Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
You are listening to,
watching, hearing, smelling,
tasting and feeling sex, drugsand skincare.
Like and subscribe.
Hey, welcome back to sex, drugsand skincare.
That was it's.
This is a morning shoot for us,so that was a very, very Don't
tell people where we are.
I'm sorry, we're in the morning.
Yeah, we're in the morning.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
They don't know where
we are what if they try to find
us?
That's true.
I went to the morning yesterday.
I went to the morning the otherday, yeah, and then they'll be
like, oh, nice to meet you.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Yeah, we try to send
them to the afternoon, if
possible.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Yeah, way afternoon.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Into the evening.
Tomorrow, tomorrow, yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
See you later.
I'm Nikki Davis Jr.
I am a standup esthetician,licensed comedian.
It's harder to do in themorning.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
It is yeah,
especially because you keep
letting your license lapse.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Stand-up license, my
stand-up license, yeah, you have
to get your CEs, yourcontinuing education credits.
Oh, I didn't even God.
That was a smart thing to saythis early in the morning.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
Thank you, my mother
was a hairdresser.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
But the CEs, she had
to take some.
Oh, I didn't know that I didtake some of those classes, like
the inside of the jaw work, butI just didn't know.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
There was a name for
it, yeah, like you have to keep
up so many credits to build upyour thing, or something like
that, oh gotcha.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
Oh, by the way, with
me as usual.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
Are we doing this now
?
Speaker 1 (01:17):
Oh wow, I guess we
could hold hands, yeah, so I
think it's time Well.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
I can't wait to meet
your mom.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
No, you can.
I can't wait no she's wonderful.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
She's a nice.
I like her.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
I do.
I know she's very nice.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
Seriously, just in
case you're not watching this is
Sandra Yocolano, my boyfriendslash Sherpa.
Slash set, decorator, slashchauffeur.
I thought you were going to sayslash from Guns N' Roses, sl.
I'm a decorator slash chauffeurtoday.
I thought you were going to sayslash from Guns N' Roses.
Slash from Guns N' Roses,because I'm not.
No, I'm not Okay.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
But yeah, I separated
the debt, decorated the set and
yeah, here we go.
Yeah, you did a good job, thankyou.
I made all of these.
I made these pillows.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
These are, I think.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
Nairobi is where they
grow the finest nylon.
Speaker 1 (02:04):
Yeah, they're taken
from innocent nylon animals.
I feel bad yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
They wake up and
they're like oh, I just want to
be a nylon worm, Because thesilkworms.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
they get all the the
silkworms, that's right.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
But the polyester?
Polyester comes from spidersright, isn't it Polyester?
Speaker 1 (02:22):
yes, it comes from
spiders, babe, okay.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Yeah right, isn't it
polyester disc?
Yes, it comes from spiders,babe, okay, yeah, well, not that
.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
We got to the bottom
of it yeah, by the way, this is
not any planned uh dialogue thatwe have going on over here, and
I'm talking to the guest who'ssitting over there.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
This is all scripted.
Yeah, this is all scripted.
Yeah, no, it's still not.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
Um, we have a really
special guest today, so I want
to get to that like kind of asquickly as possible if that's,
if that's okay with you.
Yeah, let me just talk about myweekend real quick, let me uh.
Yeah, of course I'm down, I'mexcited okay, I made some notes
because I, I just I want to makesure that I stay um and express
because, uh, I'm, we met herthrough, we're meeting her now
(02:56):
through caitlin allen, right,yep, big friend of the show and
um, and we just love her so muchand they have a collab going
right now, um, so this personthat's come in, she's an
extraordinary guest.
She's um well, I want to sayher name at the end she's a
trailblazer in the world ofbeauty and wellness and
technology.
(03:17):
Technologically.
That's a good word, you likethat?
Speaker 2 (03:20):
wow, you're making up
stuff.
I I like it I need some morecoffee.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
Seamlessly is the
next word yeah, seamlessly,
Ironically, is the next word.
What she's done is she'smerging science and spirituality
which I've not heard before ina practice to help people
achieve their highest potential.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
I dig that.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
And you know I'm a
very naturally based skincare
person.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
Naturally.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
Naturally.
So I was naturally attracted towhat she's doing because it
really kind of brings those twothings together.
She likes to put the you know,like the treatments that she
does and, um, are there a lotmore on the natural looking?
She don't.
She wants to make you look likeyou, but better.
Um, she treats beauty reallykind of like an art and it's a
(04:05):
science.
Let's see, I want to justmention a few more things.
Well, anyway, she's going totalk about things like
biohacking.
Well, we're going to learn whatthat is.
Peptides Hopefully we'll get tothe weight loss part of it and
there's a whole bunch of cuttingedge treatments that I want to
bring up today that I'm going toget your approval for for
(04:26):
another time, for myself.
This is every time we do apodcast.
It's basically just a passive,aggressive note to my boyfriend.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
Things he needs to do
or things I need to do.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
Yeah, what was that
one episode?
Speaker 1 (04:40):
Sugar.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
How do you get off
sugar?
And then does your boyfriendhave man boobs, and it was just
me and two other women on theshow.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
I don't understand
what the hell's going on.
Speaker 2 (04:51):
But yeah, um, yeah, I
think the idea of like
spirituality and like thescience is nice, because you get
people from both sides that arelike will buy into it and see
the overlap.
Yeah, so people can beskeptical about one or the other
and it's nice to have that, sothat's pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
I'm interested to
find out we are, we just we just
before I bring her.
Uh, we actually were talkingand she said something that was
super cool to me, that she saidit feels like of a divine sort
of um meeting of the two of us.
I think of everything that wayI love that.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
Yeah, that's cool
orchestration, divine
orchestration in the universewhen people are supposed to
connect.
Speaker 1 (05:25):
Do you see why I like
her already?
Speaker 2 (05:26):
Yes, I get it.
Yep, all right, so I'm going toswitch you guys seat.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Yes, I know.
She's super, great energy.
Coming to the couch the very,very beautiful I've heard she's
extremely funny, oh God nopressure, I know no pressure,
but she's amazing and, witheverything that we just
described, you guys put yourhands together for Jennifer
Tabiza.
Thank you guys, hi, thank youfor having me.
(05:52):
Hello, thanks for coming.
Thank you, we are so excitedthat you're here today.
I'm excited to be here.
This is fun.
This is super fun, yeah.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
I love talking about
all the things that you want to
talk about with me.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
Oh my, God, well, you
know I'm an esthetician, okay,
and are you also an esthetician?
But I know you're a doctor, butyeah, I'm not.
Speaker 3 (06:10):
No, but you're a
doctor, I'm my own esthetician.
Yeah, no, I'm not a licensedesthetician.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Okay, well, I'm just
wondering yeah to beauty and
skincare and all that.
So, yeah, that's why we're bothhere today.
I came up learning back fromyou know, like when I started in
the late nineties it, like theperson that taught me was like
she was very much against a lotof the stuff that was going on
in plastic surgery and like anyof that stuff.
(06:36):
But it's so far advanced nowfrom where it was what is that?
26, 27 years ago and that's whyI was so excited.
I know.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
Well, beauty tools
have been changing and evolving
through time since the beginningof time, right, we've been
using all kinds of modalities toenhance our beauty.
But really what I represent issort of a passion I have which
I've always loved goddesses anddeities and I sort of studied
their essence.
They sort of emanate thisdivine feminine presence.
When you really look at whothey are, their stories like
(07:10):
Cleopatra, aphrodite, you knowthey had sacred beauty rituals,
although they didn't have thetech we have today.
Cleopatra was taking milk baths, aphrodite was, you know,
bathing herself in oils, andwhat this really was was showing
that beauty is this sacredthing.
It's this thing that kind ofhelps you embody a certain
frequency.
(07:31):
That's the new age of beautythat I see for the future,
whereas you know we've sort ofbeen spending our time figuring
out how to use these texts likeoverfilling and kind of looking.
