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May 21, 2025 84 mins

When did medical terminology become a form of sorcery? In this profound exploration of healing, Dr. Thomas Lodi reveals how the language we use around disease—particularly cancer—shapes our recovery more powerfully than any treatment protocol. 

The "standard of scare" pervades modern medicine, transforming natural biological adaptations into terrifying "diagnoses" that trap patients in cycles of fear and dependency. Dr. Lodi dismantles this paradigm by unveiling a liberating truth: cancer isn't a collection of hundreds of different diseases, but one fundamental metabolic process (the Warburg effect) manifesting in different locations. This reframing transforms our understanding from helplessness to empowerment.

Beyond cancer terminology, Dr. Lodi delivers game-changing insights about sleep that few discuss. While most focus on sleep duration, he explains why sleep timing is actually more critical—going to bed before 9:30pm activates the brain's glymphatic system during slow-wave sleep, removing neurotoxins that contribute to neurodegenerative conditions. This overlooked connection between sleep timing and brain health could transform your wellness journey overnight.

His piercing critique of dietary trends, particularly the carnivore diet, reveals uncomfortable truths about human nutrition that challenge popular narratives. Meanwhile, his simple test for physical fitness—sitting on the floor and standing withou

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our clinic, an Oasis of Healing,is still open after 20 years.
So please give us a call there,anoasisofhealingcom, or you can

(00:24):
go to stop making cancercom andI have to use that word because
if I said stop making CFCscom,no one would know.
So, anyway, my apologies forusing that horrible, ridiculous,
absurd, absurd word.
Anyway, so I just want toremind you all about the.
You know all the social mediaplatforms.

(00:44):
We're on right at the Dr ThomasLodi, right on all of them,
right Instagram, facebook,youtube, et cetera, et cetera,
et cetera, except for Twitter,which is X, and TikTok they are
drthomaslodimd.
So we got that.
Tomorrow is the vitamin Cwebinar and I'm going to, you're

(01:05):
going to.
I'm going to just tell youeverything that you need to know
about vitamin C so that whenyou go and try to get some,
First of all, you can take careof yourself, which is really
essential.
Secondly, when you go to anykind of practitioner to get some
help to get some help hey, zach, ok, and they're going to give

(01:26):
you vitamin C IV you'll be ableto tell them how to do it,
because most of them, the vastmajority of them, don't know,
okay, so that's very important.
So check out this lecturetomorrow and you know, one thing
I hear from people is often iswe get it, we understand how do
we?
Okay, so how do we do it?
Do it If you want to eatuncooked plant food, how do you

(01:47):
do that and make it taste good?
Well, anyway, tomorrow, nextSunday, we'll have on this live
stream.
I'll have as a guest DonnaPerrone.
You can look her up, she's inManhattan, in the village, and
it's Donna Perrone,p-e-r-o-n-n-e.

(02:08):
Anyway, I knew her way backwhen I was in New York, back in,
you know, the early 2000s.
We met because she was at oneof my lectures, yeah, and that's
how we met and then turned outthat she had already been eating
this way for years and leadinggroups and teaching people how

(02:30):
to do it and all that.
And she's never stopped.
She, she, she became because ofher, her knowledge and skills
and all that and experience.
She came our my, my firsthealth educator when I first
started all this integrativeoncology way back when.
And then, when I left New Yorkand moved to Arizona, she went

(02:51):
on to become a colon therapistusing the gravity method, not
mechanical, and that's the nameof her place in lower Manhattan,
it's called Gravity, but it'snot just colonics.
She cared both ends of that tube, remember that tube.
If you take care of that tube,remember that tube.
If you take care of that tube,you live long and prosper.
But if you don't take care ofthe tube, you don't.

(03:11):
It's the tube, it's the tube.
It all comes down to the tube.
But at the top of the tube isthis thing called the mind.
So that's, yeah, you've got to.
So the mind and the tube.
So mind the tube, yeah, andmind the mind.
So anyway, she's going to bethere because she'll be joining
our groups.
She'll be part of the.

(03:32):
As you know, we have threegroups.
We have the health and healinggroup, we have the parasite
group and we have the CFC group.
And CFC group for those of youwho don't know't know, I'm gonna
say it only once is cancer, ah,hurts.
Sorry, I said that, you guys,but anyway, cfc groups.

(03:53):
I gotta somehow get this outthere.
You know, get, I have to getthat, I have to put it up.
So I don't have to say it, Iwant to put it in writing or
whatever anyway.
So she's going to be part Whoa,that's an amazing thing, emma.
Whoa, whoa.
Anyway, so she'll be part ofthe health and healing group,

(04:14):
because that means because ifyou're in the parasite group,
you automatically havemembership in the health and
healing, and if you're in theCFC group you automatically have
membership in the parasite andthe health and healing.
So Donna's going to be there,she'll be doing weekly teachings
on how to make it delicious andwhat you need and all that sort

(04:34):
of thing.
And then of course, she's goingto be available for anybody who
wants to really get into it andunderstand, and you can contact
her privately through our groupand that way she'll give you a
nice deal on that.
But anyway, she'll be here nextSunday and you can meet her.
I'll have her here and thenright after that she'll begin
her weekly sessions with you all.

(04:58):
Now here I've got to read this.
This is from Emma Dr L.
I have made a helpful comment,along with suggesting the person
contacting you and your groupthat deals with this issue, and
three times I tried to post itin even a softer manner, but my
comments were declined by eitherFacebook or moderator, don't
really know, but narrowed theproblem down to me, mentioning

(05:21):
your name.
Should I just not do thatbecause more censored towards
you I am not.
Whoa, I have.
I don't not sure what you'retalking about, what you were
trying to post, or or, or Idon't know.
But I hope that Hammy or Pearare here and please contact Emma

(05:42):
and let's talk about that, sothey'll let them contact you and
discuss this, all right.
All right, hammy or pear, Ihope you're listening because
this is weird.
I don't know what.
I'm not sure what you tried topost, but that's a bummer.
Not to mention my name.
My name is contraband now,isn't that weird?
Oh my gosh, how bizarre is that.

(06:05):
Anyway, that's too weird.
So that's it.
So, donna's uh, amazing, andyou'll know that after next week
.
Now let me try and make thingssmaller here so I can get
everybody here.
Yeah, okay, cool.
And then where's the other one?
There we go, yay, yay, yay,sorry, Got it Cool.

(06:26):
All right, here we are.
Yeah, all right.
So now first question is fromMarina.
I think Marina didn't.
We answer this.
Last week my husband had a spellput on him called the diagnosis
with testicular CFCs back in2020.
He underwent surgery radiationtreatment.
The most recent CT scan showeda three centimeter mass central

(06:50):
chest.
He refused the biopsy and hadbeen working with a naturopath.
He is feeling great physicallyand doesn't have any symptoms,
but feeling drained emotionally.
He's about to have a PET scanand we are both feeling very
anxious.
How would you recommendovercoming negative emotions and
feeling happy when goingthrough a health crisis?

(07:11):
Well, ok, what you're goingthrough right now is the halls
of the standard of scare.
The source, the sorcery isprofound.
They got you, they, they nailedyou that word, the diagnosis,
and that's it right.
Okay, so we all know that.
I hope you all saw that standardof scare webinar.

(07:32):
It's available.
It's free.
It's on our website, drlodycom.
It's also on the Biljansky,which is that's where I gave the
lectures, was virtually for theBiljansky conference recently,
in May, this May.
I'm not dismayed, but I meanthis May.

(07:54):
Anyway, watch that because youhave to understand the
profundity of using these words.
The effect is there's nogreater negative effect on you
than using these words andlanguage.
I mean other than getting hitby a car, lightning or you know
anything dramatic like that, butother than that there's nothing

(08:16):
more profound in destroyingyour health than words and the
mind.
Ok, because the ramificationsare ongoing and, ok, don't use
these words, ok.
So first of all, now, so you're, the reason you're afraid is
there's.
Now.
I want you to realize somethingwhat's happened to us?
Here we are, we've beenconditioned such that I'm

(08:38):
feeling fine, I'm feeling great,and I found a number.
They found a number that doesthat and they're going to now
pursue and try to find out themeaning of this number that
doesn't fit into their databasethat they've acquired by
evaluating millions of sickpeople.

(08:58):
And you're not normal, you'renot in the average of the sick
people Usually, usually Right,ok.
So when we look at normalnumbers on blood tests, urine
tests or whatever, realize thatthese numbers are based on
populations of people that aresick or inside or, like you know
, about to have a heart attack,about to have a stroke, about to

(09:19):
whatever.
Okay.
Now on the CT scan, when you'redoing imaging, imaging is
looking at anatomy, so it'spretty much there or not there.
So now they want to do a PETscan.
The PET scan is where theyinject a radioactive glucose
fluorodeoxyglucose, into theperson and then they, you wait a
while until it has a chance togo to all the cells and and then

(09:43):
you do a scan and you seewherever the uptake of that
glucose is at above a certainpoint usually above seven then
you know that you probably havesome CFCs going on there.
Here's the thing All of thesescans have a toxicity associated
with them.
So we need to do them atcertain times, so we can.

