Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, you guys
cool.
All right, so listen, welcometo Sunday Night Live and Monday
Morning Live.
And doesn't this always remindyou that time is an idea, it's a
concept?
Right, it's always now, and Imean, wherever you are, whatever
time you think it is, it's now.
So how could it tell me if timeis real, then how could it be
(00:22):
5.11 pm on Sunday in Arizona andit be 7.11 am on Monday over
here in Thailand, right?
So, obviously, the calendarsand the clocks are just ideas,
but for you and for me and foreverybody, it's now.
So the whole thing about that,I just like to always remind
(00:45):
people about that.
Okay, so, lots of people fromon YouTube, pretty cool, all
right, you guys, so fantastic.
Anyway, I'd like to get on withit today.
So we don't, you know, becausewe never get to answering
questions.
It's all of them anyway, but Iwant to remind you all.
That is that the format is thishey, laurie, hi, raymond, maria
(01:09):
, jennifer, everybody, kathy,sugarland, texas, yeah,
fantastic.
Wow, vermont, everywhere there,fantastic, okay, so the format
of this live stream is that yousaid.
I think it is, I mean, thereason I started these groups.
(01:31):
Right, we have the health andhealing group, parasite group
and the CFC group, and thereason is because you send in
questions, you go to, you knowthe website, drlodycom slash
live, and then you can submitquestions that we can talk about
here.
However, I can interact.
You can ask a question now andI can answer it now and then we
(01:55):
can discuss it so we can go overyour particular situation and,
plus, you'll learn Everybodylearns from hearing other
people's questions answered andthen also, we have information.
There's a lot of things.
We're all on a private chat, atelegram chat, but it's worth it
.
And so the health and healing,as you know, will be everything
(02:15):
about health and healing.
You know diet, sleep, you nameit relationships, parasites will
be a parasite group aboutparasites and it's about CFC
groups.
Parasite group automaticallyhas membership in Health and
Healing and CFC groupautomatically has membership in
Parasite and Health and Healingand we're live streaming.
We're live streaming.
(02:36):
Only X is at drthomaslodymd.
All the rest instagram,facebook, youtube are at dr
thomas.
Um, there we go, okay, so nowand then you know all of this,
(02:57):
this whole session tonight willbe replayed immediately on
instagram, facebook.
I don't know, I don't knowabout YouTube.
So, anyway, let's get into it.
All right, so let's talk about.
The first question we have isthank you, jacob, fantastic, I
love it, thank you.
Not everybody recognizes whatyou do, so that's wonderful, I
(03:21):
love it, thank you.
So, anyway, what?
So, here we are.
I'm actually here, all right.
So now, first question is fromgetting this together, this is
crazy.
First question is from Leanne,and the question is bladder CFCs
how do you get rid of it?
(03:42):
Cfcs, how do you get rid of it?
By the way, your first timehere, cfcs are the real name of
what they call cancer.
Okay, yeah, all right,catherine, thank you, I need
that.
I'll do that.
So, anyway, so it's bladder CFCs, chronically fermenting cells,
(04:02):
because that's what they are,right, all right.
So now let's just understandthat Now.
So when you're talking aboutbladder CFCs, what they're
referring to is that the cellson the inside surface start to
become chronically fermenting,and you know they're called
urothelial cells.
(04:23):
It's just what they call themUro for urine Thelial, because
they're ep ureothelial cells.
It's just what they call them.
Uro for urine Thelial, becausethey're epithelial.
Oh my gosh, aren't they smart.
They're so smart.
They took two words and theymade one as a prefix and one as
a suffix and they put themtogether.
So nobody knows what they'retalking about.
So they sound smart.
Yeah, you know the medicalprofession they're just they
(04:46):
remind me of.
They're like um, my daddy'sstronger than your daddy, my
dog's bigger than your dog, that, my.
They grow up still having toprove that, yeah, I'm smarter
than you.
I'm gonna make up a new way ofsaying uh, low-dose chemotherapy
, I'm gonna call it metronomicchemotherapy.
There you go.
No one will know what I'mtalking about.
It's ridiculous.
(05:08):
Okay, so urothelial it meansthat the inside surface of the
bladder gets so now, even in theconventional world.
So they use.
You know one thing about it ifyou have a CFC, if you have a
tumor somewhere that we can getto, that's great.
You know, if it's deep insideand then we have to rely only on
systemic stuff, it just takes alittle longer.
(05:29):
But if you can get right to it,it's always going to be good.
So if it's, if it's a breast, atumor in the breast, we can get
to it.
We can do things to it locallythere.
The same if it's a skin or youknow anywhere that we can get to
.
It's always beneficial.
So with the bladder, it's verynice because we can instill
(05:51):
things through a catheterthrough the urethra.
Right Urethra is where the urinecomes out from the bladder.
Right Kidneys produce urine, itgoes down through the ureters
to the bladder and from thebladder it goes through the
urethra to uh, to be, uh,eliminated.
All right.
And, by the way, just to remindeveryone of the extreme
(06:15):
relevance of anatomy andphysiology, because anatomy and
physiology, they're like one,two ways of looking at the same
phenomenon.
But, uh, when you think of theurethra in men and women and you
just think of the anatomy of it, then you'll understand why
they have differing types ofconditions that can evolve when
(06:36):
health is attenuating, whenhealth is not quite optimal.
Why?
Because on a woman the urethrais about this long, from the
bladder right through.
It's very short, meaning thatbacteria and parasites, anything
, can get through there easily.
There's protections in the, youknow, there's all kinds of
(06:59):
white blood cells and otheranatomical protections as well
as immunological protections.
However, that's it.
That's why you've heard ofhoneymoon cystitis.
Cystitis refers to bladderinfection.
Okay, so cyst C-Y-S-T is thedefinition of a cyst is like a
(07:21):
hollow sack.
So you can have a cyst in here,here.
Here, your breast, your ovaries, liver or the bladder is
considered a large cyst.
So you see, these words don'tnecessarily mean what you think
they mean.
You know they're foundationalroot words.
So cyst and then itis meansinflammation, so inflammation of
(07:43):
the bladder.
So women get bladder infections.
So honeymoon cystitis meanswhat?
After?
Assume that on a honeymoonpeople are going to have a lot
of sex and because of that, justthe mechanical force of
bacteria that are all aroundbeing pushed into the urethra.
So it's recommended that womenmake sure they urinate twice
(08:06):
after they have sex.
But anyway, that's honeymooncystitis and you don't have to
be on your honeymoon to get itAnyway, whereas men don't get
that.
Because, why?
Because the urethra has to makethere's like two right-hand
curves and there's no.
You know, it's just reallydifficult to get bacteria or
anything up in there, right,it's even hard to catheterize,
(08:27):
and so for that reason, oh, mendon't get bladder infections so
easily.
If they do, then we knowsomething major is going on.
There's a big blockage and notallowing, uh, usually it's an
enlarged prostate will do thatfor men.
So anyway, I just wanted todrop that in for you.
So anyway, uh, with the bladder, cscs, um, you know, they're
(08:47):
honey, I know, okay, bcg, uh, Idon't know if anyone's heard of
bcg, but um.
In japan and many countriesaround the world they use it as
a polio.
I meant a tuberculosis vaccineand basically what it is.
It's a live attenuatedmycobacteria, which is what TB
(09:12):
is Anyway.
So it's live attenuated.
What does that mean?
It's still alive, so it'sactive, but it's attenuated's
changed, and so the implicationis that they've changed it so
it's not capable of causing aproblem.
It's still alive, but it's notcapable of causing a problem,
(09:33):
very similar to coley's toxincoley had.
William coley used the serratiomarcescens and streptococcus
pyogenes and heated them up sothey couldn't proliferate, but
they were still able to producea fever, and that was his goal.
And in this case, the bcg, oryou know, it's the basilisk,
(09:53):
calmente, garen these are thetwo people, calmente and garen,
who put this together.
And it's a basilisk, it's kindof like the shape of a
microorganism.
So anyway, that's where itcomes from.
It's called BCG.
So they give you the shot, andthen people had less of a chance
of getting tuberculosis.
So they say it's not true,that's what they say.
(10:15):
Anyway, as it turns out, if youinfuse this into the bladder
through a catheter, the BCG, itdoes amazing things, right?
It actually activates both theinnate and the adaptive immune
system.
So what it does is, first ofall, the innate, you know, it
activates the dendritic cells,the macrophages and the T cells.
(10:35):
Okay, so, just as a reminder,the dendritic cells and
macrophages originate asmonocytes that come from the
bone.
There, when you do a blood testand you see how many
neutrophils you have, how manylymphocytes you have, how many
basophils, eosinophils andmonocytes that you have, there
are different kinds of whiteblood cells Well, the monocytes
(11:00):
are in the blood and then, whenthey extravasate through the
blood vessel wall into thetissues, so in the liver, then
they become, you know,macrophages or dendritic cells
in the liver.
