Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Sawadee Ka Wadidon
Tchau.
Actually, namaste, namaskar,aloha, how's everyone?
It's actually Sunday Night Livehere in Monday Morning World,
alright, like Instagram justjumps on like that.
Amazing, amazing, glad you'reall here, wow, and everybody
(00:24):
else is starting to come on.
Great, Well, let's get.
Let's wait a second for a lotof people to assemble.
You know, I was thinking.
I just wanted to share thiswith you too.
Anyway, imagine when we eat like, oh, thank you, oh, thank you,
cup of my cup.
So imagine this when you eat ameal, great, fantastic warning
(00:50):
signs.
I'm glad you got those words.
They're sorcerers and assassins, but they kill with your mind.
You're dead.
The mind is what does it?
It allows that whole process ofwhatever they're going to do
dismember you and poison you,but it's the mind.
They get the mind first.
They get the mind.
What are the Spraying?
(01:12):
Oh my God, alright.
So once again, you can't changewhat's there, so you get out of
there.
Just the way I look at it,anyway.
But imagine you eat a meal andit's got all this stuff in it.
So if you look at the plate,whatever you ate, right, and
it's just, you know, whateverdifferent things, and then you
chew it, swallow it, it getsdown there.
(01:33):
Try to understand or try topicture.
Imagine that the process ofdigestion is that this mounds of
solid material and if there aresauces and gravies, we've got
all sorts of different kinds of.
That's a very heterogeneousliquid, and so is the, you know,
(02:00):
and the foods, what we'reeating not use the word food.
Hi, good morning, hi everybody,good evening I mean.
So, anyway, you know, likepotato chips, what are they?
If you look at the back of thebottle you go, ah, on the back
of the what I just thought I wasgetting potatoes here, and
(02:23):
there's all these chemicals.
But anyway, just imagine thatit all goes in your, your, your,
your stomach.
Uh, you chew it, you swallow itand then when it goes, it
passes through the like.
Duodenum is like whoa way,important, right, a gallbladder
input.
It's got the pancreatic inputright, because you're going to
get the gallbladder for any fatsthat the gallbladder has to
producerete bile into theduodenum, right, and the
(02:46):
gallbladder gets it from thebiliary ducts in the liver.
The liver makes it right, okay,and then the pancreatic duct,
which is right as soon as youget into the duodenum there on
your left, produces enzymes, youknow, to digest or to separate,
break apart molecules.
So here's what happens.
So all this stuff and you canjust imagine your plate, or if
(03:10):
you've ever vomited, and youmight have and there was a bunch
of food or you've seen vomit,and you realize that gets
separated into specificmolecules and the intelligence.
You know what are you going tocall it.
I don't know the people thatthink that everything suddenly
occurred with an explosion fromnothing.
(03:32):
It's absurd.
It's so absurd it'sunimaginable.
But anyway, and then random,anyway, there's nothing random
anywhere.
So, except in their headsanywhere.
So, um, except in their heads,um, but anyway.
So these cells of the, of the,that line, the gut that tracked
and all it's all coordinated andthey were able to separate the
(03:52):
molecules that are going to beused for uh parts, you know,
flesh, blood and and energy, andit takes those in and it's able
to do that, and what it doesn'tneed or doesn't want, and then,
if anything got by that process, wherever it is in the GI tract
(04:15):
there's a venous vein that'sdraining it they go back to the
liver.
It's crazy.
I mean, you throw a big, youthrow all this stuff in there
and it separates molecule bymolecule.
Iran hand, pink waving.
I'm not sure what that means.
Thank you, ernie.
A bug came out a week ago.
(04:36):
Whoever they are, I mean,listen, rachel, whoever they are
, if you had a bug come out ofyour face it's not common, you
know.
That sounds like there's only acouple things.
It could be like the bot fly.
I don't know if you hadexposure to bot fly, if you're
in central america or, uh, youknow, south america, central
america, bot fly, yeah, uh,fungus has come out.
(04:56):
I'm not sure.
If that is, you've got to getto, uh, somebody who knows what
they're doing, like.
Uh, well, if you get to myclinic in arizona.
Anyway, before we do all thisstuff, I'm supposed to do the
right I have to have.
There's a certain order to this.
Sure, there has to be.
I can't be out of order.
I mean absolutely.
Yeah, just a reminder, if you'vegot anything going on with CFCs
(05:17):
, this here happening and Oasisof Healing in Arizona, because
we've been there a long time weyou know everybody's trained.
It's amazing and, by the way,it's the only place like it in
the world.
How can you say that?
Because I've been around theworld and I've been looking for
it.
I would love to find a placethat does it all.
(05:38):
There is not.
There's not one.
Thank you, cheryl, there's no.
Thank you, cheryl, and if youdisagree, please show me so I'd
love to know.
Okay, anyway, so that's whereyou go if you have CFCs and if
you don't know what CFCs are,that means you just joined us
and you're still like drippingwith Rockefeller saliva.
(05:59):
Yeah, he's definitely a reptile, they don't have saliva, but
they have this other stuff.
Yeah, he's definitely a reptile, they don't have saliva, but
they have this other stuff.
So CFCs is really chronicallyfermenting cells, which means
and they call that Capricorn,capricorn.
You know, we talk about theopposite sign.
Opposite sign of Capricorn isCancer.
Opposite sign of Sagittarius isGemini.
(06:22):
Anyway, so Cancer, you havechronically fermenting cells.
Okay, cfcs, because we don't usethat word here, because we love
each other and we're not goingto hurt each other.
Right, when I say that word,it'd be like saying you know,
it's worse than that.
It's cursing someone.
You curse, you just say you'regoing to die, you're going to
(06:42):
die, you're going to die.
You, you curse, you say you'regonna die, you're gonna die,
you're gonna die, gonna die,you're gonna die.
Yeah, you want to say that topeople?
Hi, how's your house, how'syour journey to death?
Don't use those words anyway.
So just a reminder we have threegroups the health and healing
group, the parasite group andthe CFC group.
And Parasite groupautomatically as membership in
(07:03):
health and healing, and CFC hasmembership in the other two.
Yeah, and you should joinBecause there we can interact.
Here, like, I have a lot ofquestions I've got to answer.
I can't really do this, youknow, live interaction because
I've got to answer thosequestions.
So that's why we have thesegroups.
We have these groups.
So if you have a situation,instead of a consultation, we
(07:24):
consult.
You know, if you, I wish wecould talk to people that are in
the group, because I consultall every day with everybody,
you know.
So it's an ongoing consultation.
And then we've got other things.
We've got Darren thekinesiologist, who's going to
show you how to move, how tomake it easier.
Can you please talk about type1 diabetes?
Okay, I can't look at you guys.
(07:47):
I gotta say, okay, um, darrenkinesiologist, show you how to
move, how to make it and why youwant to move.
And this guy's totallyinspiring.
I mean, it's like you know, ifyou're walking down the street
with him, he'll climb a stopsign.
Yeah, yeah, he said you knowanyway, but he prefers trees.
And then Vanessa, who's you know, extremely knowledgeable about.
(08:10):
You know, nutrition and lives.
That's the thing.
Both of them live this.
You know they eat the way we'retalking about.
They do all that, but you know.
So Vanessa is like anutritionist, health educator I
mean just amazing stuff Yogainstructor, meditation, and so
(08:30):
she and Darren are like you know, they're just amazing, so that
when you're part of the groupyou can have a day a week with
you guys and then one or theother they alternate.
And then now we have DonnaPeroni, who is a person's being
a bit raw vegan food for 36years and she used to be my
health coach my original firstone way back when and colon
(08:55):
hydrotherapist.
She will be in these groups, begiving you, uh, teaching you,
how to um, she'll reiterate whyyou want to do this, then how to
do and how to make it tastegood.
So there'll be lessons andthings, courses on how to make
it good.
And then the last one is, ifyou're in a CFC group, we have
Kathy's Corner and that's forjust a chance to mind enemas and
(09:19):
then sharing and learning andhelping each other, because a
lot of the you know, this isreally an emotional journey.
It's just, uh, you know, it'snot like you take your car in,
it's like you fix it, I'll beback at five, it's not like that
kind of thing.
It's, you know, there's adriver in this car, yeah and uh,
and it's complicated driver,yeah, so we got to take care of
that driver.
And that's what kathy's goingto respond.
(09:40):
Um and uh loves that.
So that's all part of the group.
Plus, I have these weeklythings.
So these are really worth it.
And health and healing group on.
What's the date?
June 2nd?
What's the date Today's June,what?
Oh, for you guys it's June 2nd,For me it's June 2nd already.
All right, in that group,health and healing date is
(10:04):
Monday, june 2nd.
Don't tell those people inNorth America and Europe that
it's already June 2nd.
Anyway, wow, it's crazy.
Health and healing.
So, anyway, chitvan will be onthe health and healing group.
You want to see Chitvan Malik?
She's kind of like the.
(10:28):
She's been right in the middleof PEMF, right?
Electronic Medical Pulse,Electrical Medical Frequencies,
anyway, whatever, never mind.
Pemf, electromagnetic Frequency, yeah, pulse, electromagnetic
Frequencies.
I love acronyms because they'rejust, you know, they're just
frequencies.
We can't see, we're notsupposed to say the whole word
because we're busy people sowe're just pimp, okay.