(10:04):
There are certain reasons to doit.
For example, you know, usuallyif you're going to work with
someone to help you get theresolve it, you want to get a
baseline before and then youwant to get one after.
You feel like you've done,you've completed the program.
You know you can see in termsof anatomy.
And then with the PET scan,with the physiology, is it still
happening?

(10:24):
Is this mass?
That was 10 centimeters, nowit's two centimeters, is it
still a problem?
And then you do a PET scan andyou see that there's normal
activity, it's not elevated.
So you say, oh, so it's nolonger malignant stuff going on.
Or you still have an elevatedSUV and if you still have
standard uptake value, that'sall it means standard uptake
value of that FDG,fluorodeoxyglucose, the

(10:48):
radioactive glucose that theyinjected.
So if you still have an active,then you say, aha, so there's
still something going on there.
That's the value of thosethings there.
Now, when you mentioned that hehad surgery and radiation, so we
know that surgery will causethings to spread.
We know that radiation willcause things to spread and we
know that radiation willincrease stem cells, will

(11:10):
increase CFC stem cells.
Radiation makes the tumormicroenvironment more hostile
and destroying of our immunesystem, and on and on, and on,
on and on and on.
It's it's crazy.
Radiation therapy standard andchemotherapy standard are two
things that if you wanted tomake it worse, this is what you

(11:32):
would do.
I'm serious, I'm not just likebeing hyperbolic, but you know,
I've gone over this many timesand you can easily look it up.
Go to PubMed and putradiotherapy and radiotherapy as
a cause of metastasis andyou'll see all the studies or
chemotherapy as a cause ofmetastasis, the paradoxical

(11:56):
there's one study.
It's easy to find theparadoxical effects of
chemotherapy on breasts.
But remember, if there's a,when they do a study, they don't
study all the CFC locations,they do one breast or ovary or
testes or whatever they're goingto do.
They do that.
That's the study, so that theycan get the FDA approval for

(12:16):
that particular drug and theninsurance will pay and then okay
, so that's it, but it's goingto always apply to every CFC.
Why is that?
Because to be called a CFC oryou could call it that nasty
word that sorcerers love to sayit's not Scorpio, it's not

(12:37):
Gemini, it's not Sagittariusyeah, you got it, okay.
So not Leo either.
Or Taurus.
So, um, in order for them to saythat, what do I have to know?
They have to see that there issomething called, uh, the
Warburg effect or aerobicglycolysis.
That's it.
If they see that, then that'sit.

(12:58):
That's what it is, that's,that's what's happening.
And if it started in the breast, then it's called breast.
If it started in the breast,then it's called breast.
If it started in the ovary, ifit started in the brain, if it
started in the elbow, it doesn'tmatter where that's it.
So the only difference betweenall of these they say types,
they're not types is location.
All right, remember that.
I repeat this every week.

(13:18):
And what is the differenceabout the location?
Well, the anatomy, anythingthat's happening in the pancreas
, which is right next to thespleen, the small intestines,
the gallbladder, the liver,stomach, I mean it's right there
in the middle.
So if it grows a little bitanywhere, it's already involving
another organ and you'recausing damage, whereas if it's

(13:40):
in the breast, if it's in theleg, it can grow bigger and not
involve other organs.
So that's that.
The other thing is, what is thenature of that particular organ?
Right, if it's a liver, it doesdifferent things than a heart
does, then different things thanthe lungs do.
So that's the differences, butnot the actual fundamental
biology of CFCs.
That's very, very important tounderstand.

(14:00):
Don't let them tell you thatyour type is very rare.
There's no type.
There's one type.
It's called CFCs.
That's what it's called.
There's not.
Well, this one's notchronically hermethic.
Well then, it's not a CFC.
Please understand that.
The difference is location andalso in addition to the fact

(14:21):
that the location in which itbegins, that particular organ or
gland has a different functionthan the other organs and glands
in the body and it also hasdifferent drainage patterns,
different veins that drain itand different lymphatics that
drain it.
So, again, there will be theother qualities of ovary, which
is different than spleen or lung.
Okay, so please understand allthat.

(14:41):
So here's your husband withthis three centimeter mass, and
the PET scan is going to tellyou if it's active or not.
Here's the thing that I wantyou to understand, maureen, it's
very important and your husband?
What if the PET scan saysthere's no activity?
Oh, then you just have a threecentimeter, basically, scar.
So what are you going to do?
Go out and party, get drunk andstart eating cheeseburgers?
No, cheeseburgers, no.

(15:06):
You're probably going to doeverything you can to stay that
way, which is living healthy.
Now, what if it is active?
What are you going to do?
Do everything you can torestore health.
You're not going to do anythingdifferent.
You're going to get healthybecause there's only one road to
health and that's by livinghealthy, right?
Okay?
So, therefore, however, soyou're doing everything.
You're doing the vitamin C, thevitamin D, the vitamin A that
we talk about all the time.
You're doing the melatonin.
You balance your thyroid andyour iodine.

(15:26):
You've got your adrenalsbalanced.
You're doing all of that, right?
If you're doing all of that andyou're eating human food?
If you're doing all that, youwouldn't.
There's nothing else to do,except maybe what you should do
anyway is go on a cleanse everycouple months, can't you know?
Eight days, seven days, minimum, 10 days, but a cleanse, juice

(15:47):
cleanse, or you can make it awater fast.
It'd be fantastic.
You know you're going to bedoing those things anyway.
And but the biggest thing, it'sexactly what you asked this
question for, and that is youremotions.
How do you deal with yournegative emotions?
You stop using their words andyou learn to how you still, five
times a day, for two minutes,are you closing your eyes?

(16:08):
Two minutes closing your eyes,getting silent, put an eye mask
on whatever you have to do, putearplugs in and just listen to
your breathing.
And if your mind goes away, assoon as you realize it, come
back and then it'll go awayagain.
Come back, just find that placein you that is not, has no
relationship to all this stuff.

(16:31):
It's that place, it's the youthat looks out of your eyes.
That was looking out of youreyes the moment they opened.
It hasn't changed, even thoughwhen you look in the mirror,
you've seen the earth suitchange, but you looking out of
it hasn't changed.
That place is where you got togo, because that's where God
lives and that's eternal.

(16:52):
It's eternal Now.
You have to understand that now,and the only way you can get
the now is to leave your mindoutside.
So the admission to the land ofnow, which is where you want to
get to, is your mind.
So you leave because you can'tthink about now, you can only
experience now.
Anyway, now is not a moment intime, it's not a moment that is

(17:14):
sandwiched between an incredible, uh, ever non-ending past and a
non-ending future.
There's a now.
Now is reality, it's all therereally is, and that anything
about the future is animagination.
And the same with the past.
It's an imagination Because itisn't.
You've never been there, you'veonly been here.

(17:35):
Alright, so it's not that thenow is everlasting, it's
ever-present, it's eternity.
Anyway, that's where you want toget to two minutes, five times
a day.
You won't make it for a while.
It might take you eight weeks,12 weeks, whatever it's going to
take you to enter into thatplace.
And when you get there, yourimmune system goes through the
roof and I'm telling you, it'slike it's.

(17:55):
That's the way you take yourfoot off of the brakes of the
immune system.
Cause that's the miracle that wewere given by our very birth
fact that we're alive and isthat we have this miracle.
This miracle is that we heal,we heal.
You cut us, we heal so we heal.
I mean sort of frogs andbiological entities have that
gift.
That's called healing, and it'sthe nature of nature, it's the

(18:20):
nature of biology is to heal.
It's not.
You can't make it happen, it'sin nature, it's innate to the
organism.
All right, so you got.
What do you have to do to heal?
What do you have to do?
Regardless, I don't care what'sgoing on in your body.
What do you have to do?
You have to get rid of all thethings that are toxic, that are
potentially that are damaging,and then make sure and then
start providing all the thingsthat are necessary for function,

(18:43):
energy and part replacement,because things wear out.
That's called nutrition, andnutrition is not just food, it's
water, it's air, and youeliminate all the things that
are blocking it right, such aswearing shoes all the time,
walking around on pavement allthe time, sitting in cars all
the time and being in front ofcomputers.

(19:04):
All of that stuff is blockingit, right.
So you got to get your shoesoff, you got to put your feet on
the ground, you got.
And the other big one is goingto sleep early, which we'll talk
about, but I don't want tocontinue, so, anyway.
So that's the thing you realizethat all you're going to,
whatever information you'regoing to get, you're still going
to do health and you've alreadyeliminating that and get rid of
that, that, that, that, that,that, that, that, that horrible

(19:27):
sorcery that occurred to yourhusband, and because you got it,
too, in 2020.
Ok, and how?
You never use that word.
What are the words that you use?
Treatment, progression,prognosis, remission, ned If you
think your name is Ned, fine,but there's no such thing as E.
Okay, no, n-e-d no evidence ofdisease.

(19:48):
First of all, there are nodiseases, but, okay, there's no
evidence of it, meaning we can'tfind anything there.
But it's going to get.
You Don't get too comfortablewith this N-E-D stuff because
it's on its way back.
You know that, right, it'sgoing to forget all this stuff
and don't go back to them oranything.
And every time you go for atest, that means you're

(20:11):
manifesting your doubt, you'remanifesting your fear.
I'm going to go to my testbecause I'm afraid it's working.
Okay, you got to remember howdeep this goes.
This is extremely deep.
Let's go to the next question.
This is Burley, all right, themost recent.

