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December 17, 2025 96 mins

What if the words we use about “disease” are the very net that keeps us sick? We dig into how language molds perception, fuels fear, and quietly dictates choices, then swap myth for physiology: toxins burden terrain, cells adapt, and health returns when we support the body’s design. From there, we move into practical, grounded steps—daily detox rhythms, mineral sufficiency, gut repair, and light-based therapies—that restore capacity rather than wage war on symptoms.

We unpack pearl powder’s long history and why minerals matter as the “batteries” of enzymes that power antioxidant systems. We break down pleural effusions without jargon—why fluid collects, when drainage helps, and how pleurodesis can reduce recurrence—while keeping the focus on rebuilding the terrain so the fluid stops coming back. Parasite concerns get a sober plan: appropriate dosing, liver labs, and cleansing so debris exits instead of spreading. Infrared and photobiology get their due as gentle mitochondrial modulators when integrated with real food, sleep, hydration, and stress hygiene.

Gut dysbiosis is reframed as imbalance, not an enemy. Fasting windows, fiber-rich plants, colon hygiene, and consistent circadian cues help repopulate a healthy biome. Thyroid health takes center stage with iodine repletion and targeted support to stabilize immune tone. And when symptoms like unilateral foot numbness appear, we emphasize pattern-based assessment over labels so you can choose the right next step with confidence.

This is a call to reclaim your story: clear language, simple habits, and smart tools aligned with biology. Subscribe, share with someone who needs a different lens on “disease,” and leave a review with the one term you want decoded next.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_00 (00:47):
Welcome to Sunday night, or actually welcome to uh
live now on planet earth.
Since some people are probablyconvinced it's Sunday and other
people are convinced it'sMonday.
So it's just uh live now onPlanet Earth with the right
glasses.
Yeah, here we go.
All right, cool.
So here we are.
Um it's a wild week.
It it's so it's so wild and it'sso bizarre and it's so weird

(01:10):
that it's not even worth talkingabout anymore.
Yeah, not even worth it.
You could say it's not worthtalking about, it's just too
weird, right?
So, anyway, at least we're allstill alive right now.
Um, and so let's go for it.
Let's be alive and talk aboutwhat we usually talk about, and
that is how to be free from thetyranny of uh linguistic
manipulation.
Um, and I'm not talking aboutall the political stuff that's

(01:33):
going on and the weird stuffabout real invasions, alien
invasions, forget all that.
I'm I'm talking about ourhealth, our um, you know, we're
we're we're we're we're we're umwhat's becomes clear if you look
at it from the from from theproper perspective is that um we
are linguistically we're we'reyou know just like a spider when

(01:55):
uh when when a uh when an insectgets caught in a spider web and
then the spider puts this justties it up with uh with more and
more web until it can't move.
And that's that's what that'swhat's happened to us
linguistically.
So linguistically we're being umand this incarceration not only
includes our well it includesour psyche, it includes our

(02:18):
perceptions, it clouds the wayit doesn't cloud, it defines the
way we we perceive reality, andso we perceive reality in this
uh very bizarre mythologicalthing called diseases.
And I know most people out thereare really still convinced that
there are diseases that get youand you've got to get rid of

(02:38):
them.
And I know I know, I mean,because that's the Rockefeller
thing, that's the Rocky and hisgang.
And they want us to do this, sothey've got all these billions
of names.
There's new new names coming upevery like you know, the
diagnostic and statistic manual.
The D I remember when what wasit?
I was back at the DSM II.
I don't know what they're atnow, the DSM five.

(03:01):
Who knows?
The diagnostic and statisticmanual that's just of
psychiatric terms, but um, youknow, the number of diagnoses,
the number of diseases that areuh afflicting humanity when the
and then and the only thingthat's gonna save us is these
guys on the white horses withthe white capes coming out of
the pharmaceutical and medicalhalls of wisdom are gonna save

(03:25):
us by inoculating us and by uhdrugging us and by irradiating
us.
And we're so linguisticallymesmerized that we're going, oh
shot, doctor, okay, okay,irradiate me.
So that's see, that's what'shappened to us.
So that's what I'm here to do.
I would like to break thatlinguistic web, okay, um, and

(03:49):
help us learn to speak uhproperly to each other so that
we can communicate.
Because I mean uh the goal ofspeaking actually is uh I know
we forgot that, but actually thegoal of speaking is um to
communicate, and in order to dothat, we've got to be using uh
words that have meaning and notwords that are um designed to um

(04:10):
obfuscate cloud.
No, we don't need words likethat, but that's what we're lost
in.
So anyway, one of the thingsthat uh we all need to to to
realize is that um these uhwell, first of all, uh what I'm
gonna do is uh I need I'mdeveloping a course, a
linguistic, a psycholinguisticscourse to get us out of this

(04:32):
because otherwise we're we'rescrewed.
And you and you don't even knowthe subtleties of it.
You don't realize the subtletiesof it.
Almost any aspect of anythingyou're engaged with, if you're
not well and you're at all,you're at all dealing with the
medical profession, then you'reyou're in trouble.

(04:52):
Because you've already you'vealready taken a priori, you've
taken the assumption that thereare there's diseases and they're
gonna fix you.
And you're you're gonna you'reyou're lost already, because
that's not what's going on atall.
Okay, there are no diseases.
The body's adapting, it'sadapting to the fact that we
live in an ex exceedingly toxicworld.

(05:13):
It is toxic not only, um, notonly the air, water, food, um,
and and the atmosphere and andand and and the emf, not only
that toxicity, but thepsychological toxicity, the
psychological uh uh toxicity isthe absolute worst, and that's
what gets us.
Because once you if you change,if you get out of that, if you
can clear away that web and andand be clear, uh then none of

(05:38):
the none of your your fears aregone.
Remember, fear is what kills,it's fear, and it's the absolute
freedom from fear that heals.
That sounds a little bitextreme, but it's just happens
to be true, and it's truebecause I've seen it.
I've not I don't I it's notsomething I've imagined because

(05:58):
how would I imagine such abizarre thing?
Would you imagine that?
It's not something you imagine.
You it's a you either observe itor not.
And I've observed it, I'veobserved the changing of the
mind, their health.
And I was really happy to see uhZach Bush.
Uh I put out a video of the samething.
He calls it stories.
You're gonna change your story,and you you change your story,

(06:20):
and you're once upon a time,right?
You're a little kid, and youryour parents are reading to you,
your mom's reading to you, yourdad's reading to you, and once
upon a time, and that once upona time, they take you on some
journey, and then the next dayit's once upon a time, and
there's another journey.
So, whatever the story is, iswhere you are, and that's your
reality.
So that you know, uh Zach Bushhas a uh not only that, a lot of

(06:42):
a lot of ways, he's a prettyamazing guy.
But the fact that he's he seesthat is uh um fantastic because
he's the only other person thatI've heard talk about it.
So I'm really uh quiteimpressed.
Um anyway, so let's do this uhthing about uh uh where is it?
Oh, there we go.
Yeah, that part there.

(07:04):
So just as a reminder, we'rethis is the um call the Sunday
Night Live, but we all know it'slive now on planet Earth.
Um, and uh the format of this isyou've sent in questions and
we're gonna um get to as many aswe possibly can.
Um, and that's the format.
And then in in terms ofspontaneous questions that might

(07:24):
arise as we're going throughthis, uh, I can't really address
them because it's not fair tothe people who sent them in.
That's why I have these groups,and I have three groups the
health and healing group, theparasite group, and the CFC
group, which is again for thosewho are still linguistically
stuck in the Rockefeller webthat you call cancer, uh,
they're really chronicallyfermented cells, and that's how

(07:45):
we refer to them for multiplereasons, which I won't reiterate
again today, but take it fromme.
That's what they are, and that'swhat we should talk about, and
not talk about astrology.
Okay.
I mean, I I'm into astrology,but not in this regard.
Okay.
So um, and so in those groups,we have discussions, we we
interact.
I can ask if you ask a question,I can ask uh, you know, I can

(08:08):
get some clarity on what you'rereally asking by having a uh a
dialogue uh with you.
So that's why we want to jointhese groups and then um all
that.
And um, so that's that.
So, you know, we're on all allthese social medias, but the uh
it's at DR Thomas Lodi, Dr.
Thomas Lodi, M D on uh X and andat DR Thomas Lodi without the MD

(08:31):
on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube,LinkedIn, Rumble, etc.
Okay.
Okay.
Now, um the other thing is thatyou know these uh uh the part
four of the uh exposing exposingthe myths of uh on the human
diet, exposing the mythssupposed to be November 20,
20th.
I don't know, I really don'tknow.
I I I so I don't know if we'regonna do it then or not.

(08:56):
So if I gotta have to give thepeople have to sign up for it.
So there's none people signingup, we can't do it for a while.
Anyway, it's tragic.
Tragic.
Um, and the other thing is thisI'm gonna, you know, so a lot of
people are looking or asking foruh consultations, and I stopped
doing consultations just becauseum I can't I I can't take work

(09:18):
with as many people on doingconsultations as I do with the

(09:49):
groups.
The groups are really muchbetter, and and almost or
actually they're better thanconsultations because they're
ongoing, they're every week.
However, I'm gonna start takinga few and I'm gonna just limit
it to a few per week of ofconsultations.
And um so because I I can't uh Idon't have the time, but I
there's a few few week.

(10:10):
So if you want if you'reinterested in that, uh it's
hello at drloadie.com.
You can talk to my assistant fahello at drloody.com and uh we
can start doing some a fewprivate consultations.
All right.
So let's get into it.
Wait a minute, go away.
Here we go.

(10:30):
This one here.
Yeah.
All right, all right, all right,all right, all right.
So we're on.
All right, all right.
What's the first question?
First question is from Lisa, andit is what are your thoughts on?
Oh, by the way, I never haven'tfinished in my other book, but
uh on on our language.
You know, we're talking aboutlanguage all the time.

(10:52):
Language will can kill you or itcan bring you to the point of
understanding how to getliberated.
And then, of course, that wouldbe transcending language, but uh
uh other than that, I just wantyou to know that your language
is so the language we have,right?
The English language we're thatwe're speaking now.
I mean, uh there are otherfantastic, beautiful languages.
Um, I don't know how Englishbecame the language of the

(11:15):
world, but somehow it did.
Uh, it used to be French.
No, no, it's English.
I mean, French used to be likethe international language, but
but it's it's bizarre, you know,because that that is Asia, of
course.
You know, Asia always gotexcluded because we were all
Western oriented, which is umwhere learning is not gonna work
out too well in the future.
We better get a little Asianglancing over here, but anyway,

(11:38):
uh language, preserve yourlanguage, love your language.
Okay, stop throwing it away,stop using these absurd things.
Your, you are Lisa, come on,Lisa.
How I don't know how old youare, but you are how to spell
your Y-O-U-R.
If you forgot the Y and the O,okay, and I know we do that for
what we think it's is easier,it's easier for you because

(12:00):
you've already forgotten how tospell the word, but for me, I've
got to think how would Imisspell a word to make it
shorter?
So I gotta think about it, allright, instead of just using a
language that we were given, andI mean, and and this language,
read a book.
I challenge you all, everyone,pick up a book that was uh uh

(12:22):
not nothing scientific, a novelwritten in 1880, and read it.
You're gonna have trouble,you're not gonna know half of
the words, you won't understand.
The syntax will be beyond youryou think that way.
Okay, we've lost it.
And now, okay, we've lost it.
We've lost by over 50% of ourworking vocabulary is gone.
All right.