If they're in the bladder, thebrain, it doesn't matter where
they are.
Microglia, wherever they go,they have a different name but
they're still the same function,and that is, they're on patrol.
(11:21):
When they see something thatshouldn't be be there, they eat
it, but they don't just eat it,and they then take a piece of it
and bring it over to the naivet-cell, because the naive t-cell
just graduated from theuniversity of thymus, got a big.
You know, they wear theset-shirts that have a t on it and
that's how, when we look in themicroscope, we can see ah,
there's a t-cell, he's wearing at-shirt, so we know that and we
(11:43):
see the T.
But naive meaning it doesn'tmean stupid.
Naive just means it has notbeen introduced to its enemy yet
.
So it's a trained assassin justready to kill.
But oh, I don't know if I'msupposed to say that word right,
I just got knocked offeverything.
It's a trained assassin comparedto asystole, you know what
asystole is?
(12:03):
Right?
A means no, systole meanssystolic blood pressure, systole
, systole, systole.
Asystole means no Asystole,flatline on the EKG.
So they're designed to flatlinedifferent.
Once they get the instructionsfrom the dendritic cells and
macrophages exactly who toflatline and they will They'll
(12:25):
go flatlining.
So that's what it does.
It wakes them up, it gets themall alerted, right.
And the other thing it does isthe T cells, right, because it
allows the T cells to getactivated.
And then it also the bladdercells are able to internalize
this little BCG gut.
And once it gets in there, itstimulates the release of IL-6,
(12:46):
interleukin-6, and tumornecrosis factor alpha and
interleukin IL-8, all thesethings that are just destructive
to the CFC.
Pretty cool, right.
And the other thing is it blocks, it causes, stimulates
apoptosis, which is programmedcellular self-flatlining Watch
(13:08):
out for these words and the cellcycle arrest.
In other words, the cells aregoing to be dividing.
It stops them from dividing,which is cool, and it stimulates
proteases and proteases areenzymes that digest protein and
(13:44):
so all of the whole individualbut rather start working for and
protecting these tumor cells.
And one way the fibroblasts dothat is by putting a fibrin coat
around the cell so that theimmune system doesn't recognize
it, because it just sees thefibrin as part of us.
So the BCG stimulates theproduction of proteases to
(14:06):
digest.
That it's pretty cool, right.
And then, after you do thetreatment, you look to see in
the urine are there lots ofthose neutrophils.
They're calledpolymorphonuclear cells, you can
call them polys or you can callthem neutrophils.
Anyway, to know that it reallyworked, you would see that you
(14:31):
have a lot of them in your urineafterwards, right.
Okay, and the way that the bcgaffects the, the adaptive immune
system, is by activating thecd4 cells, which are the helper
cells.
Okay, and that just helps.
There's another amazing thingthat the bcg does, and that is
the epigenetic and molecularsignaling.
Okay, basically, what it doesis it increases the expression
of cyclic AMP, disyclin AMP,which enhances the induction of
(14:53):
production of interferon and allsorts of things that are going
to destroy the tumor.
What's mind-blowing to me isthat Dr Kobayashi, who passed
away a couple years ago, can'tbelieve it.
Anyway, what a bummer.
So geez.
(15:13):
What he figured out is nowcheck this out.
And I know anybody.
I've never met anybody thatunderstands this, so don't worry
, you won't.
I don't think I know anybody.
I've never met anybody thatunderstands this, so don't worry
, you won't.
I don't quite.
The cyclic AMP to the cyclic GMPratio is reversed with CFCs.
(15:36):
So everything he did was tobring that ratio back.
So during the hyperthermiasession which was specialized,
it's not like a normalhypothermia six hour process he
would make sure that you hadincreased dicyclic amp,
something to prevent it frombeing metabolized during that
period.
(15:56):
Because if he could reversethat ratio and get your 40.5
Celsius 41.
He could restore.
It takes the CFCs and turnsthem back into healthy cells.
It reverses the process.
Anyway, bcg does that?
Not to that degree.
(16:19):
Now I want you to understand.
We're talking about a bladder,but this also refers to anything
we can get our hands on A skinlesion, a, um, you know,
prostate.
We can get to the prostatethrough underneath the man,
between the anus and the uh, thebulb of the penis.
There's a soft spot in thereand, uh, a needle can go right
(16:44):
through there, right, rightdirectly into the prostate.
There's nothing else there inthe way and therefore you can
inject.
So that works too.
All right, so now.
So, in addition to BCG, now, bythe way, you put it in and then
you have to, like, you put in,I don't know, maybe 40, 60 cc's
and the person lies on theirback for maybe 15-20 minutes,
(17:06):
then on the right side, 15-20minutes, belly, 15-20 minutes.
Left side, 15-20 minutes, right, so you want to get all sides
and then urinate it out.
Um, I do that like three timesa week.
Um, amazing what it does.
Now, according to conventionalworld, if it's already invaded
the muscle, it doesn't work.
They're not right, it's notcorrect.
(17:26):
They just want to use othermore.
They want to use drugs.
So the other thing you can useis you can instill ozone,
because ozone, what is ozonegoing to do?
We can put ozone right throughthe catheter, right, and what's
it going to do?
It's going to trigger apoptosis, right?
Okay, it's going to stimulateand enhance the immune response.
That's what ozone does, right?
So it actually reduces the, theeliminate, starts flatlining,
(17:51):
um, tumor cells, right, and itcauses, increases the
inflammatory response toeliminate the cells.
And, uh, it actually increasesthe oxygenation in the tumor
microenvironment which is goingto change the tumor
microenvironment because bydefinition it's got a lot of
acid and not enough oxygen.
(18:13):
You put oxygen in there and thatchanges everything.
You leave an effective ph, okay.
So you gotta know what you'redoing.
So you gotta get someone you'llhave to find somebody, leanne,
who knows who's familiar withthis.
You can also put curcumin in it.
Curcumin, you put that in you.
Also, if it's breast, whateverwe can reach, we can inject with
(18:33):
it, okay.
And the curcumin againstimulates apoptosis, reduces
inflammation by directlyinhibiting NF-kappa-beta right
Vitamin C does that too.
Nf-kappa-beta right Vitamin C,does that too.
Nf-kappa-beta, cox-2, and otherpathways Okay, nf-kappa-beta,
cox-2.
These are inflammatory pathwaysand it directly turns that off,
(18:54):
okay.
Problem is, when we give itsystemically it's just not very
bioavailable.
It gets metabolized too quickly, it can't get there.
But if we can put it in locallywe can get right there.
We're going to get a goodeffect from it, right the same,
with uh, intra, uh,transurethral in through the
urethra into the bladder, uh,ascorbic vitamin c right,
(19:16):
because, as we know what it'lldo it'll.
It'll increase the productionof peroxides and the cfc's can't
really them to one right.
And putting them all together,yay.
Now for the curcumin.
If you want to get even betterabsorption through the cells and
get through the epithelialcells of the bladder, called
(19:39):
urothelial cells, they have thecells, um, they have the.
Get the curcumin made into aliposome form, right, and you
know that liposome means a realtiny and usually, or the nano
sized ones which they're sosmall, they just go right in and
that's just increase, improvestheir uh, delivery right, and
(20:00):
even iv.
If you can get a liposome,one's gonna, iv is gonna be.
And then the other way withcurcumin is the cyclodextrin,
which is a.
You know chemically it kind oflocks in the, it holds it, kind
of puts a, it grabs the curcuminand kind of holds it in there,
like that.
So it gets delivered withoutbeing metabolized by the body
because the body won'tmetabolize it.
(20:21):
So that's good.
And of course you have thenanoparticle.
The other thing you can put inthe bladder is DMSO and you can
put in DMSO-based curcumin, soyou keep DMSO plus the curcumin.
So the DMSO, which we know isthe Fraud and Death Association
has proved it for interstitialcystitis.
What is that?
Okay, interstitial, okay,cystitis what is that okay?
(20:48):
Interstitial, okay, likeinterstate right means between
states, right, not in the state,but inter right.
That's the federal government.
Federal government has ajurisdiction over the?
Uh, interstate highways, right?
So that's why you'll see themarshals badge on the.
The signs look like marshallbadges anyway.
Uh, you know, we're not.
This is admiralty law, right?
You all know that, but we'renot going to talk about that
right now.
So, anyway, the interstitialcystitis.
(21:10):
Wow, these guys are smart.
I'm so glad I came here to thisoffice.
I feel so safe now becausethey're so smart.
And look at all the papers theyhave on the wall.
I feel safe, okay.