Changing the way we look wasthe big disconnect in beauty in
the last, I want to say, 20years and I think it turned a
lot of people off from it.
Yeah, and it made them feel itwas vain and that something was
(07:53):
inherently wrong with them inhaving a beauty treatment.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
Nobody wants to admit
it, or at least they didn't.
But now it's more like I don'tknow if we could see it.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
You know what I mean.
I don't know, it was a new toy,a new tool that we figured out.
And it's like now we're in theera of refining it and I do kind
of feel like there's a lot ofsynergy between what's going on
in the world with how we'regoing to bring technology into
our lives to fortify ourselves,not take us over, because that's
not what tech is meant to do.
It's not meant to change us,it's not meant to replace us.
(08:23):
It's here to enhance us, and inmy spiritual work, which is a
little bit separate from mybeauty work, I teach that you
know well.
Let me ask you this it's a funquestion Do you believe in
aliens?
I do, okay, do you believe?
in aliens All right, so we knowthey exist right, I think they
live under the ocean, sorry.
The thought I like to connectwith aliens and beauty believe
(08:48):
me there's a connection is thataliens, if they're truly
traveling through the cosmos,finding wormholes to get here,
that means they successfullymerged with technology in a way
that didn't replace them andenhance them and help them reach
a point of unity, consciousness.
They're not fighting wars witheach other.
They're literally spending timetraversing the cosmos.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
How cool is that
they're on vacation.
Speaker 3 (09:06):
Believe it or not,
every intelligent being is
somewhat on that path, and I dowork with aliens.
But let's get back to beauty.
Okay, so the connecting thedots is there is a connection to
beauty, because it is part ofmy archetype, it's part of what
I love, and it's just aboutreally taking advantage of the
(09:26):
cool tech that's out there, notto take you over, not to make
you someone you're not, but tohelp you have that inner glow of
confidence.
When you invest in yourself,you move through the world
differently, you know, and sothere's a lot of different
treatments out there right now.
So we're here to just kind oftalk about my favorites
absolutely yes, please sharewith me so, gosh, where should
(09:49):
we start?
so biohacking, that's a funbuzzword.
Have you guys kind of gotteninto that at all?
I've heard the word yeah.
Yeah, what do you?
Speaker 1 (09:56):
think about the word.
I don't even.
I don't even know what it means.
Okay, it's like I don't knowhacking.
Hacking into your, your bio, Idon't know your biographyacking
something Hacking into your, Idon't know your biography, no.
Speaker 3 (10:04):
I'm just kidding.
So it's basically using thingslike peptides and enzymes to
mimic what our body does.
So it's nothing artificial inthe sense that when we use a
peptide, a peptide is somethingour body already makes.
It is just basically part of anamino acid, and amino acids are
like the text messages of ourbody.
When they travel through ourbody, they tell our body what to
(10:27):
do produce collagen, burn fatum, you know, reverse disease
and aging in the body.
So now what we're refining inin this world of biohacking is
how to use them for specificthings that we want to enhance.
And that's sort of where beautyis headed, because, think about
it, if you're healthy inside,you're already going to look
(10:49):
better.
You're going to just have aglow.
You're going to look healthier.
You're going to have an aurathat's different because you
feel so good.
Your energy is higher.
So, if you want, we can talkabout a few specifics.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
I don't know, yeah,
please, oh, my God yes.
Speaker 3 (11:06):
So I'm really loving
a few specific ones I find that
most people could benefit fromUm.
The first one is BPC 157.
So, that's really good for guthealth and muscle repair and
tissue damage.
So you can use that um, youknow you can use it consistently
or you can use it just tosupport those specific issues
you might be having.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Is it?
A supplement or something thatyou see, it's a peptide.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
So you would, you
would inject it Um, and so
injecting it um, the protocolthat we give you is sort of
dependent on what's going onwith you.
Um, we actually also do blendit.
So let's say, you come in andyou have had some injuries, but
also you want to lose weight, um, that takes me into the bigger
(11:45):
conversation of GLP-1s.
So these are also peptides.
Did you guys know that?
Speaker 1 (11:49):
No.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
And have you heard
the word GLP-1s?
Speaker 1 (11:51):
No, I don't know.
No, this is all new to us.
Speaker 3 (11:53):
GLP-1s are the
semiglutides terzepatides
ozempic, wagovi, manjaro.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
So those are the
brand names Semiglutide,
terzepatide, and again the brandnames.
Speaker 3 (12:01):
Semi-glutide towards
appetite and again, just like
most things that come out, notsaying they got misused, but the
perception of them was oh mygoodness, the rich people are
getting super skinny, right,right, right, yeah, what about
me?
But it is for everyone.
And GLP-1s essentially do amyriad of things, but the
(12:22):
magical thing they do is help uscope with living in America,
which is, you guys know whatwe're exposed to microplastics,
chemicals, foods we're notsupposed to be eating,
preservatives, modified foods.
What happens is, when you eatthese things regularly, your
body is in an inflammatory state, and so losing weight has no
(12:44):
longer become about willpower.
It's about gut health, hormonebalance and your metabolism.
And, unfortunately, you couldeat one carrot a day and work
your butt off out in the gym andnot lose any weight.
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Because of the
inflammation.
Speaker 3 (12:58):
Yes, because of the
inflammation.
If you have gut inflammation,your body is dedicating much
more to the inflammatory processthan to weight loss, so it's
not going to burn fat.
There's a cascade of eventsthat goes on, like when your
cortisol is high, glucagon islow.
We've been talking aboutcortisol constantly lately.
That's a buzzword becausecortisol face.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
I'm sure you've heard
of it, and belly cortisol,
belly, cortisol, belly.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
So glucagon is the
receptor that needs to be
stimulated to burn fat and it'ssort of suppressed when there's
a lot of cortisol in the body.
And so, for example, there is aGLP-1 that's newer and it's
still considered researchpurposes only, but we're allowed
to use it.
It's called retatrutide, andretatrutide is the first GLP-1
in this kind of there's newgenerations of them all the time
(13:43):
.
That actually works on GLPreceptors, GIP receptors and
glucagon, so it's going to workon how hungry you are.
So it changes.
Think of this.
Are you guys addicted toanything Like vaping, smoking,
anything that you're like?
I have to have it.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
I'm not anymore,
that's good.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
I mean I.
I do enjoy marijuana all thetime and coffee throughout the
entire day, but um, yeah, Ididn't want to throw them under
the bus you're on my lifestyle,don't?
Speaker 3 (14:10):
worry yeah you know,
let's think of something like
vaping.
Like people, a lot of people,are addicted to vaping and
smoking.
What happens is your brain hasa lot of sort of receptors that
are waiting for that drug right,and so what glp ones do that's
very interesting is they reducethe positive feedback you get
when you ingest it.
Smoking food anything.
Anything addictive.
(14:30):
So a lot of people are takingGLP-1s and noticing like I don't
need other things anymore thatI'm, like, kind of addicted to.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
I just don't get the
high off of it.
Speaker 3 (14:40):
So imagine you eat a
piece of cheesecake and you're
like, meh, yeah, I mean, that'sa feeling that our brain is
addicted to.
It's like you're craving thathigh from it and you begin to
dissociate from food a littlebit as this thing of huge
amounts of pleasure.
Now, I love food, I'm notagainst it.
But we might have a slightlyunhealthy balance sometimes with
(15:00):
how we look at food.
Like we want it to resolveproblems, make us feel better,
all that kind of stuff.
So there's that aspect.
It doesn't.
Speaker 2 (15:09):
Ice cream every night
helps you sleep?
Doesn't not well, but it doeshelp you.
That's why I'm not sleeping.
Speaker 3 (15:15):
No, you know what I
mean truly.
My viewpoint is I loveindulgences and luxuries and
food.
I eat a cookie every night.
I think it's all about balance.
You know you can indulge, butit helps you regulate yourself,
where you just have a bit ofsomething and you're, you're
good, you're happy, you're likeoh, I'm fulfilled, I can move on
.
You know, instead of thatendless need for more Um.