(12:42):
So, whatever we have left,preserve it, man.
What do you you want you know wedon't know how to add and
subtract anymore, right?
You know that the clerk at thestore without without their
their device, whatever they'reusing, would not know how to
give you change.
You know that, right?
Yeah, you know that peoplearen't learning how to do that
anymore.
You know that we're not learninghow to write.
All right, we're learning how totype, which means we're

(13:03):
completely okay.
So when you lose cursive and youlose that, that on any
anything's that was written inthe ancient, ancient, you know,
more than uh before Gutenberg,before the press, before the
printing press, that uh put intouh um you know a digital format,
uh into a written format, aprinted format rather than

(13:26):
cursive.
Anything that wasn't will belost to you.
So we're gonna lose all thathistory.
So so we're gonna loseknowledge, all right.
Already we're gonna lose thatknowledge because we can't read
it.
And our working vocabulary isgetting smaller and smaller, and
our so by by by we understand by2040, we will be uh the majority
of uh uh English speaking peoplewill be functionally illiterate.

(13:48):
You'll be able to read signs,probably, how to go over here,
how to do that, you know, andhow to, you know, but that's it.
Nothing of recur requiringcomplex thought.
So preserve your language andstop doing this stuff, you know.
Don't do that stuff.
How are you?
No, no, e R E Y O U.
Come on.
Is that hard?
That's hard, that's difficult.

(14:10):
Is that gonna really like screwup your day?
You're not gonna have time to dowhat?
To scroll?
Come on, save the language.
That literacy is, you know, whenthe own the literacy illiteracy
and they own the knowledge,you're a slave.
So you guys are walking intoslavery, volunteering.
Yay! Yeah, I don't need to speakor read or anything.

(14:31):
I just all I need to do is eatand play games.
All right, well, that's not it.
That's not it.
So preserve our language, youguys.
Okay.
So, what are your thoughts onpearl powder?
Benefits bone health, immunehealth.
See, all these words you'respelling, Lisa, like the word
essential benefits.
I mean, calcium carbonate andwhy you are should not be

(14:53):
difficult, okay.
You guys, I'm I'm gonna do thisbecause come on, it's a
language, this is your literacy,this is your mind, this is who
you are, okay?
Or not who you are, but it'syou're the image, and you know,
I'm not gonna get into all that,but you know, the mind is uh is
our is a very an important tool,and it's also our most uh a
terminal trap.

(15:14):
All right, so you've got toprotect it and take care of your
mind.
So, anyway, this bone uh pearlpowder.
Um, you're using topic on yourskin and eyes, but we'd like to
try ingesting it for morebenefits, but a bit worried.
Ingredient states aluminum,iron, sodium, calcium,
phosphate.
Yeah, well, okay, very true.
It it things.

(15:34):
So, and I understand you'reconcerned because um we we
certainly don't want to ingestany more aluminum since they're
dropping it on us at night whenwe sleep, but we've got enough
nano uh aluminum, nanoparticlesof aluminum.
However, we're so uh so so wasit, yeah.
So you're you're you're correct.
Um, so pearl powder, as you allknow what pearls are, right?

(15:54):
So pearls are really the a pro aproduct of these uh creatures
that are mollusks, um, and youknow, they've been used for
jewelry, but they've also beenused for health benefits uh in
China all the way back to likethe I guess you know, way back
in the Song Song DynastyNorthern Song, Song Dynasty, the
northern part, like a long timeago.

(16:15):
They've been around for a while,it's been around for a while.
Then the then pretty muchJapanese took over and and the
most of the pearls were had beenuh harvested in Japan.
Now they're harvested worldwideuh and used.
And so now they've got um youknow the technology to make to
to grind it up into finenano-sized particles and stuff
like that.
But remember, they've been used,they it's been used for

(16:37):
thousands of years.
So one thing there um to keep inmind is that um Lisa and
everybody, and that is if it'sif something is of traditional
Chinese, Ayurvedic, any of theancient indigenous uh healing
disciplines, um, they're right.
Because listen, it's withstoodthe test the test of time.

(16:59):
If it's been used for a thousandyears, that means it's working.
Otherwise, it's not gonna beused.
That it's not gonna be used.
Well, people were practicalbefore before we be we became
uh, you know, uh so before wewere idiots, the pre-idiot days,
we were actually uh intelligentand practical, and we wouldn't
keep doing something if itdidn't work because there was no
such thing as advertising or oryou know, or people making

(17:21):
profits.
There was none of that kind ofweirdness going on, right?
And so people did things becausethey worked or they didn't.
So here's a treatment that'sbeen our or or or uh just a way
of of living your life um thatincluded these kinds of things,
you know.
Um, I guess we'd call themmedicinal in our current word,
wording terminology, but um forthousands of years.

(17:43):
So if they're if they've beenused for thousands of years,
they're right.
So in that regard, I wouldn'tworry about what something I
wouldn't I wouldn't be concernedwith that.
And then when we look, forexample, if you looked at um you
know what's in uh your body, uhwe've got small amounts of most,

(18:04):
well not most, but I uh aboutyou know a good portion of the
periodic table is in our body,our body is made up.
When you drink, when you thinkof the people that are living
for up to 150, 160 years up, theHunzas uh and the uh the
Georgians of up, you know, andthey drink what the water they
drink from this from the freshstreams uh and the springs and

(18:28):
the streams, uh they callglacier milk.
And the reason they call itglacier milk is because it's
it's got kind of a creamy, it'snot it's not it's not clear,
it's got like a creamy look toit because it's full of
minerals, and they're drinkingthat.
And they and it's these mineralsthat are like we often, not
often, we always talk aboutvitamins, we talk about
phytonutrients and stuff likethat, and we pay very little

(18:51):
attention to minerals.
And what we need to understandabout minerals in regards to
nutrients is that the mineralsare actually function as um like
the batteries of enzymes.
And remember, there enzymes arewhat are how life happens, how
biological life happens.
Enzymes are how they happen, andthe reason they happen that way,

(19:15):
um the the the the reason umhappen that way is that metals,
metals, minerals, metal metals,have um the form that they're in
is that they have the ability tocarry electrons, to carry
charge, to carry energy.
And so that's what they do, allright.
And um so they bring in theenergy.

(19:35):
So without the for example, wethink of glutathione as
transferase in you.
Well, it's an enzyme that allowsglutathione to be recycled,
right?
Because you don't make it newevery time.
You you recycle it.
Why do you why do you recycleit?
Because as soon as glutathionedoes its job, what it's supposed
to do, which is to um neutralizea free radical, once it does
that, it's lost the ability todo that because it gave away its

(19:57):
electrons.
It needs to get a new set whenit gets it from this enzyme,
glutathione as transferase.
That keeps it doing, keepsglutathione active.
But that won't work withoutselenium.
If selenium is not there, it'snot gonna, it just that enzyme
doesn't function.
And every enzyme has differentminerals that are associated
with it, and without them, theenzymes won't work.

(20:17):
And you consider that there's 37sextillion, 21 zero uh
reactions, uh chemical reactionsgoing on in our bodies every
second, right?
And those are all mediated byenzymes, and you realize that,
and then you realize all theseminerals.
So that's how important theminerals are, and we overlook
them.
So, yeah, you don't want largedoses of some of this stuff, but

(20:37):
they're part of uh the earth.
And when we get it in thesesmall amounts, and that they
they're they're not an issue,they're not an issue.
What is an issue is breathing inor getting uh being dropped,
having this dropped on you whenyou sleep and large humongous
amounts of it, all right, orjust during the during the day
with what they call achemtrails, chemtrails or
chemtrails.

(20:58):
That's just a that's a nice wayof saying the government
approved the corporate,something like that.
Anyway, um so anyway, I wouldn'tdon't worry about those small
little things there.
So and uh because it's in smallamount, but it's the some of the
most important parts of or theyou know, so why would the pearl
why why does pearl uh powder whywhy is it so important?

(21:22):
It's got a lot of protein.
Okay, so unlike bone, which hascalcium carbonate also, um, it's
got many other um minerals, andum, you know, you know, calcium
carbonate is a mineral.
It's calcium, is it's the cationand the carbonate is the anion,
and they come together and theyso they and they form a compound
uh made of minerals, right?

(21:42):
So they're uh and then becauseyou've got a carbon compound
there, it becomes an organic, anorganic compound because you got
carbon, calcium carbonate, yougot the carbon in there, now
it's uh organic, organic, and weare organic uh beings.
Organic means that we are ourour our um cellular structure is
carbon-based.
And these machines we'relooking, we're talking through

(22:04):
these the the the uh we're nowcalling it AI, they're all
silicon-based.
So there were different kinds ofwe're gonna call them life
forms.
I don't know, I don't think so.
Um, but um, because you knowthere's certain qualities of
life that need to be met, and uhthey're not doing it.
Like eating, breathing, you'vegot to exchange with the with
the with with with theenvironment.

(22:26):
You've got to somehow take inenergy uh uh and metabolize it
and use it, and then you becomean energy source for other, and
you're part of an ecosystem ofenergy exchange.
So that's not what thesesilicon-based guys are doing,
because they're getting pluggedin, it's all artificial, it's
not uh there's nothing, itdoesn't exist without
intervention, it doesn't existin the natural world.

(22:47):
So anyway, um, so also in thepearl powder is are a lot lots
of proteins and amino acids, soit's really good.
So it's been found not onlytopically for for wound healing
and for for beauty.
I mean, uh um there's one kindof um, you know, some of the
pearls have this blue bluishlook to them, and they've been
doing they've done some umstudies with that, and it turns

(23:08):
out that blue is what givesKorean women, um Korean women
are are known to have glass,beautiful skin.
Uh it's almost bluish, and it'suh a lot of that is from the
pearl pearl powder.
So it's it's it's cosmeticallybeen in use in Asia for you know
thousands of years, all right.
Um and and and about about thatthe Korean women with the blue,

(23:32):
with that blue, uh, what do youcall it?
Uh the blue blue, it has like ablue light effect.
Um, they actually did randomizedplacebo-controlled studies with
it.
So it's like it meets all thequal qualifications of a
scientific of a that the and apeer-reviewed and and published
um studies that glass glassskin, um, which seems to be a
goal now in cosmetics.

