted to talk about what is fear. So fear
is an acronym for false evidence appearing real. There is
no true threat of immediate physical danger, no threat of

(03:29):
loss of someone or something dear to us, actually nothing
there at all. Fear is an illusion, something that we
fabricate in our minds and we pretend it's real. And
the mainstream media and a lot of different mainstream things
out there that the globalists are in charge of are

(03:51):
trying to steer feil and still fear in all of us.
So let's just raise the joy in our hear hearts
and realize that it's not true. I was listening to
Mickey Willis, who did Plandemic one, Plandemic two, and Plandemic three,
and it's just an amazing movie maker. He was talking

(04:13):
the other day and he said, you know, we have
been convinced and told all our lives that we are consumers.
But we're not consumers. We are creators. We are made
in the image of God. We have God as a
part of us, and we have God in our hearts,
and we create what we focus on, what we imagine

(04:37):
in our minds. And as I've talked about this in
different shows where I talked about meditation and doctor Jodis
Benson and all the amazing things he's done with you know,
people clearing out that racetrack brain in their head, and
putting in the thoughts that are connected with the divine.

(04:59):
So when we have, you know, overwhelm of input into
our brains each day from email or text messages or
from the media or whatever it may be, we can't
hear God. Our brain's too taken up with all this stuff.
So when we meditate, we clear out that all that

(05:20):
readily stuff in our brains and we clear it out,
and in that way we're able to connect with the Divine.
We're able to hear God. We can hear God in
our mind and our heart. You can feel it in
your gut. You know the truth and the reality of

(05:41):
God's love. And So, what I think we really need
to do at this time in our lives, we need
to focus on what we want in this world, what
we want to create. I dream and want in and
I manifest and I focus on this a lot, creating

(06:04):
the beautiful, peaceful world where we all live in harmony
and we have all the abundance that God has bestowed
on us, and we have all the God given remedies
of everything we could ever possibly need. And this is
what I would like us all. I'm just doing a

(06:25):
challenge for y'all. You know, even if it's just one
time a day, take some time, clear out your mind,
listen to the divine, and focus on a peaceful world
where these globalists are nowhere where they can hurt anyone.

(06:46):
I kind of picture I'm being sucked into oblivion. But
you know, I hope that's all right with y'all. But
that's what I see, and I see us all singing
and laughing and hearing this beautiful planet and having beautiful, healthy,
joyful lives together. And so that seems kind of my

(07:07):
thoughts today. Have you know, we're we're getting close to
what they call Halloween, which you know, is not always
a positive thing in my in my opinion, because I
do think that they use it to make evil look
like it isn't so evil, or sugar to look like

(07:28):
it's really a treat instead of, you know, something that's
really bad for your health. So also in the United States,
people are really gearing up for the election that is
coming up, and there's a lot of fear mongering out there.
So I just thought I would address that now, and

(07:51):
then I also kind of changed my show at the
last minute. I hope it's all right with y'all. I'm
having one of my dear friends, Marshall Payley joined me
today and she lives in New Mexico, but we met
when she lived in Dallas, Texas, and she went to
lom Melanda University and has a master's in public health.

(08:13):
She's been a vegetarian whole foods persons and it's nineteen
seventy four and she teaches practical education to adults like gardening,
growing your own organic food, healthy food preparation, how to
simplify our life, how to avoid addictive eating. And she's

(08:35):
embarking on some newer sets of classes. I'll let her
explain to you about that. And she's happily married and
has two wonderful children. And I welcome you, Marsha to
the show today.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Well, thank you so much, Nancy. Wonderful to be with you.
Over the fourteen years that we've known each other, we've
had some pretty fun adventures. I would say we connected
over raw food classes with Lesa Cohen.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
And has been real with that, and then we've just
stayed friends over the years, and even when you moved
to New Mexico. So it's it's been a really heartfelt journey.

Speaker 3 (09:22):
Indeed, it has.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
So you've been telling me about what you've been doing
in New Mexico, which I think is just really fantastic.
You've been teaching people organic gardening, and now you're embarking
on some new classes coming up which we just go
see the other day, which I think are wonderful. You
want to share some of those with our listeners.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
One of the things that I'm really concerned about that
I see, especially where I live a lot of people
spending a lot of time and money on things that
are not helping their life at all. And so I'm
doing I'm going to be doing a class called a
Simple Christmas and that's mainly about ways to figure out

(10:12):
how you can eliminate the things you really don't want,
Like if you're in a you know, I remember when
we were young parents and my husband's sister they had
a lot more money than we did, but we always
you know, when you buy your brother in law two
hundred dollars golf shirt that he may never wear, you know,

(10:34):
those kinds of things. I see a lot of people
that are doing things they really don't want to do.
And so in this Simple Christmas workshop, we're going to
look at ways that you can basically be able to
organize your holiday around what's really meaningful to you. And
we have Actually this is taken from a book un Machine.

