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April 24, 2025 73 mins

The profound difference between fighting disease and restoring balance takes center stage in this eye-opening discussion. Dr. Thomas Lodi challenges our fundamental understanding of health by dismantling the conventional disease model that treats symptoms as invading entities rather than adaptive responses to environmental imbalances.

With characteristic directness, Dr. Lodi addresses the rampant confusion about human nutrition. "I understand your confusion," he acknowledges to a listener struggling with contradictory dietary advice, before offering clarity through biological principles rather than trendy diets. He systematically debunks the carnivore diet trend, explaining that even if eating "nose to tail," humans miss critical plant compounds essential for longevity: polyphenols, flavonoids, glucosinolates, carotenoids, fiber, and insoluble silica. His evidence includes thriving plant-based individuals like Fred Bischi who, at 97 years old after 56 years of raw plant foods, demonstrates remarkable cognitive function and physical vitality.

The discussion introduces "chronically fermenting cells" (CFCs) as a more accurate and less fear-inducing term than cancer, emphasizing that regardless of location, these cells share the same metabolic abnormality. This understanding leads to a unified approach centered on cleansing, balance restoration, and nourishment rather than location-specific treatments. Throughout the sessi

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Join Dr. Lodi’s informative
For some reason I'm viewed ascontroversial.
I don't understand it all, Ijust tell the truth, but anyway

(00:36):
I.
Masturbatory process yeah, Idon't know what's going on with
the TikTok, but the TikTok islike it's completely.
But anyway, they don't like mebecause I talk about such
bizarre things as propolis,which I really don't know what's
going on with the t, but thetiktok is like it's completely
so.
But anyway, they don't like mebecause I talk about such
bizarre things as propolis,which I really don't.
I rarely talked about.
I think talked about it oncebut they took it down anyway.
But uh, tiktok still hassomebody else faking me on and

(00:59):
they've let those videos on, thesame videos that they took off,
and of course you can't, so I'mnot on there.
But anything else.
For example, if you want to um,instagram, facebook, youtube,
all of those, it's atdrthomaslodycom or the handle is
that what it's called handle?
Yeah, is that a handle?
Because a handle is dr thomaslody and then, unless you're on

(01:22):
x, it's DR Thomas Lodi, md.
Okay, so we've got to add theMD in there.
Anyway, this Tuesday night, 8 pmyour time or 8 pm Eastern
Standard Time, I'll be on PaulNisan's podcast again.
You know the Royal Life HealthShow, so I'll be on there.
You're all welcome to join in.

(01:45):
Uh, to join in on that, um,it's free, of course.
Um and um, you know that that'sone thing.
I mean, uh, there's a lot of uhpeople out there like that are
somehow against things.
I say, but just keep in mind, Idon't charge you any money for
that.
I'm not like making money forsaying these things.

(02:07):
I don't make money.
In fact I'm pretty poor.
So what is my other motive?
Is there another motive?
Would I sit up here and tellthese potentially possible lies?
For what reason?
All right, so anyway, I don'tlie, just tell, just tell the

(02:29):
truth, sorry, and I haven'tmonetized it.
No, I haven't monetized it.
Oh, my god, what kind of acyborg are you if you can't
monetize everything you thinkand say well, I'm not one of
those cyborgs anyway.
The other thing is that vanessaand darren, as you know, darren
is he, uh, healing motion,moving is healing, yeah, anyway,
uh, and vanessa are thepathways, the healing pathways.

(02:52):
She's the teacher, so they'reboth teachers, but anyway, their
shows or their um live, um, uh,events will be beginning, um, I
think, next tuesday Tuesday,yeah, your Tuesday.
So you're gonna miss.
You'll miss this thing with thefall Nissan because you gotta
go watch them, although it's atdifferent times that they're in

(03:13):
the afternoon.
Anyway, go to my website,drlodicom.
Drlodicom, and you can find outhow to join them.
Sign up for the, the groups,because part of the membership
groups will be able to see,you'll be able to see.
Part of the content availableto you is that you'll be able to
see Vanessa and there, allright, and soon we're going to

(03:36):
have actually a raw chef.
It'll all be part of thecontent that's available to you,
all right.
So, anyway, keep that in mindand remember we have three
groups Health and Healing,parasite Group and the CFC Group
, and there's no other group.
So if there's another group outthere, if there's another group
like there is, it's called theDr Thomas Lodi Community on

(03:56):
Telegram, which is not meStrange, strange, but I've
complained to Telegram.
You know what they've saidNothing, actually.
I did get one response from oneaspect of Telegram which said
they're going to charge me $80to take down everyone, and I
don't know what they're talkingabout.

(04:17):
So obviously there must be morethan just what I thought.
So, you see, there's only 38people on here, which means
those 200 that are usually onall the other channels don't
know that we're here.
They don't know that we're here.
They don't know that we're here.
Unbelievable, all right.
Anyway, here we are.
I'm going to forget that, okay.
So let me talk about, let'sanswer, some of these questions.

(04:38):
I sense you folks had them.
Now this is from Marl.
Okay, marl and Marle asked whatare the best food and diet for
a high-grade endometriosis, cfc,for a 56-year-old woman?
So I know, marle, you must bevery new to this whole coming

(04:58):
and talking with us, I guess.
Okay, because you're using wordslike cancer, that we don't use
anymore, because we know thatdoesn't give us any information.
It just gives us fear.
And we use the word, theacronym CFCs, which stands for
chronically fermenting cells,because that's what they are.
So we like to communicate in away that allows us to actually

(05:20):
exchange information.
Okay, so from now on I hopethat you use that, because every
time you hear that other word,it kills you, it wipes out your
immune system.
All right, so your question iswhat is the best food for a
high-grade endometrial CFC, fora 56-year-old woman.
So I understand that in thatquestion you're assuming that

(05:42):
there must be different dietsfor different situations that
happen to humans, so that ahuman who is has lives in
Detroit should eat differentlythan a human that lives in
Hawaii, or that a human that hasswollen fingers, that they call
arthritis, should eatdifferently than a human who

(06:05):
eats, who has a condition withtheir heart.
And the answer is no.
The answer is we always eat thesame.
I want you to think ofsomething.
Just think of this real simple.
You got a horse that's sickfrom Montana and you got a horse
that's sick in Moscow.

(06:26):
Should they eat different foods?
How about a healthy horse inAustralia and a sick horse in
Virginia?
Should they eat different foods?
No, horses eat horse food, dogseat dog food, cats eat cat food
, lizards eat lizard food andthey never, ever go outside of
their diets.
That's what they eat all thetime, and they don't eat one

(06:49):
thing when they're sick and onething when they're not sick.
You understand, that's whatthey do.
That's what they do.
All right, so let's talk aboutthis, and okay?
So first of all, and understandsomething about that, you have
endometrial.
In other words, it started onthe lining of your uterus.
But what started?
These cells started to ferment.

(07:10):
This fermentation processthat's occurring in the inside
of your uterus is also occurring.
Could also have started in yourbreast, in your bones, in your
brain, anywhere.
If it's a man, prostatetesticles, it doesn't matter,
it's still the same process.
There's not a different process.
It's's a man, prostatetesticles, it doesn't matter,
it's still the same process.
There's not a different process.
It's not a different.
There's no different type ofCFC.