(23:54):
So anyway, um, that's that.
But also ingest ingesting, itturns out that it's uh the
because of the the kinds ofamino acids that are in there,
it's very helpful for um uh uhfunction as strong antioxidants.
Um, so they've been finding ithelpful with uh
neurodegenerative conditionssuch as Parkinson's and
Alzheimer's, and so it's it inthat regard.

(24:15):
And for all of us that don'thaven't met the criteria for the
diagnoses, because the diagnosisis going to give you a name of a
disease.
There's no thing out there as adisease, there's just you're
you're you're you're havingneuro, neuro, neurological
nerves, degeneration.
They're not functioning verymuch because they're being
they're getting toxic,neurodegeneration.

(24:37):
And you can call, well, if it'sgot these kind of qualities,
we'll call it Parkinson's.
If it's got these, we'll call itAlzheimer's.
And then sometimes we don'tknow.
We might call it ALS or youknow, amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis, or we might call itum uh multiple sclerosis.
We're gonna give it all thesedifferent names as if those are
things, but they're not things.
I hope you can understand that.
Okay, so anyway, it's it's beenfound useful in that, and it's

(25:01):
found useful in other ulcers,and so it's uh it's there's a
lot of use because of justbecause of its antioxidant
ability, it's uh got a lot uhgood, it's a good source of
important amino acids and um andminerals, right?
So it's very good.
Here's the problem the problemis that when you don't know what
you're getting when you buy aproduct, that's that's the

(25:23):
problem because they um you knowyou know, unfortunately, what
you know, we're talking aboutbusiness, right?
Because it's people that areproducing these things, um, are
doing it in large amounts,right?
And they're gonna use fillerstuff that is going to be um the
lowest cost, right?
And that's that's really theproblem.

(25:43):
And and the pro and the and theonly way to know, because it
remember these will boost yourimmune system, they'll boost uh
your immunity.
They they're powerfulantioxidants, they'll do all
that stuff, but they're gonnalose they're gonna use some the
the the least costly substances.
That's the problem.
They might have some of highquality products.

(26:04):
So that's it.
And and the only way it canreally be tested is with very
special equipment that theremost most people are not gonna
do.
So if you can somehow trust thesource that you're getting this
from, okay, trust the source,and you know, somehow you know,
you know that maybe it's afamily business or or or or it's

(26:25):
been in China or Japan orwhatever or Korea for for
generations and you trust it,then then yes, for sure, for
sure.
Because it's been used in iningested, been ingested for a
long time.
Now, guess what?
I mean, this is gonna be a shockuh um to there's a group of you
out small sub-popul, I'm I hopeit's small subpopulation, that

(26:48):
are gonna be may be shocked bythis, but you can also get all
this stuff from I'm sorry.
Oh, vegetables and fruit.
Yeah, I know, not corpses.
You could maybe get some of thisbenefit from a corpse if you ate
the entire corpse from nose totail and drank the blood and
chewed on the bones, ground upthe bones, ground up the

(27:10):
cartilage and ingest it, or youcould just eat fruit and
vegetables and get it all, okay?
Because how do we get a mineral?
How do you if there's calcium inthe ground?
Are you gonna pick up um somesoil and eat it?
Nah, you could, but you're notgonna be able to absorb much of
it.
It's not bioavailable.
How does it become bioavailable?
It gets picked up by the plants.
The plants either put an organicacid on it or an amino acid,

(27:33):
it's either one or the other,but an amino acid is an organic
acid, but other non-amino acidorganic acids and amino acids,
and they chelate it.
Now you'll get that mineral whenyou when you eat the when you
eat the plant, uh, the mineralsthat are in there will get into
your body, and that's how we getthem in.
We get them in through plants.
That's it.
Okay, so here's a question.
I I got I don't usually answerthese questions, but I got this

(27:55):
is uh for Yeshua as the son ofGod, is your name, I guess.
What kind of medical doctor roledo you work?
I don't know what that questionmeans, Yeshua.
What kind of medical doctor roledo I work?
I'm not sure what that means.
Yeah.
If you're asking me, what do Ido as a doctor?
Is that your question?
You are you concerned that whatI'm saying might not be uh

(28:19):
anyway.
Um, medical school did aresidency in internal medicine,
practiced for many years, 40plus years, integrative
oncology, internal medicine,intensive care, cardiac care.
Is that okay?
Yeshua, hope so.
Thank you.
I I get that a lot, I don'tunderstand it.
It's why because I don't speak,I'm not wearing a white coat and

(28:41):
I'm not speaking BS.
I just won't do that, excuse me.
I won't admit patients tohospitals or anything like that.
I'm not alone.
Look at Lee Merritt.
A lot of a lot of doctors outthere who are awake, all right.
So anyway, so the pearl so whatI'm saying is that the pearl
powder, if you can trust thesource, is very good.
And if it's added to any kind offood, then uh because it's been

(29:04):
the remember, it's been done forthousands of years, so it's good
stuff.
It's organic, it's an organicproduct, it comes from a from a
creature, from an animal.
All right.
So uh it's not a um anartificially produced substance.
So it's got organ, it's gotorganic matter, it's amazing.
Uh so that's it now.
Um, so that was Lisa.
So Lisa, yes, go for it.

(29:25):
Get but find a good source.
Maria, uh, my husband has beendiagnosed with left malignant
epithelia, epithelial pleuralmesothelioma in May of 2025.
He had has had drains, not acandidate for immunotherapy or
chemo.
He's 80 years old, and on twomilligrams dexamethasone, having

(29:45):
some herbal medications as wellfrom homeopaths.
He is booked for mistletoeinjections.
Please advise.
Now, I think this sounds very,very familiar.
I think we talked about thislast week to some degree.
Um, because I this uh there'sthe all these elements are are
very similar, right?
What did I see the other day?
I mean, yes.
Oh, anyway, so anyway, wheneveryou listen, and I think I

(30:09):
mentioned too when I respondedthe first time, whenever you
then whenever they say, I'msorry, there's nothing we can do
or uh you're not a candidatefor, you should say, you know,
hold up your uh your your openarms to the heavens.
Thank God.
Thank God.
When they can't, when thereain't nothing they can do, you
got a chance.
Because if you because otherwisethey've already got you

(30:29):
linguistically, they've threwout their web and they're with
their words and they got you.
They're pulling you in with fearfrom these words.
Okay, I'm just telling you,these are their words are not um
you might think this is extreme,but they're 100% a lie, 100%
false.
100% false.

(30:49):
100% false.
None of it is real, except whenthey're speaking about the
fundamental basic sciences, thenthose are real.
And they're talking aboutbiology, that's real.
Physiology, that's real.
Um talking about the chemistry,that's real.
Organic chemistry, that's real.
Biochemistry, that's real.
That's all real.
Anatomy, physiology, all that'sreal.

(31:10):
That's absolutely real stuff.
But that's not what they'redealing with, they're dealing
with uh syntheticpharmacological.
And in order to do that, theyuse words to tell you that your
deviation from health has got aname and it's a thing that got
into you, and you got to get ridof it.
The only way you're going to getrid of it is with this poison.

(31:30):
And that's what that's basicallywhat they're doing.
That's all a lie.
It's not true at all.
They made it up.
Biology is true, physiology istrue, anatomy is true,
biochemistry is true.
That stuff is true.
And then when you weave in thetruth with this stuff, then it
sounds real.
And that's how you get stuck.
But I'm just telling you.
No, bone broth.
Okay, you don't need bone broth.
If you look up the ingredientsof bone broth, you're gonna find

(31:53):
that it it's all comes in.
You get the same thing from afrom uh from plants.
How did the bone get it?
The bone got it because theanimal ate the plant.
And the animal and and whenyou're eating bone broth, you're
certainly not eating the bonebroth of dogs, right?
Are you eating are you are youeating lion or tiger or or uh
rat bone broth?

(32:14):
What bones are you using?
Okay, they're usually uh animalsthat are um well it used to be
animals that were uh vegetarianvegan, like you know, cows and
and stuff like that.
Now they're you they use I thinkwith bone broth is used mostly
with chickens.
And if you saw what chickensate, you probably wouldn't ever
eat a chicken again because theyeat each other's feces, they eat
things, anything.
And you because how do I know?

(32:35):
Because we we had chickens, umnot to eat them or anything like
that, but uh we uh we we didn'tthink it through clearly.
Mean I didn't think it throughclearly.
We had you know, there's way toomany in in Arizona.
Okay, there are these areasthrough Phoenix and Mesa and all
that where they have scorpions.

(32:55):
If you live here two housesover, you're not in that belt,
and there's no scorpions.
If you we were in the belt, sothere were these like thousands
of these scorpions.
So um, anyway, chickens lovethem, but problem is I didn't
look into it enough, is that umscorpions are nocturnal and
chickens are dire, so they don'tmeet very often.

(33:16):
So we had a bunch of chickensanyway.
But I I saw how but they ate,and uh you are what you eat, so
here these guys are eatingfeces, huh?
All right, flies eat feces too,and I don't eat flies, so that's
the bone broth.
So most of the bone broth ischicken nowadays, guys.
So if you have beef, bone broth,but by the way, where did the

(33:37):
beef?
By the way, there are no I'venever seen a beef.
I've looked for beefs, butthere's no beefs out there.
Now I saw some cows and I sawsome sheep, but I never saw a
mutton.
I don't know a mutton andnuggets.
I was looking all over the farmfor nuggets.
I didn't see them walking aroundat all.
Why do we use those words?
Because we commodify life, wecommodify it so that we can eat

(33:58):
it.
All right, and uh we we we we wewe we remove any element of of
uh of uh uh of love and lifefrom it so that we can turn it.
I don't know.
I I can't I don't even know howsick we are.
Carnivorous is really nodifferent than um um uh what's

(34:21):
the word cannibalism.
In fact, any argument in favorof eating animals, that same
argument can be used for eatinghumans.
Because really, you want to getyou want to get the best meat
for human, your best meat, eatthe human, the humans got the
meat you want, right?
That's what you want.
You want all the stuff in youbecause you want to be human, so

(34:42):
raise humans and eat them.
That's the you know, it becauseany argument that's gonna say I
gotta eat animals because blahblah blah, make it a human,
right?
You're gonna get the best,right?
So let's use human bone broth ifwe're gonna go for it.
All right.
So, what I'm saying is that thebones got that because the the
the bones were part of theanimal that was standing in the

(35:02):
grass and eating the grass, andthat's how they got the strong
bones.
So instead of using a middlemanor a middle animal, go right to
the source, right?
Wholesale rather than uh retail.
Okay, you don't need amiddleman.
All right, so you guys have tojoin.
You listen, we got all thesewonderful questions, and I want
to ask you.