(10:51):
So, yeah, anyway, she's like,and she's the one that taught me
about the Beamer and theBeamer's like.
You know, you got it.
But now there's a newgeneration after the Beamer,
it's called the cloud.
It begins with a K, anyway, itopens up your microcirculation.
Is that important?
Well, 70% of our entire bloodvessel circulatory system is the
microcirculation.
And what is microcirculation?
(11:13):
What's going on with it?
The microcirculation is thearterioles capillaries and the
venules right or where theaction right, and so the
arterioles open and let toincrease flow or decrease flow,
and that's all coordinated bythe autonomic nervous system.
And the autonomic nervoussystem is your sympathetic and
(11:34):
parasympathetic.
Sympathetic is fight, fight,fight, fight, fight, run, run,
run up.
Parasympathetic is digest.
Anyway, that determines theblood flow to your organs.
Kind of important.
So, beamer, opens them up,because that slows down when you
get older.
I'll show you.
Anyway.
She's tomorrow, I'm in the group, of course, so she'll be giving
a talk and then on the third itwill be donna will be getting
(11:55):
the, the, the, uh, our raw foodlady.
Yeah, well, I have raw food.
I hate that word but I have touse it because I don't.
It's kind of like if I'mtalking to a regular person, I
have to use that zodiac signinstead of CFCs, but it's
uncooked food.
Or how about real food?
Why real food?
Because the earth produced itand anything humans do is called
artifact, artificial.
(12:17):
Just keep that in mind.
What is a kinesiologist?
A kinesiologist is aphysiologist who kind of
sub-specialized in muscles andmovement and stuff like that and
and the effect.
You know how that affects theentire physiology.
So he's an expert in that, inthat regard, and he'll.
You know I need all theresearch and it's it you'll like
(12:38):
, because you know you gottamove, you gotta move, you gotta
move all day, not just two hoursin the gym.
Okay, you gotta move all day.
And, uh, how do you in the gym?
Okay, you got to move all day.
And how do you do that?
How do you do that reasonablyand are you doing?
Is it being effective forgetting what you need?
Do you want to develop?
Are you starting to atrophy?
Are you getting type 2 musclefire?
(13:00):
You know it's called sarcopenia,which happens as you get older,
and it happens with people.
People are sick and they can'tmove around too much.
Anyway, so first session isgoing to be on Tuesday, july 3rd
for Donna, raw food, real foodFood.
Be there.
I mean, just join the Healthand Healing Group, because the
Health and Healing Group you'llhave all this stuff.
Anyway, look on the sitedrlodyodycom and you can see
(13:25):
that.
You can see about these groups.
Anyway, let's get on with thesequestions, right?
Is there a fast way to connectwith high blood pressure?
Wow, when am I feeding office?
Uh, I'm not there very oftenbecause I have an allergy to the
united states of america.
Um, it more of a phobia, youknow.
(13:46):
Afraid of flying, I'm afraid togo to the US.
If I think I'm going to go, I'malready anxious.
Once I realize I have to go,I'm like, oh man, so not often,
I'm sorry about that, but Iinteract with the doctors there,
like what's going on?
So I'm involved in the wholething.
So it's not like I'm.
(14:07):
I mean, I'm there virtually.
It's being said ivermectin hasbeen compromised with meditac.
Is this true?
You know, Diane, probably.
I mean, I don't know.
We cannot, we're not deviousenough.
Consider how far they have gone.
They've gone, they, they, thethe undeclared.
(14:30):
I don't know.
Not many people saw that uhlittle short video I made.
Uh called the undeclared war.
I don't know why.
I guess it's too long, it'smore.
Oh my god, it's more than threeminutes and you know, you know
what.
You know, we, most of us outthere now, are 15 seconds.
Man, if you don't get me in 15seconds, I'm scrolling.
So we've got these scrollbabies.
(14:50):
But it's a thing about AI.
Just watch it.
I mean, bear with it.
It's like, oh my God, sixminutes or five minutes.
I couldn't make it shorter.
I guess I could have.
I could have cut out some part,but anyway, it's important.
We have to understand what awhat they were doing.
You know it's the final assault.
(15:11):
You all know that.
Y'all, y'all know that.
I mean not ai I'm talking about, yeah, ai.
Remember if there was no ai?
Now there is ai everywhere,everywhere, everywhere, and what
we're doing, everybody youunderstand.
If you're using it, you areoutsourcing your thinking, your
mind, outsourcing your mind.
Can I aversion to the US?
Yes, I can.
We're outsourcing our mind andthe more we do that, it's just
(15:31):
like if you outsource yourphysical activity it atrophies,
it shrinks down.
So can I elaborate on my expand,on my aversion to the US?
Yes, come on, I mean you don't,Anyway, okay.
Yes, come on, I mean you don't.
Anyway, ok, if I go through thehistory of it, it's pretty sad
I'll leave that.
But but just being there, andI've lived in several states and
(15:53):
traveled a lot in the US, bornin New York, I quickly
hitchhiked to the US, I mean toCalifornia, at the age of two,
three, no, my mother moved there.
I moved to California, I grewup in California and, yeah, went
all over.
So I know the US pretty well.
I lived in Hawaii 15 years, 15years, fantastic.
(16:17):
But here's the thing, and it'sdifferent.
It's different way differentthan when I was growing up, way
different.
Mm, mm, mm.
Different way.
Different than when I wasgrowing up, way different.
I go there now and I'm inarizona.
We're driving at least maybeevery third block police are
stopping somebody for something.
It's like eight cars around,it's like a big deal.
(16:38):
And I go into the stores andeveryone's got an attitude.
You could buy something.
It's just a weird hard, harshvibe.
Some people are pleasant butthe majority are just kind of an
on edge kind of thing going onand there's these rules and
everybody's like everyone's gotlike an attitude.
(17:00):
It's hard to explain, you haveto be out of it to understand it
, but it's kind of like, youknow, there's just this
confrontational thing going onall the time.
I mean, I remember being in newyork right, I'm in new york.
I was an intern, uh, you know,first or second year out of
medical school.
I was an intern and I was likethis I guess the guy on the left
(17:22):
had like um, you know, gone infront of this guy or something
like that.
You knew it or not.
So this guy pulls up and takesa gun out and shoots him right
there.
It's like whoa.
So anyway, it's a place.
It's aggressive.
You've got to be a sharp man,come on, you've got to do it.
There's a lot of shoulds.
You know what I mean?
You didn't.
(17:42):
You should.
Anyway, there's all that and Idon't have that here.
There's none of that here andthere's a real sense of freedom.
So I don't like being there andmy fear is this, my biggest
fear is this I'll go there forsome reason that I need to be
there and I can't get out.
(18:03):
For some out To be stuck therewould be, and it's not the place
I grew up, or that I I mean.
Now I realize it's always beenthe same, but I the delusion I
had of what it was Founded ongenocide, killed off the natives
, imported black people andenslaved them.
(18:26):
That killed the Mexicans, stoletheir land, went to Hawaii,
killed them, tricked ElilioKalani into giving us Hawaii or
giving us.
She tried to get.
Yeah, she was tricked.
Then we went to war with Spainto get the.
It was called theSpanish-American War.
Guam, puerto Rico andPhilippines.
Guam and Puerto Rico becameterritories and the Philippines
(18:50):
didn't want to.
So we had a war with them andyou can't find it in the history
books.
From 1898 to about 1904, 1906,there was the American-Filipino
War, because we were sayingyou've got to be you know, and
we would build villages next totheir village, you know American
village, and everyone over theage of I guess, 12 or 14, who
(19:12):
did not go within 48 hours wouldbe shot on sight.
Yeah, so we got this close tocommitting genocide.
That means you kill more than50% of a rich.
They celebrate, the Filipinoscelebrate Independence Day, not
on the day that they were freedfrom Spain, who had been
occupied them for 400 years, buton the day they were freed from
(19:33):
us.
That's Filipino IndependenceDay.
So after that, what did we do?
Oh, that's right, we did thisthing with Lusitania.
Wilson hired somebody.
President Wilson hired somebodyto Bernays to convince the
American people that they shouldgo to war.
You described what I've seen.
(19:55):
Yeah, yeah, that's it.
I know they will.
They'll try to exterminate me.
Okay, you know, everything'sreally cool, you know, and I
miss America.
I'm going to give back tosomeone.
All right, I won't tell thetruth.
Yeah, I swear to.
So help me, god, I won't tellthe truth.
There we go.
That's it, you guys.
So let's start with thesequestions, all right, uh, ai
(20:16):
topic.
Go watch it, roddy.
Go on instagram or facebook,whatever you'll see it.
It's stored there or whatever,and it's called the Undeclared
War.
I kind of go through it there.
The Undeclared War, it startedin May of 2024.
May of 2024 was the deployment,the initial deployment.
(20:36):
Check it out.
All right, I got to answerquestions.
I can't.
So now you can join the group,so we can it, we can interact,
okay, all right.
So where are we?
Uh, here's the groups.
This is cheryl.
After chemo scans began to showsimple liver cysts.
Now one is hepatic also nowhave cyst on pancreas that has
(20:57):
grown one and one halfmillimeters since last year.
Can I heal these?
Lots of things?