(20:32):
You got that.
Marina Burley says my sistercontinues to get high liver
numbers on her blood tests.
They have done a liver biopsyand found nothing.
They do not understand why hernumbers are so high because they
cannot find anything that wouldbe causing it.
So her doctor told her to trythe carnivore diet to see if

(20:53):
that would bring her numbersdown.
That's a fantastic idea.
Your liver is not doing well.
Go eat a corpse.
Go find a dead body and eat it.
That'll help you.
Okay, anyway, I'm not not gonnago there yet.
Let's see, see if her numberscame down.
So far, after almost two years,it hasn't brought her numbers
down.
Well, my gosh, how shocking.
Uh, haven't brought her numbersdown at all.

(21:17):
Is there something you wouldrecommend that she can try to
bring her numbers down?
Do you have any ideas of what'sgoing on?
Not knowing is extremelydifficult for us, as we lost my
mom to ovarian cfc's not toolong ago.
Okay, okay, so all right, firstof all, burling, uh, what I'd
see if you were in our groups.

(21:37):
I could ask you questions, Icould get a little more
understanding.
That's why you really try tojoin the group, so that when
we're having our meetings I cansay well, because what I'd ask
you right now is how does yoursister feel Her livers are up?
Liver enzymes how high are they?
I mean, you know, normal forboth the ALT and AST is around
35, 40, around that area, youknow.

(21:58):
So, 75, 100.
These are getting above 100.
What's going on?
But what does it mean that yourliver numbers are up?
What does that mean?
That means your enzymes, whenthey check your blood, are high,
higher than normal.
Why, what is normal?
Well, normally, as you know,cells are always in a state of
transforming and turnover.

(22:19):
Right, we have new skin cellsevery six weeks.
We have a new the liningthrough our GI tract every three
days.
We have new retina in the backof our eye Rods and cones every
48 hours.
We have a new liver every sixmonths.
Yeah, so the body's in acontinual state of renewal.
So, with that being the case,when cells are breaking down, a

(22:42):
little bit of the enzymes willcome out into the blood, and so
the normal amount that goes inthe blood of the ALT and AST are
below 35 and 40, normal,meaning there's no real problem
with the liver going on.
When you get above that, youknow that there's an increased
amount of cellular turnover andbreakdown of cells.
Okay, and that comes frominflammation.
Inflammation will cause that.

(23:03):
Okay, so that's where the worditis, the suffix itis, itis,
right.
Pharyngitis, dermatitis,colitis, uh and uh, you know any
of the itises will do that okay.
So that just means inflammation.
So so now of the liver.
So you have hepatitis, hepatitis, hepatitis, liver hepatitis.

(23:27):
So hepatitis can be caused bywhat.
It can be caused by fatty liver.
It can be caused by fatty liveris from just eating not eating
healthy, all right, you get afatty liver.
But also there are many reasons.
You can be due to virusesthere's what they call hepatitis
A, b and C viruses and you canbe due to medications like

(23:53):
Tylenol.
Any of the statins can becaused by Wilson's disease.
That's the name Wilson got hisname in.
He's immortal because he's beennamed with a disease.
Anyway, it's copper storage.
What happens is the body'sability to store copper is to
eliminate it.
To eliminate copper is hamperedand so they wind up

(24:19):
accumulating copper in theirliver and get really sick.
And the same with the other onecalled hemochromatosis, where
the ability to eliminate theiron, and so you get iron all
over the liver or something likethat.
So you know that can cause it.
All right.
But of course you know celiacand cirrhosis and all these
things that have to do with thebowel can wind up affecting the

(24:40):
liver.
You can do that right.
So anyway.
So the many causes.
So what you do is you now, um,and I did a biopsy and they
didn't find anything.
I would then they should havefound inflammation.
They should have said, well,there's inflammation if.
If there was no inflammationand the liver enzymes are up,
that's something wrong.
That doesn't make sense.
It can't be all right.

(25:01):
So they had to find them infront.
So when they do the blood testthat I'm sure they did a
hepatitis A, b and C screening.
I'm sure they looked for iron.
Ceruloplasm was what theyusually look for For Wilson's.
They look for something calledceruloplasm.
You do a serum iron and a serumferritin to look at
hemochromatosis.
There's a lot of things.
You reason for elevated enzymes.
How high are they?
So I really don't know.

(25:26):
I would have to have moredetails on this birth.
However, you know, I hope theydid that.
So if you're working with, whatare you working with?
It must be a naturopath,because only naturopaths would
put somebody on a carnivore diet.
I don't think sorcerers woulddo that.
Anyway.
So but did you, you and burley,I don't know if you had a

(25:47):
chance to see that uh post a fewdays ago that I did, where I
was responding to a doctor whosaid that I haven't eaten meat
because because how long has itbeen since you've eaten meat?
I've had five, six years.
I wouldn't eat meat, I wouldn'trecommend.
So I said, okay.
Then he calls himself acarnivore.

(26:08):
So anyway, there I.
I did a look for it.
It's in the on, you know,instagram, facebook, all the
rumble x.
I posted it.
It's a fun little thing.
I had fun with it.
Just a few minutes, not a long,three minutes, four, five
minutes, but anyway, just as akind of a reminder of what I was

(26:29):
talking about with him, is thatto be on a strictly animal diet
, carnivore diet, okay, thatmeans you're eating just animals
, all right.
So in order to get the mostnutrients out of it, you're
going to have to eat nose totail everything.
Well, that's what carnivores do.
And if we're going to callourselves carnivore and we're

(26:50):
better to act like carnivore,can't call yourself carnivore
and not act like a carnivore andnot do what a carnivore does,
right?
Isn't that fraudulent?
Okay, don't want to be frauds,want to be real carnivores?
Okay.
So now, and, by the way, so, buteven if you eat head to tail,
nose to tail, right, becausethat gets the whole thing.
You know you're still going tolack lots of nutrients that you

(27:11):
just can't get.
Because why?
Because the body doesn't havethem.
You know we don't.
The blood, okay.
So you've got to eat the heart,the brain, the thyroid glands.
You've got to eat the you know,the thymus.
You've got the pancreas,ovaries, testes, depending on
the sex of the animal.

(27:31):
You're eating Intestines.
You've got to get theintestines because in the
intestines, I know you're noteating plants, you're just
eating animals, but in theintestines is undigested plant
material, which is good for you.
Don't let anybody know thatlions eat the undigested food in
the animal.
Oh my God, they're not pure,are they Not like us?
All right, so you got to eatall that.

(27:55):
And then you got to eat thetendons and you got to eat the
muscle.
You got to chew the bones.
You need the calcium, you needthe proline, you need all the
different amino acids.
You got to eat it all Tendons,ligaments and the skin, eyeballs
.
Eat those eyeballs.
Those eyeballs are fantastic.
Now the only problem is youprobably shouldn't cook it,

(28:16):
because you really want to getthe most out.
The liver.
Eat the liver.
For sure you don't cook theliver.
The brain you can maybe simmerthe brain a little bit, yeah,
but it's just not the same.
It's just not the same.
You gotta eat.
It's better to eat it uncooked,all right, all right so.
But you know, what are you goingto be missing if you, if you do
all that, well, you're notgoing to have fiber, fiber, and

(28:36):
you're not going to have thesephytochemicals that you need,
and all the plant derivedcofactors just can't get them.
All right.
So I don't know what to say.
I wish it was somethingdifferent, I wish I could
pretend that it was okay, youknow, and you got to drink the
blood.
I'm telling you, you got tostill drink the blood.
You do all this.
You're still not going to begetting adequate amounts of

(28:56):
vitamin C, because it's just notenough, and then you're
definitely not going to getenough magnesium or probably
potassium.
You're not going to get thefiber and the prebiotics.
Right.
How important is that?
Well, fiber is how you keepyour intestines clean, number
one.
Fiber is how the microscopicbacteria in our colon produce
short-chain fatty acids, whichare essential for health.

(29:18):
Fiber absorbs toxins that youmay have gotten in food that you
inadvertently had eaten.
So it's very important.
And if you're just eatinganimals, you're not getting
prebiotics.
You're not getting the stuffthat.
So your gut biome is going togo and that's going to affect
your liver that's right, inaddition to your pancreas

(29:39):
everything else right.
And you're not going to begetting polyphenols, flavonoids,
carotenoids, no, vitamin k,what you won't be getting, the
phytosterols and theisothiocyanates from.
You won't be getting thesethings that are necessary.
For what?
For dna repair, fordetoxification.
This is how your body maintainsimmune enhancement.

(29:59):
Uh, it keeps your healthy gutbio.
All these things are necessaryfor not just surviving but being
able to repair and heal andhave vitality and all that, yeah
.
And, by the way, no, no, nohuman culture has ever survived,
not even the Inuits, not the.
You know the planes, none ofthem.