(07:31):
There's a different location,but there's not a different type
.
There's only one, and thatmeans metabolically aerobic
glycolysis.
That means with the Warburgeffect.
That's what that means.
Period, there's no other thingthat describes CFCs.
Okay, what that means.
Period, there's no other thingthat describes CFCs.
Okay, there's no other thing.
There's no like specificmutation or anything that
describes it, except themetabolic abnormality, unique

(07:55):
quality of aerobic glycolysis,meaning that it engages in
fermentation even in thepresence of oxygen, whereas
healthy cells do not do thatOkay, and we don't need to know
more than the deep what I justsaid in terms of that even in
the presence of oxygen, whereashealthy cells do not do that.
Okay, and we don't need to knowmore than what I just said in
terms of that kind of detail.
So the question is this Do youunderstand that you've got a
process going on inside of youruterus, started there I don't

(08:18):
know if they've done surgery orwhat and they're saying high
grade.
Forget their terms.
If you listen to their words,if you follow their vocabulary,
you're dead.
Their vocabulary is on thislanguage train called the train
of death and it ends at theyhave a special door in the
hospital and it's calledM-O-R-G-U-E morgue and you're

(08:41):
only going to find that door ina hospital.
You won't find it anywhere else.
They don't have them anywhereelse, only in the hospital.
So if you want to go to themorgue, the front door to the
morgue is the hospital doorentrance and they call them
healthcare facilities.
Can you imagine?
That's like saying war is peaceand hate is love.

(09:02):
That's what it's like saying.
Yeah, am I exaggerating?
No, is this hyperbole?
Same thing, no, anyway.
So what?
What is the best food?
The best food is for thisperson with a high grade,
endometrial cfc who's 56 yearold.
Same thing for a 18 year old uh, young boy who's a marathon

(09:25):
runner.
Same thing.
We all need the same thing.
What do we need?
Well, we have threemacronutrients, right, called
carbohydrates, fats and aminoacids, which are proteins, okay,
yeah.
So then, uh, that's it.
And then there aremicronutrients.
What are the micronutrients?
Well, um, they consist ofminerals.

(09:49):
Now, minerals are what it's.
Minerals are minerals, right?
Minerals are like potassium,calcium, sodium, zinc.
You can't pick them off theground and eat them.
They've got to come through theplants and get chelated to,
either to an organic or an aminoacid, and then we can ingest
them.
So we need the plants for that.
Now, do you need minerals?

(10:10):
Yes, because the minerals arethe batteries of the enzymes,
and the enzymes are how yourbody works.
Without enzymes, your bodydoesn't work, because your body
is engaging in 37 sextillionchemical reactions every second,
21 zeros.
That's a lot of chemicalreactions every second.
A lot of chemical reactionsevery second.

(10:31):
Every one of them is mediatedby an enzyme, and every enzyme
has at least one or twodifferent minerals that are the
battery that allow it to run.
So minerals are essential, yep,okay.
Now the other thing is to keepin mind is that, in addition to
the minerals and themicronutrients, which we call

(10:51):
vitamins, there are alsophytonutrients.
And the phytonutrients there'sabout 25,000 of them essential
by the, by the, by by theamerican dietetics association
and the american medicalassociation, because they only
look at, they say what isessential is what you going to

(11:11):
survive, what is required tosurvive right now, in the acute
setting now, without the, theseother nutrients, these
phytonutrients, you won'tsurvive more than a year or two.
So I can still consider themessential, because if we're just
talking about making it for thenext 300 days, that's not my
goal.
That's kind of like, yeah, thefive-year survival of?

(11:34):
I don't want to hear five-yearsurvival, I don't want to hear
that, I want to hear you know, Iwant to die of old age sometime
way in the future.
I don't want to die within theon the year six anyway.
So when we're talking about um,the, the phytonutrients,
they're required forregeneration, for longevity, for

(11:55):
resistance to degenerativeconditions, right, so, and
anyway, you need all those.
And people say that, well,there's nothing I can.
I can get from a plant that Ican't get from eating animal
flesh.
That's just not true.
And to say that it's ourancestral diet is reductionist

(12:17):
fiction, reductionist fiction.
And to say that it's completeis just biochemically false.
And to say that plants aretoxic when we which means you're
ignoring the adaptive symbiosisthat's required.
That is due to those littletoxicities and plants.
They require an adaptivesymbiosis.

(12:37):
So to say that plants are toxicis just scientific illiteracy.
By the way, if there's anycarnivores oh carnivores you're
not carnivores, by the way,you're a corpse eater.
So if there are any corpseeaters out there who want to
debate with me, live anywhere.
I'm ready.
Let's do it okay.
Let's do it okay.
Let's debate live.
And you give me an opportunityto show the research that backs

(13:00):
up every syllable that comes outof my mouth.
Then you show me that.
And also I want to know youknow I feel better on a
carnivore diet.
Yeah well, you'll feel reallygood on a cocaine diet for a
little while, but guess whathappens?
It doesn't last.
So you tell me how, try eatingjust animals for the.
And let me talk to you in 20years.
How are you doing?

(13:21):
In 20 years?
You won't be here.
There is no culture of humanityever that has sustained itself
on purely a flesh diet.
And, by the way, even if you'reeating nose to tail everything,
nose to tail, like a carnivorewould like a good, you're going
to be a good carnivore.
Eat everything from nose totail.
Okay, even if you did that,you're still going to miss out

(13:44):
on a ton of stuff.
Okay, what are you going tomiss out on?
Polyphenols, what else?
Flavonoids, what else?
Glucosinolates Anything else?
Carotenoids Well, that's got tobe it, then, right, no fiber
what?
And then the insoluble silicayou can't get it.
Even you're eating nose to tail.
You're going to miss out onthose things.
And what are they going to do?

(14:04):
They're going to allow you tolive long and healthy.
You want to be like Spock Livelong and prosper.
Gotta eat your stuff.
All right, so go for it.
Biochemical and scientificilliteracy Okay, anyway, we'll
leave it at that.
You guys and I would loveplease let me debate.
It's one of you guys.

(14:25):
There was a doctor and somedoctor was being interviewed.
Yeah, I haven't eaten a plantin five years.
He was proud of it, but hehasn't felt better anyway, so,
okay, so, by the way, so whatI'm telling you, maral, is that
you need to eat, um the same.
You need to clean your body out, get rid of all the toxins by
doing a good, thorough juicecleanse.

(14:46):
Clean your colon out.
You need to clean your body out, get rid of all the toxins by
doing a thorough juice cleanse,clean your colon out.
You need to do all the things.
So there's a lot of things youneed to do, and then the food
you eat would be uncooked plantfood, and because that's what
human beings were designed toeat and that's what they eat
because they need it.
So when we eat regardless ofwe're ill or not ill when we eat
because a lot of times whenyou're ill you're not going to

(15:07):
eat because you need to healfrom not eating but whenever we
eat, we always eat that foodwhich human beings were designed
to convert into nutrient, intosubstance or energy.
So there are things that wecannot convert into substance or
energy and we shouldn't eatthem.
It's just really simple, thatsimple.

(15:29):
So, marl, I'm glad you're here,so you got to join one of the
groups.
Join the groups, go todrlodycom and join one of the
groups and let's get you.
You should join the CFC group,obviously, and then you'll get
the program.
It'll give you a program ofwhat to how to live and then we
can talk about your situation indetail with you, with everybody

(15:50):
.
We do this publicly, yes.
Next person is Marina and Marinasays could you please evaluate
the endocrine test results formy husband?
He was diagnosed withtesticular CFCs back in 2020,
went through orchiectomyradiation recurrence in the
chest area as of December 24.

(16:10):
He refused the biopsy andfurther screening.
At the moment, he's beenworking with a naturopath in
Atlanta and incorporating yourrecommendations.
We had two consultations withyou.
I've joined the health andhealing group, but my schedule
and having small kids in thehouse won't allow me to join
live.
I appreciate everything you do.
Well, you know, marina, you can, you know.