Just okay, let's just do rightnow some word definitions that
help and a little bit of grammar.
So you said simple liver cysts.
Now one is hepatic.
Hepatic means liver.
When they use the word hepaticit's the medical word.
(21:18):
So it's a hepatic.
That's why you know, you'veheard of hepatitis, itis,
inflammation of the hepatitis,liver.
Okay, so that's it.
So, so it was so.
Liver cysts and then one in thepancreas and a sclerosis since
last year.
And can I heal these?
See, heal, heal is not atransitive verb.
Healing is something thathappens.
You don't do it.
(21:39):
But the reason you said thatand this is very important to
everybody the reason you saidcan I heal these, is because
you're still in that Rockefeller.
It's not your fault.
I'm never meaning to insult oroffend anyone, I'm just trying.
I just want you to realize howdifficult it is for us.
(22:00):
I do it too.
I mean, it's not like I'm, youknow, don't?
I find myself saying words, andit's because we grew up with
that and regardless of whatcountry you're from.
So so you got that because the,the, the, the Rockefeller thing
would be to treat it, to cureit, to fix it because it's
(22:25):
broken, right.
But healing is a process that'sinnate to the organism.
Healing happens, as doesbreathing, because what healing
is?
It's a part of, let's say, youwere way advanced, you were an
(22:47):
alien, I don't know from Nibiru,and you wanted to produce an
organism.
Well, what you'd have to do isyou'd realize that if you
produced all the functionalparts, and, as they're
functioning, that'll begin towear and tear, so they need to
be replaced.
(23:08):
So, as it's going through wearand tear, you're going to have
to have a replacement process.
That's all healing is.
Healing is the replacementprocess.
There's an opening that you'vegot to cut.
It's innate to the organism,but in order for the organism to
heal, it needs to have all ofits needs met, all its
(23:28):
biological requirements met,which is what we would call
nutrition, oxygen, water, allthe things that are necessary,
and then, for us, psychologicalneeds too, anyway.
So healing is an innate processthat's going on with the
organism and it's happening allthe time.
(23:48):
It's never not happening.
Healing.
The word healing, heal, heal,heal, heal is the root word of
health, health, health, health,health.
So health is what is whatHealth is?
Optimal functioning of theorganism who is in a condition
(24:09):
where it is capable of, and isengaged in, continuous health,
healing, healing, healing,healing.
You're healing.
Because what are you healing?
Because there's wear and tear.
You remember, we have new skinevery six weeks.
We have the new lining to ourwhole gastrointestinal system
Every three days.
We've got new rods and cones inour retinas every 48 hours.
We've got a new liver every sixmonths.
(24:29):
So we're pretty dynamic.
We're not just like a thingthat happened, okay, we are
happening.
So all that is just, that'spart of life.
So healing is just we'veseparated that word and concept
from life, but it's part of life, right?
So you've got a big somethingopens your.
You've got a big cut, biglaceration.
(24:52):
Whatever they go to thehospital, what do they do?
They sew it together, they putit together.
You have to heal it.
They can't heal it.
Healing has to happen.
And healing will only happen ifyou are well-nourished and
clean.
So anyway, let me answer thequestion.
I just had to do that becauseit's important.
(25:13):
So you've got these liver, acouple of liver cysts and one
pancreatic cyst that's growing.
Now the Rockefellers, you knowit's hard to fathom for me how
they think, but so when they'retalking about a cyst, what they
mean, what the word means, is afluid filled sack, ok, and the
(25:35):
conventional world says thatwhen you're 50, over 50, you get
more liver cysts because it'spart of aging, which makes no
sense age equals cyst.
And then they go.
Well, it's, you know, hormonalchanges, menopause or whatever,
andropause, all these things.
They don't know what they'retalking about at all.
(25:57):
It also then the pancreas canget them well less.
They happen less frequently inthe pancreas, but but they
happen in the frigate and ofcourse they're going to separate
them into types.
There's, there's types of cysts,right?
So this type, you know, whatyou got to worry about is the
papillary mucinous neoplasms.
Papillary mucinous neoplasmswhat does that mean?
(26:20):
Well, papillary just means it'sa papule, it's like a little
like that.
It's papular Mucinous, it meansit's producing mucus and
neoplasm neo is new, plasm islife, biology, new life.
It's a nice word, but theyturned it into meaning
(26:43):
chronically from everything else.
Nice word, but they turned itinto mean meaning chronically
from everything else.
So, so, and of course it'scalled intraductal papillary
mucinous, uh, neoplasm.
So that that's not enough.
Now we have to call them ipmns.
These are ipmns, and if you'resmart, if you really know what's
happening, you know what anipmn is.
An ipmn is insane, all right.
So, uh, anyway, and what arethese kind of cysts caused by?
(27:06):
They think cysts, you know,just start to you get a sack of
a little sack of fluid becauseyou're old.
Usually cysts are parasites,right, and specifically, more
specifically, they are thetapeworms.
They're they are the tapeworms.
They're just different kind oftapeworms, but the common one
(27:29):
that we have, the beef, which isthe word they call an animal
like a cow or a bull.
So when you want to turn theseorganisms into food and make
them a commodity, you call themthe beef industry.
All right.
(27:50):
So these kinds of beautifulcreatures they get, you know
this.
Let's call it the tineasajinata, and then there's tinea
solium, and so you can get beefI'm using their words, I'm
thinking the way they do.
You can get bovine cowtapeworms and you can get them
for the porcine or a pig, andthen there's one of those long,
(28:12):
ridiculous words for the kind oftapeworm that you get from fish
.
So it all happens if you haveundercooked beef, undercooked
cows, undercooked pigs andundercooked fish.
So freshwater fish seem to be abig problem because here in
Thailand, in Isan, there's anarea of Thailand east end of it
(28:35):
where they eat.
There's a certain dish theyhave that uses these eats the
freshwater fish raw, and thefreshwater fish just happen to
have a, uh, flatworm, uh, it's afluke, it's a liver fluke that
goes in and causescholangiocarcinoma, so, anyway.
So these guys here, the, thetapeworms, can cause cysts in
(28:55):
various organs, and so theycause it.
That's how they make a home.
So they're protectingthemselves, right, they're
insisted they can also get inyour brain.
The incest, especially the dwarftapeworm, is well known for
that, the hymenalpus, hymenalpusnana, hymenalpus nana.
Anyway, the interesting thingabout that particular tapeworm
(29:19):
they call it a dwarf tapeworm,because there are tapeworms that
can be a meter long, three feet.
What's cool with this?
So, uh, anyway, here's this islike the most bizarre thing.
There's this they had a, youknow, a documented situation
where this, uh, this hymenolipus, the dwarf tapeworm, was in
(29:44):
somebody's body and it developedCFCs.
It developed CFCs, not theperson, and then the person
developed CFCs.
And the way they knew this iswhen they biopsied it.
They found in the biopsyspecimen, they took from the
(30:04):
person part of the genetic codeof the tapeworm.
So somehow, you know, and sothe tapeworm got CFCs, and then
the person got CFCs.
That was from the tapeworm andit was no longer the tapeworm,
just having CFCs inside of theperson.
It was the person having CFCs,whoafcs, whoa, yeah, so I mean
(30:27):
that's pretty crazy, um, butanyway, it kind of shows you
also that we divide things intosystem.
We divide things into systemfor that's what words do.
Words are just ways to divideup the perceptual reality of
everything, everything that yousee.
Let's call this this, we'lldefine it as energy, right, and
(30:51):
that's what it is.
But the point I wanted to makewas that the biological
processes we have all these, wehave 100 trillion organisms in
our gut and they're part of us.
They're an aspect of ourdigestion, of producing
neurotransmitters, of modulatingour immune system.
So the biology doesn't end.
(31:13):
So this whole thing with thisdwarf tapeworm just shows you
that the process that was goingon it's not that it was oh wow,
they can cause it, they'reinfectious.
You mean CFCs are infectious.
That's not what it means.
They can cause it, they'reinfectious.
You mean CFCs are infectious.
That's not what it means.
It just means that theenvironment that existed around
the CFCs in the tapeworm waslarge enough to become the
environment of the host, whichis the human, and it's had the
(31:41):
same environment, which thenallowed that process to go on.
Anyway.
So I'm pretty sure that that'swhat's going on with you,
because there's no other reasonfor cysts.
I mean an ovarian cyst.
Yeah, you can have an ovariancyst because of a.
You know, when you have ananovulatory cycle you end up
with a little cyst.
Yeah, but liver and pancreas,so that's what it is.
They won't think of it so theywon't deal with it.
(32:06):
But you're going to be doing aparasite cleanse anyway, I would
think as soon as possible.
You know you might do the basicone, depending on your liver
function.
You've got to know all thatstuff.
But depending on your liverfunction, you might do the
ivermectin, fenbenzazole andniclosamide and then, of course,
(32:27):
nitrozoxanide so that you canget the, or tinnitusol so you
can get the protozoa.
So calcine, legbain.
Have these Doctors gone?
Nuts?
They have gone.
By definition.
They're insane.
No, no, no, they're insane.
Mangala, nothing, nothingcompared to what's going on in
the world right.
(32:48):
Well, now you know we're whoaelective.
I want to go to a surgery likeplease.
You know those people are gonnaask you got to keep something
that's ongoing.