(15:36):
So it helps that really reallywell and a lot of us suffer from
that more than we realize.
Um's that aspect.
But the other aspect is becauseit works on these other
receptors.
It does reduce inflammation inthe body.
So, like my mom has arthritisand she's thin but I give her a
little dose to reduceinflammation and she doesn't
have pain.
So you can use it in sort oflike these indirect ways.
(15:59):
We can use a really small dosejust for longevity.
Why?
Because if you live in Americaor any chaotic place we're
pretty chaotic, yeah Um, yourstress levels are naturally
higher just from living in thisworld.
Even if you're, you have peaceand all that good stuff, you
kind of bump into these energiesall the time.
So you can do a micro dose of aGLP one just for longevity,
(16:23):
just to, because inflammationalso does something else.
You guys know about DNA, right.
Yeah, I'm not talking, totalalien talk no, no.
Dna the length of the telomere.
So telomere is the end of yourDNA.
Okay, it gets shorter as youage and there are certain things
that make it shorter faster.
That's why people age atdifferent rates.
(16:45):
You know, like I'm a couplethousand years old no one knows
and it's because I've beenworking on my telomeres and so
there's a lot of holisticbeautiful things like sound
baths and healing that can helptelomere length as well.
But I'm talking about thebiohacking world where we use
peptides Because we're reducingso much inflammation.
It actually has been showing toincrease telomere length.
(17:06):
Age in reverse.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
Wow you can.
Speaker 3 (17:11):
It's possible and it
might actually be the future of
where we're headed if we use itright.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
It sounds like it's
going to be yes.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
So inflammation is
basically like the culprit in
all of that.
Yeah, yeah, because I've alsoheard, like even when, like I
remember, a couple years ago,they were like, oh, heart
disease and whatnot, it's not somuch the actual like function
of the heart.
It's the inflammation caused byor that causes that issue.
Speaker 3 (17:36):
It's fascinating and
there's sort of like an eastern
medicine approach to diseasethat I find kind of like is more
spiritually aligned, which isthe organs that end up having
disease, like, let's say, yourheart is where all your trapped
emotions are.
So it's not a coincidence thatmost men die of heart disease.
Oh wow, they have trouble withthe expression of the heart
throughout their lifetime.
And that's where the energiesare sort of held.
(17:58):
So, if you think about it, mostof our trauma is actually
stored in a body part.
There was a really good examplesomeone gave to me, which is
imagine you ate something as achild and you like kept throwing
up and you'll never forgeteating it, like pickles, and you
can never eat it again.
Yeah, the memory is not in yourbrain, it's in your throat.
(18:19):
You feel it there, right, andso kind of helps you understand
how we store all of ourtraumatic experiences through
life somewhere in our body.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah, we talked aboutthis.
You know like the liver foranger and like the gut, so you
have heard about this.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
So there's a
connection there.
There's also a peptide I'mwondering if you've heard about,
because you can use this inyour work as an esthetician.
It's called GHK-CU, it's copper.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Have you heard of
this one?
Speaker 3 (18:45):
So this is a peptide
you can use topically and you
can inject it.
You can use it on your scalp,you can use it on your skin and
it's really good at restoringthe skin and boosting collagen
and it's good for hairstimulation that I need.
So I love it because you knowpeptides and skincare like a big
thing.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
It's like a precursor
right.
Speaker 3 (19:03):
This is you know,
they just say peptides are
really general.
This is one of the specificones that you can order and you
can use and it's, it's excellent.
A lot of people just want touse skincare that isn't by a
brand or a line.
I'm like just get your hands onsome GHK oil.
It's really profound.
I use it on my scalp and myhair all the time.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, so that's another reallygood one.
(19:23):
There's another one that I do.
You guys know the guy.
His motto is never die.
I think his name is BrianJohnson, have you?
Speaker 1 (19:32):
guys heard of him.
He's the guy trying to liveforever.
Oh, yes, I watched adocumentary on that guy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
So he's really well
known in the longevity space,
which I'm kind of part of thatcommunity, and he uses peptides
like CJC-1295.
These are actually annoyingbecause you have to inject them
pretty regularly.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
But they do help
reverse aging and they've been
shown to help reduce aging um,just by kind of like helping the
cells restore faster and umyeah, so peptides are sort of
magic.
Speaker 3 (20:04):
Is that also like
increasing the length of your
diet, your dna as well, thetelomeres?
Anything that is anti-aging isbasically doing okay, gotcha
yeah, because you have.
For example, one of the reasonswhy we get wrinkles is the genes
that turn on and make collagenare slowing down because the
telomere length is shorter.
So it's not, it's not doing itanymore.
So when you use GHK, it'sstimulating those genes that
(20:24):
know how to do it.
Your body is like a, like alittle machine and we're just
like hitting codes to turn it on.
That's what biohacking is, andso you can.
You know, at my med spa what wedo is we kind of do like a
whole consult of understandingwhat are your goals in health
and in beauty.
We come up with a protocolthat's sustainable for you.
(20:45):
You know we're not trying tooverwhelm people with there's
endless things, as you can tell,but some key things that are
important to you and it itchanges your.
It can change everything.
When you feel better, you lookbetter.
When you look better, youattract more things in your life
.
It's like a magnet.
Yeah, it really is, I believeyou, and sometimes people don't
(21:06):
know where to start, but itdoesn't have to be overwhelming.
Just know there's a plethora ofthings and if you're in the
right hands of the rightprofessional, they'll gear you
in the right direction.
There's a lot of great peopleworking in the biohacking space,
including myself.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
This is the first
I've heard of it, so this is
amazing yeah.
Speaker 3 (21:24):
Yeah, they're also
fun beauty tools, like I brought
this today.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
So this is so cool.
I'm sorry, I got really excited.
Speaker 3 (21:33):
But basically this is
a mist, so this is turning
water into a hydrogen vapor.
Now this just looks like awater vapor, but it's not.
When you isolate hydrogen andyou mist yourself with it, you
can mist your eyes with it.
Hydrogen is the smallestmolecule on the planet, so it's
going to get into cells reallywell and it's a natural
antioxidant.
So there's also some easybeauty things that are profound
(21:55):
and work and you could buy abeauty tool and it endlessly
will produce for you.
So it's kind of really exciting.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
Wow, and then where
do you get the fluid that goes
in there?
This is just pure water justclean, pure water, and it just
separates it.
Speaker 3 (22:06):
It's going to
separate it out.
It works for about three yearsand then it'll stop separating
out the hydrogen efficiently.
But we use hydrogen.
We have a device that you caninhale hydrogen while you're
doing red light therapy, and sohydrogen is like you're
breathing in.
You know you guys takeantioxidants, you eat it.
You're breathing it in.
You're breathing it in.
Your lungs are getting it forus like smokers.
And so it just helps One of ourlongevity stacks.
(22:35):
We call it a stack, so this islike a protocol.
That's like ready to go andeasy to use.
We give to people is you comein once a week, every day,
whatever you want, and you'redoing red light or I have every
color light, depending what'sgoing on with you while you're
breathing in hydrogen, whileyou're standing on what's called
a micro impact plate plate.
What's that?
Speaker 1 (22:54):
like a grounding
surface.
Speaker 3 (22:55):
So no micro-impact
plates are so cool.
They're sort of the new era ofvibration plates, and vibrations
promote stem cells.
So when you stand on them for30 minutes and it's just like
this slight vibration, what'shappening is it's going to lead
to bone production.
It causes lymphatic drainage.
You know when you get like alymphatic massage reduction.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
It causes lymphatic
drainage.
Speaker 3 (23:14):
You know when you get
like a lymphatic massage.
Yeah, it's the equivalent ofthat.
So it's going to pull fluid outof your body faster, and stem
cells are the cells in our bodythat need to be released in
order to create new tissue.
So it's the magic seed of allthings.
You can even get a stem cellinfusion.
We do that as well.
Is that what PRP is?
Speaker 1 (23:32):
Or that's different.
Speaker 3 (23:33):
That's a very good
question.