(10:59):
A lot of the things I'm doing are taken from
that and another another fabulous resource book.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
It's a little bit it cut out a little bit
when you said the name of that book.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
Okay, unplugged the Christmas Machine. And unfortunately I don't think
it's still in print, but I think you can get one.
You know, I can use books from places, but really
the best resource for simplifying Christmas. There's a young woman
who has a YouTube channel called the minimal Mom, and

(11:38):
I love this woman. She has seven hundred videos and
she and her husband had four children pretty quickly, like
maybe in six or seven years, and she just looked
around and thought, you know what, I cannot do my life.
I every morning I get up, everything's a mess. I'm

(11:58):
going crazy. This is not working. And so she started
her minimalist journey and basically they got rid of like
eighty five percent of her stuff. But anybody that needs if,
even if you have a drawer to reorganize girls, find
the minimal Mom. She is just fabulous. I mean she's

(12:19):
young enough to be my daughter. But I love this
woman and she's hilarious. It's very honest and open about
their struggles, et cetera. But I really want to try
to help young parents be able to not just get
sucked into our civil and the crazy stuff that we do.

(12:39):
We have massive holidays based around sugar, you know, Halloween, Hello, Halloween,
and then you know, the next holiday, Thanksgiving, then Christmas,
and a lot of people it's one food or they last,
you know, two months, and so that's another thing. I

(13:02):
try to help people be able to make some choices
about what they do with their time and what kind
of food they're going to be having. One of the
reasons that I'm so excited about living in northwest New
Mexico and why I wanted to come here, really, I
remember my husband and I have We had lived in Austin,
Texas for thirty We had our home there for thirty

(13:24):
two years, and one day I was sitting in a church.
I was I was looking around and I was thinking,
you know, this church, these people they have enough money.
You know a lot of them have advanced degrees. When
I thought about it, I thought, you know, that was

(13:44):
really not a reason for me to be here. There's
nothing that I can do. It's any different than any
of the rest of the people here. And so because
my husband had grown up in Farmington, New Mexico, and
it's we are right on the edge of the Navajo nation.
We had Indian tribes all around us in New Mexico.

(14:08):
And I remember from years ago, back in the early seventies,
I taught school on some reservations and that's where I
realized what food deserts these places were. Like. You know,
I would I would go to school and the only
spot within you know, twenty miles is seven or eleven.

(14:32):
And so I remember at the time, I was telling
my husband, you know this is this is not sustainable.
Well now fifty years later, what we have we have
a nation of people with massive obesity, massive diabetes. In fact,

(14:54):
I remember last year I met a girl in my
neighborhood and she was a nurse and entire job was
to do wound care for all of the amputations that
were done in my little town of forty six thousand people.
And that was I thought, are you kidding me? We

(15:16):
have to do something. And that's one of the reasons
why Gary and I lived here, because I felt like
I really have had a passion for health for fifty years.
I and my friends they remind me, Marsha, you are
a nut job, even in nineteen seventy five about all
this stuff. And so I just feel like it's my

(15:36):
calling in the world to try to help people get
away from addictive food, get away from basically reductionist thinking,
which is what we have in the Western world. And
by that, I mean we think that if we take
a pill to help let even even if you say

(16:02):
a serious thing, somebody takes an abortion pill, you think
all that's going to do, it's going to go directed.
It's going to be directed to this one area of
my body. It's not going to impact anything else. And
that's the way we live. And that's why our doctors,
we have a cardiologist, we have an interest. We have

(16:22):
all these different people, none of whom are looking at
the whole person, none of whom even are thinking, wait
a minute, if I add another drug to this person's plate,
they're going to be on eighteen medications. I have friends,
people I know that are my age that are taking

(16:43):
fifteen medications. It's literally nuts, Nancy, and I know you
know that millions of time crazy.

