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June 11, 2025 92 mins

Imagine a world where cancer isn't a death sentence but simply a cellular adaptation that can be reversed. Where Parkinson's disease isn't an inevitability but a toxic burden that can be lifted. Dr. Thomas Lodi invites you into this paradigm-shifting perspective where the language we use determines not just our psychological response to illness, but our physiological one as well.

The conventional medical system has taught us to fear diagnoses and surrender our power to specialists wielding toxic treatments. But what if we recognized that these "diseases" are actually adaptive responses by our bodies facing environmental challenges? Dr. Lodi explains how changing our terminology from "cancer" to "chronically fermenting cells" transforms our understanding from fighting a mysterious enemy to supporting metabolic restoration.

When treatment becomes necessary, approaches like insulin-potentiated therapy deliver chemotherapy with precision rather than destruction. By exploiting cancer cells' increased insulin receptors, treatments can target damaged cells like a dart hitting a bullseye rather than a grenade destroying everything in its path. Yet Dr. Lodi emphasizes that addressing the causes—removing toxicity and providing optimal nutrition—remains paramount.

The modern environment bombards us with unprecedented electromagnetic frequencies, compromising our immune systems and triggering adaptive responses we label a

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So I'm late again.
That's because I couldn't getthis set up.
So, anyway, I'm glad you couldjoin us.
We got at least a few peoplehere.

(00:21):
I don't blame you if you wentto, went to bed and you said why
stay up and watch this guy?
Anyway, let's make today a goodday.
I wanted to say a few things youknow, as usual, to you know,
just kind of to remind everyonewhat's going on.
We have the Sunday Night Livesand, as you know, we also have
three groups.
The three groups are the healthand healing group.
The other one is the parasitegroup.

(00:42):
The other one is the parasitegroup.
The other one is the cfc groups, which some people refer to as
capricorn or sagittarius orcancer or something like that.
I think it's cancer anyway, butit's really called chronically
fermenting cells.
Good morning alice and goodmorning everyone.
You know, yeah, I'm here, madeit.
That was very difficult andthank you for hanging in there
and being there.
So, uh, anyway, the content ofthese groups is incredible.

(01:07):
Now it's really growing.
For those of people that are inthe CFC groups, you have the
opportunity of also, in additionto me, doing Zoom meetings with
you and answering discussionson your situation and CFCs in
general.
But you have the opportunity ofjoining Kathy's Corner.

(01:28):
Kathy is a psychotherapist who'sbeen with me for a few years
now, and it's a place where youall get a chance to just forget
all the tests, forget all thetreatments and all that stuff.
But let me tell you how I feeland that's what we do.
We open up, we share about it,we find out how we're really
feeling and thinking about itall, and we find out that

(01:51):
there's other people that arefeeling and thinking the same
things and we're not alone.
And it's a wonderful thing.
Kathy's wonderful, everybodyloves her.
And the other one is Darren,who's a kinesiologist, the only
one of a kind in the world.
Kinesiology is a branch ofphysiology that specializes in

(02:12):
muscles, and muscles are kind ofimportant.
It's how we get around or ithelps us steady ourselves while
we're sitting on the couch, butanyway, our muscles are a big
part and that's where metabolismstarts and everything just gets
going.
So anyway.
But when they're beingappropriately used, your immune

(02:35):
system it goes through the roof.
So, and you develop type twomuscle fibers and you beat
something that happens to all ofus.
It's called frailty.
You know, one of the realcauses of death in elderly, the
most profound is frailty, and italso happens to people who are

(02:57):
sick and just unable to do whatthey need to do.
Hi, kelly, Good morning, thankyou, good evening.
Anyway, it's so good to see youall here, yay, fantastic.
And I see a message in Russian,and that's great, and if I
could only translate that Iwould be able to understand it.

(03:18):
Elisa, who said that oh, that'sMontez, montez, I think you
should go somewhere where you'rehappy.
You're not happy, shut up.
Seriously, I'm already pissedoff.
What?
Well then, you shouldn't behere.
Why would you do that toyourself?
Come on, you like yourself morethan that.
Don't expose yourself to thatkind of stuff, um, but anyway,

(03:41):
so, so at the CFC group, then wehave the parasite group, and
the parasite group and thehealth and healing group have
access to, as I said, everythingexcept Kathy's Corner, but
Darren the kinesiologist,vanessa, who's a nutritionist
and a health coach and a yogainstructor and a meditation
instructor, and she knows how totake you from where you are to

(04:02):
where you want to be.
She helps you get the toolsthat you need, both in mind and
in action.
And then we have Donna Peroni,and she has been a raw food
vegan for about 36 years now Anamazing woman, and she will also
show you how do I make thisstuff taste good so I can eat it

(04:24):
, and she'll teach you about why.
She's also a colon therapist,which is beautiful because she
takes care of both ends of thatlong tube that sits in the
center of our physical being.
Now let me just say this onething here.
So here we are, and in additionto all that, we're doing
webinars, and I did one onvitamin C, which is everything

(04:46):
you wanted to know andeverything you didn't want to
know, but it's everything aboutvitamin C and that's available
on the website, and so we'rehaving webinars like twice a
month, and so if you're a member, of course, there's no fee and
they're available to you all thetime and it's really good.
We kind of need to know whatvitamin c is if we're going to

(05:06):
use it.
We need to know what nadh is ifwe're going to use it, or nad
plus or whatever, whatevertherapies we're going to do, I'm
going to do continued webinarson them, and I'm going to do
that because, um, I don't wantto answer questions really,
because that won't help you.
But what will help you is togive you the information and the

(05:28):
understanding so that you cananswer that question and all the
other ones that will arise.
So my goal is for you to havethe understanding and with that
you're going to find out thatyou'll never need another doctor
the rest of your life, becauseyou'll be your own doctor, and
that's not really that.
I'm using that phraseologybecause that's all we have in
our language.

(05:48):
But you know, doctor means oh,that was doctored up, meaning it
was changed or something right,you fixed it.
So that whole concept needs togo away.
But, in other words, you'll beyour own, you'll guide your life
of health, and when that healthgets imbalanced, you'll be able
, you'll recognize it and you'llknow how to deal with it.
And so you'll have to go seethe technicians when you broke

(06:12):
your leg or you're having acritical situation.
They're excellent at that.
That's where the allopathic MDscome in.
They're excellent at that kindof situation.
Okay, but that's about it.
So there's a lot of content onthere and it's growing even more
.
But that's all available to youif you're on Health and Healing

(06:33):
or Parasites or CFCs, of course, and remember it's at
DRThomasLody on Instagram,facebook, youtube, linkedin, et
cetera.
Rumble, yeah, I'm not sure whatelse there is, but it's
drthomaslodymd at the end on Xand TikTok.

(06:54):
Okay, I did it, got it all done, all right, cool, so let's get
into questions.
Okay, and, by the way, normallyI have a chance to even like go
over them and see what they'regoing to be.
I do that usually an hour ortwo before, just so I know what
we're going to be talking about.
But I didn't have a chance, soI'll be seeing it for the first
time.

(07:14):
The first question is fromJolita and her question is over
the last 10 years, I've alwaysbeen following Dr Lodi, always
for others.
Now I'm in Phuket in a hospitalwith pneumonia, not CFCs.
Luckily, they gave meantibiotics and steroids and
what else.
I haven't had any of thesemedications in more than 30

(07:38):
years.
There are so many people withpneumonia at the moment.
What is the best way to dealwith it?
I am not allowed to fly home toNew Zealand yet, whoa.
Okay, jolita, I'm happy youwrote and you're here in Phuket
Me too.
Well, okay, what is pneumonia?
Pneumonia?
Okay, our respiratory systembegins with our nose and our

(08:00):
mouth, of course, and that'swhere the air goes in.
And it goes in through thebronchus and the trachea, the
bronchus, and they split offinto little bronchioles which go
into the lung matter, theparenchyma as they call it.
The parenchyma means the actualworking part of a tissue.

(08:22):
So the parenchyma of thekidneys is the, or the glomeruli
.
The parenchyma of lungs isactually those little sacs,
alveoli, that exchange gases andit carries, it's connected to
the bronchial, which goes to thebronchus, and those little air
sacs in the lungs they diffuseback and forth into the blood.

(08:46):
So I mean, that's it.
So pneumonia is when you havelarge colonization of one
particular microorganism that iskind of taken over.
Instead of there being awell-balanced like we have a gut
biome, instead of there being awell-balanced biome, this one
group takes over and it's calledby the medical profession as an
infection.
So you know, if you have alittle abscess on your hand or

(09:08):
arm, that you know that's whatthey're calling an infection.
And what an infection is is anovergrowth of a particular
organism in a particular area.
So pneumonia is having itusually refers to in general a
bacterial overgrowth in the lung, and when we look on x-ray we
can see there's a big area thereor a small area, whatever it is

(09:30):
, but it's in the parenchyma,not in the bronchial tubes.
And what is it doing there?
It's compromising yourbreathing.
Not only that, thosemicroorganisms which are in that
little pocket there arediffusing into the blood.
So your risk of having anoverwhelming colonization in

(09:54):
your blood is there.
So it's kind of a nasty thing.
You wind up coughing up phlegmand it can be green and yellow
and you're coughing it up oryou're not coughing, you're not
able to cough it up.
That's another situation.
The other kind of what theycall pneumonia is a viral

(10:17):
pneumonia and it's not at allthe same.
It's not like a pus pocket inyour lung parenchyma, because
viruses don't act that way, butyou can have a viral pneumonia.
So you're probably, I think,talking about a bacterial
pneumonia and you're saying thatthere's a lot of it going
around now.
I wasn't quite aware of that,but I thank you for telling me.