I do love PRP as amicro-treatment.
Going into that combo, prp iswhere we draw your blood out and
we separate what's called theplasma.
It's like the liquid gold.
It's got all the growth factors, so it's your own.
It's growth factors.
It's not stem cells.
They are a little bit different.
One is the actual cell thatwill turn into anything.
(23:53):
So a stem cell can turn.
If it's near my knee, it willturn into cartilage.
If it's near my skin, it'llturn into skin cells oh wow it's
omnipotent.
It's like you know god in a cellit'll turn into anything.
Speaker 2 (24:04):
It's the potato of
cells.
It can be ogrodden.
Speaker 3 (24:07):
It could be french
fries, anything I love that,
yeah, mashed potato okay, sorry,I like to chime in with
scientific stuff.
No, I love it, I've got anotherscientist over here but plasma
is naturally in your blood,helping supply, just like
signals for tissue to repair.
But it's not an omnipotent cell, so it's a little bit less
(24:29):
potent.
Not, it still works.
It's just different.
There's so many differentthings that they all do
different things, so I've had afew stem cell infusions and, um,
actually just had my biologicalage tested, which you can do.
Uh, and I was 16 years youngerthan my age wow.
So that's how much telomerelength it's.
(24:49):
It's worked on, but also it'srepaired and hormone balancing
it can do.
So I'm a big fan.
The only problem with stemcells is they're a little bit
unapproachable for peoplebecause of the cost.
But again, we make a budget forourselves based on what we
believe in.
So I just want to educatepeople that health and beauty if
they're number one, everythingelse kind of becomes a magnet.
(25:12):
You know it just trickles intoyour life and in some really
profound ways.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
Also, VCRs used to be
like 1200 bucks and now they're
like available for everybody.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
So you know we'll see
what happens with stem cells.
Like you know, I'm kind offollowing RFK's mission.
He's a little bit.
He's aligned with sort of how Ithink about the food, the
industry, the corruption and thethings we eat, and he has
spoken about it.
The big threat is that stemcells could take away medicine,
right.
So you guys know what thatmeans.
(25:41):
Yes, that means pharmaceuticalcompanies won't be happy, so
there are reasons why they'renot abundantly available.
Speaker 1 (25:47):
I believe it.
Speaker 3 (25:48):
They shouldn't have
to be this expensive.
They just keep it at bay, andthey're considered for research
purposes too.
So you, you know these.
A lot of these things are notFDA approved, which the FDA
really cares about.
I don't know, but um, I thinkpeople are empowering themselves
.
Like we have so much access toeducation and information that
we're kind of all learning, like, the truths behind things.
(26:08):
We're in that era.
Speaker 1 (26:11):
Truth is coming out.
It's coming out In everyindustry.
This year is like boom.
Speaker 3 (26:15):
Yeah, from like
Hollywood to medicine, to
spirituality, to aliens, it'slike no matter what you talk
about, there's so muchdisclosure, which is kind of fun
.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (26:25):
I'm a rabbit hole of
a person.
I just rabbit hole everything.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
You on TikTok a lot.
Speaker 3 (26:30):
I'm on TikTok a lot.
My nickname is Jenny bunny.
For a reason I just I reallylove the mysteries of the
universe, but also I really deepdive most things I'm interested
in, so that's why I can talkabout it endlessly, um, and I
and I hold space for that cause.
Not everyone has the capacityto do that, so I just love to
share what I learned in myrabbit hole adventure.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
Wow, and so what
you're talking about in this
part is like a holistic sort ofthing, like it's not just like a
you know, I'm going to injectthis here, inject this there,
whatever, whatever you'retreating the whole body.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
I do.
I try to get people to thinkthat way.
Not everyone's in that mindset,yet there is a wave of us sort
of having the awareness thatthat's what sort of beauty and
health should be.
Speaker 1 (27:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
But I'm still here to
educate that.
Um, you know, if you come to meand you're like, oh God, I wish
my chin was longer, my cheekswere huge and I just grew up
with a flat face and a nose, I'mnot gonna, I'm not going to
encourage that mindset, right,let's reframe it Right.
So, kind of going to microbeauty treatments which is kind
of a phrase I like to describehow we do beauty yeah, I'm going
(27:39):
to look at you, my injectorsare going to look at you and
we're going to find your ownnatural beauty and we're just
going to enhance it.
So you shouldn't look like youhad anything done, you should
look like a more stunningversion of you.
So, I think you saw that Caitlinhad skin had skin veved.
Yes, on her lips not wellenough known, but it's basically
an injectable moisturizer.
Okay, that's all it is.
It's not going to fill andchange the shape.
(27:59):
You're gonna get a bit, it'sgoing.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
Yeah, I love it
because I love injectable
moisturizer.
Speaker 3 (28:03):
Those are great words
yes, they are, and, um, it's
just hyaluronic acid that's sotiny that it kind of sits right
in the skin and gives you thatdewy kind of glow on your cheek.
We did use it in her lipsbecause she didn't want volume.
She just wanted a little likeLike a hydration.
Yeah, and our lips arenaturally more hydrated when
we're young.
So that's why I consider it arestorative procedure versus
(28:23):
like an altering procedure.
If you were not born with hugelips, it wasn't made for your
face.
But we can do little thingsthat kind of, you know, give you
a little enhancement or makeyou look maybe how you did when
you were just a little younger,or balance, maybe Balance yeah,
plasma, prf injections.
Prf is the new generation of PRP.
(28:43):
Okay, and even newer than that,is Easy Gel.
So we can actually take yourplasma, turn it into a PRF,
which is a fibrin Okay, it's alittle thicker and thicken it
into a PRF which is a fibrinit's a little thicker, and
thicken it into a gel.
And the reason why the gel iscool is, if I put it let's say
you're under eyes it's a populararea because people get hollow
(29:04):
under the eyes.
Let's say I inject the plasmathere or in the cheeks, what
happens is the gel is so thick,it'll stay there for a while.
And that growth factor guesswhat it's going to do?
It's going to produce collagen,elastin.
A lot of people, when I postvideos about PRF, they kind of
go viral, but they're alwayslike it doesn't work.
It's not that it doesn't work,it's not a filler.
So they're like oh, I'm so fullwhen I leave and then it goes
away.
It's something you do and withrepetition your body will
(29:27):
transform and start to thickenthat tissue and rejuvenate it as
much as your body can.
Right, it's not designed to bea filler and you're not going to
get that instant gratificationof filler.
Filler is not a demon in itself, it's just misused a lot.
Yeah, and I don't like fillerunder the eyes.
Injectors can probably talkabout that for a long time.
(29:48):
It can cause lymphatic drainageissues.
Oh my God.
It puffs up over time.
It tends to make you have thisweird like Chinese kind of eyes,
even if you don't have Chineseeyes you know what?
I mean, Like you just kind oflook like small and so it just
kind of it shrinks.
I don't know, I hate it.
So I just think naturalaesthetics take more patience,
which we don't have in beauty.
(30:09):
So you know, you just need alittle bit more repetition with
these procedures, but they dowork.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (30:15):
Yeah, so those are
some things I love.
Microneedling, I'm sure youknow about that.
Yes, but we do it, and we do itwith exosomes.
So as you microneedle, you putthe exosomes into the skin.
Exosomes is like the outermatrix of a stem cell.
Okay, tiny little molecule goesinto the skin, causes rapid
collagen production.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
Do you get that out
of the blood?
Speaker 3 (30:34):
No, it's from a lab.
Oh, okay, so embryonic stemcells are basically donated from
women that have babies forscience.
Then science takes it and makesproducts out of it.
Exosomes are approved.
I'm pretty sure they are.
Yes, they are FDA approved.
It's the stem cells that theywon't fully give approval to.
Exosomes are part of a stemcell not to over.
(30:56):
You know, complicate explainingthem but they are part of one.
They're just the part that, Iguess, somehow got approved for
mainstream use.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
They just snuck past
them when they weren't looking.
