Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to Sunday
Night Live.
And again, so many problemswith the electricity around here
.
It's just ridiculous.
Anyway, I apologize, apologize,I'm so sorry.
Anyway, I'm sure most of youwent to sleep already, it's so
late.
Anyway, thank you for hangingin there.
(00:25):
And, as you all know, it'sSunday Night Live in the US and
Canada and Mexico and placeslike that, and it's Sunday
morning over here.
And, just as a reminder, it'son X and the new TikTok is at
(00:53):
drthomaslodymd.
All the other ones Instagramand Facebook, youtube, all the
other ones are at drthomaslodyand you all know that.
All right, thomas Lodi, and youall know that.
All right.
(01:15):
Anyway, the weekly, the groupsare working out very amazing and
amazingly.
So I hope you're allconsidering getting involved so
that we can interact directly,all right?
So let's start with somequestions.
There is Ah, there's somethingelse.
(01:39):
One other thing is that I'mgoing to have a webinar on the
28th of July about the humandiet.
It really has to be in threeparts, but I'm going to make the
first part at least touch oneverything to give it a sense of
(02:00):
comprehensiveness.
But to do it right, it'll haveto be in three parts, but the
first part of the, becausethere's a lot of.
That's probably the most commonquestion that comes up what
should I eat?
And then you have people onlinewho are eating.
You know there's all sorts ofdiets.
So I decided I need to clarifythat, and it's not that hard to
(02:23):
clarify it, it's kind of easy.
Oh, so, by the way, so if you'renot a member of the groups,
there's a?
What is it?
You can reserve your seat by aone-time pass ticket.
(02:44):
I'm not sure what that means,but go on DrLodycom and find out
about this.
Yes, it's live.
Rotten steam.
Okay, good, the Human Diet willbe live.
It'll be a live webinar.
(03:05):
So please join that and also goto my website link on my post.
On every social media platform,if you look at them, they'll
tell you how to get a ticket forthis, unless you're a member.
(03:33):
I don't know much about thispart.
Anyway, hey there everybody.
Oh, how to fix a high spike Mprotein?
Wow, well, I've got to excuseme, I have to answer the
(03:56):
questions that were submitted,but just just as a quick, just
as an overall understanding ofit, is a high spike M protein is
(04:16):
?
You know it's, it's, it's thesame type of thing that's going
on with all CFCs.
You know it's fundamentally a aa biochemical metabolic process
that's going on and in thiscase it's taking place with
plasma cells that are producingand anyway, remember, all CFCs
(04:41):
are the same process going on indifferent locations hey, from
Florida, anyway, so that'sreally important to remember.
So there's really nothingdifferent about it All.
Right Now, the one thing you cando to directly address that is
a plasmapheresis that down andit can bring down some other
(05:02):
anti.
You know, we start to produceproteins that are basically
interfere with our immunefunction and those can also be
(05:24):
taken care of withplasmapheresis.
The problem with plasmapheresisand just to see if anyone's
ever heard of it is that's wherethey.
It looks like dialysis, wherethey have a catheter in each
side and it's like an EBU Ifanyone's had EBU for ozone.
It's basically it exchanges allthe uh, the proteins, not all
(05:47):
the proteins.
But the good thing about it isyou're gonna have very small
filters so you can select outthe proteins you want to filter
out.
So it's very good.
I mean, there are times whenthat's the only thing you can do
to help someone who's got um alot of problems.
For example, spike protein canbe be filtered out in that way.
But plasmapheresis is crazy,it's expensive, it's hard to
(06:12):
find anyone who's doing it right.
So that's why I mean Imentioned that with a high M
protein, but we need to.
Really one thing is filteringit out.
But if it's going to keep beingmade, then we're not going to
get very far.
It's just going to kind of slowthings down.
(06:33):
So we've got to get to the rootof it, like we do with all
things.
What is going on here?
It's freezing.
How can this works too well,okay, okay.
So Anyway, if you're notfamiliar, we have three groups
(07:09):
the health and healing group,the parasite group and the CFC
guidance group, which is cancerwe don't use that word, but
anyway, it's almost like aprivate consult twice a week if
you're in the CFC group, becausewe can talk about your
situation as if we were having aconsultation twice a week.
(07:32):
And that's why I don't reallydo have consultations anymore,
because I just there's no timeto do them all.
Oh, very good.
Mara Pleasant In Santa Rosa,california.
Wow, santa Rosa is quite alittle spot, isn't it?
It's got Dr Rowan, it's gotwhat's the fasting place there?
(07:57):
Yeah, it's pretty amazinglittle town and beautiful, and
so many people eat.
Well, it's pretty amazing.
You wouldn't believe what wenton with electricity this morning
(08:19):
, but I can't even explain it.
Anyway, let's get into thesequestions and make them a little
bit bigger so I can see them.
Okay, there we go.
Okay, marina, would yourecommend getting blood work
(08:43):
done after an eight-day fast?
Well, I mean true, nor.
Thanks, jeff, true north,absolutely.
Wow, a lot of questions I haveto answer.
(09:09):
Really, I have to answer thesequestions.
So join the groups please, sothat I can answer live questions
.
So Marina is asking here whenwould you recommend getting
blood work done after aneight-day fast?
Well, on that day or the nextday you could.
(09:35):
But and I'm not sure thereasoning for it I guess you'd
want to know how well did thathelp.
I'm not sure the reasoning forit.
I guess you'd want to know howwell did that help.
Yes, dr Alan Goldhammer is theman who's the doctor, who's in
charge up there at True North,which is, I think, the only
(09:55):
water fasting place I know of inthe US.
I'm not sure.
But back to Marina's question.
You know, even if you did atest, I really want to clarify
with testing, when we test,we're, you know, we're down.
There's a lot of down and fearinvolved in testing, and that's
(10:18):
why we test.
And if you feel good after thefast, things are looking good,
you could get a test.
I understand how we've gottenlocked into that.
We all grew up in that systemand we can't help it.
Eventually we'll get past that.
We won't need to be testingourselves because we'll know how
(10:40):
we feel by knowing how we feel,how we feel by knowing how we
feel.
But anyway, if you're justlooking at what would be the
best time in terms of gettingthe most accurate assessment of
what the fast did, I would sayon the eighth day, ninth day,
(11:01):
right then, because you're rightat the peak of it, ninth day,
right then, because that'syou're right at the peak of it.
But also keep in mind that whenwe're, when you're doing things
like fasting and cleansing,there are cycles and sometimes
things might look like they'regetting worse and that's because
of the process of healing.
Um and so if you catch it atthe wrong time, you might think
(11:21):
that maybe not the wrong time.
You might think that maybe notthe wrong time, but if you catch
it at the time when someonenumbers that you don't want to
be up or up, that's not thewhole story.
You'd have to retest again,maybe in a few days.
So it really depends.
And you also want to testfasting.
The other thing is we've got tobe.
