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April 30, 2025 93 mins

Dive into the fascinating world of the human microbiome and discover how these trillions of microscopic organisms aren't just passengers in your body—they're essential partners in your health journey. Dr. Lodi reveals the profound interconnectedness between our various microbiomes, from gut to vaginal to oral, and how disruption in one area creates ripple effects throughout your entire system.

You'll learn why the conventional medical approach of "killing bad bacteria" with antibiotics often creates cycles of recurring infections and dysbiosis. Instead, Dr. Lodi presents a revolutionary perspective: these microorganisms respond directly to your dietary choices, stress levels, and overall lifestyle. By understanding how to create the right internal environment, you can cultivate beneficial microbial communities that naturally suppress harmful organisms without harsh interventions.

The conversation takes unexpected turns into the mouth-body connection, where dental infections silently travel through meridian pathways to trigger problems in distant organs. You'll hear a remarkable case study of facial neuralgia resolving after proper tooth extraction, highlighting why biological dentistry matters for whole-body health. Dr. Lodi also shares cutting-edge approaches for cancer patients, explaining how intermittent fasting creates a metabolic advantage by leveraging the difference in insulin receptor density between healthy c

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Join Dr. Lodi’s informative
Those of us that are, and, uh,great, instagram's, cool.
Yeah, well, instagram's alwaysworking, yay.
How about the other guys?
Facebook's there Yay, goodmorning, april and Kat, all
right, great, itchy ears for along time now.

(00:21):
Um, anyway, cool, I'm gladwe're able to do it and I'm
actually on time today, which ispretty amazing.
And what was I going to say?
Yeah, last week, I'm sure youall know I was on Instagram, but
no one else.
You folks didn't realize it.
So, anyway, we till a few getout, Okay, so a number of people

(00:42):
are getting on, cool, so let'sdo that.
Let's just get going.
Let's just get going, becausewe never have enough time to
answer all the questions, right?
And of course, this here is notgoing to there we go, okay, so
we never have time.
So let's get started with themall, right?
Hey, besides Facebook, anybodyelse on there?
Youtube or anything?

(01:03):
They?
Hey, besides Facebook, anybodyelse on there, youtube or
anything?
They all get on X.
Are you guys there?
X?
Let's just make sure we're allon and then we'll get started.
Are we all on?
I don't see Facebook.
That's cool.
I mean, oh, x here.
Yeah, okay, cool, all right.
Well then, that's it.
Is it true that best to do aparasite cleanse around the full

(01:25):
moon?
Well, if you were going to justdo a short, one-day parasite
cleanse, that would be a goodtime because they're hatching
and all that.
But remember there's trillionsof them that are unhatched.
So how about several full moons, in other words, continuous?

(01:47):
You've got to do three weeks onone week off, or whatever.
Four weeks on two weeks off,whatever, just keep rolling.
You can't just look at it asyou're going to do it in one
short period of time four days,five days, one week it's not
anywhere near enough.
So let's go on to the questionshere.
So we've got people going, allright, excellent, here's the

(02:11):
questions and here's Okay.
So, anyway, I wanted to get intojust to remind you a few things
, as you oh, what the hellAlready know, but then I'm going
to remind you anyway.
So I think the impersonatorright has kind of gone, I I
think for a while.
So we don't have any.

(02:31):
I don't know if someone's Iknow that I'm on.
I'm only on three places theinner circle, which is health
and healing group, parasitegroup and the um cfc group group
.
So any other groups or anyother platforms are just not me.
All right, I'm on, you know,and if you go to my drlodycom,

(02:54):
drlodycom, you'll find out whereI really am, because people I
don't know why people arepretending to be me or whatever.
It's bizarre.
Anyway.
So the three groups and youshould join them because they're
getting I mean, everyone'sstarting to get to know each
other pretty well now andthere's a lot of really good
support.

(03:14):
Everyone supports each other,which is fantastic, you know,
and you know it's an interactionbetween a whole group of people
.
It gives you a community ofpeople who are interested in the
same areas that you are.
So if it's health and healingand you don't have any
particular illnesses that youknow of or that you don't feel
sick, you don't feel badly.

(03:35):
So the health and healing groupand there's all sorts of
different people on there andwith thousands of years of
experience, put them, puttingthem all together.
So it's great.
In the parasite group, again, ifyou're in the parasite group,
you have automatic membership inthe health and healing group

(03:56):
plus, uh, you know, the extrabenefits of being in the
parasite group and and again,you're going to find the people
that have had, have been throughwhat you've been, you're going
through, and they, um, were ableto help each other.
And then, of course, I'm a partof it, so I'm answering.
And on the, on the group I'mtalking about, on the, because
we all have, each of thesegroups has, a private telegram

(04:18):
chat group that we all, you know, communicate on 24 hours a day,
so that's cool.
And then, of course, the cfc,chronically fermenting cell
group and do I have to really,um, explain that one again?
I guess I do also known as therockefeller word cancer, but

(04:38):
it's clear, chronicallyfermenting cells.
It is not an astrological sign,it's out of your body, it's
just not that okay.
So, anyway, um, that's what Iwanted to say, all right, so
it's.
And, as you all know, you canon on twitter, uh, and the new
tiktok, it's everything elseinstagram, facebook, youtube,

(05:00):
linkedin rumble it's dr thomaslodi.
Linkedin Rumble it's DR ThomasLodi.
No MD at the end.
So let's get into questions, allright.
And why are they so small?
Oh, wow, come on, there, we go,all right, cool.
So first question is how do Iget rid of frequent infections
with bacterial vaginosis thenturns to yeast infection.

(05:21):
It's a constant repetitivecycle, one after another.
So this is so anyway, all right.
So, jl, this is a and actuallythis is an excellent question
because this question is goingto is going to give us a view,
although I want to answerquestions and I do answer
questions More importantly, Iwant to give you the

(05:42):
understanding so that you couldhave answered the question and
that you will be able to answerlater questions that will come
up that you don't even know youhave yet, but they'll be
answered and you won't have them.
So see, you're going to begetting a benefit you'll never
know about, but you will.
You will, you'll have anunderstanding, okay, so let me
just talk.
So that's a good question.

(06:02):
So why am I getting repeatedinfections?
And it doesn't only have to bevaginal.
You could get repeated skininfections.

(06:23):
You know, people get a lot oftimes.
People get recurrent abscessesof the skin, which is, you know,
skin abscesses.
You can have it in your colon,um, you know, ulcerative colitis
and bleeding, uh, rectalbleeding and mucus and stuff.
But this lady's question isspecifically vaginal, so
bacterial vaginosis, and whichbecomes the yeast infection, and
then I guess it goes back andforth.
Okay, but so let let me talkabout what we need to all really

(06:45):
start to come to appreciatewith extreme authority.
We have to understand theenormity and the profundity of
our microbiome.
And our microbiome, our humanmicrobiome, it's all of the
bacteria, funguses, archaea,whatever viruses are.
They always include them.

(07:07):
I don't even they don't reallyexist, but all right.
So there's a healthy proportionof them, right, and you know
like.
So, for example, in the GItract we have anywhere up to a
thousand different diversespecies, right, and now they

(07:27):
have about 150 times more,actually, genes than we do.
Right, to have an effect inbiology you need to have genes.
The DNA are the ones that havethe effect.
Why are they there?
They're there because of thesame reason that any organism is
anywhere it's because it hasfood.
If it has something to eat,it'll be there.

(07:48):
Okay, if there's nothing to eat, it's gone.
It's got to go find food right.
Pretty fundamental primary uminstinct, uh, leading to a whole
set of behaviors and uh,lifestyle is survival number one
, okay, first chakra, first onmaslow's list.
You all know maslow, abrahammaslow, psychologist.
The hierarchy of needs.
First on Maslow's list.
You all know Maslow, abrahamMaslow, psychologist, the
hierarchy of needs.
First on his list, first on thechakras.

(08:09):
So pretty much East and Westcame together on that one, and
so it is fundamental Right.
Second one, as we all know, isa sexuality, and then we move up
from there.
So, but in terms of motivationsfor human behavior, or in the
chakra system, energy centers.
So anyway, the, what do you callit?

(08:32):
The?
So now the vaginal microbiome,by the way, in the, in the
reproductive system of a woman,right, we're talking about
vagina vulva, vagina exocervex,that means the part of the
cervix that's in the vagina,that's at the posterior wall,
and then that's all consideredthe lower part of the

(08:54):
reproductive system.
The upper part is theendocervex, which is just on the
other side, not in the vagina,in the peritoneal cavity, then
the uterus, fallopian tubes andovaries, all right, so that's
the upper part of thereproductive system and this
lower part of the reproductivesystem.
Well, there are about fivedifferent minor ecosystems in

(09:15):
there which have differingrelative proportions of these
microorganisms, but you can makea big distinction between the
lower part, which is cervix,vagina, vulva, with the upper
part Okay, and that bigdistinction in the main one is
is that in the lower part thereare more lactobacilli,

(09:37):
lactobacillus, and the reasonthat's so important is because
of relationship betweenestrogens and all that.
It's pretty, it's.
That's pretty, it's, it'sfantastic.
I mean to study this stuff andto learn this stuff.
It's like if you, how can yoube an atheist, how can you say
there's nothing intelligent inthis universe?
It all just exploded and thenfell into place somehow.

