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(00:00):
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We are here, it's Wednesday.
It is.
I love Wednesday.
It's my favourite day.
(00:20):
I would have thought we wouldhave turned such a funny, no one
really likes Wednesday, it's themiddle of the week into so many
people's favourite day of the week.
Monday, yeah, it's like, no, it'smy favourite day of the week.
Yes.
How has your week been so far?
Oh well, I get to see patientsMonday, Tuesday magic and things
(00:43):
that I did not things that I did notexpect that had during COVID she had
COVID went to the hospital with justrespiratory infection and 24 hours
later, half of her brain was gone.
She had a stroke like massive the mostnot a simple sensory motor cortex stroke
like people get this was half a brain.
(01:07):
And Sandra has been treating her,and every time she treats her,
she has some improvement, and then18 months ago, things start to
change, and she developed pain.
So she has spasticity on the leftside of her body, and she started
having pain on the right side ofher body, on her leg in particular.
(01:27):
And Other things.
So her right arm was tight.
She could use it.
She still had motor, but the tone inthe upper right just wasn't right.
And so we put a wrap around her neckand a wrap around each ankle and I ran
(01:48):
the frequency to increase secretions.
In the sensory and motor cortex toget the spasticity better on the left,
but if you touched her right leg, shewould scream and right sided brain
sensitivity.
What was the
(02:09):
pain?
Like, really?
Really?
She's she could say, don't touch that.
It hurts.
Right sided brain strokeschange the personality.
And for example, you, theyhave left side neglect.
They like can look at their left armand don't know who it belongs to.
So from her neck to her right leg, Iran the frequency for thalamic pain.
(02:33):
It's the only thing that made sense.
I used the converter in case it was nervepain, but that didn't make any sense
because it started 18 months before andshe's not, it's not like she's moving.
She's in a wheelchair.
So, in 60 minutes, her rightleg didn't hurt anymore and
she was still all slumped over.
Well, the next day she comes in withher adorable husband and she's sitting
(02:59):
upright, like with her head up.
Not slumped over like this, the way she'scome into the office for the last year,
and I ran the frequencies for thevirus, the R6 flu frequencies, and
the capillaries, the cortex, and thesensory motor cortex, and the thalamus,
(03:23):
just kind of did a drive by, and
she had a facial expression.
Instead of the mask that writes that itstrokes make and with her right hand, she
is exploring her left arm, like, insteadof the instead of it not even being there.
(03:46):
She's touching it and her shoulder.
Like, I wonder what.
This is interesting.
She held her.
I mean, it's who knew?
And I'm, it's, it's notlike hard manual labor.
It's not like workingon somebody's shoulder.
It's, I'm sitting there with a wrapperon her neck and a wrapper on her feet
(04:07):
and three machines connected to her.
So I ran a concussion in Vegas becauseappears to be happening is that there are
more clots and the stroke is spreadingfrom the right side to the left side.
Heading through one part of thethalamus on its way and that means
(04:29):
that we need to increase blood supplyto the brain and people that do FSM
know that increasing secretions inthe vagus increases nitric oxide and
increases blood supply to the brain.
So I ran concussion on vagus ona third machine and then when
(04:50):
we were still treating her.
I threw in vagal tone and she, whodoes that, who gets to do that?
We do.
We do.
It's like, how do you, how do you explain,I was, I had a conversation with a
documentary filmmaker this morning andshe said, well, we're going to do this
(05:15):
and this with people who are singing andtreating, using voice and tone to treat.
Sick patients.
What does it look like whenyou're treating people?
Well, they have a towel around theirneck, and in this case, one around her
ankle, and I'm sitting there talkingto her husband about engineering.
(05:38):
You know, but that is there's somany so many beautiful and profound
moments happen in that silence thatYeah, it may seem super boring to a
filmmaker, or to somebody who is justscrolling through Instagram, and yeah,
somebody lying on a table with a wettowel around their neck, so what?
(06:01):
But to the person that was in painfive minutes ago, and whose face was
all scrunched up because they werein pain, and for the woman who's You
know, holding her shoulders because shewasn't paying to see them on the table
in extension with this not just neutralexpression, but blissful expression
on their face or to see, like, thesuper shy teenager that never talks.
(06:29):
Opening up and telling me all about theirday and, and their teacher and their
grades and their girlfriend and their,like, and the mom going, keep him talking.
Can you just keep himtalking a little bit longer?
I'm getting so much out of this kid.
He never talks.
You know, so when, when we seethose side things, it may not
(06:49):
be a big deal to so many people.
That can be the turnaroundpoint for healing.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's, it's, I don't even know, I'msupposed to do a, an introductory, what
is FSM webinar podcast something on the29th and I'm making the slides and how,
(07:13):
how, so I use, I'm using the publishedpapers, but how do you describe in a.
In 60 minutes, even in a few minutesout of the 60 minutes, how do I have
to figure out a way to describe whatit's like to do reproducible magic
(07:37):
patient with five lumbar discs, L1through five, five lumbar facets left
hip replacement, L1 is numb, the lateralfemoral cutaneous nerve is numb, and
her left glute is, Completely shut off.