We have to before we just do aneight day water fast.
(11:43):
Hopefully we've done our juicecleanse already, which is a long
three, four-week cleanse, butanyway, day eight or nine,
marina, would be the best time.
So, elizabeth, breast CFCs Ihave a breast tumor that kept
(12:08):
going through the last sixmonths of ivermectin and
fenbendazole.
I'm an athlete and coach and canno longer hide it through the
clothing I need to wear for mywork.
I have not gone anywhere neardoctors.
This all started exactly whenmy period ceased.
I am 52.
(12:29):
I am not in a financial stateto be paying for anything
medical, as just covering mybasic living expenses is a
challenge.
Moreover, I am on my own, withno partner or husband, no
children and no family anywherenear me.
With no partner or husband, nochildren and no family anywhere
near me, the loneliness anddisillusionment of life has
(12:53):
definitely weighed on me andtaken a toll, along with a brief
but abusive relationship.
For a few months, I'm eatingone meal a day and sleeping
better than I used to, but itjust won't stop.
I feel so alone and so humbledby this.
One meal a day and sleepingbetter than I used to, but it
just won't stop.
I feel so alone and so humbledby this.
I'm trying to keep it private,but my work, but with my work.
(13:15):
Soon other people willinevitably notice.
Yeah, I hear that.
So, elizabeth, if you can jointhe groups I know you don't have
any extra money, but the onething is, if you join the groups
(13:36):
we could get you started in theright direction, and if you've
been listening for a while, thenyou know that we don't.
You know, the problem is thisis going to cost some money.
You're going to have to see abiological dentist.
There's okay, that's.
I don't know.
I don't know a way around that.
So that's, that's that's.
(13:59):
The tragedy of this whole thingis that it costs money.
Tragedy of this whole thing isthat it costs money, and that's
the part of it that really hasreally disturbed me for a long
time.
It costs money, and so muchmoney.
It's not even a reasonableamount of money.
It's ridiculous.
But anyway, what you can doright away is start the
(14:22):
cleansing.
You know we talk about thisevery week.
I hope you listen frequently.
But if you join the group wemeet, the CFC group.
We meet twice a week, right?
(14:42):
So that gives us a chance totalk about your situation twice
a week, right?
So that gives us a chance toand talk about your situation
twice a week, which is like anongoing consultation.
But anyway, start with cleansing.
You've got to see a biologicalthat.
You've got to make sure there.
Then there's not a problemthere.
Now, do you know, do you have a, any root canals or do you have
(15:02):
any extracted teeth?
How are your gums?
Are they, you know?
But anyway, you have to see abiologic with that.
It's a 3D cone beam CT.
It's a quick, 20-second process, but it's horrible.
(15:26):
It's horrible that that, that,that this whole process costs
money.
I, I just, uh, I don't know, Idon't know.
I haven't tried.
I've tried my whole life to, ormy working life to get around
that.
So I can.
One of the reasons I came hereto Thailand was to try to lower
(15:47):
the costs.
But anyway, and you're going tohave to do, you're going to
have to start with the juicecleanse and I it's not Elizabeth
, I don't know if you've beenlistening a lot, but I hope you
have.
I hope you've been listeningand if you have, then you know
(16:08):
that a lot of things areavailable on the website and you
understand the importance of ajuice cleanse.
We talk about it every week, butit's a way of changing the
water in your aquarium, it's away of cleaning out and it's
simply done by the law of massaction.
You just keep drinking thesefresh juices and no eating of
(16:30):
solid foods, three-quarters aday, if you can, until you're
peeing out of everywhere.
All right, you're justcleansing and cleansing and
cleansing.
You're doing this three weeks,four weeks, five weeks.
The longer you do it, thebetter it is.
And if we want to stop thatgrowth which I can see right now
is a main focus of yours if wewant to stop that process,
(16:54):
you've got to just cleanimmediately, immediately, now.
If you have had no extractionsand no root canals and no
amalgams put in your mouth, youstill need to see for an
evaluation a biological dentist.
It's just essential and starton your juice cleanse.
(17:24):
So you're on the ivermectin andfenbendazole.
That's great.
The ivermectin, I hope you'retaking at least 12 milligrams
three times a day and thefenbendazole, 222 milligrams
three times a day, right.
So I don't know about that's aproblem.
What's going on it's being so Idon't know about.
That's a problem.
What's going on it's being andabout being alone.
(17:49):
That's why, if you do join ourgroups, you're not alone anymore
.
You're going to have, like,lots of friends, sincere friends
.
People are not trying to getsomething from you or sell you
something.
People who care, who are inyour position, and we share a
lot.
So it's of resources, ofeverything.
(18:10):
It's very important, and youcan also join Kathy's Corner
when you get in there, becausethat's part of the membership
and that's a place for us totalk about how we feel.
So but you start out with thecleanse.
That's the way you do.
You know.
(18:32):
The problem is that even thatis expensive.
Imagine, even the cleanse isexpensive.
It's crazy, it's just.
It's just.
It's madness.
But somehow you have to workthat out.
Whatever your finances are,work it out so that you're going
(18:53):
to spend some of that money oryou're going to reserve your
money for cleansing.
It's essential.
Then you're going to have toget certain supplements and then
, after the cleanse, you'regoing to do certain supplements
and then, after the cleanse, youcan eat healthy for a while,
and that's uncooked, that is, ifyou have uncooked plant food,
(19:21):
and that's just it.
Also, if you join the group,you'll be able to have access to
Donna Barone, who has beeneating uncooked plant food for
about 37 years now and she'samazing.
And there are other people thatyou have access to if you join
the group, the CFC group, if youjoin the group, the CFC group.
(19:50):
So the question here is can youtake fenbendazole if you have
liver CFCs?
Sure, you just need to look atyour liver function.
Many people have either lesscommon primary liver CFCs, but
(20:12):
many people have metastaticwhere it started somewhere else
in the breast or the ovary orcolon and it's gone to the liver
.
So, yes, the thing you need tolook at is the liver enzymes,
the AST and ALT, and you know ifthey're going up.
Depending on how high they are,you will have to adjust the
dosage, that's all.
(20:32):
So you know.
I know that you think having nofamily anywhere to help you.
I mean, I understand that'sprobably very sad, but I can't
tell you how many people havefamily and their problem is the
(20:54):
family not agreeing with whatthey do, what they've decided to
do, and that's that can be.
So I want you to understandthat that can actually be a
blessing in this particularsituation.
But you do need friends, you doneed support, you do need love
we all do and if you join agroup, that's what you get, plus
information and knowledge onhow to turn this around Right.
(21:20):
And you join the groups by goingto drlodycom, drlodycom,
drlodycom, the groups by goingto drlodycom, drlodycom, and
right on there, when you enterthe website, you'll see there's
three groups health and healing,parasites and CFC, which, I
hope, if you're new, that's whatwe that's the acronym we use
(21:41):
for the three words chronicallyfermenting cells, which define
what's going on in people whohave tumors.
