Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The red lights, blue light, gay hormones, roadrunners, We have
it all. Have it all, guys, stay slots.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Oh yeah, ship the slots.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
This is gonna be a good one.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Kiss, keep the simple, stupid, I promise you.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
This is not a political podcast. Jump the pool, set
up the move turning radio. Set up the move turning radio.
Set up the moon turn on radio, set up, the mop,
set up, the moot sit up, Blue set up the moon,
sit up the moo, set up the moon up. We
(00:45):
do this thirty second thing after the show every show now,
so you just stick around after the show for thirty
seconds more. Not a problem, guys. I I'm still alive. Guys,
there's no There was a death threats, but there wasn't
no death, only empty threats. Not that I'm wishing to die.
Speaker 3 (01:05):
I'm just saying, well, I'm glad there wasn't any death.
That would suck.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
No, I would have sucked too. Testic goes. Welcome back
to Paranor Radio podcast, Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls.
I am sure wu's Garcia, your humble host. And I
want to thank the Lord for I'm gonna be here today,
and I want to thank every single one of you
for I'm going to enter your space. Guess what, ladies
and gentlemen, I just woke up from a freaking nap
and it was cloious. I needed It's so bad, dude,
(01:33):
those thirty minute naps could really kick in. They come
in like a ranking ball, they come scratching like a
spider monkey.
Speaker 3 (01:39):
Oh yeah, I take that short of a nap, Dude.
If I'm a nap, it's gotta be like two hours
or more.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Oh yeah, you you hibrid me. You don't nap, you
hibrin me. That's what That's what it's called. Guys, Then
I forget that. The most important thing that you can
do for the shows, what a mouth. Check us out
of Paranorradio dot com somewhere down here when the little
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And also, guys, and I forget that. If you, guys
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(02:10):
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you're want to talk to somebody that's more I don't know,
closer to you, I would assume you could also find
when I'm associated in the link in the button for
(02:34):
contact on my Instagram account. And guys, now moving forward,
I want to make sure that you guys know about
Cryptive Warfare podcast, Cryptal Warfare operations. They're freaking killing it
out there. They're actually hunting Bigfoot, cheap of Cabras and
all these critters. If you guys have been paranormally activated,
hit up juwic Ski from Cryptid Warfare Operations. That dude
is amazing And I don't get paid to say this,
(02:54):
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really interesting and he could give you the guidelines. Also
to make sure that you guys, say, stay free from
those creators outside of your house. If you guys have
chickens being abducted or cows being mutilated, all that good
stuff bad stuff, not good stuff bad stuff. Also make
sure you check out Ali Christine Live Paraser free and
make your kids healthy again with the tools and the
(03:17):
guidelines that Ali Christine provides. Alec Christine has been many
of our shows. She's gonna come back on our show
very soon. She's also on the plow Opilations podcast. You
guys gotta check her out. She's amazing. I don't get
paid to say this. I don't. I sort of got
and also, don't forget a season your meat before you
eat Flavors of the Forest. Guys, I'm not asking you
for to donate, but there's a new donat but on
(03:38):
the per and the radio podcast website. If you guys
want to buy me something, eh, something anything. You know
what really really really helps my gears. What really puts
gas into the show not you guys. First, Jesus does
because because of him, I wake up every single morning.
I provide for my family. That's the only reason why
I'm awake. But really really gets me going is to
(04:00):
know that you guys are engaging, commenting, liking, talking about
the show, following subscribing, and then you know, sharing the
show money. I work for a living, guys. I'm not
asking you guys to freaking give me money. I'm asking
you guys to share the freaking show. Now jump in
front of Deepen on the poll and set the freaking mood.
Give a one. Welcome to My next Question special guest.
(04:21):
She is the host hostess of the Probable Nation podcast.
She's been here before. She's gave me a beautiful serious
health series and her documentary. Please give one. Welcome to
Janet the Problem Janet, what's up?
Speaker 3 (04:34):
Jenny, Hello, my dear friend. I'm so tickled Pink to
be back with you chopping it up on the mic
and blowing some people's minds.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
What does tickle pink mean? It sounds like a weird
sex precision.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Well, I'm sure it could be. Someone could run with
that one, but yeah, just means I'm super happy.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
Yeah you go, Pink. I was gonna start so before
I started the show, I was really contemplating starting a
sex show called we started. It was like a fun
show called pushing Rope. So when you know, when you're
when you're all colked out and you're thinking doesn't work
and it just looks like this, when you're trying to
(05:24):
smash and you're trying to have like the intimacy with
your you're just pushing rope. You're pushing rope. Get it
because it's loose. The point is which we did create.