(07:57):
Hasn't contracted sincethe hip replacement.
I was like, oh, that's easy.
They did an anterior approach.
Your femoral plexus is glued downand so your glute doesn't fire.
For us, that is normal.
That's like, well, of course,yeah, that part's easy.
I can, yeah, I don't worry about that.
And your low back,that's facets and discs.
And the only thing that would causeall those facets and all those discs
(08:20):
Would be your so as on both sides.
I'm thinking this in my head becauseit's not gonna make sense to the patient
because she doesn't know what so as is.
So I work on our so as on theleft work on the L1 nerve root.
Work on all the nerves that are irritated.
On the auto care run subacute for seton a custom care run disc repair on
(08:41):
her low back, then manually just todo inflammation in the nerve scarring
in the nerve and the blood vesselall the way down the femoral plexus
and long story short, she gets up herpains of three instead of an eight.
She's also a cervical trauma fibropatient, but she said, I just, I
(09:01):
don't pay attention to the body pain.
I said, well, do me a favor.
On your pain diagram, fillin, I'll give you a pencil.
You don't have to cop to it.
You just, you can put it in a pencil.
And so she draws thecervical trauma fibro.
I said, don't forget the circleson your shoulders and your elbows.
How about your hands?
Oh, yeah.
My hands and your feet and your knees.
Oh, yeah.
So she draws that pain diagram.
(09:23):
So I ran 40 and 10, nine machines on her.
Wow.
40 and 10.
Is
that a record?
Pretty much.
I beat Ben Catholey, which I thinkis a, is quite an accomplishment.
I'm very proud.
And, and so the body pain goes away,but as I'm working on her leg, I
get to the hamstring and it's tone.
(09:47):
Wait a minute.
Wait, what?
She's had three?
Yeah.
Rear end accident, feel her otherleg, hamstring tone on the other leg.
So I just grabbed another precisioncare and ran 81 and 10 at the same time.
So she gets up and the hamstrings don'thurt and her knees don't hurt and her
(10:07):
feet don't hurt and the nerves thatwere numb and icky are now normal.
Her back pain's gone, her neck pain'sgone, her flexion went from 52 to 70.
Rotation went from 60 to 85, and she hasnow her right, I didn't work on a right
(10:29):
so as, so I'm going to do that tomorrow.
How, how do you, how do you, how doyou tell people what that's like?
I didn't, yeah, it's.
Well, if you don't know.
You know, everybody that'swho's who's who's with us today.
There's 30 of us here.
(10:50):
So the 30 of us know, and the 150people that are going to listen
to this on YouTube, we know.
And then you try and explain it tosomebody else, it's like, well, it's,
that's the other reason people come to theadvance, it's the only place you can go
and sit next to somebody at lunch and say,well, it was really just not that hard.
It was just 40 and 89 and 40 and 10and a little bit of facets in this OS.
(11:11):
And it's like,
it wasn't that hard.
Because we've made, you've made becomingthe detective and figuring out the cause.
That has become the norm.
That hasn't become theoutlier or the exception.
And in our allopathic medicalmodel, that's just, functional
medicine is different.
(11:32):
But when you go to your physician andsay, I have hip pain, they're not trying
to figure out why you have hip pain.
No,
and that's the first thing westart thinking about why and
if you're a neuro geek, we're,we're going to the neuro side.
If you're a pelvic geek, we're goingto the alignment of the pelvis.
(11:54):
If you're a podiatrist,we're checking the feet.
If you know, there's so many differentpractitioners, but we all have that
one thing in common is asking why.
And
with her, she's 5'10 healthy,no childhood abuse history, not
(12:15):
centralized, keeps exercising, has aclean diet, all that stuff, but she
has wicked arthritis in her neck.
She's had her left hipreplaced at the age of 62.
She has facet degenerationin her low back.
She has a degree of inflammationthat doesn't make any sense.
And I said, what happened to you,and she had asthma, and respiratory
(12:40):
stuff, from about the age of 4 or 5?
And I said, what happenedto you when you were 3?
She said, I don't know, there'ssix kids and I'm the second one.
And so I, I don't know what happened,but it's funny you should ask that.
I saw an acupuncturist once who wasvery sensitive and she looked at me
(13:01):
and looked at me and said, somethinghappened when you were three.
Wow.
And I said, she said,why did you ask me that?
I said, well, the only way.
That somebody has this much pain andthis much inflammation in the joints,
because what creates inflammatoryjoints is inflammatory healing.
(13:24):
You'll have people that, I mean,she has the kind of low back
and neck that somebody has afterthey've done saddle bronc riding
for six years in their 30s, right?
And she's never done any of that.
So what created all the inflammation?
Why?
(13:45):
The vagus is in charge of turningdown inflammation and the only way
you have that many allergies andasthma is if your vagus wasn't working
by the time you were four or fivewhen you started getting asthma.
So something happened when you werethree ish to turn down the vagus.
(14:08):
And she went, I don't know, butit's funny you should mention,
because this other lady did.