(10:37):
I need to look into that.
But why are all these thingsgoing around?
Why is it that almost everybodyI talk to is having trouble
sleeping.
They're having headaches, youknow they frequently are coming
down with the body aches andlethargy and weakness, and you

(10:59):
know things that we would in theold days was called the flu,
and now we're calling it COVID.
So I don't know.
Anyway, but what's happening iswe're being exposed to
electromagnetic frequencies.
It's so intense it's almostlike we live in a box that's

(11:19):
being irradiated.
It's crazy how our exposure hasincreased, because I think, if,
if you realize that in the year1900 we had, uh, just what is
called ambient or naturallyoccurring electromagnetic
frequencies from the sun right,because the sun is a generator

(11:40):
of electromagnetic frequencies,right.
And then there's, uh, there'sthe extremely low frequencies,
which are the ELF.
Those are low frequency andthey cause a lot of damage to
biological systems, as do thehigher frequencies, emf, which
can go up to now.
We've graduated to 5G, and Ithink someone has told me that

(12:04):
we even have 6G now, which iskind of bizarre.
I didn't even know there was a6G and I heard there's actually
even others.
Let me just make sure I getthis here.
Excuse me one second here.
There it is, is that it?
Yeah, okay, all right, now whatdo you do about it.
They're giving you antibioticsand steroids.

(12:26):
So the reason they givesteroids is usually there's the
immune system is reacting tothis thing that's going on.
The immune system is trying torestore the balance of the
microorganisms and which wouldmean eliminating that pocket of
colonization.
Thank you, hammy, meaneliminating that pocket of
colonization.

(12:46):
Thank you, hemi.
Okay, so in its effort to dothat and combination of what's
going on in the lung, there canbe wheezing and constriction of
ability to breathe and you knowlots of other symptoms which are
really the immune system tryingto do its job, and so the
steroids eliminate that.
And all of a sudden excuse me,I don't have the money the

(13:10):
steroids eliminate that, butunfortunately the steroids also.
They're suppressing the immunesystem system wide, so they're
really an immune suppressant,which is not a good idea.
Let me, there we go.
It's not a good idea, but itmakes people feel better.
And this happens in a lot ofconditions when a doctor is in a
situation with a patient thatthey're working with and they

(13:35):
haven't looked for the cause.
But then, because they don'tlook for the cause, they just
look for which hammers they canuse to knock it down.
But when they're in a situationthat they don't really know how
to do steroids.
That's like, okay, let's dosteroids because that will slow
everything down and they'll feelbetter for a while, they can
get them out of my office, butwhatever, that's what they use.

(13:57):
So the antibiotics are tryingto kill those microorganisms.
Now there are situations whereyou've got to use antibiotics
and that kind of makes you think, well, wait a minute.
Then that means you'resubscribing to the germ theory
and yeah, I'd like to talk aboutthat at some point, about the

(14:18):
germ theory and all that.
But, for instances, you have abacterial overgrowth in your
blood or a fungal overgrowth inyour blood or anywhere else on
your body and it's causing aproblem.
Then there's times when you'vegot to use the antibiotics
intravenously or antifungals.
So there are times for that.
But that doesn't mean we'resubscribing to the germ theory.

(14:39):
That means we're using them tohelp restore balance.
The problem is, thoseantibiotics are also killing the
healthy bacteria that we need.
And are they there everywhere?
There's no place in us thatdoesn't have them Right.
Like 100 trillion in our gut,100 trillion, 100 trillion in
our gut.
We have like 44 species on ourforearm.

(15:02):
When we talk about a microbiome,we're talking about the
differing percentages ofmicroorganisms in a particular
area.
And since microorganisms arethe are the of life out of, you
know, it's the microorganismsthat that, you know, keep carbon
moving and oxygen moving andnitrogen moving and sulfur
moving.
They keep these cycles alive.

(15:22):
Sulfur moving, they keep thesecycles alive, which are the
foundations of life.
Are made up of these atoms andthose cycles that keep them
restored and renewing and beingused is pretty much dominated by
the microorganisms.
The microorganisms also give ustheir metabolism in our systems
, happen to stimulate our immunesystem system, make the immune

(15:45):
system produce most of theserotonin that is necessary, for
it's a neurotransmitter.
It's also called the feel-goodhormone and, um, you know it's,
it was me, it's me like that'smorning.
Yay, I'm ready for, ready forall that.
You know it's a combination ofcortisol and other things, but
but serotonin plays a big partin people who get depressed,

(16:06):
even though they get what arecalled serotonin reuptake
inhibitors, which blocksserotonin from being broken down
, which keeps more serotoninaround.
So the implicit of depressionis that it's a lack of serotonin
.
But that's not it.
However, by giving these SSRIsand they increase the amount of
serotonin available people don'tfeel, as you know, unable to do

(16:33):
anything and all that.
It kind of lifts them out ofthat, although it compromises
the body in so many other waysthat it's almost questionable
about whether or not it wasworth it.
And there are really other waysof doing it.
First of all, restore yourmicrobiome.
Get a healthy microbiome sothey can produce it 90% of it,
and the rest is you have to beable to as well, but anyway.
So, but don't work on restoringyour physiological function,

(16:55):
which would be my goal is to sayhow can we get your physiology
back balanced and functioning,because then you'll be in a
condition that we call health,yeah, so.
So the anemones and thesteroids are kind of what they
do.
It's like the only tools theyhave.
The other tools they might haveis, if you're wheezing because
of what's going on in your lungs, they would give you something
nebulized to breathe in thatwould dilate your bronchioles so

(17:19):
that you can get more airexchange, because the wheezing
is a decrease in air exchange.
It's basically whistling inyour lungs.
So there's those kinds ofthings too.
And pneumonia, by the way, isdistinguished from a bronchitis,
which means that you have this,this sort of overgrowth,
inflammatory process going on inyour bronchial tubes and not

(17:39):
your lung.
So, anyway, those are justterms and they're based on what
I just said, the anatomylocation.
So, um, what do you do?
Well, first of all, whateverthey're doing for you, if the
antibiotics, if you were so sickthat you needed to be admitted
to a hospital, it sounds likeprobably your vital functions
were compromised, you were, youknow, I don't know coughing and

(18:01):
you didn't have enough oxygenand you were mentally uptunted.
I'm not sure what would havehappened with you coughing up a
lot, just weak.
So at a time like that, you givethe antibiotics.
They do eliminate a lot of thebacterial overgrowth in your
lungs and you can start to getbetter.

(18:22):
Because when you're at thepoint where whatever's going on
in your body in terms of amicroorganism overgrowth, when
that's impacting a vitalfunction like breathing, it's
something you've got to takecare of now.
So you know that's where theantibiotics would come in.
But as soon as you're feelingbetter, you're breathing and
you've got the energy again, youknow, then you would probably

(18:43):
consider leaving and then goingto a center that could help you
restore your physiology, whereyou would get intravenous
vitamin C, other intravenousbotanical non-toxic substances,
you know, ozone, curcumin, allthese things that are good for
people with CFCs are also goodfor any condition.

(19:05):
All right, because, remember,the goal is to restore balance
of physiology.
The goal is not to get rid ofanything, because we need to
understand that that thing thatwe're trying to get rid of
exists because there's animbalance, it's a manifestation
of it.
It's just a reminder thatthat's what's going on.
So, although we focus on that,that's not foundationally what's

(19:26):
going on.
So that's what you could do.
And you're in Phuket, so thereare, just look them up.
There are several healingcenters, alternative medical
centers, medical treatmentswhere they give intravenous
vitamin C and other veryimportant things.
So the other thing you can dois cleanse right now, because

(19:47):
you're obviously toxic.
Now you've got the antibiotics,or even more toxic.
So when you get out of there andyou have control of your life
again, you can do a three-weekjuice cleanse, but it might be
hard because apparently you'reon vacation and what is it?
You're not allowed to fly homeyet to new zealand.
Did they tell you whatcondition you have to be in so

(20:09):
you can't fly?
Usually what it is when you geta fit to fly a letter from a
doctor.
It's saying that you are ingood health and well enough to
sit on a plane and you're notgoing to be harmful to other
people.
And so if you can't get, if youare obviously sick, if you
don't look sick, you'll walkonto the plane and no one will

(20:32):
ever ask you anything.
I mean, if you're not sittingin a wheelchair or obviously
incapacitated, you know so, thenthey would give you a fit to
fly and then you could fly.
So I'm not sure what you needfor that or where you're at.
So it's hard to answer yourquestion completely.
All right now, cindy, onesecond please, sorry, okay.