(30:21):
They all ate the intestines,like the, the caribou.
They killed the caribou, theyknew it.
They drink the blood.
They, yeah, and they even gotthe plants here and there.
They just never, but they madesure they got.
Uh, there's just look, look itup, look up their dietary
history, and you'll see that'swhat they did.
All right, so just keep that inmind.
All right.

(30:42):
So no one did so going on a.
So what we're calling acarnivore diet is what is being
referred to nowadays as acarnivore diet, is eating the
muscles of a corpse, some animalcorpse, whatever it is.
You might as well be human.
If you're going to eat corpsesand you want to get like the
closest to your nutrient needs,make sure you've got a grass fed

(31:02):
human.
All right, if you have a grasshuman, or at least a plant-fed
human, it doesn't have to bejust grass, because it's not a
cow.
So yeah, let's give them aplant-fed human.
Why?
Because you want it to be highquality.
Oh my God, did I just think that?
Oh my God, I'm going to slap mybrain for thinking that, but I

(31:31):
can't help it.
So to get a really good pieceof meat human meat I need to
have that.
I need to have this human fedon plants.
Don't tell anyone, let's keepit between us.
This is like it's.
It's.
It's sacrilegious.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm gonna be struck down.
I know it today.
Okay, anyway.
Now I can't.
You guys, I look at your stuffand I see that you're whoa over
on other stuff, so you don'tcare what I'm talking about.

(31:52):
So I'll stop talking about it.
Unbelievable, unbelievable,yeah, okay.
So let's forget about this.
Anyway, I don't recommend eatingthe animal muscles for any
reason, unless you just like tochew.
But you might as well chew on abone and seeds.
So you know, anyway, that's notgoing to do it.
What's going to do it?
Guess what makes the liverbetter?

(32:12):
Alpha lipoic acid, which doesn'tcome from animals, and then
alpha lipoic acid andacetylcysteine, right, and um,
uh, okay, so wait a minute.
Uh, and acetylcysteine, andwhat do you call it?
Excuse me, N-acetylcysteine,alpha lipoic acid.
Vitamin B complex, especially.
You've got to have B1.

(32:35):
And silymarin, which comes from,you know, it's a plant and you
get silybinum from it.
And silymarin, and it comesfrom milk thistle plant.
You get all these things thatwill make your liver heal.
It helps the liver healing.
You all get it from plants.
So take those you got to findout what's going on with her.

(32:57):
But don't you see, you're inafraid because your mother died.
She, your mother, most likelydid not die from the ovarian cfc
, she died from the treatmentthey gave her.
I'm like, yes, without knowing.
Uh, wait a second, these arecrazy.
Okay, uh, all right, anyway,let's go back to where we were.
Okay, okay, okay, uh, all right.

(33:18):
So, anyway, kathy, you shouldtell hammy all right, I can't do
anything.
I'm'm not, you know.
Okay, whatever, all right, sowhere are we going here?
Let's go back to thosequestions.
Where the heck are thosequestions?
Oh God, why is it so hard tofind?
Oh, here's the guy I'm lookingat right now.
There's the guy saying Ihaven't eaten meat, it's all I

(33:42):
can eat.
Oh, where the heck?
There we are.
My God, that makes it easier,all right Now.
So, anyway, remember that Noseto tail, you guys.
If you're going to do it, comeon.
Don't do it halfway.
Come on.
You know that You're going todo something.
Do it, just go for it.
I'm a carnivore, just go for it.
I'm a carnivore.

(34:03):
I'm a carnivore.
Give me that nose and then comeout and intestines.
And don't forget, at the veryend of the intestines you get
the donut.
It's called a rectum.
Yeah, you get that too.
Don't forget the rectum.
Ovaries, testes, thyroid gland,eat that thyroid pancreas.
You got to eat it all.
Come on, carnivore, that's mymeat.

(34:23):
Man, I want my meat.
I love the way these peopletalk it's my meat, it ain't your
meat, it's that meat, it's hermeat and you just killed her and
ripped it off her body.
It's her meat.
Don't call it your meat.
Oh, you're going to eat it,it'll be incorporated into your
body.
Then it's your meat,no-transcript.

(34:56):
And oh, replying to Zachary, Iurge you to join the Everwell
Herbal Clinic.
Okay, why would you do that,everwell Clinic?
Replying to April, cameron,here's June.
Again, I recommend you to visitthe Everwell Clinic, okay, so.
Okay, june, do you have anyrelationship with the Everwell

(35:16):
Clinic?
You seem to be highly promotingit.
Now I eat grass-fed hamburgerwith lots of fresh garlic and
fried onions.
You eat a grass-fed hamburger.
Listen, I have been I don'tknow 88 countries, more 98
countries.
I've been to a lot of countriesand I always go out into the
countryside and I've never seena hamburger walk around.

(35:37):
I looked, I saw cows, bulls, Isaw deer, I saw pigs.
I never saw a hamburger.
What did they look like?
So there was a grass fedhamburger.
Did you eat grass?
No, what is a hamburger?
You kill the cow right, usuallyan air gun to the head, so it
goes unconscious.
Unfortunately, those are reallyhard and they find actually

(35:58):
pieces of brain and stuff in thehamburger meat, but anyway.
So you render the animalunconscious, unless it's kosher
or it's halal.
Kosher and halal does not allowthat.
They want the animal to beconscious while it is being
murdered.
But the other non-halal,non-kosher allow the animal to
be unconscious while it's beingmurdered.

(36:19):
So after they've murdered itand they've taken out the inner
and they cut it up and theyground up the muscle and the
muscle's got yeah, it's got somebrain and other stuff and you
make a hamburger.
That's just just clarifying ourwords here, so we know what
we're talking about, because ifwe're going to communicate we
have to have the same vocabularyand have the same vocabulary.

(36:39):
We have to agree on what itmeans.
What does dog mean?
We know the dog.
Ok, we have to agree on that.
What does meat mean?
Well, meat in English actuallymeans the essence, right?
What is the meat of the subject?
What am I asking for?
I'm asking for the essence ofthe subject.
I eat the meat of the coconut,I eat the meat of the coconut,
okay, so Do you consider thedecayed muscles Of a deceased,

(37:04):
of a corpse?
The essence?
I don't.
So I can't call it meat.
I'd have to call it the corpseMuscle.
I'm just saying I know a lot ofpeople out there hate me.
You know why?
Because I want to eat, I wantmy, I mean mine, I mean, I mean,
I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,

(37:25):
I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,
I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,
I mean, I mean, I mean, I mean,I mean, I mean.
So, burleigh, let me just leaveit with you.
Don't worry, not knowing isextremely difficult, knowing is
more.
So, don't know?
Just say, look, we're going tolive a healthy life and be

(37:48):
healthy and just don't worryabout it.
Look for a reason for her tohave elevated transaminases.
You know the liver enzymes.
Then, okay, can't find a reason.
All right, whatever.
Eat healthy.
Do a thorough cleanse.
Do a juice cleanse.

(38:09):
Three week, four week, eightweek, whatever it is.
Juice cleanse.
You do it together with her.
No food, just eat fantasticvegetable juices with some fruit
to make it delicious.
Yeah, do that Colonhydrotherapy.
Go to sleep early.
Um, just do everything that youneed to do to be healthy.
And guess what's going tohappen?
You're going to be healthy andtake the alpha lipoic acid,
which you can get at any uh, anyplace that you can get uh

(38:30):
supplements of vitamins.
Alpha lipoic acid, you know,300 milligrams three times a day
.
Uh, vitamin B complex with B1,one twice a day.
The B100s it's called the 100because it has 100 milligrams of
everything, but the B1 is themain one.
You want thiamine?
You want NAC?
N-acetylcysteine 500 milligramsthree times a day.
Take silymarin or silybinum ormilk thistle Again 500

(38:54):
milligrams three times a day.
What else did we saySeleniumium.
You need selenium, get at least400 micrograms a day.
But you can eat four brazilnuts and you'll get that.
And uh, I know I'm forgettingone.
Oh well, it should be.
And don't stop, get off thattrain.

(39:15):
You're on the death train.
Get off it, jump, jump on tothe train going to paradise,
train going to.
We're all on that train.
We're going to paradise, andthat paradise is called health,
and where there is health, thereis absolute joy and brotherhood
, sisterhood, humanhood,babyhood, all kinds of hoods.
Now, uh, here's from naz.

(39:38):
Naz says how much and how shouldwe use ivermectin to prevent
You're using that word, naz, naz, you can't use the word and be
healthy CFCs?
Should we avoid meat and meatproducts altogether to prevent
CFCs?
Or green juice is good enoughdaily, naz, you must be new to

(40:02):
all of this.
So, naz, let's do this.
You've got a lot to catch up on, okay, so that's good.
I'm so glad you're here.
You finally made it.
That's great.
So if you want to prevent, if wewant to prevent developing any
kind of a condition, thatoptimal functioning of the
organism means that all of theorganism's biological needs and

(40:24):
psychological needs are beingsatisfied and it can optimally
function because that's how itwas designed.
If any of those needs are notbeing satisfied, either through
too much of one thing, or toomuch of something it didn't need
at all, or not enough of thingsit needs, if any of those
things are happen, then theorganism, in order to survive,
has to adapt, and thatadaptation is what they call

(40:46):
diseases.
So, but they're not diseases,they're adaption, adaptations to
okay now.
So therefore, if you want toavoid having to go through an
adaptation, make sure you'reproviding your body with all the
biological and psychologicalneeds it requires, and then
you're done.
Ok.
So ivermectin is very helpful,but so is fenbendazole, and I

(41:10):
would never.
So, as part of your cleansingand all that, you'd probably
want to do a parasite cleanse.
You'd probably want to get ridof the parasites that we all
have and you'd probably do acombination of the ivermectin,
fenbendazole, niclosamide,nitrous oxonide, you'd probably
do a combination of all thoseright, and maybe an antifungal
as well.
You'd do that for three weekson one week off.