You know those people are goingto ask You've got to keep
rolling it.
By the way, do I have a lot ofpeople on.
(33:10):
How many people do I have on Alittle bit, okay.
So listen the other guy.
I don't know how people do this, why people do this, why would
you come and listen to me if youdon't like me?
Or if you don't like me or ifyou don't?
The other.
I was reading when I when I endthe thing, I was reading the
comments and somebody was likesaid these really nasty things
and told me that I have a, youhave a 60s, and what is with
(33:32):
that 60s?
And I have no idea what thatmeans, because I grew up in the
60s and this ain't a 60s hairdo,it's a 50s hairdo maybe.
In the 60s we all had long hair.
I had hair down the middle ofmy back, so this is not a 60s.
By the way, whoever you arethat don't like me and don't
watch, don't come, you don'thave to come.
(33:54):
And somebody else.
Is he a real doctor?
Yeah, I am.
But what is weird?
Is it because I'm an MD, thatwhat I say has meaning?
So if I wasn't an MD and I saidthe exact same things, it
wouldn't have meaning?
That may be true.
It may be true that you've gotto have these credentials,
(34:19):
anyway.
So it's a good thing that allhappened, decide to do any of
this.
It all happened.
Became a psychologist, but I'vegot all these credentials, so I
guess what I say.
But don't listen If you don'tlike it.
You guys people come on, don'twatch me.
I I'm gonna say what I'm gonnasay.
I'm gonna talk about what I'mgonna talk about and if you've
(34:39):
seen one or two, you realizethat I I'm on a different like
paradigm than other people.
So you don't have to listen.
And, uh, you gotta go back, asyou're not old enough, maybe,
but you gotta go back and try tolook at the pictures of the 60s
.
This ain't a 60s hairdo, ormaybe 62, nick, 63, you know.
And bobby rydell, and who else?
And elvis, you know what's hisname, ricky nelson, right?
(35:04):
And then what happened?
These guys from liverpoolshowed up.
Was it 63?
These guys from liverpoolshowed up and uh, world.
Anyway, let's get back toquestions.
Second question was this isReed, he says best steps for
reducing hypertension.
All right.
Well, hypertension, as you know, that's the medical word for
(35:28):
high blood pressure, hypertension on the blood vessels,
and that's what's happening, allright.
And so when we look, when wemeasure blood pressure,
hypertension on the bloodvessels.
And that's what's happening,all right.
And so when we look, when wemeasure blood pressure, we get
the systolic over the diastolic,right.
So they put the cuff on andthey're listening.
What are they listening for?
Well, that was the old school.
Now they just have machines doit.
But we actually just listen andyou're listening for what.
(35:51):
You squeeze, you tighten, you,you know, you put that around,
right, the stigma monometer, andthen, uh, you tighten it and
then you squeak, you start.
We used to pump it and it wouldsqueeze and we'd be listening
here, right to this artery, andwe would wait until there was no
, you couldn't hear anything.
And then we're listening, andthen we let off, we let the air
(36:14):
out, the pressure out, and assoon as we hear boom, boom, boom
, the first bump, that's yoursystolic.
And then, when they go away,that's your diastolic pressure,
right.
What that means is the systolicmeans that is the maximum
amount of pressure that is beingproduced by the force of your
heart and the blood goingthrough.
(36:35):
And why is that?
How do you know?
By that?
Because if you've squeezed itso that there's no blood flow,
then that's more pressure thanthe heart's putting to push the
blood through right.
Then you're letting off thatcuff and as soon as you get to
the point where it's equal tothe pressure that the heart's
(36:56):
doing, it'll start to flow, boom, boom, boom, boom.
And then when it stops flowingyou don't hear it anymore.
It's because you've completelylet it off and it's just so.
The systolic, that's what, boom, boom hitting it.
So if you have continual highblood pressure with especially
systolic, your arteries aregoing to get frayed and and they
(37:20):
can even you can even formaneurysms and you can.
And if that and remember that'sgoing through the kidneys,
you're going to get kidneyproblems.
So it's any organ is going togo and the diastolic is the
lowest, it's going to be and, uh, that's the lowest number.
So if that's high, that meansthere's didn't never resolve, so
throughout your system it'salways high.
(37:41):
So there's all kinds ofproblems that happen along in
time, for everything fromblindness to kidney failure, to
you name it.
It just happens strokes, heartattacks, heart failure.
I mean it doesn't.
I mean it doesn't matter, I'mjust saying a lot of things
happen, so it'd be better to nothave that situation going on.
Now, what do you do?
(38:02):
It's really easy, but I meanit's simple but not easy, and
that is do a water fast ifyou're, either.
If you're not, don't jump inthe water.
Do a juice cleanse.
Do a fresh juice with enoughfruit to make a delicious uh
cleanse for three weeks I'llprobably do, depending on how
(38:22):
old you are and how long it'sbeen going on, and stuff like
that.
Um, four weeks.
But you might, hey, you're on acleanse, go for it, do the one
you need to do.
We all need to do a good six toeight week, just clean it out.
You know you take your car infor 50 000 mile, whatever it's
time.
You know when was the last timeyou changed your oil or rotated
your tires, or okay, so it'stime to do that.
(38:45):
Change our spark plugs, we needto do that.
Um, but anyway, you do that andyou, your blood pressure will
not be pretty normal and youwon't be taking any medication,
because if you take themedications it'll get too low.
And then, when you resume eating, you eat food that we were
(39:05):
designed to eat, which is plants.
It's cool, you hear the birds,I love it.
So, plants, you know, fruit,seeds, nuts, stems, leaves,
roots, and you eat that anddon't try to imbue any magical
powers into it.
Isn't that one of the reasonsthat cooking might have started
(39:29):
To impart magical powers?
Now, I think it actuallystarted when people started to
eat animals, because there's noway nobody anywhere looks at an
animal and says, wow, you know,an animal walking right and and
you certainly don't startsalivating if you're walking
along and there's a dead animal.
So I mean, the only way youcould decide to put that in your
(39:52):
mouth would be to do somethingto it.
It smells pretty funky.
It's not that way with tomatoesand broccoli, anyway.
So I digress, so that.
And then, of course, the.
What do you call it?
So if you're eating uncookedfood and it's plants you're not
going to have, your bloodpressure will be normal, your
blood sugar is normal,everything, your liver function,
(40:12):
everything gets normal I have.
Your blood pressure will benormal, your blood sugars,
everything, your liver function,everything gets.
I'm sorry to use the wordnormal, I really apologize.
I meant healthy, all right Now.
Or you can do water-based.
And the other thing is, ifyou're not ready for that, but
you want to stop takingmedications drugs for that,
(40:34):
eating within a six-hour window,so that but you want to stop
taking medications, drugs forthat?
Um, eating within a six-hourwindow.
So that means you don't eat for18, and remember that's it.
Uh, 30 years old, three hours.
40 years old, four hours.
50 years old or older, fivehours before sleep.
You stop eating for a thousandreasons, we'll go over it later.
So so you're eating during athousand reasons, we'll go over
(40:56):
it later.
So so you're eating during asix hour window and you stop
eating for three, four, fivehours before sleep.
So then you have 18 hours ofnot eating and it cleans out
toxins because, basically,hypertension or increased blood
pressure.
It's that, for there aremultiple reasons why it has to
happen, why the body isrequiring, because everything
that happens in the body,remember, is a an adaptive
physiological response right toa situation where its needs are
(41:20):
not being met.
Because if, if the needs arebeing met, if everything's being
met, then it'll just be thefunctional, healthy process, but
if the needs are not being metand it has to modify, so, um,
you know, and and it can bebecause of kidney problems.
It can be.
You know what are they from?
You got to find what are they.
(41:40):
How did you get that?
Are you having a problem withinsulin resistance?
You know?
So you know what it all comesdown to.
It's crazy and it turns out tobe true.
And that's eating.
There's definitely psychosocial, psychoemotional aspect to it
all.
Yeah, absolutely.
In fact, eating ispsychoemotional.
(42:02):
That's the problem with eatingis because we don't eat to
nourish ourselves.
We eat to please our tongues,to please our appetites.
That's why Because I always atethis, I grew up eating it.
Therefore, I know we're allcursed with that.
We're cursed with ourupbringing and our and what we
have, whatever it was, becauseno place there's no.
(42:24):
By the way, everyone thinksthat their country and their
culture is the best, just liketheir religion is the best.
Turns out, they're all not.
There's no diet.
I've never seen, seen acountry's diet.
Well, the Mediterranean diet,okay, yeah, so it's got less
junk.
And look at the results.
That's pretty good, but lessjunk.
Imagine no junk.
(42:45):
Imagine a real diet.
You're an extremist, matt.
I want you to understandsomething.
We are considered eccentricextremists for seeking health in
the only way it can be obtained.
You're an extremist if you seekhealth in the only way it can
be obtained.
So any cognitive dissonancethere.
(43:06):
For me it's a cognitive crash.
So I'm just that will happen.
Now the other, you know, ofcourse.
Uh, you, if you want to takesupplements and stuff, they help
.
Garlic is well-known for it,green tea, l-arginine.
You all know what L-arginine is.
Arginine is an amino acid thatkind of initiates, or is
(43:28):
necessary for a process, forproduction of arterioles, of
nitric oxide, and nitric oxidecauses blood vessels to expand
and open up, so you kind of getthe flow.