(35:22):
So please join these groups sowe can interact now.
So, Maria, so we talked aboutthis last last week, and I want
you to understand something.
Your uh your your husband's beendiagnosed.
They put another one, they put aname on it.
They your husband's no longeryour husband, he is now a
malignant epithelioid, pleuralmesothelioma, which sounds

(35:44):
really important and smart, butit's not, it doesn't mean much
at all.
Doesn't mean anything.
You know what it means?
Epithelioid is the cell type inthe pleura, but the pleura lines
the the uh the the lungs and thethe pleura is how the the lung
is attached to the chest wall,and there's a little bit of
fluid in there that allows forthe movement to be without
friction and and and that youknow, like all moving parts in

(36:06):
the body, and so it's got uhchronically fermenting cells in
that area, and it turns out thata lot of times what's involved
in the uh um in this um uh is uhasbestos.
So asbestos that was that's beenthat's been inhaled, and it kind
of because it's it's very smalllittle sharp fibers, they work

(36:29):
they work their way out, and uhthey can get right to the right
to the ends into your your uhpleura, right?
So that maybe that's how so andthey can cause that kind of
damage to the mitochondria, andyou well you wind up with uh
chronically fermenting cells.
So that's what's happening.
But oh, you don't have to stayand call that, you just have
some chronically fermentingcells there.
So your husband needs to do whateverybody needs to do with not

(36:50):
only chronically fermentingcells, but any condition that
deviates from health.
If you want to be restored tohealth, there's it's really
simple.
You got to get rid of anytoxins, and we're we're getting
and it's not like, oh, I did thedetox.
So it's just like saying, I uh Ihad a bowel movement yesterday,
I'm done for the month.
What would you done?
No, you're not.

(37:10):
That was yesterday, there'stoday.
Okay, so you got to do it everyit's in other words, detox is
not something you did, it'ssomething you do.
You gotta keep detoxing becauseyou keep toxing voluntarily and
not voluntarily, you're gettingtoxified.
If you live in the UnitedStates, you get it day and night
when you're sleeping.
Don't worry, they're gonna takecare of you.

(37:31):
So maybe the one benefit.
Now, I wonder with the airportsclosing if they're still gonna
be flying at night to uh draw uptheir goodies on us.
Anyway, uh your husband, 80years old.
That's fine.
I have a uh a friend of mine uhis 97.

(37:51):
He's running around, he sprintsevery day.
Sprints, okay.
Um, Fred Beeshe lives at StatenIsland.
I think he still lives there.
Um and uh been eating uncookedplant food for 57 years since he
was 40.
97.
It's like talking to a30-year-old, sharp, runs, he's

(38:14):
running right, hasn't reallyslowed down his work, takes
works with people all over theworld, helps him get healthy.
So anyway, so 80's young forhim.
He he's wow, I remember what Ialmost 20 years ago.
So, in other words, age, age,when we think of age, when we
what we're thinking, what wereally mean, but the thing that
we think oh, he's aging.

(38:35):
We we change that with gettingaccumulating toxins.
The more toxins you accumulate,the more you're gonna have
dysfunction of the physiology,right?
Because your physiology is gonnaget clogged up with toxins, so
it's it's not age, it's not age,all right.
In Vilcom Bambaum at the elder'stable, you've got to be a
hundred to have to earn a seatat the 98 years old.

(38:57):
You just I'm sorry, you're tooyoung.
99, nope, wait until next year,buddy.
Too young.
So you gotta be 100 to sit atthe table, all right.
So we've got to change that,okay.
They've got us, you know, we'reborn with into a system that
tells us, look, health isimpossible and disease is
inevitable.
You're gonna get sick, and so wesay, Okay, wow, I better get

(39:18):
some insurance.
So you you insurance, and alsoif you're healthy, you gotta
you're healthy.
I better go to the doctor andfind out what the hell's going
on.
So you go for your well baby andyour well child checkups, and
the doctors are really good,they're gonna make sure that
you're not gonna be well becauseyou're gonna give you injunction
inoculation to protect you abouta mythological creature that's
gonna get you in the future,maybe.

(39:39):
And if we give you this in, thenthen that that creature won't
find you.
Yeah, okay.
You realize well how wrapped upwe are in linguistic this these
have got fear.
We're we're we're fear zombies,we're afraid of everything.
Uh the next corner, right?
There's a you know, uh diseases,man.
You just look over there, righton that doorstep there.

(40:01):
I think I see some diabetes, andthere's a there was an uh uh an
ALS right just on on the otherside of that brick.
An ALS, right?
And uh yeah, and be careful.
And there's heart disease justall over the place.
I mean, we I'm gonna get us,right?
They're gonna get us.
So I'll get a shot that's gonnaprotect me from heart disease.
Oh, and when I get sick, uh,what drugs should I take?

(40:23):
Okay, so please, you gotta getout of this.
If as long as you're using theirwords, okay, and if you're gonna
go get tested, you've they I'mgonna jump on and get a pet
scan.
Yeah, they got they got you.
You got they got you.
You need a pet scan why?
Because you believe theirnonsense, their story, their
mythologies.
Remember, MD, by the way,whoever was asking me what kind
of doctor I was, MD ismythological doctor.
So I went and studied all themyths, the myths, all right.

(40:44):
So keep in mind that, um, uh,Maria, that your husband, 80
years old, young.
All right, I hope he's young.
I'm almost there.
So uh, what do you want to do?
You've got to go to a biologicaldentist, you've got to find a
biological dentist, and I talkto you've got to go IAOMT.
We talk about that every week.
Uh, International Association ofMedical Toxicology.

(41:09):
IAOMT.
I don't know exactly what it's,I forgot what the acronym stands
for, but uh, I think it'sInternational Association of
Medical Toxicology, I guess so.
Um, something like that, close.
Uh, but they train, and so youwant someone who's certified, so
they've trained them andcertified them um in uh in
SMART, which is the safemercury, the safe removal of

(41:30):
mercury in the mouth.
Mercury is a poison, all right?
Uh, and uh it's extremely toxicpoison.
I mean, the warning cans onpregnant for pregnant women
eating too too much tuna fish,and yet they stick it in your
mouth.
I gotcha.
It's the only safe place.
I mean, don't yeah, the fish,not safe, but in your mouth,

(41:51):
safe, don't put a word up.
Uh, but anyway, so but there'snot only the safe removal of
mercury, but the biologicaldentist is with all sorts of
things like biocompatibility,all the materials that are you
know, dental materials with8,000.
There's all many, manymaterials.
And you may, even though mostpeople are okay with this
particular material, you mayhave an idiosyncratic reaction

(42:11):
with it cause problems.
So they test your blood to uhthe whole full array of of
dental materials to find out ifyou have any incompatibility,
they won't use it.
So that's you know, it's theycall it biological dentistry.
I call it logical dentistry,it's just logical.
So um, and they don't put anymetals in your mouth because
metals are um, if you have morethan uh one metal and you have

(42:33):
salt, which is a salt solution,which is saliva, you've got a
battery, so you've gotelectrical currents causing all
kinds of problems.
All right, and there are no puremetals, they don't put gold in
your mouth, they put an alloy,they don't put titanium in your
mouth, they they don't usetitanium implants.
There's titanium makes up 40% ofthat implant.
The rest is got stuff, includingaluminum, in larger amounts than
you're gonna get in the propart.

(42:53):
Propart is someone was askingwhether pro part is real, it's
it's a powerful antioxidant,it's really good, it's good for
your skin.
Make you get the right one,you'll have the skin of a Korean
woman that according to thisstudy I was looking at.
But um, yeah, all right.
So um it's stuff.
You just gotta trust the sourcethat who's being all right, so

(43:14):
that they're not because they'renot using cheap filler, and
they're you know, you're you'regetting the real deal, and that
that's what we're talking aboutwith that.
So, but anyway, that yourhusband says needs to go to a
hot biological dentist, okay?
Get that clean taken care of.
Then to do a uh do a cleanse, doa juice cleanse, and do that
juice cleanse for what uh youknow as long as six weeks, keep

(43:35):
doing it.
Get get a good recipe, which youcan get, you know, um, from us,
uh, you know, celery, cucumber,uh, kale, spinach, lemon, apple.
Uh you can put in parsley, uh,you can put in uh anything you
want, you know, and and make ittaste good.
You don't have to worry, don'tworry about some.
If you're using organic foodsand you put in a little bit of
fruit to or enough fruit to makeit okay and delicious, don't

(43:57):
worry that you need it.
Remember, carbohydrates are notthe enemy.
Carbohydrates are not going,they're absolutely necessary.
They're one of the threemacronutrients that you need to
live.
And they're not just fuel,they're part of our structure,
they're part of our immunesystem, they're part of our our
our cells.
You know, they're calledglycoproteins, and you know, so
they're uh they're part of Imean our DNA is a sugar, deoxy,

(44:21):
deoxy acid, ribose is sugar,RNA, DNA.
So the whole idea that sugarsand carbs are bad, it's just
another more nonsense.
They're necessary.
What's not necessary with any ofthem is too much.
Protein, protein, protein,protein, that's my mantra.
Protein, protein, protein,protein, protein.
No, no, you need about five,seven percent in your diet.

(44:45):
Yeah.
Why would I say such a thing?
Why would I say that you needfive to seven percent?
Because that's how much, that'sthe percentage of protein in
your mother's milk.
And that mother's milk wasdesigned to be a complete food
for a ant who's going to doubleits size in a short amount of
time to become viable so that itcan be weaned.

(45:07):
All right.
In other words, in order todouble, because teenagers don't
double, they don't go from fourfeet to eight feet, all right.
So you don't double.
We we go rapidly, teenagers, butnot as rapidly as a baby.
So a baby's growing more rap, sothe time in our lives when we're
growing the most rapidly, and itcan be and it's being uh
supported, fueled by milk, andthat milk, which is the perfect

(45:29):
food to allow for the greatestgrowth sport of our life, has
five percent protein.
So I say, so this is not youguys, this is not stuff I make
up.
This is just the way it is.
This is biology, right?
It's the way it is.
Five percent.
Well, you know, more is better,not true.
More is better is true withnothing.

(45:49):
Well, yeah, you've got moremoney.
Okay, yeah, right.
Get more money, get more.
You're gonna get more and moretrapped and lost.
You're gonna get a lot, you'regonna get more things, and
you're gonna think you're gonnaget lost.
Okay, more oxygen is important.
No, too much.
You put to put a mask of 100%oxygen on, you're gonna get
emphysema within a few weeks.
Yeah, keep it up.
Not even a few weeks, a couple,one, two, yeah, good two weeks.

(46:11):
100% oxygen, forget it.
You start to get fibrosis andand uh water.
I need more water, try drinkinga couple gallons a day, see what
happens.
Okay, so in other words, there'snothing that more is better.
What it need is the amount thatwe need and nothing more and
nothing less.
But the animals don't have tothink about that, right?
They're not out therecalculating how much to drink
and eat and all that.