(41:31):
Three weeks on one week off.
Three weeks on one week off,you'd be taking those same liver
supplements that we talkedabout with burley right.
Right, you're doing thatbecause you want to keep your
liver protected.
Why?
Because these anti-parasitics,uh, are all cleared by the liver
and when it's trying to clearall of them at once, you get
elevation of liver enzymes, likewe were talking about.
So, but anyway, it's okay, goup now.

(41:51):
That's why you do three weekson one week off.
Three weeks on one week off,okay, that's what you do.
You got to go to a biologicaldentist and you got to find out
what's going on in your, in yourhead, three dimensionally, with
a cone beam, 3d cone beam, ctjaw of your mouth, and that
they'll be able to see yourairway.
They'll be able to see theposition of your tongue.
They'll be able to see which isvery all that's very important.

(42:12):
They'll be able to see anycavitations which are little
caves up in your, in your bones,above your teeth or below your
teeth.
They'll be able to see anymetal implants whatever, and
then they'll be able to knowwhat to address to clean it out.
Because if you don't clean thatout, you cannot, cannot be

(42:33):
healthy, cannot be healthy.
Cannot be healthy because themouth, contrary to popular
opinion, has never left the body.
Yep, it's still in the body,and that we have two professions
.
We have dentistry, medicine,and then we have podiatry.
Right, because the feet aren't.
You know, the feet and themouth.
Another mistake God made Gave usfeet and the mouth, kept them

(42:55):
in one place, didn't cook thetomatoes.
My God, what were you doing,god?
How could you do that?
How could God do that?
He didn't cook the food.
I don't know.
I wonder about God.
Sometimes you know, like allthese things, that God didn't do
that we needed, after all, weneeded this right, we needed all

(43:16):
this electronic equipment.
He did his best, okay, he didhis best.
Okay, he did his best, so,anyway.
So, naz, one of the big things Iwant to talk to you about is
that people don't usually evenconsider is going to sleep early
.
Why would you go to sleep early?
Everybody should be worriedabout this.
Now we're concerned, or willingto listen to why you should go

(43:37):
to sleep early.
Because when we talk aboutsleep, we talk about the number
of hours.
We're always done with thenumber of hours you get.
All right, okay, you can getthe number of hours, you can get
.
Eight hours between 11 PM and 7AM, that's eight hours, but you
didn't get what you needed.
So now, in acute sleepdeprivation, like you know you

(43:57):
just, you know you normallysleep, go to sleep early, but
let's say, something happens,some kind of urgent thing or
traveling or whatever, and youdon't sleep for one day, and
then the next day, you like me,and then the next day you sleep
just a couple hours and you knowyou have an acute period of
sleep deprivation.
Okay, well, do you know thatthe number of those acute

(44:20):
periods of acute sleepdeprivation?
Okay, well, do you know thatthe number of those acute
periods of acute sleepdeprivation correlate with
neurodegenerative conditions?
Neurodegenerative conditionslike what?
Like Alzheimer's, parkinson's,what they call amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis, multiplesclerosis, and there's more.
We'll come up with moreAlzheimer, oh my God.

(44:41):
So what with acute, now chronic?
We won't even go there, okay,so we're talking about sleep
deprivation, we're not justtalking about the number of
hours, we're talking about thetiming.
And why the timing Because weare oh my God, I keep getting
into this controversies.
This never was a controversy.

(45:02):
It might've been a controversyback in 1300.
I thought it stopped.
Anyway, all right, sorry,please close your ears If you
don't like to hear these sort ofthing.
I'm about to say somethinghorrible.
That is okay.
So we live on a planet that isrevolving on its, it's rotating
on its axis and it makes onecomplete rotation every 23 hours

(45:24):
and 56 minutes and it's tilteda little bit.
And that's got a relationshipto this big fireball in the sky,
sun, which, by the way, is badfor you.
You're going to wear sunscreen,why?
Because the source of allbiological life in the solar
system is bad for you.
You understand the things webelieve, right?
The things we grow.
So, instead of being exposed tothe sunlight, which I get

(45:46):
vitamin D and I get, you know,each cell produces melatonin
Instead of doing that and thewarmth and all that, I'm going
to wear a sun guard.
And what is that sun guard?
It's poisons.
We're going to put poison onyour skin to prevent you from
getting the benefits of the sun.
They don't quite say it likethat.
They say quite the opposite.
They say you're going to diefrom that sun.

(46:07):
The sun's going to kill you.
So I know I segue all over theplace, but you know I got one of
those bicycles that doesn't gostraight, anyway, so I forgot
where I was.
But anyway, you go to sleepearly and the reason, oh, yeah,
yeah, circadian, okay, so ourcircadian rhythm is our
relationship with this almost 24hour cycle 23 hours, 56 minutes

(46:31):
, almost all right.
That's our relationship withthe sun and the earth, our
relationship with the sun andearth.
Oh, my god, is he talking aboutastrology?
No, yes, yes, no, no, yes, nojoke.
And I'm also talking aboutwe're going to tell you about
jupiter or mercury.
I'm not going to tell you thatmercury is in retrograde
sometime, not, hey, we're justtalking about our circadian

(46:51):
rhythm.
Why is that important?
Because every cell in our body,every cell in our body has a
circadian process going on, okay, and it functions differently.
So every set all right.
Now for the brain, particularlywhen we talk about the brain,
you know what happens in these24 hours, these 20 hours, even

(47:11):
the fact that our gene genes notnot the ones you wear, the um,
you know, like the chromosometype stuff, you know.
I just want to make sure we'renot talking about those genes,
okay, so we're talking aboutchromosomes.
Anyway.
Gene transcription, cellsignaling, physiology and all
sorts of behaviors are on a24-hour circadian rhythm.
That's right now to so.

(47:33):
Therefore, we are what theycall diurnal creatures, and then
there are nocturnal creatures.
Nocturnal creatures are aliveand they eat and make babies
during the day and during thenight, and then they sleep
during the day.
Diurnal creatures like us, weeat and make babies during the
day and we sleep at night.
Okay, night is what?
When the sun goes down?

(47:54):
Did you hear what he's?
When the sun goes downDefinition?
That's night.
Not all natural paths arecarnivore, are pro carnivore
diets.
Yay, I'm glad to hear that.
I know that.
No, what my point was this Ican't.
I that the person must havebeen talking to a naturopath,
because nobody else.
No, I don't.

(48:14):
I've never heard of a medicaldoctor offering any kind of diet
other than go see the dietitianor eat a well-balanced meal, or
they don't even think about it.
I wasn't saying that carn uh,naturopaths are car, because not
all naturopaths are carnivores,fortunately, fortunately, um,
but so you all need to hear that, right?

(48:36):
So not all of them.
And your best chance, if you'renot, well, your best chance of
getting well is to avoid thesorcerers, the m deity freaks,
and go to a naturopath.
But you got to make sure thatthat naturopath they're not all
naturopaths are the same.
I'm telling you, I knew a guythat was brilliant way back when

(48:57):
I first met him many years ago,and now he wound up being an
allopathic.
But what do they call that whenyou have an alcoholic and you
have, and you have the personthat's helping them?
It's called a.
Please remove them.
What do they call that when youhave a?
What banner?
I don't know what you'retalking about?

(49:17):
Oh, banner, how do I removethat?
Oh, there we go.
Ok, I didn't even know it wasup, thank you, anyway, where are
we now?
Ok, how weird.
All right, so, anyway, thispoor guy, you know, he was
really, really good and now he'slike.
He's like what do they callthat when they call a call, when

(49:38):
people are?
I forget what it's called, butit's the word.
Anyway, he works for allopass.
Now, basically, so, but, um, andI'll tell you something, if I I
didn't even know thenaturopaths exist, had I known,
I would not have gone to medicalschool.
Can you imagine?
I wouldn't have gone, I wouldhave gone to naturopathic school
.
So I didn't know.
And what's weird is I wasreading Herbert M Shelton all

(50:00):
those years, since I was 14, andhe was a naturopath, but I
didn't get it.
I never heard the word and Ihit NMD and I didn't even think
about it.
Had I known?
Yeah, oh, june.
Okay, june, you're going to tellYolata Hossein I recommend you
visit the Everwell Herbal ClinicJune and April.

(50:22):
You're so kind and yourecommend that she visit it June
.
Can I ask you, don't you thinkthat everybody in the United
States should visit the EverwellHerbal Clinic?
Eh, I mean everybody?
Okay, yay, june, let's do that,everyone, do it.
Get over to the Herbal Well,whatever clinic right away.
Okay, and just tell him junesent you.