So arginine will increasenitric oxide production in the
arterial system that we weretalking about earlier.
That is the arterial system.
(43:50):
So the little arteries andthese arteriolesials, these
little arterials about 10 ofthem would fit in one hair.
That's how small these guys areand, uh, and they're pretty.
They're controlled by the, bythe autonomic, by the um
autonomic nervous system.
Ans you can use the wordautonomic, say automatic,
(44:10):
automatic.
We don't have to think aboutthe non-voluntary part of our
nervous system.
This is voluntary, right, andall the other stuff that's going
on is not voluntary and needsto be coordinated by the nervous
system.
Nerves are how things move.
So you had garlic, the green tea, the L-Arginine, coenzyme Q10,
especially if you're taking astatin, vitamin D and potassium,
(44:34):
if you're not eating a lot ofplants, which you should start
doing.
See, if you do all this, you'llbe getting all that and you
don't have to worry about it.
But you know, potassium veryimportant Potassium and
magnesium big deal with bloodpressure and we don't have
enough.
We usually keep our potassiumsokay but you know, I'd say most
people are magnesium deficientand you can't do a blood test on
it and you don't need to do ablood test, don't need to test
(44:57):
and find out.
Do I have just eat right?
What are you going to do?
If it's low, you're going toeat right.
If it's not low, you can eatwrong.
No, you're going to continue toeat healthy.
So, since that's the answer toeverything, why test?
Because I want to know what itis.
(45:19):
What if there's no it?
What if it's everything?
Yeah, so, anyway, the reasonwe're looking for an it is so
that we can get rid of it.
It's a no, it's a rockefellerthing.
I'm telling you got tounderstand how deep and uh, this
language goes all right.
And vitamin d it's amazing.
You know, high level, you gotreally high levels of vitamin d
30 less%, less blood pressure isdown, yeah, anyway, garlic,
people take either raw garlic,you know, you can squeeze the
(45:43):
clove, garlic's amazing.
And onions, you know, andthat's where we get a lot of.
You know those are really goodfor giving our body sulfur,
which we need sulfur Because youneed selfhydryl groups.
You know they're part of thewhole detox system, the
glutathione.
So yeah, elizabeth, sufferingwith dry eye, eyes are
(46:06):
constantly watery.
It keeps me from going outside Abreeze or beach air throws it
over the edge.
Try it all kinds of drops.
Using an eye drop now thatcontains flax oil helps some,
but doesn't stop the runningeyes.
Why is it happening?
How can I heal thisholistically?
(46:26):
How can this heal?
Remember, it's not a transitiveverb how can I ensure that all
the biological and physiologicalrequirements are being met so
that my body does not need to gothrough this adaptive process
anymore?
Let's think that way becauseit's really helpful.
Ok, so now they said dry eyes,and then you know about watering
(46:46):
eyes.
But, but it's really, I wish Icould have it.
You know I if, if we were allon Zoom, I could share the
screen, I could show you the,the diagram.
But, uh, you know, because theeyes are uh and tears are a
really important thing.
Right, we make tears because ofuh, to protect the eyeball.
Right, that's what it's for.
And uh, where is that thing?
(47:08):
So, uh, I wish, how can.
I wish I could share it withyou.
But anyway, if you can picturethe eye, the eye is a ball, but
the part we see, the almond thatwe see.
So up here in the outer part,right, you have the lacrimal
gland and then you have allthese meibobium glands in here
(47:28):
and up inside of that lid and inthere, and then you've got some
goblet cells.
They all contribute to what atear is.
Can you imagine?
So a tear has got basicallythree layers.
Right, it's got an oil layer, awater layer and then a mucus
(47:52):
layer.
Didn't think it was thatcomplicated, right, okay, and
then over here they were thetears and they drain into the
lacrimal sac.
That's called lacrimal gland,lacrimal sac, which grabs it,
holds the tears and then they goout through the lacrimal duct
into your mouth.
You throw.
All right.
So if you got watery eyes, allthe, it's usually because
(48:13):
there's some kind of blockage inthe lacrimal duct system.
So if you're producing a lotfrom your lacrimal gland, which
is only the water part, it's themy bobeian glands that produce
the oil part.
My bobeian gland is the namefor a sebaceous gland in the eye
(48:35):
and a sebaceous gland is whatwe have all over.
So you've heard of cystic acneand stuff like that.
It's those glands, the sebumglands, the glands that produce
oil.
To keep us oiled, we have to bewell oiled.
Yeah, and do you realize thatit's's even though we're into
this?
We've been Rockefellerized somuch that we think you've got to
(49:00):
take a shower every day, twicea day, and I do.
I mean, I grew up I couldn't.
I wish I wasn't this way, but Iwouldn't feel right on this day
too, if I hadn't showered.
Day two, if I hadn't showered.
We should only bathe once.
Imagine a natural or shower two, three times a week, because we
need all that.
(49:22):
It doesn't smell.
It's because we're not used toour smells Pheromones Listen.
I remember when I was 16 orwhatever, I'd be friends of mine
and I would be going out guysand they're putting on this
cologne.
It was hard.
And then and then you meet agirl and she's a lot of perfumes
(49:44):
.
I guess a minor mild scent wouldbe okay, but you know what
happened to just us being like,you know, like smelling each
other.
Why don't you know?
Um, you know, you know likesmelling each other.
You know a mother who's nursingthe baby's.
A big part of the baby'sinteraction is and that's why we
have these certain kinds ofglands in our axillary areas,
(50:06):
armpits, that we say, oh, hestinks.
Those are those glands arewhich impart your smell.
Those are those glands arewhich impart your smell and that
baby, while it's nursing, knowsyou by smell, not by name, not
by concept, by smell, so a babycan tell.
If another woman were to holdthe baby, the baby would know by
the smell.
So it's very important.
(50:27):
So it's just like we no longertaste food, we taste sauces.
What about just eating?
Imagine eating a salad withoutany sauce, and you don't even
have to do that.
You could just have a couple ofcucumbers, tomato, avocado,
different kinds of leafyvegetables and lettuce and stuff
.
Just eat them that way.
(50:49):
Remember, the best sauce ishunger, because if you're really
about what you're going to eat,if you've got in front of you
organic, fresh food and you'rehungry, you're going to eat it.
But if you're saying you know Ireally need that, then you're
no longer.
It's not hunger anymore.
Now we're dealing with appetite.
(51:09):
You don't want to feed appetite, you only want to feed hunger.
Anyway, the eye is a very, veryinteresting thing.
I mean you think you would tear, just talking about tears.
So you've got three aspects toit.
So the goblet cells down hereproduce the mucus.
The mucus kind of adheres tothe covering of the eye, the
water part keeps it fluid, andthe and the meibomian mixed with
(51:31):
the water part, the oil, tomake it not evaporate so quickly
, just to hang around and thenit all gets drained down here.
How do you produce tears Uphere in this lacrimal sac every
time you blink?
And every time you blink youalso squeeze a muscle over here
which causes the lacrimal ductsystem to drain, to constrain.
Pretty amazing.
Lacrimal duct system to drain,to constrain Pretty amazing.
(51:56):
I'm just always amazed thatpeople think this happened
randomly.
It's a complicated, incrediblycomplex system.
It's a complexity that justdidn't happen Out of what, out
of the hat.
It's a madness, madness.
And then we won't even go intohow the eye actually is able to
(52:19):
pick up light.
And so you've got this systemhere.
Now you know that we have acentral nervous system, a brain
and a spinal cord, and then thenerves that go out from our
central nervous system arecalled peripheral nerves, and
that's what happens, how we canmove and all this stuff right,
and that's how our digestivestuff happens through, and those
are parasympathetic nerveswhich are starting the brain,
(52:41):
natural central nervous system,but that's the uh autonomic
nervous system, right, but?
And so part of that, so part ofthat is any nerves coming out
of the brain, one of the wordsfor this thing up here on top of
our shoulders.
It's called the cranium, thecranial vault.
We have 12 cranial nerves.
I just this rabbit hole justappeared to me, I'm not going to
(53:04):
take you there.
Anyway, cranial nerve numberfive and number seven are
involved with tear production.
It's that complex.
So, cranial nerve number sevenis our facial nerve.
It's called and now, by the way, that's the one that gets,
that's the one that what's hisname?
Justin Bieber, bieber, bieber,bieber, bieber.
(53:28):
He got Bell's palsy, couldn'tmove.
How did he get that?
I think wasn't that one of thegifts that Pfizer was giving?
I don't know, was Modernagiving that gift as well?
Anyway, so, cranial nervenumber seven.
And then there's cranial nervenumber five.
So the cranial number five,which is called the trigeminal
(53:50):
nerve that's pretty much for thesensation, so your eye has
feeling called the trigeminalnerve, that's pretty much for
the uh sensation, so that theyhave, uh, you have feel, your
eye has feeling you if somethingis on your eyelid, you eyeball,
you know, and theparasympathetic.
And then number seven is theone that controls the secretion,
the production and also thedrainage.
So it's a very complex process.
So if you're having dry eyes,that's one thing.
(54:12):
So dry eyes you're not going tohave to.
And we and they've got, they'vegot thousands of names for why
it happens.