(16:33):
So you don't come on the healthand healing Zoom meetings.
That's too bad, all right.
Well, his testosterone is 430total.
His free testosterone is 6.4.
His estradiol is 35.3.
Progesterone is 0.46.
Fsh 12.7.
Lh 4.3, and sex hormone bindingglobulin is 52.

(16:56):
Well, and you want to know whatthat means, excuse me Anyway.
So his total testosterone was430.
So that's low.
I mean now I'm assuming, whenyou said he had an orchiectomy,
he had only one testicle takenright, not both.
I'm assuming just, you said hehad an orchiectomy, he had only
one testicle taken right, notboth.
I'm assuming just one testicle.
And so 430 is probably adequatefor one testicle, but it's not

(17:22):
enough for optimal functioning.
It should be higher.
For optimal functioning, itshould be above 550, 600.
That's what it should be.
And again, same with the freetestosterone it's low.
Normal it can go from five to21.
And so his is 6.4, so it's kindof low.
Again, it could go higher foroptimal functioning.
His estradiol is still withinnormal limits, but it's 35, so

(17:44):
it's kind of high relative totestosterone.
So he's converting a lot of histestosterone to estradiol.
So, aromatase inhibitors youcan look for natural aromatase
inhibitors like chrysan andsulfamero, and there's many
natural ones that you can get.
Or if you have the actual drug,like an estrozole, whereas

(18:06):
women are told to take onemilligram a day if they have ER
positive breast cfcs, he couldtake half a milligrams twice a
week, three times a week if youhad, if that's what you had.
But I would look for thenatural because they're all lots
of plants that are natural.
Okay, uh, and progesterone isokay, it's a normal.

(18:27):
And you know, fsh a littleelevated, which we expect.
Right, lh is normal and sexhormone binding globulin is high
.
Normal means that it's grabbing, uh, the testosterone and not
keeping, not allowing it to befree, which it's only.
It only works in its free form,yeah, so, so, yeah, so I think

(18:51):
you know the LH is trying tobring up the and you know the
your elevated, his elevated FSHis going to impair his sperm
production, but you know that'sprobably not number one on his
mind at this point in time,right?
So so that's the situation.
I'm not sure what else you wouldwant to know about that.

(19:12):
So the recommendation would beyou can increase his
testosterone with exogenoustestosterone.
In other words, you could getthe androgel or you could get
some other biologicallyidentical testosterone and use
it as a topical identicaltestosterone and use it as a

(19:37):
topical or to boost it.
Also, you could use HCG, whichis used.
People inject that and thatwill.
It's an analog of LH, whichcomes from the pituitary, so it
tells the testicle to startproducing more testosterone.
So it allows him to increasehis own endogenous, his own
testosterone instead of havingto get it from an exogenous
source.

(19:57):
That's that, let me see.
Was that your only question?
Yeah, yeah, so I, I don't knowwhat.
Does he have symptoms, do you?
Anyway, I need more informationfrom you, marina.
So, marina, you have anotherquestion and that is what do you

(20:17):
think about the studydetrimental effects of chia
seeds on learning and memory inan aluminum chloride-induced
experimental Alzheimer's?
Should people withneurodegenerative conditions
avoid chia.
Wow, incredible, okay.
Well, first of all, the claimthat chia is dangerous due to
aluminum is chemicallymisleading and actually
biochemically unfounded.
Okay, because if it were true,then the populations like the

(20:44):
Aztecs or the South Americantribes that consumed it a lot,
they should have had problems.
They used it for millennia,millennia.
They should have had problems.
They used it for millennia,millennia.
They should have had theseproblems and they didn't.
There's just no evidence tothat.
Okay, okay.
But what there is evidence is isthat it has all nine essential
amino acids, so it's a completeprotein.
It's rich in alpha, alphalinoleic acid, ala omega-3,

(21:07):
which allows for the productionof epa and dha, which which are
downstream metabolites Very,very important.
It's high in soluble andinsoluble fibers.
It's got calcium, magnesium,phosphorus, manganese, really
all these really importantthings.
It supports satiety, so forglucose control, glycemic
control, it allows bowelregularity.

(21:28):
It's pretty much of a superfood.
So now, now.
But the problem with theseclaims about aluminum is that
the studies are looking at totalaluminum.
They're not distinguishingbetween the naturally occurring
aluminum that is bound to silica.
Naturally occurring aluminumthat is bound to silica it's

(21:49):
called a lumino silica.
They're talking about the bio,which is the bio available at
the time.
The bioavailable, absorbablealuminum salts are the ones that
can get toxic, not the silicabound ones.
So when they look at total,they're not distinguishing, and
that's very important.
So the fact is that chia mayhave traces of aluminum, like

(22:12):
all plant does that's grown insoil, it does right, okay, but
most of the aluminum is bound tosilica silicates, which just
pass through the GI tract, can'tbe absorbed.
Okay, the bioavailability isvery strong.
And then if someone's eating aplant-based diet with a lot of
plants, the fiber is gonna bindit by a lot of any of the

(22:34):
aluminum that comes in a saltthat might be bioavailable and
bind it, and the chia does that.
So there's actually no credibledata showing aluminum toxicity
from chia none.
It can't happen because it justcan't happen.
Okay, what can cause that arethings like baking powder,

(22:54):
processed cheeses and acids,some teas and, of course,
cooking with aluminum cookware,but not chia.
That's just not true.
Excuse me all right, wait, letme see the question here.
The next question is Nicole andhow, hi, how do I know how to

(23:14):
eat confidently when there is somuch conflicting information
out there about keto, about ketoslash meat versus plant-based
and juicing?
I'm struggling to know if I'mdoing it right.
I've been juicing and gettingall my healthy fats in my salads
and eating well-nourishing mybody, but I have seemed to gain

(23:39):
some extra weight from it, whichdoesn't seem to be good for my
insulin levels.
Nicole man, I really get it.
What a bummer.
What a bummer.
I mean there's all thatconflicting information out
there.
I'm I'm gonna do a um.
I can't get any of thecarnivores willing to really um,

(24:00):
have a debate or a conversation.
Well, it wouldn't be.
I don't think in that formatit'd be good.
I think it's better just toteach it right.
But I mean, I think we need tounderstand the truth about
eating a carnivore diet.
It's not a carnivore diet.
Carnivores eat animals alive andthe only obligate carnivores of

(24:22):
the mammals are cats, and thatmeans tigers, lions, panthers,
leopards and house cats.
Obligate carnivores means thatthey have to eat carnivore.
They have to.
They're designed to eat and ifthey don't, they, their their
health, is compromisedtremendously.
Look, a dog is not an obligatecarnivore.

(24:42):
A dog is what they call ascavenger, just like a raccoon,
a rat.
Or is a scavenger a bear,omnivore, scavenger, same thing,
bear omnivore scavenger, samething.
Or raccoon rat?
There's a lot of them out there, but all of them have snouts
and they've got sharp teeth andthey've got they have the
ability to kill an animal incase they don't.

(25:03):
I mean, see, an omnivore wouldbe equipped to eat anything,
right?
Not anything, but within acertain range, right?
An omnivore is not going to eatfeces, so an omnivore is not
going to eat certain things.
So when we're talking about anomnivore, we're talking about
basically, an omnivore or ascavenger is going to eat from a

(25:24):
.
It just has a wider variety ofdietary choices than the.
Like a cat, cats, will you know,and in the wild, the cat won't
eat a corpse, they're only goingto eat a live animal.
The animal dies while they'reeating it, yes, but they don't
usually come across and find acorpse and eat it.