(50:43):
You guys are great anyway,that's right, herbert m shelton
he is.
Here's one of his books thehygienic care of children
incredible, incredible.
Save your baby.
Uh, what else, herbert mshelton?
Uh, health for the millions isgoing to be like your, it's
almost like your.
Um, the bible of health.
And then, uh, the a science andfine art of fasting.

(51:06):
Um, I mean, he's prolific, buthe's number one mentor that I
had from the time of age of 14.
What else did he write.
I mean, I can't all these booksI have.
He's written so many books, butanyway, anyway, whatever.
So it's cold now.
Can you imagine cold, going tosleep early, okay, so?
So there's one other, there's acouple other things that are

(51:28):
about going to sleep early thatmost people are not even aware
of, and that is, you know, ourbrain does not have a lymphatic
system, like you know.
Like you know, when you thinkof all organs that have, they
have a specific lymphaticdrainage.
So the brain doesn't, itdoesn't have a lymphatic
drainage.
Okay, so what happens?
So it's actually called theglymphatic system for the brain,

(51:51):
okay, and the way it works isthat there is a network of these
around the blood vessel tunnelsthat are wrapped in the brain.
It's called perivascular, okay,and it's by, uh, these
astrocytes, which are basicallylike macrophages in the brain,
which are white blood cells.

(52:12):
They're kind of there, um anduh.
So there's kind of a.
So it's based upon the arterialpulsation, and when your heart
and when your heart rate goesdown, it's better distributed.
So your heart rate goes downwhen you're sleeping, so when
you're having a dream.
But so why?
Why?
Therefore, it works best, best,best in slow wave sleep, and

(52:36):
slow wave.
Sleep doesn't occur after 930,10, 11.
It doesn't occur.
Don't look 11, you can see itdoesn't occur.
Ah, don't, don't look at me, Ididn't do it, it's god again.
God did that.
It's one of those other thingshe did didn't cook the tomatoes
and wanted us to go to sleepearly and so, um, so they were
doing that slow wave, slow wave,the slow waves of your brain

(52:58):
waves.
You know you have beta waves,theta waves.
Delta is when that circulationis happening and it's cleaning
out what Neurotoxins.
It's cleaning out toxins fromyour brain and gets rid of them.
So if you don't go to sleepbefore 930, if you don't 9
o'clock, you won't clean themout.
And guess what you're going toget?

(53:20):
Find yourself in the middle ofoh my God, yes, all those
neurodegenerative situations.
So you know the spinal fluid,right, we're talking about the
spinal fluid in there.
It circulates, right, thespinal fluid which is made in
the ventricles, inside of theventricles of the brain.
The brain has these chamberscalled ventricles which are
aligned.
They have a choroid plexus thatproduces this cerebral spinal

(53:44):
fluid which circulates all theway around.
Okay, guess what that is on acircadian rhythm too 's right,
can you believe it, at aroundthat time of night, when you're
in slow wave, you're producingmore cerebral spinal fluid.
What else is happening at thattime?
It's incredible and won'thappen other times, and that is,
our immune system is beingenhanced.

(54:07):
It's based on, it has acircadian rhythm too, okay, so,
uh, you know so what happens,that you know the ability for
the cells to phagocytize.
That means eat up.
You know bacteria and otherstuff that wants to eat up, uh,
to produce cytokines.
You know that important ofsignaling to other parts of the
body and to other white bloodcells for its ability to migrate

(54:30):
towards areas that all thosethings are enhanced before that
time.
It's kind of that.
And then, on top of it,melatonin will do all that as
well.
So you gotta go sleep early now.
The other one is movement, andI just want you to realize
there's something about movement.
Very important about movementis that if it weren't important
now, plants don't have to worryabout this.

(54:51):
Ok, plants don't have to worryabout this, they got it covered.
Ok, we don't.
That's why we've got these armsand legs.
Yeah, I know, it was.
Actually, I'm sure they'regoing to come up with something
extremely convenient where youdon't have to use your arms and
legs either.
You just sit around.
But who wants to be a torso?
No-transcript.

(55:39):
The gym we don't need to go tothe gym because our life is
moving.
Okay, now we don't realize it,but one of up there in the top
causes of death in elderlypeople is frailty not being able
to move.
Now there is a good test thatyou can all do I hope you're all
listening very well becausethere's a good test you can all

(56:00):
do If you want to find out howfit you are, how physically fit
you are.
There's one test, and it's moreimportant than any blood test,
any imaging test, anything.
This is the most important testthat you can do at home, with
nobody, and you don't need aprofessional at all.
You just need to be alone andyou need about I don't know
three or four feet on the floor.

(56:22):
Make sure it's carpeted and allthat, so it's soft.
Sit down on the floor and thenstand up without using your
hands, elbows, knees, and thenstand up without using your
hands, elbows, knees orfurniture.
If you can do that, you're ingood shape, you're okay.
There's a few other ones too,things like that.
But anyway, if you can't, thenwhat you want to do is use it,

(56:46):
okay.
So if you have to use yourknees, which I have to do, I
have to use my knees.
I don't have to use my hands,but I have to use my knees.
So I need to keep doing ituntil I don't have to use my
knees, so you can stand up fromsitting down without using hands
, knees, elbows or anythingaround you.
Furniture.
It's a test.

(57:06):
So that's the kind of thing wewant to be working on.
So the answer, naz, is thisYou're going to clean out
everything you can and thenyou're going to put in
everything that you want to eatthat is healthy for humans and,
by the way, it happens to beplants.
Whether you like that or not, Idoesn't really matter if we

(57:27):
like it or not, just happens tobe true.
Ok, so now?
Movement immunity, going tosleep, frailty Remember that.
Going to sleep early?
Okay, eating human food Stopeating five hours before bed.
Eat only in a short window, soyou have a long period of not
eating.
Drink lots and lots of fluids,water fluids, water fluids,

(57:47):
fluid water, water, water, water.
And stop lying, if you can.
It's hard to stop lying, I knowthat, but we have to water and
stop lying if you can.
It's hard to stop lying, I knowthat, but we have to try to
stop lying because we do.
We're lying, we lie all thetime.
We learn to lie.
You have to lie if you want toget around.
You can't tell your boss whatyou think of them.
You can't tell your boss whatyou think.
You can't tell everybody.
You can't speak the truth.
You got to say right, ifeveryone spoke the truth, my god

(58:11):
, we actually.
Because here's the thing.
I guess they call it mannersand all that sort of thing.
But isn't it weird?
Why would I have to be what inyour position?
It is expected You're a child.
It is expected You're a mother.
It is expected You're a CEO.
It is expected you a plumber.

(58:31):
It is what it is expected.
In other words, your behavioris already proscribed in all
right because of all that stuffand all that stuff.
So we look at each other and wehe should, she should, they
shouldn't judgment.
Okay, judge not, lest you bejudged by that which you judge.
I don't't know where I heardthat.
Where did I hear that?
From One of those books, youknow?

(58:55):
Anyway, let's get back to ourquestions.
So you got the point, naz Good,meta has melasma skin condition
.
Does he know the underlyingcause?
Used everything under the sun.
Will it ever go away?
Okay, melasma for those of youwho might not be familiar with
the term is a hyperpigmentationof the skin.

(59:16):
Women get it, usually aroundpregnancy, because they have a
increase in their melanin output.
Melanin, that is the substanceproduced by melanocytes, which
are cells in our skin thatproduce pigment, right.
So the different pigments ofpeople that have different
pigments.
It means this is differentamounts of melanin that they're

(59:38):
producing.
Melanin has a biologicalfunction.
It protects you from certainaspects of the electromagnetic
spectrum which could be damaging, and that's why it's not.
And that's why you don't needsunscreen, because God gave you
sunscreen.
Unless you're an albino, thenyou've got to stay out of the
sun, or maybe you know, shortperiod, it doesn't mean you can
be in the shade.
You can be in the shade and beout in the sun.

(59:58):
You still need your exposure toall that Because, remember, all
the circadian rhythm that we'retalking about comes through the
eyes and through the opticnerve to the suprachiasmic
nucleus right, then from thereit gets distributed everywhere,
everywhere.
Okay, every cell is dependenton this 24-hour system.
So melasma is the mask ofpregnancy is what happens, but

(01:00:22):
you can get it for other reasonstoo.
You know, the sun is a bigfactor in it, of course, so
anyway.
So if you get that, and youknow, sometimes it goes away in
a short period of time,sometimes a couple years, and
sometimes it never goes away,all right.
So there are.
If you go to a dermatologist,um, you know, you know they've

(01:00:44):
got treatment.
They use hydroxyquinone, right,they use trinitoin, which is,
um, can be, you know, toxic,toxic and mild steroids.
So they combine them.
Actually they use thehydroquinone with the Trenitoin
and a steroid in one and likethat.
But the other thing they can doI don't forget the term of it,
but they have this microneedlingwhere they can use laser and

(01:01:07):
light, and I've seen very good,amazing results from the laser
are in light, and I've seen verygood, amazing results from the
laser.
Of course, it was in Japan andthe quality of everything in
Japan is way up there.
They empty the trash betterthan we do, they go to the
toilet better than we do.
Everything they do is like what?
Why didn't we think of that?