(09:59):
Yeah, so instead of having theidiot view sorry, thank you,
Eric.
Okay, so, instead of having theridiculous view, check this out
.
The amount of estrogen not onlydetermines which glands inside

(10:21):
the uterus are going to beactivated the most and what
they're going to produce,because they produce secretions
right, which comes out asvaginal discharge ultimately but
that changes and any womanknows this.
Every woman knows this, becausethey know that the discharge is
different throughout the month,and there's one time during the
month, probably between days 12to 16 or whatever of the right

(10:44):
around ovulation, that they'redifferent, that the discharge
becomes stringy.
The rest of the time, it breakseasily.
All that has to do with theestrogen concentrations having
their effect on the glands whichhave an effect on the bacteria,
the microorganisms.
So actually, one of the thingsthat estrogen does is for the
inside, inside the vaginal vault.
There inside the vaginal vaultis, um, can you not know?

(11:08):
Okay, so the cells that line upthe epithelial cells, that line
the vaginal wall, under theinfluence of estrogen, start
accumulating glycogen.
Glycogen is, as you know, is, is, is, is starch.
Starch in a plant, uh, uh,would be what we when we eat
potatoes and rice, stuff likethat.

(11:28):
But starch in in in mammals, uh, is just uh and it's just.
It's the same actually, inplants, in us.
But uh, we call it glycogen andit's just glucose molecules
strung together with alpha bondsand uh, we can break those
alpha bonds down and produced,we can break those alpha bonds
and get the glucose and get theenergy from it.

(11:50):
So that's how, what starch isokay, so in plants and in humans
, but it's called glycogen.
So there's a lot of glycogenthat accumulates in the cells,
the vaginal cells, theepithelial cells, because of the
estrogen which does what?
Well, that means thelactobacilli are there because
their food is glucose, so theytake the glucose from the

(12:12):
glycogen and they ferment it.
Right, what does that do?
That keeps the pH low, allright.
And the reason that's importantis because, see, this is how,
when we say that, you know, whenwe have a healthy biosis and
otherwise a healthy uhdistribution of microorganisms,
it's because the ones that arethat are helping our physiology

(12:34):
are, uh, they produce substancesthat keep the other guys down,
and that this is one of them.
So the lactobacilli, which iswhy they're so important.
Is that where we go with this?
Yeah, right, so, um, anyway, sonow they are, there's a lot
more of them in the lower partwith.
Okay, now, what do they do?

(12:55):
What is that?
Uh, what does that acid do?
That low ph that actually keepsaway and kills and doesn't
allow the proliferation oforganisms that we don't really
like, all right, that are not inour best interest.
And so, also, I just I wanted tojust tell you the an amazing

(13:15):
phenomenon that blew my mindwhen I first learned about it,
and that is that, right aroundovulation, what has to happen in
ovulation is the estrogen hasto come up, has to, you know,
it's being produced, and itcomes up to a certain point,
peaks, and then, and then it hasa rapid deceleration.
Well, it's that, and and so,when it gets up to that point,

(13:37):
the glands, that the glands andthe other biochemical um changes
that it's producing, result ina when the microorganisms
metabolize that these kinds ofit's less acidic, it's more
alkaline, just during that fewday period during the ovulation.

(13:58):
And the reason that's essentialand mind-blowing is because
when it's acidic it kills sperm.
Sperm cannot live in an acidicenvironment, all right.
So two things happen the spermcannot live there, so they die,
and also the mucus that's beingproduced it breaks apart.
If you take it between yourfingers and go like that, it'll

(14:19):
break.
However, during that ovulationperiod they're not producing a
lot of acid and the mucus isstringy, which means the sperm
can climb up.
Right, they're heading up thereand they aren't killed by the
alkalinity.
So it's kind of the back.
Without a healthy vaginal biomeyou could not reproduce.

(14:39):
That blew me away.
Maybe you think that's a lot Tome.
So that's the interrelationshipof nature that we are part of
this living, breathing,pulsating, enormous, endless
life.
We're part of it, we're part ofit, we're part of it.
That's what indigenous peopleknow.

(15:01):
Indigenous people know thatthey are part of this incredible
we all.
I don't know what we'veconcluded, but I know now we're
pretty much cyborgs, right, Iknow we don't really like the
natural world.
We're pretty much sitting inour little boxes with all these
electronic nonsense.

(15:21):
We're gone.
We're gone.
We're psychological, we'rehybrid psychological, and now
cyborgs, mutant cyborgs, hybrid,psychological, mutant cyborgs.
Yes, welcome to the 21stcentury folks.
And, by the way, you know what?
You don't even have to have ababy anymore.
You don't have to destroy yourfigure or anything like that.

(15:43):
We can extract the egg.
We can extract the egg, we canextract the sperm and then we
can let them grow into thisincubator so you don't have to
worry about it.
Then you have the baby, right,and you don't even have to
breastfeed it, right?
We've got this formula.
Things are getting better.
It's called progress, yeah,anyway, let's get back to this.
So what happens?
So in a healthy vaginal biome,right, you're going to have

(16:05):
predominant of lactobacillus,with a pH, and then the rest of
them.
Are these other four groups,right, there's one, two, three
and four groups and they'redominated by different organisms
and based upon those other fourgroups, whichever one and the
way you can define a group is bywhich organism is is, uh,
predominating anyway, there aredifferent ph levels.

(16:27):
That's one of the fundamentalend products of a biome.
Is ph, right, one of them?
So, um, so it prevents.
What does this?
What does the healthy,predominantly lactobacillus,
which is 92, okay, of theorganism do?
It produces of an acid thatprevents yeast growth prevents

(16:48):
multiple different bacterias andviruses, right, right, it
prevents them.
So the ph varies with fromabout a ph of like four, right,
remember, neutral is seven.
Our blood is 7.4, which isalkaline, so neutral is 7.
Our blood is 7.4, which isalkaline, so neutral is 7.
Our stomach acid is like 1.5.
So when we're talking about 4,that's pretty acidic.

(17:11):
That's the healthy vaginal pH,right, it can go as high up as
like a 5.3, depending on whichone of those four groups are
predominating during.
Right.
Now, this lactic acid producedin the vagina because of
fermenting the glycogen which isglucose, doesn't allow the

(17:34):
growth of chlamydia, neisseria,gonorrhea or trichomonas, right,
what we call STDs.
So one of the things that is tokeep in mind.
I don't know how manyrelationships have been

(17:55):
destroyed because of the medicalprofession Saying that, aha,
you've got chlamydia or you'vegot gonorrhea.
It's from having sex with you.
Know, if you're in arelationship and you've got a,
you're committed, uh, to nothave sex with other people, and
then you have this they got howyou did it, you did it, you

(18:15):
disloyal, you broke my heart,blah, blah.
It's just not always the case.
It could have been involved,but not necessarily if a woman's
.
If a woman's vaginal ph changes,these guys which are there in
small amounts anyway, just likeif I did a throat swab on
everybody, most of us have strepit doesn't mean we have strap,
we have strep, not strap Strep.

(18:36):
You understand the difference,right?
It has to do with the face youmake, no, anyway, it has to do
with colonization numbers, allright, so, anyway.
Face you make no, uh, anyway,it has to do with colonization
numbers, all right, so, anyway.
So gonorrhea, trichomonas andchlamydia are kind of the big
what they call stds, right, uh.
And then of course there'snon-gonococcal.
They all these terms are justnonsense.

(18:59):
They just get you like confusedand they help with nothing.
So what we call that bacterialvaginosis is gardenerella
vaginalis, is the name of, ofthe microorganism, right, okay,
uh.
So basically it is a vaginaldysbiosis, okay, and in addition
to the diet, so whatcontributes to that?

(19:20):
Contraceptives, if you'retaking, uh, you know, birth
control, control pills, anyhormonal imbalances, obesity,
having had a hysterectomy, soyou don't have your upper
reproductive biome is changed.
A lot of things can contributeto it, right, but the gut and
the most important contributorto the vaginal biome is the gut

(19:44):
microbiome.
What's very important in this,and this is really important.
This goes beyond what we'retalking about.
So, please, everybody who'sbored right now, open your ears
and listen.
So, the gut microbiomeeveryone's got a gut, all right.
So if you're a man or a woman,the men turned out and say I
don't want to hear this vaginalstuff.
We're talking about the gutagain.
We all have a gut.
I don't want to hear thisvaginal stuff.
We're talking about the gutagain.

(20:04):
We all have a gut.
What do those microorganisms do?
What is one of their main jobs?
They have a lot of jobs.
They are why we are alive.
However, one of their jobs isthey metabolize estrogens.
Yes, they metabolize estrogenson our behalf, and I'm a man, I
don't.
Yes, you have estrogen as well.
Without estrogen, you're dead.
So men have estrogens too.
So they do this by uh they.

(20:28):
They produce an enzyme, you know, beta glucuronidase, and it is
able to deconjugate estrogensand when it deconjugates them,
they can go into the bloodstreamand they have an effect on
binding to estrogen receptoralpha or estrogen receptor beta.
So if you have ER beta, orpositive breast CFCs, or you
have prostate excuse me or colonor lung, all these are related

(20:51):
to estrogens.
By the way, this is profoundlyaffected by the gut microbiome.
So it's these deconjugated,unbound estrogens that are
circulating in the bloodstream.
Why this happens, right, iswhere we get most of our
estrogens.
Now there are they callendocrine disruptor chemicals,
right, and we all know those.

(21:11):
There's ones found in nature.
It's not disruptive, theychange it, like the
phytoestrogens of genistein andcomostrol that we get from green
tea, we get from soy and allthat stuff.
Okay, they modify.
They are also estrogens.
They're actually really helpfulfor us because they bind to the
betas which shrink everythingdown.
So we like that, okay.