So, our job is to turn her vagus back on.
I'll treat her asthma tomorrow andher respiratory system tomorrow.
And get this, that's the why.
Get the system turned around.
Her diet is anti inflammatory.
She's, she had a difficult first marriage,a magical second marriage, three healthy
(14:34):
kids, all on to new and good lives.
So, she's It's just like shealready has a stable state, but
something unhinged it early.
We can reverse that by turning the Vegason, but it's easier to turn the Vegas
on when you know what turned it down.
Right.
(14:54):
And you've just described how, howI, I described to clients the short
term play in the long term play.
Right.
So the, the short term and theathletes and the active people
kind of get that, like what's,what's going to happen in the next.
Few hours versus what's my plan.
You're not going totell me to stop running.
You're not going to tell me tostop skating, blah, blah, blah.
(15:16):
So short term, you're like, this is easy.
We get the Vegas turned on.
And then you would think allthese other little switches start,
it's like a domino effect, oncethat Vegas is back online again.
But, as you always say, it's likebailing out the boat and shooting
holes, like, to really close the case,I mean, yes, doing all those things
(15:37):
is going to make a huge difference.
And yes, it's so much easier whensomebody has that stable state
in place, but then there's thatone missing piece of the puzzle.
Yeah.
And I have to creditHarry Van Geller for that.
And George, George would tellthe story about the, about the
patient that Harry was treating.
(15:59):
And Harry's muttering to, so Georgewatched Harry for three months.
And Harry's muttering to himself,this doesn't make sense, ah,
he rode his tricycle downthe stairs when he was three.
He has a chronic concussion.
So he would treat the concussion protocol.
And that's why we run the concussionprotocol on everybody just because you
(16:21):
never know when it was that they droppedoff the monkey bars when they were five.
And
sometimes it is something not as littleas falling off the monkey bars, like
those are pretty, pretty big memories, butevery person has their own way of filing
these memories as to what was traumaticand what wasn't and that big T little T
(16:43):
that we always talk about so that thatbig trauma to somebody is somebody else's
like, of course, I fell down the stairs.
I was knocked unconscious.
I think I was down there halfa day before my mom found me.
It's just
no big deal.
The certain people, right?
So I think asking, asking the rightquestions definitely helps doing
that thorough patient history.
(17:05):
Like you said, your first visitis hardly any therapy, right?
It's just kind of going through that.
First was she came in with a very nicelinear history, one MRI these three
accidents and oh yeah, there was thissurgery and oh yeah, there was that
and there was that and there was that.
So it's, the history is not realisticfrom almost everybody that's listening.
(17:30):
There's, there's not that many people.
It's really nice being my agebecause I don't really care.
It's like, I'm going to do it my way.
Finally, I get to earn,I earned the right.
So I get to do a two hour historyand an hour and a half treatment.
And she wrote me a check without atwinge because her pain was gone.
(17:53):
And she knew insurancewasn't going to cover it.
But in a realistic world, you can takeA shorter history the first time because
you're going to see them two or threetimes a week for two weeks and then
twice a week for two weeks after that.
So we have time to put pieces of thehistory together a little bit at a time.
(18:14):
Talking about the way I get to do thingsdoesn't fit everybody that's listening.
And there are, in some ways, it's It'seasier when you get to see them twice a
week for four to six weeks, because youcan treat things as the patient recovers
(18:37):
and fix the compensations as they show up.
Right.
And
it's, it's really easier.
I try and I have to doit all in four days.
Right.
When you have people coming infrom out of town, you are, you're
under the gun to, to make theseimprovements and how these improvements.
Correct.
Yeah it's funny in the last littlewhile I've had a big group of the client
(19:01):
base kind of transition to maintenance.
And I have one person that was like,I'm not ready to go down to once every
two weeks or once every three weeks.
I'm like, I think you are.
Like, you're, you're doing great.
There's been no sites like,like, I think we're ready.
I don't want to risk it.
I'm like, Okay, how about we just go downto half an hour treatments instead of a
(19:25):
full hour until you're comfortable enough?
So it's the confidence too that we'rewe're giving people that and it's a bit
of that disbelief We talked about thedisbelief that happens really quickly
in the clinic that happens when youhave somebody who's like a six or a
seven out of ten down to a two withina couple minutes and they're just like
and you ask them to move and they'renot really Computing how the pain is
(19:49):
gone because they've had the pain forso long, but the same thing happens when
your person is out of pain for a while.
They're almost expecting it to start.
They think.
If they don't come to the magicroom with the magic towels,
something is going to happen.
And I just want to keep safe.
And so it's that safety and thatconfidence that to transition somebody, so
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the practitioners that are listening, whenyou go from that twice a week or once a
week and now think, okay, let's try to goonce a month or once every two weeks that
can be frightening for some people becausewhen they've been in pain for so long and
then they're out of pain, They don't wantto go back to chronic pain ever again.
And they're, they're usedto passive palliative care.