(01:01:28):
Why didn't we think of that?
So, anyway, the averagedermatologist in Japan will do
really good job.
So anyway, but lasering is thebest I've seen happening, right.
Another thing that they use isit's called PRP, platelet rich
plasma.
So drawing your blood, spin itout and then at the top they get

(01:01:50):
the platelet richrich plasmaand they can inject that into
your skin too.
And you know it helps witheverything.
I need something that reallyhelps with everything, but
that's about it A lot of.
I know that there areover-the-counter things.
You can buy the ointments andstuff.
I don't know if they work ornot.
I don't think so.
There's a belief that vitamin cget taken or topically is going

(01:02:17):
to do that.
I don't know, I just don't know.
Okay, so anyway, but probablywe won't know if it'll ever go
away.
Made up, so go find a gooddermatologist.
So now this is d d uk.
What time is it?
Are we okay still?
Yeah, good, we're doing reallygood today.
So topic is breast CFCs.
All right, was so happy youread my question.

(01:02:39):
I am under a good functionaloncologist nutritionist via Zoom
.
Oh, wow, Can you do that Zoom?
Yeah, I guess you can.
I used to Checked outdoxycycline, yes, have asked
regarding should I add to myregimen?
Well, if you have breast CFCsand you have bone metastasis.

(01:03:01):
Yes, if you have breast CFCsand you don't have bone
metastasis, it's a goodprophylactic measure, and it
just happens to kill the CFCstem cells as well.
So that's really important.
Yeah, you know, and you'll bedoing a lot of vitamin c, right?
You'll be doing.
You'll be getting, uh, theliposomal.
Here's what I get from japan,yeah.
Yeah, I'm not a japanophile, Ijust love japan.

(01:03:23):
Wait a minute, is that the samething here?
Uh, uh, yeah, liposomal, watch,watch it.
Show you how easy it is watch,done, done.
Could it be easier?
No, I guess it could be moreconvenient if I was just sitting
in a chair and I didn't doanything all day and vitamin C
was pushed through my skin orsomething.
But that's other than that.
This is the best.

(01:03:44):
And take two grams four times aday.
Two grams four times a day,that means two of those packets
four times a day, or you getyour whatever.
So you'll be doing that.
You'll be overdosing on vitaminD, overdosing on vitamin D with
K2, vitamin D with K2.
You're going to be doingmelatonin and you're going to be
getting your iodine, lots ofmelatonin, iodine.
Thyroid adrenals you got to getthose because they are the

(01:04:06):
bosses of the immune system,that.
And they work best when they'recoordinated.
And you're going to sleep early, whoa.
Then your thymus is going away,no matter what you do.
So you got to get some thymusand alpha-1, thymus and alpha-1,
because you want T cells, youkind of want T cells.
This is the stuff you need tobe doing All right Now.

(01:04:28):
The doxycycline and vitamin Ctogether are amazing, amazing at
eliminating CFC stem cells.
And so is ivermectin, and so ismebendazole, so is fembendazole
, so is nicosomide, and so isnitrozoxone.
Yeah, side benefits.
So now you know I'd love tojoin the CFC group, but I'm a

(01:04:48):
pensioner.
The other group, the health andhealing, you know it's not as
extensive by any means, but itstill gives you some access to
the ongoing and learning andstuff.
So it might be a good idea.
But you know the CFC, you knowa lot more.

(01:05:09):
It's just, but it's the way itis.
But anyway it will give yousome connection.
Neurologist said it's okay.
But one more question.
Before their diagnoses I hadstill have getting worse a
numbness down my right leg allthe way to little toes and right

(01:05:31):
foot.
Neurologist said it'scompression spine due to
adenocarcinoma, but cannot seewhere on MRI.
This is the only thing thatseems to be stopping me feeling
100%.
Nothing had any response, nosupplements.
My mind is good, I meditateoften, but those immune cells of
mine just hanging on.

(01:05:51):
I wish I could have moved overthere.
But three little doggies age 14rely on my loving care.
Oh, you mean Wolverine too?
Well, if your doggies are 14,unfortunately, dogs don't live,

(01:06:17):
you know, by the way, you guysanother, the carnivore diet.
The carnivores in nature liveonly 15 years.
True, look it up, it's true,they look it up, they live 15
years.
The non-carnivore elephants is60 to 90 years, all the other,
like horses and like that, 40s,40s, 50s, 30s, 40s I'm sure
we're talking about deer horses.
Anyway, I just got to recreatethis health journey.

(01:06:39):
All right, good, fantastic D.
So numbness down your legSounds like the sciatic nerve,
which goes from like L4 to S3.
What are you talking about?
So we have a spine, the spinehas cervical.
No, the cervical that means wehave vertebra.
The vertebra are the bones ofour spine that protect the
spinal cord.
Okay, because it's justprotected, okay.

(01:07:00):
And then nerves, and then alongthe spinal cord, the nerves
come out and they branch allover and we do all this sort of
stuff.
So the ones in our neck, theeight there right, which goes
from the head to where the chestbegins, so those are called
cervical, and then all the onesthat are in our chest are called
thoracic vertebrae.

(01:07:20):
So listen, thoracic, becausethe chest is called the thorax.
And where does the thorax go?
It goes down to the end of theribs.
When the ribs stop coming off,that then we're no longer in the
thorax, we're now in the lumbar, that's all.
And then there are lumbar, andthen the lumbar end when you get

(01:07:41):
to the hips, and then those arecalled sacral.
So you have cervical, thoracic,lumbar and sacral are just the
same things, their vertebra,their bones protecting the
nerves, but in different areas.
Okay, so the sciatica is likelumbar four, up to about like S3

(01:08:03):
.
Okay, you know, which is calledthe sacral plexus, right?
So that's what's happening.
So I kind of agree with, eventhough the mri m I guess the mri
didn't show that that's odd,very odd, uh, especially if you
have that kind of, you know,symptom from it, but if it goes

(01:08:25):
all the way down to your white,right to the, to the baby toes,
that's kind of the distributionof that nerve.
So, and I don't know if you hadchemo or anything.
But if you did, excuse me, youmight have some peripheral
neuropathy, but you would havementioned it.
You didn't mention anythingabout numbness or tingling.
You just mentioned about thisone particular sciatic nerve

(01:08:45):
distribution and so that.
But if you did have peripheralneuropathy of any kind, you know
, then taking alpha lipoic acidis very helpful and acetyl
L-carnitine those two togetherare very, very good for this
neuropathic pain.
Neuro is nerve, pathic is meanssomething like it's part of the
disease thing.

(01:09:06):
Just neuropathic means that thenerve, the pain, is coming from
the nerve.
It's easy, kitty.
I don't like the word pathic.
There's nothing pathic exceptthe pathetic pathologist, but
other than that there's nothingpathic.
Everything's adaptivephysiology.
There's no path out.
I think there's adaptivephysiology period now, uh, but

(01:09:27):
in addition to taking the alalipoic acid and taking the
acetyl L-carnitine, the B1, very, very important right, b1 and
B12, b6.
B1, b12, b6 are reallyimportant for it.
So just take a B complex, okay.
Omega-3s are very important.
Flax seeds, chia seeds you havethe chia seed, of course.

(01:09:49):
Get lots of that right andwalnuts, walnutsnuts, flaxseed,
cscs, all that.
Curcumin, excellent vitamin d.
Did you know vitamin d actuallyhas an analgesic property to it
.
That means it decreases pain.
Yes, amazing, amazing, right.
And the curcumin isanti-inflammatory, anti.

(01:10:10):
It helps.
It's very helpful with thenerves.
If you've got a peripheralneurotic, if you've got pain and
tingling or anything like that,it's because it's inflamed.
All right, all right, good.
And guess what?
That old, dread, terrible,terrible glutamine, right, we've
got to avoid.
I've got to get rid ofglutamine and glucose.
And I, but I'm going to get ridof it, I'm dead.
So glutamine, in addition tobeing the primary fuel for the

(01:10:33):
cells that line our intestinesthat allow us to absorb, and in
addition to being the primaryfuel source for our lymphocytes,
and in addition to being anon-essential amino acid, means
we produce it, whether we eat it, we don't eat it, we don't need
to eat it, we produce it.
So we have tons of it.
It's the most abundant aminoacid in our body.