That's what it's going on.
There's no astrological sciencein there.
Okay, okay, all right, from thePhilippines, fantastic, you
have an excellent biologicaldentist over there, dr Ebuwin,
(22:03):
in Manila, e-v-u-e-n.
In fact, that's where I go.
It's the only place inSoutheast Asia that you can go
to.
So, oh, very good.
So you're new, okay, welcome.
So if you go to the website,drlodycom, you can find out
(22:26):
about the groups.
Good, good, very good,excellent, alice, thank you.
So, and you know, just, youknow about this particular group
, though you know all the, theuh, the health and healing group
and the parasite group.
They meet once every other week, but there's content available,
(22:48):
um, um and there's other thingsavailable by being a member of
the group, the, and everyone hasaccess to on tuesdays, and
(23:30):
everyone has access to onTuesdays, darren, the kinesi
chef, and will just help youwith leading a raw lifestyle.
And then, if you're in the CFCgroup, you have also access to
Kathy's Corner, which is Kathy'sa psychotherapist who's been
(23:53):
with us from the beginning andshe just helps us all get
clearer on how we feel and learnhow to see things more clearly
with what happens, with andthat's the problem there's
something called the rationalemotive network process
continuum rationalist thought.
(24:14):
I have a thought which is a fact.
Let's say it's a fact.
Okay, now our thinking doesn'tstop there.
We then.
We then make conclusions and wesay therefore and those
conclusions can be fantastic orthey can be horrible.
So we could, I could say, um,uh, oh, forget it.
(24:38):
Let's say I, I have a a small,a small accident on the way home
.
Somebody hits my car with theirmotorcycle from behind.
It's not a big deal, no onegets harmed or anything and I
could say, oh, my God.
Therefore, I knew I shouldn'thave taken that route, I really
(24:59):
shouldn't be driving today and Icould take that all the way and
turn it into a horrible thing.
Or I could just say I had asmall fender bender Right, I
could do that.
And you know there was AlbertEllis, is the is the
psychologist who started thewhole, kind of formalized the
(25:19):
process of rational emotivetherapy, kind of formalized the
process of rational emotivetherapy.
And he, you know, I rememberseeing a teaching film with him
with a woman who had she wasreally become disabled because
of her mind, because of herpsychological condition.
(25:42):
So you know, he had a couplesessions with her and he found
out that what had happened isshe was wanting to get married.
She met a man who was eligibleand fit all the criteria that
she thought was necessary forher and she went out with him
(26:04):
and they had a wonderful timeand then he never called again.
So those are the facts she wastelling herself.
Therefore, no one will everlike me.
Therefore, I'll never findsomeone as a partner.
Therefore, the rest of my lifewill be ruined.
(26:25):
She took this all the way.
Those are all the therefores,and one of the things that we
need to all learn is how not to,if we're going to have
therefores, understand that theyare therefores and they're
imaginations.
They're not real, they haven't,you know.
These, therefores are,especially in reference to the
future, are just made up, so youhave to know that, you have to
(26:51):
know that.
But, anyway, another thingthat's important is to get some
clarity on that, because we'rein the middle of our own minds,
we don't really know how we'rethinking, we don't understand it
, and it's really helpful andit's a whole group of us I'm not
in the group, I'm in the groupoccasionally, but but it's a
whole group of people that aregoing through the same thing and
(27:11):
it's a wonderful experience Ihear from all of them, you know
to be with people who know,really know what you're going
through and can help you, tellyou where they were at and
they'll show you where you'reyou through, and can help you
tell you where they were at andthey'll show you where you're.
You know that this fear, thisparticular fear, might not be
(27:31):
necessary, and so, anyway, it'samazing and you have friends,
real friends, and what I likeabout this group is that these
friendships are not based uponany.
These relationships are notbased upon any finances.
You know, I one of the reasonsI don't like money, why I don't
(27:53):
have much of it.
But is I?
My feeling about money is thatwhenever money's involved in a
relationship, it lowers itsauthenticity of it lowers the
authenticity of the relationship.
That's just my, you know.
That doesn't have to be true,it's just the way I see it.
Okay, so that's why I don'tlike money.
(28:18):
I don't like so, anyway, thatdoesn't exist.
So, with all these people thatyou'll meet, you're all friends.
So, anyway, that doesn't exist.
So, with all these people thatyou'll meet, you're all friends.
You all will help each otherwithout any requirements.
So that's very important too.
And all these people have beenthrough it and they're going
through it and they're going toshow you how they did it and
(28:42):
they're doing great.
So, anyway, all right, great.
So, anyway, all right, okay.
So here's this is uh, from Stacy.
I have chronic lymphocyticleukemia.
What methods and protocolsshould I take?
My WBC is 274,000.
(29:03):
They are telling me three.
There is no cure.
I'm 47 years old.
Okay, stacey, your whitecount's high and needs to come
down.
That is true in terms of therebeing no cure.
(29:34):
I want, I want to help youchange your understanding of
that.
Okay, there is no cure becausethere is no thing to cure.
So let me.
Let me explain that.
The reason the white blood cellcount goes up so high is that
in the bone marrow there arethree areas or three types of
(29:55):
cells that are born and releasedout to the system.
Those are red blood cells,white blood cells and platelets.
Okay, so, the white blood cellsand there are several types of
white blood cells, but they'reall began in the bone marrow and
they get released at differenttimes depending on their
(30:23):
particular function and the waythey mature and all that sort of
thing you know.
So lymphocytes can become arethe ones that become T cells, b
cells, natural killer cells.
So they're very important.
Now, the term that they're usingchronic lymphocytic leukemia,
(30:44):
leukemia.
Leukemia means LEUK, which is aprefix that refers to white in
this case white blood cells, andthen the suffix emia, which
means blood.
So it's not really adescription of what's going on,
(31:07):
it's just the white cells in theblood.
That's not really a description.
But what is meant is that thereare high white cells in the
blood, or there are occasionswhere leukemia can be the
opposite, where you have verylow white count.
I mean really really low, low,low, low.
So it's basically sayingthere's a problem in the blood
with your white blood cells.
That's what it's saying chroniclymphocytic.
(31:29):
So anyway, we understand whatthe problem is.
The problem is is that if whathas happened is one particular
clone of of lymphocytes that arebeing produced with chronic
(31:53):
lymphocytic leukemia are notfunctional, they're not healthy
lymphocytes.
So it's not like you have areally high healthy lymphocyte
count and the reason they'rebeing produced at their rapid
rate is like they're in someclonal expansion process.
What we have to ask ourselvesis how this happened and how can
(32:15):
I stop it.
How it happened is the same waywhen we talk about breast,
colon, ovary, doesnary, doesn'tmatter brain, pancreas and in
the blood, um, thank you.
Amazing, um, um, um.
(32:40):
So think about what we'retalking about.