(21:09):
So this is Cindy and herquestion is on chemotherapy and
it says in what cases would yourecommend low-dose chemotherapy?
Besides low-dose chemo, whatother natural compounds would
you recommend specifically totarget and kill CFCs,
specifically to target and killCFCs?
All right, so, cindy andeveryone else who might be

(21:29):
interested to know the answer tothat question, what happened to
me?
Sorry, all right.
So, okay, what does that mean?
Chemotherapy, first of all.
What is Cindy talking aboutwith low-dose chemotherapy?
Why would you give somebodylow-dose chemotherapy when you
really need to get rid of it?
You don't want to waste yourtime.
Well, as it turns out, thestandard chemotherapy that's

(21:52):
given is called maximumtolerated chemotherapy and they
learn through their usuallytheir initial, what they call
preclinical studies, which arewhen they're working with
animals, and for the most partthat's preclinical studies,
which are when they're workingwith animals, and for the most
part that's preclinical.
They find the amount ofchemotherapy that's the most
they can give, because the morethey give, the more it's going

(22:14):
to be able to get into the tumorwithout killing the person, and
so that's what they give.
So it's called maximumtolerated and it's so powerful
because multiple effects, youknow, one is shrinking tumors,
hopefully, but there are otherones that you didn't really want
Ensuring metastasis, ensuringit suppressing the immune system

(22:36):
, harming the gut so that you'renauseated and not even able to
digest your food, if you're ableto get it in, and I mean just
also're able to get it in.
It's unbelievable what it does,but a lot of people are strong
enough at that particular timenot to really get really sick

(22:56):
and that's amazing that theywithstood that, because one of
the effects it does is shrinkthe tumor, which we want.
So what they found was, sincethere were so many serious
effects from it, they startedgiving it in lower doses to see
what it would do.
And initially they found thatlow dose, very low dose
chemotherapy, you know maybe 5%or less at a particular rhythm,

(23:18):
would block blood vessel growths.
And if the tumor doesn't getblood vessels doesn't get blood,
it can't, it can't exist and itcertainly can't get bigger and
grow.
If a tumor even gets onemillimeter bigger, it needs more
blood.
And so the process ofangiogenesis angio meaning
vessel genesis meaninginitiation of the birth of.

(23:41):
So angiogenesis is new bloodvessel formation, so that's
happening.
So it turned out that the lowdose actually would block that,
which is fantastic, because ifyou can do that, then the tumor,
which has really dysfunctional,kind of like spaghetti blood
vessels, is going to eventuallyfail because it can't control

(24:02):
what's going on.
And you wind up getting uh andit dies and it's so the tumor
would die but also during thattime wouldn't be able to grow.
So that's how the uh low dosewas, was uh, that's what they
were looking at and that's whatthey were measuring.
And instead of keeping it,instead of calling it low dose
chemotherapy because the reasonthey don't want to call it

(24:23):
low-dose chemotherapy is becauseyou know what it means.
And if you know what it means,that means that makes you like
them and they need to know morethan you.
They need to be smarter thanyou because you're going to pay
them money and also they need tomaintain their prestige and all
that sort of thing.
So they changed the name tometronomic chemotherapy.

(24:45):
Isn't that great?
Because if someone here ismetronomic, they're going to not
know what it is, but they'regoing to think these guys are
really smart.
And so what does metronomicmean?
You all know what a metronomeis.
Okay, some of you may not, butif you're taking piano lessons
or any other kind of musiclesson one of the critical you

(25:11):
know one of the foundations ofmusic that we may not be aware
of is the rhythm.
We are, especially if it's thekind of music that makes you
want to dance, but we're notaware of it.
We're not aware that there areinstruments in the presentations
of music that are keeping therhythm, and the rhythm is kind

(25:33):
of the structure of music.
So even in a classical piecethat you may not be hearing any
drums, the instruments aregiving it a rhythm.
Of course we know.
You know, like the jazz, thebass, and even in rock and roll
with the bass, there's a lot ofrhythm, but mostly it's the
drummer and it gives rhythm.
So when you're learning music,you've got to learn to read

(25:57):
notes and you're going to findout that every beat has a
certain rhythm or a certainperiodicity.
And so you learn the rhythmright and you keep everything at
three, four times.
So it's one, two, three, one,two, three or four, four times
four, one, two, three, four, one, two, and we keep it like that.
But in music, when we'relistening to it, like jazz, rock

(26:19):
and roll, everything we'rehearing the drummer.
The drummer's keeping it, it,giving it a foundation, can
stand up.
It's got a skeleton right.
So anyway, in order to help youlearn your musical instrument,
there's this thing.
It's usually looks like atriangle with four sides and on
the three sides, yeah, like likea pyramid, and there's a.

(26:39):
Inside, there's a, there's ametal, thin metal, thin piece of
metal, and it's got a weight onit and that weight determines
how quickly it's going to fall.
So you set the metronome at acertain level Tick, tock, tick,
tock, tick.
Now they have electric ones,but that was originally how they
had it.
But basically it's just keepingyou on rhythm.

(27:01):
So rhythm, remember I saidearlier, they give the low dose
at certain specific intervals.
So if it was every other day,it was a third day.
So it's a rhythm, even thoughwhen they give the maximum
tolerated chemotherapy, theygive it in a rhythm.
It's a bigger, it's a widerrhythm.
So you might get the chemo everythree weeks.
Why?

(27:21):
Because it takes it takes atleast two weeks to get up.
You just got punched down tostand up, right.
So because of that you need tohave been recovered enough to
get hit again.
So they might have a two-weekand then a two-week and then you
get the treatment and thenanother two weeks or three weeks
.
And that depends on how toxicthe chemo is right, because

(27:44):
because it's extremely toxic,you'll have to have a wider
interval between treatmentsessions.
So that's metronomic, but we'rejust low dose chemo.
So with the low dose theyactually have changed the name.
They've got people thinking interms of metronomic chemotherapy
and you, the average person, isgoing to say I don't know like

(28:05):
must be good, because that's allit is now low dose chemotherapy
.
They found out that it not onlywill uh block and filial the
lining of, of of a blood vessel,uh growth and all that, but it
also has its own effects.
It's also doing what the highdose would do, but it's not

(28:27):
damaging that much because it'sa low dose, maybe 10 percent,
five percent or even a littlebit.
Every day, for example, youknow taking uh, you know 50
milligrams orally of of amedication which they do a lot
of.
You're're doing it daily.
So it's a and it's low dose andeven though it's oral, it's
still by definition a metronomicpart of metronomic chemotherapy

(28:51):
.
So what's been learned is thisit's very interesting.
It's almost a homeopathicconcept and you all know what
homeopathy is, okay, what it isbasically.
You know it's more complicated,but fundamentally what it is is
.
It's been observed that anysubstance that has an effect on

(29:13):
biology will and that effectwe're talking about a damaging
effect.
So, for example, there's aplant called Nux vomica that
comes from that plant.
So if you eat this plant, youbone it.
So what's been found is that ifyou can take some uh like oil
or essence of it, put it in anamount of water and then you

(29:35):
know, seal it like just put adrop in there and then hit it
against your palm, that's calledsuccussing it.
If you do it 10 times, it's 10x, 100 times, it's 100x, and then
you take out the same amountfrom that and you put that in
the in water, whatever it was,whatever water you were using,
like it was 10 percent, uh, 10cc's, 5 cc's, whatever it is and

(29:56):
then you succuss it again.
I'm sorry, the other stuffwasn't 1x, that was just the
succussions.
Now, the 1x would be that you,you did it.
You did would be that yousuccussed it 10 times and now
you're getting another dropready.
So that was 1X.
2x would be having done it thesecond time, 3x would be having
taken it out and doing it thenext time.
Well, by the time you get to acertain dilution, because you're

(30:20):
taking a little bit out andputting it in water, it's
getting more and more diluted.
You get to a certain pointwhere, actually, if you went in
with some equipment, youwouldn't even be able to find
that original molecule anymore.
It's no longer there.
However, its effect, its energyis still there.
So, from a low dose of the samesubstance that caused one to
vomit, it now will stop vomitingand prevent vomiting.

(30:44):
Okay, so that's kind offundamentally homeopathy, and
that's what they found withmetronomic chemotherapy that it
actually can be immune-enhancingand have some effects that are
really beneficial.
Now, prior to all of thishappening about 100 years ago
was it 100 years ago, no morethan 100 years now?
100 years ago Was it 100 yearsago, no more than 100 years now

(31:07):
there was a skinny Mexicandoctor named Donato Perez Garcia
and he was in the Army andanyway, I'm not sure if this
happened before you joined theArmy or not, but he wanted to.
It must have been after,because anyway, I don't know his
exact medical history like thatbut he started to use insulin.
Insulin had been discoveredprior to that, but they finally

(31:30):
found a way to get the insulinfrom a pig and give it to a
human.
So he said he used it to gainweight.
He wanted to be giving himselfa shot before every meal.
And I think what was it?
10 units, which is a pretty ashot before every meal.
And I think what was it?
10 units, which is a prettyfair shot before every meal.
And he found that he did gainweight and he did get stronger

(31:51):
and bigger.
So he said, wait a minute.
That means the insulin issomehow helping the food I eat,
the nutrients, get into the cell.
So he saw it as a deliverymechanism.
So he says, let me try thatwith something else the cell.
So he says he saw it as adelivery mechanism.
So he says, let me try that,something else.
So he took low doses of uh oneof you know a couple of the only
poisons.
They didn't have any poisons inthose days so he took a little

(32:12):
bit of arsenic and a little bitof mercury and used the insulin
and what, and was able toactually eliminate the uh, the
syphilis organism that hadgotten into the brain and that's
called tertiary syphilis.
And tertiary syphilis back inthose days was the most, the
most the dominant reason forpsychiatric, psychiatric