(46:31):
Why?
Because they operating under theauspices of instinct.
We gave that up.
We jumped, and not gave it up.
We was beaten out of us by ourparents.
No, stop, don't, no, stop,don't, no, stop, stop, don't,
no, stop, don't.
Do it this way.
You sit like this, you littleboys don't cry.
Little girls don't sit likethis, blah blah blah blah blah
blah.
And if you're in Japan, it's uhif you're uh this is the way you

(46:54):
act, and so we learn how to act,we learn how to eat.
So none of what humans do isnatural.
Everything we do is fromculture.
We're enculturated, um, uhhybrid mutants, is what we are.
Okay, so we don't know what todo.
So we've got to calculate it.
But the animals don't have toworry about it, they're not
gonna take too much of anything.
What their instincts will allowthem to do is to eat, drink, and

(47:15):
live their lives according withtheir biological requirements,
right?
They'll go to diurnal, they'llgo to sleep when the sun goes
down.
If they're nocturnal, they'llwake up when the sun goes down.
That's just that's that's whatthey'll do.
We won't.
We violate every part of ournatural biology, and I wonder
why I'm sick.
You know, I really uh I do mybest, I a good dietary nonsense.

(47:35):
You wouldn't be sick, youcouldn't be sick if you were
living in harmony with yourbiological requirements.
You couldn't be, it's notpossible.
Well, it's in our genes,nothing's in your genes, all
right?
Unless we're talking about bluegenes, there ain't nothing in
your genes.
Because if you made it to firstgrade and you're sat in class,
uh, yeah, you're all good.
You're good.
Your genes are okay.

(47:56):
But if you never made it tothat, means that that's when
those are those of us that havehave that have problems.
Okay, so anyway, I won't.
All right, well, we're back, Iimagine.
So I don't know where.
Uh are we back, everybody?
All right, cool.

(48:16):
So I you know, I I love it.
The technology just has made mylife so fantastic.
By the way, uh, I don't knowwhere I where you didn't hear.
Where where did I where did Idon't even what the hell was I
talking about?
This stuff is really this thisis not cool.
I I'm not gonna use I don't likewant to use restream anymore.

(48:36):
It wasn't my microphone.
Go away.
Where is that?
I hate it.
Anyway, I was talking to Maria.
I'm not sure if she got what didyou got, Maria, and what you
didn't get, but the point was uhthat um Maria with your husband.
The point is 80 years old is notis not old.
Remember, these are relativeterms, so a 30-year-old is old

(48:59):
to a 15-year-old.
Okay, that is so it's the degreeof toxicity, and the degree of
toxicity, uh the the degree oftoxicity is how we define age.
We think age, we oh, it'sbecause of his age.
No, it's because of histoxicity.
Because as I said, I have afriend who's 97, and he's
there's no no no cognitivedecline, no anything, no

(49:23):
anything.
So it's not in your genes, okay.
The only thing in uh youremember, so toxicity.
So that's it.
So what do you know?
Your husband's not old.
You get he's toxic, you gottaclean out his toxins.
And the reason that this thesechronically fermenting cells
that develop is because oftoxins.
That's why they develop.
They develop as an adaptiveresponse because it's the only
way that the cells can survivebecause they've been they've

(49:44):
lost the ability to use oxygen.
So that's what they do.
It's an adaptive response, it'snot a thing that got into you
that you got to get rid of.
Okay, that's the whole idea.
See, that's part of thelinguistic trap that gets you uh
running down the wrong place.
You're running down with all ofyour heart and soul down an
alley chasing a phantom.

(50:04):
You're gonna run down this alleyand chase this phantom that
doesn't exist, and you're gonnashoot him with uh these weapons,
but that him is you.
You're you're shooting yourselfwith weapons, thinking it's him.
You have to understand this isan extremely uh clever.
I uh this level of this ofdeception and um and entrapment

(50:29):
of the human uh psyche is canonly be uh at the level of s uh
uh uh of Satan, of satanic.
It's satanic.
It can't there it it's too good.
It works too well.
And you gotta remember, I wantyou to know what this you know
JD Rockefeller did, okay?

(50:49):
You know, I don't they don't Idon't know if they look at his
IQ or anything like this, buthe's gotta be the the greatest
genius, not great in the senseof good, but the great the most
incredible genius that everlived because he played chess,
four-dimensional chess,including uh time through time
from about 1885 until nightuntil 2020.

(51:11):
That what happened in 2020 wasthe great oax.
All right, that okay, set allthe pieces up perfectly
perfectly perfectly.
How perfectly well in 2020 ittook six weeks to shut down the
world.
That's pretty damn clever,especially when you've been

(51:34):
planning it, and that's what ittook.
So, anyway, and part of gettingus there was this.
This was it.
We're entrapped, we're ensnared,we're caught in the spider.
The spider's called rock theweb, the Rockefeller Web.
That's got you running down thealley, shooting at yourself
because you think thismythological creature who

(51:55):
happens to be you it's insane.
Anyway, these the the theseadaptive responses are because
of the toxins, period.
Okay, gotta get rid of thetoxins, gotta get rid of the
toxins.
And when?
Daily.
That's why you don't eat for atleast 18 hours a day.
Because when you're not eating,your body's cleaning.

(52:15):
And if it's well hydrated andwell nourished, during those 18
hours of not eating, you're set.
All right.
All right.
So listen, Tim, I see complexregional pain syndrome.
Yes, I dealt a lot with that inNew York when I was in New York.
Um, but um, yeah.
So uh you gotta contact me, youknow, you know, privately and

(52:36):
stuff because like this thisregional pain syndrome is too
complex to talk about right now,all right?
But it's a horrible, horriblething, and I get it.
I don't know if you guys haveever heard of this, but um a lot
of times it happens from trauma,like someone will get you know,
an accident or whatever, somekind of trauma, and the pain is
just takes over their life, andit involves a whole limb or

(52:57):
whatever.
It's just horrible, horrible.
Uh so Maria and your husband, sohe's got to do that.
And now he's on a dexamethasone.
And instead of that, I think Italked about this last week.
He's on two milligrams ofdexamethesone, you can easily
put him on the and I talkedabout this, I know I did, Maria.
The adrenal rest program, yougotta do so.
You got to go to the website,drlone.com, and get involved.

(53:18):
Okay, get him in this because ifyou're really asking and you
really want this to happen, thendo that.
You can go for mistletoeinjections, they're great as an
adjunct if you're doingeverything else and you're not,
it's not gonna be much help,okay?
You're gonna lose hope.
You're gonna be giving your youknow, more than paying the
money, you're paying your hope.
And then you can say, Well, Itried that, it didn't work.
Well, no, try it alternative,and it's alternative.

(53:39):
Why is it alternative?
It's alternative to theRockefeller, of course.
Any any it's well, it's justnatural, natural, that natural.
You know how people leak peopledenigrate natural.
That's how that natural stuff.
Uh you mean like you mean likelightning and uh the sun and
solar system.
I mean natural stuff is weird,what and uh not you know, okay,

(54:04):
doclorated.com.
Okay, please join them.
Okay, now here.
This is Darwin.
Um, and the topic is parasites.
I've watched all your YouTubevideos, and I just want to
clarify dosing is the correct asper your video.
Fembendazole 222 milligramsthree times a day at
pancure.com.
Ivor McDonald's 12 milligramsthree times a day, prosyguantole

(54:26):
600 milligrams three times aday, tinnidazole 100 milligrams
three times a day, fluconazole100 milligrams twice a day,
nystatin niclosomite, threeweeks and niclosomite.
Right.
You don't give the dosage onthere.
That's 500 three times a day.
Three weeks on, one week off forsix cycles can get acupuncture
meridian testing to confirmremoval.

(54:49):
And I'm absolutely testing toconfirm removal.
It's very confusing, and I'mabsolutely parasites are
consuming my body, and my healthis terrible because of it.
Itchiness, diarrheas, skinconditions, brain fog, pains in
organs, muscles, twitches, andspasms, nausea, fatigue,
pre-diabetes, sleep apnea,terrible heartburn, headaches.

(55:13):
Please help me.
My life is terrible, and Ibarely want to live anymore.
I understand.
I could my sure my elderly momis infected too.
Similar situation.
I researched these medicines,and the dosages online are so
much lower, and not for threeweeks, straight daily, as you
make in your videos.
So I'm confused.
Okay.

(55:33):
I got you, Darwin.
So you're confused.
Well, of course, the lookonline, you're gonna find that
they get it, they're gonna giveyou uh okay.
Now uh Darwin, listen carefully,and everybody else listen
carefully.
And and that this is the truth.
The pharmaceutical industry andthe medical industry, the
industrial complex, know nothingabout health and are not trying

(55:57):
to restore health.
That's not in there, they don'ttalk about it.
They don't even talk about it,they certainly don't teach it.
There's not one course inmedical school on health, not
one course in medical school.
There's a little bit on on diet,which is wrong, right?
It has to do with some bizarrefood pyramid they came up with.

(56:18):
All right, but uh they don'teven give you wrong about
health, they don't even talkabout it, it's not even a
subject, it's not in any medicalschool anywhere, you'll never
find it anything to do withhealth.
Okay, they don't define it, theydon't know what it is, so
they're not trying to restoreyou that.
So if you understand that, thenyou're gonna say, why the hell
would I ever go to a doctor whodoesn't study health, doesn't

(56:39):
learn health, has no, it's notthe goal of the doctor.
The goal is to whack-a-moe withmy symptoms.
You never know, whack-a-mole,whack-a-mole as your little kid,
you're playing whack-a-mole.
Well, whack-a-mole with yoursymptoms.
I got a headache, here, takethis, you know, and you don't
ever take understand what'sgoing on.
Okay, so all of your problemsthat you're discussing, Darwin,

(57:00):
okay.
Um, and I can see your earfeeding, of course you are,
because your yours got so manyuh problems going up, but you've
got to stop and realizesomething.
It's not just parasites.
Okay, it's not just parasites.
And if you and and and and theand the reason you're stuck on
that is because it's part of theRockefeller mindset, is that we

(57:21):
find an enemy and we go after anenemy.
Now, but so let me just talkabout the dosages, first of all.
They don't give you the rightdosages.
When you when you look at thedosages, uh they're absurd.
For example, there's uh aparasite that causes uh
colangeocarcinoma, and it'snumber one uh in the world here

(57:41):
in Thailand.
Colangio is goal, the billibiliary in your bile, the bile
system of your liver.
So it's a part of the liver, soit's CFCs there.
Number one um in the world forwhat they call liver CFCs uh is
in Thailand.
And uh the recommended, and weknow the prosyquantal will take
care of the these particularparasites, and I think the

(58:03):
dosing that they're recommendingis one a day for six or seven
days.
It's like no.
So, what happens when you don'tgive enough?
When you don't give enough andyou're not treating them enough,
is you're underdosing it, thenyou're disturbing them and they
wind up migrating to otherorgans, and now you just spread
it around.
You've got to come on heavy.
So, this is why we do this, allright.