We're talking about aparticular clone, a particular
Okay, there's a word genotypeand phenotype.
(33:02):
So genotype, it means thegenetics involved in a cell.
What are its genetics?
That's its genotype.
The phenotype is the way thosegenes are being expressed, the
XX genotype.
(33:24):
When we're referring to thesexual, the cells involved in
sexual differentiation, the XXis a female and every female you
meet is XX.
But look at all the differentways it's being manifest, right?
So that's the phenotype.
The phenotype is the way it'smanifest, right?
(33:46):
So that's the phenotype.
The phenotype is the way it'smanifest, um, and the phenotype
can change.
And the phenotype can, in otherwords, the, the genes that
exist in a cell can expressthemselves in different ways, by
turning off certain ones andturning on other ones.
You know, it's not, it's not,and that's how our bodies are,
(34:06):
that's how we grow and develop.
So in the uterus, when, the,when, the, when, the when,
actually in the fallopian tubes,where the sperm and eggs, egg
meet and fuse and become one.
Then, and then the process of,you know, migration and all that
, and it finally lodges into theuterus where it grows.
But that whole process of wherethat one cell, which is the
(34:30):
specific DNA, half from themother, half from the father,
they divide into two cells andthey divide into four cells and
they divide into eight cells andthey divide into 16 cells, and
it keeps doubling, and it getsto a point, early on in the
process, just in a few weeks,where these cells, the process
(34:53):
of differentiation occurs, andthat's where this group of cells
stops, turns off all the genes,in other words, doesn't allow
them to be expressed, silencesthem.
All the genes except for kidneyand this group over here, all
the genes except for liver, allthese genes over here, all the
genes except for brain, centralnervous system, et cetera.
(35:13):
That's called the process ofdifferentiation, all right.
So each cell still has thecapability of being every cell,
but it's turned them off.
That's epigenetics.
That's basically that'sepigenetics, and we talk about
(35:37):
that, you know, with the.
And our epi means epi meansabove or around genetics, and
the genetics means genetics.
And our epi means epi meansabove or around genetics and the
genetics means genetics aregenes.
So the epigenetic influence ongenes is tremendous, because if
you turn off, if you turn off agene so that it can't express
(35:57):
itself, it's the same as nothaving it.
So if a gene is shut down orit's just turned off, silenced,
you don't have it, and if a geneis turned on, you have it.
So that's why two differentkidney cells can be completely
different if they're silenced,if they have different genes
that they're expressing anddifferent genes that they're not
expressing, all right.
So this is very important, thiswhole epigenetic concept.
(36:19):
And so what happens with CFCs,chronically fermenting cells and
I hope you, elizabeth, that younot Elizabeth, this is Stacy
and I hope you've been aroundfor a while to understand that
the CFC process, which is where60% of the mitochondria get
(36:41):
rendered non-functional.
The cell has to go through.
It has to change operatingsystems.
It has to go from oxidativephosphorylation to glycolysis,
which is also fermentation.
It's got to change Because,even though it's a less
(37:02):
efficient way of producingenergy, it produces energy and
it's the only efficient way ofproducing energy.
It produces energy and it's theonly other way a cell can
produce energy, so that's whatit does.
All right.
So in your particular case, thisis that occur.
This is occurring in the bonemarrow, whereas someone else
might be occurring in the breast, the ovary, the colon, the
pancreas, right, but that'swhere it's occurring and so all
(37:23):
the problems associated with itare due to the location in which
it started and what the cellsare used for, what their
function is in life.
So the way they look at it isWell, yes, very interesting.
(38:01):
I'm not sure your name is.
I don't see your name onFacebook.
It says I'm sorry, get back toyou in a second Stacey.
It says I'm an acute care nursepractitioner, icu background,
now hoping to ethically practice.
I get it.
Does your inner circle provideprotocols for parasite molds?
Yes, it Does your inner circleprovide protocols for parasite
molds, yes, in the parasitegroup, but you want to do more
(38:25):
than that too as well.
But that's a great way to start.
I'm in the process of doing atrillion things and getting
almost none of them done, butone of them is developing a
through my Singapore basedcompany, institute of
Integrative Oncology.
Start certifying people,training people, you know.
(38:49):
So, yeah, but absolutely jointhe parasite group.
What's your name?
The?
Your name is, oh, chantel,great Chantel, yeah.
(39:09):
So the Meds for ParasiteProtocol when can you get all
these?
Again, follow my assistant.
If you go hello at drlodycom,she can get them for you, but
we're working with this group tofinalize I've been saying this
for a long time a place whereyou can just order them all.
(39:30):
So it's pretty close to beingfinished, but in the meantime,
she can get them for you, but inthe meantime, she can get them
for you.
And then, if you join our group, there's access to all sorts of
resources, because all theother members of the group have
all these resources.
It's amazing.
(39:52):
But so, getting back here toStacey, so the particular clone
or phenotype of your white bloodcells that has become, that is
growing without stopping, areyour lymphocytes.
Okay, so that's what that means.
(40:15):
So why, how did this happen?
And that's not always possibleto answer.
And one of the questions thatcomes up often is that, okay,
well, I get it, but why mybreast instead of my ovary, or
why my pancreas instead of mycolon?
(40:39):
You know, and that question iswith any specific person it's
pretty much we're unable toanswer it.
But in general you'd have tounderstand that if it's
happening in one location ofyour body, your whole, your
entire body, is being exposed tothe same biochemical soup, but
(41:03):
because of other issues withthat particular organ, it may
affect it quicker.
For example, if someone had, youknow, basically had a lot of
toxins that were eating upmitochondria, but they also had
(41:26):
anovulatory cycles where theyweren't ovulating, where they
weren't producing progesterone,so they were very estrogen
dominant.
So they were estrogen dominantand that, and they wore a tight
bra, and they wore a tight braor, you know, an aluminum,
(41:53):
aluminum based deodorants, andthen, left or right depending on
left or right we can look atthe cycle, emotional aspects of
that as well had a very troubledrelationship with their mother
or their children Left sideTroubled relationship with
spouse or employer, right sideor father.
(42:14):
So there's so many variablesthat go into it.
So in your situation, we maynot know, but it doesn't matter.
If we know what particulartoxins came together in sort of
like a perfect storm toaccomplish this, it doesn't
matter.
I mean it matters.
But if we don't know it, it'sokay, because we just want to
(42:37):
eliminate it.
But we do know that's whathappened, we do know that.
And when they say that it'sincurable, they're saying you
have a disease.
And again, a disease means thatthere's this third party thing
that got into you, that'sdisrupting your life and you
have to get rid of it.
And that's just not what'sgoing on.
Okay, what's going on is thatyou've had an accumulation of
(42:59):
toxins over your lifetime andfor some reason they had more
and more of an effect in yourbone marrow than it did
elsewhere.
And you might have, might youdo have other chronically
fermenting cells Otherwhere.