Speaker 2 (16:51):
I am so on the same page with you there,
because you know, I health counsel people, and I I
have had people contact me who are quite literally on
twenty medications and it, and many of them, after I've
worked with them, you know, they feel like they are

(17:14):
able to. By law, I can't tell anybody to stop
taking those drugs, right, but I know that they're poison
and that they don't fix the problem. They don't cure
whatever it is they're giving it to them for. And
what I find is that in many ways it actually
causes other problems so they can make more money off

(17:36):
of you. So it's it's kind of a it's a
very tricky money making scheme that they have going. And
they just I mean, it's just it's just it's amazing
to me. And and so you know, frequently I will
they will ask me, can you tell me, you know,

(17:57):
like the supplements or the nutritional thing is I should
do to, you know, to so that I can safely,
you know, let go of these you know, all these
drugs and things. And then you know, I will try
to work with them on that and that and that's
really you know, makes them feel better that they have

(18:19):
an alternative. And then also one of the things I've learned,
and this is something I've studied electricity for a long time,
being married to an environmental trial lawyer that was always
doing environmental impact studies on electromagnetic field radiation and things
like that. But it sees electrical wires that can really

(18:40):
mess up people's blood sugar and actually cause the diabetes.
And it's you know, a lot of people don't realize
that the toxins in our environment, some of them are
invisible and you can't even see them. And of course
they put up all of these satellites now that are
just bombarding us, and so you knowwhere on the planet

(19:03):
can you escape this, and so it's it's a real
challenge for folks. And and so anyway, you and I
have really connected over this type of thing because you know,
growing up in Harlem Park like I did in Dallas,
you know, being one of the few people who is
taking health east next to my kids, and and for

(19:26):
a while I didn't even participate in any Halloween activities.
That was criticized for that by the other moms. But
but anyway, it's just it's something important. You and I
have connected over some holistic health things that that we
are using, and I wanted to go into that a

(19:48):
little bit. We do have a couple of questions from
our listeners, and so after we do one or two
of these questions, remind me, we're going to go in
and we're going to talk about some of the things
that you and I are using that are drug free
and totally holistic and very affordable and easy for people

(20:13):
to do. So one of our questions from one of
our our listeners is what if you always have the
intention to repurpose things but hardly get to it. How
can people just not want to keep on holding onto
these things.

Speaker 3 (20:32):
Well, there's the thing is and this I can't say,
don't tell my husband this because hello, that I the
reason that I am not doing this stuff. My mother
was a hoarder. And you have to realize a lot
of people they're holding for good reasons. They might need this.

(20:56):
You know. My husband will say, how you look these
bolts that I saved for forty years when we used
to live in Colorado, I'm using them now so I'm
not having to go to ACEH Hardware. And I'm like, well, honey,
that's great.

Speaker 4 (21:12):
But.

Speaker 3 (21:14):
When you get so much stuff, I think that to me.
One thing that I did that really helped me, I
due to what happened in twenty twelve, I had to
come and we lived in Dallas, and I had to
come to Farming, to New Mexico, and my mother in

(21:34):
law had an almost three hundred square foot house and
I had to get everything out of it and get
everything where it needed to go. And this is for
our question. Some of the things that were in her
house were things that were precious family things that people

(21:55):
that are in our family should have the first ride
of grief, usal like I shouldn't take, you know, something
that's precious just that that would be for our family
and just say, well, you know, I'm getting a dumpster,
I'm throwing this in there. No what I did, I made.
I boxed up things that I thought other people would want,

(22:16):
and I literally sent them to them. I sent the
stuff to them. Here's you know, for my father in
law's children. You know, I sent them things and then
I let them be the ones that decided do I
want to keep this or can I let this go?
But one thing that I really think that in the

(22:38):
United States, especially most people, well where I live, people
don't have their cars in their garage. Why, because her
garages are full of stuff that they're going to get
to someday. And like my mom, who was a hoarder,
she was going to get to it if she wasn't
going to move. We'd say, Mom, let's just take a

(22:59):
little bit of stuff that you will are going to want.
She goes, no, I'll go through it when I get there. Well,
it never happens. Never, it never, it never happens. And
so there's things that would mean something to other people.
Then the other other way that I get rid of things.
We have a lovely little thrift store here that's run

(23:23):
by a mission of a church that I take things there.
I take things sometimes to good Will and the other thing.
And this has only come up in the last few years.
There's some stuff that we can spell and we don't
have to be able to sell it in our own town.