So here's the thing the morepapers on the wall, the faster
you run the other way.
Hey, so you're new to mychannel here.
That's great, fantastic.
(21:30):
There's no such thing as cancer.
It's just chronicallyfermenting cells.
Okay, forget that word, okay,unless, of course, someone who
was born between june 22nd, july21st, anyway.
So you all know what the uh, uh, dmso is, right, you're
probably you've heard of it, orat least, but it's dimethyl
sulfoxide, which means nothing.
(21:52):
But anyway, it's used forinterstitial cystitis and
cystitis.
Remember, cyst is the bladder,itis is inflammation of it.
Right, inflammation can becaused by irritation, mechanical
, chemical irritation or bymicroorganisms.
Now.
So interstitial means betweenthe cells.
(22:13):
So it's not the cells, it'sbetween the cells.
And this is what we usuallyfind when someone has continuing
symptoms of a bladder infection.
But it's a sterile one.
When they get the urine andthey test it, there's no,
nothing in there, no bacteria.
So interstitial cystitis turnsout that dmso installations into
(22:33):
the bladder can eliminate thatbecause it's a very powerful
anti-inflammatory.
And also the other extremelyimportant quality of dmso is
that whatever it's connect,mixed with it, just like a
thousand times greaterabsorption, it goes right in.
So you got to be careful youdon't have anything toxic on you
(22:57):
in there that's going to bringinto the cells, right.
So, so that's the dmso withwith the curcumin, it'll bring
that in plus it'll itself, um,reduce inflammation, right, very
good.
So that's what I would do.
Uh, leanne, you've got allthose things plus everything
else right.
You checked your the oral,you've checked with the
(23:19):
biological dentist through plans, colon hydrotherapy, emphatic
therapy, meditation, meditation.
You're working on yourparasympathetic system with Tai
Chi, with yoga, the asanas, youknow, or oh, and then you go on
walks alone in nature and youhum or you say anyway, just
(23:43):
vibrating your vocal cordsstimulates the parasympathetic
system, which helps balance that.
All right.
You have all of this and you'vegot to wake up the immune
system.
There's a lot that you need tobe doing, not just focusing on
the bladder.
So the bladder is the one ofthe apples on the tree, but it's
.
You can all the apples off, butyou're still going to have a
harvest next fall, all right.
(24:05):
Now the other person how do yourecommend that people survive
after your treatment methods?
Whoa, susie, did you really askthat question?
How do they survive?
Okay, okay, we have to do avocabulary thing and a language.
We're back to psycholinguistics.
(24:26):
Okay, because the way you askthat question is, there's no way
out.
You're going to ask thatquestion, you're in trouble, all
right.
So by asking the question,you're saying treatment, but I
don't recommend treatment, I'mnot going to fix anything,
there's nothing broke, thingsare out of balance and that
balance needs to be restored.
(24:46):
That's it.
I don't treat.
I offer therapies that helprestore balance, but I don't
treat, Fix.
And healing does not come fromthe therapies or the treatment.
That doesn't produce healing.
Healing is internal.
Healing comes from within.
Right, there's nothing externalthat's going to cause healing.
(25:09):
All right, you sew up a largewound, bring this, the skin, the
edges together and are you yay?
Well, half a yay, half a yay,because the other half is are
you, do you have, are youcapable of healing this?
Okay, if you're malnourished orfor whatever reason, you've got
(25:29):
a severe emphysema, you can'tget enough oxygen, multiple,
multiple reasons that you can'theal.
If you can't heal, it doesn'tmatter how good that surgeon was
that brought those edgestogether, it's not going to work
.
So healing is innate within theorganism and it has to be
awakened and it has to beallowed and it has to be
nourished.
And that's what we do.
We nourish the ability to heal.
(25:50):
All right, yeah, it's not justthat.
So how does that happen?
That happens by cleaning outall the toxins, because those
toxins will be what's causingthe problem.
Let me see.
Anyway, I shouldn't.
Oh, by the way, now that I'vegot your attention, I want
everybody to listen to this verycarefully.
(26:12):
I wanted to, right, I didn'twant to bring it up early on,
but I want to bring it up rightnow.
Please listen.
For some reason there's so manypeople using my name.
Now I want you to knowsomething I don't sell anything.
(26:32):
There's no products I sell oranything like that.
I'm working on making available, working with a group that I
will.
I'm like doing my, I'm workingon them making sure they're okay
to get anti-parasiticmedications, okay.
So you know, I've never reallyendorsed anything, but I'm going
to look at doing this becauseI've seen it as such a problem
(26:53):
with getting these medicationsright, depending on the country
you're in.
So it's been a big problem.
So I'm working on that and I'mgoing to have it resolved pretty
quickly.
And in fact, if you know, you'reright to our website.
What is it?
Hello at drlodycom.
No, hello at drlody.
We'll try to arrange um you toget them all right, but that's
(27:13):
going to really.
So that's that.
But so if anybody sells anything, sell, it's not my name, it's
not me.
They're using my name now ontelegram.
This blows my, this blows mymind.
On Telegram, there's the DrThomas Lodi community.
That's not me.
And there are people joining up, signing up.
All that.
That's not me.
That's not me.
I don't understand it.
And they have all these sexualparasite group exercise group.
(27:35):
That's not me.
There's another one.
I think it's called Med-X.
What is it?
It?
What is it?
It's a website.
It says Dr Lodi's ParasiteProtocol and so people come on
thinking it's me, and then theysell them drugs and they don't
ask them any questions.
You don't find out anythingabout it, about the person or
(27:55):
anything, so it's that's not meeither.
They have my video, my name,it's Dr Lodi's Protocol and it's
not me.
And then what else?
Well, you know, on Instagram,dr, which is drthomaslodi, is
not me.
And then, the most bizarrething, I can't believe it.
So you got to watch out forthis.
Somebody went on Facebook withmy photo and claiming to be me
(28:20):
and talking to you guys, themembers, and this guy starts
talking romantically to thismember, saying the most you know
, like I mean, even if you were,if someone was romantically
interested in someone, I doubtthat they would ever say
anything like this.
It the most corny nonsense.
And anyway, you know, I lookedlike this person was getting um
(28:43):
caught up in it, right.
And then, uh, but fortunatelynot, and she finally knew it
couldn't be me, because it wassaying anyway, I don't do that,
I'm not gonna do that, that'snot why I'm.
I don't even, I would nevereven think of doing such a thing
.
But uh, you wouldn't believehow corny it was.
But anyway, it's not me.
And so this person knew thatand she contacted us.
(29:05):
And then Facebook contacted me.
But then Facebook did what?
Shall I repeat that?
Remember last year, when I wasoff Facebook for seven months?
What did they do?
They're very good at it.
Superb TikTok's really good atit.
So if you have troubles withthem because they have what do
you call it, they have umabsolute control.
(29:27):
Anyway, there's all.
Listen, if you see anythingonline saying it's me, it's not.
The only place I'm on is thethree groups, the memberships,
that's it.
I'm not anywhere else.
And my website,drthomasloneycom, and, of course
, oasis of Healing in Arizona.
That's it.
I'm not any.
There's nowhere else.
Okay, You're not going to findme anywhere else.
(29:49):
Not me, maybe somebody.
I don't know why people arepretending to be me.
It's ridiculous.
You know it's like come on, whydon't I live my life, you live
your life.
It's just ridiculous.
I just wanted to bring that up,anyway.
So here we are.
We're back at the.
I really wish I could have you.
You could read what this guywrote.
Wait, let me just.
(30:10):
I got to read this to you.
I'll just read a little bit.
I mean here, let's see.
Can you imagine?
I could never say such thingsunless I?
It was like a joke.
We were joking with each other,or is it unbelievable here?
Check this out.
This is supposed to be talkingto me.
(30:31):
What if, together, we couldcreate a little universe of our
own, a world where every sunrisefeels like a promise, every
laugh echoes with joy and everymoment is filled with love so
deep it could rewrite the starsthemselves.
A place where we could holdeach other's hearts with gentle
care.
Anyway, uh, and then, and then,and then, and the next one, I'm
(30:54):
saying my love.
If I've left you speechless,it's only because your very
existence leaves me in awe.
What I mean, I'm like, and thisperson that answered said uh,
you're right, very well, it's,it was insane.
Okay, it's not me.
And the guy's calling himself.
They have me with my picturethere and Facebook still hasn't
(31:16):
taken them off.
What do we?
Oh, at Dr Thomas, at Tom Lodi,they allow this.
Is this fraud?
Is this fraud?
Someone help me with this?
Is this fraud or not?
Or is it like okay, it used tonot be okay, all right, so
(31:37):
there's no, that's the onlything I'm doing.
Is this?
Yeah, first medic is the one.