We all do not, not, not justyou, we all do All right.
So and this goes for you too,elizabeth, so I hope you're
(43:22):
listening so it doesn't matterwhere it started.
You must get over that wholeRockefeller nonsense.
It doesn't matter where itstarted, I mean it matters.
But I'm saying that's not.
That doesn't mean it issomething different than, okay,
(43:46):
the difference between breastand bone marrow in terms of
chronically fermenting cells isdue to the location.
The breasts are where they are,they do what they do and the
bone marrow is where it is andit does what it does.
So, for example, if you've gotthe apparatus for producing new
cells in your bone marrow is ata nonstop proliferative phase,
(44:13):
then that means it doesn't havethe energy and the capability of
producing other cells, becauseit's just producing these at a
very high rate, so it's notmaking it.
So two things are happening.
One is you're getting such anaccumulation of the lymphocytes
(44:35):
that the percentage of othercells is very low, because you
know percentage means out of 100.
How many do we have, right?
So 20 would mean you have 20out of 100, right?
So the percentage of othercells is going to be very, very
low compared to the the amountof these lymphocytes.
And these remember, thesecloned lymphocytes are not
(44:58):
functional lymphocytes, whichmeans you're going to get anemic
because you won't be able tomake enough red blood cells,
which means you know those areall the meanings of that, okay,
that we need to bring that down.
So the way I've done thisthroughout the years and it
works very easily.
It's very easy to do, andthat's with IPT insulin
(45:18):
fatiation.
It's very easy to do and that'swith IPT insulin fatiation low
dose chemotherapy.
So this is one of thesituations where I do use it.
So I would now, while we'redoing that, you're going through
the cleansing.
You've got to start thecleansing.
You've got to start thecleansing.
You've got to check your mouth.
(45:40):
You get colonics, lymphatics.
There's a lot of cleansing.
You've got to start tocleansing.
You've got to check your mouth.
You get colonics, lymphatics.
There's a lot of cleansingyou've got to be doing.
And then I'd begin the IPD andI'd also begin intravenous
vitamin C and I'd have you betaking all.
There's a whole dietary,there's a whole program to be on
and we could bring down thathigh white count rapidly, two or
(46:00):
three weeks.
So I mean it'll start comingdown right away and that's a way
of using insulin potentiationtherapy is a way of using
chemotherapy when you have to ina situation like this, but with
minimizing any toxic effect onthe body, which is really
(46:24):
essential, because with standardchemo, unfortunately, there's
no way.
It's not targeting any specificcell, it's just shotgun, getting
them all, and you wind uphaving as much damage to your
healthy cells as you do to thecells you didn't want around
anymore.
So the IPT we were able totarget that in and we're doing
(46:51):
that again based on ourknowledge of metabolism, of
biology, and that is that it hasto do with insulin receptors
and glucose requirements and allthat.
Just knowing the biology ofthings allows you to work within
that and that's calledmetabolic therapies.
A metabolic therapy is when youare using your knowledge of the
metabolism and the biologicalrequirements of cells to
(47:15):
challenge them.
That's with vitamin C,high-dose vitamin C and curcumin
and some of the other botanicaltherapies.
But IPT is not a metabolictherapy.
It is a cytotoxic therapy.
Cyto meaning cell toxic meaningtoxic.
But what we've done is with theinsulin.
(47:36):
That we've done what has beendone for us by Dr Donato Perez
Garcia.
The first, a hundred years ago,was using the insulin.
You're able to target the CFCsvery nicely, meaning that first
of all, we're going to give a10% dose 10% of the normal
(47:59):
standard dose, in some cases 5%and we're going to use it with
insulin so that we target justthe CFCs.
What that means is that,suppose you did not do it this
(48:26):
way, suppose you gave thestandard high-dose chemotherapy
Right.
Okay, it would be dispersed toall cells around the body evenly
is what it would do.
All right.
And the reason they call itmaximum tolerated chemotherapy
because it's the amount that aperson, that the average person,
can tolerate without dying.
And the reason they have to usehigh doses is because they want
(48:49):
to, by the law of mass action,just to get enough of that chemo
into the cells, the CFCs, aspossible.
And the maximum tolerated partmeans without wiping out the
(49:10):
healthy cells.
That's not at all possible Atall.
So we're giving 10%, and 10%even to somebody without the
insulin.
You're not going to feel great,but it's tolerable, it's doable
.
The amount of toxins that we'reexposed to daily in this modern
(49:33):
world are probably close tothat.
However, by targeting with theinsulin receptor and that's
another time, we'll go into thatwith the insulin receptor,
relying on insulin receptors anduse the insulin, we're going to
get most of that 10% into thecells that we want to get into
(49:53):
and not elsewhere.
That's the important part.
So what's left over forelsewhere is somewhere.
So what's left over forelsewhere is somewhere.
So let's say, for example, wegive a dose of chemotherapy and
(50:17):
50% of it goes into the CFC and50% goes elsewhere.
All right.
Now, if we give 10% of thatdose, right, that would mean
that all cells evenly got it.
(50:39):
But let's say 50% went in, likewe said before, like 50% went
into the CFCs and 50% didn't.
So the 50% that didn't, or thatdid not go into these CFCs but
are in the general circulationand can cause harm, is 50% of a
10% does, and 50% of 10% is 5%.
(51:00):
So this, what they call sideeffects, would be 5%.
This is just an example of howto look at this.
If you go to the websitedrlodycom and look under
webinars, you'll find Dr I'vedone two with Dr, three actually
with Dr Donato Perez Garcia,the third, the grandson of the
(51:23):
man who developed IPT.
Anyway, that's what I woulddefinitely recommend in your
situation.
I'm not sure where you are,stacy, but you're very welcome
to come to our center in Arizona, an Oasis of Healing, and then
(51:55):
we begin the cleansing processtoo, and when the cells start
coming down, you'll feel better,because now you're anemic,
because I'm sure you're anemic,it will not be as profound.
Things start rebalancing andthen it gives us an opportunity
to reestablish balance in yoursystem.
That's what we need to do.
So, stacy, so Stacy, there areother places around.
(52:27):
I don't know of any that lookat diet and all of this.
I just don't.
If anyone knows of a place,please tell me.
I'd love to find somewhere elsethat's doing everything.
But anyway, please call us atum and Oasis of healing, calm,
you know, I think they changedthe number for years.
(52:54):
It was, for, you know, eight,three, four, five, four, one,
four.
I think it's changed.
I can't believe it.
I don't know why we changed it,but an oasis of healing, or you
(53:26):
can contact hello at drlodycomand have Fah put you in touch
with me so I can expedite theprocess.
Okay, the next person is Javier,and the topic is constipation.
I'm 20 years old and have hadconstipation all my life.
They are now saying it may bePOTS syndrome.
I had a stomach bug in Decemberand I've lost 32 pounds with
(53:50):
malabsorption issues since then.