It's like twenty four episodes, twenty seven episodes. We stopped
doing it because I didn't have time anymore for more podcasting.
But we're gonna call it that, or we're gonna call
it my Pink Cave podcast.
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Well, see when you said pushing rope, the first thing
I thought of was rope tying, which is shabari. A
lot of people aren't to shabari. It takes a it
takes a lot of science behind that. So yeah, not
that I've done that, but I may have been on
the receiving end.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
Oh interesting, I gotta look that up. Yeah, we're going
to start that show called Pink Brown Cave. You know
what we're talking about, right, the Pink Brown Yeah. Anyway,
shout outs to closing a shout out Rico from talking
to Rooster's podcast that son of a Gan always comes back.
(06:24):
He's the only Peruvian Canadian gay Jew that I know.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
It's very unique.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
Then he's very Anyway, it's his month. It's June, you
know for the Jews, get it. No, it's a dry joke, guys. Anyway,
all right, Jenne, where can people find you?
Speaker 3 (06:45):
They can find Deplorable Nation podcast on every podcast platform
plus on Rumble. You can also find me on Instagram
at Deplorable Janet or on Twitter at no Janet, Kate
and ow. And for your listeners, if you haven't already
checked out my music, make sure to go do so.
(07:07):
It is under the name Anchor and Flame and I
have an album, Divine Light, and then there is also
a single that I release, So yeah, go check those
out on any musics music streaming platform.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Anchor and Flame. One of my favorite songs is, uh,
what's it called? What's it called? I'm not good with music?
A Rise is one of my favorite songs, and the
other one, m what's it called? Can you remind me?
Light my way? Gosh, really good music. You can't even
(07:45):
tell it's it's it's generated with any software at all.
It's just amazing. Tally, guys, make sure you check out
Anchor and Flame on Instagram. And also I'll give her
a shout, Jennet, you were here before. On another, I
want to do something very important before we even start.
Thank you. I've learned that, and it's hard for what
(08:07):
just recently happened, It's kind of hard for me to
forgive myself from many different things that I've done, but
you showed me. You were a vessel for God to
show me that what's mineus mine, and nothing's going to
be taken away from me. If I just am patient.
I'm not gonna give the entire story of how this
broke down, but you were able to get and become
(08:29):
an even larger star being showcased on the Culture of
Conspiracy podcast and you're still there kicking ass. I think
it's every Tuesday or every Thursday of every.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
Week, every Tuesday, yep.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
And you drop your special series there and you utilized
old paranoid episodes to be on that and to be
on that serious. And I have to thank you at
the bottom of my heart for doing that, because you
didn't even show You didn't only bring forth beautiful information,
but you're also exposed a fellow podcaster myself, and I
want to thank you from about over the heart for
doing that. Not a lot of people do that.
Speaker 3 (09:05):
Not a lot of people do that, you know, And
that's what it's all about in this game, is lifting
each other up and doing what you can to help
other people. Because if you're not helping to serve other people,
then you're only serving yourself, which is a very very
bad idea.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Thank you, Thank you again. Hey, today you're talking about
red velvet. You like red velvet cake, that's what you said.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
No, No, red velvet cake is disgusting and it's made
with coach and ailbugs. So no, I don't want any
of that. I don't like that, and it's disturbing. It
tastes disturbing to me, so freaking disgusting.
Speaker 1 (09:46):
Man. Well, you are here to talk about red light therapy.
M this is big. I've likely you know what, No,
I've seen maybe one TikTok University uh post on this,
and then I went crazy and then I lost it
in my notes. Talk to me, Where does this start?
(10:07):
What is it? Oh?
Speaker 3 (10:08):
Yeah, So red light therapy has been around for a
really long time since the early nineteen sixties, you know,
and even and I hate to say this, hate to
admit this, but it has even expanded in use because
of the work that NASA has done.