(20:38):
Almost every other methodology, whetherit's drugs, even physical therapy
ultrasound, heat, whatever, is designedFor temporary relief because nobody
else aims, not nobody else, but inparticular, we aim to fix the cause.
(21:03):
If the cartilage is torn and brokenand inflamed and degenerated, those
are the frequencies we use for thepoor cartilage that's all beat up and,
and then vitality in the cartilage.
So our purpose is to fix the cartilage.
Who else can fix the cartilage?
(21:23):
Right.
Oh.
Where there is a the medical modelas you describe it is passive care
here a massage and Palliative, it'sreally phenomenal last a couple of
days and I'll see you on Friday forand for us it's Yeah, it's gone.
(21:44):
And when you come back in onThursday, it's still gone,
right and then It's still gone.
Yeah, right.
There you go.
Yeah.
And then you see them the next week.
Those of you that have a regularpractice, you see them the next week
and part of it's still gone, but thensomething else shows up someplace else.
(22:08):
Well, that makes sense because nowyour left hip is acting this way.
And now your right hip iswondering, what do I do now?
Fix your right hip and the two of them.
It'll be okay.
And so, at the end of four weeks, it's
fixed.
Yeah.
And the stable state is, go for a walk.
What does that mean?
(22:28):
Go for a walk.
It hurts when I walk.
Does it hurt when you walk now?
No, but I, it always, yeah, itdoesn't hurt when I walk now.
Okay, so tonight go for a walk forfive minutes out and five minutes back.
Ten minutes, it's going to be fine.
Yeah.
And then you have to build thatconfidence that it's going to last
(22:52):
and getting them to understandthat FSM operates differently.
Yes.
Yeah, it, there's this 8 to 1ratio that we talk about a lot.
So for every one bad experience wehave, we need 8 good experiences
to cancel that one out.
I didn't know that.
That's really cool.
Yeah, so it'll happen with Like bad,so you had a, you went to a restaurant
(23:16):
and you had a terrible, terrible meal.
It, you, it was bland, it wastasteless, the service was, was
horrible, you had a stomachache after.
Chances are you're going to tell aboutseven to eight people about that.
But if you had a great experience,you might only tell one or two.
That's just the way we operate.
So, similarly with injuries, oncewe get, let's just say, a dislocated
(23:41):
shoulder neutralized in a hockeyplayer, so there's no instability.
Imaging shows it's strong, they'regoing to need eight times the amount
of repetitions that are pain free fortheir subconscious to think I'm strong
enough to withstand the brunt of it.
(24:01):
So, Do you think that 40 and89 can reduce that number?
Yes, I am absolutelyseeing that clinically.
So, the The emotional, we talk aboutthis all the time, like the emotional
attachment that the wonderful slidethat always stuck out to me from
(24:21):
the very first core that I took.
And mind you, I was a new mom during thattime was when we're talking about the
first few frequencies of the concussionprotocol, and there's a sentence in the
slide that says, if you've ever triedto apply a Band Aid to a screaming three
year old, you understand this concept.
So that screaming three year oldthat has the scraped knee is like
(24:43):
the screaming midbrain that's like,this movement dislocated my shoulder,
even though that happened six monthsago, it's going to happen again.
So we know that 40 and 89 is that safeto move feeling, and it has that effect.
So I'm absolutely seeing that clinically.
We're seeing athletes coming back,and even not even just Athletes,
(25:05):
but in quotation marks, but just areactive people who are afraid to go
up the stairs because going up thestairs once hurt their knee or going
down the stairs hurt their knee.
And now they don't wantto do the stairs anymore.
And
it's
so what is that ratio with 1489?
I don't know.
(25:25):
Maybe it goes down to half.
Maybe it's 1 to 4 instead of 1 to 8.
One can hope.
I do know, but, and that's one ofthe reasons that there's, remember
that picture from Cloward of thereferred pain from the disc annulus?
Yeah.
I used to have the picture inthere one time and people weren't
(25:50):
remember, they weren't getting it.
And then I remembered thatsomebody has to see something seven
times before they remember it.
So now, in the core, there isa picture, that Cloward diagram
is seven times in five days.
If I did everything seven times,then we'd be there for two weeks.
(26:12):
But that one, I want people to remember.
And this year at the Advanced, JohnRuski is back for the first time.
fourth or fifth year.
And somebody said, why is he coming back?
And I said, well, I, we aregoing to be the people that
pick up vestibular injuries.
(26:33):
I'd finally made a patient informationhandout slide, a handout on vestibular
injuries, explaining what they are.
What they cause what can be doneabout them, you know, and just and
it took 3 pages and out of in 4.
(26:56):
Well, actually, actually, in 2days, I handed it out 3 times.
Because so many chronic neck painpatients have chronic neck pain
because their neck muscles are so tightbecause their inner ear is busted.
Right.
And so tight, and
(27:17):
And you, you have that forall of us to see somewhere?
Did I
give it to you so
you can put it on the resourcepage or didn't I send it to you?
Which one?
The information for patientson vestibular injuries.
Well, we have the B I B V I S S.
Yeah, we have the B I BS S, but this handout.