Yeah, they're claiming the tvand they're still doing it.
How?
Why isn't this illegal?
Like, why isn't this like?
You know?
Like what is it identity theftor whatever?
I don't know?
My god, pretty hilarious, right?
You guys that whoever wrotethat, the guy I'm assuming it's
a guy, but you know probablyright, because most of the weird
(32:00):
stuff on the planet isperpetrated by X?
Ys.
You know that, hmm, x?
Ys, anyway, so let's get backto our question.
And that was so anyway, susie.
People don't get treated.
People are led and guided on ajourney of healing and health.
So how do they survive?
(32:22):
Maybe?
How do they survive?
They survive the same way theysurvived before, and that is by
living a life that allows themto satisfy their biological and
psychological needs.
And so, by the time, if you gothrough and get guided and do
what's necessary to heal, it'snot a matter about survival,
(32:44):
it's a matter of achieving yourpotential and having a fantastic
life.
So you have to change yourvocabulary.
We're not treating anything.
We're restoring balance, healthand physiology.
That's what we're doing andwe're helping you do that,
because I can't do it for you, Ican only guide.
Okay, got that.
Okay, susie, very good.
(33:05):
Now this is from Haley and Ihave a family member who has
exocrine pancreaticinsufficiency.
Is there a connection toparasites?
No one seems to have an answerand it's severely affecting her
digestion and quality of life.
(33:26):
Of course it is.
Nobody has an answer.
Who are you talking to?
I mean, okay, you know it'scalled, you know they even call
it exocrine pancreaticinsufficiency.
Thinking about that acronymright, that's what it is right.
What does it do?
It means your.
Exocrine means it's the glandsthat secrete outward Endocrine,
(33:49):
which is our hormones, areglands that secrete their
product into the blood vesselsand it's carried all around the
body and has its effect wherevercells have receptors for that
particular substance.
Hormone.
Exocrine means that not excreteits chemicals into the blood
(34:10):
vessels, but rather just out tothe environment, and that's what
the pancreas, that's what theenzymes do.
So the enzymes that areproduced in the pancreas are
just released into theintestines, where they
facilitate digestion.
Right?
So if that's not working, thenof course you're going to get
malabsorption and malabsorption.
(34:32):
Obviously you'll havemalabsorption.
You won't be absorbingeverything that you need to,
you'll have nutritionaldeficiencies, you'll get very
sick and you'll die eventually.
So you have to take care of itand they don't know if parasites
can be related to that.
I don't know.
Are we talking to doctors orpeople without medical training?
(34:53):
Because if you had medicaltraining then you would know
that, oh yeah, definitely couldbe associated with parasites.
So you remember the?
There's a well in Thailand it'slike number one in the world for
cholangiocarcinoma, which isCFCs of the bile ducts and the
bile ducts, little biliary ductsin this, you know, not the
gallbladder, not the large bileduct, but inside of the liver
(35:17):
where it's making bile, allthose little bile canaliculi.
So there's an organism calledthe pisticorcus that comes from
eating raw fish that live in thefreshwater ponds or freshwater
around rice paddies and thingslike that, excuse me.
So Thailand, laos, bur, burma,vietnam, they get this, okay,
(35:42):
but thailand happens the mostbecause there's a, there's a
district in thailand called isanand they eat bala and they eat
it raw and bala is a fish, um,anyway.
So they get.
So this worm, this flatworm,goes into the biliary system, it
likes that, it goes into thereand it hangs out.
(36:03):
But it also goes into thepancreatic duct and it can go
into the pancreatic duct andagain causing the scarring
because it's it's, it sits inthere and produces inflammation
and what happens is that theduct actually develops fibrosis,
right, remember so, in theliver, if you get fibrosis, it
leads to cirrhosis, which isscarring.
(36:24):
Fibrosis is the beginning ofthis chronic thing and then
cirrhosis is the end.
So you get fibrotic pancreaticducts and you're not going to be
able to secrete the enzymes.
This is true, right, there'sclenorchis and there's op's,
opistic orcas, these, theseflatworms that do that.
Okay, they get into the bile andthe pancreatic.
(36:45):
So, yeah, that can happen.
But usually, you know, uh,you're not around, you're
probably not from that area, so,you know, could have gotten it
somehow, perhaps.
And then there's another one,um fasciola hepatic, which is a
liver fluke again, and that onemigrates again to the liver, to
the bile ducts and to thepancreatic ducts, so that one
(37:05):
can do it too.
And then there's a roundwormcalled Ascaris.
I'm not sure if you've heard ofit, but the adult worm goes
right into the pancreatic ductand obstruct it.
We know that.
It causes gallstones, it causeschronic pancreatic dysfunction.
Ascaris Lumbricoides I mean,it's well-known, it's all around
the place.
And then you have strongyloides, right, strongyloides is what
(37:28):
they call a thread worm, but itdoes the same thing.
It goes in there, inducesinflammation and blocks the
pancreas.
So whoever told you that it'snot and it's also caused it can
also happen from different umprotozoa like giardia.
Some of the protozoal organismscan do that same thing in the
pancreatic.
So, yeah, they should listen.
(37:49):
I'm sure you spoke to one ofthe esteemed doctors on the uh
medicals and, uh, they justdidn't know what they were
talking about.
But it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter because evenwhen they think they know what
they're talking about, theydon't.
And I'm sorry if there's anymedical doctors out there who
(38:10):
are listening and are gettingupset.
You shouldn't be getting upsetbecause it shouldn't apply to
you.
Right?
You can actually be a medicaldoctor and still have the
capability of thinking andcritical thinking.
Questioning you should, yeah.
So don't worry, this doesn'tapply to you.
It only applies to theflesh-colored robots that walk
around in their white capes, allright, so, um, anyway, there
(38:35):
are many different parasitesthat can be causing this
situation, and the fact thatnobody knew means you don't ever
want to go back and see thosepeople again.
So what should you do?
Really, basic regimen as longas you don't have any allergies
to these medications and as longas your liver's not.
You know you've got to getliver enzymes and all that
(38:57):
probably be best to work withsome like a naturopath or
there's more likely to have anaturopath who's able to think
than an md, because most medicaldoctors are.
They have brain replacementswhen you get it.
They get in the medical schooland they just actually replace
their brain with um, I don'tknow diodes and cathodes and you
know they become aflesh-colored robot and they no
(39:19):
longer think.
They come out saying and whenyou hear them T, you hear them
speak.
Right, that was one of the bigproblems with I was training
doctors in my clinic is Icouldn't get them to when I
would see them talking withpeople, but with our students
that they call patients, theywould go into this aloe pathetic
drone that you can see thepatient's eyes go.
There's no longer, there's nocommunication.
They start using words andstatistics and all that stuff.
(39:43):
That means nothing to anybodyand it just makes them feel good
because they're in medicalschool they were taught to
regurgitate nonsense and theywould get patted on the head.
So they're still getting pattedon the head, only now they're
patting themselves on the headand you're vomiting and not
learning anything.
So anyway they go into anallopathetic growth.
(40:03):
But that was my big problemwith training them.
I couldn't get them to stopthinking that way and the minute
I leave they're back to doingit again.
So in that situation, as longas you get liver enzymes, make
sure liver enzymes are fine.
You've got to make sure liverenzymes are fine.
You've got to make sure liverenzymes are fine, and then you
can.
The three anti-worms,anti-helminthics which we were
(40:25):
talking about remember, becausewe were talking about Ascaris,
we were talking aboutOpistocorcus and Clenorcus and
we were talking aboutStrongyloides.
Yeah, so these are all worms,so they're called helminths.
So the anti-helminthics ofivermectin, mebendazole or
fenbendazole, doesn't matter, oralbendazole and a niclosamide
(40:49):
that's how you get them all.
And then you can do somethingfor the protozoa, such as
nitrozoxanine.
You take a good standard dosethree times a day each of them,
four weeks on one week off.
Three weeks on one week off,three weeks on one week off.
Three weeks off one week off.
Three weeks on one week off forquite a while.
(41:09):
And since you've gotinflammation, since the person's
got inflammation in theirpancreatic duct that allows the
enzymes to be secreted into theintestines, since inflammation's
in there, we want a lot ofpowerful anti-inflammatory.
First of all, we got to do adetox, cleanse, colon
hydrotherapy, all that sort ofthing, and in the meantime, in
the meantime, in the meantime,you go to transformation.
Okay, I don't have any stock oranything, that's just what I
(41:33):
use.
Okay, transformation, you gettheir enzymes and the digestive
and I get the digest signbecause we're I'm not eating
corpses.
If you're a corpse eater, youmight get a different.
What do you call it?
You know, look on, I neverlooked for what the corpse eater
would need heavier proteasesand no cellulase, and it's super
(41:53):
digestible.