(25:45):
That wouldn't be their choice.
Their choice would always be tosee an animal and run after it
and eat it alive.
So, whereas the hyena, the dog,the wolf, german shepherd,
poodle, whatever, will come upona corpse and eat it, but even

(26:05):
the strict, the obligatecarnivores like the lion and
panther, they've got to eatplant material.
They get plant material attimes and um, and they also get
it from the intestines of theirof who they're eating.
So if they're eating an animal,they're going to get the
undigested plant material fromtheir intestines, right.
So they've got to have it, gotto have it, got to have it now,

(26:29):
but no matter.
And if you eat nose to tail,like I was saying before, you
eat nose to tail, like I wassaying before, you eat nose to
tail, you get everything you eatand you're eating it alive, no
matter what.
Okay, you're still not going toget polyphenols, you're not
going to get flavonoids, you'renot going to get glucosinolates,
you're not going to getcarotenoids, you're not going to
get fiber and you're not goingto get insoluble silica.

(26:49):
So therefore, in terms of yourability for regeneration, for
living more than a year or two,and your resistance and your
ability to not degenerate, it'sgone.
You got it.
So that's just it.
All right, you have to realizethat, Okay.
So, anyway, what they're talkingabout is fiction and, sadly,

(27:14):
most of the world doesn't knowthat because no one studies this
and of course, you know you'vestudied the other things, right,
excuse me, even the.
You know, what's often referredto is the Inuits, the Eskimos.
They still have to eat plantmaterial and they still have to
eat the plant, from the guts,from the intestines of the

(27:36):
animals they eat.
There's not a population onEarth ever that has lived on a
flesh diet.
Never, never, never.
It's not sustainable.
And if he were still alive, youcould ask Robert C Atkins, the
Atkins diet, about that.
How sustainable is it?

(27:57):
And it's not.
So I understand your confusion,but it shouldn't be, because I
want you to think of somethingalso.
I want you to, if you lookaround all the creatures in the
zoo in the jungle and you say,okay, where do humans fit?
Right, well, other than theguys who work out extremely
right, who look, uh, we don'treally look like insects.

(28:18):
But some of the guys that arelike on the front of those
magazines, where they're,they've got all these bubbles
and ripples, that okay.
So, yeah, they resemble insects.
But other than that, weprobably don't resemble the
insects, that we probably don'tresemble the insects or those
you know, I mean rats, raccoonsyeah, we have got a head, four
appendages and get up to look.

(28:38):
The ones that we really looklike, uh, resemble the most, are
chimpanzees and gorillas andorangutans.
They're usually called thegreat apes, and the great apes
because they don't have a tailand, um, they kind of look like
us and in fact, of all thecreatures in the jungle, they're
the closest.
So, since we're very confusedabout what to eat, some of us
can't think that you got to eatlive monkey brain.
Others of us think you've gotto eat a bull testicles.

(29:01):
Others of us think you've gotto eat insects.
Others of us think you've gotto eat dead muscle matter.
Other others of us think you'vegot to eat plants.
We're all confused.
We have no idea what to eat.
You know, we don't even knowwhen to go to sleep.
No, you know, right, yeah, theyargue.
Then there's people arguing andsaying that we're not really

(29:21):
diurnal.
We can live it.
Not, I don't.
Here's what you have to do and,please, anyone who joins my
groups have to realize something.
I'm not going to just answerquestions, because Chad, your
buddy, chad there, will answerquestions.
That's not what I'm going to do.
I want to give you the abilityto answer the question and I'm
going to help you, give you acertain amount of knowledge, to

(29:45):
avoid having to ask another10,000 questions.
So what we need to all developis a certain baseline of
knowledge so that when we'rereading something or hearing
something, we'll be able torealize at least if it's in the
realm of being true or not.
If it's possibly being true,then it should be evaluated.
But if they're talking aboutthings that you already know are
nonsense, you don't need tobother with them.

(30:05):
So we need to have a certainbaseline, all right, and so
that's what I do.
So I don't just answer questions, right, I, I, I I'm not
listening to the content of yourquestion, I'm listening to the
intent, and the intent of yourquestion is saying I really
don't know much about biology,or or or biology or nutrition,

(30:27):
so can you help me with, can yougive me a background on that so
that I can navigate my life?
That's what you're asking.
You're not saying or, whatshould I not eat?
Because if I were to tell you,then you would say but what
about this, but what about that?
And you'd have a million morequestions.
But by giving you anunderstanding, a foundation of
understanding, you'll be able tomake those decisions, make
those, answer those questions.
Right, so that's that.

(30:55):
So, uh, where are you?
So, nicole, if you're gainingweight, this means and your
insulin is not well, that meansthat you're probably eating
carbs.
There's no way you can be doingthat.
You cannot be gaining weightand having insulin problems
without eating cookedcarbohydrates and juicing and
your juices.
So, um well, uh, I've got toput out this uh diet, it's
three-part diet.
Uh food, human, human diet, uhseries, so that everyone can

(31:18):
hear this, because I know thereis so much conflicting
information.
There shouldn't be.
And you notice, although younotice that, like rabbits, don't
attend seminars on what is thebest food for rabbits, neither
do horses or elephants or dogs,only us.
Remember now, we're theintelligent ones of all the

(31:39):
creatures.
They're not intelligent at all,except that they already know
what to eat, they know when togo to sleep, they know how to be
healthy.
We don't, but we're intelligent.
I'm going to do that.
But basically, just understandthis, nicole, that I will show
you in every way.
And, by the way, fred BischiB-I-S-C-I look him up, look for

(32:00):
his videos on YouTube.
He's 97, he's been eatinguncooked plant food for 56 years
, 57 years.
He started at age 40.
And at 97, he's as cognitivelyaware and adroit as any 30 year
old.
He's in incredible health.

(32:22):
So that should help you.
Paul, nissan n-i-s-o-n.
The raw life, which is calledthe raw life.
Um, what's it called the nameof his show?
You should watch it, it'scalled Raw Life Health Show.
It's free and this podcast is aYouTube channel, right?
And you know Paul's been eatingthis way for 35 years.

(32:43):
And there's another lady I knowin New York, donna Peroni, I
think at least 40 years, vibranthealthy and they haven't aged
years, vibrant healthy and theyhaven't aged Fred, you know he's
97.
He does look older, but hedoesn't.
He looks, he doesn't look theway you would expect someone
who's 97 to look, and hecertainly doesn't think or act.
He's got, he's running, he'sall over the place Down in

(33:03):
Florida he's.
You know, he's like, he's anactive human being.
He's 97.
He's not sitting at home in hisrocker.
So join our groups.
Uh, uh, nicole, okay, join ourgroups.
Let me hold on one second.
Where are we?
So what's our next question?
Our next question is with nikkican you help me to understand

(33:25):
how to get rid of alpha gal?
Is that even possible?
Not many doctors know aboutalpha gal.
It's a rabbit hole in its ownalpha gal.
Well, here's a guy that doesn'tknow about alpha gal.
Let's see what is alpha gal.
My god, what is alpha gal?
Alpha, alpha gal.

(33:47):
You see, first of all, I I'llhelp you with this in a second.
Let me just see what they'retelling you and you're believing
.
Center for Disease Control saysalpha-gal syndrome is a serious,
potentially life-threateningallergic condition that can
occur after a tick bite.
Alpha-gal is a molecule foundin most mammals.