Speaker 2 (31:07):
They probably have
like an uncle in the business.
They're like, yeah, justapprove them.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
He's my sister's Get
them off our backs.
Yeah, he in the business.
They're like yeah, just approvethem.
He's my, he's my sister's.
Yeah, he's my sister's.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
He's my sister's cell
.
What so?
Yeah, stem cell.
Speaker 3 (31:18):
You know it's not
really, but they are using them
in other forms of medicine, likeorthopedics, use them for knee
regeneration and things likethat plasma too.
So they're not just used in therealm of beauty, they're used
in a lot of different spaces inmedicine.
Um, it's kind of this phrase ofregenerative medicine, which I
love.
We want to regenerate ourself,we want to alter ourself.
(31:40):
There's a difference, yeah, sothose are some of our most
popular micro beauty treatments.
We do filler, we do Botox.
I'm not against those.
But, I'd rather work on skintightening and hydrating and
restoring your health from theinside.
Speaker 1 (31:55):
I like the idea that,
yeah, it's kind of like, okay,
it's long-term and it's probablya little more expensive, and
like you're not going to see itright away.
But I've been hearing more andmore that, like the filler I
haven't gotten filler in my faceand that's, I mean, not one of
the reasons why it kind of is,though, but like it doesn't go
away necessarily.
Speaker 3 (32:13):
You know there's a
lot of myths around that story.
That's that quickly spread out,it's, it's it's pretty
interesting.
I don't know the study thatthey did.
There wasn't a lot ofinformation about how often this
person got filler.
Now you have to remember yourbody should take the filler, get
rid of it over time.
But if you're getting it aninsane amount, like every three
(32:33):
to six months or something crazy, your body may get overwhelmed
and it could get trapped in theface.
So I don't feel like that casestudy that came out that kind of
went all over the internet.
I don't know that that wascompletely the truth for
everybody.
It can be used in moderation.
I think it has its place andit's not a bad thing.
It's hyaluronic acid, whichyour body also makes Right, so
(32:55):
I'm not completely against it.
I just think it shouldn't beyour staple.
Botox shouldn't be your stapleeither.
A lot of people they're justBotox addicts.
And the effect wears off overtime.
Your body gets used to it.
And not only that if you freezeyour face constantly, the
muscles in your face get weakerand actually drag down faster.
Speaker 1 (33:15):
I've been saying that
for years.
Atrophy too, yep.
Speaker 3 (33:17):
So we do M-Face.
M-face is a muscle stimulator.
Speaker 1 (33:20):
It's like the
opposite of Botox.
I love that.
Speaker 3 (33:22):
Our muscles naturally
weaken as we age, and so M-Face
actually stimulates them withlike magnetic frequency and
pulls them back up, and sothat's a nice again alternative
that restores your face withoutadding a poison to it, without
freezing the face where themuscle will lose functionality.
That's why, when Botox wearsoff, most people are like, oh my
(33:44):
God, why do I look like that?
It wore off and I look so bad?
People say it all the time it'sbecause for three months you
weren't able to move a singlemuscle Right, and then it just
wore off and it's like droopsand I'm assuming other muscles
are going to compensate for thatas well like if you're trying
to make sure, yeah, yeah I thinkin the eyebrows.
You see that a lot people havekind of funny things going on
with their yeah facialexpressions.
(34:04):
Um, so I'm a big, big educatoron when people come in for botox
consults, which is still, again, a huge part of our business.
It our business.
It's just hey, we can do laserskin tightening, we can do
microneedling withradiofrequency.
We can do.
Radiofrequency is really bigtoo, and there's a lot of myths
around that one that it meltsyour face off.
(34:24):
I've never heard that one Laserscan also burn your face off, so
it's all misuse, right.
So a lot of people don't know.
I don't know why this ishappening, but non-licensed
professionals can get theirhands on a lot of these devices.
Speaker 1 (34:36):
That's so weird to me
.
Yeah, that is so weird, yeah.
Speaker 3 (34:39):
Or just like maybe
they are licensed to use it, but
they're not quite educatedenough.
So, morpheus, you've heard ofMorpheus.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (34:46):
That's the big one
where anytime I talk about radio
frequency, everyone's in thecomments I don't want to melt my
face off, I'm like I've done it.
It doesn't melt your face off.
It was misused, and Morpheuslacks an internal regulation of
temperature, so if I'm doing thetreatment it's not live telling
me what the temperature is.
So it can overheat and it cancause facial fat melting.
(35:06):
So I don't use that device.
So again, educate yourself ondevices, on your professional.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
Don't go for the
cheapest price.
People stop doing that.
I had a client who she and agroup of women, they would go to
mexico, basically take a bus,go over there and get filler,
and lord knows what was in thatfiller, and she came to me for
years to try to smooth out thefiller, whatever that was, I
mean yeah, god knows what it was, and it was toothpaste, what's
that toothpaste yeah yeahyeah, oh cement, yeah, rubber
cement, rubber cement, yeah, andI would try to like massage it
(35:37):
so that it would like you know,at least, if it doesn't break
down, at least smooth it out forher, because she, she would cry
a lot, because you coulddefinitely see like these worms
of filler underneath and anightmare.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
I really don't think
that that was like a, an
approved filler that's gotta getin the way of your crying too
like because your face when youcry it efficiently goes down.
But now you have this littlebump and now it's gotta do this
thing.
Speaker 1 (35:59):
It's like climbing a
mountain.
Yeah, he's always looking outfor me.
Speaker 2 (36:02):
Yeah, you gotta be,
yeah you're always crying, yeah,
she's definitely a crier, yeahbut you get all the stuff out of
your eyes, which is good yeah,yeah, but you don't want to.
You don't want to put bumpsover here no tears that's not
cool you got.
Speaker 3 (36:12):
You guys know it's
also in the us, it's happening
in the us.
You can buy stuff from chinaand you know again like, I see
all these facebook groups oflike in los angeles where do you
guys get botox and how cheapcan I get it?
I'm like, be careful, becausefirst of all botox, we, we are
the ones um mixing the powderwith the bacteriostatic water.
(36:32):
I can give you any amount ofunits and you don't know.
Speaker 1 (36:35):
To be honest, quite
frankly, you don't know.
Speaker 3 (36:37):
So if you're getting
it for $8, $9 a unit, you're not
getting a deal.
I promise you that's almost ourcost.
I'm not actually exaggerating.
So people are obsessed with adeal too.
Everyone, stop it.
You don't know what you'regetting, you don't know how much
you're getting, and I would bevery weary of a professional
that's ready to do Botoxconstantly for $8 a unit.
(36:58):
It's a really popular thingLike I get it for $8 a unit.
I'm like good for you.
We charge 14 because it's thereal stuff yeah.
Speaker 2 (37:04):
It's like going to
the flea market and you're like
I got a great deal on Botox.
Speaker 3 (37:17):
It's like what, why
would you do that?
But but people have no problembeing like I got on a website
for cheap.
They're like, oh, that was goodscore.
Yeah, you're like you have noidea what's in it.
It's creepy.
But I think one of the reasonsit's happening is girls are
looking for it at way too youngan age, where maybe they don't
have the wealth to back up yetall these things, but they also
don't need it.
They're like 25 year oldslooking for a deal.
You know, so I'm like you don'tquite need it yet just work on
being healthy in your 20s.
That's really all you need todo.
Speaker 1 (37:32):
And a good person.
Work on being a good person.
Be a good person.
Speaker 3 (37:35):
Tackle your demons.
Yeah, do the shadow work.
Do the shadow work.
Go to a sound bath or two Inyour 20s, really.
People actually ask me.
They're like, what can I do?
And I did a little of this, nota lot.
Just do microneedling it.
Facials done, maybe get a peelif you have acne or pigment but
you don't need Botox.
Don't start freezing your facebefore your face has even fallen
(37:57):
.
It's really kind of you're notsetting yourself up for a better
future.
But that's again it's likemisinformation about beauty.
They think if I do Botox now,I'll look the same age until I'm
40.