(23:44):
But two groups I'll tell you about, and the one
that I've used is a it's a company called spread
Up and it's spelled t h R E d up.
And when you go on their webs side, what they
do they will they will give you a mailing label

(24:05):
and or they'll send you a bag that you can
pack full of up to thirty pounds of clothes. So
have nice things, and like, you know, I don't want
my children to have a whole bunch of stuff. When
I'm no longer with us. I want to do, you know,
kind of do this before. But I filled up the

(24:27):
bags of stuff I had to night. I had some
beautiful person's handbags. They were beautiful and they're wonderful that
they're too heavy. When I would carry them on my shoulder,
you know, I would feel like it was a bowling ball.
So I thought, you know what, Dad can go to
somebody younger that energy to have hippie purses. I don't.

(24:48):
And I put nice stuff in there that I had.
And what they do, stread Up does all of the work.
They list your your piece of clothing on their website
and basically they cut you a check. And that's what
happened to me. I think I made like one hundred

(25:08):
and eighty six dollars from stuff I sold it thread Up.
So the things that you have, they're really nice that
you just don't need that much anymore. You can do there.
But also the other thing, there's something you know, you've
got a rip in something that you can't fix that

(25:29):
you can't mend. I just you know, let it go.
But it is so wonderful. And my friend the Minimal
Mom on her channel, when you just listen to one
or two of her videos, the freedom of being able
to have our energy restored to us because we have
stuff everywhere. We don't realize it that it's constantly nagging.

(25:54):
It's saying, look at me, look at me. You were
supposed to have done this in office and you didn't.
Or you're thinking, oh, I need to that pile of clothing.
I need to mend it when you haven't mended for
fifteen years. What we need to do? And I think
this is a principle that I live by. I am
trying to have the things for my authentic self, not

(26:18):
my imaginary or my wonderful self who would wear size
too and be able to still hold heavy pursues and
all of that we have. We need to look at
our life like I know how old I am. I
know things that are going to be coming up, and

(26:39):
I think I'm probably not going to need three down
parkos now. I don't have any doubts parks now because
I got rid of them. But you know, if we
need to be realistic about who we really are and
not try to just have stuff for our fantasy self.
And a lot of us have stuff for our fantasy.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
So that is such a great it's such a great advice,
and I'm with you there, girl. I had a friend
who Functui on my apartment years back after I had
already Dan sized like four times, and she taught me
the power of energy and how you can actually feel

(27:23):
it and absolutely, and she said, anything torn, broken or stained,
you immediately get rid of that because it reflects your life,
like right your life is ripped or stained or anyway.
And she said everything needs to be in its place
so that you can find it easily. And I think

(27:45):
what happens is people have things stored so that they
don't know.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
What they have and exactly, and.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
Then they can't find something and they go buy another,
or you know, something like that. But she taught me
that I need to see my things. I need to
put things in clear boxes. I need to like I
just I don't have a real entry at this farmhouse
I live in. It's very small and I don't have
any closets, so I have to be organized and so

(28:14):
I have clear bins and I scrupulously make lists of
what's in those bins, and then when I use them
or need something, I can look at my list, I
can find it, I can check it off if I
use it and it's not there anymore. And it has
made such a huge difference in my stress level in

(28:36):
my life. Absolutely, it's like food. It's like food, and.

Speaker 5 (28:41):
You ask for maybe about a year when we lived
in Austin, I was a pnational organizer right before we
moved to Della, and this is what I would see.

Speaker 3 (28:52):
Clients would call me and they would say, Marusia, I
had a flood on part of the kitchen floor and
so I have a few mops.

Speaker 2 (29:04):
Oh, I think we lost Marcia. But what I'm going
to talk while she calls Rebel, my sound engineer, back,
and I wanted to say that I was just at
a friend's house in Dallas and he struggles with diabetes
and terrible gout in his feet, and he is he

(29:25):
actually has gone shopping with me. He knows what he
should be buying and what he should be eating, and
he didn't want Oh, Marcia, let me finish this story
and back and on. You kind of fell off of
our show for a minute there.