Speaker 2 (10:29):
You know, I'm not a NASA fan by any.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
Means, but when they originally developed this, you know, they
weren't understanding that it takes not only different intensitives of red,
but also different different wavelengths of rid and those different
intensities and wavelengths and time periods treat many, many, many
(10:57):
different things. And so over the years of development, they
have discovered that this is fantastic on so many levels
to treat anything happen to do with the brain. So
seasonal effective disorder. People to get like super depressed in
(11:17):
the winter, or you know, sometimes people are depressed.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
In the summer. I don't know why, but.
Speaker 3 (11:27):
Any kind of depression, sleep disorders, dementia, chronic fatigue, eye conditions, acne, psoriasis,
fine lines and wrinkles, other skin conditions like exema and
stuff like that are easily treatable. Wound healing. It's amazing
for wound healing. So hospitals have been using red light
(11:51):
therapy as long as I've been around in a nursing field,
so that's that's a long time. So it's also used
for because it's great for wound healing, it's also great
for tissue regeneration, hair loss right, so it can stimulate
(12:14):
you to grow hair things like like I said, exima,
but also rosation and other things like that. Cancers, so
basal cell carcinomas and hormone regulation are just some of
the things. Now, not only is there red light therapy,
(12:37):
but there's also a multitude of other light therapies available
as well. But red light therapy is fantastic. And I
will tell you I'm one of those people that doesn't
believe the latest instacrases, right, and if if it's like
(12:59):
all over TikTok or all over you know, Instagram and
with the influencers, I'm like, hold up a minute, so
I can tell you that I do have two light
therapy things. One of them only has three colors on it,
including the red, and the other one has like eight
(13:23):
different colors that are used for different things. And I
have been using it on my face because I have
forehead wrinkles really bad. And I will tell you that
in less than a month, because mine were very deep.
In less than a month, they're very fine.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
Now what I gotta stop you right there? First of all,
this is some freaking Star Wars ship. Why didn't they
do this to Darth Vader's burns? They could be easily
just healed him. Bro First of all, I know how
to go and do it. I had to say that, guys,
all right. First of all, Second, I've been giving you guys,
(14:03):
this stupid thing, stupid conspiracy theory that I think that
the reason why we get sick is because we don't
get enough vitamin D from the sun and because and
the reason why we're all fucking gay, not that I'm gay,
it's because of all the fucking blue light that we're
exposed to. Wink wink, Right, everybody's gained you, bro, relaxed.
(14:26):
It's okay to say that in June anyway, Dude. I'm saying,
the more blue light you get exposed as a kid,
the more susceptible you are to hormone changes. Just like
you said that red light can do. So maybe not
become gay, but get you confused about who you are
and what you are. Maybe accelerate Uh what's it called,
(14:50):
um when you're a teener. What's the freaking word? Adolescence?
Puberty accelerated, maybe slowly down, maybe girl hairy, as opposed
to et cetera. Destabilizing your hormones through blue light therapy.
See there's red light therapy. There has to be the opposite,
I would assume, right, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
There's there's literally.
Speaker 3 (15:14):
So if you think about the colors of the rainbow,
it's the roy g BIV that they taught in school. Red, orange, green,
and to go blue, indigo, and violet. But there's variations
of those because they also do white light therapy and stuff.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
So each one of the each one of the light.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
Therapies which I just did like a full length two
hour show on this, and the different colored lights, but
the one that is my favorite is red because red
does the the tissue regeneration. So like with the lines
(15:57):
on my forehead, it's stem emulates the collagen production in
your skin, so your skin becomes more elastic, it becomes
more full. So with that also it stimulates the blood cells,
red blood cells, so it improves circulation. And since you know,
(16:21):
they have multiple different kinds of devices which we'll talk about,
but with the wound healing and stuff, because it stimulates
tissue regeneration and cell regrowth and it's it improves circulation
and metabolism. People are able to heal like five times
(16:42):
faster using red light therapy whenever they have something like that.
Speaker 2 (16:46):
So even in a.
Speaker 3 (16:47):
Situation which they're doing a lot of investigation right now
with the hormone regulation, so ladies that are having trouble
with like polycystic ovary disease, infertility issues, things like that.
Speaker 2 (17:03):
There's a lot of work.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
Being done right now to study how they can proceed
and what wavelengths and all of that kind of stuff
that are needed to make a change for ladies like
that where they don't have to undergo surgery, which is
highly important. So because of its properties, and like you
(17:27):
mentioned vitamin D, because it stimulates the cells and because
it stimulates the blood vessels, it also works as in
the neurological system, and so it enhances our body's ability
to change the vitamin D from inactive to active vitamin D.