Please help, I do have aconnective tissue disorder.
Don't know if there's acorrelation.
Okay, xavier, and you're 20years old.
One moment, please Excuse meone moment.
So, um, so, uh, all right,sorry, you know, what goes in
(55:35):
must go out.
Hopefully, that's what we'retalking about, anyway, all right
, that we're talking about,anyway, all right.
So so, to address your questionhere, xavier, probably saying
(55:55):
that wrong, but okay.
Okay, let's understand how thebowels work.
We've got approximately 30 feetof a tube starting here and
(56:17):
ending at the anus, or 10 metersif you're in the metric system.
Um, the last 1.5 meters or thelast five feet is the colon, and
so the process of digestion isyou eat, absorb, you eat it,
hopefully absorb it all, or allthe nutrients and all the non,
(56:38):
all the, all the ingredientsthat were in the food you ate
that were not necessary pass out, and there's a process in the
gastrointestinal tract thatmoves things along, called
peristalsis, and that's just awell synchronized constriction
(57:00):
of the bowel from higher up tolower, okay, and that moves
things along.
That requires a certain amountof fluid, because during
digestion we absorb most of thefluid.
We reabsorb that we can't.
It's a very conservative system.
The last 10% to 15% of thatwater that needs to be
(57:23):
reabsorbed from our daily intakeof water is removed by the
colon.
The remaining 10 to 15% thatneeds to be removed is removed
in the colon and the colon is so, for example, when you've eaten
, chewed, swallowed, and it'sgone through all the processes.
(57:45):
Once you swallow it, it'scalled chyme, c-h-y-m-e and
there's different types of chymedepending on where it is in the
system, types, meaning that hasdiffering amounts of
ingredients because some areabsorbed, et cetera.
So when it arrives at the endof the small intestines and
enters the large intestines, insomeone who's healthy and well
(58:10):
hydrated, it will take about sixhours to remove that last
remaining 10% to 15% of thewater and then you're done and
it should come out.
So if it doesn't, what's goingon?
Several things can be going on.
What you're eating is top onthe list, okay.
(58:30):
So, for example, somebody whoeats food that doesn't have a
lot of plants a lot of plants issee, the plants actually have
cellulose which helps movethings along.
Right, because the cellulosecan't be digested so it kind of
(58:52):
remains in there and it pullswater into, so it keeps it
hydrated, but that kind of helpsthe whole parasitic process,
helps things moving along.
So if you're eating foods thatdon't have that plants in it,
then you've lost thatcontribution.
(59:17):
The other thing there's a fewother things that can happen on
the transit time from the mouthdown to the colon, and that is
if your small intestine hasleaks in it.
You've heard leaky gut syndrome.
If you have leaks in it.
(59:38):
Then, on top of the wholeprocess, you're going to be
absorbing things that you don'twant to absorb, and that's going
to be causing your body to havereactions to it, almost like
what you'd think of as anallergic reaction.
Your body has to eliminate it.
For example, we cannot absorbmore than one amino acid, so
(59:59):
proteins are made of at least100 amino acids.
So when you break them downinto single amino acids, you can
absorb those.
So if you haven't adequatelybroken them down, then they
cannot be absorbed.
Now, if you have leaky gut,though, and maybe three or four
or five amino acids stillconnected are absorbed, that
(01:00:21):
causes a problem in the bloodthe body has.
Your immune system has a bigproblem with that.
Okay, that's why you can't.
When you think of eating protein, you're not eating protein, I
mean you're not going to get,you're not going to absorb the
protein that you eat.
Your body's going to break itdown into its constituent amino
(01:00:42):
acids, and then you'll absorbthose.
So it's like collagen whenpeople are taking collagen
supplements.
Your body cannot absorbcollagen.
If collagen enters your blood,you'd have an anaphylactic shock
.
You'd be sick, you'd be very,you're very, very sick.
(01:01:04):
So to make use of the protein,we've got to break it down into
amino acids.
So it's a lot more efficient,um, to eat uh foods that are, uh
, either already broken downinto amino acids or there's much
smaller groups of them, peptidegroups Anyway.
(01:01:26):
So there's that aspect.
You can also absorb toxins.
You can absorb bacteria orheavy metals or anything Okay,
so that leaky gut can be a bigproblem.
Most people don't drink enoughfluid.
Now, we often talk about water.
(01:01:48):
You need to drink X amount ofwater per day, but if you think
about it, a plant is what?
95% water, so you're getting alot of water.
So if you drink a vegetablejuice fresh vegetable juice
(01:02:08):
you're getting water with somenutrients in it.
It's pretty good.
So during the day when you'reliving and eating healthy, if
you're eating healthy, you won'teat for about 18 hours, which
means and you're going to stopeating four to five hours before
sleep and you're going to sleepat nine.
(01:02:29):
So if you stop eating at four,that means your first meal can
be at 10, and you will have noteaten 18 hours, which is
excellent because it gives yourbody a chance to replace itself
and restore itself and all thatand get rid of toxins.
Chance to replace itself andrestore itself and all that and
get rid of toxins.
And but during that 18 hoursyou can be drinking lots of
water.
During that, during the sixhours that you're eating, you
(01:02:52):
can be drinking nutrient waterlike juices etc.
Now if you're doing a juicecleanse, then of course you
don't just eat during six hours.
During that juice cleanseyou're going to drink juice from
the time you wake up untilabout 5 pm so that you don't
stay up all night going to thebathroom.
So the point I'm making here isabout being well hydrated.
(01:03:17):
Sometimes and it's notinfrequent, it's frequent that
just by increasing the amount offluid water intake can help
with constipation.
Now the other thing is is therecan be conditions where your
ability, that peristalticability of the gut, can be
(01:03:37):
hampered, can be damaged.
So I'm not sure what's going onwith you.
Now you say you have aconnective tissue disorder.
Connective tissue disorder isanother.
The body is attacking itself.
It's producing antibodies thatare attacking the very structure
(01:04:13):
of the human body.
So the immune system is prettystupid, Can't figure it out.
That's the implication.
But that's not the case.
The immune system wouldn't dothat.
There's no reason for theimmune system to do that.
What it's doing is it'sidentified something that we
haven't quite figured out andit's going after it, because it
(01:04:38):
would never just go after thebody.
So if you have a connectivetissue disorder, that could be a
systemic lupus erythematosus,which is lupus, it can be.
There's many differentautoimmune conditions.
Rheumatoid arthritis is anautoimmune.
(01:05:03):
So I don't know which cells areinvolved in your autoimmune
condition, but what that tellsus is that your immune system is
unbalanced and usually, withconnective tissue and autoimmune
(01:05:25):
, we're looking at what arecalled Th2 instead of Th1.
The difference is Th means Thelper cell, t helper cell.
So if the system can be Th1 atone side, th2 at the other side,
that's kind of like thepolarities.
So if it's TH1 dominant, that'sthe one we want.