(21:32):
But then there are artificialchemicals that are used in
industrial solvents andlubricants.
You know and you know they dothe same thing, but they disrupt
the microbiome.
They don't allow them to dotheir job right or they make
them do their job at a much morerapid pace, right, and so you

(21:53):
know these are thepolychlorinated biphenols and
all those PCBs, right, thesePCBs.
Then there's the plasticizers,like the phthalates.
There's the pesticides, whichis we all know what the
pesticides are, and then there'seven antibacterials, fungicides
, bisphenol A.
All these things are artificialchemicals that disrupt the

(22:15):
microbiome so it cannotmetabolize estrogen in a healthy
way.
The ones in nature that thephytoestrogens do are helpful
for us because that's whythey're part of our food.
They're considered part of ourfood because they're they also.
So, when we think of our, ourbody's metabolism, we're not,

(22:35):
like this um, separate fromnature.
Doing what we do, it's what weingest and it's the organism.
It's's a very, very complexecosystem that extends way
beyond our skin.
But so coming down, I mean, youknow, for example, pcos pretty
much is a dysbiosis, a lowerreproductive and upper

(22:57):
reproductive system dysbiosis.
And you wind up with, you know,low estrogen, high androgen
ratios and you get PCOS rightpolycystic ovarian syndrome,
that's what it is.
It's basically an upperreproductive dysbiosis.
Almost everything is adysbiosis.
So what I'm going to be sayingto the lady who asked this

(23:18):
question is we need to work onyour vaginal biome, all right,
so the one thing you're going todo first of all is stop taking
any these antibiotics.
Stop.
You can go get some vaginal umprobiotics right and you get, or
you can uh, you know you take,they give them to you orally,
but also you can get themvaginally right and basically

(23:40):
we're talking about lactobacilliright.
So you want to change yourvaginal biome, but in order to
do that, you've got to have ahealthy gut biome, which means
you have to do a fasting, ajuice, cleanse colonics, clean
yourself out, clean yourself outand then start eating human
food, which is sorry, everybody,sorry.
I know you don't want to hearthis, but it's uncooked plant

(24:01):
foods.
What can I say?
If you've got a problem withthat, you've got to talk to God.
But if you don't know about God, then go talk to nature, ask
nature.
What the hell are you doing,man?
What are you doing?
I want nuggets.
I've got to have nuggets.
I mean, I'm not going to gothrough life without nuggets,
come on.
So anyway, sorry about that,but the more you can eat of

(24:27):
uncooked plant food, thehealthier your gut biome will be
, period, and the healthier yourgut biome is, the healthier you
are in every respect, in everyrespect.
Okay, so now, but especiallyhere, in this situation.
So you've got to do that, andyou can use vaginal.
You get uh, get these uh,probiotics, you know.
Open up the capsule, get thepowder and mix it in with some

(24:48):
water and then put it into ahigher volume of water and
actually do some excuse mevaginal douche and do that and
start changing your microbiome.
Don't you're not going to killthis or kill that, because, as
you saw, you killed the, you got, you got you get the garden,
and then you kill that and thenthe yeast pop up.
You kill the yeast, then theypop up.
That's because someone's goingto take those empty parking

(25:09):
spaces.
All right, if you leave thoseparking spaces available,
someone's going to take them,and if you don't have the ones
that are on your side, thenyou're in trouble.
Okay, so very, very importantfor us to understand all this.
The relationships areincredible.
So you understand.
We're talking about the.
Well, first of all,neurologically, the way you're

(25:33):
thinking will affect yourhypothalamus, which affects your
pituitary and your ovaries andproduction of estrogens, and in
men, it's testosterone and wemake.
We have estrogens as well, andwe have adrenal glands and your
level of stress.
They all connect with whatwe're eating.
And, yeah, so what we're eating, our state of mind, uh, all of

(25:54):
that reflects directly on whatorganisms are inhabiting us, in
us and on us, because they'reall over every.
There's no place in our bodiesthat are sterile.
Sterile meaning no organisms.
They're everywhere.
So, and we need them andthey're not them.
We've got to change that to usAll, right, so everyone has to

(26:18):
have that as your pronouns.
Your pronouns are we, us, whatelse?
We and us?
All right.
So we got that All right.
So we got that All right.
So let's go back to your whereis that question?
Questions, come on, questions.
Is this it?
No, what is this?

(26:38):
I don't know.
Where's the how did that getthere?
What?
It's crazy.
What is all this stuff Gettingcloser?
Come on, all right, that's theonly way to do it.
There we go, got it All right.
By the way, it's April 28th,eighth right.

(27:00):
What day is it for you guys?
It's 29, 28?
I think it's 28.
I think it's 28 for us here.
I don't know, you know whatdoesn't matter.
Okay, wait, not that one.
Yeah, yeah, 29th for me, 28 foryou guys.
I mean, yeah, okay, so here'sthe question now.
Next one is um, how?
So that was jl, now this ismelissa and it's how?

(27:21):
How do I get parasite meds forhumans?
Doctors cannot even diagnoseproperly.
Doctors are, it turns out.
Doctors have nothing to do withhealth care and you're looking
for health, so that's not theplace to go.
Anyway, so all theseantiparasitic medications will
be available soon.
I know I keep saying that, butit takes a while to get this
together, but we're going tohave a place you can go to and

(27:43):
get them all, so that's comingto get this together.
But we're going to have a placeyou can go to and get them all,
so that's coming.
In the meantime, you can sendattention to my assistant at
hello, at drlodycom F-A-H, andshe can help get you some until
we get this going.
But yeah, that's one way to doit.
There are other ways and lotsof people if you join our

(28:04):
parasite group, or even ourhealth and healing, I think.
But we've got a lot ofresources on there of where to
get all sorts of things, so thatwould be very helpful too.
But just if you want to do thisright away, send that email to
her and we'll get that done.
But, like, for example, there'sniclosamcom, where you can get

(28:25):
niclosamide from um lithuania.
And then there's uh, oh and, bythe way we talk about for
humans and dogs, and it doesn't.
These, these, these, thesemolecules, these chemicals are
the same.
And, uh, if it's for dogs, itjust means that maybe they made
it in some sort of paste thatthey like to lick or or

(28:46):
something like that.
You know, I mean, there's nodifference in the actual
medicine, there's no differencein it, right?
So that's really important tokeep in mind.
Which is, you know the wholejoe tippin story, right?
The veterinarian told him itwas a large animal.
Vet said, hey, whenever we'reuh treating an animal for uh

(29:08):
have some sort of uh you know,um, worms, um, and they happen
to have cfcs, the cfcs go away.
So he said I'll try it allright.
So it's the same thing.
It worked with him, worked forthe else.
So just please keep that inmind.
Um, so that's how you get itmelissa for now.
Now, okay, and then this is Sue.
I had a gum infection for 18months.

(29:29):
Tooth was fine.
I tried to fight the infectionwith fragile antibiotic three
times fragile and brushing withsalt and peroxide to no avail.
Eventually I got facialneurology, a trigeminal nerve
pain.
That's terrible trigeminalneurology, very painful.
I had the tooth pulled.

(29:49):
A week later the pain was gonefrom my face, but I'm left with
a really bad groin pain goingdown to my right, right down to
my knee and along the abductedmuscle.
It's very painful to walk andsleep, and along the abducted
muscle it's very painful to walkand sleep.
I have a feeling it could be onthe same meridian as the tooth,
which was the top right molar,second from the back.

(30:14):
I'm interested to hear if youthink it could be related the
infection in the gum tooth in myleg and what I can do about it.
Sure, okay, I'm sure most of thepeople listening here
understand the relationshipbetween the teeth and the rest
of the organs in the body.
They're on like circuits inyour house where you have, you

(30:35):
know, the bathroom light and thebedroom light go out and you
just change that fuse and theygo back on.
So that's a circuit.
We have circuits in our bodythat go through our teeth and
down to different organs.
Okay, so they're related andthis is a hundred and a billion
percent, true, okay, so, anyway,excuse me, so typically,

(30:58):
typically, when you count teeth,you start with the upper right,
go all the way back to yourwisdom tooth that would be
number one right Go over here to16 and 17 to 32 on the bottom.
That's typically how you count.
So with that system, numberfour and five, and then 12 and
13, right, and then 18, 19, 30,and 31.

(31:20):
Those are all on the largeintestines, but they're also the
pelvic and groin area, so theygo down there.
So it sounds like you had.
So it definitely sounds likethat's what was going on with
you, definitely Right.
And here's the thing If you had, you said you had a gingivitis,
a gum infection.
So if you had a gum infection,that's a superficial infection.
However, if the tooth pullingthe tooth relieved that and the

(31:45):
neuralgia, that means that itwasn't just superficial, it was
also deep and it was into thenerves and into it, was into
your, it got into your cranialnerves.
You know trigeminal is thecranial nerve number five.
It got into there and that'swhat caused the pain.
Trigeminal neuralgia is verypainful.
You got into there and that'swhat caused the pain.

(32:06):
Trigeminal neuralgia is verypainful.
But the fact that it was pulledand that went away tells us
that it was a deep infection,not just superficial.
All right Now, if that was now,my concern is you might have
had this pool extracted by aregular dentist who I'm sorry,
I'm not sorry, I'm just sorrythat you have to hear it, I'm
not sorry for saying it, butregular dentists are as

(32:29):
dangerous as regular doctors.
They have got to.
When you go to medical schoolor dental school and get all
your training, that is thefoundation, the beginning, and
now you got to go learn how toreally help people.
You can't, because rememberwhat happened in 1910.