(58:23):
But I don't know your yourcondition and your mother's
condition, I don't know yourliver condition.
So, you can't say you can't juststart all those things right
away.
You've got to get someone tohelp you take a look at your
liver, at least go get a bloodtest.
You can get a blood test withoutgoing to a doctor and and and
get the blood test.
And if you get into our parasitegroup, you'll find out how to do
that.
I don't know exactly myselfwhere you go, but it's in

(58:44):
America.
But there's a place you can goand you can get because our
team, I mean, uh but the membersof our groups have all this
information for each other,they're all helping each other.
So when you join the groups, youget into a special telegram
group, like a closed group thatyou all share information.
But there's a place you can goto blood, get blood testing,
find out how your liver's doing.
If your liver's doing then whenyou can then we can start
digging all these things, butyou've got to be cleansing too.

(59:06):
Your body is all of this stuff.
If you pre-diabetic, you justsaid you're pre-diabetic.
I don't know what that means.
That means what you have someinsulin resistance, but not
completely, or you know, it soyou have to understand the the
the diabetes, which doesn'texist, had the criteria to meet
the diagnostic criteria to bediagnosed with diabetes, the

(59:26):
diabetes melanis type 2 um haschanged.
They use hemoglobin A1C, theyuse uh fasting uh blood
glucoses, um, but they don't useuh fasting insulins for some
reason.
So anyway, but but but but thefact that you so pre probably
means that your insulin resist,they they've discovered somehow,

(59:48):
I don't know, your hemoglobinA1C with 5.6, almost up.
Whatever they have found to saythat is not to do nothing to do
with parasites, it has to dowith diet.
So, Darwin, you've got to docleansing and all that stuff,
and then find and get on toantiparasitics, yes, but don't
think that's it, because it'severything.
You've probably got no doubt, uhyou've got heavy metals, you've

(01:00:09):
got uh exposure to environmentaltoxins, your diet is probably
not at all near healthy, yoursleep, you know, all this stuff,
your whole lifestyle has got tochange.
That's how you're gonna getrelief.
That's how you're gonna get backto being uh happy again about
living and and and and lookforward to waking up in the
morning.
And yeah, that's what's gonnahappen.
With all, you know, all of thesespasm and twitches are not due

(01:00:31):
to parasites, they're due to youknow, dip uh nutritional
deficiencies and stuff thatyou're getting from eating
inadequate foods and stuff likethat.
And yes, parasites are in thereand they're caused, we gotta
deal with them, but we've got todeal with it all, otherwise,
we're not gonna be successful.
Just join the group.
Come on, Darwin.
If you sound like it's uh yourparasite problem is really
significant, so um, but it'snever just this one thing.

(01:00:55):
Okay, now uh, because uh um andagain, that's what Rockefeller
wants us to do.
You have to understand that thething is if you we've got to I
the diagnosis is identifying theenemy, it's naming the enemy.
Now, now that we've named theenemy, we've got a tool chest
here.
We got it's called their theythey actually call it their
armamentarium, which is militaryuh term their armamentary

(01:01:18):
they're all their weapons theseare the weapons we have they
they they they they talk aboutthat the war on cancer the war
on whatever diabetes so the onlything that war has ever the only
ones who benefit from war arethose who finance all right so
those are the only ones thatbenefit from war okay so who's
financing this for us thinkabout it okay so see I detox all

(01:01:43):
the time all the time right oh Iblew my nose last week right
you're gonna blow it again thisweek no i did it last week i
i've done that i had my bowelmovement on monday forget it no
you it's every day remember itwhat we we separate life into
healing into detoxing and it'spart of a cycle that goes on

(01:02:03):
every day all the time everymoment every moment our body is
assimilating and and cleaningand that's just the way it is
it's we you we like to separateand name and stuff like that but
don't understand that we are afluid process we are a fluid
process okay so all right now sowe got to help you Darwin we got

(01:02:28):
to help you only you can helpyou in fact get that's what and
the one lesson for us all thoughis that nobody's gonna help you
no one's gonna restore yourhealth you though the people can
guide you to do it becauseyou're the only one you're the
one that opens your mouth andputs in whatever you put in and
you're the one who go puts yourhead on the pillow whenever you
put your head on the pillow andyou're the one who either gets

(01:02:49):
up or doesn't get up sits allday or moves around all day
because no one else can do thisfor you no one can live your
life for you and to re andhealth comes only from the
healthy living there's notanother way you can't buy it you
can't coerce it demand it youcan't negotiate it you can't
borrow it you can only earn ithealth that's what it is okay
and it comes from one thing andit comes from living healthy

(01:03:11):
period period there's notanother way and if there's not
another way then what are wetalking about?
Is there anything else we shoulddo rather than to live healthy?
Is there anything else we shoulddo?
Well there is if we if health isnot the concern if health is not
the concern then whatever let'sdo it but if health isn't the
concern that's the only thing wecan do there's no like how much

(01:03:34):
of this and how much of thatdon't have to worry about that.
Get rid of the toxins livehealthy and then yeah we need
supplements and stuff whybecause our food's no longer
food right and we and we had youknow you should read there was a
report that came out um talkingabout the the selenium the soil
was completely depleted ofselenium and uh it was like uh a

(01:03:55):
major public health concern umand and it was because due due
to the farming practices uh andthis came out was a government
report came out and was I thinkit was like 1922 so where do you
think we are now where are wenow we're at the point now where
yeah we we need supplements weneed some supplements because
they so by the way uh we're atwar shh we don't want to tell

(01:04:20):
anybody we're at war but get thefood supplies knock out the
communication yeah we're at warreal quick here stacy asking if
infrared lights are safeabsolutely uh infrared they're
all they have really importanttherapeutic value it's in that
range that you can it stimulatesa lot of processes in the body

(01:04:40):
but there are different ways ofdoing it and uh you know there
are ways of get of uh you knowyou you could you can ingest
substances or or or or have theminjected if it's you dealing
with the tumor so it depends onwhat your oh so you're talking
about CFC's breast tumor yeahyeah um uh but what you want to
do is find a um I don't knowwhere where you live um but if

(01:05:03):
you find a um I remember there'sa place you let me see I can
find that there's like a I I'mnot you you you should you've
got to find someone who's whowho who knows what they're doing
with it someone who's hadinexperience and not because I'm
it's dangerous or anything butyou don't want to waste your
time you don't want to wasteyour your money and your and you
mostly don't want to waste yourhope.
You don't want to waste your youknow um right um so um see

(01:05:29):
there's there's I guess youwould look up in your area you
know um now I don't know if youI I don't know if you have a uh
an uh a holistic type uh medicalperson working with you um but
um if you do um then they theywould know about this or you can
actually um you know join ourgroups and and you a lot of

(01:05:52):
people in our group our CFCgroup uh uh will tell it tell
you where the where to getthings and uh for the best price
and all that stuff so anyway sobut anyway so there's but they
work there's there's lots ofstudies on the uh on on the on
the photochemistry thephotobiology that we talk about
we use the word photo photo hasto do with so light so anything
that's dealing with light in atherapeutic sense is got the

(01:06:15):
word photo in it all right sophoto um and and basically that
comes from the word the thephotons of light right but
anyway you know there arestudies far infrared irradiation
inhibits breast cfc cellproliferation independently of
DNA internet yeah so it'sthere's it's real stuff but what
you've got to find is someonewho knows um to teach you how to

(01:06:40):
how to do it yourself becauseyou can't do it yourself because
you but but there you can alsothere are some very specific
ways you can do it in a clinicso um but the best thing I can
really recommend is that if youjoin the CFC group we can guide
you um you know through yourthrough your and and that's
something for everybody torealize when you join the groups
it's not like you just get oneconsultation but it's like every

(01:07:02):
week and some twice a week we wewe on and on and on and and and
guide you through the journeybecause the journey is the is
the journey and it's today andtomorrow and the next day and
I've got to be and we got tokeep going and something happens
you want to check in we get soit's a process you know we're
all holding hands we're allwe're all going in that same
direction that is I'm lookingfor help I'm not there go I'm

(01:07:24):
I'm same with with you we're allon that road to health that's
the road we're on okay and it'sa beautiful journey right you're
not alone and weird and it'snone of that okay we're all on
it your mom's on it your dad'son it your children are on it
your baby's on it we're all onthat road okay it's not an
unusual he's very no you're notokay understand that okay we

(01:07:48):
have to de-Rockefellorizeeveryone all right so but I just
want you to know that this stuffworks for everybody and uh so I
I would love to get you uh youknow you so so that we can share
all that because there's placesto get it so all right so
remember uh photons photons notprotons photons when I said
photons uh yeah I mean thinkwhat they're doing so it's we're

(01:08:09):
at war folks and so you gottakeep that in mind and um I know
a lot of people say I don't wantto hear it I got take care of
myself okay don't hear it but bythe way hey there's eight
tornadoes coming uh towards yourtown I don't want to know it
don't tell me about thosetornadoes I'm too busy I gotta
go work okay right I know Idon't want to know it's all
nonsense anyway and you can'tbelieve anything so anyway um

(01:08:33):
leslie that was Stacy so Stacyyes infrared is safe and it's
real and it works really wellyou want to make sure that
you're gonna get the you'regonna do it right and it's not
just something we can it's notlike a short explanation so we
got to teach you about it.
So please um but yes absolutelynow this is Leslie lung I have
metastatic breast CFCs whichspread to the liver lungs bones

(01:08:58):
eyes etc I have shortness ofbreath and finally after several
months I had a procedure todrain the fluid that had built
up around my right lung andcompressed it seemed to be a
success and oxygen went up to100 and the tech said that the
lung had popped open I felt itfelt I felt great.

(01:09:19):
Following morning the heavinessand shortness of breath were
back and it was determined thatthe lung had actually not opened
up fully after 80% fluid removedand was in fact now stuck open
due to the malignant cells andin in the effusion causing it to

(01:09:39):
stick to the wall.
A drain was put in and then theyremoved the day later to see how
long it would take to refillagain.
The doctors of the lung wouldlikely never drop back down.
I'm having a hard time acceptingthat I'm now on oxygen to keep
levels up is there any hope thattheir alternative listen

(01:10:00):
absolutely this your doctorsfirst of all and on you know
this is okay understandintegrative oncology integrative
oncology oncology is CFCsintegrative means we're gonna
take we're gonna take ourknowledge of all the different
healing disciplines and medicaldisciplines and when to use what

(01:10:20):
so there's situations whereyou've got to use the allopathic
system and this is one of themall right it's like your bones
broken you there's no amount ofherbs that are gonna it's gonna
heal yes but you'd like to resetit first.
In other words there are thatyou know the babies coming out
feet first you're gonna have toyou can't go to the herbalist

(01:10:40):
you can it's not the time forthat so you've got to know when
to do what so this is thesituation.
So what's happening because itsounds like the way you're
describing this that they didn'thelp you understand it.
And and and that they do that onpurpose.
They like to keep you in thedark so that you you keep paying
them because you don't know whatthe hell they're talking about.
And they don't even really knowwhat they're talking about.
But at least you know that youdon't know they think they do.