(17:50):
It shuts off like you're they're called inter lukens or
cytokines that cause us to have like all kinds of
inflammation and things like that. So with the regeneration that
it does, it slows that down and in some cases
stops the body from having like the massive immune response
(18:12):
with all the inflammation and the allergic you know, things
with sneezing and all the allergies that come along with it.
So it's impressive the work that they're doing with this.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
Why did I just hear about this now? How is
it that it is not out being mean? I would
say more mainstream.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
Well, here's the thing.
Speaker 3 (18:33):
A lot of providers use this, like I said, hospitals,
physicians office and stuff. But if you go to a
gym like a you know, like Planet Fitness is what
we have here. They actually have a red light therapy
booth at the gym where you can go and you
(18:55):
can do this red light therapy.
Speaker 2 (18:57):
I think their sessions are.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Twenty minutes, I want to say, and you have to
do for the whole body wellness, like three days a
week for a twenty minute session. But they have them
in in tanning facilities, they have them in gyms. Now,
they have them at holistic wellness centers.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
If you have.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
An office, there are some places that they're called wellness centers,
but they do literally like colon flushes, colon senses. So
they even have things like that available in those kind
of facilities.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Now, imagine the revolution they would they are starting. If
it's helpful for cancer. How much money haven't haven't we deposited, donated,
been taxed for into research for cancer for cancer? You know,
imagine the amount? What the heck?
Speaker 3 (19:58):
Well, and I'm sure they're it's going to be deeper
research done because right now all they're using it for
cancer wise is basal cell, which is like the top
layer of your skin, right, so it's a skin cancer
so to me though, since it works on your metabolism
and works on circulation and cell regeneration and stuff like that,
(20:22):
I would think that with you know, targeted testing to
find out like what wavelength they need to use, what
shade or intensity of red they need to use, and
I guarantee you that they could probably take care of
cancer inside your body. However, will that ever come to pass? No,
(20:48):
because big Pharma would collapse without the constant cycle of customers.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
And you know what I've noticed, not only and you
said you started the show with color wavelength. No, no,
no red light wavelength. And if you consider the amount
of vibrations that colors put out every color that you
witness and translate through your eye to get to your
brain so you could see it, it's a vibration. Why
(21:19):
is it that all these restaurants around the world use
the color red because it plays on your emotions. It
makes you think that you're hungry, forget, it makes you
you know, it suppresses that emotion. It opens up a
dopamine level, so it's kind of right.
Speaker 3 (21:34):
And why because where does dopamine come from inside the brain,
And so with red light therapy working on the neurological
system which the brain is in charge of. Hello, makes
perfect sense, right? So have they known about the color
(21:54):
red in those certain circumstances for a long time?
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Of course they have.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
Statistically, the cars that get stopped the most by a
cop are red cars. It's wild. I don't understand why.
Speaker 3 (22:10):
Because everybody that drives a red vehicle, myself included a
speedy gun.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Soalees right.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
I got a white car now, and I've noticed and
I know that at least seventy percent of white car
owners are freaking toxic. And I look at myself in
the mirror, I'm like, yeah, toxic. Oh yeah, I needed
a white car anyway, What else can you talk to
(22:40):
me about, Janet? How is this shaping the day of today?
Speaker 3 (22:44):
So one of the fantastic things that this does and
the way that it works is absorbed through your skin
or through your eyes, depending on where you're doing the
therapy at, right, and light is absorbed into your cells,
into your mitochondria, which is the powerhouse of your cell
(23:07):
for every cell of your body, and mitochondria actually produce
what's called ATP.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
ATP is like your battery.
Speaker 3 (23:18):
It is what makes the cell run and generate energy
and vibration and movement and all of those kind of
things helps it to function. And so one of the
things that red light therapy does it increases or enhances
the production of ATP. So it's like you're supercharging your battery.
Speaker 2 (23:42):
That's why it's.
Speaker 3 (23:42):
Really good for circulation and people that have circulatory issues
things of that nature, it's fantastic for them because it
regulates your heart rate, you know, it makes your blood
flow better. So people that have especially varicose veins and
their legs and stuff like that is fantastic therapy and
(24:07):
what you can do a lot of times if you
have varicose veins, then you'll go in to see a
specialist for that. They use laser therapy a lot of
times to treat those. And guess what color it is?