(32:52):
How to really help people?
You can't because remember whathappened in 1910.
Abraham Flexner, brother ofSimon Flexner, wrote a report,
went to Congress and then prettysoon we had Rockefellerian
medicine, and that's what wehave today, right, and includes
dental as well.
And the point is these systemsnot only that, they have their
absolute important place'm notwhen you gotta have surgery, you
gotta have surgery and youdon't go to an herbalist, right,

(33:13):
okay, when you've got, uh, youbroke your leg or your spine or
you don't, again, you don't goto an herbalist or to a uh or
acupuncture, you've got to go toan allopathic, or shall I say
allopathetic.
You have to go to one of theallopathetic physicians who, in
that situation, are not pathetic.
They're actually very cool,they're very important, very

(33:33):
necessary and they're helpful.
Okay, neurosurgical, you've gotto have it.
You've got a tumor about tocompress your spine, you've got
to go for radiation.
There's nothing else.
You can't do anything else,okay.
So remember, we are always goingto do that which is necessary

(33:54):
at the moment and is going tocause the least harm, to find
our way along that path ofhealing so things can get in the
way.
Obstructions to healing, suchas tumors and things like that,
obstructions, they get in theway.
We've got to get rid of themand if we have to use surgery,
whatever we have to use to do it, we do Otherwise what you die.
So, okay, so you do it.
But so, anyway, I just reallywant to clarify that.

(34:19):
Okay, so back to the dental,going to the regular dentist,
because when they extract atooth, they do not take out the
periodontal ligament.
And remember, keep in mind thatmuscles are connected to bones
by something that are calledtendons, you know, and ligaments

(34:39):
are the same fibrous materialthat connects bones to bones.
You've got your upper leg andyour lower leg right are
connected by ligaments, theanterior cruciate ligament
everyone knows about ACL, youknow, which often gets damaged
during different kinds ofsporting sports, and we have

(35:00):
them in our wrists and in ourankles, but we also have them
around here.
So it's bone connected to thebone.
So the teeth are connected tothe jaw through the periodontal
ligament.
Okay, if you don't take thatout, if they don't take it out,
then they left it in, whichmeans there is a superhighway
for microorganisms, asuperhighway right into the jaw
and that's where they'll go.

(35:21):
They're going to go up having acolony inside your jaw
producing toxins and stuff likethat that the immune system
can't get to, because it's inthe jaw, it's in the bone, you
know, in the immune system youcan, but it's not quite as the
same as, uh, you know, in otherparts of the body it's it's kind
of inhibited okay.
So very, very important.
So I don't know if that's whathappened.
I'm hoping you went to abiological dentist and they took

(35:43):
out the tooth and they uh tookout the periodontal ligament and
then.
And then what they would havedone, if they're a biological
dentist, is they would have thenuh, used ozonated water to
clean out this, to irrigate thesocket, and then they would have
taken ozone gas and put that in, so it went up into the
trabeculae of your bone, of yourjaw, and then they would have

(36:06):
sealed it because they wouldhave drawn your blood and spun
it and at the very top of theblood is the platelet-rich fiber
in which they would have usedto seal off that area.
So you would have taken the,the, the, the tooth out and the
periodontal ligament, cleaned it, sterilized it and sealed.
It makes sense.
It's called biologicaldentistry.
I think it just get rid of thebio, just call it logical

(36:27):
dentistry.
Logical makes sense, works.
Okay.
So, and you've done that.
Now you've taken care of that.
Okay so, if it's still affectingdown here, that means that's
telling you if you're having aneffect on your groin or your
pelvic area and and that thethat is uh, and you said it goes
down to your knee.
Uh, so obviously they didn't dothat.

(36:51):
Obviously you must've gone to aregular dentist, is it the
sorry guys?
Don't get mad at me.
Look, I got the regulartraining too and I realized it
didn't work.
So I went beyond that.
So, um, yeah, if this idiot cando it, you can do it.
Doc.
All right, doc, doctors like tobe called Doc.

(37:11):
I don't quite like it myself.
I hate it.
Hey, doc, it's weird, unless,of course, it's Bugs Bunny.
Now if Bugs Bunny says hey,what's up, doc, I'm cool with
that, but only bugs, all right.
So it sounds like you have thatinfection.
You have that colonization ofthese organisms up in that area
and it wasn't sterilized and itwasn't clean.

(37:32):
So you've got to go findyourself a biological dentist
right away.
You're going to make surethey're certified, not just
registered or a member certifiedwith IAOMT, international
Alliance of Oral and MedicalToxicology.
I don't know IAOMT.
Okay, they train certifieddentists to.

(37:57):
You got to find them in yourarea right and right away and
you'll take care of that.
That what's going on.
This isn't the question.
Is it safe to administercannabis oil suppositories for
an extended period of time?
Are there any potentiallydangerous side effects?
All right, so, uh well, yes andno great answer, right?

(38:20):
Oh thanks, doc.
I waited all week for you totell me yes or no.
So here's the thing.
Oh, thanks, doc.
I waited all week for you totell me yes or no.
So here's the thing.
Cannabis is a very importantherb in terms of helping restore
balance in our systems.
It has wonderful, wonderfuleffects.
It can stop nausea, it canstimulate appetite when you're

(38:43):
not able to eat and you're undermalnourished.
It can eliminate pain and alsohelp healing from CFCs and other
conditions.
Now, the reason we wind up usingit rectally as a suppository is
that the outer two-thirds ofthe rectum, the veins that drain

(39:10):
that area, go directly into thesystemic circulation, as
opposed to the proximal or firstthird.
I don't know if everybodyunderstands proximal and distal,
but that's how it's referred toin anatomy right.
Something that's closer to tothe center is proximal,
something that is further awayand distal.
But that's how it's referred toin anatomy right.
Something that's closer to thecenter is proximal, something
that is further away is distal.
So the proximal one-third ofthe rectum drains through the

(39:33):
portal circulation into theliver.
The distal two-thirds drainsdirectly into the systemic, you
know the vena cava, right intothe system.
Difference is this goes throughthe portal circulation, goes to
the liver, it gets modulated,conjugated to become
psychoactive and you get high,all right.
The outer two-thirds doesn't.

(39:54):
And since you're going tousually take large amounts
because you're trying to eithereliminate pain, to get off
narcotics, or you're trying tojust help get rid of tumors,
whatever it is, you're going totake large amounts rid of tumors
and whatever it is, you'regoing to take large amounts.
And if that were to go allthrough your liver, you'd be too
.
Even if you liked the feelingof cannabis, it would be too
much for you, you wouldn't likeit.

(40:16):
Not even Cheech and Chong, noone would like it.
It's like you get stupid high.
I don't even like a little bitbecause it makes me stupid.
But if I just, yeah.
So I haven't done it in longtime, years and years, years.
But uh, it doesn't have thateffect if you do it.
So that's why people use itrectally.

(40:37):
You take large amounts andstill function.
That's it now.
Long term, you're saying use.
I'm not sure what you mean Like.
Are you talking about like sixmonths a year?
Beyond that, I don't thinkthere'd be a reason to go too
long.
And if there is, that I'm notaware of.
If there's a reason ineverything.

(40:57):
We should never do itcontinuously.
We need to give it, we need tohave it breaks, because nature,
the fundamental reality ofnature, is that it's cyclic.
Nothing is continuous, it'scyclic.
We have day and night, right,we have winter, spring, summer.
It's cyclic, everything iscyclic, and so anything

(41:23):
consistently there.
First of all, what it does isit has, for example, in our body
.
If we're doing somethingconsistently that should be in
cycles, our body becomes used toit and starts to decrease its
ability to have that effect.
It's called downregulation, soit'll downregulate receptors and
so the effect is lessened.

(41:43):
So what is that?
Again, think about that.
That's an adaptive response.
The body is engaging in anadaptive response because its
biological needs are beingthwarted in some manner.
What is that that's thecontinuous of anything.
Even breathing is cyclic.
We need oxygen, but we breathein cycle.

(42:06):
We breathe in and out, right,so there's nothing continuous,
except what in our mind.
We get a little break duringslow wave delta sleep.
We get a short break.
So even that's a cycle.
It's a big set, but we only geta short time, a couple few
hours a day.
If you go to sleep, right, ifyou do proper mental sleep
hygiene, but if you don't, thenyou're going to wind up thinking

(42:29):
all the time.
So, anyway.
So would there be a problem?
Yes, there would be a problem.
The problem is that you wouldbe continuous.
So whatever effect you werelooking for is going to be much
less than you would hope.
Number one.
Number two anything in yourrectum like that and it's a
chemical is going to change themicroflora.
It's going because now the, the, the, the, the, sus, the food,

(42:55):
the sustenance for themicroorganisms has been modified
.
So to use it for short term andthen, if you're eat, but you're
eating healthy, you're eatinghuman food.
If you're eating human food andyou're doing it, okay, that's
going to be the best.
But for long term, to have thatin there, you're going to
ultimately wind up with acompletely different not

(43:15):
completely different, but adifferent relative proportion of
microorganisms.
It's going to happen, there'sno way.
It cannot happen and thereforeyou don't want that.
So what you want to do is youwant to have a healthy
microorganism and healthymicrobiota.
By the way terms again,definitions we say microbiome,

(43:37):
we're talking about the dna, thegenetics of the microorganisms
in your gut or wherever they are.
When we're talking aboutmicrobiota, we're talking about
the, not the, not the dna of theorganism, but the organism,
whether it's a strep or it's acandida, whatever, that's the
organism.
We're not about the d.
So the microbiota is reallywhat usually people are usually

(44:00):
referring to, but it's become ahabit or common to just use the
word microbiome.
So, um, a microbiome that isresults in assisting us from, I
mean everything, every aspect ofour, of our, of our physiology,

(44:24):
including our moods.
I mean there's nothing that themicrobiome doesn't affect.
But all of that is harmonizedin perfect, beautiful, harmonic
resonance with our being, with acertain relative proportion of
these microorganisms.
And they're there because ofwhat they're eating.
Period, period, period Period,big period, big period.