That's what
I'm,
I'm
working to put the page together.
(27:39):
Okay, Kevin's putting the pagetogether and I will send him, it's
a Word document, so I will sendhim that and it's, yeah, I'll just.
Feel free to print it off and oncebecause I'm sitting there explaining
to a patient how the vestibular injuryaffects her life and her eyes got a
little blank and it occurred to me.
(28:02):
It's like, oh, yeah, vestibularinjuries interfere with.
The transport of informationfrom short term to intermediate
term to long term memory.
So I sat there and told the patientyou're not going to remember any of
this tomorrow, so I'll, I'll have, soI had the handout ready the next day.
Smart.
Speaking about vestibular injuries,we would talk about 94 and 94
(28:26):
would make people feel typicallyyucky who have vestibular injuries.
20 percent of vestibular injury patients,because I have a lot of practitioners that
have never seen a problem with 94 and 94.
Right.
20%.
Right.
And because I was going to say, Ihave a lot of people that have had
confirmed vestibular injuries thathave no problem with it at all.
In fact, so if that's 20%, I wouldlike to find a new percentage of
(28:51):
people who have vestibular injuriesthat absolutely love 94 and 94.
I'm
designing my new hats right now forthe Advanced and part of me wants to
just put a little 9494 on the backof the hat and just the FSM people
would know because it is my absolutefavorite frequency combination on
(29:12):
the planet that I've ever tried.
I'm like a drug sniffing dog in aballroom of like a hundred people.
If somebody is running 9494, Ijust want to go sit beside them.
Yeah,
I, can I just.
Be
here, I'm like, that was 81 and 109.
it's like, I'll just, I'll just sit here.
Yeah, because that feels goodtoo, but nothing like 94 or 94
(29:38):
and I have not got immune to it.
I had somebody the other day that waslike, I really miss like how stoned I
was when I first came in to see you.
She's like, can you turn itup or change it or something?
I'm like,
we'll,
we'll try to replicate it.
But yeah, that's where 94does it to me all the time.
Well, and when you think about whatour practitioners go through, everybody
(30:01):
that's listening, when you hear patienthistories, I don't know about you, but
if you're at all empathetic and you heara history that includes They did what?
And that, and then he, right,that's a concussion for you.
Sometimes it's a concussion for thepatient to talk about it because
(30:24):
it brings all that history up.
Right.
And so, and then you drive home andthen there's the guy that thinks the red
light is like or yellow, it's orange.
And then there's.
So I run the concussion andconcussion and Vegas on myself every
single night, that's just, that's,
(30:46):
I have to be better at that becauseyeah, we're not, we're not robots.
And I think FSM practitioners aresome of the best practitioners.
The people that find FSM from.
Their practices.
They're special people, right?
Because there's, there is thatburning flame inside of them that
says, There has to be more than this.
(31:08):
I have to be able to domore than what I'm doing.
There has to be more tothe story than whatever.
So just that desire and that courageto be an FSM practitioner sets
you apart from the rest anyways.
In general, my favorite FSM studentsare people, physicians of any stripe,
(31:31):
clinicians of any stripe, that havebeen in practice about 10 years.
They're good at what they do, and theyknow what they can't do, and they're
looking for another tool for the toolbox.
I don't want to stop what I'mdoing, but, and then they find
out what FSM can do to add.
(31:52):
To what they're already doingmanually or with needles or with
herbs or with medication or withsupplements or colonics or whatever.
Right.
It's yeah.
And anonymous says the people thatadversely reactive 9494 probably
it can be reversed with 40 and 44.
(32:13):
So the activity of the inner ear or 40and 94 right or both or lacking that just
a dose of meclizine and wait 20 minutes.
It's just it goes away.
The, the thing that the reasonI talk about the 20 percent are
the number of practitioners.
(32:34):
So you go on Facebook and somebodysays, I treated somebody Monday and
they had a headache Tuesday and theywere nauseous and, and now they're on.
And what, what happened?
And it's like what did you run on Monday?
I just ran the concussionprotocol and treated their neck.
Did you do a vestibular screenwhen you did their physical exam?
Oh, well, 94 and, orgive them a meclizine.
(33:01):
It's the ones that miss it becauseit'll scare the heck out of the patient.
I don't want to come do that againbecause it made me really sick and
gave me a headache and made me throwup or made me dizzy and nauseous.
And then it scares thepractitioner when they react.
Yeah, it's, it's, it's scary,especially when you're so used
to like just doing good things.
Yeah.
(33:21):
I do have to say I.
I used to say, you know, for all theathletes that I worked with, I would
always stay in the room during concussionuntil at least 94 and 94 passed.
And if they didn't have a reactioninitially, they typically didn't.
However, there was an outlier last yearfor me who loved the concussion protocol.
I was in the room anyways and allof a sudden he started sweating.
(33:42):
He got very pale.
He's like, I feel like crap.
I looked sure enough.
It was 94, 94 time.
I just paused the machine all I did.
And he's like, okay, that was terrible.
I'm like, so I just took thetowels off, let it run until 94,
94 was done and put it back on.