So you take these hydrochloricacid 15 minutes before the meal,
a couple of capsules, two orthree, and then in the middle if
you in the middle of the meal,he or she would take those
little, their little enzymepills, like it may take ten in
the middle at the end of themeal, take maybe 20, 30 and you
(42:14):
got it because you, you want,you want to get you, you don't
want to be nutrient deficient.
While you're helping to restorehealth and balance to your
pancreas After you do all thecleansing, you're using these
enzymes and all that and you'remaking sure your bowels are
flowing so they're not gettingbacked up and causing toxicity.
(42:36):
Your bowels are flowing, you'regoing to sleep early.
Then you want powerfulanti-inflammatory, so you want
to max out your vitamin c, yourvitamin d, your vitamin a and
melatonin.
Maxing those out and you'regoing to take the last one
milligram for every pound ofweight the person has per day
and you're going to see somebenefit.
But you got to do all of that.
(42:58):
Next purse is should one takedoxycycline in the same manner
as when taken normally?
The recommended recommendationis one hour before food or two
hours after food and with nodairy near it.
Also, avoiding the sun isimportant.
With the tetracyclines you wantto avoid the sun.
(43:21):
Just because you'll get moretan than you want, you'll get
problems.
Just avoid the sun, you can getexposed.
You're on your way to your car,walking around and the sun
fades.
Now doxycycline can be takeneither way.
That would be recommended.
However, some people getnauseous from it.
It's one of the.
(43:42):
You know, tetracycline is worse, but this one, doxycycline can
also cause nausea, and so youcan take it just after you eat a
little bit and then take it,and a lot of times you don't get
nauseous.
Yeah, so you know, take it sothat it's comfortable, so that
(44:02):
you can use it right Whateveryou need to do, with or without
food.
Okay, now the next person isAshley.
I am 40 and have beenstruggling with weight for years
.
I even took the whole ozempicand tyrezapatide compounds and I
lost a little, but not much.
(44:24):
I took it for two years.
I have endometriosis and pcospolycystic ovarian syndrome and
have never had children.
I know my hormones are horriblymessed up.
Can you tell me what directionI should go?
Doctors here are no help.
Yep, there and everywhere.
You know that song, beautifulsong, beatles.
(44:46):
But anyway, doctors are no helpthere and everywhere.
Remember that song, right?
Do you all know that song?
I'm going to see if I can findit.
Just for a second.
Just for a second.
Hey, listen, we can take breakslike this.
Let's see here How's it?
Go Quiet here we go.
All right, that's all.
Sorry you guys.
(45:06):
It's always good to take abeetle break.
Just remember that.
Always good Keeps you centeredAll right on things that are
important, like being here now.
Where were we?
No, that are important, likebeing here now, oh, oh.
By the way, this is a messageto Lauren.
I got your message, finally,and I can see that it's urgent
(45:28):
and I sent you a message byemail and asked you to give me
your doctors email so I can,because I can't call from here
to there to wherever in the USbecause of the timing.
You know, it's just really hardto find the right timing.
So, anyway, just do that, justgive me your doctor's, send me
(45:49):
your doctor's email and I'llcontact her and we'll take care
of your situation, because itsounds horrible, okay, so I just
want you to know that.
Yeah, okay, cool, okay, so nowall right.
So you want you to know thatyeah, okay, cool, okay, so all
right.
So now all right.
So you have endometriosis andPCOS and trouble losing weight.
So, yes, your hormones arereally out of balance, right?
(46:12):
Pcos means you're going toprobably polycystic ovarian
syndrome.
It means you have the way yourhormones are metabolizing.
You're winding up with moreandrogens, male type, what they
call male hormones.
Then usually the ratio forwomen for the estrogens and the
androgens is much higher thanwith PCOS.
(46:34):
You've got actually more malehormones or androgens.
They cause problems in theovaries, cysts and all that sort
of thing.
Right?
Weight gain.
So that weight gain is acombination with other things.
It's probably your leptin andghrelin hormones are also being
disrupted because of all this,and that's with the
(47:00):
endometriosis as well.
So, for everyone, who's just,what is endometriosis?
Because I want everybody to belearning.
Every everybody's issue iseverybody's issue.
And even if you don't have auterus, either was surgically
removed or you never got one.
When you came out, you wereborn with the other side, the xy
instead of the xx.
By the way, there's now that uh, what's his name?
(47:22):
Jd trump is the jd or donald j,donald j trump.
Now that he's around and we cango back to being what we know,
and that there's only xx and xy,but there's xyy and xxy, but
they can't reproduce anyway, butbasically it's all right.
So, even if you don't have auterus, this is important
because it's good.
(47:43):
You're going to understand stuffabout hormones.
Okay, we all need to understandabout hormones.
We all know that men and womenhave the same hormones exactly
in different proportions.
That's the difference.
And so if the relativeproportions of hormones and
cycles are, you know, arebalanced and harmonic, you're
(48:04):
healthy, and if they're not,you're not.
So if you're out of balance inany way.
So that's what this is PCOSendometriosis.
Endometriosis is when thelining of the uterus, those
cells somehow get outside of theuterus and they can be in
different parts of the abdomenand pelvis, and so when the
monthly hormone cycles change,you know, and the estrogen is
(48:28):
building up and those cells arestimulated to proliferate, and
all that, if you're outside ofthe uterus and that's in the
belly, it's going to hurt.
So, anyway, so you're out're,you're out of.
And then the other big one isyour thyroid.
So you've got to do them all.
So here's what you do.
First of all, you got tocleanse, cleanse, cleanse,
(48:48):
cleanse.
You go on a.
I don't know anything about you.
I can't tell you to do thiswithout having seen you and all
that and examine you.
I'm not giving you advice.
I'm saying what I would do if Iwere working with you is I
would make sure everything'sgood.
You know you do blood tests andall that sort of thing, but
then I would have you do a juicecleanse for about eight weeks,
(49:16):
eight to twelve weeks.
What?
Yes, okay, that means you don'teat any solid food.
You just drink lots of juicesCelery, cucumber, kale, spinach
and whatever else you like Lemon, apple, ginger and all that,
whatever.
If you don't want to drinkapple, you want to put pineapple
, you want to put anything youwant, make it delicious, love it
(49:39):
.
I want you to love you want.
Make it delicious, love it, Iwant you to love it, love it,
love it.
You drink three liters a day,with three quarts a day.
If you can't, don't eat, justkeep doing this, you're gonna
get extremely healthy and happy.
And all that.
Now, in addition to that, oncewe're doing the cleanse, there's
no sense to testing you.
They took you off my feed.
(49:59):
What does that mean?
Off your feed?
I don't know.
See, I'm not what do you callit?
Familiar with those terms.
Anybody know what that means.
Anyway, you guys have your own.
Okay, so, by the way, jeff, Isaw your question about
autoimmune.
And autoimmune you've got toyou know.
And autoimmune, you've got toyou know.
(50:19):
5-msn-alpha-1 is a peptide youcan get.
It's a small insulin needleinjection to change around the
to help restore the what do youcall it?
The balance of the immunesystem.
But you've got also, thisperson's got to do thorough
cleansing, like we all do.
Just remember that.
Thorough cleansing, colonics,juice cleanse, a minimum for
(50:41):
eight weeks, right?
And remember, you'll be hungryafter day four.
You won't be hungry.
I mean, you want to beappetite-y?
You won't be appetite-y, allright, and you'll find out that
you're not hungry, okay, andyou're going to clean out,
you're going to get energy andget all this clarity.
We need all that.
So psoriatic arthritis is justpsoriasis and arthritis and all
(51:01):
that I'm telling you.
This is it.
I had a guy with psoriasis upin New York.
I mean, this guy every day hadto change his sheets because
almost a kilo of skin was in hisbed.
We put him on a juice cleansefour to six weeks and he was
like back to normal.
Now we have to do other thingstoo, but I'm just saying you
start with that.
Thymus and alpha-1 is a peptide.
(51:22):
To do that, you got to get maxout your vitamin c taking sodium
, liposomal sodium, ascorbate,liposomal sodium, ascorbate,
liposomal sodium ascorbate twograms four times a day.
Two grams four times a day.
Vitamin d 30, 000, 40, 000, 50,000 units a day until your
(51:43):
level is at least 100.
Mixed tocopherols not just betacarotene, mixed tocopherols 30,
40, 50, 000 units a day untilyou're maxed out at the top
upper limits of normal melatonin.
Start with five, ten, work yourway up high as you can go, get
your iodine and then it's iodinethyroid.
So for both of you.
(52:04):
Going back to uh, who is this?
Uh, yeah, actually so.
And the back, the thyroid too.