(44:45):
All right, that's why they'rethere because of what they're
eating.
Period, period, period Period,big period, big period, all
right, that's why they're there.
So is it essential that we eatcertain foods?
If our goal is health?
Yeah, and I'm assuming that ourgoals are health, that's our
collective goal.
That's why we're all here.
I think collectively if we hadone.
So why are these guys allmeeting all the time?

(45:06):
We have this thing that we'relooking for and that's called
health.
I would say, if you're gonna Idon't know why you would need it
continually for prolonged orhow long is prolonged but if
you're doing it to overcome yourcfc problem or something like
that, then it's gonna.
It could be a while, but again,do it in cycles.
Give yourself a couple weeksoff, if you can, unless you're
in severe pain, do it.

(45:28):
You have to do this accordingto your situation, right, and
you've got to be able to judgeand remember you don't need
experts to tell you.
The point is this does it helpyou?
Yes, okay.
Can it be a problem?
Yes, okay.
How do I avoid it being aproblem?
Well, giving it some sort of.
How do I avoid it being aproblem?

(45:48):
Well, giving it some sort ofsick cycles.
That's how I can do that, butI've got a lot of pain, so we
have to work around and figureout how to do that.
But so figure it out, andthere's no expert that knows.
Nobody knows this stuff.
I mean, they don't know it.
Most people don't.
Most.
One 99.99 of doctors don't knowabout how to get someone off of
pain narcotics by usingcannabis.
So you can't go to anyone andask them about that.

(46:11):
Or if it's for whatever, allright.
So anyway, what I'm saying isbe your own clinician, be your
own, realize that you know asmuch as they do.
You know more because it's yourbody.
Now, what's the next question?
Next question is by Lynn LynnDuploit.
What question is what is theprotocol for parasite cleanse If

(46:34):
you do not have CFCs, just todo a complete parasite cleanse,
what meds do you use and howlong?
All right, linda, I hope you'rehere today Because the what do
you call it?
The oh, this is oh, yeah, it'sworking good, okay, okay.
So you don't have CFCs and youjust want to do a parasite

(46:55):
cleanse.
So and it sounds like otherwiseyou would have mentioned it it
sounds like you don't have anyobvious manifestation of a
parasite colonization, right?
Because you didn't mentionanything about seeing worms in
your stool or anything like that.
So just saying, okay, hey, Irealize I'm human and I'm going

(47:19):
to have parasites.
Now, by the way, we'll never getrid of them because they're
part're part of our, ourecosystem.
They're, they're in there,they're part of it.
But you want to get them downinto a relative manageable
condition where they're not atall causing a problem.
That can happen.
That's how we are when we'rehealthy, and it requires, um, um

(47:39):
, minimizing exposure and makingsure that your internal
environment is not hospitable tothese guys, excuse me, um, so,
um.
So basically, this they're whatare parasites, worms and
protozoa, right, are what wecall the endoparasites, right,

(48:00):
the ones that are inside ourbody.
Now, there are ectoparasites,which are like scabies, and what
they call crabs, scabies.
And then there are these reallydisgusting ones that come from
bot flies that are down aroundCentral America and South
America.
And these flies, you know, andthese flies, you know, they lay

(48:36):
eggs and then, like a mosquitoor a tick or some other vector,
will find itself in the sameplace that the bot fly laid its
eggs, and the eggs will adhereto the mosquito's legs or to the
tick's legs and the tick comesand takes a bite out of you and
leaves the eggs there and thoseeggs turn into larvae.
You can't be calling me, don'tcall me right now.
These larvae go through theskin and then migrate all

(48:56):
throughout the body.
Yeah, yeah, and they come out.
Yeah, it's so, they'reectoparasites.
Those you would would know,there would be no question, and
you would have definitelymentioned that here in your
question.
So both of us are thinking aboutendoparasites, you know, like
tapeworms and pinworms, and youknow things that we're familiar

(49:18):
with, not know it, but you know,um, for example, with if a
woman has a, a fishy odorvaginal odor is fishy.
You know that's a.
You know, usually trichomonasis, uh, is the protozoa that
causes that.
Um, yeah, so anyway.
So you want to take about threeanti-worms.

(49:40):
The word that is used medicallyis helminth, one of the
stupidest words I've ever heardof, but hell, helminth,
h-e-l-m-i-n-t-h.
Yeah, yeah, it's spelled asstupidly as it sounds Helminth.
So three anti-helminths and oneor two anti-protozoa, if you
have thinking that.
So the anti-helminths arevibramectin, one of the

(50:06):
benzimidazoles, fenbendazole,nabendazole, albendazole,
niclosamide, and those three andniclosamide, those three
together, do it, we'll get youknow most worms.
And then one or twoanti-protozoa, nidazoxanide,

(50:29):
also called Alinea brand name.
And then what?
Tinidazole?
Because one of thebenzimidazoles fenbendazole,
nidabendazole, albendazole,niclosamide, and those three and
niclosamide, those threetogether do it.
We'll get you know most worms.

(50:50):
And then one or twoanti-protozoa, nitrozoxanide,
also called Alinea brand name,and then what?
Tinidazole, cousin ofmitronidazole, which you might
have heard.
Now, what should youparticularly think?
If you don't have problems withyour liver, you've got to make

(51:12):
sure you do a liver test, makesure your liver is fine.
Then you can take regular doses.
So what I would say to you is,linda, is join the parasite
group.
Go to drlodycom and there's thethree groups.
Join the parasite group.
Go to drlodycom and there's thethree groups.
Join the parasite group.
And yeah, because there mightbe ongoing questions that you'll

(51:33):
have as it goes and you'll findout where to get them and all
sorts of stuff.
So, yeah, join, but that'sbasically it.
You want to get the worms andprotozoa right, and then also
you have to deal with fungus aswell, the funguses.
I wonder who was calling me justnow, because it was a local
call.
I'll never know.
Lisa, what are your thoughts oncryoablation?

(51:56):
Is it safe and a goodalternative to lumpectomy?
Also, can this be performed onother CFC locations, such as
thyroid neck area?
Thank you All right.
So a couple of let's take a lookat just the nature of the
question.
The nature of the question isit's kind of telling me that

(52:16):
it's not necessarily.
You might not be thinking thisway, but normally, usually when
someone thinks I want to get ridof this thing, is that they
think that's the problem Alittle mass in the breast or on
the thyroid or wherever, in thelung or liver.
But I'm not saying it's not aproblem, but it is only that

(52:37):
aspect of the problem that youcan see.
You can't see all themicroscopic and smaller ones,
all the microscopic and smallerones, the manifestations of the
same underlying condition, whichis a systemic toxicity.
You're not able to see that.
So you're thinking that this isthe problem and that if you
remove it then the problem issolved.

(52:59):
And that's just not the way itis.
So as long as you know that andyou know that you've really got
to be dealing with thissystemically by cleansing,
getting rid of toxins,rebalancing everything and we
all know we've talked about it,there's a whole process to begin
the healing journey still wantto get rid of a particular mass,

(53:31):
I would say, unless the mass isexcruciatingly painful or about
to block a vital function likebreathing, eating, bowel
movements, urination, you know,is in a place where it can't
really, you know, grow too much,like in the brain, the skull
and on the spinal cord.
So we might, in those cases,have to use surgery or radiation

(53:52):
, depending on the situation.
But other than that, the actualremoval of something causes it
a problem.
It causes it to spread.
Number one.
Number two, it causesinflammation, which adds to the
whole process and it diverts thetension of the immune system

(54:12):
from healing that to now healingthe wound.
But all that being said,cryoablation can be.
So there's other ways,non-surgical ways of eliminating
massive, excuse me.
So radio frequency ablation,rfa was done.
You know we were doing that 20years ago and it worked pretty

(54:35):
nicely.
Uh, in the liver and stuff likethat.
You could just ablate it withthe radio frequencies, right,
emf, and then, uh, you could getlung and liver.
I don't remember ever doing inthe breast, but cryoablation is
freezing it, right and, yes, itcan be very effective.
Like all procedures that aredone, you need to always find

(54:59):
out that the person who's goingto do a procedure on you make
sure that they are, that they dothis procedure frequently, and
I mean at least twice a day or10 times a week, or why?
Because, regardless of theirprior training and how many
papers they have on the wall,it's how good they are at this

(55:23):
now, manually.
How good, how good are and youcan only be really excellent is
if you do something on a regularbasis, right?
So when you, for example, youhear a guy sit down and play
piano and they go, wow, thisdoesn't just do this once in a
while, all right, say anything,guitar, whatever, singing, so

(55:44):
anything that people are good at, they do it all the time.
So if you want someone to do aprocedure on you, make sure that
they do it all the time.
For example, we used to use inthe hospital there's a PA as a
physician's assistant and PAshave had like a smaller

(56:05):
encapsulated education thatphysicians have had, you know,
just kind of like thenitty-gritty and it's not as
long.
So they're called PAs orphysician assistants and they
can do many things and usually,like if they work with a
cardiologist, they'll be able todo what the cardiologist does
and they'll be able to do thecatheterizations and things like
that instead of thecardiologist does, and they'll

(56:26):
be able to do thecatheterizations and things like
that.
Instead of the cardiologist andin radiology, we would have
someone put in a port right.
A port is where they put in.
So we used to use this PAbefore we'd use the radiologist,
who was well-known, because thePA did what 15 a day.