(01:11:03):
But anyway here's what'shappening and I we I mentioned a
little bit earlier with the ladywith uh whose husband has uh
misothelioma but the lung isattached to the thoracic wall to
the chest wall by uh uh thesomething called a pleura and
there's a there's this thoracicpleural and the parietal there's
two parts to it and in themiddle is this fluid and that
fluid allows for the movement ofyour breathing without friction

(01:11:26):
otherwise every time you took abreath it would hurt and every
time your heart beat it wouldhurt because you have the
friction.
So anything that's moving in thebody including joints and all
that has a little somehow it'sit's it's got two um surfaces
and and in between is a fluid.
So we know we have joint fluidand so that fluid is normal
pleural fluid it's in the pleuraand it allows for easy movement.

(01:11:47):
What happens is um that if youget an eck somehow you get an
excess of fluid in between thethose two between the the part
of the lung that the part of thepleura that's attached to the
chest wall and the part of thepleura that's attached to the
lung right you get more and morefluid in there and now you've

(01:12:09):
got what's called a pleuraleffusion.
And so that means the lung isbeing compressed because there's
there's fluid in that space andthe more fluid the more the lung
is compressed and you can't geta breath that's what's
happening.
So I'm not the other word wordsyou were using are not there's
no popped open or anything allthat stuff forget that this is
what's happening.
So why did the fluid get inthere?
There's a couple reasons a fluidgets in there uh so that's why

(01:12:32):
when we do a test usually whenwe draw the fluid out uh we send
it to the laboratory and we askfor certain things you know like
I'm not gonna give you all thewords we use but basically we
want to find out if it's atransidate or an exudate so a
transidate means that the fluidhas um leaked in because of you
know not enough uh albumin oryou know there's certain

(01:12:54):
metabolic situations that allowfor what's called a transidate
okay now that's very differentthan an exudate an exudate is
when the the tissues the theplural the pleural tissues
actually have something on themusually malignant cells that are
producing it it's exudate and itproduces an exudative fluid and
we can tell that by the amountof protein in there we can tell

(01:13:15):
that by specific gravity there'sa lot of things we we can we can
we can determine um it's anexudate or transidate so that's
one thing that's the first thingyou find out right um and it's
are there any red blood cellsand there's malignance all that
stuff so it sounds like you hada malignant effusion and if
you're if your nutrition aremetabolically unstable you can

(01:13:36):
have a combination of atransidate and an exudate and
all that stuff things that youshouldn't even have to think
about because they should justbe knowing this so now normally
what happens is um and thishappens in lungs it can happen
uh in the in the abdomen rightwith called ocites and so what
you do is you can drain it outright and and you just drain it

(01:13:57):
out now keep in mind when you ifyou have a lot of fluid and you
drain it out that fluid camefrom uh initially came from your
blood meaning that your bloodwhich is made up of plasma which
is all the non-cellularcomponents of your blood what
are those the red blood cellswhite blood cells and the
platelets those are the cellularother stuff is the proteins and

(01:14:19):
uh you know the amino acids theproteins the peptides uh the
steroidal hormones like uh youknow the you know estrogens
progesterone stuff cortisol umuh the nutrients the gases the
oxygens and the carbonyl youknow there's all that stuff in
there and the waste the wastematerial that you still haven't
eliminated so all of that ispart of uh uh of that's in the

(01:14:40):
blood plus the cellular elementsso when you've got an effusion
or a size what's happened is thenon-cellular stuff the plasma
has gotten into that areabecause the cells don't go
across the uh they don't diffuseinto it because they're too big
now but if you do have red bloodcells in there then that means
that either the holes are big oryou're bleeding as well so

(01:15:02):
there's that's why you look forblood too.
But anyway it's it's getting inthere.
So when you take it out so youtake out let's say you take out
three liters four liters wellwhat's going to happen is that
same process is going to want tofill that back up which means
it's gonna come from your bloodwhich means you're gonna you're
gonna lose volume in your bloodso you've got to get fluids IV

(01:15:22):
intravenous uh at once they takethat out otherwise you because
it's gonna you have tounderstand that the process is
going to happen again and nowyou you'll be low so you got to
keep your fluid up and that sothere are ways we can do that
medically there's certain thingswe can do we can we can give uh
you know furosamide and uhaldactone uh which are what uh
get they help you get rid offluids to prevent on a daily

(01:15:44):
basis uh keep your intake up umand you know that there are ways
we can do that so we can do thatand and you know medically in
the clinical there's way toeasily take care of this all the
time a lot of doctors don't dothis as an outpatient because
they don't really know how sothey send them to hospitals it's
not something you have to go tothe hospital you can do it in

(01:16:05):
our clinic easily all the timeit's not uncommon but anyway so
they drain the fluid out of thepleural effusion they drained it
out this is true of ascites aswell but especially for the in
the pleura where we're talkingabout the chest when they drain
it out now it will reaccumulatethat's normal there's nothing
like it popped open whateverthey said that whatever words
they were using were just nottrue.

(01:16:27):
Okay and usually kind of thecriteria well the criteria that
they used to use when I used toadmit to the hospitals which is
that I think after three timesif if if if it if if it requires
three consecutive uh what's itcalled thoracentesis for taking
out the fluid uh then we then wetry to do something called
pleuridesis and pleuroidesis iswhere uh you've got a chest tube

(01:16:49):
in and they keep the chest tubethey don't take it out they
don't they don't take it outthat night to see if it refills
no they just measure how muchfluid's coming they don't need
to take it out because they gotto keep it filling I don't know
what they did not uh no we'retalking about no we're talking
about pneumo so pneumothorathorax is getting uh air we're

(01:17:10):
talking about pleural effusionit's a different thing so
pleural effusion is fluid inthere so pneumothorax is getting
uh air in there you know anywayso it's drain and they they
watch it drain so what they'lldo is and they realize well it's
not gonna stop for a while sowe'd have to keep uh uh either
keep the chest tube in or bedraining it every day so instead

(01:17:30):
of doing that they try what'scalled a pleuroidesis which
works maybe an 85% of the time apleuroidesis is where they um
they drain and then they put ina substance that causes the
pleura on your lung right theperinal pleura and then the
pleura on your chest wall tostick together so that you can't
get fluid to accumulate.

(01:17:52):
That's what a pleuroidesis is.
And what they use is uh talc,you know like uh the same stuff
that's in the baby powder.
I think they've got othersclerosing agents now but that
was pretty standard for a longtime.
And they put that in and uh itand it caused the the those two
surfaces to adhere and to kindof get sclerotics closed uh

(01:18:12):
scarred up together.
Um yeah you wouldn't want thisgenerally but when you're having
this effusions you have to haveit otherwise breathing is not
possible.
And so you can get that becausenot the whole lung you're still
having you still have somemovement on the other parts of
your lung right if you did thatwith your whole lung you
wouldn't be able to breathe soit's not gonna happen.
But it just happens in this onearea.
But it's called pleuroidesis andit and it and 85% of the time uh

(01:18:36):
the person can uh can now goback to not having not having
the accumulated fluid and alsonot uh having to go in the
hospital and keep getting itdrained all right no but still
you've got to not you've stillgot to work on restoring health
because once you restore healthof course there's not only
there's no CFCs there's nopleural effusions there's no
headaches there's no itchingthere's no any so health is our

(01:18:56):
goal and it's not just gettingrid of one particular
manifestation of ill health.
So keep that in mind.
So you know I don't know whereyou are Leslie but I don't know
what to say my clinic in in inArizona we'd be able to help you
you know anoasis of healing it'sin Arizona you can find it on uh
on online but uh wherever youare there might be a good doctor

(01:19:20):
in your area who knows whatthey're doing but apparently
from what I heard from what youwere just telling me these sound
like really typical doctors whodon't really explain anything
well at all and uh that'sprobably because they really
don't even understandthemselves.
But there's all sorts of thingsyou can be doing in addition to
taking care of it physically youknow what I just described but

(01:19:41):
in addition to taking care of itphysically there are things you
can do to restore health whichis what you're referring to when
you say is there anything I cando to unstick the fluid around
the so you see you have that wasthe wrong concept.
So the idea is that it uh is itan exudate or a transidate
probably exudate probably acombination but probably mostly
exudative meaning we have todeal deal with the underlying

(01:20:01):
process which is the chronicallyfermenting cells and everything
like that.
So the ivermact and benzol thatyou're mentioning that you take
and other you're doing a lot ofdifferent things and and as you
say you're so confused.
I get it so instead of beingconfused come to the CFC group
come to the CFC because there'sso much that I there's no way I
could tell you everything youneed to do and then you say okay

(01:20:23):
I did this now I have this so inother words it's an ongoing
thing so let's join now um thisis Teresa bacterial overgrowth
my question is what can I do toget rid of bacterial overgrowth
within my gut I've beenstruggling with it for years and
nothing seems to work.

(01:20:43):
Okay Teresa um so when you usethe word overgrowth I'm thinking
that they might have told youyou have SIBO which is I hate
that acronym uh small intestinalbacterial overgrowth because
that's what they talk about.
They don't usually use that termwhen it comes to coal the colon
like with um you know likeCrohn's Crohn's disease or

(01:21:06):
ulcerative colitis or uhirritable bowel syndrome that's
they don't usually use the wordsovergrowth or all of that.
But it's not really overgrowththat's one aspect of it it's a
dysbiosis it means that the thehealthy relative proportions of
the different microorganismsthat would live in the gut of a
healthy person are not there.
They're out of proportion you'vegot uh a lot of more more of

(01:21:28):
this than you need and notenough of this and so they're
they're all out and they're whydo we need them because they
they are these microorganismsare responsible not responsible
they are intimately and uhinvolved with and you know
actually are part of ourphysiology they're part of how
we function without these wedon't live so they're not when

(01:21:52):
we think of them thesemicroorganisms in our gut we
have to understand they're notthem they're us they're part of
us right just like without yourheart you can't live without
your liver you can't livewithout your kidneys you can't
live without these guys youcan't live so they're not I mean
they're part of how we live andif they're out of proportion
they're out of balance they'renot gonna be then then they're
not gonna be then we're gonna beout of balance basically and

(01:22:15):
that's it we have to restorethat balance.
So when someone realizes theyhave an over they have an
overgrowth that means there's alot of one that they don't need
and not enough of the one thatthey do need is what they're
they mean.
And that's what we all have tosome degree and we have to
restore that in fact if we couldrestore our gut homeostasis uh a
healthy biome uh we're healthyall right um so what you we and

(01:22:38):
what what's involved in it thereason you wound up with that
what's part of that wholeprocess of getting uh developing
a dysbiosis in your gut is um uhgetting um what what we call a
leaky gut where the tightjunctions uh between the cells
are are dispersed and notrepaired um as part of it and