(32:33):
hospital admissions in thosedays.
And so this was a big deal.
He was invited to the whitehouse and all that, but he, he
did it with other conditions.
So you give a little bit ofsomething with the insulin, so
the insulin would open the doorand get it in there.
So you give a little bit ofsomething with the insulin, so
the insulin would open the doorand get it in there, and then
that little bit of whatever itwas could have its effect.
And in 1943, one of his officersabove him asked him to treat

(33:00):
someone that CFCs of the lungs.
It was a woman where the breastbecause she was getting married
and they didn't want to have toremove it breast because her
dress size was already made.
I mean, this is true, I heardit from the, not himself, and so
they asked him to.
They asked the, not the PerezGarcia to try the insulin and he

(33:25):
did and, by the way, that was1943, 1946.
He, the one that's alive today,is Donato Perez Garcia III.
So his father, you know hisfather, who was the son of the
original guy, went on to do thesame kind of work as the
original Donato Perez Garcia,kind of work as the original

(33:49):
donato perez garcia, um.
And then the second son, whichis the one I know, the third, um
, somehow, I think yes, thiswoman came to him for treatment.
She's now standing her like Idon't know mid to late 80s or
something, um, I don't.
So he was kind of blown awayand you can imagine why.
Here's a woman, first personever treated with IPT in the
world before they had chemos,and it's still alive After what.

(34:14):
I don't know how old she was,but let's say she was 18 or 20
or something like that.
So it restored the whole system, she got healthy and she lived
on.
So that's IPT and IPT being sonon-toxic because insulin drives
it into the cell, into the CFC,so you can give lesser doses.

(34:36):
Yeah, so it has all of thebenefits that we talked about
with metronomic chemotherapy,but it also has additional
benefits in that because CFCshave many more insulin receptors
, because they need more glucose, because they're fermenting and
fermentation is a veryinefficient process for

(34:56):
producing energy 19 times lessthan our normal cellular
respiration, which is in themitochond mitochondria.
So they need 19 times moreglucose if they're going to
survive.
So that they go through allsorts of changes.
They upregulate this, down,regulate that.
In other words, they changetheir genetic expression.
What does that mean?
Genetic expression is when youopen some uh enzyme systems and

(35:20):
others you shut down, or orsignaling systems or whatever it
is.
So you've turned them on,you've turned some on and you've
turned others off.
You've just silenced them.
So what's being expressed inyour genetics has changed, but
that change in the physicalpresentation, which is also
called epigenetics, you now havea genetic expression that will

(35:45):
support um, that that supportsit makes it easier to happen for
the cfc's to develop, andthat's what happens.
They have search epigenetics.
Basically they are in anadaptation, all right.
So, and since cfc's have allthese extra insulin receptors
because they need more glucose.
When you get ipt, what happensis you come in having fasted at

(36:06):
least the night before, I think.
Some places think it's sixhours or something, but the goal
is just to get in a place whereyour body's no longer
processing food.
That's in your body, right, andso if it's a six-hour window,
so it's the last time you ate,versus a 12-hour.
So the longer that window isthere's going to, the longer
that window is there's going tobe less and less, until there's

(36:26):
no processing of any nutrients,because there's nothing left.
It's all you know.
It's all been digested in oneway or the other.
So the um, so the.
So the insulin brings in moreuh, because it has more
receptors.
When you give the insulin tosomeone who's in a fasting state
, the CFCs have more receptors,so they grab more insulin and

(36:49):
they open their doors sooner.
When they open their doors,what's happened is the amounts
of chemotherapy goes that way,like if you had a pipe system
and you had a few pipes turnedoff and only these pipes are
open.
So it wind up going down there.
So that's what I'm sort offunnels into the tumor, which is

(37:10):
great.
So it's a way of targeting thetumor and not targeting, and not
not hitting, all the otherhealthy cells around, right?
So you know, one of the greatanalogies that I see is that,
let's say there was somethingyou really didn't want in your
house, kind of like a deadlyscorpion or whatever on your
wall.

(37:30):
Well, you could, like, get adart if you're really good with
darts like that you couldcapture it, throw it away or
give it a new home somewhere.
Or you could get a hand grenade, throw it at the wall and blow
out your whole kitchen and youprobably killed the Scorpio or
whatever.
Well, that's kind of theallopathic medicine just throw
that hand grenade and then thechemotherapy is just getting

(37:56):
that dart right into it likethat, because then you get to
keep your kitchen, you get toeat, uh, which is a good idea.
So, um, that's, that's the wayof viewing the targeting of it
with the insulin.
So insulin helps to target itright and you're not knocking
out the stove and you're notknocking out the window and the
faucet, okay, okay, you're justdoing that.

(38:16):
So it's targeted and becauseit's so relatively non-toxic,
it's got like 5% of the sameeffects.
That a standard would be.
Yeah, but it the what was Isaying?
Anyway, but it's because it isthat, in effect, that non-toxic.

(38:38):
You can give it at more frequentintervals.
You don't have to wait twoweeks or three weeks.
You can do it twice a week.
You could do it every other day, but you'd have to get really
low doses because there is acumulative effect regardless of
how little you give, right?
So what I've seen is thatthere's pretty much no effect on
people, negative effects onpeople who get it at the
beginning.
But if they're getting it,let's say they're getting it

(38:59):
twice a week for eight weeks bythat time you've probably got
more than, in total, a full dose.
You didn't get it all at once,so you didn't get the bomb, but
you've accumulated it and thenyou start to see the white blood
cell count go down and some ofthe other problems that are
usually associated with thestandard, but much less.

(39:23):
You don't see hair loss, yousee.
I mean they might have somethinning, but it's nothing like
what you see with people gettingstandard.
So that's basically that makesit metronomic, because it's in
specific intervals.
So it's insulin potentiatedmetronomic chemotherapy.
You could say low-dosechemotherapy.
It doesn't sound good.

(39:43):
It sounds better if you can sayinsulin-potentiated metronomic
chemotherapy.
So in what cases would Irecommend it?
And that's a very good question, since it sets up metastasis,
damages the immune system,damages the gastrointestinal
system, damages a lot of systems.

(40:03):
I'd rather not give it.
If I don't have to, I won't.
And the reason I don't thinkthat, just because there's a
tumor there, I have to do it, isbecause we all know the apple
tree metaphor, right?
Everybody who ate an apple offthat tree died.
So you call the tree doctor,the tree doctor comes over, cuts

(40:25):
off all the apples.
Did we solve the problem?
No, because next fall there'llbe a new harvest.
So the problem was not theapples.
The apples are a manifestationof the problem.
And so to surgically remove it,or to bomb it with chemicals or
to irradiate it, so what?
Because even someone who haswhat's called stage one, which

(40:46):
is just an area of malignancy inany kind of tissue that hasn't
really disturbed thearchitecture of that structure,
is Wait a minute, I didn't getenough sleep last night, sorry,
um.
So anyway, let me, let me getback to, you know, the insulin
potentiated therapy.
So, so, basically, so, so let's, let's look at that in total.

(41:09):
What have we done?
We've, we've targeted the tumor, even if they're small tumors.
And we're getting the chemothere, we're not getting it
elsewhere.
And we're also getting thatother positive effect which we
found out from just standardmetronomic chemotherapy, and
that is you can eliminate newblood vessel growth and
stimulate the immune system,which are kind of good things.

(41:31):
So you're getting thosebenefits as well.
And so let me finish the thoughtI had before.
So stage one is where it's,just that's where it is.
But even if someone has stageone, it hasn't yet disturbed the
architecture, it hasn't goneinto the limbs and it hasn't
gone to another organ.
Even if it's at stage one, it'salready got an unknowable
amount of microscopic metastasis, if you will, and metastasis

(41:56):
means spreading away from theorigin.
Metastasis, if you will, andmetastasis means spreading away
from the origin.
So you know, if it started inthe breast, it's already those
little microscopic ones, becauseit takes at least eight years
for a tumor to grow, usuallyExcept.
Pfizer came up with a way ofactually helping that happen a
little quicker.
Moderna helped them too.
So yeah, so that's the thing.

(42:16):
So when they say you're stageone, grossly in other words,
looking at it from a largeperspective you're stage one,
but microscopically you'realready stage four.
So we have to understand thatand that's why when we're
talking aboutpsychoneuroimmunology, right,
we're saying, don't use the wordcancer, because that gives you

(42:38):
no information.
Use the word or the acronym orthe phrase chronically
fermenting cells, because thatis what's happening and by
knowing what is happening youcan actually devise something to
resolve it.
But when you don't know what itis and you're calling it cancer
, then you don't know what it isand all you have is fear and
that's going to cripple yourimmune system.

(42:58):
So that part doesn't work.
But also doesn't work as any ofthe words associated with that
that are going to give thatmeaning, such as staging and
prognosis and treatment andcomplete pathological cure or
partial or there's manydifferent phrases they have, but
they all support that conceptof the word, of that

(43:19):
astrological sign which istelling someone.
When you hear that word, whensomeone says you have, they just
said you're going to die Samething.
And what that produces is anextreme fear.
And the way and the effect offear physiologically is that
there's a part of our braincalled the amygdala which
manages fear.