And he was fine.
(34:03):
So I didn't have a needto reverse it with 40.
Because it really just hit him fast andhard, and I think Keith Pine talks about
when that happens too in the lockerroom, he lets guys just throw up, as
long as it's not on his shoes, he'sfine, and then he goes on his merry way.
That doesn't work in my clinic,I don't want to have people
throw up on me but like I said,I, Admit when I'm proven wrong.
(34:27):
And so sometimes and maybe this persondid have a new vestibular injury that
I had missed since the last time I hadseen him because it had been a year.
So to your point do the screeningall the time, especially if you
haven't seen somebody in a while.
Yeah, it's just an.
Yes, all of my patients are new patients.
(34:48):
I'll have 2 new patients on Mondayand then repeats and a 2nd new
patient on Thursday, something likethat Tuesday, something like that.
And it's doing a vestibularscreen and screening for others.
Damage or hyper mobility has become.
Standard, right?
Because we get such outliers.
It's not like we get theworld's easiest patients.
(35:10):
Most of the time.
No.
And sometimes guys
are shocked.
And then we're like that otherperson that we're like, and I think
you and I will text each other.
Like, was it really that easy?
Because we're so used to somethingcomplicated that everybody else has
missed and you're hyper vigilant.
But sometimes you do get the treats.
(35:31):
Yeah, they're every now and then you
something easier.
Normal is what you ask for.
It's like, okay, I reallyneed to rest this week.
Easy people get off the bus and youtreat them for a week or two and
then, then the universe says, okay.
(35:53):
Yeah,
yeah, it'll be fun.
We had a lot of email questionsthat came in the last little
while and one came in today.
That I'm not sure you had a chanceyet to see or respond to, but I, kind
of going along the track, it saidis there any tissue that it would be
unsafe to run 124 or any condition?
(36:13):
It said, she wrote tissue, but I'm justgoing to say in any, 124 is typically
not one that I've ever feared for anadverse reaction, because I feel like
everything in her body could use alittle repair and heal, repair and
heal, or has been torn and broken.
I don't know.
I haven't.
David Mosnak.
Running 124 and 22, torn and broken inthe small intestine, to repair leaky gut.
(36:39):
And he runs it for 60 minutes.
Yeah.
And you run it for 5 days in a row.
That was like watching the suncome up in the west for me.
It's like, what?
It works?
Seriously?
But
it makes so much sense.
It made perfect sense.
Right?
And then you can think of, well, you,the, the liver and then the periosteum.
(37:03):
Yeah, that could work.
And then, so while I'm treatingthis stroke patient, I don't know,
I tell her husband, I can't puttissue back that's not there.
It's.
And then she comes in the roomthe next day, sitting up and using
a right arm, I can't put tissueback that's not there, but she's
(37:25):
sitting up and using a right arm.
So, okay.
And one of the things I ran was tornand broken in the cortex, the sensory
cortex, and you look at the MRI.
And all of the tissues, the basal ganglia,the insula, the, I mean, just, yeah, so
(37:47):
I did torn and broken and all of theminflammation because it's the halo of
inflammation around an ischemic area.
So, her strokes werecaused by blood clots.
She's having more blood clotsfrom something, so her husband's
job when they go back to SanJose is to take her to their GP.
(38:11):
I don't like medical doctors.
I said, you don't have to likethem, but he's the only guy
that can do what you need.
I want her to have an EKG, andI want a new MRI of her brain.
And you might want to try this drug.
We don't like drugs.
Well, this one doesn't havemuch in the way of side effects
and it's going to help her arm.
Okay, fine.
So it's the, it's the why.
(38:33):
It's the, in 124, she's sitting up.
Right.
She back that's not there,but I apparently just did.
124 has been like on our, our spotlightfor the past few years, ever since
we figured out it was time dependent.
Diana Cross.
(38:54):
I have, sorry.
Diana Cross.
I saw her on the schedule.
I almost, I know.
And she's, Donna Cross is likeI would say a, a dog with a
bone or a a, a terrier kind of.
She just keeps digging.
Yes.
And she emailed me three weeksago after I thought I had the
(39:14):
schedule, symposium schedule all set.
And she said, I'm coming.
I've been doing more work on 124.
And it's like, okay.
So I had to email everybody that thoughtthey had 90 minutes and say, guess what?
You get 60.
And we found a place and this turnsfrom 60 into a 30 minute case report.
(39:34):
And there's Diana Cross.
So she's going to tell us more about that.
I can't wait because to your point,you know, 124 super safe on so many
different tissues and conditions,everything, whether you subscribe
to the torn and broken or repairand heal it both works the same.
But then you start thinking,okay, but why is it torn?
(39:55):
Those of us who are asking,so how did it get torn?
How did it get broken?
Why does it need repair and healing?
Was there trauma?
Was there bleeding?
Was there a surgery?
What led to the surgery?
What, what, like, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And so that, it forcesyou to ask the question.
So I have a funny quick story to tell.
I have been struggling with somekind of deep hip pain on my left.