(01:22:59):
there's a lot of a lot of otherstuff that's that's that's going
on in there by weight two-thirdsof your immune system is in your
gut in what are calledgut-associated lymphatic tissue
uh pyrus patches um uh and thenall the lymph nodes associated
with that are around the uh theorgans in there that um and the

(01:23:20):
spleen these are all part of theimmune system so by weight two
thirds 60% of the immune systemis in the gut and so by cleaning
up the gut you have just givenyourself a huge boost of
immunity right so so clearlycleaning doing colonics cleaning
that out that so that you don'treabsorb that because every four
minutes you know there'senterohepatic circulation where

(01:23:43):
uh the the the the bowelsincluding your colon they have
veins and the all the wastecomes there and goes back into
the portal vein right back intoyour liver so every four every
four minutes your liver gets abig wave of sewage so cleaning
out your colon is very veryimportant for your liver and for
uh the lymphnosal but hey sothere's a lot to do so you've

(01:24:03):
got to clean out you've got todo some cleansing we could do a
juice cleanse and then a andthen perhaps a a fast so we'd
have to work on your situationspecifically but basically you
need to clean clean clean cleanclean it out and a water fast
they just they it just they justreassemble in the right order
they just do um it allows forthat and then when you start

(01:24:29):
eating you've got to eat thefood that's going to support a
healthy uh a healthy relativeproportion of the of the of your
biome you want to eat the foodthat because remember whatever
you're eating is what they eatand they they they can't find
you're the one you're the cookyou're the chef so what you're
eating is what's for dinner andif what's for dinner is not the
the healthy the ones that youneed don't eat that then they're

(01:24:51):
not gonna hang around they'regonna die and so that's how you
wind up so it really comes downto what you eat and how stressed
you are and how much sleepyou're getting all that is going
to determine what's availablefor them that's what it comes
down to but you've got tocleanse uh and then we use
prebiotics probiotics but whenyou're eating healthy those are
the prebiotics that the food youeat are the pre prebiotics

(01:25:13):
cleansing fasting colonhydrotherapy lymphatics living
healthy going to bed early andall that and then when you do
resume eating after you've doneyour your your your your juice
cleansing and your fast when youdo you do it within a uh four to
six hour window and you stopfive to six hours before bed and
bedtime is uh latest at nine andjust do that and and you're

(01:25:36):
eating human food and the resultis health that's just the way it
is that's the formula for healthyeah there's not another formula
for health and it doesn't matterif uh well I'm a type O or I'm a
b and all that it's it it it itit it it it doesn't work that
way the antigens that are onyour red blood cells do not

(01:25:58):
determine what you eat thatwhich determines what you eat is
your anatomy and physiology andbiochemistry which are unique to
your species and so if you're ina species that is uh what we
would call a fly then yournutrient requirements are
different than the species thanif you were uh an eagle or an

(01:26:23):
orangutan or a buffalo so youranatomy and physiology determine
what you're gonna eat not thenumber of antigen not the kinds
of antigens on your red bloodcells bow type eat right for
your blood type so there's againthat's more madness more madness
I just by the way uh I was ahorses have what seven or eight

(01:26:45):
different blood groups so canyou imagine some horses should
be eating hamburgers some horsesshould be eating hay other
horses no dogs and cats theyhave dogs have a lot too I
forget so around seven eight sixI forget but you know all
animals they have differentblood types they're still eating

(01:27:05):
where they're eating because ofthe species that they are and
what they have what happens tobe the environment they're in
and they're usually they're inan environment that is
appropriate for their speciesunless they're unless we capture
them and put them in a zoo orcapture them and keep them in
our house.
Otherwise they're going to beliving only where they can
survive and where they cansurvive is their biological
niche.

(01:27:26):
All right so that's what I meanso absolutely uh Teresa your
situation is actually verysimple simple to understand and
and what to and what and what todo is the hard part is us.
We're always the hard part weget in the way of our healing
because we're not willing to dowhat we need to do.

(01:27:46):
We want to find another waythere's got to be something I
don't hang to change the way Ino I'm I mean you know I gotta
you guys isn't there a pill Ican take no sorry no isn't no
but what no something comes outall right so um now all right so
um this is Lizzie she says chemofor breast CFCs thyroid breast

(01:28:08):
thyroid CFCs five years ago allgood eating plant based three
years no booze no dairy all ofit my question is recently my
whole left foot becoming numband tingly seems to be
progressing not sure what'sgoing on what can I do to put
the brakes on it what do youthink is the cause what

(01:28:30):
diagnosis with was diagnosedwith Hashimoto's years ago why
hasn't my clean diet cleanedthat up too is that the call
yeah all right so Liz I hearyour your concerns so um the
chemo for breast thyroid CSC soyou had breast and thyroid is
that what I'm I mean that's whatit looks like it says and uh I
hope you went to biologicaldentist if you didn't go right

(01:28:52):
away because the breast and thethyroid are right on the same
meridian of uh these teeth overhere and over here right so you
you you you got uh I just hopeyou did that and you get there
just do that and if you didalready do it again make sure
that thing because sometimes weget a procedure and it doesn't
quite work you know it wasn'tcomplete and that's not

(01:29:16):
necessarily the fault of thedentist it's just that it's
really difficult to geteverything you know sterilized
so if you take out a root canalor you you you you you're
correcting a cavitation and youput in the ozone gas remember
the ozone gas is after you've irirrigated with an ozonated water
the ozone gas goes up into thebone right to the trabeculi up
the bone which are the little umlike caves in the bone they go

(01:29:40):
up in there because these guysare hanging out up in there it
might not get far enough up anduh and there might be some so
you know is so you want torecheck but anyway but breast
thyroid is same same meridianokay uh now you're eating plant
based but you know that you knoweating pasta and bread is plant
based as well uh and uh you knowso just I I don't know what your

(01:30:02):
plant-based is but um now I'mwhat I don't know also is what
is does plant based mean becauseI would just say I'm I'm either
vegetarian vegan because ifyou're vegetarian you eat eggs
and or cheese or yeah uh ordairy that's it there's
basically the vegetarian butplant based to me could mean I

(01:30:23):
eat the the majority of my dietis plant but I eat you know fish
and beef and other stuff too.
That's what I think of the wordplant-based so I don't really
know what plant based means butagain even if you're eating uh
95% plants uh but they're allit's all cooked and it's got you
know non-organic and you know soit's more than just that so I

(01:30:43):
hope you're aware of that and Ihope most of what you're eating
is non uncooked so you'regetting a lot of real vegetables
real nutrients uh and you'regetting a lot of healthy oils
from nuts and seeds and lettuceand seed butters and chia seed
porridge and flaxseed smoothiesand you know all the all those
sorts of things and then theHajimoto's that's just the name

(01:31:03):
it's a name Rockefeller theymight as well call it
Rockefeller's not Hashimoto andGraves which is the opposite
they should call Rockefeller oneand Hashimoto's Rockefeller two.
It's all related Althoughthyroid thyroid conditions are
all related to iodinedeficiency.
You've got to get the iodineback.
And um, and that takes about ayear, year and a half of taking

(01:31:24):
iodine.
And during that time, you keepyou take uh appropriate natural
thyroid medicine to keep yourthyroid function uh healthy
while you're replenishing youriodide, because once your iodine
has been replenished, then yourthyroid will produce enough of
the right enough thyroid uhhormone for you to be healthy,

(01:31:44):
right?
But you've got to get there, butyou've got to keep it because
the thyroid is one of the bigbosses of the immune system.
So you gotta keep that going.
So you've got to do that.
But that's not with your leftfoot.
If your entire left foot, youmean from the ankle down, that's
very unusual, unless there is anactual block, something blocking
the blood flow into there.

(01:32:04):
So when you say, but but thewith the terms you were using
nominally, that can mean thatyou're you're you know, like if
you've ever woke it up and youwere sleeping on your arm, well,
you were probably blocking ablood vessel that was supplying,
yeah, that was allowing the theblood to to leave and or go into

(01:32:26):
it.
Anyways, you block the bloodflow, which eventually gets numb
because that means the nervesare not getting their nutrients
either, or you're blocking, oryou're actually on a nerve that
is in that area.
But if you're on a nerve,usually, well, you'll know if
it's on a nerve, because if youwake up and only this part of
you know, the these two fingers,then you're on a nerve, or if

(01:32:48):
just these three fingers.
But if it's your whole hand andit was then it's different.
So, uh, but it's your wholefoot.
So I'm not sure what what youmean.
That's why, that's why if youwere in a group, we could talk
this out and I could find out.
Um, because the whole foot meansthat there's something blocking
that foot, because otherwise itwould be in uh different areas

(01:33:11):
because different area differentparts of the feet have are
supplied by different bloodvessels and nerves.
They're they they they go todifferent parts.
So that's why I'd have to reallytalk to you about what you're
really experiencing, and thenmaybe have you do some tests for
me on your foot so we could Icould better understand what
you're talking about.

(01:33:31):
And you're talking about onefoot, not two.
So, because I'm thinking if youhad had a chemo in the past, uh,
you know, like theplatinum-based chemos and other
chemos will cause numbness andand and tingling in uh in your
hands and feet, but not just onefoot.
It's never like that.
So there's a lot of stuff I needto clear up with you, Lizzie, so

(01:33:53):
I could answer your questionmore thoroughly or more
functionally, so you havesomething you have something to
go on, because right now I'm notgiving you any any kind of hints
on what to do.
Uh so we gotta we have to have adiscussion.
So, Lizzie, join the CFC groupor health and healing group.
If you've done no more CFCs,join the health and healing

(01:34:13):
group, but just join one of thegroups so we can interact, okay?
All right, you guys.
It's after nine uh over here,which means it's I don't know,
it's your daylight savings time,so I don't know what happened
there.
Anyway, I just know that um Ididn't change in Arizona, so
that means it is 7 a.m.

(01:34:33):
uh p.m.
in Arizona, 7, 10 p.m.
Arizona.
So I don't know what the uh thethe rest of the country because
you change, but anyway, it'stime to go.
And I just um I uh you know Iwish we could do this every day
so that because there's so manyquestions and there's so much
confusion, and what I'm seeinghere mostly is that uh is

(01:34:53):
language, you know, we're giventhe wrong language, or not, and
we're not even given the correctlanguage in their particular
dialect, right?
And they have differentdialects, so we're not even
given that.
It's crazy.
So, you guys, anyway, we've gotso much work to do, we've got to
keep going, you gotta join thegroups.

(01:35:15):
Uh, and as I said, I'll be openfor some uh a few uh private
consultations on a weekly basis.
I got but I gotta keep thenumber down because I just won't
have the time.
All right, so um, anyway, soAikap, aloha, uh Namaste,
Namaskar, and um be safe outthere.
And by the way, those of youguys who want to hide and
pretend like there's nothinggoing on, it is going on.

(01:35:37):
Keep your eyes open.
There's about eight tornadoescoming through your house.
Just keep your eyes open.
All right, so what I cut, aloha.
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