(56:47):
Really good at my point is thisdoesn't that doesn't matter if
the you know head of thedepartment, of whatever, doesn't
matter.
What matters is do you do thisall the time?
So that's what you want to findout.
So the cryoablation veryimportant, because I've seen
situations where which werehorrible because they didn't,
they weren't skilled.
This is a skill.
That's what I would do.
I would use that and I woulduse other things too as well.

(57:10):
And, yes, it could be used onthyroid, it can be used in other
areas too.
And again, what's good aboutthe cryoablation versus like
surgery is that you don't causea lot of much less inflammation.
Number one.
Number two, you don't reallycause as much spreading.
So there's a lot of good, Ithink.
Benefits over, sir, definitelyover surgery.

(57:31):
But again, think about it too.
But if you just say, look, Iget all that, I'm gonna do all
that, but I just feel better ifit's gone, then you know, then
do it.
Then I make sure you got theright person who does these all
day long, every every day, verygood at them, and say what is
your data?
Show me, if you did 100 people,how many have the effect you're
looking for over, let's say,the next three years, five years

(57:54):
, and how many Try to get thatinformation from them?
Now this is Lisa, and Lisa sayswe hear constantly that CFCs
feed on glucose and sugar.
Which sugar alternative, safe,safe maple syrup, raw organic
honey, monk, or is it a no withactive cfc's, lisa?

(58:15):
Um, so this is another form ofasking a question get that gets
asked all the time and it's veryimportant and worth repeating a
million times, worth repeatinga million times.
And that's this.
Where am I?
Where did that?
Where is that?
No, what is that?

(58:36):
Combination of high-doseparenteral ascorbate and alpha
lipoic acid failed to enhancetumor inhibitor genie juice.
Go, paul adderson.
Oh my god, we got to read that,yeah, okay, by the way, I'm
going going to talk about that.
Alpha lipoic acid, what do youcall it?
And vitamin C together, okay,anyway.
So, regarding sweeteners, firstof all, here's the thing.
Remember we have five tastes,actually four Salty, sour,

(59:00):
bitter, sweet, and now they havea fifth one which is new.
They're calling it savory.
I'm not sure what that means,but I think savory is a
combination of the others.
But anyway, fundamental tastes,right.
And then most of our experienceof eating is probably 80%
olfactory, meaning nose, ourability to smell, all right, and

(59:23):
the nose is probably the mostprimal, right.
You know, you look at dogs,cats, any, they're always
smelling and they can smellthings.
And and not that they know theydon't have a database um, they
are through the nose, they'reable to detect whether to go

(59:43):
forward or not.
But the nose is very important.
And taste.
So taste is.
But as a fundamental tastewe've got salt, sour, bitter,
sweet and maybe savory.
Okay, now, interesting is thatyou can, for example, savory
whatever that is, if it's acombination of things or if it's
an actual separate taste,whatever that is, if it's a

(01:00:07):
combination of things or if it'san actual separate taste, if
you can accent, shift yourpleasures, your, your, your,
your gustatory pleasures, tothat away from the sweet.
And in fact, in japan they I Iforget the terms because it's
been so many years, but in japanthere's actually, they talk
about people who are, they havea name for people who like

(01:00:27):
sweets versus people who likesavory.
The Japanese.
It's amazing, they're amazing,amazing and Japan will never
stop amazing me, but anyway.
So what I'm saying is that andwhat I have found working with
people over the years is that ifthey come in and they say okay,
and they stop eating anythingsweet and they're just, and then

(01:00:52):
I think within a month or twomonths, maybe they actually
don't want any sweet, they don'tlike it.
It's crazy.
I don't know what happens.
But so, ideally, what I wouldsay is what are we talking about
with sweets Again?
So this is a big topic.
So we're talking about sweets.
Sweets are usually not usuallysweets have come from

(01:01:13):
carbohydrates in nature.
They're carbohydrates andremember, the fundamental
carbohydrate called amonosaccharide is glucose,
fructose, galactose, right?
Those are the main guys, andthey form disaccharide.
Is glucose, fructose, galactose, right?
Those are the main guys, andthey form disaccharides too.
They're polysaccharides, whichare starch, anyway, but they are

(01:01:33):
what activate the sweetreceptors and we have a sense of
taste of sweet.
Now they're necessary.
Remember we have threemacronutrients protein, which is
really amino acids,carbohydrates and fats.
We have micronutrients, butthose three, and one of them is
carbs, and carbs are not onlythere for us to extract energy

(01:01:57):
from them.
They also allow for thebiosynthesis for our body to
make other molecules that itneeds to make right.
It gets the carbon backbonefrom glucose.
So carbohydrates are essential.
So we can't say I don't want any.
So if you're going to have them, you want them to form when
they come in.

(01:02:17):
They have to form in fruit, inplants.
You know there's carbs inplants, there's carbs in spinach
, in broccoli.
I mean yeah, and so that's it.
So don't think that you'regoing to get away from it.
I'm going to do a ketogenicdiet and I'm not going to have
any.
You can't.
No, you had zero carbs, youjust have zero life.
Okay, so you can't be withoutthem.

(01:02:40):
I just wanted to clarify,because there's a lot of in this
question is a lot of otherunasked questions.
All right now.
So in terms of sweet sweeteners, right, they the, the, the ones
that are popular, that havebeen, we've known, for a long
time, excuse me, the alcoholones which are, you know, you

(01:03:01):
know, well known.
And then there's the other onesthat are called just artificial
sweeteners, you know, likeaspartame and saccharin and
sucralose, like xylitol,maltitol, lactitol, all those.
They're all alcohols, that.
And an alcohol, by the way, is amolecule that is very similar

(01:03:22):
is a metabolite of carbohydratemetabolism.
So that's why I don't know ifyou've ever heard of this, but
there was, excuse me, I do thisonce a week.
I've just sneezed like 18 times, so, excuse me.
So in Japan, excuse me, therewas a, and it happened a lot

(01:03:42):
there.
People would be pulled over fordrunk driving and they, they,
they failed the breathalyzertest and, however, they didn't
drink, but they just had a mealwith a lot of carbs.
It turns out that they had a, adysbiosis, of a fungal
dysbiosis, and they wereconverting it into alcohol, all

(01:04:04):
right.
So I just want to make thatpoint.
So alcohols and carbs, they'reit's, they're part of the same
family, and that's why you havesweeteners that will mimic it,
and then you've got the otherones, but, excuse me, so what
they're calling now novelsweeteners?
I hate the word novel becauseremember, uh, what's his name?
Um fakuchi, no um.

(01:04:25):
Uh, what's his name?
Trust the science, trust thescience, trust the science.
For the guy he used to be headof the uh, uh, nih, yeah, yeah,
hopefully now he's being uh,taken care of, but probably not.
He's probably being pamperedsomewhere.
He's probably living on epsteinisland?
Who knows knows?
Anyway, remember, they call thecoronavirus a novel virus.

(01:04:47):
Anyway, I hate their terms.
Stop already.
Come on, are we at the 18 yet?
Okay, so novel sweeteners are.
The reason they're novel isbecause they're derived from
natural sources.
Why should that be novel?
Okay, so, anyway, they callthem plant-derived, non-caloric
sweeteners.
And we all think of calories,because calories gain weight.

(01:05:09):
You got to count your calories,all that stuff.
So plant-derived, non-caloric,so they're from plant, they're
natural.
Yeah, so there's monk fruitstevia, but one of the latest to
come to the public's attentionis allulose, and allulose is
like in figs and dates.
It's that kind of sugar and ithas a very low glycemic response

(01:05:29):
, remember.
So the glycemic index is howquickly your blood glucose goes
up when you eat something.
The reason that's importantwhen you're talking about CFCs
is because when glucose goes up,the pancreas produces insulin,
because insulin is what keepsthe glucose going out of the
blood and either and in thecells being used or being

(01:05:53):
converted to fat and stored forlater.
Right, that's the job ofinsulin.
Well, as it turns out, cfc'shave about 15 20 times more
insulin receptors.
So you don't want to.
You want to avoid that, becausewhat's going to happen.
Every time you get somethingspikes like that, you have a

(01:06:13):
spike of insulin.
The CFC is going to be able toeat more.
So you get up in the morningand you eat something sweet
which causes your blood sugar togo up.
Your pancreas produces insulinand the CFCs eat first.
Because they have all theseextra insulin receptors, they
eat first.
The rest of your cells getseconds and thirds.

(01:06:34):
So that's kind of the reasoningfor this.
However, you don't have to takethat to an extreme and
understand that you also stillneed carbs and that if you can
keep your fasting insulin low,which is the goal then that
means that your body does notneed a lot of insulin.

(01:06:54):
It's very insulin sensitive,the opposite of insulin
resistant, which is part of thewhole diabetic thing.
The more insulin sensitive youare, that means it doesn't take
a lot of insulin for your cellsto pick it up.
Cells to pick it up.

(01:07:15):
Okay.
So if you're fasting, insulinis three or less.
You're probably very close tohaving the same sensitivities as
CFCs.
So you eat something and it'sgot sweet causes insulin, but
you're going to eat it about thesame time.
The CFCs aren't going to getfirst than you get seconds.
Why is that important?
Because they need 19 times morethan regular cells and if
they're getting equal and you'regetting equal then for them

(01:07:36):
that's a relative starvation.
Ok, so you get your fastinginsulin low.
What's the best way to keep yourfasting insulin low?
The longer the interval betweenyour last meal of one day and
your first meal of the next dayis the best and most efficient,
quickest way to lower yourfasting insulin.