That's not exactly how it works.
It's deeper than that, yeah.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
Do, yeah, yeah.
Well, do you recommend thatpeople do their own
microneedling with, like theones that you can buy, like the
shorter needles?
Speaker 3 (38:21):
My only concern with
those is like the bacteria get
stuck on those.
Um, and I know you clean them,but you know we we obviously
replace the tip every time.
Um, I don't know.
I don't use them myself, sothose are my mixed feelings
about it.
I think you could bereintroducing things into your
skin with them.
So here's the thing, like ifyou do microneedling four times
(38:46):
a year with a professional youboosted your collagen by 400%.
Whoa, just go get it done.
Yeah, you don't have to.
Also, it's like how manytreatments you want to do at
home every night and roll onyour skin.
It's a lot.
Yeah, same thing with red lighttherapy.
I do think it works, and areally good hack, um with red
light is use it with green tea.
So if you spray your face withgreen tea and then you do your
red light, it makes it 10 timesmore I've never heard that
before.
Speaker 1 (39:06):
They've done studies
on.
Speaker 3 (39:07):
That's amazing and
live it like they've done
studies with like red lighttherapy and cells and green tea,
and it actually can reversecancer cells.
Speaker 1 (39:17):
So really cool things
.
Yeah, I know, it penetratesyour skin up to an inch right
Underneath.
Speaker 3 (39:22):
The devices matter,
Like the reason why a medical
grade device like the one I haveversus yours.
The difference is called theradiance levels.
So, radiance is the part oflight that helps dictate how far
into the skin it's going to goRight, and so at-home treatments
are okay I'm not going to saythey're bad but again, a lot of
places are popping up where youcould go once a week do a
30-minute treatment.
(39:42):
It's the same as like sitting30 minutes every night for a
week.
Speaker 1 (39:45):
You know what I mean?
Okay, right.
Speaker 3 (39:46):
So I'm not saying go
spend all your money in spas.
I'm just saying there is adifference between.
I'm not a big fan of tons ofat-home care.
It exhausts me.
I would rather once a month oronce every other month get
treatment done, just pop in andget some stuff done, it's easier
going.
Yeah, I just do really goodskincare at home.
I get a facial every month andI do my med spa beauty things.
(40:08):
But I don't love elaborateat-home rituals.
I think it can be exhausting.
Yeah, and who?
So that's where I'm at withthat.
But red light is great.
It's powerful.
Yeah, light therapy in generalis really powerful.
So each color does differentthings, like purple helps with
lymphatic drainage, yellow helpswith making glowy skin, red is
(40:31):
known to help with pain andinflammation.
Speaker 1 (40:33):
So they all kind of
do different things.
Speaker 3 (40:35):
We have different
protocols based on what you want
, so I mean you can actually seeit through your hand.
Speaker 1 (40:40):
Yeah, and people like
freak out when I show them.
Speaker 3 (40:42):
I'm like look you can
see the red glow through there,
so it's going through.
It's doing something.
It's doing something.
Speaker 1 (40:48):
It's causing your
cells to act healthier?
Speaker 3 (40:50):
Yes, Well, we're made
of light.
That's true, believe it or not.
We're all just energy molecules.
Speaker 2 (40:56):
There's nothing that
separates anything, so light
travels through to show you whatyou're really made of.
Wow, and that's the shaman Jencoming out.
When you say that there's like,it almost seems like from
hearing you talk like themajority of, like the
pharmacology, everything is inthe body already.
Yes, and a lot of it is likethe light and everything that's
(41:16):
stimulated.
Speaker 3 (41:17):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (41:17):
It's like mimicking
natural light, but then like
altering the amount of it, orlike specificity of it.
Yes, that's just.
It's fascinating it is.
Speaker 1 (41:27):
The majority.
Speaker 2 (41:27):
Of it's just
naturally there, but honed.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
You're just working
with it.
Speaker 2 (41:31):
Yeah, yeah, it's like
magic.
Speaker 3 (41:32):
It's like unlocking
the secrets of the body of the
universe.
I mean, we were probably meantto be outside a lot more.
There are certain parts of thesun's frequencies that help heal
cells.
We're not really in the sun alot, and the sun's been
demonized too.
That's a whole other thing.
I won't really deeply get intoit.
I have my own beliefs about thesun.
I don't think the sun is theproblem.
(41:52):
For example, the study thatrevealed UV radiation causes
cancer cells.
It didn't cause it consistently.
It caused it in the rats in astudy that were eating sugar
diets.
Oh my gosh.
So it shows you, it's sort ofinteracting with you.
And so everything has its goodand dark side.
(42:14):
Right, Like radio frequency,laser lights you can use too
much, you can melt your face.
Right, you can burn your skin.
Everything has to be used justright so that, so that you um
get the right result.
There is a special balance toeverything, and you guys know
about grounding like walking onearth, stuff like that we don't
do as much.
Actually probably hardly at all, If you think about it and
(42:35):
those are.
those are ways you can naturallyheal that are so accessible
that I really encourage peopleto look into Um, because these
are some of the things I'mmimicking, believe it or not,
with peptides.
Oh, you know so, yeah, look intowhat grounding really does.
Um, it charges the cells.
So the cells in your body areelectric, but because of all
(42:56):
these technologies surroundingus oh my God, right now in this
room I'm even looking it'screating a negative charge.
So we have to use positive ionsto go back to neutral and then
your cells are not as chaoticand they heal faster.
And so it all, your body, is auniverse, honestly, of its own,
and it does have a lot of magicin it.
(43:16):
It has secret codes to reverseaging, probably time travel,
honestly, if we just learn how.
Speaker 1 (43:24):
I think everything.
Speaker 3 (43:25):
Everything.
Speaker 1 (43:26):
Anything.
It has a drop of everything init it does.
If that makes sense, does thatmake?
Speaker 2 (43:30):
sense.
Speaker 1 (43:30):
Yeah, totally yeah
Like you look into water, it's
going to mimic.
You know the universe or youknow, I don't.
Speaker 3 (43:35):
Do you guys know
about the water you?
Speaker 2 (43:38):
ever heard about it
Water is magical.
Speaker 3 (43:41):
Water holds your
consciousness.
So if you talk to water, thehydrogen and oxygen create a new
angle to their bond, dependingon what you say to it.
If you say I love you, if I sayI'm so lucky, whatever I talk
to my water all the time, youguys don't.
Speaker 1 (43:58):
I don't, but I should
.
I would like to startEspecially in the shower.
Speaker 2 (44:01):
I am so funny, I am
so funny.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,that's exactly when you drink
the water.
Speaker 3 (44:06):
The water talks to
your cells.
The cells become part of yourenergy and you believe it more,
and so I believe water is likethe physical manifestation of
holding our consciousness.
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (44:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (44:18):
It holds anything we
tell it.
It also holds hate anger.
That's why tap water isunhealthy.
It travels through harsh angles.
That was part of Dr Yamato'sstudies.
Oh, I didn't know that Like 90degree angles, which it doesn't
like.
Water is not supposed to flowlike that.
And then through these olddingy disgusting pipes full of
whatever.
So, they did studies on what thewater looks like when it's
(44:40):
frozen and looking under amicroscope, and it's these like
chaotic structures and then ifyou drink it, your body
literally digest it like it's apoison, including bottled water.
Speaker 1 (44:49):
Oh yeah, especially
bottled water.
I don't drink bottled water.
I would rather be thirsty thana bottled water.
I have a glass bottle ofwherever it went.
Okay, she knows yeah.
Speaker 3 (44:56):
So that's another
really important thing for
people to know if you're dyingof thirst and your only option
is bottled water, you'reliterally better off not
drinking right yeah.
Speaker 1 (45:05):
I've even sanded
before and the more you tune in,
just a big glass of sand, yeah.
Speaker 3 (45:10):
I started telling
people that years ago and now
they're like I almost taste it.
Now I know what you're talkingabout.
I was like, yeah, you reallyplastic and water the frequency
of them do not mesh well and sowater gets really upset in
plastic.