There's autoimmune problems.
You can have a my bobean oh, bythe way, you know those, my
bobean glands, we're talkingabout that produce the sebum.
Those when you say you have, oryou think you have, or you see
someone with what they call astye.
A stye is just that it's kindof like an acne on, because acne
(54:36):
is when your sebaceous glandgets plugged.
So when it gets plugged overthere in your eye, you got a sty
.
So if you're having watery eyes, oh, by the way, and we make,
we produce the tears every timewe blink and they're up here
right every time we blink.
So that's why you know you'llbe going.
(54:56):
If you're in wind or something,you're going to close it for a
while, and all this is done likeinstinctively, right, we don't
have to think about it.
It's pretty amazing.
But anyway, you know there arecertain drugs that can cause it
as well, right, you know, likeantihistamines, high blood
pressure medications and stufflike that can cause reduced tear
(55:18):
production.
That would be truly of dry eyes.
Then, of course, the autonomicnervous, the autoimmune diseases
.
Autoimmune means that theimmune system freaked out and is
attacking you.
It doesn't happen that way, sothey have different names.
They call them Sjogren'ssyndrome, and then Sika is for
dry eyes and lupus can do it.
It doesn't happen that way, sothey have different names.
They call them shogren'ssyndrome, and the sika is for
dry eyes and lupus can do it.
(55:41):
So there's all kinds ofsyndromes and it's not there's,
there's no such thing asautonomic.
Yeah, autoimmune we've talkedabout that before, we'll do it
again, but not right now.
So there's nothing.
And so if anything can damagethat lacrimal gland, then you
won't have production, right,and the just being dehydrated
(56:02):
can do it, right.
But you know one thing to keepin mind there are three kinds of
tears, right, there's the basaltears, the reflex tears and the
emotional tears.
So basal tears are the amountof tears that are being the
fluid liquid that's going overthe eye Every time you blink.
You produce it and you drain it.
You produce it and you drain it.
Now that's basal, and thenreflexive tears are something
(56:25):
gets in your eye or it's dry andyou can make tears and then
tears are emotional tears.
So this is good for your health.
So I don't know what else to sayabout it, but a lot of times,
with the watery one that's goingon with you, I guess you feel
dry and then it gets watery.
If it's dry, you know you canbuy what do they call it?
(56:45):
It's just normal saline, justto keep your eyes moist, because
you've got to keep them moist.
It's a protective thing.
It's very important.
They call them what?
Something tears.
I don't know.
You don't need a prescription, Ihope, and I mean you don't hear
it.
I mean, so I, I don't knowabout the gulag, maybe you do
(57:06):
need it there.
Uh, I don't think so.
Um, but they call them tears orwhatever they call it anyway.
Um, but the problem I've seenmost people is that the drainage
something is blocking thedrainage Right and sometimes
actually in those.
If you could see it like righthere, this inside Right, you've
got two drains.
(57:28):
People get, you know, like youget kidney stones, you get
gallbladder stones, you can getstones.
They're formation, crystallizeand they can block the uh, but
normally if that's happening alot, you're going to get pain
there too.
You're going to feel it becauseit'll.
It'll cause inflammation, right, and stuff, but not necessarily
at the beginning.
(57:49):
So there's a lot of reasons forwhat could be going on.
And honestly, you, whatevercondition you have, do a cleanse
.
If you get rid of the junk,you'd be blown away with what's
left.
What's left is a fantastic you.
Yeah, okay, but you know thestuff you're using with the flax
(58:11):
oil sounds great.
If you've got an eye drop, it'sprobably a normal saline.
You know mild salt With flax.
It's fantastic.
So if it's that, that means it'sdry.
So you're not watering.
So I guess you're going backand forth.
It's dry sometimes in water,but if it's dry, if it's truly
dry, then that means you're notproducing it.
(58:32):
And the question is what'sgoing on with that, what's in
the way of that?
It?
And the question is what'sgoing on with that, what's in
the way of that?
And, as we've just discussed,it could be cranial nerve number
seven and then anythinginflammation of any of the my
bobean glands or not the goblets.
So you got to cleanse that's.
You know, if you collectbecause something is preventing
a flow, your flow and your flow.
(58:54):
It's all orchestrated by thecranial nerve number seven, the
facial nerve, which is eyes,face and mouth, and then the
trigeminal is jaws and tongue.
And, by the way, if you've gotit, or a dysbiosis nasally, in
(59:16):
other words you've got, ifyou've got a dysbiosis nasally,
in other words you've got anot-so-healthy relative
proportions of microorganisms.
They have access to your brainthrough the cranial nerves.
They have access to your brainthrough the cranial nerves.
So you want to make sure youroral health is good.
Hi, burley, I asked about mythere.
I want to see you guys there.
Vitamin A will cite Notnecessarily it's necessary
(59:42):
Vitamin A and remember vitamin Aand there's all that Lutein,
but you need it to cite andother things.
So I asked about my doctor'shigh number on a previous
episode.
Just to give you moreinformation about the situation.
She's just 53 in May and is notoverweight, healthy all her life
.
She originally went to see thedoctor for fatigue, so exhausted
(01:00:03):
she could barely do day-to-dayactivities.
That's when they did all thetesting and found her AST number
was 211.
Her ALT was normal.
She also has gotten a positivenegative pap test report.
It will come back negative andgo back in for another test and
(01:00:24):
it comes back normal.
So now her doctor isrecommending a full hysterectomy
, with losing mom to ovarianCFCs.
Her doctor tells her all ofthese issues could be caused by
menopause.
I was wondering if she couldhave parasites.
Literally All of theseconditions, horrible conditions,
are caused by menopause, whichis a natural process.
(01:00:47):
Hey doctor, no, are you adoctor Really?
No, Doctor, no, no, I don'tknow how to say it any other way
than no, no, no, no, no.
So her pap smear is coming back, sometimes positive, sometimes
negative.
So we're going to take out yourwhole reproductive system Now,
(01:01:11):
because your mother had CFCs.
You see, you have to understandwhat they've done, the spell
that they put on you.
Okay, now, what is a pap smear?
A pap smear is where they putin a speculum of some sort and
they scrape the cervix.
It's got a little openingcalled the os, not the wizard os
(01:01:34):
and anyway they scrape justaround the inside and outside of
that and they take those cellsand they send them to the
pathologist and they look at itand they describe it and that's
called a diagnosis.
So is they're going to look fornormal, normal cells that would
be in that area or are theyabnormal?
(01:01:56):
And they also look for viruses.
So, uh, and, as you know, theylook for the hpd human
papillomavirus because they'veconvinced everyone this causes
cfcs.
So that's what they do.
So if you're saying you'repositive, that means you had the
cells.
Were what the cells on the testwere malignant, were they
(01:02:19):
chronically fermenting cells orwere they not?
And then your liver functionwent up and that can be caused
by menopause.
No, menopause, a naturalprocess, doesn't cause a problem
.
The doctor's insane.
They're just trying to sell youa surgery.
Now, wait, let me ask.
Let me ask.
Now, let me guess, the doctorthat you're talking about is an
(01:02:40):
obstetrician, gynecologist,right, obgyn, and what does he
do?
Or she?
Is it?
You said she the doc or herdoctor?
All right, anyway, they'retrying.
It's this sales job.
They want to get some money tocut it all out.
So, not all of these issues, nota lot of.
If your ast is higher than youralt, first of all, your alt is
(01:03:01):
normal, your ast is high.
We see that with alcoholusually.
If the ast is like two or threetimes greater than the alt,
that we think of that.
If it was the other way around,not.
So I don't know if your momdrinks, but, um, but is she
taking medications?
There's a lot of reasons whyliver enzymes could be elevated.
(01:03:23):
Is she taking medications thatcould be causing that?
So, uh, there's a lot to lookinto.
So I would still need moreinformation, and what you should
do, burley, is join one of thegroups so that you and I can get
this talked out instead ofanswering a little part of it
every three or four weeks.
Burleigh, do it Join.
So what I'm saying is that itcould be parasites.
(01:03:44):
Parasites are involved ineverything, and so that's like
almost irrelevant.
Yeah, okay, get rid of theparasites anyway, but there's
nothing that's causing it.
Liver enzymes up and an abnormalpap smear.
That goes the best way to takecare of an abnormal pap smear.
Get a clove of garlic andsqueeze it with a garlic press
and somehow, maybe with a tampon, use it and when you go to
(01:04:05):
sleep at night, you put thetampon, you or whatever I don't
know how to do it again, becauseI don't have, I've never, you
know and get that garlic up tothe cervix so that it's being
held there with the tampon andgo to sleep.
Do that every night for aboutone month and then go get
retested, see what happens, butchange your diet, clean up, do a
(01:04:26):
cleanse, all right, so now, ohmy gosh.
So let's see when are we now?
This is Tony.
I traveled to Costa Rica insummer of 2023 and have been
passing yellow rice-shaped eggssince Symptoms include muscle
twitching, bottom irritation,loss of balance.
What do I do?
You need to do a parasitecleanse, a thorough one that
(01:04:48):
we've talked about.
A thorough one, because youknow the reason.
Listen, costa Rica is maybe theparasite capital of the world
now, but you know you've gotChagas disease.