(01:07:58):
By the way, your doctor shouldhave measured your fasting
insulin and your fastingascorbate on day one and be
following it.
But I'm pretty sure that theyhaven't.
And but I'm pretty sure thatthey haven't.
But anyway, the average eaterin the Western world has
probably got a fasting insulinof but the normal range, okay,

(01:08:22):
remember, this is another reasonwhy you don't want to be normal
.
The normal range goes up tolike 25 or 27.
Crazy, that is a fasting insulin.
That means that you need somuch insulin to get that glucose
into your cells so that theycan stay alive that you would
have.
That means the cfcs were justthey're like overfed, they're
like, so no, it's too cold.

(01:08:45):
You see cycles, everythingcycles.
My sneezing cycles, cold inside.
So it's referred to incorrectlyas intermittent fasting, which
is absurd.
It's not.
It's eating health healthfully.
Eating healthfully is eatingone meal a day, at most two
meals a day, and within a fourhour window that maybe stretch

(01:09:06):
it to six hours.
That's it, because all thattime of not eating is allowing
your body to clean up, reset itsmetabolism, get rid of waste.
Very, very important, okay,which is why we have nighttime
and sleep time, because that'sreal important to be, you know,

(01:09:27):
active and productive during theday, but it's equally important
to go to sleep.
If you don't go to sleep,you're not going to be
productive.
So not eating is as importantas eating, and elimination is
more important than eating.
I'll explain that some otherday, but anyway.
So allulose is really the onethat's being used the most and

(01:09:48):
remember, it's a plant derived,it's normal, it's natural and
that would be the way to do it.
I would suggest that you try toenjoy other flavors.
For example, if you eat a chiapudding, maybe you just get a
coconut flavor or a cinnamonwithout sweet or just by itself.
What we've lost is our abilityto enjoy the flavors of foods

(01:10:12):
right.
Our ability to enjoy theflavors of foods right.
People probably don't even knowwhat a piece of lettuce or a
piece of arugula or a piece ofspinach tastes like anymore,
because we're so used to thedressings that go with it.
We don't know anymore.
Do you remember?
I remember when I was young,before there was a whole thing
about organic, the word didn'texist.

(01:10:34):
Organic meant carbon-basedchemistry, biochemistry, but I
would eat, take a bite out of anapple, of a tomato, and it was
fantastic.
I don't know what they tastelike now, but I mean I get the
organic ones, but I don't knowwhat the non-organic kind of was
.
I think they just look liketomatoes, just like look like
apples.
You take a bite, it cruncheslike an apple but doesn't taste

(01:10:57):
at all like an apple.
That's what they are.
But anyway, the tomato.
So it's delicious and we'velost that.
I would love to go back like150, 200 years and eat the food,
eat the cucumbers, and taste it.
Just wow, can you imagine howit tastes so full?
So we've lost that.

(01:11:22):
We now combine things and we putsauces and we don't even know
what the real taste of foodwould be.
And as my hero Herbert MShelton said, the best sauce is
hunger.
I love it.
The best sauce is hunger,because with hunger, not
appetite, hunger you getsalivation.
We've lost that.

(01:11:42):
So one of the things we want todo is get back to appreciating
different tastes, appreciatingdifferent smells, doing things
consciously eating, consciouslyeating, consciously eating,
eating, not eating.
You know, listen, I'm the worst, right.
I don't know why I have teeth,because I don't even chew, I
just inhale my food, which isreally bad, stupid.

(01:12:04):
It's not bad, it's not bad,it's stupid.
Um, but anyway, that's thething about this.
But if you're going to use asweetener, I would say you go
for the allulose.
At this point, monk fruit isokay and allulose is.
I'm not sure how you buy it,but remember, like it's the kind
of, it's the sweetness that youget from raisins and sugar,

(01:12:25):
raisins and figs and things likethat.
All right, now, where are we?
So, lisa?
That was that.
Lizzie, when you have neck CFCs, can it quickly travel to the
brain?
How can I prevent it?
I eat plant-based on allsupplements.
You discuss juicing, cleansing,intermittent fasting, biological

(01:12:45):
dentist, grounding, and stillit came back, even though
thyroid removed.
So, lizzie, you mentionedbiological dentists.
The reason I question that isbecause there are so many that
are not like any group of peoplewho do something.
They're not very good at it alot and they don't really know

(01:13:08):
how to read uh, 3d cone beam ctsvery as well as other people,
and then their skills aren't asso I don't know.
Because if you're having thethyroid we're talking about,
there's certain teeth that arevery much related directly on
that meridian and it's the sameas breast, stomach, pancreas,

(01:13:30):
spleen, depending on which side.
But that's that number one.
Number two I would go get, Iwould, wherever you are, I'd go
find Dr Emma Abramayan inGlendale California, emma
Abramayan in Glendale California, and if she says, she says but
that's what I would do, just tomake sure, if you get that out

(01:13:52):
of the way, that's's what Iwould do, just to make sure.
Get that out of the way, that'severything.
That's everything.
Now the next thing is you'vegot to continue to cleanse.
Okay, because number one,number two we either have not
completely eliminated the sourceof toxicity number one source

(01:14:17):
of toxicity number one and ornumber two is the tumor
microenvironment hassufficiently paralyzed the
immune system so that it can'tdo its job.
So it's usually a combinationof those.
So how do we deal with it?
We continually cleanse andrecheck.
Do a juice cleanse, prolongedjuice cleanse.
Six weeks, eight weeks,prolonged juice cleanse.
Colon Colonics.
Go to bed early.
Go to bed early.
Go to bed early, that meanslatest 9, 930.

(01:14:39):
Latest, okay.
And then when you resume eating,you will eat only human food
for a while, nine months, aslong as it takes, until you get
on the other side.
You want to get on the otherside.
You want to get on the otherside now.
And the reason I say that?
Because if you're talking about, if you're concerned about the
brain, remember the.
The most direct route isthrough the teeth in the mouth.

(01:15:02):
Now, just because the thyroidis here and the brain's there,
it wouldn't matter.
The breath is not, it's notthat much, you know.
And usually the whether or not atumor in a particular location
of CFCs goes to the brain has todo with the drainage systems of
those tissues.
So breast go there, and thelung, the lymphatics and the

(01:15:27):
blood vessels and other onesthat go there less frequently to
the brain, they do it lessfrequently just because, again,
because of drainage patterns, ofall that.
So that really is what has todo with it.
And it's not and don't think ofthe because the thyroid has
this close, but the breast isstill not that far.
The liver, lung, they're nottoo far.

(01:15:50):
So it's not the distance, okay.
So, and then, as far as thetumor, microenvironment, first
of all, I'm not sure how old youare, but if you're 40 or older,
then your thymus gland is notreally producing enough T cells,
and so you should get a peptidecalled thymus and alpha-1 and

(01:16:14):
give yourself subcutaneousinjections, about 2 mg a day,
for at least 30 days, and thenevery other day.
I didn't lose anybody, right?
It just told me I'm signed outof my zoom account because
somebody else is in it.
Weird, somebody's in my zoomaccount.
Alright, so the thymus andalpha, one very important um.

(01:16:35):
So if you're 40, remember, ifyou're 40 years old you've
already lost 70 of your thymusfunction.
What is your thymus?
It's the gland that sitsunderneath your chest bone.
Here, get up high, um, likeright between the upper parts of
your lungs, right up there.
It's largest at around the ageof 12 or 13.
It's the most functional, likethe day after birth, maybe even

(01:16:58):
in utero, when you're in theuterus, but anyway.
But it starts to decline andwhat happens is the actual gland
gets replaced with fat and it'scalled thymic.
So's, at the age of 40 it'sabout 70% gone, and men it's
completely gone by 65, women alittle longer.

(01:17:18):
But anyway, the point is thiseven at 70%, right, you need
t-cells.
That's how you get naturalkiller cells, that's how you get
your, your activated killerlymphocytes.
You mean you need to your thelper cells, cetera, et cetera,
et cetera.
So that was an alpha one.
The second one you want to getis a peptide called methionine

(01:17:41):
enkephalin, which is afive-amino acid peptide.
Normally, usually, usually notusually it is produced by the
brain and by the sympatheticganglia, which are little kind
of nuclei of the sympatheticnervous system which, as you
probably recall, is part of theparasympathetic and the

(01:18:03):
sympathetic, and they need to bein balance, right.
So the sympathetic ganglia andalso the adrenal cortex, you
know the outer part of theadrenal gland that produces
adrenaline, cortisol alsoproduces this and it has an
incredible effect on your immunesystem.
Why?
Because it is part of theendogenous opiates, those

(01:18:27):
opiates that our body makesright, and that's the word
enkephalin and uh.
The reason that's so importantis because endogenous opiates
don't only have an effect onpain, but they also there are
opiate receptors on our immunecells, our macrophages, our t
cells and uh natural cells, allthose cells.
They have uh opiate receptors.

(01:18:50):
Okay, so which is what?
Which again reminds us that,what it reminds us that, uh, the
body is wonderfully anddivinely complex and
incomprehensible, right, andthat you'll never have.
You'll never have one thing inthe body, one like, for example,
estrogen or thyroid, or any ofthese secretions, or this

(01:19:12):
peptide or that protein Remember, our body makes about 30,000
proteins and our body makesabout 300,000 peptides, which
are small proteins, and they allhave an effect.
But they don't just have oneeffect, like, for example,
estrogens, don't just do this,they affect your coronary

(01:19:34):
arteries, your cerebral function.
Same with the testosterone.
The effects on the genitalia oftestosterone is like number
four or five on the list.
Number one is the brain, thenthe heart, then the heart, then
the brain, then the muscles,then the metabolism and then the
genitals.
So we only think of usually oneor two.