(34:09):
Alpha-gal is a molecule foundin most mammals.
Symptoms appear after peopleeat red meat or are exposed to
other products containingalpha-gal.
What is alpha-gal syndrome?
It's a serious, potentiallylife-threatening allergic
condition that can occur after atick bite.
It's named for a moleculegalactose alpha-1,3-galactose

(34:29):
that's found in most mammals.
Symptoms occur after people eatred meat or are exposed to
other products made from mammals.
Because of this, alpha-galsyndrome is also known as red
meat allergy or tick bite.
You know, I never heard of thisAnyway.
So the question is how to getrid of alpha-gal.
You see how they have usthinking that it's called

(34:51):
alpha-gal syndrome.
It's a thing and you want toget rid of itgal.
You see how they have usthinking that it's called
alpha-gal syndrome.
It's a thing and you want toget rid of it, instead of
understanding that, for somereason, your body has developed
a specific response when theenvironment in which your cells
are living changes toincorporate include these things
.
Whatever this molecule is fromuh animal from mammals.

(35:16):
Well, one thing about this wouldbe really easy stop eating
animals and then you don't haveto worry about it, or just eat
reptiles.
It looks like it's only inmammals.
So you eat reptiles andamphibians and fish, insects you
can eat, just can't eat mammals, right, is that it?
Well, you know, like if I hadthat problem, I would never know
it.
You know why?
Because I wouldn't have eatenit.
It's like saying, yeah, likeyou know, those puffer fish in

(35:39):
japan if you eat they have atoxin that if you eat it you're
dead.
Well, I would never know thatbecause I don't eat fish, so I'm
gonna never run into that bymistake anyway.
But, nikki, this brings up avery good point that I'd like to
take an opportunity to expandon, and that is that, uh, there

(36:00):
are not these entities like highblood pressure or diabetes or
cfcs or stroke.
They're not things that getinto you that you've got to get
rid of that whole concept.
That disease model is absurdbecause it's not close to being

(36:20):
reality.
So if the body is doingsomething, it's doing it as an
adaptive response to a situationthat where it's not getting
having its needs met, that's allthat's happening.
There's no thing calledalpha-gal that got into you.
There's no exposure to thismolecule in mammals is what

(36:44):
triggers your body to do that soclearly right there
corroborates what I'm saying thebody's response to whatever is
in its environment.
That's what the body does.
So the body's doing something.
It, the body, is doingsomething in response to the
environment.
It's not that a thing hasgotten into the body and is now

(37:08):
like it's harder to imagine withyour particular condition there
, because it is this, thismolecule, that gets into you
from.
How do you get rid of it?
Just don't eat the molecule.
How can you change your body'sresponse to it?
You can't.
Your body will respond to that.
That's the way you.
Okay, so you just have to notput, put it in the position
where it doesn't have to beexposed to that.

(37:29):
Hold on, let me fix the airconditioning.
So I hope that was clear.
That for you, in your situationwith this alpha gal which is
what?
Again, it is galactose, that'sreally the gal, alpha,
1,3-galactose, alpha gal.
Okay, so they got a name andthey gave it a name and they

(37:51):
made it a thing.
It just means that there's amolecule that your body says no,
I don't want it, and so youcan't make your body say I want
it, so you could just avoid it.
And if you don't eat mammals,you don't have to worry about it
.
So if you want to eat animals,you can still eat reptiles,
amphibians, fish and insects.

(38:12):
That's okay, that's still inyour options.
So now this is Heidi, and Heidisays so.
I sent you a message and wespoke briefly and I was telling
you about my left breast feelingvery sore.
The first night it felt so soreI put a castor oil pack on it
it, thinking that if there wassome type of tumor in there it

(38:35):
might help pull it out.
But, like with everything, Itend to overdo.
So I put the castor oil pack onthree nights in a row, all
night long while I slept with aheating pad.
Could that be why today I can'teven touch the left breaths at
all, not even gently?
Maybe the castor oil did toomuch, so the castor oil wouldn't

(38:58):
do that.
Now, if you had a heating padall night, that could have
burned your tissues.
And if it was a deeplypenetrating heating pad and
didn't burn the surface of yourskin, obviously then that burn
is on the inside, but it soundslike you've burned it, not from
the castor oil.
It sounds like it's been burnedfrom the heating.

(39:19):
Castor oil just doesn't do that.
Now where are we?
Ah, this is Heidi.
Heidi says so.
I did jump in last Sunday whenyou were talking about bird
parasites.
I don't know, I work on Sundaynights.
I was almost off work.
I just happened to jump on theshow, jump on, throw the
question out and you did touchbase with it.

(39:39):
I'm going to wait till nextSunday to see how it, how I feel
.
But within five days I woke upand my breast was kind of
hurting as oh same thing.
Okay, I didn't hit it withanything.
I didn't two or three days goby.
I kept putting castor oil packson.
The skin.
Color has changed a little.
Pinkish capillaries.

(40:00):
My grandmother died from breastCFCs.
I used to get mammograms everyyear, but I have not had one in
three or four years.
I was researching and there isa type of CFC that just has to
deal with inflammation.
I'm scared.
I just wanted some answers.
I drink plenty of water.
Do paracyclones take apricotkernels for B17?

(40:21):
Do paracyclones and I'm notsure what you meant Apricot
kernels, b17, lots of vitamins?
Put Celtic salt in my water,drink it On the right path.
I haven't had any trauma.
I had two total hipreplacements.
Years back I had a vascularnecrosis.
They kept telling me you havehad trauma.
Were you in a car wreck?

(40:42):
I'm just trying to take a wildguess because I'm not the.
Anyway, listen, heidi, yousound.
It's very chaotic.
You're kind of jumping all overthe place.
We're not getting a clearpicture here of what's happening
, and I can what you do, becauseI think the fact that your
grandmother had a problem withher breast has no relationship

(41:17):
to you than your mother.
There's just I can hear fromthat you think that there is a
hereditary component and Allthat.
So none of that's true.
There's no hereditary componentto this stuff.
And yeah.
So you know they've really gotyou.
Okay so, and hopefully maybeI'm feeling better.

(41:40):
I can't wait to talk to younext Sunday, huh, okay so, heidi
, I just feel like you hadvascular necrosis.
You had a hip replacement.
Heidi, I just feel like youhave vascular necrosis.
You had a hip replacement.
See, avascular necrosis of thehip is not like a systemic wide
situation.
The reason avascular necrosisof the hip happens is that

(42:01):
there's only one vessel for thehip and if it gets compromised,
your hip's in trouble.
It's kind of weird that we haveonly one blood vessel, whereas
all organs have multiple,multiple lines of blood going
into not just one, right andthat's and the hip really like
an extremely important structurein the human frame.

(42:22):
To have only one is kind ofweird.
And it goes right into the tipof the, the tibia.
So it's kind of strange.
But anyway, the avascularnecrosis of the hips is very,
very different than a systemicwide vascular problem.
I don't know what you meant byparacyclones.
So your breast, you know.
Whatever is going on, it soundslike it's an acute, not a

(42:44):
chronically not a chronicsituation.
It has occurred acutely, it'sextremely tender and so it's not
anyway, it doesn't follow the,an understanding of what CFCs
are, because CFCs are, theydevelop over time and they don't
just suddenly become horribleand inflamed and painful.

(43:08):
There's a it, just it gets thatway and you see it, you feel it
, you see the, you see thejourney.
So to go from nothing to likethat means something else
happened and I really would haveto examine you or talk to
someone who can examine you orsomething so we can have a
better idea and then look atblood tests.

(43:30):
So you know, get an ldh, get aferritin and get a iron test,
get a d-dimer, get a ca 15-3 anda cea and a thymidine kinase
and a crp and a cbc, of course,and general chemistry.
And if we get all that, let mesee it.