Speaker 3 (29:41):
I know, I don't know what happened.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
That's okay, it happens, believe me. But anyway, I was
saying that, you know, he'd even been on a retreat
with me in Nicaragua. He had lost seventy five pounds,
he was eating healthy, he'd gotten off all his medications
and was really doing great. But then he started getting
into old patterns again and filling up his you know,

(30:04):
big bowls of in his kitchen with chocolate, and filling
up his refrigerator and stuff with you know, ice cream,
and you know, things that I did not teach him.
We're good for him. And and what I've what I've
really found, especially with myself, is I simply don't buy

(30:25):
anything that I am not going to use and need
right away. I try not to live in fear. And
if I know I shouldn't eat something, and I know
I really, I really don't buy any sugar, like I
don't buy ice cream and my refrigerator and I don't
buy things. And you know, that's a real struggle at

(30:47):
Christmas and holidays when people give you things that they
absolutely know that I don't eat. Like somebody will give me,
you know, candy or different things, and I have to
admit I don't even give them to other people. They
actually go in the trash because I don't feel consciously

(31:12):
that I can't do that to anyone else. And it's just,
you know, it's just one of those things that you know,
I encourage all of you as listeners be aware of
what you're giving people as gifts and what you're buying
or taking to your home for yourself, and really think

(31:34):
about organizing your life in many ways. And I think it,
you know, it expands, Marcia, in every area of your life,
doesn't it?

Speaker 3 (31:45):
Absolutely? Absolutely. But what I was telling before I got
something happening to call, you go over to these homes
and you couldn't be in the door, and what this
scal had done, and I had to get a forty
yard dumpster to be delivered in front of the garage.

(32:05):
But here's what she would do. She bought a four
bedroom house, and so she would make an office in
one of the bedrooms until it got so full that
she couldn't get in and out of there, so she'd
go into the next bedroom. So she had four sets
of everything, you know what I mean, office wise, And
people just don't realize and if I think the other

(32:29):
thing I've noticed the difference between people that have problems
with this, that is, when you touch an object the
first time, you need to put it away, not just
put it down. Putting it down means it's not in
the home that needs to go in. But a lot

(32:51):
of times the reason there's no home is because there's
so much stuff that many many things, I mean don't
have a place to go at all. And so I
just think, and for women, I think it's a good
place to start with your wardrobe. I'm going to be
teaching capsule wardrobe classes. It makes so much difference for

(33:15):
you and Nancy. You and I have talked about this.
People wear twenty percent of their clothes eighty percent of
the time, and if we can just have the things
we love, so every time you open the clockt you're like,
oh yeah, instead of thinking, oh my god, I never
should have bought that one hundred and thirty nine dollars

(33:35):
down the tubes or whatever, because many people buy stuff
that they never wear. But all of these things are
about things that siphon our energy off. They just they
burn our energy up for nothing. And I really think,
especially I would that these young people like the minimal

(33:58):
mom they're trying to show people. Listen, you can have
time with your kids if you're not constantly battling a
crazy amount of things in your home. And so that's
one thing so true. Yea.

Speaker 2 (34:15):
I was really proud of my son and daughter in
law when they when they had two children, because they
really keep their home really neat. And so my son
really encourages everyone to like give the children toys that
are not technology for one, which is really great, right also,

(34:38):
you know, not so many toys. You know. Like this
birthday for my six year old grandson, me and my
daughter we talked the other day. We actually got him
a whole lot of books, you know, because he loves books,
and we were really glad to find out we had
different subjects that we had bought for him. But know,

(35:00):
it's it makes your life so much simpler if you
are not having to organize and clean and store us
stuff all the time. I remember when I down sized
and I you know, lived in a oht No, it
was a four thousand square foot house, you know, with

(35:21):
a four car garage and our city. And you know
when I when I everything is emotionally attached things you're
emotionally attached having all this stuff. What I learned is,
you know, if you're surrounded by stuff, it's because you
need to feel safe. You don't feel safe without all
your stuff. And when I really finally let it go,

(35:46):
I realized I was safe even without all that stuff.
And you know, I gave my children first, my children
and my family the first option to have anything they
wanted I was getting rid of. But then when people
those things, you know, either at the estate sale or
you know, as a donation, I actually found great joy

(36:07):
in people walking away with their new treasure that they
they acquired, and so I always thought that they were
getting adopted.

Speaker 3 (36:17):
Exactly. You know, you mentioned one thing about gifts for children,
and this is going to be part of my Christmas
workshop that there are really the gift challenge for children
is this, And I think this is brilliant. I did
not come up with this the minimum mom. Actually did
they need to get something that they want, something that

(36:41):
they need, something to wear, and something to read. And
I think, yes, that that is a wonderful thing instead
of getting seventy five things, you know, something they want,
something they need, something to wear, something to read. I
think that so much wisdom because advice. You know.