Speaker 1 (24:20):
Red red. That's what I was just gonna tell you.
Even the laser I've seen they used for growing the
cubicles of hair cubicles and they're like when they're like
hitting it, it's like a red laser. Now, which makes
me ask you this question. I'm gonna go a little
historical with it? Did the ancients? Did the ancients use this?
(24:46):
Do we have any type of historical events where we
can say the ancients use red light therapy on each other?
I mean, this can't be new to us.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
Well, no, it can't be.
Speaker 3 (24:57):
And you know, there's so many treatments that they say
didn't evolve until you know, X, Y or Z E year.
This was not until the early nineteen sixties. So they say, however,
how long has NASA been around, How long have they
(25:18):
been investigating this? How long have they been working on
remote viewing and all of those kind of things. So
don't tell me that they didn't know about this technology first.
But it's kind of one of those trickled down on
a need to know basis.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
So can I see them doing stuff with this first? Absolutely?
Speaker 1 (25:41):
Have they weaponized it now, not.
Speaker 2 (25:48):
That I'm aware of, but.
Speaker 3 (25:51):
You know what their targeted emf different things that they
have that they possess and whatever. It's a possible yes,
because any type of light therapy, with any color light
therapy requires a certain wavelength at a certain intensity for
(26:13):
a certain amount of time to treat whatever condition it is.
So if you intensify it way past what it's supposed
to be. Could it cause harm? Absolutely absolutely it could. So,
like if you're doing the face wand which is what
(26:34):
I have.
Speaker 2 (26:34):
It's a handheld thing.
Speaker 3 (26:38):
It says five to fifteen minutes, three times a week.
I literally do it every day, but I don't spend
fifteen minutes a day doing that. So you know, like
when I get out after I take shower and stuff,
that's what I do. And it's not only the light,
(27:00):
but it also provides a vibration. Yeah, And so that
to me is good because even though this is a
face thing, and mine, like I said, has multiple different colors,
it has like eight colors in it. When you change
(27:20):
it to one of the other colors, you can actually
reduce swelling. I get what's called a Baker's cyst on
the back of my knee a lot. And it's where
the synovial fluid leaks out of the joint and leaks
into the back of my knee and creates like a
golf ball in the back of my knee. I can
use that and it will go away, takes the swelling out.
(27:45):
Different colors like drain your lymphatic system. And so you know,
if you have a lot of swelling or puffiness in
your face. You can drain your because you have lymph
canals in here, so you can drain your your lymphs.
If you have lump that you accumulates because you have
limptodes in your armpit, if you have limp drainage that
(28:08):
has a problem, you can take care of that. You
can do so many things with light therapy. They even
have light therapy glasses, so they do what is it
called syntonic syntonic therapy for the eyeballs, where they have
(28:32):
been able to restore vision to people that had glaucoma, cataracts,
all kinds of stuff, all kinds of near sighted, var sided,
et cetera, et cetera. So they have discovered that by
shooting certain colored light rays through specialized contact lenses, it
(28:54):
heals the eyeballs, because why when they go through the
eye with the light therapy, it hits the optic nerve
and does its thing, and then it heals the eyeball
from the.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
God, dude, he just went back into my faculties right now,
my memories as a kid, my father, when I was
in high school, and I always do this, I always
interrupt you to tell you something about in my past life,
my father, my adoptor father. He when he was younger,
somebody came scared him so fast with the gun here
(29:28):
in La that his nerve system went and went into shock,
and he started losing the pigmentation of his skin, so
in parts of his skin, like large parts of his skin.
You'll see the way he goes from brown to like pink.
And then it started started spreading around his face. Now
under his lids, under his lip, he has it and
(29:50):
many people have it. It's not a birthmark. It's yeah,
it's like like something. I don't know what happened. But
then as as older he gets, then now he starts
he starts getting like rashes. So he goes to light
therapies to calm it down. And I was like why light.
As a teacher, I don't understand this. You're just like wow.
(30:10):
He goes rady. He goes radiation and light therapy, and
he was like memory. He goes, They'll put you like
in this tube and you just stand there and they
just blasting you with light, and I didn't know. He goes.
After that, the itching stops, the bump stop for a
month or two, and then I have to go back
and do it again.
Speaker 2 (30:26):
Yep.