(43:52):
We can at least have abiochemical assessment.
Now this is Rachel and Rachelsaying is there any way to find
the detox parasite cleanseprotocol?
I'm trying to heal my body andhave been really struggling.
So, rachel, do you havenoticeable parasites?
Do you have worms anywhere thatyou can see or any evidence of

(44:14):
a protozoal condition?
So, a parasite cleanse protocol?
Well, of course there's aprotocol that I have talked
about, where you use medicationsfor the worms and medications
for the protozoa and then eventhe funguses.
You know the ivermectin,fibendazole, niclosamide, and

(44:38):
the nidazoxanide and tinnitazole, gluconazole.
You know all those types ofdrugs.
And then there's also HuldaClark has a great program of
natural substances.
So I'm not sure.
And then, in terms of detoxcleanse, it's the same detox
cleanse that anybody would do,nothing but fresh vegetable

(44:59):
juices with enough fruit to makeit delicious, and you drink
three quarts a day or more andyou don't need any solid food.
You just keep doing that forthree weeks, four weeks, five
weeks, six weeks, go to a colonhydrotherapist, get your colon
cleaned or use enemas, all right.
So the Holda Clark is you canfind that online H-U-L-D-A Clark

(45:20):
Very good, very good naturalherbal program.
It gets the eggs, the larva andthe adults.
It's good.
So now let's see.
Anyway, I can't.
I was trying to see if I couldhelp that.
But okay, let's look at thenext question From Melissa.

(45:40):
It says how do I removetoxoplasma gondii cysts from my
brain?
I'm in Australia.
I'm going to have to do it athome myself.
Is ivermectin alone adequate?
Is it even safe to disturbthese cysts?
Anything?
I would need to know, to beprepared or experience.
Well, first of all, melissa,how are you sure?

(46:04):
Did you do an MRI?
And I mean, how do you know youhave cysts that are
toxoplasmosis and that they'renot cystic circosis from
tapeworm, I mean?
So the toxoplasma Gandhi workswith them, and so does
sulfadiazine, you know.

(46:25):
So together they're verysynergistic the pyrimethamine,
that's aP-Y-R-I-M-E-T-H-A-M-I-N-E, and
the what do you call it?
Sulfadiazine, which isS-U-L-F-A-D-I-A-Z-I-N-E.

(46:45):
So together they work very well.
And I also have Bactrim, whichis very similar.
Together they work very well,and also Bactrim, which is very
similar, that's trimethoprim,sulfamethoxazole, and that is a
good preventative, but anyway,the other one that helps you can
substitute for thesulfathiazine is clindamycin.
Ok, so clindamycin, thepyrimethamine and clindamycin,

(47:11):
or pyrimethamine andsulfindamycin, or pyrimethamine
and sulfadiazine would work well.
But the question is do you havefor sure?
Is it toxoplasmosis and how doyou know?
No, no, no, and there's noproblem.
If you're killing them, you'rekilling them.
It's not like you're going toopen the cyst and they're going
to come out and be alive, sodon't worry about that.

(47:34):
Now here's from esther and she'sasking how many cycles should
one do on the multidisciplinaryparasite class protocol at
phoenix online, or how many, youknow, when you're clean
thereafter, what should one doto maintain that?
Okay, so good question, estheruh, now if you had obvious

(47:58):
parasites, you had obvious wormsor I don't know you were
bloated and gassy and then,after you had, uh, you started
taking parasite medicine.
You saw worms and stuff likethat.
So if that was the situation,or if you you're just doing it
as a regular detox, or if youwere doing it because you had
CFCs but you didn't really haveany particular parasite symptoms

(48:22):
, then that's one thing.
Then how many cycles would youdo?
Well, if it was for CFCs oractive parasites.
I would say 10 to 12 cycles.
Make sure you're always takingthe anti-parasite, the anti-out.
I mean the liver enhancementprotocols, right of the
silymarin, the alpha lipoic acidb complex and the nac.

(48:48):
But in terms of how many youshould do, you know.
And then in terms of let's sayyou were to do it, let's say you
had a lot of symptoms, you do10, 12 cycles, whatever, until
you didn't have the symptomsanymore.
And then, as maintenance, youmaybe do two to three cycles per
year.
You might have to.
It depends on how you're beingre-exposed.

(49:10):
You might do to.
It depends on how you're beingre-exposed.
You might do more than that.
It depends on your situation.
There's no specific protocol.
It depends on your symptoms,why you did it in the first
place and all that.
So if you had CFCs and you didit, so you would do a good 12

(49:30):
cycles and then maybe threecycles a year.
But you'd still be taking alittle bit of the ivermectin,
the Mabendazole and theglycosamide, as well as vitamin
C to kill the stem cells.
So you take those all the timein small doses.
All right, so now.
So this is Diane.
I felt some gas traveling fromstomach to mouth since January

(49:53):
of 2025.
I felt hurt at the back of themouth ceiling where the gas hits
.
I took ezomeprazole for 10 days.
One internist prescribed mewith Dogmat D 50 milligrams two
times one and vitamin D, butsometimes the gas comes back.

(50:15):
One internist doctor told me totake IgM blood test on
Helicobacter and it was reactive.
The other internist pressed mystomach.
I did not feel hurt on theepigastrium, right lower stomach
and upper stomachs.
I felt hurt on the colon.

(50:35):
I had constipation that timepoop once in every two days.
After my poop was stable onceor twice a day, I didn't feel
hurt anymore.
Sometimes I felt hurt on thesurface of my skin.
I was prescribed by aninternist of gastroenterology
and took seven days ofclenithromycin.

(50:56):
Wow, you get to a lot ofdifferent internists Wow,
amazing.
And they all pretty much areuseless.
Pretty much useless, right?
Because they're all looking forthe same things.
They're all looking for Hpylori.
They're going to give you acidblockers.
The omiprazo, which is a,blocks your body's ability to

(51:16):
produce acid which your stomachneeds.
So it's like so you know, and,and, and, and.
Then from having the uh with,from having a test positive with
h pylori, then their treatmentis going to be putting you on
triple antibiotics, which isgoing to destroy your gut,
natural gut biome and make youno longer at all healthy in any
way.
So hopefully you stop going tothese guys.

(51:38):
So, believe me, you don't havea drug deficiency and medication
deficiency.
Wow, that's what they do.
I never heard of the drugdogmatil.
Is that really a drug?
Is that really that's a drug?
It's called dogmatil.
Is that really a drug dog?
Is that really that's a drug?
It's called dogmatil.
Let me look that up.
Dogmatil, dogmatil, it's a drug.

(52:00):
What's it for?
This is great.
This is amazing.
It's prescribed for depressionand irritable bowel syndrome.
It's prescribed medicationaffects the nervous system.
Active ingredient is Silpride.
Silpride is a generic name andit's in the subgroup of
antipsychotic medications andit's given for persistent

(52:24):
sadness or depression, mentaldisorders, emotional and
cognitive imbalance andprolonged psychological
imbalance that affects dailylife.
Wow, and they gave you that forwhat?
They gave you that for leakygut.
They put you on anti-psychoticmedicine.
Here's what you should do.
Diane, your question here at theend is the best one.
I still feel like the gas comesback in the mouth of my ceiling

(52:47):
.
Am I taking the rightmedications?
Could it be parasite virus ordyspepsia.
So there's something in therecausing it.
No, no, no, no, no.
What's happening is your bodyis plugged up and not working.
It's just it's full.
It needs to cleanse.
You need to stop all medicationsand get make yourself fresh

(53:08):
vegetable juice celery, cucumber, kale, spinach, lemon and put
in apples if you want, orpineapple or whatever you want
to make it delicious.
Put enough to make it delicious, but not beyond that.
And drink nothing.
Four quarts a day, as much asyou can, and don't eat any solid
food, and do this for a monthor longer.