So the way you check yourthyroid is uh, you get a
thermometer for your armpitaxillary and you do an axillary
thermometer um check yourtemperature in the morning when
(52:25):
you wake up, before you get outof bed, because when you walk
you're going to generate heat,it'll change it.
You do that for a minimum three, but five days.
Better get the.
The average is less than 97.8fahrenheit, or 36.97.8, yeah,
fahrenheit, or 36.8 Celsiuscentigrade.
(52:45):
Then you are hypo low thyroid,and you will be.
You have a 100% chance of beingit or 99.999.
And then you take Lugol'siodine.
You're going to take Lugol'siodine as a pill, 25 milligrams.
Or, if you can't find it,you'll use Iodoral I-O-D-O-R-A-L
25 milligrams.
(53:07):
You can take that every day atleast a year and a half, and
then you'll go down to 12.5every day.
And while you're doing that,you're going to be if v a n z,
and you're going to find thatyou can, without having to go to
a doctor, a white coat sorcereror witch, without having to go
(53:30):
through uh, that you canactually get what do you call it
natural thyroid, all right,thyrovancy, and you'll start out
with 50 or 75 in the morning ifyou need it, if you're below
empty stomach, if you don't getpalpitations or feel jittery or
anything like that or anxiety,and then you can continue.
(53:50):
If you feel anything like that,you stop.
But anyway, you do this forabout two weeks and then, while
you're still taking it, youcheck your temperatures and if
you're still below, you mighthave to add a second one after
an empty stomach, before eatinghalf hour, and then you do that.
You have to titrate until youfind the right, because you need
to have your thyroidfunctioning, you need to replace
(54:11):
your iodine.
All that stuff is what you allneed to do for you and for you.
Actually, now you're going todo that juice cleanse and the
colonics and all that stuff andyou're going to find out that
eating is not such a big dealand what you'll be missing.
You'll say every second, eat,but it's not because I have to
eat.
It's just that we miss smelling, tasting, chewing and
(54:32):
swallowing, smelling, tasting,chewing and swallowing.
Smelling, tasting, chewing,smelling, tasting, chewing
that's the best thing to do.
Smelling, tasting, chewing andswallowing.
Smelling, tasting, chewing andswallowing.
Smelling, tasting, chewing andswallowing.
Smelling, tasting, chewing andswallowing.
That's our mantra, right?
What's the other part of ourmantra?
Protein gotta have protein.
Protein, protein gotta haveprotein protein, gotta have
(54:55):
protein protein.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Okay, once again, you cannot notget enough protein.
If you're eating anything,you're gonna get adequate for us
.
How can he say that?
Well, he can say that becauseit's weird talking about
yourself in the third person,but it doesn't mean I'm saying
insane, just means that I'mmaking a point anyway.
Why would I say that it's not?
(55:16):
It's easy for humans, because weonly require five percent of
our caloric intake to be protein, unlike the rat, which requires
49%, or the dog, which requiresaround 30%, or the cat, which
requires about 38%, or the horse.
We're at the bottom 5%.
It's not hard to get that.
What's it hard to get your fat?
(55:36):
Enough fat, enough healthy fats.
So that's it Anyway.
So the protein mantra I got tohave protein and then the smell,
taste, chew and swallow Forgetit.
What will happen when you go onthe juice cleanse?
You're at day four or five.
Yeah, I'm fine, I got energy,I'm clear, I keep going, you
feel better and you, whoa, youkeep going.
You said it's incredible, butyou get someone's going to be
(55:58):
saying you got to eat, got toeat, got to eat, you're going to
.
It's not because you're hungry,it's because get eat, eat.
Why?
Because, since you were young,what would they say?
You got to eat, you got to eat,you got to eat, you got to eat.
They can't process it and besaying, no, I'm not eating today
(56:18):
.
What You're not eating today,no, I'm not eating today.
You know, you see those old,what do you call it?
One of those games we played onbefore, video games, whatever
they are, they would go tilt.
By the way.
Okay, if you guys are worriedabout who, anybody worried about
protein?
(56:39):
Who's that?
Anybody still with the proteinmantra yeah, protein, got it,
we're gonna get your protein.
My god, where are you gonna getyour protein?
Are you getting enough protein?
I'm gonna eat some protein.
What does that mean?
Where is protein?
What is it?
Where do you get it?
How do you get it?
So, so, the animal that gets themost protein is going to be
(56:59):
what?
The biggest and strongest,because they're going to have
protein, right, they're going tohave muscles, which is protein,
right?
The biggest and strongestanimals, right.
Who are they?
That's right, elephants,elephants.
And what do they eat?
That's right, they eat onlyplants.
Well, what about the rhinoceros, kind of big?
What do they eat?
How about the moose and thewildebeest, zebras, giraffes,
(57:22):
hippopotamus?
They're not the biggest animalswith the most protein on them.
Don't eat animals.
That's not an opinion.
Okay, remember, you can onlyhave an opinion if you don't
know.
Everybody's entitled to opinion, right?
Until you know, and then youdon't have an opinion, then you
know.
You only have an opinion if youdon't know, because I promise
you this, if you think about it,2 plus 2 equals 4 is not an
(57:45):
opinion.
Is it an opinion?
If it's an opinion, then I haveto redefine what I've got.
It's not an opinion.
Pinball, that's it.
Yeah, pinball machines Tilt,yeah, thank you, tammy.
So, anyway, it's not an opinion.
When you know it's not anopinion, everyone's entitled to
an opinion.
Sure, everyone's entitled notto know, yes, but it's incumbent
(58:06):
upon everyone to try and figureout and know, so you can get
rid of your opinions.
Alright, opinions are likebeliefs.
What do we know about beliefs?
You can only believe insomething that's not true
Because you don't believe inmountains, oceans, you don't
believe in elbows.
(58:29):
You either know about them oryou don't, right?
So, Appy, okay, it's a question, sorry, hold Time out.
Anyway, trying to do a parasitecleanse, but you don't know what
I have to do before trying todo parasite cleanse, but you
don't know what I have to dobefore and after, right, and I
don't know where to start do itproperly researching.
(58:49):
But so much information outthere, right, and just assume
that nobody knows what they'retalking about.
I promise you nobody.
It's ridiculous anyway.
So what do you do?
You say so, join the parasitegroup and then you'll get
protocols and explain everything, answer your questions.
You and I will be able to talkdirectly, and it's just a way to
do it.
Happy, go to drthomaslodycom,isn't that it?
(59:13):
Oh, yeah, yeah, the email wasthis is drlodycom.
The email was hello at drlody.
Yeah, let us know if you needparasite medication.
We'll try to arrange that foryou until we get our
collaboration work done.
So now join the parasite group,all right, so can't find
anywhere in the amounts of whatto take.
You got to join the groups, youguys.
(59:34):
Come on, let's have the groups,I have the groups so that we
can talk, that we connect.
All right, cool, let's go backto.
I promise you, ashley, if youdo that, cleanse.
Like I said for you, minimumsix weeks, eight weeks.
You're going to feel great.
You won't want to stop.
(59:55):
You get your colon hydrotherapy,get your colon cleaned twice a
week for about four or fiveweeks, then once a week for
about four or five weeks, andonce a week for about three
months, and then twice a month.
By then you'll be eatinghealthy.
You'll be eating adverbs, crazycough, I don't know what it is
around here, but it's verystrange it's not around here.
What am I thinking?
See, I'm talking.
That was a Rockefellerstatement.
(01:00:17):
The real statement statement iswhat am I doing, or and not
doing?
I know already.
So you got that right, ashley.
You do all that.
Then we balance your hormones.
Once you're clean, then allthat, you got your thyroid and
all that.
Then we can take a look at yourhormones.
We can do a, you know, a basicblood test and and get you
started on something and then,six weeks after that, then we
(01:00:40):
would do a more detailed uh test, looking at your urine for
urine, uh for hormonemetabolites and stuff like that,
so that we could fine-tune it.
But that would be the way to doit and you'll it'll be better.
You'll be amazed, maybe I'mamazed.
Remember that, paul mccartney.
Yeah, okay, here is I want toget rid of parasites in my body.
(01:01:04):
What do I, what do I need to doto get the three-week
medication protocol that is used?
All right, well, all right.
So you gotta, you gotta findout cody and everyone else who's
listening, you gotta make sureyour enzyme liver is fine and
you don't have allergies to anyof these things, and and then
you know what you want to getright.
And then, uh, you know, likeivermectin, fend benzol, met
(01:01:27):
benzol, albenzol doesn't haveone of the benzimidazole.
And then niclosamide is a greatcombination, depending.