(43:39):
It gets so lit up working thatit actually blocks its
connections to other parts ofthe brain, like the prefrontal
cortex where we make decisions,so that fear eliminates your
ability to make a rationaldecision.
Number one and number two thatfear cripples the immune system

(44:00):
and it does all sorts of things.
All right.
What supports that word, thatwe're talking about, that
astrological sign, are all theother parts of that paradigm,
which is the disease paradigm,which says you've got this thing
and you have to get rid of it.
Right, and that's not what atumor is.
You didn't get a thing.
What's happening is thesetissues in your body lost a

(44:25):
certain percentage ofmitochondria and they're
adapting.
And that adaptive process ismaking energy without the
mitochondria throughfermentation, and they're good
at it, so they're chronicallyfermenting cells.
That's what is happening, okay,and that you know.
It's important to know what ishappening.
Uh, instead of having thismonster in me so there's nothing
in you you have to get rid ofwhat you have to do is change

(44:49):
the biochemical environment inwhich your cells live so that
all their needs are being metand they no longer have to go
through that adaptive process.
And that's true for anything,whether it's diabetes, because
you're eating too much, too manyfoods to cause increased
glucose in your blood,stimulating insulin and all that
sort of thing.
So instead you know, and thenthey call that diabetes.

(45:13):
So instead of taking a drug toget rid of the diabetes which
they never get rid of, by theway, you get diagnosed at the
age of 12 and you still have itat the age of 82.
But it's to just not make thatadaptive process necessary.
And how do you do that?
You stop eating the things thatwould be causing your blood to
have elevated glucose.
So if you don't have theelevated glucose, I mean, you

(45:35):
will have an L.
Everybody has an elevatedglucose after eating.
It's called postprandialbecause you're absorbing the
glucose.
But that's kind of a natural, anatural rhythm, right.
But it's what if you're eatingit all the time, or the stuff
you eat is lasting a long timeand all that's going to make
your insulin go up and itchanges the whole biochemical
dynamic between insulin andglucose, which is one of the

(45:56):
foundations of the underlyingchronic inflammation that we see
in all degenerative conditions.
So that's why keeping theinsulin-glucose dynamic healthy
is basically going to have apositive effect on any chronic
condition, whether it'sosteoporosis, arthritis, crohn's

(46:20):
, you know, cfcs, heart, right,any of them because they're all
fundamentally having a chronicinflammatory process which keeps
it alive, and it's kind of likethe oven or the you turn the
burner on the stove, so you know.
So let me, let me, let me justget back to some of my when I
would do it is when a because,remember, if I, if I don't want

(46:41):
to just cut off one or twoapples and then have it come
back, that's really not going tobe, that's not what you want,
that's not what I want.
So what I like to do is stop,is change everything so that we
start producing good apples.
All right, so so unless thetumor apple is blocking a vital
function, or about to block avital function, such as

(47:02):
breathing, eating, bowelmovements, et cetera, or
excruciatingly painful, youcan't deal with it in any way.
There's a few reasons.
The other one is in your skull.
You can't grow very far.
So situations like that, we'vegot to move quickly.
Then I would use the IPT andwith some people also, they're

(47:25):
not having any compromise oftheir or potential compromise of
vital functions, but it's notreally responding to some of the
other therapies likeintravenous vitamin C,
intravenous curcumin,intravenous quercetin,
intravenous ozone artesanate.
There's a DCA, there's a lot ofthose, and there's systemic

(47:47):
hyperthermia and localhyperthermia.
There's all sorts of ways ofdealing with it.
Yeah, so let's see, I think weanswered Cindy's question for
the most part.
So that's when we would use it,and then usually our goal, my
goal, is to use it to a point.
I want to do this as short atime as possible because it does

(48:09):
have a toxicity.
It's a small one, but in thiscase the risk-benefit ratio
shows that it's more importantto use this because we're going
to get more benefit than we aregoing to develop any any
problems from it.
So you guys say, well, becauselet's go for that, all right, so
if we can just keep it down tosix weeks, four weeks, eight
weeks, so that that's usuallythe way we think.

(48:30):
Um, so if someone's got, youknow, widely disseminated, we
would probably use it for awhile, but we'd also have done
all the other things that we'retalking about, that we talk
about, from cleansing and allthat.
And then also, you have toremember that we have to make
the person who's going throughthis positive be doing it with
gratitude, right, instead ofdrinking the green juice or

(48:52):
whatever they're doing.
All right, you know we have toget involved.
So if somebody really wants it,they come.
I really want chemo, but sohe's okay, all right, we're
gonna do all this other stuff,but we're gonna use low dose
with insulin because you don'twant someone to be in your,
under your care and they'rereally unsatisfied because

(49:14):
you're not giving it anyway.
All that negativity is going tobe suppressing the immune
system, so that's that'simportant not to allow that, all
right.
So it doesn't necessarilyalways have to be that we're
we're uh about the impact ofauto function or excruciating
pain and all that it can be.
The person really wants it, um,anyway, but I work with that as

(49:37):
well, of helping them realizethat they may not be needing it,
but when you use it it'sincredible.
It's incredible and I've seen.
You know there are times thatwe need it quite often.
Yeah, all right.
So I got you there on Cindy.
Now here's Dr Jyoti.

(49:58):
It's about breast CFCs and sheis saying let me put this here.
She's saying hello, sir, I'mdiagnosed with triple negative
breast CFCs in 2024, and it wasmetastasized to the lungs.
I've taken NAB paclitaxel,which is where they change

(50:19):
paclitaxel, which is taxol.
It's a type of chemo, right,and they make it so it's more
targeted.
Targeted and uh, erbulin, withwhich both got effective after
ineffective.
After a few months there arebig lumps in both of my
clavicles these bones hereclavicle regions, and also in my
right axilla armpit.

(50:39):
Now my medical oncologist isasking me for a biopsy and a
third line of chemotherapy.
My BRCA1 and BRCA2 exams werenegative and PDL score was 5
over 10.
That's why I could not takeimmunotherapy with chemotherapy.

(51:00):
Please help me as giving meproper prescription regarding my
condition so that I can furtherheal myself and become CFC-free
in this lifetime.
All right, dr Gioti andeveryone.
What I'd like to look at firstis the words and the grammar and
the way she worded that,because that's harming her a

(51:21):
great deal.
It's just psychoneuroimmunology, so she was diagnosed.
We always use that word.
We have to realize that thediagnosis is naming it and
before the diagnosis you were DrGOT.
Now you're not.
Now you are triple negativebreast COCs.
That'sot Now you're now.
Now you are triple negativebreast COCs.
That's who you are, and yourwhole life is going to now

(51:43):
change.
You're going to be devoted todealing with this thing that
they've named.
But that's what a diagnosis does.
It says you're not who youthink you are, you're this, and
you'll see that what I'm sayingis not an exaggeration, because
you actually spend your wholelife becomes centered around
that, regardless of what you'redoing.

(52:04):
That's in your mind somewhereon a constant basis.
And then you start to seeyourself that way, because I've
had people say to me I'm acancer patient, anything else.
Are you married, do you havefriends?
Do you work somewhere?
Are you an employee, employer?
But no, you become that andremember, most of your
activities are centered aroundthat.

(52:25):
So is your family's activitiescentered around this, the name
of it, which actually is no helpat all, which I have explained
before, but anyway, so there'sthat.
So the diagnosis means you gotit's like sorcery, you got a
curse put on you, and the triplenegative means that you don't
have positive estrogen, youdon't have, uh, estrogen

(52:46):
receptors that can be measured.
Um, progesterone, which is oneof the other female hormones.
Um, it also doesn't haveprogesterone receptors, but it
does have and it doesn't have it, and it also doesn't have an
expression of what they callHER2, right?
So HER2, the HER system, theone through five, is the same as

(53:10):
epidermal growth factor, butthey named it HER.
So you've got the second onebecause there's five being
expressed more in these tissuesand therefore they've developed
an antibody that attaches tothat and starts to eliminate it.
So that's what it is and that'swhy the words are so important.

(53:33):
So saying that it's a triplenegative is saying it doesn't
have these three things.
But what the implication is isbecause it doesn't have those
three things, the HER2positivity, the progesterone
receptor that can be found 1%are all that's necessary.
Or estrogen receptors 1% is allthat's necessary to call it a

(53:53):
positive estrogen receptor,progesterone receptor, because
if you have that, that, thenthey have drugs to go after that
particular thing.
So the reason to determinewhether or not you are triple
negative or just positive, orwhatever it is, is to know which
products and services they cansell you, because they're
working with a sales algorithmbut that they most likely got

(54:14):
from the American Society ofClinical Oncology.
And yeah, now the other thing.
And then your oncologist wantedto re-biopsy, in other words,
do a second biopsy.
I'm not surprised, but I can'tthink of another reason Probably
wants to get it in the axillato find out if it's the same, if

(54:34):
it's the one and two.
So that's the re-biopsy.
And and remember, you werenegative for the broccas, and
the broccas that become nastything.
I don't want a brocca gene, butwe all have brocca genes.
What they are isdouble-stranded dna repair
mechanisms.
That's part of it, and theability to repair it is is gone
and that's why they're callingit BRCA.