Speaker 1 (45:24):
It doesn't like its
life there it sits in the back
of a truck somewhere and it's inthe heat.
And then the chemicals.
Yeah, it's so gross.
Speaker 3 (45:30):
So it's an industry.
You know that again, we've beentold to use um.
You guys remember back in the80s and 90s you didn't even
drink water.
Speaker 1 (45:36):
We were fine uh, I
have a whole bit about like
there was a time when theirbottled water didn't even exist.
It didn't, and we were okayyeah, you would just take a
canteen if you were going thatfar away from your house but we
actually are meant to get mostof our water from fruits and
vegetables.
Speaker 3 (45:50):
So, fruits and
vegetables, instead of it being
h2o, it's h3o, which is morehydrating to yourselves.
So we were drinking orangejuice, but real orange juice
that we were like squeezingourself.
You know that's how the 80, theeighties, were.
They were magical like that.
Um, that's why we didn't needwater.
We were fine, like it's.
It's a little bit of a lie.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 3 (46:09):
I think it's a water
lie, the water myth.
Speaker 1 (46:11):
I think you can,
almost like you, wash away some
of your electrolytes too, if youoverwater.
Speaker 3 (46:15):
Absolutely, not to
mention if the water is full of
crap.
You're actually making yourbody unhealthy, like by drinking
water, which is so crazy tothink about.
And so these are the things.
I want to spread these messagesoutward, because drinking the
right kind of water, likealkaline filtered water, you
will enhance your booty justfrom that.
So invest in your water.
Speaker 1 (46:37):
Do you?
Speaker 3 (46:38):
guys have like the
Kagan water maker.
Speaker 1 (46:39):
No, we should have
one Worth it.
Speaker 3 (46:41):
I know these things
cost something, but then you
think about what am I spendingon?
These things in a passive way.
Right, it's not as much as youthink.
When you think of it that way,we're just taught in America not
to invest upfront.
Everything is pay over time,pay $2 a day.
So we have to learn how to alsoorganize the way we invest in
ourselves and not not makeeverything a monthly payment of
(47:03):
ten dollars, like, yeah,sometimes that those things,
those tricks, make it worse in away, because you have no idea.
It's happening, it's randomspending way more than you think
and usually you're getting away worse product right, like
buying a bottle of water everyday.
I mean I can't believe peopledo that I can't either.
Speaker 1 (47:19):
There's whole
sections in the grocery store
where it's just literally likean aisle of water in a bottle,
like it's so crazy if you gointo right aid.
Speaker 2 (47:27):
I don't know if all
the right aids are the same, but
the one that I've been inthere's just shelves of water
water, water yeah and it's.
I can't believe that.
I'm like, well, where's allthis stuff go?
It's just, it's a travesty fromthe beginning to end.
Speaker 3 (47:39):
It's terrible it
really is.
It's a waste of plastic.
Speaker 1 (47:41):
It's such a way, it's
wasting and also like I don't
want it touching plastic, Idon't want my water touching
plastic plastic has got to goyeah we have a lot of
alternatives you could eat aseasily, use, um, it's just like
like pharmaceuticals they havetheir place.
Speaker 3 (47:55):
You know, I think
western medicine is really good
at saving your life if you're inan emergency and you need help
right now.
It saved my life once, you know, but it's not meant to maintain
your life.
Speaker 1 (48:05):
Got it Right.
Speaker 3 (48:06):
I like that you know,
it's kind of how you look at it
.
I have a lot of friends who aredoctors and I have a lot of
respect for them.
They absolutely could savepeople's lives, but to maintain
your life and to create health,they're not the ones to help you
.
Speaker 1 (48:18):
Right.
Speaker 3 (48:18):
I mean, you can lean
on them, but you're not going to
feel that great.
Speaker 1 (48:21):
But what do you feel
about Ozempic?
You were talking a little bit.
Is that?
Where does that fall in there?
Speaker 3 (48:25):
Ozempic is one of the
GLP-1s, so I don't love Ozempic
because it's an oldergeneration GLP-1.
It has a lot of side effects.
Speaker 1 (48:31):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (48:31):
Like upset stomach,
like vomiting, even, and nausea
no-transcript.
It will work on your hungerwithout you realizing it.
(48:52):
Your blood levels will bebalanced, but it's going to help
your body learn how tometabolize fat again, which a
lot of people it's not justabout not eating.
Their body doesn't remember howto burn fat.
It doesn't remember, so you'reactivating a memory it knew at
one point, and so you can be onthese things for some time and
slowly get off and your bodywill readjust.
(49:12):
Okay, so people use them asthey want.
We usually recommend like a sixto 12 month journey.
Speaker 1 (49:17):
And how do you?
Is it administered to you?
It is injected.
Speaker 3 (49:20):
Very painless.
You're usually doing it in yourbelly and it's a paper-thin
needle, so they're easy.
People get a little bit scaredabout that.
We do it in office too, likepeople come weekly.
But most people we just teachyou and it's not that bad at all
.
It doesn't hurt at all and youdo it once a week.
Speaker 1 (49:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (49:37):
And the reason why I
suggest six to 12 months,
despite how much weight you haveto lose, is we want to get you
stable.
We want to kind of train thebody for a while to stay at that
weight.
Understand those signals,retrain how you think about food
.
There's a psychologicalcomponent.
Speaker 1 (49:50):
Absolutely, that's
huge.
Speaker 3 (49:52):
So, getting on it for
a month or two, people ask are
they can I just lose 20 poundsand get off?
I'm like you can.
You probably might gain it back.
Speaker 1 (49:59):
Also, your skin's
probably going to be dragging on
the ground if you lose it thatfast.
Speaker 3 (50:02):
That's true,
depending how old you are.
Yes, yeah, your body may notsnap back fast enough.
You can lose rapid amounts ofweight on these, which a lot of
people want to do, and itdepends where you're starting.
Yeah, I mean, if you have like100 pounds to lose, you're going
to deal with some skin issues,no matter what.
Speaker 1 (50:17):
That's true too.
Speaker 3 (50:18):
But it's still worth
it and you know you you'll
figure that part out there theirtreatments, their things.
Some people have surgery,whatever it is.
You know some people havegained a lot of, they've got to
lose a lot, you know, and soit's worth the loose skin to
trade it off for good health andvibrancy and feeling good.
So yeah, so I'm a big fan Allright.
Speaker 1 (50:36):
So if you had to
recommend and we're going to
just um, this will be like butif you had to recommend like,
just like a basic, I don't knowwhat would you say, Like the
basic three things that youwould recommend for somebody to
just maintain, or it wouldrestimulate, like your youth or
your beauty.
Well, okay, let's talk both.
Let's talk both.
Speaker 3 (50:55):
So, in the realm of
just like the face, microneedle
your face four times a year withexos, with exosomes.
Do it with, pay the extra,trust me, you're already opening
up the skin.
You might as well give itsomething to boost that collagen
faster, right, I also you knowwhat I'd say.
Even that is pretty good, likenow.
Where I build on that is youraging concerns.
(51:18):
Do you have hollowness in yourface?
Are your under eyes botheringyou?
So it's not the same foreveryone, but that one is like a
staple.
It's like just do it, trust me,you will thank me, your face
will change just from that.
Speaker 1 (51:29):
Four times a year.
You said Four times a year.
Yeah, got it.
Speaker 3 (51:31):
So once a quarter.
Speaker 2 (51:34):
Fiscally speaking
yeah.
Speaker 3 (51:35):
Fiscally speaking Q1,
.
Speaker 1 (51:37):
I had.
Speaker 3 (51:40):
And then consider
some anti-aging injections like
NAD, which I actually didn'tspeak about yet.
Nad is also another naturallyoccurring molecule in your body.
It does a couple differentthings that help with anti-aging
.
It helps cellular energy.
So you know, when you'refatigued and you're slow and
you're, that's your cells.
They're not getting energy fromthe mitochondria.
Well, because it's the NAD, isnot.
(52:00):
You don't make as much as youage.