You know, with the trypanosomacruzi, you know, as we get
(01:05:09):
enlarged organs and you get thatjust from the feces or urine of
different animals, somehow itgets into the food supply.
I don't know how it happens,right.
And then there's a screw wormdown there, the unolverable
screw worm, and screw worms canget in and they stay in, right.
And then, of course, there'sthe famous bot fly, where the
(01:05:34):
larva migrated throughout yourbody.
It's disgusting.
And then you've got the onesthat are in the soil.
They could go, the helmets thatwith typical ones that we talk
about, right, the roundworms,the whipworms, the hookworms
they're all there.
You know which is nematodes andstuff like that.
It's, you know, it's, it's gotpretty much all, all of them.
(01:05:55):
So, and if you were in CostaRica and you were eating animals
, so just do a thorough one.
If I had that situation for me,I would be taking ivermectin.
If my liver enzymes were good,I would probably be taking 12
milligrams three times a day.
I'd probably be taking10-bendazole-222 three times a
day or mebendazole-500 threetimes a day.
I'd be taking niclosamide 500times a day and prosaquantum 600
(01:06:20):
times a day.
It's a lot, right, you know,and I would do three weeks on
when we go through these.
No, we did that for a while.
That's what I would do.
Of course, I'd have to find adoctor to prescribe it for me.
Oh, I wouldn't, because I'm inone of those countries that.
Oh, I wouldn't, because I'm inone of those countries that they
think that their populace issmart enough to take care of
(01:06:42):
themselves in certain ways.
So you're losing your balanceand everything like that.
So you also need the, you neednitrozoxanide, alinea as well,
and then some antifungal at theend, like Fluconazole, and you
can do them all three weeks on,one week off.
Three weeks on one week off.
There's no magic about that.
You can be four weeks on twoweeks off, two weeks on one week
(01:07:05):
off.
I guess you could do that Right.
So there's no specific magicalformula and that's really
important to know.
Okay, it's how well you'redoing with it.
A lot of people have problemswith pros and cons.
So if you're taking all that,so what you might want to do is
maybe start with one and takethat two days, had a second one,
(01:07:28):
two days, so you can kind ofsee if any of them are going to
cause a problem.
But most people I took them alland never knew I was doing it,
except that I did it.
It shouldn't be a problem.
Going back to the cervical, youknow, I don't know if she had
cervical dysplasia or not.
What is that noise going on?
Listen, I moved to the mostbeautiful place I live, on the
(01:07:50):
beach.
It was like lie on, lie on, lieon, yeah, and perfect nothing.
They're building a resort nextdoor and so I gotta move.
I mean it's all day it's gonnabe this noisy and then, and then
, when they're done, I meanthere's gonna be all these
(01:08:13):
people here and and it's justgonna be such a nice beat.
So I gotta move.
But I found the place.
I mean I found an area to moveto, to move, but I found the
place.
I mean I found an area to moveto.
Uh, yeah, it pisses me offanyway, let's get back to here.
You guys, uh, but the dysplasia,cervical dysplasia now, if
you're anywhere near you newyork, go see dr zhang z-h-a-n-g
(01:08:33):
zhang clinic in manhattan.
Hey, I used to work withbecause I was in new york.
Uh, this guy's amazing.
He's got for that.
You have an abnormal pap smear.
You do what he is and you won'thave an.
Uh, he's got two things a sprayanalysis and the spray allison
is the chemical compound in thatgarlic.
And then he's got something hecalls watermelon frost.
(01:08:56):
It's some herbs.
You spray those on a tampon andthen put it in when you go to
sleep.
30 days and I've done it withprobably a couple hundred women
and it goes back to normal.
So if she's having cervicaldysplasia I know she didn't have
anything other than dysplasia,otherwise they would have tried
(01:09:17):
to rip it out of her sooner.
Now they're going to rip it outanyway because she's got that
and liver.
Yeah, all of this could becaused by menopause.
What an absurd thing to say.
Tell him you think you knowthat all his problems are due to
his tongue.
So you're going to remove histongue and he'll be much better
off.
So where am I?
Okay, this is Kika.
(01:09:38):
Regarding lung CFCs isPanchakarma detox beneficial for
lung?
My husband's on ivermectin,evandazole, curcumin, zinc, no
animal flange, no chemo radio,no biopsy.
Only lung CT scan showedsomething we don't know name or
stage.
Good, and you're adding myclose of my in Burberry sounds,
(01:10:02):
sounds great, as I'll get a lotof good things.
I punch karma is important.
Yeah, do it, do it.
Do it because they're gonna,yeah, they're gonna, clean you
out.
They you know, though you knowpunch karma.
You know they do therapeuticvomiting if they have to, or
therapeutic enemas or other skin.
It's quite involved.
Yeah, and we don't know if it'sa CFC.
(01:10:23):
You don't know what it is.
If you didn't do biopsy, thenyou don't have the histological
descriptions and you don't needit.
There's no it.
Just realize that there's anadaptive process going on.
I need to get my body in asituation where nothing needs to
adapt because everything's allbeing met.
Right, all the stuff is beingmet, but everything you're doing
(01:10:44):
sounds good and I hope you knowhe.
I hope your husband did athorough juice cleanse three,
four, six, eight, twelve weeks.
And now that he's eating again,he's eating in a six, four to
six hour window and stoppingfour to five hours before bed
and he's eating human food.
So all these supplements aregreat, but the underlying
(01:11:07):
fundamental physiology has to besupported, because what are we
looking to achieve With anysituation?
Our goal is to restore healthyphysiology.
That's our goal.
We don't have another goal.
If we restore healthyphysiology, everything's working
perfectly.
That's our goal.
You don't want just this partto work and not the rest.
(01:11:29):
You want it all to work.
The stuff you're doing is good,but you've got to clean healthy
physiology.
Going to bed by 9 pm latest,sleep, go to bed earlier, go to
sleep by 9.
Just live healthy.
And the panchakarmas and theantiparasitics are great.
Three weeks on, one week offKerala.
(01:11:50):
So are you I don't know firsttime you've been to Kerala?
Do you know Amma?
Do you know Amma Hugging saint?
I got hugged by her twice.
I was in New York, I was livingin New York.
Amazing, she's in Kerala andthat's where Ramana Maharshi was
(01:12:12):
.
Kerala is cool.
It's a cool southern part ofIndia.
So, yeah, yeah, yeah, kika,good, join the group so we can
talk Somewhat you've beendiagnosed wrongly with
delusional parasitosis.
Yeah, don't go to anybody andthey don't need anybody, so you
don't go to them.
You've got to join the parasitegroup, okay, because we know
(01:12:34):
you're not delusional, we knowthat these guys you know it's
the greatest, greatest people,the whole medical profession.
Yeah, her hug was incredible.
She's an incredible lady,except that she's diabetic and
she's overweight and stuff,because she's obligated to eat
the food that her devotees giveto her.
(01:12:55):
I was going to be part of theirbuilding a hospital down there.
I was going to be part of theirbuilding a hospital down there.
I was going to be part of it,but it never happened.
Marina, when drinking a greenjuice every day, is it possible
for the body to become resistantto chlorophyll?
No, same person For testicularCFCs.
Painful sensation in theesophagus area.
(01:13:17):
Five months ago, the pain wasin the upper chest, but it went
away after fasting.
Well, esophagus is here in yourupper chest, so that sounds.
I'm confused.
Oh, okay, so the painfulsensation in the esophagus was
five months ago.
Right, the pain was in theupper chest, so that it went
(01:13:37):
away after fasting.
So what would be yourrecommendation?
Well, you guys got to join thegroup so we can interact.
I'm telling you join the groups, drlodycom, join the groups.
So yeah, the esophagus goesfrom here to the stomach.
It's the tube that carries,which is chewed to the stomach.
(01:13:59):
So the testicular.
If they did an orchiectomy, theytook off the testicle usually
and I think I remember a coupleweeks ago, anyway, excuse me the
CFCs can find their way up intodifferent lymph nodes and
(01:14:20):
that's not uncommon up here.
That could be it.
And so the fasting resolved thepain, which tells you a lot of
information that tells you thatyou can't act.
But the pain was ameliorated byfasting.
So, wow.
So what is fasting doing?
It must be going right for thecause of the pain.
The pain was probably a swollenlymph node and it's going away.
(01:14:45):
That's pretty good, becausethere's no other treatment for
swollen lymph nodes unless youcut them out.
That's what they do.
We're going to cut them out andwe're going to cut out these
other ones just so they don'tget.
So intermittent fasting.
Now, intermittent fasting isnot what they think.
It means.
Within a four-hour window isnot intermittent fasting, it's
healthy eating.
A fast is 24 hours of no food.
(01:15:08):
So intermittent fasting wouldbe something like you fast for
five days and then you do thatevery eight weeks or six weeks,
or you fast on Sundays, or youfast.
That's intermittent, so you'vegot to do that now, because now
you know that works All right.
So here's, mariana, I would liketo know if you can heal your
(01:15:29):
eye issues with eating.
Well, everyone's using this.
What you're doing is you'resubstituting the word, you're
substituting heal for can youcure?
Because you're looking for cure.
So don't, because it doesn'tfit either.
Yeah, I get it.
Maybe if I talk like this, isthat better?
(01:15:50):
Because then you can't.
Can you hear everybody?