(40:16):
That is not really hip pain, butsomebody had said that it's my labrum.
And I said, well, it, that is what it is.
I'm going to keep running and I just haveto, I'm thinking in my head, I just need
to run more 124 everything will be fine.
So the practitioner is very bright,saying you need to do more strength
(40:37):
training because your glute is weak.
And I said, okay, let'sjust entertain this thought.
I go, if my labrum is torn, do youthink My glutes are going to magically
appear online and turn on because I havetearing in the labrum or a bone spur,
and they kind of gave me a blank stare.
(40:57):
Nobody thinks like that.
No,
but he's like, I guessyou kind of have a point.
And I said, so doing all theseactivations before my run, do you
think that's going to magicallymake my hips stronger and pain free?
And I kind of had a, I swear it was like10 minutes of just staring at each other.
I said, okay, I'm going to blink first.
(41:19):
Thanks for the advice.
I'm just going to treat myself at home.
I'm glad we had this appointmentso I could walk it through
in my head what I need to do.
But I have, you know, and I thoughtof all the years that I used to do
a lot of exercise prescription andjust say, oh, something's weak.
Let's just turn it on and never thinkingwhy something would be inhibited.
(41:41):
It seems to me that when you were onthe table in Hawaii two years ago, it
was your left psoas that was tight?
Yes.
And the psoas is attached to the femur,and if the psoas is tight again for
some reason, then the femoral headgets jammed up into the acetabulum,
(42:03):
and the labrum, the acetabulum,I have an opinion about that.
And have you found any, is there anybodynear you that could go in and mash on
your sos or do I need to get on a plane?
, I wouldn't do that to you.
I, I would come up to see you.
I, I'm gonna, I'm going to reachout to some prospective mashers.
(42:23):
If not, I'll see you in Arizona.
Okay.
And there's, there's that time.
It's not excruciating, it's manageable,but I have another race coming up, and
I want to get it under control, so.
Oh, I know.
Okay, well, you know, I've nevertried working on my own psoas.
It's not, it's not easy.
Trust me, I have tried to get inthere, and it feels good at the
moment, but then I start like,palpating, like, ooh, what's this?
(42:46):
And is this my ovary?
And what's that over there?
It turns to more of likean exploratory moment.
And I am.
really against using those hip hooksand those so, and I call them utensils
because that's what it looks like.
Oh no,
it's terrible.
I should
put tacos on and not laymy abdomen on top of.
So until then there's 124 andit'll just repair and heal all
(43:07):
the good things around there.
But as a skeptic, I wasn't a skeptic.
I was cautiously optimistic about using214 or frequency for meniscus and labrum.
It works very, very well on him.
Yes.
So,
and it's a surprise.
It was an investigational frequency.
Right.
Just stumbled across it.
First place they used to wasin the knee and it worked.
(43:28):
Yeah.
Well, it's a meniscus and you lookat the labrum and it's like, well,
let's kind of, but so we can try it.
They're for sure likebiologically related.
They're for sure first cousins.
And then the magic was in the shoulder,torn and broken in the labrum, and
then you get the humeral head, youget the elbow up, you get the humeral
(43:51):
head right over it, and then as you'rein torn and broken repair and heal
the labrum, the humeral, all themuscles relax, and the humeral head
just It just slides around the edgeof it and slides back into the socket.
It's like magic.
It's just I
had an instructor years ago that said,you know, we have to have the belief that
(44:15):
the human body knows where it needs to go.
We just have to create the spacefor which it needs to travel.
That's a good instructor.
Yeah, you know, if for a manual therapistthat that is sort of the the dogma and
the mantra as opposed to like, really kindof violent chiropractic or osteopathic
manipulations where you're just like,I'm just going to force this and deal
with the collateral damage later.
(44:36):
So, you know, when you'rethinking of those, especially
those very movable joints, right?
The shoulder, the hip.
That is not reliant onthe labrum for stability.
Like, let's face it, like, withoutthe rotator cuff, the shoulder
would not sit in the labrum.
It would slip right out.
But those surrounding muscles are relianton the labrum for constant feedback.
(44:56):
Are you cracked?
Do I need to tighten upmore to provide stability?
And then that loop can just become
That's like, where do we needto put the humeral head so the
labrum is going to be safe?
Right.
And then, yeah.
It's, it's amazing.
It's a whole conversation that we getto just kind of sneak into the room
and be like, I'm just going to sithere and listen for a little bit to see
(45:18):
what you two are saying to each other.
It's listening with my fingers and it'slike, why is that, gee, that muscle's
kind of tighter than it should be.
And why is your, why is your pecminor pulling her shoulder forward?
And why is, what happens if we, andthat's this complete lane change.
(45:40):
Same thing with theability to treat the dura.
So, I, Eduardo Gallo from Italy,he's an osteopath, and we treated
a patient in Italy, in Rome whohad dural adhesions, and the change
(46:01):
in that patient was extraordinary.
That set Eduardo off.
On a on a path and he's doing anhour long at the advanced on the dura
when and why you treat it and whathappens and why you would do that.