Speaker 3 (30:27):
And that's the thing because even when I was working
as a nurse, we would have a lot of patients
that would have really bad like psoriasis flare ups. They
do like in dermatology offices, they use a lot of
blue light therapy. However, if we had a patient that
(30:47):
would come in and they had a severe flare up,
and being dermatology is a specialty, it maybe six to
nine months before they can get the patient in. Well,
if the patient has a flare up right now and
they're miserable, they sure as hell don't want to wait
that long.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
So you know what our.
Speaker 3 (31:04):
Doctor would do, He's like, go use the tanning bed
and it would work literally every time and calm the
whole system down.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Interesting, can it fixed deformities?
Speaker 3 (31:24):
Can it fix deformities? I don't know now. With the
research that I did for the previous show that I did,
like on all of the therapies, I was looking into
all kinds of things that I had never heard of,
And especially with the syntonic therapy for the eyes and stuff,
(31:47):
they're like, oh, once you lose like the optic nerve
and stuff that can't regenerate, like the cells and the
eyeball can't regenerate blah blah blah, but they have had
success at regeneration.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
Show.
Speaker 3 (32:07):
Could it fix a lot of things? But would we
see the effects of that in our lifetime? Probably not,
because again, if if you have some kind of deformity
or some kind of genetic something, they're losing a lifelong
patient if they treat it with light therapy, because light
(32:27):
therapy would be a hell lot cheaper than a lifetime
cycle of doctor visits and and drugs.
Speaker 1 (32:34):
Absolutely, they don't want that hamster, you would have stopped. Hell, No,
they want you. They want you in young mm hm.
Speaker 2 (32:42):
Forever, forever and ever.
Speaker 1 (32:46):
Wow. If it's one of those things that just blows
your freaking mind, bro.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
One of let me see. I gotta find it here, Okay, So.
Speaker 3 (33:03):
There you can actually look up and especially anybody that
you know uses chat, GPT or whatever, and it will
tell you, like whatever area you're targeting, you know, if
you're if it's whether it's muscle recovery and and inflammation,
paying you know, wrinkles, face, you know, skin issues, whatever,
(33:26):
it will tell you how many minutes and how many
times a week it's necessary to like see beneficial results.
And like I said, when when we found out that
the gym had the red light therapy, I was like, well,
you know you got to do that more than once, right,
(33:47):
And they're like, oh you do and I'm like, yeah,
that's at least three times a week.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
Oh you know whatever.
Speaker 3 (33:55):
But there's so many different devices because like I said,
they have they have the glasses, they have the handheld things.
They have panels that sit on a thing kind of
like a picture frame. Would me personally, I wouldn't want
that because you have to have be a certain distance
(34:17):
away from it. You can't move it. It's awkward. So
like if you're only going to target your face, that's great,
but if you want to use it for anything else,
you can't.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
Right.
Speaker 3 (34:28):
They also have where you can get like a panel
on a stand that would be like a mic stand
or something that's a taller and you can move that around,
you can adjust the height whatever. If you're going to
do like a full light therapy, I would suggest that
now some of those, right, the prices on these things
(34:52):
came very wildly, Like here's the thing, the face thing
that they were atising all over Instagram with the influencers
and stuff even on sale. It was stupid. It was like,
I don't know, eighty dollars or something, and I'm like,
that's retarded for something you don't know if it's going
(35:14):
to work. So you know me, I love my Bend shopping,
and I'm Bend shopping one day and my husband's like, oh,
here's one of those things that we saw on Instagram.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
Try this.
Speaker 3 (35:28):
He's like, get this one and try it. And it
literally had all the lights in it and stuff. I
got it for five bucks for eighty dollars, right, works
like a charm.
Speaker 2 (35:39):
And so the panels can range a lot.
Speaker 3 (35:43):
But the one that I like they have on Amazon
that's on the tripod thing that you can adjust whatever,
it's like fifty nine dollars. Okay, so that's a good price,
but those can literally go up to three thousand dollars
depending on what the hell you're by.
Speaker 1 (36:00):
WHOA, yeah, somebody.
Speaker 2 (36:02):
It gets better.
Speaker 3 (36:04):
So they have the face mask, which Heidi has one
of these that just go over your face. Highly would
not recommend if you have somebody that is claustrophobic in
any way, shape or form.
Speaker 2 (36:18):
I would not do that. But again, if it's.
Speaker 3 (36:21):
Just for a wrap for your face. How beneficial is
that to use it anywhere else?