(53:29):
And then when you start eating,and during that time, do and
take, get enemas and clean outyour bowels and then, when
you're back to eating again, eatwith only within a four hour
window.
So 12 noon to 4 pm would beperfect, and you go to bed by 9.
That's five hours between lastmeal and going to bed, perfect.

(53:51):
And during that period of timewhen you are eating, you eat
only uncooked plant food salads.
You know you can have fruitsalads, nuts and seeds and make
delicious wraps.
You can make all kinds offantastic food, but just don't
cook it and all your problem.
All of these problems are goneand they're gone permanently.
But you got to cleanse firstand get up.

(54:11):
All the problems will are gone,and they're gone permanently.
But you've got to cleanse firstand get out.
All the problems will be gone.
There'll be no more burping,there'll be none of that, none
of those things that are makingyou feel horrible.
They'll all be gone.
They just will.
And I'm like 100% sure I don'tthink perhaps this will work,
but no, but you've got to do itlong enough.

(54:33):
Four weeks, six weeks, andyou'll be back to health.
So the only problem is going tobe right now is you deciding to
do it, and unfortunately, mostpeople use the word can't
instead of the word won't.
You can't do this, but it's not.
You can't because you, you, youcannot, you can't pick up a car
, but you can do this.
You just don't want to for thisreason and that reason and that

(54:56):
reason and this reason andthese reasons and that reasons,
and of course, there's thisreason.
But so, uh, coffee enemas help.
Someone's asking about that.
Coffee enemas help, but it'smuch, much more than that.
You've got to do cleansingcoffee enemas and they have to
be done the right way, and thatmeans you do a clean cleansing
enema first with salt and youclean out as much as you can

(55:18):
from the rectal vault and fromthe descending colon so that you
clean, then the coffee shouldgo in, should be about one cup.
So you start with like three orfour tablespoons of coffee and
two cups of water and you boilit and it's the right coffee,
correct?
Right, it's the still green.
You boil it.
You boil it down to one cup,then it's concentrated.
You strain that and then youcan, when it cools off, you can

(55:41):
use that.
You've already done yourcleansing animal.
So when you put that in, it'sgoing to be absorbed.
You're leaving it for 20minutes.
Now you can also eat broccolisprouts.
Two handfuls of broccolisprouts in a smoothie every day
is going to give you the samevalue, but even more than the
coffee animal.
That's only one part of healingand cleansing from CFCs.
There's a lot to it and you getthe basic program by joining

(56:05):
the CFC group, but then we cantalk in detail about your
situation with you personally.
So that's the answer.
That question, um.
Excuse me, this is donna.
Oh, wow, there's so many otherquestions.
So here, um, some questionsfrom recent posts from jenny.
Can you give us the exactprotocol?
We take four differentmedications at the same time

(56:26):
three weeks on when we go.
So you do you, okay.
So you take the, the ivermectin, the fenbenazole and
niclosamide, um, now, dependingon your, you know, I I don't
know your particular situation,I cannot say particularly your
situation, but what I can say isthat someone who's got good,
healthy liver, um and um, youknow would, would could take

(56:48):
ivermectin 12 milligrams threetimes a day.
They could probably takefenbendazole 222 milligrams
three times a day.
They could probably takeniclosamide 500 milligrams three
times a day.
They could probably takenitozoxanide 500 milligrams
three times a day and maybefluconazole 100 milligrams twice
a day, and they could do thatthree weeks and then stop for a

(57:10):
week and three weeks and stopfor a week, and like that.
They could do that three day,three weeks and then stop for a
week and three weeks and stopfor a week, and like that.
They could do it like that andum, or they could do, instead of
nitroxanine, I think tinnitusanyway, and how long would they
do it?
Well, it depends on why, what,what, why, why, why you're doing
it in the first place.
If it's because you haveobvious parasites, then you'd
say, well, you're going to keepdoing it until they're seemingly

(57:36):
gone.
Remember they'll never be gonebecause get them down to where
you have a healthy.
You've restored your health,your balance.
Remember you've got to be alsobe using liver support the
silymarin 500, three times a day.
The alpha lipoic acid, which is300 milligrams three times a
day.
The alpha lipoic acid, which is300 milligrams three times a
day.
A vitamin b complex like b100,twice a day.
And uh, nac and s till 16 500milligrams three times a day.

(57:59):
So those for you'll be doingthose like every day just to
support the liver, even on theweek off, and uh.
But you're also going to starteating healthy.
You're going to eat healthyfood, real human food.
You're going to do a cleanseyou're going to do start eating
healthy.
You're going to eat healthyfood, real human food.
You're going to do a cleanse.
You're going to do all theother things you need to do to
health.
You're not just going to waragainst this.
Whatever.
This is not it.

(58:19):
You're restoring balance andhealth, and part of that
restoration of balance andhealth is getting rid of these
guys that are causing that, arecontributing to the imbalance.
So we never look at itdifferently than the way it
really is.
This is the way it really isimbalance, all right.
So it's not another way.
There's not another way,there's nothing.
It's just that's what it isrestoring balance, restoring all

(58:43):
, the, all that which cells needfor health, for, for, for, for,
to replace their parts, wornout parts, and for energy.
That's it, and anything else isnot necessary.
So, as long as you need Now, ifyou don't have any signs or
symptoms and you're just doingthis, because in general I'd say

(59:04):
to do six cycles, three on, oneoff, and then every year repeat
it two to three times cyclesper year, if you have no
symptoms.
So Brody says, if you'll neverget rid of it, no matter what he
opens with this video, thenwhat the hell is the so-called
medicine for Brody?
Good question, I would have thesame.

(59:26):
What the hell am I doing here?
I get it.
Good response, pretty good andhonest response.
The answer is this and I andmaybe you didn't hear that when
you because I guess when, whenyou heard that you kind of went,
ah, you didn't hear the rest ofthe rest of it said this
however, you'll never get rid ofit, you'll never get you.
We've got all sorts of stuff inus that is not if it were to be

(59:48):
the majority, we'd be dead.
But it turns out that ourbodies exist in a state of
harmony, in harmonic resonancewith all different aspects of
nature, and so, but in thisparticular ratio of proportions,
there's a balance called health.
For example, let me just takeoxygen, which is really

(01:00:11):
important, brody, I hope you'relistening.
Oxygen very, very important,but not too much.
If I have a hundred percentoxygen and I'm breathing it in,
I'm gonna get emphysema and I'lldie.
So I have to understand thatwhat we need to do is restore
balance, which is health.
And right now, if we've gotparasites and we've got to

(01:00:31):
realize that they're onlythey're parasites only in that
they're damaged, see, oncethey're no longer damaging us,
they're no longer in thecategory of parasites.
They can become, um, you knoworganisms that are this part of
our makeup, but they're notdamaging us, the net effect is
not damaged.
So, um, and we have lots ofthose.

(01:00:54):
They're called commensal, right.
So there's organisms which arewe have a mutualistic
relationship with, and those are.
We give them a place to liveand food to eat, and they
benefit us by producing allsorts of stuff and help in our
system.
So that's what our, our gutbiome is right, our healthy gut
bio.
And then there are commensals,where we're giving them a place

(01:01:17):
to live and all that and they'renot harming us.
And then they're the parasites,where we're giving them a place
to live and they're harming us.
So this category depends on thevotes on that, those criteria.
So if you get them to the, youget them in the right balance,
where they're no longer harmingus, they actually become
commensal, and that's what we'regoing to do, because you'll

(01:01:37):
never.
In other words, our body ismade up of the universe.
Everything is in our body.
You're never going to get ridof everything you can.
There's not good and bad,there's just everything getting
in balance.
So please try to understandthat, brody.
Okay, getting in balance.
So please try to understandthat, brody.
Okay, what we're talking aboutis using these medications to
get it out of balance, to getrid of uh, because there's a
large, large biomass.