I mean, I got this little fuzzything here and it's supposed to
, uh, keep the other noise out.
Does that help?
No, no, no, please help.
I have some real issues.
I'm so desperate.
I'm willing to give informationover facebook.
Please talk to me.
(01:16:12):
Gail, join the group right now.
Go DrLodycom, drlodycom, jointhe group and we'll talk twice a
week.
Gail, if you need, I'm ready.
You got some real issues.
I'm ready, I'm ready.
This is so much better.
Okay, cool, then I'll do it.
I'll keep it up this way.
It was fine before, ah, nowit's better, sounds better.
(01:16:34):
Okay, sounds better, close,okay.
And then this uh, I think thisis keeping the noise out.
I mean, that's what I'm toldanyway.
Where were we?
Where was that?
Uh, was that here?
Yeah, so, so, so from now on,I'm gonna do that, I'm gonna
start putting that here.
You can do that.
It's got this thing.
It's.
You don't know.
You, can you imagine living in aperfect, beautiful you?
(01:16:57):
You're right on the oceans,right there, and there's trees,
and it's quiet and wonderful,and they're building a resort.
And then on the other side theyalready built one.
A group from China came andit's like a huge monster and
this guy and this guy, so it'slike, and I used to walk on the
beach in the morning.
There was no one, two peoplemaybe, and I'm sure by the time
(01:17:20):
these are built, it's going tobe like I'm in Santa Monica
Beach, waikiki, apatong, milu,and it's all.
For what purpose?
E-d-g-r-e-e-d and greed was hisname.
Yeah, greed, I need more money.
I need more houses.
I need more money.
(01:17:41):
I need more houses.
I need more cars, I need morephones, I need more, because
they're going to make me happy,turns out, everybody.
Just turns out that a thingcannot make you happy.
Gail, you need help.
Where do you go?
I don't know what kind of helpyou need.
If you've got CFCs and you're inthe U S or or Europe Arizona,
an Oasis of Healing, an Oasis ofHealing, an Oasis of Healing.
Just go to anoasisofhealingcomor make it.
(01:18:05):
I got to use that word but it'sbecause it's old, I just did.
Anyway, it'sstopmakingcancercom.
Stopmakingcancercom,stopmakingcancercom.
That will take you to ourwebsite.
Then you can find out and callus if you've got a problem.
Otherwise, join the groups,drlodycom, just go and you'll
join the groups and then we cantalk and interact and work.
(01:18:26):
Okay, I don't know how manytimes I've got to say this.
I've got to say that.
What?
Every family I'm going gonnasay that.
Okay, so where were we?
So the esophagus?
So what I'm saying, marina, isnot.
Clearly, you now know that youcan.
You can.
You're like undoing, removing,eliminating the process.
(01:18:48):
That that is the cause, becausefasting does not, doesn't do
anything else.
It's not like you did somethingto your body.
You stopped doing something toyour body called eating.
It's pretty crazy, it's pretty.
So remember that video.
Uh, I did a short video of thepost called the best thing to do
(01:19:10):
about anything is nothing.
Did you all see that?
And so good job, marina.
Okay, so now Mary says forpatients.
No, we don't like the wordpatient, remember, patient means
sufferer or the person that'senduring.
Okay, so your expertise, please.
Granddaughter, special needs.
Raised her 23,.
(01:19:31):
Has developed five big over oneacross the proximate scene.
Big, what Her converse?
Conservative or ignorant, butalternative or diagnosis I don't
know where?
The cysts, pilar cysts.
Anyway, you got to join me, yougot to join the groups because
this is a complicated situationand there's no way I can ask you
(01:19:54):
In order for us to interact inthis way.
It's the same as a consultation, because you're asking how to
consult with me.
That's how.
Join the groups and I consultwith people all day.
That's what we do.
It's easy, it's fantastic.
That's why I made the groups,because there was no way I could
do consultations on everybody,right.
But now I have these groups andI can.
I do it all day long.
(01:20:14):
Okay, just, I have these groupsand I can't.
I do it all day long.
Okay, just, please.
You've got to keep that in mind.
So, for this is Mary, mary, yeah, yeah.
For for patients who getregular MRIs for metastasis,
what is the best way to detoxfrom the gadolinium?
Okay, so well, whatever.
Okay, so, mary, metastasismeans that it's not yet resolved
(01:20:35):
, all right.
So how do you want to resolvethat?
Let Father Diddy baptize youCassie was born again in the
baby oil, whoa.
So first of all, if you'rehaving metastasis, that means
it's still happening, right?
So you've got to go back andsay have I gotten rid of all the
potential toxicities thatcaused this in the first place?
(01:20:57):
And you got to go to bio, to goto biological dentist.
Uh, I'll go, good one, a realone, get a 3d comb being the
whole things that we're talkingabout.
Right, that's what we're alwaystalking about, the same thing.
You go to the good biological.
Then you got to do thoroughcleanse, colonics there's all
the things that we talk aboutjoin the cfc group and what
you'll get protocols and allkinds of stuff and uh.
(01:21:19):
And then the other thing is,when you do that, you need to do
a parasite cleanse.
Because you will do a parasitecleanse if you're gonna, if you
can do everything you can.
Part of the, the parasitecleanse, the medications used
for that, the ivermectin andbenzo, like close to mine all
kill cf stem cells, which arewhat metastasize.
And your changes diet and allthat.
(01:21:40):
There's no place, there's nosoil for the seed to go to grow
in, and so you're killing theseeds, and that you won't have
the metastasis.
So that's better than more funthan looking for them every year
with an MRI.
You don't need to do that.
What are you going to do if youfind a thing that you're going
to do with chemo?
So, in other words, you have tounderstand.
(01:22:01):
I'm in a good situation, thoughthe big primary and all that's
gone.
All I got are these I want tomake sure I don't have
metastasis, so let me make sureI don't have it.
So I'm going to do all thestuff.
That's what?
How do you get rid of thegadolinium?
Same way Again juice cleanse Agood juice cleanse, right,
drinking just three to fourquarts a day with liters, a lot,
(01:22:21):
so that you're just peeingeverywhere For three weeks, four
weeks.
It'll feel great anyway.
It'll make everything betteranyway.
Saunas, sweating and chelation.
You can do chelation, edta anda combination of them and you
can get oral DMSA.
So you can do chelation.
I would do that and anyway,it's interesting.
(01:22:42):
What we're going to do to helpus resolve a situation is what
we should do for the situationto not have occurred and what we
should yeah, so it's crazy andto keep the situation from
occurring again.
Right, it's amazing, it'samazing.
So, anyway, I didn't get toeverybody today Of course I
never get a chance to get toeverybody and I see breast,
(01:23:04):
breast, breast, triple negative.
Okay, you please join thegroups.
How can I tell?
System of my kidney and fourgallstones, yeah, rhonda.
Yes, system of my kidney andfour gallstones, itonda.
Yes, since I'm getting for.
It's time to do a thoroughcleanse, like everything
(01:23:24):
biological parasite, for thecyst and the gallstones.
You got to clean them up by.
They will dissolve once yourestore the healthy environment
there, because they only, theyonly, they only precipitate
because of the concentration,solution, solute solution,
hydration, ph.
(01:23:45):
It all goes away.
So that's the protocol.
Biological density do athree-week nothing but fresh
vegetable juices with enoughfruit to make it delicious.
Try six weeks and during thattime get two colonics the first
week and then one colonic everyweek after.
Go to sleep early, Move aroundevery 10 minutes of movement and
(01:24:09):
join our group so you canlisten to Darren and all that
stuff.
There's so much stuff coming up,so I want you to remember that
tomorrow is Tuesday.
Okay, monday for you guys.
Monday, but it's really Tuesday.
But no, monday, it's Monday foryou guys.
So tomorrow, on Monday, justremember that Chitvan will be
there, chitvan Malik, she's anexpert on pulsed electromagnetic
(01:24:32):
frequencies, pemf, and veryimportant, very, very important.
And then again the next day,donna begins her raw food thing
for us.
So that'll be for all of you.
People on, oh Kona, it's likethe end of this.
All right, this is you guys.
(01:24:53):
Kona, I'm going to see youtomorrow.
Right now, you're going to joinDrLoricom.
You're going to join.
That's a lot of stuff.
You're talking about SIBO, yeah, but basically you've got to
cleanse and restore your normalgut biome and the candida.
I don't know where it is.
This is easy to resolve.
(01:25:14):
All right, you guys.
Sawasdee, krap, kapoomaka,aloha and namaste, namaskar and
aloha.
See you next week.
Where are we here?
Let's see, come on.
Anyway and you know there'smany here, so many questions.
(01:25:36):
If you join the groups, then wecan get into it.
All right, cause I want to helpeverybody.
That's why I don't doconsultation.
If I was doing consultations,I'd have to spend every day and
I wouldn't be doing this.
I just be every day, and thatwould be one person, and then
one person, one person, and atthe end of the week let's say I
did, let's say I was able to dosix, seven a day.
(01:25:56):
I usually take two hours, threehours or so, so I couldn't six,
maybe five.
How much is that compared towhat we can get?
Many, many more.
So that's why you join thegroups and then, while I'm
answering this person'squestions and working with
theirs, it's going to relate toyou because we're all the same
All right, you guys.
So, aloha sawadikap.