And it's that's the other 1 when thepatient when their posture is strange.
(46:31):
Yes.
And I can't.
Oh, my hip flexors are always tight.
I can't flex my knee.
So you lay on their back.
And their knees stops at 90 degrees.
Yeah, my hip flexors are really tight.
It's like no, that's your dura.
It's like, excuse me?
It's because hip flexors are whatso many people have told them
(46:52):
because it's easier to treat a hipflexor than it is to treat dura.
The fact that it doesn'twork is another conversation.
But the nice thing about us is we getto treat the dura and it not only frees
up the hip, but the thoracic spine.
And the cervical spine and the patientgets up and everything like, you know,
(47:14):
there's the dancing in the kitchen.
It's just that reorganizing iswhat I, what I, what I see is I
just need to reorganize myself.
Right.
When you think about your spine andthe attachments and the relationship,
the dura has with Everything it'sso exciting that Eduardo is going
(47:37):
to talk about it for so long.
I was like looking throughthe schedule going.
I'm going to be brain dead by theend of this, but I can't miss.
A moment.
No, and it's we, we willhave tables in the back.
So people want to work on each other.
Yes.
But, and being there in person,we have already like 140 or 150
(48:00):
people signed up, but they're.
A lot of them are online, and I'm hopingmore people plan on actually being there.
Yeah.
Because there's something aboutsitting at the lunch table.
Yes.
Sitting next to Eduardo, oryou, or any of the speakers.
(48:22):
Right.
Jerry Pollock, and Diana Cross.
Yeah.
Just being able to have, to hear themspeak, and not only just hear them speak,
but just are not only just the speakers,but some of my dearest friends that I
text now when I am in, not just medicaltrouble, but like trouble, are FSM
(48:44):
practitioners that I met at the Advanced.
Like, this isn't, this isn't advertisingto go, but there, there is something
just about meeting your people.
And like, like the FSM practitionersgot into FSM for a reason.
And it's not about making money.
It's like not one of those.
Meetings that you go to, right,there's something deeper and
(49:07):
more profound about about it.
It's our tribe.
Yeah,
we, we attract a very particularkind of intellect and personality.
There's it and it's, it showsthere's a kind of joy at the advanced
and symposium that is just it.
(49:30):
Yeah,
there's this
collaborative excitement about sharing,right, especially the symposium years
because we get to hear so many more casestudies and the case studies are great
because other two things are happening.
Either you're just like, wow, I neverthought about using it like that before.
Or you're like, Yes, I havebeen doing it like that.
(49:50):
So, because sometimesyou feel a little lost.
So that validity and that confidenceof, okay, someone else did what I did.
And look at me and lookup, look at everybody.
I was right.
I was right.
Yeah.
So you've got that like mindednessthat, you know, the word tribe is
probably the biggest thing that sums itup and you just don't get that online.
(50:11):
No, it's, I mean, you get the educationonline, you get the video, you get
the audio, but the community, FSMis a, the email I sent out it after
a core, welcome to the FSM family.
It's, you know, 7, 000practitioners in 23 countries.
And by the way, Hannah, yes, a little 18month old that was there six years ago.
(50:38):
She's eight.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
And she insists on comingto the core with calm.
I love it.
Hannah's
going to be there.
Yes.
But before we do our closing, whichI have a warning going off and this
isn't for anything I have, I'vementioned this practitioner before.
He's not an FSM practitioner.
He's on Instagram and on YouTube.
(50:59):
He's an orthopedic surgeon.
He's talking about like mindedness.
His name is Dr.
Howard Lux.
Lux is spelled L U K S.
His Instagram handle is H J Lux one.
So H letter J L U K S the number one.
He is a orthopedic surgeon, sportsmedicine doctor 20 years of experience.
He has a lot of science andevidence based posts that he does.
(51:24):
He will tell arthriticrunners to keep running.
We need to use our bodies.
We can't sit still.
He talks about how tendonsneed load to heal and not stop.
Boots and casts and immobility.
So he's very like minded asfar as how we are looking at
the bigger picture of things.
And I've referencedsome of his work before.
(51:44):
So I just wanted to put outthere before I forgot again, Dr.
Howard Lux.
He's amazing.
He's very opinionated, butI feel like he's earned.
He's earned it for all the yearsthat he's been in practice.
And for me, I.
I really respect doctors who arelooking at the bigger picture and
for a surgeon that doesn't want tojust inject or cut somebody open
that wants to send them on a walkoutside has special place in my heart.
(52:08):
So that's my shout out to Dr.
Lux and to go
to the others.
And there's hang on, there is data onrepairing tendons with eccentric load.
Yes.
And that's, that's, that's,
that's right up his alley.
Yes.
Well, speaking of right up the alley,I have to fly because I have to go
(52:32):
on and do crazy things today, butpast this hour of the week is today.
So thanks everybody for coming onceagain, sign up and go to the advance.
Come see us in Arizona because it's fun.
It's a week long party andwe'll see you next week.
We'll
see you next week.
All right, everybody.
Thanks for coming here.
Bye.
(52:52):
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