(54:56):
B-r-c-a stands for breastcancer.
You know that word.
So here's the thing when youtarget with monoclonal
antibodies, because you alsohave some similar therapies for
the estrogen receptor tamoxifenand things like that and we're

(55:19):
giving you a drug that decreases, that decreases your amount of
dastritiums in your in yourblood, so uh, the uh or the uh,
so you triple negative.
So if you're triple positive,they could have given you those
things, but because you'retriple negative, they can't and
they say, oh, it's, it's theworst and it's um aggressive,
and they use all these words.
So that's why I don't even liketo use braca.
Or because there's just thename of it, is it's wrong,

(55:42):
there's, it's not a gene that'sproducing cfcs.
That's what it sounds like,right when someone says I'm
braca positive, whatever it is.
And then your pd, your pdl1,your PDL one, which is, it's the
pro programmed death, ligand,ligand.
And what is a ligand?

(56:03):
A ligand is that part of amolecule that attaches to a
receptor for receptor for that,so the cell attaches to the
other cell by it's.
It's a ligand, the getting intothe receptors.
That's what the word is.
So it turns out that there arePD-L1, which is their PD-L1s,

(56:25):
and there's a programmed deathreceptor.
So there's the ligand and thereceptor which block the immune
system and they prevent the Tcells from eliminating the tumor
.
So that's great.
If you can set something in andblock the ability of that to
happen, then that's atremendously positive thing to

(56:49):
do for someone Turns out thatdoesn't work for more than
giving you a couple extra monthsof life, and most of the time
the life that you're gettingextra a couple months is not
worth it, because you're sickand you're paying.
It's not the kind of life thatyou're looking for, but anyway.
But that's why they would findout that, and so that you.
What's very important for youis that you get away from using

(57:11):
these words and thinking inthose terms, because even though
you're not using that word,you're still saying CFCs.
So you're not using theastrological sign, you're still
in that same paradigm becauseyou're using all the terminology
that defines that.
All right, so that's one thingis that you had already seen a

(57:44):
certified biological dentist whodid a total evaluation of your
mouth and found these two orthree things that were causing a
problem, like root canals ormetal.
There's lots of differentproblems that could be happening
.
So they not only do that, butthen they treat you.
In other words, they reversethat symptom or change you so
that your body's no longer goingthrough that um and uh, what

(58:05):
was it the um?
So anyway, anyway, let me getback to the brocca, because it's
very important.
What I'd like everyone to knowis that if you're brocca one or
two positive, that means eitheryour mother or father had it,
you got it All right.
So that's when it's an inheritedgene defect.

(58:25):
And what's the defective?
Again, one of the enzymesthat's involved in
double-stranded DNA.
So it's not a gene that'scausing CFCs.
It's a gene that would normallyclean up a DNA mistake.
But you got one parent Now inorder for this to be a problem,

(58:46):
because we have pairs ofchromosomes.
So the something that's beingproduced is going to require the
left and the right hand.
So if you haven't done that,then you need to in order to
really call this a BRCA event.
So that means you need to getwhat they call a mutation this
lifetime and that's called asomatic mutation.
So in order for a BRCA1 or 2 toreally manifest, you have to

(59:10):
get very toxic this lifetime,right?
So what would you do then ifthat were the situation?
Well, you'd clean up and theneat a healthy diet and live a
healthy lifestyle.
And what would you do if youdidn't have this diagnosis?
It should be the same answer,all right, I just don't want all
that to throw you off from it.

(59:32):
So your question is what else isthere other than different ways
of administering chemotherapyand high-dose vitamin C?
Well, first of all, you need tobe meeting your physiological
requirements by taking enough ofthe vitamin A carotenoid group,
having your vitamin C level upto a therapeutic.
What's considered therapeutic?

(59:54):
You have other.
I mean, because vitamin c forever, for so many things to make
neurotransmitters, to makecortisol, uh to it's just it's
involved in rewriting thatepigen, epigenetic group of
changes that allow the cfc togrow.
It undoes that.
It's incredible what it does.

(01:00:15):
What's that seminar?
Um, but anyway.
So by taking enough orally,which would be like two grams of
sodium ascorbate liposomal fourtimes a day, or a one liter,
one quart of drinking water witheight grams of sodium ascorbate
, this is all that.
You'd be sipping it slowly.
So the seven, because if youdrink too much of it, most of it

(01:00:39):
won't be used.
It'll come out in your urineand the threshold is about 500
milligrams.
So that's vitamin C.
So if you're taking it orallyand you're able to satisfy all
your physiological requirements,if you had enough, you probably
wouldn't be able to have everdeveloped CFCs because you would

(01:01:00):
be turning off their epigenetic, which is kind of like their
paradigm or their scaffoldingthat allows the cell to be
turned that off right Reversethat.
The other thing a vitamin C doesthat I didn't mention is those
spaghetti-like blood vesselsthat burst, meaning that oxygen
is not arriving somewhere andwhen it doesn't, tissues become

(01:01:22):
low oxygen and the medical termfor that is hypoxia.
When that happens it stimulatesa group of events by something
called HIF1-alpha, which ishypoxia-inducible factor alpha.
Anyway, that causesangiogenesis, tissue
proliferation etc.

(01:01:42):
So vitamin C is going to quenchthat, because the vitamin C is
necessary for the enzymes thatturn that off naturally and
without the vitamin C you won'tbe able to do that.
So anyway, when you're takingenough vitamin C orally and
enough of the carotenoids andyou're like overdosing with
vitamin d3 and you're getting anincreasing amount of melatonin

(01:02:06):
and you've taken care of youriodine and thyroid and your
adrenals and you've done allthat right then, uh, or even if
you're close, that's where theintravenous would be good,
because the intravenous is goingto go.
Remember, it's got to get up toa certain concentration in your
blood, right, 350 milligrams perdeciliter, to have the desired
effect of eliminating a tumor.

(01:02:27):
And it's proven.
This is not.
And so, in order to get there,how much do you give?
Well, I'm getting 75 grams aweek, or every other day, or
whatever, I'm getting 50.
The problem is is that mostdoctors, most clinicians, don't
measure your fasting ascorbatelevel.
In other words, how much isyour ascorbate in your blood

(01:02:47):
when you wake up in the morning?
It's, it's not.
It's also, um, you see, theamount we need for that to be
occurring should be satisfiedalready because we're taking
enough orally.
So now when I get the IV, itwon't have to fill up a deficit,
it'll go straight up and I canachieve that 350 milligrams per

(01:03:07):
deciliter more easily.
So perhaps on 25 grams, 50grams instead of 100 grams, but
it doesn't matter because mostdoctors are not measuring it
anyway.
They're not measuring beforeand after the vitamin C.
Do I have the levels in my bloodthat are adequate to kill the
tumor.
Because the only benefit?
Well, you get all the otherbenefits, but the main purpose

(01:03:30):
and benefit of high-dose vitaminC IV is to get enough of it to
the tumor so that it can killthe tumor.
And it kills the tumor via acertain mechanism that is
prevented by healthy cellsbecause they have all the
enzymes they need, but isunstoppable by cfcs because they
don't have that enzyme, right?
So if you're getting enough thea, like I said, which is the

(01:03:51):
carotenoids, mixed carotenoids,the c, the d, uh, the melatonin,
the thyroid iodine and theadrenals, and you're balancing
all of those and there are otherthings you need to do, right,
that's going to.
You know that's when theintravenous vitamin C is going
to have a relevant effect.
Sadly, people are going in andgetting 50 or 75, whatever it is

(01:04:12):
, for some other reason.
They're saying well, I was ableto tolerate it.
I'm not sure what that means.
I think it means that sometimessomeone's getting some vitamin
C, especially if it's in asodium ascorbate form.
The reason you want sodiumascorbate is because that's the
only form in which ascorbate canbe picked up by a cell.
It's going to have a sodium.

(01:04:33):
So if that's all satisfied,then the pro-oxidant effect can
take place by giving youintravenous vitamin C.
Otherwise, it won't happen andthe only way you would know is
by measuring, because you're notgoing to see it is by measuring
the before and after andcomparing it.

(01:04:55):
Sadly, very rarely does thathappen.
You know what else?
There's a lot.
There's iodine and iodinefibroid situation, and
understanding that iodine is oneof the bosses of the immune
system turns out to be veryimportant.
So the next question is um,listen, oh, I guess I don't know

(01:05:16):
.
So it's topic is parasites.
How can I get a consultationwith you?
I think we've talked about that.
I think this question was onlast week.
You said I want to get aconsultation with you on
facebook and it fell apart.
I extreme eat extremely healthy, right, you went through all
that, I think.
Yeah, we did talk about thisthis this last time.
So, um, but basically I don'tdo individual site consultations

(01:05:40):
anymore because there were waytoo many to even fantasize about
getting close to getting themall.
Um, which means it'd be so manypeople.
Excuse me not getting theconsultation, because I was
doing it for a while and if Iyou know, you know usually we're
on for as long as we need to becould be two hours, three hours

(01:06:00):
and the initial consultation.
Then, even though I may nevermeet the person, I would have to
do the initial blood imagingprescriptions, blood test
prescriptions and all that, allright.
So the consultation was notjust that time, the two hours or
whatever it was it now.

(01:06:22):
Then I have to follow upbecause I've already recommended
to get these blood tests and toget you know that.
So I've got to make sure thathappened.
So we have at least onefollow-up, right?
Well, it turns out that, um,look, I've had people on there
who, uh, I've been following upon for years and so I can't have
to.
I mean, that's all I would bedoing.
So it's much more efficient todo it like this, this way here.