(01:10:58):
And guess what else it does?
Feeds nerves, restores nerves.
So you have a peripheralneuropathy.
Glutamine is going to help, yep, so do all those things.
But your situation sounds likedefinitely a sciatic problem.
So what I would do is go to astructural integrationist.
It's called structuralintegration.
Look it up and myofascialrelease and cranial sacral.
If you can find a group thatdoes cranial, sacral work,

(01:11:25):
myofascial release andstructural integration.
They're all really good.
You got to find someone who'sreally good.
Make sure they've been doing ita while.
Talk to them, make sure youknow a lot of times they were
former uh, physical therapistsand a chiropractor, you know.
You add, those are the peoplethat are going to help you,
since it's not seen on mri,which is odd, plus you, you want
to go the orthopedic anyway,because the medical doctor,
which is the mythology doctor,will go in there and cut things

(01:11:47):
open and they're going to startcutting you open.
Ah no, let's get yourestructured, okay, so good,
structure integration,myofascial release, cranial,
sacral and chiropractics boom,boom, boom, boom and you'll get
better, you get healthier andstart doing yoga in the way you
can.
Whatever you can and cannot, dothe best you can do and go to

(01:12:12):
sleep early and do all thesethings and you're gonna see.
Okay, my, still, I don't know Igot time.
What a day.
Now let's see d?
Uh in the article regardinglanguage of scare.
Yes, yes, absolutely,absolutely okay.
This is HS.
I won't say your last name, butHS.
Yes, topic is other.

(01:12:33):
I've been trying to get aholdof you, but struggling.
I have solitary fibrous tumorsactive in my lungs and around
spine and working its way downmy lower spine and pelvic floor
and pelvic region.
How do I specifically stop theSFT fusion of NAB2 and STAT6

(01:12:55):
antisense oligonucleotides?
Targets STAT6-3 untranslatedregion to reduce NAB2.
Okay, inhibiting EGR1 and IGF-2may be viable.
Who can stop this?
I've seen one of your videosand noted that this is proto
Ivermectin, prasukhantaran,niklosamide, three times a day,

(01:13:15):
Thinbendazole, tinidazole it'snot Excuse me.
So your name is Hardip Singh.
Okay, namaskar Singh, maybe notSingh.
That means you're Sikh.
Anyway, do Sikhs say Sikh sayuh, or is that just the Hindu

(01:13:35):
sign?
I don't think I've ever seen aSikh when I was in India doing
it anyway.
Okay, so all those things youwere just talking about, right,
all of these pathways and allthat, don't, you can't, you're
never going to figure that out.
They didn't figure it, it out,they just named it.
They don't know what's that.
Anything that's going to workneeds to do that, so you can't

(01:13:56):
find something specific.
Everything that is leadingtowards health and resolution is
that.
So if you've got a situationgoing on, they've got you
looking at the larva of aparasite that is on the wing of
a fly on one of the trees in theforest, you, you way distracted

(01:14:18):
down there, okay, and if yougot up, so when I'm in the
forest, okay I get.
So you can't see the forest forthe larva anyway.
So here's the story, um, allthese things that, oh, the name
of that.
I just saw something.
The name of that is called LipoC, l-y-p-o-c.
Yeah, from Japan.
And then it's just like this Ilike taking it, so I'm going to

(01:14:41):
show you more.
Wow, that was easy.
So it tastes salty, you know.
But my doctor said I shouldn'thave salt.
Yeah, your shouldn't have saw.
You know, your doctor shouldn'ttalk.
Um, there's a problem, that'swhen the doctor's not telling
the truth as soon as their mouthopens.
Um, now, what I'm trying totell you, um, hard dip saying,

(01:15:01):
is that you're lost in the.
What they have identified iswhat's going on in everyone of
anyone who's having cfcsanywhere.
There's all these differentpathways.
It doesn't.
It's not like I can stop thepath.
You can, a path, anythingthat's happening, any
biochemical pathways that arehappening in anybody, in any
cell.
They're happening because theyare required at that moment for

(01:15:23):
the cell to stay alive.
But that's what cells do.
They do what is necessary.
There's nothing else they'redoing.
So what's your job?
Job our job is to do is to makethose things that are not in
our best interest not necessaryby changing by what we, the way
we live and stuff like that,because we're never going to
figure it and you can't go inand stop a process.

(01:15:46):
That must happen or the celldies.
Imagine if this is doing thisto well, yeah, I want to kill
the CFC.
Yeah, you do.
But you have to understandsomething.
Why that's happening is if yougot rid of all of them, there's
going to be more happening,because whatever is causing them
has caused that and whatevercaused them is still going.
You're going to have more.
You have to understand that.

(01:16:07):
If you don't pull the plug,it's going to keep happening.
If you don't stop producingthese things, then it doesn't
matter how good you are atgetting rid of them.
Very, very simple concept.
You've got HHS.
You've got to go hard dip sing.
You've got to go to abiological dentist a real one.
You've got to find one.
You've got to take care of that.

(01:16:27):
All right.
You've got to do a thoroughthree, six, eight week juice
cleanse.
Got to do that.
Where you don't eat.
Got to get colon hydrotherapy.
You've got to find a certifiedlymphatic therapist if you can,
but you're going to be movingall day.
You're going to be doing thisand, by the way, can you stand
up without using your elbows,your knees, your hands and

(01:16:49):
furniture or anything like that,from sitting on the floor?
That's my goal now.
I want to learn to do it.
I want to get to that point ofdoing that, anyway.
So instead of looking at howyou're going to inhibit this,
look at restoring health.
And yes, the Proziquanto, theivermectin, the nicosamide,

(01:17:10):
fenbendazole or any of thebenzimidazoles yes, tinidazole
or nitrozoxanide, those are partof restoring health, because
it's getting rid of eliminatingthings that we don't need, that
are blocking our ability to heal.
Yes, it's part of it, and theyhave a nice little side benefit
of modifying certain pathways,like we were just talking about,

(01:17:32):
that contribute to this wholeproblem of CFCs.
Yes, yes, yes.
So those things are good, butdon't get into those things that
you're lost in that one.
Now you are in their world andyou can never make it.
Their world ends at the morgue.
Get out of their world.
Get out of their world.

(01:17:53):
Their world ends at the morgue.
You understand?
Get out of their world.
Stop using their words.
They end at the morgue.
Forget the SFT, fusion, theNATU, forget all that stuff.
They tell you all that stuff,now can they help you?
No, what is it?
It's some sort of logoria.
Are you familiar with that term?

(01:18:14):
Logoria?
It's similar to the hyper,hyper loquacity.
Logo means word Ria is gotdiarrhea.
Logoria, loquacity same thing,loquacious.
There are other words todescribe that kind of thing.
But they're saying these words,these words that mean nothing.
When I say they mean nothing,they have some meaning in their

(01:18:36):
little world, but they have nomeaning in terms of being alive
and healthy and happy.
Because why those are going on,nobody knows.
They don't know.
I'm telling you why they'regoing on because they have to.
Why do they have to?
Because we're not living in away that's satisfying our
biological and psychologicalneeds, period, period.
It's not hard.

(01:18:56):
It's not hard.
They make it confusing and allthat stuff, just so you'll be
confused and you'll say you gotto run to them and say what's
going on?
What's going on?
What's going on?
They're going to tell you well,come over here, pay me first.
What's going on is you'll neverunderstand it, so just do what
I say.
It's an extremely patriarchal,extremely extraordinarily evil,

(01:19:21):
yeah.
So yeah, you can take thosethings and all that, but you've
got to get well, you've listenedto everything I've been saying,
all the stuff.
Do that and join the group HS.
Join the CFC group, drlowdycom.
Find the CFC group and join thegroup HS.
Join the CFC group, drlodicom.
Find the CFC group and join itso we can deal with it.
Specifically, I can talk to youand ask you questions.
Here's Debbie.
She's saying can you give thefull name and contact for who
your acupuncturist, dr Yu, andwhich dentist?

(01:19:45):
You're in Carlsbad, okay.
You're in San Diego, okay,you're beautiful, okay.
So you're going to go see DrEmma Abramayan in Glendale,
california.
Not a long drive for you, emmaAbramayan, glendale California,
and you can go to Dr Emma, drEmma D-R-M-M-A-D-D-S,
d-r-m-m-a-e-m-m-a-d-d-s atgmailcom and they'll look her up

(01:20:09):
on the internet.
The best in the world, andyou're right near her.
So that's so fantastic.
In terms of acupuncturists, drYu is not an acupuncturist.
He was a acupuncture meridian.
It was a way of assessingwhat's going on.
He's in St Louis, but you don'tneed go see Dr Emma and I'm not

(01:20:31):
sure what else is going on withyou.
The dental that's.
You don't need a doctor, youwhen you got a doctor, dr, you
found my stuff, but because Ididn't need but, but if you go
see Dr Emma, you've got to coverit.
You're great.
I'm so glad I got to answeryour question today.
So, debbie, go right, it'snighttime for you.

(01:20:51):
You so, tomorrow morning, geton there, call her office, send
the emails, say I want to comeas soon as possible, and you go.
She's the one she does it all.
She's amazing.
All right, Okay, here's Dawn.
I want to do a parasite cleanse, but no doctors talk to or
support it and think I'm crazy.
Who can I get help with it?
Join our group, the ParasiteGroup.

(01:21:12):
Go to drlodycom and there'sthree groups Health and Healing,
parasite and join the ParasiteGroup and we'll guide you
through this.
Alright, great, fantastic.
So we are done.
You folks, sawadi, kaap, kaapun, ma, kaap, namaste, namaskar
and aloha.
I keep saying I'm going to dothat aloha video, because when

(01:21:38):
you know what aloha means,you're going to go wow, is that
what aloha means?
Yeah, aloha is deep.
You know, it's not just aloha,it's that too, it's everything.
Anyway, aloha and

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