Speaker 2 (37:04):
Okay, we're getting close in the show, so I'm going
to change subjects here. So that was beautiful and wonderful information,
and thank you so much. But you and i've been
using the LifeWay patches now for I'm going on three years,
and you're pretty close. But you had had like I

(37:24):
think a car accident or you had fallen and hurt
your leg. I'm trying to remember when you started why
you started using them, but I had actually mailed you
some and these LifeWay patches are totally drug free, and
I really believe in them. I believe they work so

(37:47):
well in so many ways. But I had actually sent
it to you for your son Ian, who had had
a terrible thing happened to him in college and he
had lost his sight. And I had heard that people
wearing these had some of them had gained their vision
back or had good benefits with it in many ways

(38:09):
other than just that. So I'd love for you to
share with our listeners some of the things that you've
experienced u seeing them, and how you have have viewed
this as a wonderful alternative to any kind of drug.

Speaker 3 (38:31):
Well, when you told me about that for Ian. I thought, well,
I'm going to try myself to see, you know, what's
going on with it. And I didn't have any expectations.
But I did have horrible exema for the first time
in my life. I mean it was really bad. I had,

(38:52):
you know, patches on my leg that would be a
long I mean it was really bad.

Speaker 4 (38:58):
And I know, patches of oh yeah yeah, oh no,
oh yeah yeah, patches that were really they were they
were bad, and you know, there was really nothing I
could do about it others and so when I started
doing these patches, I noticed that it was just healing, and.

Speaker 3 (39:19):
I thought, how is this even possible. Well, then the
next thing that happened, This is kind of terrible, but
never have a sunken living room. We have one. Not
a good plant. I fell up a step from our

(39:39):
living room into our kitchen and I fractured my shoulder
in four places. Was very bad. I had to go
to the hospital in an ambulance. Not good. But I
didn't break anything, and I healed pretty fast, you know,

(39:59):
in my my opinion. But patches, yes, using and I
used X thirty nine all of that time. And then
another I didn't had another clumsy accident where I broke
my right knee. I tripped over something in the middle

(40:21):
of the night that I didn't that never should. I
just moved it there because somebody was coming to my house.
Blah blah blah. Anyway, but I didn't have half surgery,
and I did have to wear a full leg brace
for two months. But anyway, I lived through all of that,
and I think the patches really helped me. Another thing,
I don't have it. I am going to be seventy six.

(40:44):
I have zero age spots on my hands. Really, I mean,
I look at my hands and I think, how if
that impossible? Because I run.

Speaker 2 (40:53):
Howl Garden and that's where I'm wearing the patches. You
were like, oh my goodness, I believe they've gone away.
And then you were in a car accident and I
remember you broke some ribs.

Speaker 3 (41:07):
Well that that actually wasn't a car accident. Another thing,
I dropped a great big cement pot and broke my
hand and broke my ribs, and you know, I healed up,
and it just sort of like a fourteen year period,

(41:31):
fourteen years fourteen month period of time where it was
like everything was braking. It was horrible, but Anyway, the
bottom line is is that the patches have really helped me.
I don't look as old as I am. In fact,
I just went to vote with my daughter on Saturday,
and I told him I was born in nineteen thirty eight,
and this girl goes, you are not. I really was.

(41:55):
But also that's also being a vegetarian for fifty years,
exercise thing for fifty years, you know, all those things.
But I think that the thing we really need to do,
we really need to think of our bodies as a system.
And what the patch does for me is going to

(42:16):
be different than what the patch does for my son
or what it does for my husband. And so for
my son, he lost all of his right eye visions
and in his left eye, he lost eighty percent of
his left eye. And I won't go into what happened,
but it was bad and it was bizarre. But anyway,

(42:40):
the bottom line is that one day when I was
talking to him, and he lived in PHARMI key too.
He moved here from Austin as well, and there's a
cemetery on the road where he or on the street
where he lives, and he said, Mom, I was walking
by the cemetery and I could read need some of

(43:00):
the names on the headstones for the first time, and
that was pretty huge.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
That is so huge. And I remember when you told
me that, My heart just was elated. And you've been
having him wear the X thirty nine patch for twelve
hours during the day every day, you know, a while.
But we don't know how fast anybody is going to
react or what's going to happen. Everybody's different. But I mean,

(43:32):
that's just I mean, that was just made my heart sing.