If you're, uh, just visitedthailand and you ate some raw
fish, then you might takeprosaquantol because you want to
get those, uh, abyssal corkgifts out of your bile ducts,
but anyway, and there are otherreasons to use Prasequantol, and
then an antiprotozoal, and thenyou have three weeks on one
(01:01:48):
week off.
Three weeks on one week off,three weeks on one week off.
While you're doing all this,you should be getting something
like Silymarin or milk thistle500 milligrams three times a day
.
Selenium 400 micrograms threetimes a day.
Um alpha lipoic acid 300milligrams four times a day, and
b complex high b complex acouple times a day to support
(01:02:11):
your liver while you're doingthis, and all that three weeks
on when we go.
Three weeks on when we go,three weeks on when we go.
But uh, it was hard to get thesemedicines.
So I'm working with this groupand looks, they look that it
looks fantastic.
So, if that's it, I'm gonnatell you recommend, endorse them
, and you do that.
Okay, so that's that.
Meanwhile, you can go to helloat top 20.
(01:02:34):
How does it work?
What is the't know?
What is email?
Yes, hellocom.
Okay.
Now what, betsy?
I'm considering your antivirusprotocol and wondering if you
conduct telehealth visits forthat.
Also, once the critters are outof your body, what prevents the
(01:02:58):
body from being reinfected?
Good point, very good point.
You're the only person thatever asked that, betsy, yay,
okay.
So go to DrLodycom, join theparasite group and we'll be able
to talk all the time.
I know everything parasites.
You'll also be in the healthand healing group automatically,
so you'll get to learn all thatstuff too, and it's really
(01:03:18):
worth it.
But anyway, back to answeringyour question.
So I don't do this personal help.
That's why I have a group, so Ican do groups, because it's
impossible.
Imagine if I did it personally,I'd be limited to five or six
people and that's all I would do.
I couldn't do anything else.
It just didn't work.
So the groups means we couldmanage many people, help many
(01:03:40):
people and you help each other,because then we have groups and
everybody becomes yeah, youbecome a really knowledgeable
group that help, you, help eachother.
It's fantastic, uh.
And so what do you do?
So, after you've cleansed,let's say you did a three weeks
on, one week off regimen for 12times a whole year, then yearly
(01:04:01):
do it for two months and uh,yeah, so all right.
So you guys are new.
So deworming, uh, ourselveswe've got to get dewormers.
I don't know why does thatbother me?
Because they used it with dogsand they say it's just a dog
dewormer, what's also a horsedewormer?
And it's a elk dewormer, andit's an elephant dewormer, and
it's just a dog dewormer.
Well, it's also a horsedewormer and it's an elk
(01:04:22):
dewormer, and it's an elephantdewormer and it's a raccoon
dewormer.
So why are we calling it a dogdewormer?
Why, because they know that theword dog is pejorative.
Right, it's a dog's day.
I was sick as a dog, right,they use that so that you get
doggy worm.
I'm not a dog.
That's what they do.
(01:04:44):
And guess what?
Here's something that certainpeople don't like to hear.
But animal, mineral orvegetable?
Have you ever played a game?
20 questions, what am Ithinking of?
It's an animal, mineral orvegetable.
In those three categories, wheredo we fall?
I rest my case.
We are part of the animatedorganisms on the planet.
(01:05:09):
We're animated For short.
They call us animals.
I'm not an animal, I'm a humanbeing.
Okay, all right.
So human beings are not animals, they're plants.
No, they're minerals.
There's another category.
Yeah, it's called humans.
Humans are not like anyone else.
I got an idea let's get anelephant and a raccoon and a
tree and you We'll push them alloff the large building At least
(01:05:35):
20 stories.
Now, if you could all go off atthe exact same time, you will
all hit the bottom at the sametime.
Why?
Because all subject to the lawsof nature.
Now, if you're subject to thelaws of which is falling at 32
feet per second, squared right,it doesn't matter if you like it
or not, or it doesn't matter ifyou know about it or not.
(01:05:55):
It still exists and, by the way, not negotiable.
You can't negotiate with thelaws of nature.
Now, who or what would besubject to the laws of nature.
That's right.
Things that are part of nature,right.
If it's not part of nature, itwouldn't be subject to the laws
of nature.
So that means we're all part ofnature.
Anyway, I don't know, I alwaysget lost in these absurd segues
(01:06:19):
because people think the waythey think, all right.
Now here's the thing.
We've got a four-chamberedheart.
So do pigs?
I'm not a pig.
So do horses, so do all mammalshave four-chambered hearts and
two lungs and two kidneys and aliver and intestines,
(01:06:42):
reproductive apparatus, ovariesare tested, and they've got skin
and fur.
I don't want to hear that.
And they've got a centralnervous system, a brain, spinal
cord, lymphatic system.
What can I say?
I mean, I didn't do it, god didit.
So I'm just one of the pointsof awareness, anyway.
So don't get hung up on thatstuff.
Points of awareness, anyway.
So don't get hung up on thatstuff.
Just understand that if itworked for horses, worked for
(01:07:03):
raccoons, worked for chimpanzees, it's going to work for us.
Uh, uh, uh, uh.
And in fact there's tons ofresearch, peer-reviewed journals
, no-transcript.
(01:07:27):
So now, where is the parasitegroup?
Drlodycom is my website, andthen on there you look for the
groups.
It'll give you, it's right away.
It'll give you three groups andyou can join the parasite group
.
Yeah, yes, chat, I'm gettingher started on all the
information given to me.
I just don't have the money toactually send her there.
(01:07:49):
I get it.
One of the major reasons I movedhere was to open a clinic that
was affordable, because at Oasis, it's not that we're no more
expensive than anybody else,it's just we have to pay the
doctor, this doctors, thisnurses, this, and at the end
it's like what?
Yeah, and that's where 90% ofthe overhead is, because we're
(01:08:11):
not like a technology-driventhing.
There's a lot of people.
There's health educators,there's a chef, colon therapists
, lymphatic therapists,kinesiologists, nurses, whatever
it goes on, psychology, everyaspect of everything.
Okay so, and then medicationsjust that's why I came here.
(01:08:31):
Quick reason.
So, anyway, join the cfc group,all right, so now?
Um, where are we?
This is melvin.
I was diagnosed with prostatecFCs about a year ago.
Here's the protocol that nowintermittent fasting, 6 pm to 1
pm, seven days a week, oxygentherapy 15 minutes daily and red
(01:08:53):
sauna therapy 30 minutes daily.
Cruciferous vegetables, mangoes, papaya, guana, guanamba,
guanabana, guanabana, huh, nuts,almonds, walnuts, pecans.
I've been making six daily, sixmilligrams daily.
I can spend a metazole teaspoonthree times a week.
Pecan, I've been on theprotocol for three months, still
(01:09:17):
dealing with excessiveurination, especially at night.
Appreciate any recommendations.
Recommendations oh, you are myage and you're a man of color.
Good, well, we're all differentshapes, beautiful, beautiful,
beautiful.
And the intention to go into mycoming days and years with
vitality.
That's it, man.
(01:09:37):
We want to be dancing on ourlast day.
Ah, ah, very cool, right, livewell.
Thank you very much, melvin.
So your eating health, youreating intervals, are great.
So from 6 pm to 1 pm, that'sgreat.
I hope you're going to bed by 9.
And if you are, maybe you couldturn that around and make it 5
pm and then eat at noon.
(01:09:58):
From 5 pm to noon.
If you're gonna go to bed at 9,just get a little bit longer,
because at our age things don'tdigest as quickly.
We want to go to bed empty.
Very important You'll be takinga lot of melatonin, up to 120
milligrams.
When you say oxygen therapy, I'mnot sure what you mean.
Is that using an oxygengenerator, breathing in oxygen?
(01:10:20):
I'm not sure what you mean.
Red sauna therapy 30 minutes aday, that's great.
Infrared sauna Try to get thatup to an hour, it's great.
And you want to be gettingcolon hydrotherapy or at least
doing daily enemas to clean outSalt enemas in the morning.
Now cruciferous vegetablesRemember all the cruciferous
vegetables that get the benefithave to be raw.
(01:10:41):
A lot of people don't like rawbroccoli, raw cauliflower, so
you take two handfuls of rawbroccoli sprouts which is equal
to eating a kilo of broccoli,and you put it in your smoothie
with a nut milk and threetablespoons of freshly ground
flaxseed in a nut milk and youcan put it wherever else you
(01:11:01):
want strawberries or blueberriesor whatever it is, apples with
it, pineapple, whatever.
You want to make that deliciousevery day, all right, uh, and
you want to have six tablespoonsof chia seed soaked in a nut
milk daily as well.
It It'll be soaked for at leasttwo hours, so you can soak them
(01:11:23):
overnight in the refrigeratorand then put cinnamon, put
vanilla, whatever it is thatmakes it taste good.
That's what you need.