(01:01:57):
But they're only got that waybecause we didn't have health,
we didn't have a balance, ourimmune system wasn't strong.
That's why we got to that point, otherwise we wouldn't even
have gotten to that point.
I know that's hard.
I'm not making not making thatmuch sense, but think about it
and I'm going to answer thisquestion again.
So now, does anybody know whereto purchase niclosamide?

(01:02:21):
This is Sherry, charlie.
Yeah, so, charlie, for thatanswer niclosamide, niclosamcom,
n-i-c-l-o-s-a-mcom, and that'sLithuania and they'll send it to
you.
It takes a while Now.
No prescription.
Now I'm working with a groupthat soon they'll be able to

(01:02:44):
provide everything, and I'mgoing to work because I want to
make sure we're gettingeverything we need and it's a
good source and reliable and allthat sort of thing.
So once we're close finalstages of getting this together,
and then I say, go here andyou'll get everything, and then
that's it, because there's a lotof places out there that are

(01:03:04):
claiming this and claiming thatand you've got to really be
careful.
That's why I want to put thistogether and, um, vetting these
people, make sure, and then Ican say here you can feel
comfortable.
Wow, even that had trouble.
Good, all right, guys, we'reback.
Okay, cool, my gosh, uh, so thiswas other question, uh, okay.

(01:03:28):
So so, janelle, there there wasa question for the brand and
dosages.
I, I hope you just got what Iwas talking about here there.
And this is uh, julie waswondering about a possible
consultation.
Father has prostate cfc.
So, yeah, well, julie, you gotto join the cfc group and then
we can talk directly to you andyour father about his particular

(01:03:50):
situation and you're going toget all the information.
You're going to get ongoing,because it's not just one
consultation, it's not just oneinteraction, right, it's an
ongoing process and by joiningthis group we can do that and
you're going to learn a lot fromeverybody and we all share and
you know we're not going toNothing's private.
If you want private, then don'tsay it but we kind of share

(01:04:11):
everything about what's going onin our lives.
I share about my life, becausewe're all in this together.
We're all trying to heal.
All of us, whoever you are,you're trying to heal, you're
trying to get health.
That's our goal.
We're all in the same group.
We're in that same group.
We're all here to make todayfantastic and we can do that

(01:04:33):
together.
All right, so join the group,okay, julie, and we'll be able
to do that and you'll be able touh all the ongoing stuff and
and the different programs thatare available and all that.
So join that drlodycom and thengo to the group called cfcs,
because you remember I hope thatthe word is not astrological
science, it has nothing to dowith a Sagittarius, leo, gemini

(01:04:56):
or Scorpio or cancer.
It has to do only withchronically fermenting cells and
in his case they began in theprostate.
They can begin in the elbow, itdoesn't matter where they began
, they're the same thing, allright, yeah, so, sasha, how do
you join the uh, uh, the innercircle?

(01:05:16):
Um, just um, go to drlodycomand go right there and join the
cfc group or the health and healwhatever you want health and
healing or cfc group.
Cfc group gives you much moreinformation and it's
specifically for people withcfcs.
I'm reading a question from fromZaid Z-A-I-D, and Zaid is
saying "'In your experience andnot as medical advice, "'in

(01:05:36):
regards to ivermectin in thisvideo, "'he mentions the issue
of taking ivermectin only, "'orfamendazole only, "'and that you
can, under treating parasites,"'it can disturb the parasite,
"'and they can relocatesomewhere else "'This is
extremely informative.
However, if you're takingivermectin only, treat virus for
COVID yeah, I mean, I mean it'sstill true, because we all have

(01:05:58):
parasites and and treatingCOVID and long COVID and all
that stuff, that's, that's theirrabbit hole.
It's not a real, it's not areal deal at all.
So don't think about that.
And what I would do, and what Ido do is take several of them.
I've recommended Because,whether you're doing it to treat
whatever you think you'retreating, that's fine, but also

(01:06:20):
realize that you're also don'twanna cause a problem, so make
sure you've got a well-roundedwith the three different.
So yeah, because if you thinkyou're doing you're taking care
of what they call lung COVID andso you're taking ivermectin,
but you need to be taking allthree because you want to make
sure that they don't migrate.
This is Daniela.
So I struggle for many yearssome sort of infection,

(01:06:43):
inflammation I can't get rid ofher.
Since I got CLV, since I gotwhatever happened in 2020, I
believe You're seeing anaturopath.
You've been diagnosed with verybad asthma 15 years ago,
inflammation all over my body.
So a lot of things going on, alot of things going on with you,
danielle.
We've got to really you've gotto join the group, okay, because

(01:07:04):
there's just too much.
Your situation is.
We can't just answer it.
But you know I mean if thereare parasites, I mean you know,
when you think of parasites thatcould be causing lung asthma
and stuff, you know, strongaloides comes to mind because it
hangs out in the lung and itcan cause symptoms, like you

(01:07:25):
know what we call asthmabronchospasm.
It can also causegastrointestinal problems, all
sorts of things, but you'd haveto have been to certain parts of
the world.
So I don't know your situation,danielle, and I don't know what
else could be causing yourlungs to be having bronchospasm.
But I do know that you've got toclean out.
That's where we start.
We start with cleansing.

(01:07:45):
So you know, join, go todrlodycom, join at least the
health and healing group andlet's get started on your
journey, because we've got tostart cleaning.
But the first thing you got todo is clean out, and you do that
by drinking lots of juices,colonics, and you go to a
biological dentist a real oneand make sure you got no stuff
going on in your mouth likecavitations, root canals, metals

(01:08:06):
, things like that Essential.
All right, yeah, metals, thingslike that essential all right.
Um, yeah, deborah, beenfollowing dark lady for a long
time.
Appreciated videos.
Cannot find an article video onwho should, who should not have
a breast biopsy.
All right, nobody should everhave a breast biopsy, and that's
really something terrible tosay just at the end when I don't

(01:08:28):
really have time to, becausewe're done here, it's over.
Unfortunately I don't have timeto go through this all, but
they, they spread and they'renot going to give you.
It's not going to give youinformation that you need.
That's going to help you becauseif you've got a lump, if you've
got a mass, if it's persistent,you've got lymph nodes and if
you really want to know if thecfc is, you do a PET scan, even

(01:08:50):
though you're going to getradiation.
You can mitigate that withvitamin C and vitamin E and
stuff like that.
But the biopsy, we definitelyknow, spreads it and makes it
worse.
It doesn't give you any usefulinformation.
But if you pretty much know, ifit's, I mean what else?
If it's a hard lump in yourbreast, that's been there a

(01:09:11):
while, what else could it be?
So that doesn't mean oh my God,it means okay, here's what I've
got to do.
I've got to get really seriousabout balancing my life and then
it'll be gone.
That's what we have to remember.
I have to get real seriousabout balancing my life.
It's no longer rehearsals, it'sshowtime.

(01:09:31):
Folks, and that's it.
Curtains are open, showtime,perform, that's it.
That's what it is.
It's not the end of anything.
It's the end of the illusion tothink that you don't have to
live healthy, because to behealthy can only come about by
living healthy.
Health is the result of livinghealthy, all right, so, yeah,
that's what we do.
All right, so I'll get the restof your questions next time.
And it's uh, you know I'm sosorry about of living healthy,
all right, so, yeah, that's whatwe do.
All right, so I'll get the restof your questions next time.

(01:09:52):
And it's you know I'm so sorryabout we only got Instagram this
week.
And, yeah, try to, we'll getthat fixed by next week.
Aloha, let's talk about whatthat actually means next week.
I'll do that because it'simportant.

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