(01:06:45):
So, um, you need to please makean appointment.
You should join the um parasitegroup.
Oh, excuse me, you're sayinghere my blood tests all came out
okay, but you just knowsomething's in your body, Okay,
and that's a good point that youbring up.
I think we discussed it lastweek when we talked about your
situation.

(01:07:05):
And when they say normal, myblood tests came out okay, that
means the result on your systemof your blood gave you a number.
The result on your system ofyour blood gave you a number, a
concentration of this particularelement, that it falls within
the normal range.
Now, the normal range is thenormal range of the community in

(01:07:27):
which you live.
That's why they're calledcommunity reference labs.
But if your community is prettysick because they're a normal
average city nowadays where youknow about every 50 or 60
seconds someone has a heartattack I'm not sure what the
number is now and then everyseveral seconds someone's

(01:07:47):
getting a stroke, they havealmost a 50% chance of having
CFCs.
You know 70% are gettingdiabetes and that's the group
that you're using for reference.
So you don't want to be in themiddle of that.
What they don't have are thehealthy ranges, right.
So when they say your bloodtest came out all right, I don't

(01:08:12):
know what they mean.
So you get a list of all theblood tests you should ask for
and all the other reallyimportant benefits, in addition
to the lives live, live streamsevery week, etc.
In the question and answer foron zoom, and that way you have
access to you know, kind of likea, a doctor who's there
virtually right because, whichis always a good reason not to

(01:08:35):
work with me, because you, I canbe there.
There's no way I can examineyou and really understand who
you are, so I can't really besomeone's physician.
But if you've consulted, whatare you going to do?
Consult with them and then justsay, yeah, I ordered these
tests, have someone else tellyou what they're about, you just
have to take care of them.

(01:08:55):
So imagine I'm doing six ateight a day, and by now, what
four or five years I've beendoing this particular type of
work.
I mean, that would be the only.
I couldn't even talk to newpeople.
I have to just be taking careof these answers.
So it's physically impossible.
These groups are what'shappening.
So you should join the Parasite, okay.
So we talked about that lasttime.

(01:09:17):
We talked about that too.
Where is the?
I can't see the date.
I was just wondering if we gotthe wrong date.
Nope, it says June 8th.
So I guess the question wasbrought.
All right.
So now this is from.
Wait, no, we did that, I'msorry, I'm sorry.
So we were on Yeneti and so yourblood test came out, okay, but

(01:09:41):
you know there's some in yourbody and you eat healthy.
That's what you're saying.
You stay active, you don'tdrink or smoke, but you're just
not feeling good, yeah, sobasically, that's what she's
saying.
She's saying I recentlyrepeated a stool test because of
one year I've been having asharp pain in my.
I went to the, I was having asharp pain in my right side and

(01:10:04):
it just won't go away.
So, anyway, in 2019, it allseemed to have correlated with
um blastocysts in their blood.
Well, that's pretty interestingif they were in your blood, uh,
and they gave you antibioticsand you antibiotics, and then I
ended up in the ER with bloodclots near my cecum.
So that's where you are now.

(01:10:25):
It sounds like, yeah, and Ithink we talked about this what
a parasite is and all that andhow to deal with it.
So please look at last week'slive, because it's been recorded
.
And then we have Rhonda live,because it's been recorded, and
then we have ronda, and ronda issaying um, I have a cyst on my
kidney and four gallstones.
Could you suggest a protocolfor me?

(01:10:47):
Thank you.
Well, I thought we answered allthese questions anyway.
There can be cyst development intissues.
You can get ovarian cysts froma failed ovulation and you can
get up.
You get other systems whereit's basically a fluid-filled
sac and or you have to realizethat one of the ways in which

(01:11:10):
the protozoal parasites protectthemselves, one of the ways is,
uh, by getting into it andthat's what a cyst turns out to
be before you go any further.
That's what I would do, right,and you know that involves a
good, healthy, fast andcleansing.
So it's not.
It's not that important to findout exactly what it is and
where they are although if youdid, that'd be great except to

(01:11:33):
realize that microorganismsdon't live isolated.
Even in an infection, whereit's predominantly something,
they're still not in isolation.
So you just need to keep thatin mind, and that's why going
after just one thing and tryingto eliminate it without
supporting the whole orchestrato become tuned will never work.

(01:11:54):
Will never work because it'sworking outside of the
understanding that what needs tohappen is the physiology needs
to be balanced and restoredright.
So I know we answered thisquestion last time and this one
oh, this is an ad Someone tryingto sell themselves to me, I'm

(01:12:17):
talking.
That sounded weird.
Um, they're offering me helpwith my website or something and
they want me to use them.
We did this one too, jeff.
Oh, I don't know if we answeredthis, or I just read it, but
this is by um k and it sayscolonoscopy four years ago
caused major motility problems,issues, the methane gas and

(01:12:40):
bloating accompanied it, allright.
So colonoscopy is, as you know,where the gastroenterologist,
you know, uses somethingrectally to take a look
fiberoptically or directly atthe lining of your colon to see
if there are any tumors or justpolyps or what they are.

(01:13:06):
All right, so that's aprocedure and if the procedure
did not involve biopsying, itwould not be dangerous.
There's chances of perforationand things, but I mean it would
not be, you know, it wouldn't beas as bad so the, or is that
again?
So somehow what that caused wasmotility issues.

(01:13:27):
And what she's talking about isthat the way in which the food
is propelled along in the gut iscalled peristalsis and that
just means that because,remember, the lining of the gut
has smooth muscle around itwhich contracts, but it
contracts in a sequence so thatwe actually have movement and
that's how things move around.
So the more anxious you are,the more in sympathetic drive,

(01:13:51):
the less you're going to be ableto use that.
And there are many differentways we can do to stimulate our
vagus, which means to restorethe peristaltic function,
because you know, without a goodperistalsis, you're going to
become very constipated becauseyou've got to get things moving
All right.
So what you're asking is wherewas that all right so?

(01:14:14):
So let's go back.
So you'd always, uh, you hadthe colonoscopy.
It caused the motility issues.
Then you got then the methanegas production and bloating.
So that's one of the gasesthat's produced by
microorganisms that are notreally, uh, the ones you want to
have in your gut to help youdigest.
And you'd always been likeclockworks, have big, regular

(01:14:38):
bowel movements.
I know we answered this and sowe went into colonics and when
you should do them and all that.
And that's the question.
And the other thing I mentionedI, I hope you remember is that,
since, if it's true that youhave trouble with peristalsis,
um, you know a good, thoroughcleanse and allowing your body
to rest, and then doing you knowdifferent therapies like yoga,

(01:15:02):
tai chi, qigong, meditation.
You know all these things canstimulate the parasympathetic
system, which is the one that'sgoing to cause the peristalsis
to work, and then the otherthing that utilizes the
autonomic nervous system, whichis the sympathetic and
parasympathetic fear or anxiety,and all that stuff that

(01:15:27):
stimulates the adrenal glands,okay.
So we want to uh herbs, okay.
So how do you do a cleanse?
How do you do a cleanse and allthat stuff?
I think we talked about that.
You know, you can do a juicecleanse and then you can do the
fasting and all that sort ofthing and and then, um, whether
or not you're sure you haveparasites or not, it's always

(01:15:48):
good to do parasite cleansebecause we're being exposed to
it and our immune systems havebeen greatly compromised from
what they were in 1900, which Inever finished saying that.
But basically in 1900, we onlyhad the ambient EMF, and now
we've got such high exposure toelectromagnetic frequencies and
the lower frequencies, bothwhich are harmful frequencies,

(01:16:13):
and the, the lower frequencies,both which are harmful um, we've
got amounts to which our bodyis having a very difficult time
dealing with and we're seeingimmunosuppression in almost
everybody, whether or not theyhave cfcs.
So, yeah, I would uh, yeah, soI I said anyway that the doing a
parasite cleanse it means it'spart of a total cleanse.
You can't just think I'm doinga parasite cleanse means it's
part of a total cleanse.
You can't just think I'm doinga parasite cleanse because they

(01:16:36):
live in a certain environment,so it's good to do a juicing
cleanse, maybe even a watercleanse.
You don't have to Colonics,lymphatics and all that stuff
and then do the anti-parasiticprotocol.
But now if you say you had aspecific problem and you found
it and you know that's what itis, then you don't have to.
You still have to do that, butyou can get started with some

(01:16:59):
other, the anti-parasitics youknow, while you're going through
detoxification processes, andif it's in the form that yours
is so, then you want to makesure that you've got the right
anti-parasitics, because there'sdifferent forms and different
kinds.
I know we talked about that one.
Well, we talked about all these.
And here's Mary Jean, we talkedabout that.