(01:05:49):
That's the balance of theimmune system that we want, so
that it's ready to go after andeliminate anything that acutely
is causing a problem.
If it's TH2 dominant, then itwon't be doing that and there'll
be a lot of things will startto, a lot of problems will start
to accumulate, and that'susually what we see with
(01:06:15):
connective tissue disorders orautoimmune disorders is TH2
dominant.
So we want to restore theimmune function.
So if I were working with you,we would start with the same
thing we always do, which is agood, thorough cleanse, and a
good juice cleanse for you wouldbe fantastic.
I would recommend getting ajuice cleanse, doing a juice
(01:06:35):
cleanse for six weeks four tosix weeks.
Fresh vegetable juice, threequarts a day, three liters a day
, no solid food, and that'llgive you a lot of hydration,
probably more hydration thanyou've had for quite a while,
(01:06:56):
and it'll be giving you reallyimportant, uncooked, pristine
nutrients from that juice.
So it's a highly nutritiveprocess.
It's not like fasting, which iswater, where you won't be
getting any nutrients.
You'll be getting all thenutrients that you need, except
(01:07:17):
for fat and fiber, but it's avery important part for what
you're going through that youneed, except for fat and fiber,
but it's a very important partfor what you're going through.
And rather than looking foranother name to put on, see,
these names for diagnoses are todiagnose a disease are just
(01:07:39):
more and more myths that aregoing to disturb your process of
restoring balance.
You need to restore balance.
If your immune system isbalanced, you're well hydrated,
your hormones are balanced, youwon't have constipation and
neither do we have heartproblems.
(01:08:00):
Neither do we have and neitherwe have heart problems.
Neither we have.
So and we've got to understandthat there's.
You're singling out one effectwhich is a constipation, which
is obvious to you, but there arevery likely there are also many
(01:08:20):
other problems going on thatyou're not as focused on, okay,
that you're not as focused onOkay now you say you've had it
all your life.
It means that you were bornconstipated or developed later
on.
You know, because that would be, you know, because that would
(01:08:52):
be strange, since babies usuallydrink milk or at least some
other kind of right.
I don't know, I just they'reterms, I want to get away from
them, but they want to give youa new one, pots, right, I don't
(01:09:15):
know what your connective tissuedisorder is specifically, but
POTS is another one they saythere's no cure for.
They don't even know what it is.
You know postural tachycardiasyndrome, meaning when you stand
up you get a rapid heart rate.
Well, that happens to a lot ofpeople with autonomic
dysfunction, because of it's theautonomic nervous system that
causes the arteries to constrictor not, the little small
(01:09:40):
arteries, the arterioles.
So, when you go from a sittingposition to a standing position,
if the arteries in your legs,the little arterioles in your
legs don't clamp down andprevent all the blood from going
into your cells.
What will happen is that justfrom the gravity, the force of
the gravity, the pull of gravity, it'll pull your blood.
(01:10:03):
It's like the blood will be inyour feet and not circulating in
your head and you'll fall down.
But to compensate, what doesour body do when it has less
blood volume?
In order to maintain the flowof oxygen to cells, it will
increase the heart rate.
That's a normal process.
It happens also to people whoare dehydrated.
(01:10:24):
So I don't know your situationat all, but you've gotta do a
juice cleanse and then, when youcome out of the juice cleanse,
you're gonna be drinking stillbe drinking juice and water, so
that you're getting at leastthree liters a day, three quarts
a day.
Dehydration is very important.
(01:10:46):
So I'm not sure why you were.
Are you saying from an earlychildhood or anyway?
That's why it's great if youjoin these groups.
You can join the health andhealing group.
That way I can talk to you moreabout your particular situation
(01:11:10):
.
But fluids you gotta eat.
After you do the juice cleanse,start eating plants, the best
plants.
The way in which you eat plantsto extract the most nutrients
(01:11:32):
from it is to eat organic plantsand then don't cook them, don't
heat them.
This whole problem could beresolved.
Cook them, don't heat them.
This whole problem could beresolved.
Now you say you had a stomachbug in December and if you lost
(01:11:52):
32 pounds with malabsorption.
We often use that term, we'vegrown up with that term of
having a stomach bug, a stomachflu, stuff like that.
That's never, ever been.
I don't know where they came upwith that.
I don't know.
(01:12:12):
I don't know where they came upwith that.
I think what they, what theymean is not necessarily, not
necessarily the stomach, but thegastrointestinal.
So I have a gastrointestinalbug which they usually refer to
(01:12:36):
as a virus.
If it was a bacteria likesalmonella shigella, one of the
forms of E coli, if it was it,you would have lots of diarrhea
and it might even be bloody.
But if it's not that, thenthey're calling it a virus and
we don't even know viruses existand on a close examination it's
(01:12:59):
pretty clear that they don'tAnyway, that they don't look
anyway.
So we often say that when we'renot feeling well, we were
nauseous or vomiting or diarrheawe say that we got a stomach
bug, which normally we didn'tget any sort of bug.
What happened is what we'veeaten foods that were not our
(01:13:21):
body didn't want the rejected.
So that's what you got to dojuice cleanse six weeks, at
(01:13:46):
least four weeks.
While you're doing it, go to agood colon therapist and get
some colonics do at least one aweek.
I do twice a week for a whiletwo colonics a week doing a
juice cleanse and you're goingto start clearing all this stuff
up and restoring balance.
And then we've got to look atother parts of your body that
(01:14:07):
might be toxic too as well.
So there's a lot of work to do,but this is how you can get
started and if you join thehealth and healing group, we can
talk to you directly.
This is Mariella.
January 2025.
(01:14:29):
I was diagnosed with enlargedfatty liver, sugar level 198,
gassy colon and digestive issues, heavy metals, low level on all
hormones and hard time losingweight.
I have been on carnivora sincediet since on the carnivore diet
(01:14:56):
.
I have been on a carnivore dietsince, taking lots of
supplements and brought my sugarlevel to 113.
And I'm feeling better, but Istill still not 100%.
I do not take meds, onlyholistic Herbal.
Only holistic herbal capsulesprescribed by my holistic doctor
(01:15:24):
and supplements by myintegrative doctor, I'm
wondering if you would suggestthat I do a parasite cleanse and
heavy metal cleanse, since Ihave seven mixed metal implants
in my mouth.
(01:15:59):
Okay, mariella, you went on acarnivore diet since and your
sugar's down, so, okay,carnivore diet is usually Wow,
that was.
Are you guys still on Whoops?
(01:16:24):
Okay, instagram, are you guysstill there?
Yes, yeah, right, you guys.
Good, okay, okay, Wait, oh, myGod, there we go.
(01:16:52):
Okay, all right, all right, allright, cool, my gosh, all right
, cool, my gosh and I, okay.
(01:17:15):
So let's talk about that.
What you said it's Mariella.
So a carnivore diet, what peopleusually mean by carnivore diet,
it means they're eating onlyanimal Right, only animals, dead
animals.