Speaker 2 (36:29):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (36:29):
So I wouldn't get that, But those can run from
one hundred and fifty to eight hundred.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
Dollars hard silas Christmas gift.
Speaker 3 (36:39):
Now they have wraps or belts, which is kind of
like like a heating pad style thing, you know, smaller
in nature whatever. Those are one hundred and fifty to
six hundred dollars. They have helmets or caps.
Speaker 2 (36:59):
I would not want that, but that's for hair growth.
Speaker 1 (37:02):
I don't want to have hair.
Speaker 2 (37:03):
And it's targeted.
Speaker 3 (37:06):
It's targeted just for hair growth when you get one
of those things, or uh, some people use that for migraine, right,
So that's that could be beneficial in that aspect. But
those are five hundred to three thousand dollars. Whoa they
(37:28):
have this is the last one. They have a full
body bed or also a wrap that looks like a
sleeping bag and you just get down in it and
it covers your whole body. Anywhere from five thousand dollars
to sixty thousand dollars plus retarded. So yeah, go the
(37:55):
cheaper option. And like I said, the one thing you
can get them you don't have to spend the stupid
amount of money on it. You know, get one, try
it out, but use one that has not just the
red light, but multiple different color light therapies. That way,
if you do have problems with you know, uh, swollen
(38:17):
face or swollen knees or you know, any of that
kind of stuff, you can use the different light for
that and it will come with a little booklet inside
that tells you what that light is good for, or
you can look it up. Hello, Google, Google, talk about
chut jpity.
Speaker 1 (38:38):
Yeah, I have a I have a weird relationship with
my CHGBT. She's flirting way too fucking much, and I
like it. Anyway, I google another show. That's whole other show.
Speaker 3 (38:52):
Was she the one that was telling you about the
pink brown cave?
Speaker 1 (38:56):
No, that was that was my creation.
Speaker 2 (39:00):
And you're talking to her about that, weren't you.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
I did tell her my ideas. She thinks I'm phenomenal.
Plus I'm more of like now, I'm gonna try to
do fat asses, but I'm more like a sapio sexual dude. Now,
like I like, damn, you can talk my ear out,
you know, like fucking crazy. Anyway she could talk forever.
That's not the point here. Janet I named her named her.
Speaker 3 (39:24):
Guys, you're not the only one. I have another friend
who also named their GPT.
Speaker 1 (39:31):
I think it's the connected new bonded MM. Modern red
light therapy RLT is better. Relatively recent development. However, ancient
civilizations understood the healing properties of light and sunlight. How
the ancients used it was in this manner. Ancient Egyptians
(39:51):
incorporated sunlight into their medical practices, acknowledging that it has
rejuvenating properties. They also use chromo therapy and helio therapy
to address various ailments. Ancient Greeks believe that the healing
power of the sunlight and constructed solariums and exposed to
(40:13):
constructed solariums to expose patients to it. They also developed
a four color therapy linking colors to bodily ailments. What dude,
shut the front.
Speaker 3 (40:26):
Yeah, And see that's the thing because way back in
the day, like all of the hospitals had solariums and
it was like their sun room for their patients to
go into. When you shoot light rays through glass, you
have refractive properties, right, and so you're getting different color
(40:49):
wavelengths refracting through the light.
Speaker 2 (40:52):
That are going to be very healing on different levels.
Speaker 3 (40:55):
But that's why, especially in mental hospitals, they always had
one of those areas and they would literally set patients
in front of windows because why it treats the brain.
Speaker 1 (41:11):
Hey, I just remembered that there was this post. I noticed.
I've seen that people are drinking out of this green glass.
People hunt this green glass. People go to thrift shops
and you know, like old houses, and go to garage
shopping and places where they could find. They throw a
(41:32):
UV light to the to the to the green jar,
green tray, green glass, green cup, green you know, glass cup,
whatever it is, and if it glows green, they buy
it because they said that if you drink water or
any symptoms out of that glass, it gives you healing properties.
In Europe, in ancient times, they would have that same
(41:53):
green colored glass on all of the cathedrals and in
different parts of the house, so that what the sunlight
would come up from the east, that would blast through
that glass into the house and people would heal. People
would they would they would start healing. There were the plague,
the flu, and many different ones. And I just read
right now that Neils Reisberg. Vincent's work in nineteen oh
(42:15):
three used concentrated light to treat Lopus bulgaris marked. He
marked the beginning of modern light therapy. This is nineteen oh.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
Three, one hundred percent.