(01:17:19):
And Christy, we talked aboutthat.
Wait, where are the new ones?
Oh, here they are.
Gosh, here's a question fromParkinson's, and this is from
Hannah and she says hello,parkinson's, diagnosis 2024,
64-year-old male not taking theprescription medication and

(01:17:41):
following a protocol juicedetoxing with IV vitamins.
What is your recommendationsfor this condition and the best
way to follow it?
Well, with Parkinson's, I don'tknow if you know, but there's
actually damage to the, uh, acertain part of the brain that
results in a fine tremor and atrest and you wind up actually

(01:18:06):
getting us your face the musclesdon't move like that some
cognitive decline shuffling whenyou walk, you know.
So that you know prettyspecific and that's called
Parkinson's and, since it's inthat area, called the substantia
nigra, and we know, then we candeal with it right and what we

(01:18:26):
want to do is allow those cellsto make as much dopamine as they
need.
So how do we do that?
Well, first of all we we needto understand that we're, we're
really not um, when we callparkinson's and then we call I'm
talking about neurodegenerativeconditions, parkinson's, ls, ms
alzheimer's, all that stuff.

(01:18:48):
We give them names, them names,but basically there's a whole
variety of, there's a whole lotof cognitive decline and
neurodegeneration going on, andespecially now with these extra
EMF and microwave EMF and allthat and to name it something
specific.
Well, it gives them a name andit gives treatments, members,

(01:19:09):
the sales protocol, but it canfluctuate between looking like
this and looking like somethingelse.
I had a.
I had a woman years ago who hadgotten a flu shot and then, you
know, she got to the pointwhere she wasn't able to flow
Right and she was diagnosed withALS and then it went away.
Als doesn't go away.

(01:19:30):
It usually it goes on to becomea terminal.
It's where all your muscles arestopping and finally the
muscles of your respiration, soyou can't breathe.
So yeah, but she went to nothaving it, which doesn't happen.
Then she got another flu shotthe next year and now it
happened, and then it happenedpermanently.

(01:19:50):
So what I'm saying is whatthey're calling ALS is because
it met certain criteria, butthere's no thing called ALS,
there's no thing calledParkinson's.
That's my point.
But it turns out thatglutathione, which is what the
cells of the substantia nigra inthe brain with people with
Parkinson's cannot produce.

(01:20:10):
You want to be able to enhancethat.
So that's a very important partof the program.
So if you could enhance theproduction of the glutathione or
give the glutathione, then thatwould be helpful.
And what we found was actuallygiving intravenous glutathione
which, would you know, obviouslyintravenous is going to get to

(01:20:34):
the substantia nigra and it'sgoing to decrease those symptoms
that are occurring from it.
So the glutathione was veryhelpful.

(01:20:56):
And so people would walk inwith very severe Parkinson's
symptoms you know the shufflinggate and all that stuff and
giving them the intravenousglutathione, they actually went
away and they could now talknaturally, and the problem was
it didn't last that long and sowe came up with glutathione.
It actually went away and theycould now talk naturally.
And the problem was it didn'tlast that long and so we came up
with glutathione suppositoriesand that was hard to get levels

(01:21:18):
and all that sort of thing.
And then if you look at the waysof you know what are the
biochemically, what do you haveto do with the body to improve
its ability to make glutathione?
And there's lots of ways ofdoing that, which include diet
etc.
And, um, anyway, so that's kindof you know where I would work
with parkinson's.
The other thing is, I would youhave to detox because, remember

(01:21:42):
, the reason that came about isbecause of a toxic insult, and
what has been found withparticularly the the uh, when
you actually damage cells in thesubstantia nigra uh, is
pesticides.
They seem to target that and sopeople that had pesticide
exposure, et cetera.
So by eliminating anddetoxifying the, the, the uh,

(01:22:06):
your body and getting rid of theparasites and then upregulating
your, your ability to cleansein your liver.
But there's ways of doing that.
So there's a lot to that.
Um, because once you startanti-anti-parkinson's medication
, it kind of snowballs and thenyou need it.
So, uh, and they become lessand less effective.

(01:22:28):
So it's really good if you, ifyou have Parkinson's, to delay
the onset of treatment, and youcan do that forever, if you can
just restore the ability to dothat.
So, anyway, but that'soccurring to everywhere,

(01:22:55):
especially in cities with a lotof 5G.
That we're seeing is like thewoman who got with the flu shots
is not necessarily thatparticular process I was just
talking about, you know.
So when they say, well, you'vegot something that looks like
ALS, but it could be Parkinson'sor it could be multiple

(01:23:18):
sclerosis and stuff like that,what they're saying is that
you've got a derangement, you'vegot to imbalance, a toxicity of
your nervous system is whatthey're saying.
System is what they're saying.
However, um, and and and.
If you give it any particularname, that doesn't matter really
, because there's no treatmentfor als, there's no real

(01:23:38):
treatment for ms and there's noreal treatment for Parkinson's.
So I don't know why they're soconcerned about naming it.
Oh, I know why because theyhave specific drugs that don't
work.
But anyway, the point is it'sneurodegeneration and it can
have many manifestations, right,right, and when we see it in
young kids, it's autism, andthese names only give a

(01:23:58):
justification for using acertain drug.
Drugs, I'm serious, that's whatit is.
So, instead of doing that, yousay, okay, in general, I'm going
to get all the toxins out.
I'm going to do chelation.
I'm going to improve get all mynutrients up my vitamin C.
I'm going to get all the toxinsout.
I'm going to do chelation, I'mgoing to improve get all my uh
nutrients up, my vitamin c.
You know you're going to do allthat.
You're going to restore balanceand physiology right, and

(01:24:19):
that'll do it.
And one of the one of thebenefits or effects or
consequences of having abalanced uh physiology is your
glutathione, your ability toproduce glutathione, like you
know.
So we're talking about theParkinson's, what's called
Parkinson's, all right.
So that's really what we needto understand.

(01:24:41):
And the point here that is veryimportant is that why are we
looking for a name?
Because I know we all want it.
You're saying I need adiagnosis, I want to get a
diagnosis're saying I need adiagnosis, I want to get a
diagnosis, I finally got adiagnosis.
Well, we're trying to name, uh,put a specific name on
something.
For what reason?
Because, implicitly, what we'vebeen taught by the rockefellers

(01:25:03):
is that if we have a, if we cangive the more specific of a
name we can give it, then we'llhave specific medications, and
if that were true, it'd be great, but that's not what's
happening.
We don't see the benefit allright like that.
In certain cases we do, such asa pneumonia, and we give

(01:25:24):
antibiotics and we see it goaway.
That would work all right.
However, there's a lot of otherthings that would go into that
and I didn't.
I didn't talk about that whenwe're answering the pneumonia um
, uh question that you need torestore your health, um, and
good vitamin c levels and allthat sort of thing.

(01:25:44):
So actually, the pneumoniacan't happen in the first place,
but anyway, anyway.
So if you take a look ateverything we're talking about,
it's really the same fundamentalprocess going on.
There's an accumulation oftoxins and they could be, you
know, specifically accumulatingin a certain area, causing a

(01:26:05):
problem there, whatever, but itis toxicity and it needs to be
removed.
And when the toxicity isremoved and you're supplying the
nutrients that allow physiologyto function, then there aren't
any problems.
There's no need for adaptivestrategies right On your body's
part, right, because theadaptive strategy on your body

(01:26:27):
that your body goes through iswhat we're calling the diseases,
right.
So the adaptive strategy of acell to become insulin resistant
, to protect itself from glucose, we're calling diabetes, et
cetera, et cetera.
You know the chronicallyfermenting cells we're calling.
So these are adaptivestrategies, physiological,
homeostatic, correctiveresponses, and what we need to

(01:26:48):
do is get rid of anythingblocking that and support and
give everything the body needsto not to be satisfied, and then
there's no need for adaptation,so there's no problem.
So I know this.
You might be thinking that'snot relevant to me, but it is.
It's, it is, it's, that's, it's, that's what it is.
It's all about that.

(01:27:08):
There was a book by John Tildenand I just happen to have it
here 1915, if you can see thatToxemia Explained and basically
he goes through that.
But understand that in 1915,their vocabulary was different
than ours because they hadn'tgiven names to aspects of

(01:27:28):
physiology that we have done now.
So, discussion of a conditionor a disease, it's going to be
very different than that, butwhat he does is show you that
it's basically the same thing.
So even aging, right.
So as you get older and you'vegot accumulated toxins, when
those toxins actually start toimpair because if you have

(01:27:51):
enough toxins in any organ,it'll impair its ability to
function.
Well, when you've got thetoxins, in particular thyroid
and all your different organs,all your glands that are
producing hormones, and youstart to see hormone decline,
then you start to see thephenomenon that we call aging.
So you can imagine, if you didnot, if you're, if you never had

(01:28:14):
a hormone decline, you wouldn'tsee it, right?
I mean, that's amazing.
So even you know.
So what I'm saying is that, ifthat, that can happen more
quickly.
And why do I say that?
Because we've got in differentparts of the world, we have
people delivering children at 65and the other going, going into
menopause is early, like that's35, right, and that's because

(01:28:35):
they're we're told by themedical profession and there's a
million reasons why I said thatdoesn't even make sense.
But no, it was.
It was.
The difference wasn't there?
Both their toxicity exposureand their ability to eliminate
it, right, right, and that's it.
So we live a life where we'renot producing, we're not
exposing ourselves to toxins andwe're supporting all the

(01:28:57):
nutrients and all that.
So that's basically it.
Again, I'm sorry, but earlier Icouldn't get things working.
I'll get them working bettersomeday.
And sawadika, aloha, namaste,and stay healthy.
Here we go.
What are we doing here?
We're going to do that.
There we go.
Cool Whatever.

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