So you can get injections oncea week.
They are, they're not, excuseme, they're kind of the ones you
get in office, because they'reintramuscular, they give an
exorbitant amount of energy tothe cell.
But they also help reverseaging, so they help repair
tissue.
So I get NAD done every week.
(52:21):
You could do once a month whatfits your lifestyle yeah, and
also appropriate for your age.
You know, depends on what we'redealing with like again, I'm
four thousand, so I've got to doa lot um these are alien years,
right, yeah, alien years pastlifetimes I count it all yeah,
I've been here way too manytimes.
Um, hopefully this is my last,okay, so so, yeah, so you know,
(52:44):
we do customize it, butmicroneedling is one of those
and, like it works for everyone,just freaking.
Do it, yeah, but do it withexosomes do it with exosomes and
ask most med spas have it okayit's just um.
It almost costs more than themicroneedling itself.
Okay, but again, it's it.
Speaker 1 (53:00):
You're already
sticking a needle in your face.
I might as well.
Speaker 3 (53:03):
Yeah, so that's it.
I mean, everything else iscookie cutter.
It depends on the person.
Speaker 1 (53:09):
Right.
Speaker 3 (53:10):
I wouldn't say it's
the same for everyone.
So, yeah, these are.
You can do, you know, vitamininfusions if you're low on
energy.
That's where you start to thinkabout the person.
Speaker 1 (53:19):
Do you guys do IVs?
Speaker 3 (53:24):
the person.
Speaker 1 (53:24):
Do you guys do IVs?
Yeah, we do IVs.
Yeah, we do a lot of IVs.
Glutathione is an IV.
We do a lot of you know aboutRachel's big into that one.
Speaker 3 (53:28):
Yeah, so it is a
molecule that helps break down
pigment.
That's like stuck in the skin,so brightens and evens our skin
tone, because as we age, ourskin naturally becomes like more
of a mosaic, like there's somany different pigment colors
going on you can't tell, but itactually indicates, when you
look at someone, how old youthink they are oh you kind of
like analyze that subconsciouslylike oh yeah, there's
(53:48):
unevenness in their skin sittingin a makeup chair.
Speaker 2 (53:50):
I didn't realize how
much you're like oh well, a lot
of.
And they're like oh, I have toreally match this up like, oh, I
had no idea there's so manydifferent shades, so many shades
.
That's so funny.
Speaker 3 (53:58):
That's why we wear
foundation, we feel better
because we're evening our skintone.
Or, like you know, when you'redoing a photo shoot you want
tons of light.
It's kind of leeching out thepigment variations in our face.
That's why lighting can be soharsh on how we look.
It's shining the light on thosethings.
So peels I'm sure you knowpeels are great too for that.
So there's just so many funways to go about anything.
(54:19):
You just do what kind of callsto you, based on what you need.
Yeah, yeah, I love that.
Speaker 1 (54:29):
Yeah, I love this
whole conversation.
I wish we could just talk about, like for the rest of our lives
.
Speaker 3 (54:32):
Yeah, you can move in
with us.
Speaker 2 (54:33):
Yes, okay, guys,
let's do it well, um, um oh uh,
I was gonna ask you where peoplecan find you on social, but
first of all, what's the name ofyour spa?
Just so we get out there.
Speaker 3 (54:40):
Yes, so we'reics Okay
, right now we are in
Westchester, we aretransitioning to moving to
Marina Del Rey, but we haveparking.
We have such a great team.
I mean they are all embeddedwith the ethos of everything I
spoke about today, but they'realso just really kind, sweet,
amazing people.
You guys can see our reviews.
People really love them and Ifeel like I specifically wanted
(55:02):
to curate a team that made youjust feel comfortable.
I mean, you're in a place whereyou're kind of like a little
vulnerable.
You know you're coming forweight loss or you know
something about your face youwant to improve, so it's really
nice to have people that makeyou feel good.
Speaker 2 (55:15):
Nice support system,
yeah.
Speaker 3 (55:19):
They're a really,
really great team and so, yeah,
yeah, we're there.
We do endless fun things.
I feel that we do a little bitmore than I've seen out there
compared to the run-of-the-millvent spa, so I like to toot my
own horn with that.
But, um, but at the same time,you're going to start to see
these things everywhere.
This is sort of the new era.
Speaker 1 (55:35):
I'm just on the
you're just on the forefront of
it.
Speaker 2 (55:37):
I'm just making sure
I, I stay and you have parking
that's going to get so many morewe have parking.
Speaker 3 (55:42):
People get parking.
Speaker 2 (55:43):
They're like I don't
care what it is, I'll be there.
Speaker 3 (55:45):
Yeah, and where we're
moving, we're making sure there
is a lot too, thank God,because it really just ruins
your day when you arrivesomewhere, I know.
Speaker 1 (55:52):
Yeah, sorry about
that.
Speaker 3 (55:57):
That's another
stressful part too.
It really is in LA, but I don'tgo places that I know I can't
buy.
It gives me anxiety.
Speaker 1 (56:02):
I'm like what am I
going to do?
Speaker 3 (56:04):
when I get there, um,
so yeah, so we're there.
Speaker 1 (56:07):
My socials.
Speaker 3 (56:08):
Okay.
So on Instagram we're totalbody aesthetics LA.
I think that's our same on TikTOK I on Tik TOK I'm more candid
and I talk about the thingswe're talking about.
I kind of go on rants aboutthings.
Well can I do this Sometimes?
Oh, I got to watch that.
I'm just kind of brutallyhonest with people about the
things they're saying onlineabout beauty, because I like to
(56:31):
set the record straight andhonestly the thing is, you know
this about social media, youguys know People just talk with
a lot of authority and youbelieve them, but it's like did
you really do the research?
Do your own research.
If you heard something that youwant to know more about, please
do the research.
Use ChatGPT, it'll tell you.
Speaker 1 (56:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (56:48):
You don't have to
trust everything you hear.
There was a girl who was she'sactually I don't know her name
and I'm not trying to callanyone out she's really sweet.
She gives a lot of like adviceabout manifesting your dream
life, but she went on a rampageabout filler.
She's like it is destroyingfaces.
Look at all these puffer fishfaces and listen.
I get it, but calm down.
You're making people feel badwho are considering it and you
(57:10):
also don't know all the factsaround it.
And um, just speaking withauthority doesn't make it true
Like you're not a doctor andyou're not the easy doctor to
speak on it, but then have thewords to back up what you're
saying.
Don't just passionately sayit's terrible for you because
you heard another viral clip onTikTok Right.
There's a lot of that.
So I do a lot of, you know,setting the record straight.
(57:32):
On Instagram, we do a lot morehighlighting of what our
practice looks like.
The before and afters, as youknow, they're kind of different
vibes, yeah, so we were a littledifferent on those two and
you'll see two different sidesof us on both.
Speaker 1 (57:44):
I love that.
Yeah, Well, thank you so muchfor joining us today.
Jen and I'm going to be.
You're going to take me overthere and have some things done
that I'm not going to tell youabout until later.
I know, yeah, I know she'sgoing to come back looking like
an alien.
Speaker 2 (57:57):
No big deal.
Yeah, that's okay.
We we can take it around thespaceship.
Oh and for my alien lovers.
Speaker 3 (58:00):
my personal is Cosmic
Love Bunny and I'm mentioning
that if some things I said justpiqued your interest, because
that's where I talk about myspiritual stuff.
Speaker 1 (58:08):
Oh, okay, yeah.
Speaker 3 (58:09):
So that's my.
You'll see it infused in mybeauty, but that's who I am as a
person.
Speaker 1 (58:14):
I don't think I've
ever met any doctor like you,
ever ever impressed, Thanks.
Thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (58:20):
You didn't bill our
insurance to come here today, so
that's pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (58:23):
That's positive.
Speaker 2 (58:25):
Thank you so much for
being here.
Thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
I'll see you guys.
This will be out probablyWednesday 3 am.
We'll see you guys next week.
Bye, bye.