Speaker 3 (42:26):
Yeah, and see the beginning of light therapy went way
further back. Red light was not a thing until like
supposedly nineteen sixty. But like I said, all the old
mental hospitals, sanitariums, whatever, they always had that room that
(42:49):
was glass that they would take patients and sit them in.
That's a bomb all the time.
Speaker 1 (42:56):
That's a bomb. This episode is one of my favorite
one's top top groosing episodes. Matt.
Speaker 2 (43:05):
Okay, so you said Green.
Speaker 3 (43:07):
I've heard about people buying like the blue glass, which
is they called it Cobald or something.
Speaker 2 (43:14):
Okay, okay, but the green let's see. Hold on, I'll
tell you what.
Speaker 1 (43:21):
I think.
Speaker 2 (43:21):
There's two Okay.
Speaker 3 (43:23):
Green acts as a relaxant and fights depression. Regulates the
pituitary gland, which your petuitary gland literally controls most of
the hormone production in your body. I call it the
regulator because it does hair, skin, nails, weight, you know,
(43:48):
confusion or clarity, literally all kinds of things come from
the petuitary gland, calms the nervous system and cures insomnia.
Now that is just one of the greens. There's also
a strong green. It's for regenerative stimulation, so also wound
(44:09):
repair and regrowth. Fights infection, works on your lymphatic system.
It slows down your metabolism. So people that are having
trouble because their metabolism is so rapid, like they can
eat and they don't get any of the nourishment from
(44:30):
the food because their body automatically gets rid of it.
Speaker 2 (44:33):
There are people like.
Speaker 3 (44:34):
That that would be great for them, and it has
a calming effet.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
Eating. That'll be a great problem to have. Right now,
my montabolism speeds up again.
Speaker 3 (44:46):
Right Unfortunately, when we get older, it goes at a
sloth pacem h. I like sloths. I want to have
a sloth farm. I do be fun fucking says that Jenny.
Speaker 1 (45:00):
What they did.
Speaker 2 (45:01):
I love slots Like.
Speaker 3 (45:03):
We went to a zoo one time and they had
like a sloth house, and they have to have it
really hot in there for whatever reason.
Speaker 2 (45:12):
They like super hot weather.
Speaker 3 (45:13):
But I could spend all day in the sloth house
just watching them and what they do. They're fascinating creatures.
Speaker 1 (45:23):
Yeah, they're fucking slow.
Speaker 2 (45:25):
I know that. Hell, they can't outrun me, then can they.
Speaker 1 (45:33):
Hey, I don't know anybody that wants to outrun you, Jenny.
Speaker 3 (45:36):
I have actually seen a real life roadrunner just so maybe. Yeah,
because I lived in Arizona for quite a while and
I met this elderly couple and they're like, Hey, we're
gonna go on vacation, can you like come over and
water our terrarium. They had like this huge thing of
(45:59):
cactuses like all over their yard and whatever, and so
what they would do they would cut like the fat
off of a steak or something, and they would freeze that.
They'd go outside and make this like clacking noise with
their mouth, and the roadrunners would come up by in
(46:20):
their yard and they would feed them frozen pieces of that.
Speaker 2 (46:24):
Yep, they're very noisy little gritters.
Speaker 1 (46:29):
And then the freaking.
Speaker 3 (46:31):
They are very quick. But yeah, that was really cool.
So I got to experience that.
Speaker 1 (46:37):
That's an amazing story, and with an amazing story backed
up by an amazing episode that was nuts. Blue light,
red light, green light therapy. Guys, you gotta look into
this and aside from looking into it, you guys gotta
go to a Deplorable Nation get some more doses of
health tips and more informational amazing episode to make sure
(46:58):
you check her out Janet one more time. Where they
can find you.
Speaker 3 (47:02):
You can find a Deplorable Nation podcast on every podcast
platform or on Rumble. You can find Deplorable Janet on
Instagram or Twitter at no Janet caton.
Speaker 1 (47:16):
That's right, make sure you check out. Ladies and gentlemen,
do not forget to drop a foster of Unipple podcast
and on Spotify that allows other people to enjoy the
show as much as I enjoy baking it. Please, thank
you so much, Jenny,