Speaker 3 (43:36):
It was it was literally a miracle because they told
us when this thing happened to him, his optic nerves
were totally shop. Well, they told us, well, there's nothing
you can do to bring these optic nerves back. If

(43:56):
they're not coming back, they're not going to come back,
except maybe someday they'll have stem cells. So my son
was like, let's try to find a country that does
stem cell injections. Well, China was doing it, but I
don't know about you, but I don't think I want
to go to China and trust that they're shooting you.

Speaker 2 (44:17):
And you know, a lot that is very very expensive
and it and it's very iffy. Best because I've had
people do stem cells stuff way back when that was
I don't know, six or seven thousand dollars, and quite frankly,
most of them didn't even notice hardly anything happening. I
think somebody's mole fell off or something, if I recall.

(44:38):
But these, these, the X thirty nine patch by Lifewave
has been studied and fanned, and it's patented to actually
activate the body's own dormant stem cells. And this is
a patent in this this I find so many great

(44:59):
benefits from it. I know when you were in that
car accident, you had called me one night and you're saying, oh,
my ribs are just killing me. I can't sleep at night.
And I suggested you put the X thirty nine patch
on your worst pain on your rib that night. And
I will never forget you texting me the next morning saying,

(45:20):
oh my goodness, Nancy, that worked better than any of
the pain medications the doctor gave me, or the TILO
and all. And I was just absolutely so joyful for
you for that, and oh absolutely, And I do think
you know that people that use them when they are
have had surgery or have an accident and had something

(45:43):
hurtful happen. I have been hearing from numerous people that
have been ordering these under me that you know, they're
having their doctors saying, oh, my goodness, is healing is
actually miraculous. You know, how's that happening? It's really really wonderful.
And I wanted to just share with our listeners that

(46:08):
Marsha you have, you know, if anybody wants to order
these or try these, that you have a particular link
that people could order through you, and your your referral
number is one for eight eight eight seven five and

(46:28):
so really pretty and your link is life Wave l
I F E W A v E dot com slash
Marsha Paisley and that's m A R s h A
p a I s l E Y. And if any
of y'all want to try these, there is absolutely no drug,

(46:51):
no known side effect, and they don't interfere really with anything.
But what what happens is your stem cells start going
dorm in your twenties and by the time you're about fifty,
they're pretty much all dormant. And they were not even
sure they'd work in older people because they're so dormant,
wo that they were you know, I'm finding that because

(47:13):
you know, I'm turning seventy this year. I have found that,
you know, people think I like in my fifties and
yeah at all like getting a face left is really
quite quite wonderful, but you never know what's going to happen. Marsha,
we have like two minutes.

Speaker 3 (47:31):
Left, and what about the other question? Was there another question?

Speaker 2 (47:35):
Well, I don't think we have time, but I think
just really quick. I just want to tell you, bless you,
thank you for sharing your beautiful information with us today.
I'm just so honored to have you on. We really
have just one minute left and we need to end
on time. But if you have a quick parting thought
for our wonderful listeners around the world before before we

(48:00):
have to sign off, I would love for you to
do that.

Speaker 3 (48:03):
Okay, I think I think the most important thing is
for all of us to pay very close attention to
everything we.

Speaker 5 (48:11):
Put in our body, everything we.

Speaker 3 (48:14):
Put on our body, and we cannot assume that the
medical paradigm is going to work in our favor. You
have to study everything for yourself. I would say a
quick plot for R. S K. God bless that guy.
He is speaking truth to power. But and and our bodies.

(48:36):
We can't just their their very complex systems, and what
we do to something is going to affect other parts
of us, and that is not the current ways that
our modern Western medical model is. We don't we don't
think about that. You know, the the interness doesn't know

(48:58):
what drugs cardiologist is giving you and what they're foreign necessarily.
But I think this is a very amazing time to
be alive, because honestly, you can't tell from one day
to the next what's going to be happening.

Speaker 5 (49:14):
But why did you say, Nancy, God bess all your viewers.

Speaker 2 (49:21):
Yes, thank you and for all of y'all listening out there,
Martian I do we send you blessings for peace, safety,
joy and perfect health.

Speaker 6 (49:31):
Thank you for joining us today

Speaker 3 (50:01):
On
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