(01:19:56):
We have to realize that thereare multiple functions of almost
everything in our body, and soone of them, the opiates.
They're called endorphinsbecause we first discovered them
in relationship to opiates andso it got that name.
But that's not what it is.
It does many, many other things.

(01:20:18):
It's kind of like the BRCA genethat it's got.
Nick, that's probably names,and what you, you've destroyed.
You, you've, you've, you've,you've, you've, you've, defined
it into this little.
You've encased it, imprisonedit.
That's not what it is, okay.
So the points that are having awide effect, but probably the

(01:20:39):
main ones.
So this methionine andenkephalin, its job is to
modulate, mediate theneuroendocrine system and the
immune system.
What is the neuroendocrinesystem?
The brain, the pineal glandwhich produces epithelium,
melatonin, and then, so that,the neuroendocrine pituitary

(01:21:01):
which controls all the otherhormones.
So the neuroendocrine systemand the immune system, because
they work together.
That's why the thyroid if yourthyroid's not balanced, your
immune system won't work.
If your adrenal glands aren'tworking with your thyroid and
they're not balanced, yourimmune system won't work.
If you don't have a thymusgland because you're older, then
your immune system won't workIf your melatonin is.
So all of these things we haveto bring in harmonic balance and

(01:21:23):
that's what we do.
We restore balance.
One of them is take the thymusand alpha-1 for your situation.
Two is uh, get the methionineand keflin and that way you
would do uh usually get a vialof 20 milligrams and you can
reconstitute it with one ccsterile water and then you use

(01:21:45):
half of it in the morning, halfat night.
So you do that subcutaneouslyand you do that again for at
least a month, and then everyother day to wait, to, to, to,
to undo the immune suppressionthat is caused by your the tumor
microenvironment.
Nothing else does it, by theway, but vitamin C and all these
do affect the tumormicroenvironment as well.

(01:22:06):
So if you're doing those plusthis, it's fantastic.
And then the king of them all,the queen, queen of them all,
the emperor of them all, is themind.
It can change everything, nomatter how great you're doing
with everything.
If you're in fear and angry orwhatever, in trouble, it's going

(01:22:27):
to shut it down.
Okay, and just the opposite aswell.
Right, you can be in trouble,but if your mind is, you can get
out of that show.
I just hear which peptide didyou just say it's also known as
MENK, for short MENK, or MET5.
Five, because there's fiveamino acids methionine and
keflin.
So thymus and alpha-1 andmethionine and keflin.

(01:22:54):
All right, so right.
So just to follow up a littlebit here.
So my thoughts on soft tissuesarcoma in the pelvis area,
parasite fungus oh, it'severything, you do everything
all the time.
Excuse me one second, there'ssomebody here, hold on.
All right, I'm sorry about that.
So soft tissue sarcomas listen,sarcomas, like any other

(01:23:16):
carcinoma, are, you know, thesame factors going to produce?
What a weird little osmo.
This is Okay.
Okay, there we go.
Soft tissue sarcomas or bonesarcomas, you know,
osteosarcomas are the same ascarcinomas.
They all have the same sort of,they all have their.
It all is the same thing.
Remember it's still.
Cfc is chronically fermentingcells.

(01:23:38):
The reason they're fermentingis they lost their mitochondria,
an adequate number ofmitochondria to engage in
oxidative phosphorylation, sothey have to ferment.
So that's always no matterwhere tissue it starts in, it's
still the same thing had to havehappened.
So, buddy, but yeah, so, yeah,we do so for PS, so we do look

(01:23:58):
at the parasites, but all ofthat stuff, the cleansing,
cleansing mouth it's always thesame.
So don't think it's different.
They have us believing thateverything's different and
unique and it's not okay, it'snot, I promise you okay.
Now the end and my thoughts onbovine adrenals to support
adrenal health fatigue.
Yeah, okay, but uh, I prefer tostay in our species and what I

(01:24:20):
would do is this I have anadrenal fatigue program protocol
that I I use, and that is, Ireplace the adrenal glands
produce something calledhydrocortisone or cortisol, same
Hydrocortisone.
They don't produce thesynthetic ones like prednisone,
prednisone, dexamethasone theydon't produce those.
They produce hydrocortisone andthey produce anywhere from 20

(01:24:44):
to 25 milligrams a day just tokeep our body.
That's what we need for stayingalive.
And so if you replace that andyou give five milligrams of the
hydrocortisone four times a day,then you've replaced that, so
the adrenal gland doesn't haveto do that and the hypothalamus
is going to say, okay, we've gotenough around, we don't need to
make any more.

(01:25:04):
However, if you do somethingstrenuous or you're afraid or
you get anything that calls foran adrenal response, you're
still able to do it.
You're not suppressing it.
You're just like hormonereplacement.
You're just supplying what isnecessary for everyday
functioning, but you're notreplacing it, you're not
suppressing it or anything likethat.
Okay, so understand that.

(01:25:25):
So you do that, and while you'redoing that, you're going to
make sure you have enough DHEA,because that's another hormone
that the adrenal glands need,that they produce.
And you want to make sure youhave enough vitamin C, because
that's another hormone that theadrenal glands need, that they
produce.
And you want to make sure youhave enough vitamin C, because
that's necessary to make allthese things, for the adrenal
gland to make all of theproducts that it makes.
Then you're going to do thingslike ashwagandha and there are
other adaptogens, other herbsthat can be used, and the reason

(01:25:51):
is that I just think it's bestto stay within our species,
because initially, with celltherapy, they were using stem
cells from animals and, ofcourse, they knew that the stem
cell of an animal is not goingto turn into a human cell, but
they were relying on the growthfactors being produced by these
stem cells, so it had a benefit.

(01:26:12):
But there's also you're gettingthere, it's not quite the same
the microflora there's.
There are significantdifferences between uh species,
and I just stay in our species.
And how can we augment ourspecies ourselves with, uh, you
know, plant foods and thingslike that.
So, um, I gotta get back tothese.

(01:26:35):
I can't ask you, you guysplease join the group so that we
can interact like this, becauseI've got to stay with the
people that sent in thequestions.
Uh, anyway, I hope I helped you, lizzie, with um, with the
thyroid and by iodine, andthere's so much more to do with
your.
Join the cfc group please, uh,but iodine.
There's a lot of things that weneed to be doing with you,

(01:26:56):
lizzie, okay, now here's liz,same person.
Okay, you mentioned withthyroid or breast cfc.
You can put lugols on the area.
Can we mix in pokey oil orcastor oil?
How does it work to shrink cfcs?
Also, should we be ingesting atthe same time?

(01:27:17):
And smoothies, etc.
Yeah.
So, lizzie, um, you gotta jointhe cfc group, but in the
meantime I, I, I don't know whatyou can mix with the iodine and
what you can't, because iodineis, uh, the lugol's is um,
potassium iodide and moleculariodine.

(01:27:38):
All right, and you have to, uh,you're welcome.
What you have to realize is thatthe but we, here's what we
don't know about chemistry.
If we mix two things together,do we know if they're going to
react?
So usually they can assume thatthey will in some one way or
another.
And if I want to get theeffects of one thing and I don't

(01:27:59):
want it to be augmented, I'mgoing to do it alone.
So I would just do that alone.
So you could do the other oilsif you want at another time.
But I would say do this Now.
The iodine, yeah, you put thaton there, because how does it
work?
It's the okay in multiple ways,but the molecular iodine.

(01:28:20):
Actually it prevents the CFCfrom dividing.
It can't continue to grow.
And it's so effective that ifyou have enough, and then you've
got the iodide part of it too,which can cause, produce a salt
bridge with a cation, with apositive charge.

(01:28:41):
So a positive charge on yourcell and iodide they come
together and produce a saltbridge and kind of spills its
guts, kills it in that way, butthe iodine is much more powerful
, the iodine there and but theiodine is much more powerful.
The iodine there.
And then the iodine also is anecessary cofactor in estrogen
metabolism.
So many, many, many importantthings.
But if you have enough iodine inyour body, so you've been

(01:29:02):
eating it, you've replenished it.
So you take 25 milligrams ofLugol's tablets or the iodolol
because they're easier to get.
For some reason Iodoral is theonly one that is exactly the
same formula as Lugol's intablet form.
25 milligrams a day.
Now the maintenance dose is12.5 milligrams a day and we

(01:29:26):
base that on the fact thatJapanese, eating a standard,
typical traditional diet, aregetting about 13.8 milligrams a
day.
So 12.5 would be maintenance.
But if you need to fill up thedeficit because you haven't been
getting enough your whole life,then you would be taking 25
milligrams a day and it takesabout a year, year and a half.

(01:29:47):
Then you can go down to 12.5milligrams a day.
Now that what you're takingorally is for the entire body,
but if you have a particularproblem, like breast or thyroid,
and you're putting on, that'sdifferent.
Still, do that Because,remember, when you're doing all
this too, because the iodide inthere is going to, it can tell

(01:30:08):
your thyroid to slow down.
You've got to be measuring,you're doing your basal body
temperatures and using yourbasal body temperatures to
adjust the amount of extrathyroid medicine you'll be
taking, like ThyroVans or someother uh Westroid or, if you
want, if you did, a syntheticone which is like um, you know,

(01:30:28):
cytomel and um, um and uhSynthroid which is Levothyroxine
.
So there are, there are, thereare, there are, there's the

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