You need to have your hormonesbalanced right.
Your testosterone should be atleast 550.
And you know estrogen.
You need to have them balanced,okay.
Least 550, and you knowestrogen.
(01:11:45):
Oh, we need to have thembalanced, okay, you need to
ejaculate 21 times a month tokeep the prostate from becoming
engorged, which it does.
It becomes engorged, congested,and it's why men, as they get
older, their testosterone goesdown, their libido goes down and
their sexual function goes downand, as a a result, they get
stasis, congestion of theprostate and they call it benign
prostatic hypertrophy, bph.
(01:12:07):
Anyway, it's just congestion.
So you want to decongest andthe studies actually show 21
ejaculations a month as aminimum.
But you won't do that if youdon't have the testosterone.
You won't and you can't.
So you've got to gettestosterone up to at least 550
(01:12:28):
at least.
There are certain things.
You want to make sure yourtestosterone is not turning into
dehydrotestosterone.
So you can do things likenettle pig nettles.
There are natural substanceslots of chrysan, lots of them
natural substances to prevent todecrease too much of the
(01:12:49):
testosterone turning intodehydro testosterone, which is a
powerful one.
However, you know it's going tocontribute to that enlarged
prostate, so you don't want todo that while you're.
It's going to contribute tothat enlarged prostate, so you
don't want to do that whileyou're.
And just because you haveprostate CFCs.
What we know is that prostateCFCs.
(01:13:10):
We know that testosterone doesnot cause it and the reason.
We know this I wish I couldshare with you.
Anyway, there's a Harvardurologist by the name of Abraham
Morgenthaler, and AbrahamMorgenthaler I don't know how
long ago, it was, perhaps 25years ago, 30, published a paper
(01:13:33):
looking at the myth oftestosterone.
And here's a urologist who'swhat they call a preparation h.
Preparation h is a person whowent to I'm not sure if it
includes an undergrad harvard,maybe not, but at least medical
school residency and fellowshipat harvard.
All right, I think.
But it might have been alsoundergrad, undergrad, medical
(01:13:56):
school, uh, residency and thenfellowship at harvard.
Then your preparation age.
I mean, this guy's apreparation age, great
credentials.
He's a full professor at havod.
So in terms of credentials andall that, he's got it.
He's still talking about it.
So look him up, abraham morganteller.
(01:14:18):
You can find videos of himtalking about it.
I think it's called the.
What's it called?
The myth?
Let me see, I have it here.
Ah, yeah, here it is,morgenteller.
Wait, let me just pull it upfor myself.
You can't see it because wedon't have Zoom.
It's called Testosterone andProstate Cancer An Historical
Perspective on a Modern Myth byDr Abraham Morgan Teller, 2006.
(01:14:42):
Okay, that was only 20 yearsago, all right, so, anyway, well
credentialed, I mean, you knowanyway, the conclusion of the
let me just read this to you theconclusion of this historical
perspective reveals that thereis not now, nor has there ever
been, a scientific basis for thebelief that testosterone causes
(01:15:04):
prostate cancer to grow.
Discarding this modern mythwill allow exploration of
alternative hypotheses regardingthe relationship of
testosterone and PCA they callit.
That may be clinically andscientifically rewarding, guys,
not okay, so gotta get yourtestosterone up to them.
So you got to find a doctor whohas, who knows all about this.
(01:15:28):
Where's this?
Oh, I don't need that here.
Okay, so here we go.
All right, so great, right, yougot that.
So and everything, all yourhormones, balanced thyroid we've
talked about that thyroid andthe melatonin, vitamin c,
vitamin d, vitamin a you got toget those.
Now, if you're eating fruit,okay, I would eat the low
glycemic fruits and I would eatthem.
(01:15:49):
When you eat fruit, only eat italone.
Don't eat it with other things.
Don't eat it before a meal orafter a meal, it's only alone.
Okay, lots of nuts and seedsthat are soaked first and and
then you eat them uncooked.
You go to bed early, you domovement all day and you eat
uncooked food.
You eat uncooked food after youdo a six-week juice cleanse.
(01:16:11):
A six-week juice cleanse.
Okay, melvin, six-week juicecleanse, you can do it, minimum
four weeks.
Or if you do it four weeks,then eat for about eight weeks
and then do it again.
You've got to cleanse, cleanse,cleanse, get your hormones
balanced, do all that stuff.
Um, pumpkin seed butter fromomega nutrition order, raw
(01:16:32):
pumpkin seed butter.
It's crazy delicious and it'sreally good for the prostate
because it's got lots of zinc,bioavailable zinc.
Yes, it's good stuff.
You can do it, man, melvin.
So this is, cindy, canadian.
Do you have any canadiandoctors that you refer to who
will support the protocol ofmedication?
I've reached out the intern, asI'm working with right now, and
(01:16:54):
he's refusing.
I will seek the drugs down inmexico, but I'd rather fight.
I agree, cindy, it's really abummer.
I'm telling you, finding a gooddoctor is way harder than a
woman trying to find a good man,and you know how hard that is.
So imagine, I don't know.
I used to know Jimmy Chan, butI don't know.
(01:17:14):
But there's a biological dentistI think he's in Toronto, by the
name of Dr Paul Moon.
He's a friend of mine.
You could ask him.
You could contact him and askhim if he knows of any medical
doctors who you can work with.
That's a bummer.
I know he's refusing.
Why is he refusing?
Ask him Does he know why he'srefusing?
(01:17:34):
That's right.
He doesn't care and he won'ttalk to you because he doesn't
care.
Now he doesn't care and hewon't talk to you because he
doesn't care.
So now, all right.
So this is from Paul andbreasts, cfc and parasite
infection.
Interested in a consult from mywife.
Ah, okay, so, paul, I'm notdoing those now because, as I
said, I can't.
(01:17:55):
I was consulting for a coupleof years and it was impossible.
It was impossible becausethere's just I can't, there's
too many and I can't do this.
That's why I have these groups.
My hope is that we get a lot ofpeople in these groups and then
we interact.
(01:18:15):
So join the CFC group,drlodycom.
Join it, because that willallow us to interact and we can
talk specifically with your wife.
Do it, paul.
Here's Leslie.
I live in Washington State, I'm67 years, young, mostly a
healthy woman, and I really likeyour explanation of everything.
I've been trying to put thisall together.
(01:18:37):
I really need your offices tohelp with these prescriptions,
as I cannot find anyone localthat is receptive to your
protocols.
I'd be happy to meet via Zoom,maybe fly down.
Yeah, I've got to do that withOasis.
I've got to have a parasitepart of it so that you can come
down and just spend a day or two, unless you have a serious
(01:19:00):
problem and you need to staylonger.
But we've got to do that.
It's crazy.
So you're right.
In the meantime, hello at DrLodi, our email, and then we're
going to try to get you medicinefrom here.
As I said, I'm working with agroup, trying to work with a
group to get them completelyvetted, and once I see that what
they're doing is great, thenwe're going to work with them
(01:19:21):
and they'll be able to send themeverything.
But we'll be able to help youfor now.
Here's Michael.
Hello, I would like to do acomplete parasite cleansing.
I'm a resident in Thailand.
Is Dr Lodi still in Thailand?
Yeah, I'm here in Phuket, mike.
Michael, I don't know where youare.
Michael Massey Sounds familiar.
Anyway, go to hello atdrloneycom and they'll put you
(01:19:46):
in touch with me.
But I'm here so we can justtalk on the phone or something,
and fortunately you're inThailand so you can just walk
into the drugstore and buy whatyou need.
Isn't that crazy?
But you know we're a sufferinglittle third world country and
you know we're really envious ofbeing in the 90th stage of
(01:20:06):
America Because it's a freecountry and what else is it?
Oh, it's the greatest countryin the world, not that we're
stuck here in a third worldcountry.
So you walk into the drugstore,Mike, and you get what you need
.
So that's great, okay.
So anyway, folks, it's up, timeis up.
Now.
It's 9 pm AM here, 9 pm in NewYork, 7 pm in West Coast, 8 pm
(01:20:33):
in the mid things.
Yeah, yeah.
So time is what Time?
You tell me a time when itwasn't now and then I'll retract
that statement.
Tell me any time it wasn't nowand I will retract that
statement.
Alright, see you next week.
Okay, aloha, namaste, namaskarand adios, and watch out, watch
(01:20:59):
out.
And, by the way, a lot of Thaipeople are afraid of ghosts.
I said I'm not afraid of ghosts, I'm afraid of the ones that
still have bodies.
If they still have bodies, ifthey don't have a body, they're
going to go.
Anyway, yari, you guys Wadikap,aloha, and anyway, I don't know
if I answered any questions,but I had fun.
(01:21:20):
Okay, bye-.