So that's where we have to.
If we're going to start, it'simportant for us to understand
(01:17:37):
and use the proper vocabulary,the proper words, so that we
understand.
You know, because the words arehow we understand.
It's what our perceptions are.
So, if we look at a carnivore,which are the only obligate
carnivores are cats, the catfamily from lions and tigers,
panthers, leopards, house cats,leopards, house cats.
(01:18:05):
They eat animals alive.
They don't eat the corpse, Imean.
What they'll do is they'll killit and either while it's dying,
they start eating it, orimmediately right after it's
dead, depending on the situation.
But that's a carnivore guy andthey eat everything from nose to
(01:18:28):
tail and it's still not enoughfor them.
So they do chew different kindsof grasses and plants Eat, but
they get most of their botanicalintake, their plant intake,
from the undigested portion inthe animal that it's killed to
(01:18:52):
eat.
It's still in its intestines.
They'll get that.
Look at that.
And the reason they need theplants is because a pure, 100%
nose to tail carnivore is stillnot going to have all the
nutrients they need for life.
So dogs, raccoons, bears, rats,rats there's a few others
(01:19:22):
raccoons, bears, rats andthere's a few others are what we
call scavengers and they caneat either plant-based foods or
animal-based foods.
So they're called a scavengerand they can live on either one.
(01:19:43):
So a dog is a scavenger.
In fact you could raise a dogon a vegetarian diet.
You could not raise a cat on avegetarian diet.
They're an obligate carnivore,but anyway.
So even eating dead animalswould qualify as a carnivore
(01:20:06):
diet.
But eating dead animals is it'stricky, because you're going to
have to eat the heart, you'regoing to have to eat the glands,
you're going to have to eat allof the.
You know the kidneys.
You're going to have to eat thekidneys.
You're going to have to eat thelungs.
You're going to have to eat theadrenal glands.
(01:20:28):
You're going to have to eat the.
You know the ovaries and thetestes and the brain spinal cord
.
You need to eat it all ifyou're going to get all your
nutrients.
That's very difficult forhumans to do.
It violates our fundamentalinstincts, so it just doesn't
(01:20:58):
happen.
So you're on a sort of like anAtkins diet.
Robert C Atkins, remember theAtkins diet?
It's basically that, which wasa modification of an earlier
(01:21:22):
diet that had been used in theUK for diabetes.
It's a great way of loweringyour glucose intake, which is
clearly what's the benefit thatyou see, but you can do the same
thing without the poison.
You see, the difference betweeneating a carnivore, eating
animals, dead animals, is you'regetting amino acids, which make
a protein we were talking about, but they're coming in a
(01:21:42):
package of fats and other nastystuff that we don't need,
whereas if you're getting youramino acids or proteins from
plants, they're coming in apackage of minerals, chelated
minerals, and vitamins andphytonutrients, so they're
coming in a better package.
I would have a healthierpackage Easier to deal with.
So you could be.
(01:22:04):
You would have, just as yoursugar control would be just as
just as incredible.
Even in a person who's whatthey call diabetic, who's highly
insulin resistant, glucose cancome under control easily within
(01:22:27):
two weeks one to two weeks.
So I think what you need tounderstand is that eating an
(01:22:49):
animal diet is counter to whatyou're trying to do, which is a
detox and cleanse, becauseyou're getting a lot of toxins.
So it's counter to that.
In a large fatty liver youdon't get from plants unless
you're eating cookedcarbohydrates like potatoes and
stuff like that, rice bread,pasta.
(01:23:10):
But I mean eating plants, justeating plants.
You're not going to get it whenyou start processing them and
cooking them.
Yeah, so now your heavy metalproblem and you've got these
teeth in your mouth that are.
Now you've got several placesof how many in your mouth,
(01:23:34):
anyway.
So your sugar level is high,you're gassy, your colon
digestive issues.
You need to clean out yourcolon.
You need to do a cleanse.
Clearly, mariela, it's reallyyou need to do a juice cleanse.
(01:23:56):
Now, a carnivore doing a juicecleanse would have to be blood,
and I'm not sure how one wouldgo about drinking blood for
three liters a day.
But anyway, I wouldn'trecommend a carnivore juice
cleanse, but I recommend a plantjuice.
Cleanse and clean out your bodyand get colon hydrotherapy and
get it all cleaned out.
(01:24:17):
You're going to feel so muchbetter and your digestive issues
, all that will really comearound.
Low level on all hormones.
So I'm wondering you know whatyour age is?
And when you say all hormones,are you talking about thyroid
and pituitary hormones or areyou just talking about the sex
(01:24:39):
hormones like estrogen,progesterone, testosterone?
So we need to know that right.
So, for example, when you saidthat you have a hard time losing
weight, well, there could bemany reasons for that, but one
could be low on thyroid, and ifyou're low on thyroid, then
you're like 99.9% of us, becauseyou're not getting enough
(01:25:02):
iodine, anyway.
So yes, you need to clean out.
Four to six week juice cleanse,get two colonics per week and
(01:25:27):
then it Seven mixed metalimplants.
As you know, anyone who's heardme for a while realizes that
there are no pure metals thatare put in the mouth.
Not gold, not titanium, none ofthat.
They're alloys, and alloys aremixtures of metals.
So the titanium might be 40%,50%, 40% titanium and the rest
(01:25:52):
is aluminum and other heavymetals.
Gold is not pure, it's gotother metals in it.
When you have two metals in asaline solution, which is our
saliva, you produce a battery.
The battery produces electricalcharges and currents that
(01:26:12):
disrupt the normal healthy.
That disrupt the normal healthyrequired currents in our mouth
which affect our whole body,remember, because every tooth is
on a meridian and it'sconnected to certain organs.
So, yeah, that's so clearlyyou've got.
The answer is Mariella, you'vegot to get those implants
(01:26:39):
removed, replaced with zirconiumby a biological dentist.
You've got to start yourcleanse right away and not
eating animals.
Do a juice cleanse, start thatright away.
Get two colonics a week Duringthis four to six week period.
At the end of that four to sixweek period, at the end of that
four to six week period, you'llbe a new person.
(01:27:05):
So your question was do aparasite cleanse and heavy metal
cleanse?
Well, you can't.
Well, you can't use chelationtherapy to get rid of the metals
, heavy metals, in your body ifyou've still got them in your
(01:27:25):
mouth.
It doesn't make sense.
You could be starting on achelation program, which can
either be intravenous or oral orboth, while you're having your
amalgams removed or whateveramalgams or implants.
You've got to have thoseremoved by a biological dentist
(01:27:49):
who knows how to do it the rightway, because doing it the wrong
way you can wind up with evenmore problems.
But yeah, you would do thoseconcurrently.
The parasite, you could waituntil after the juice cleanse.
So, yeah, okay.
(01:28:17):
So for the heavy metal, you knowyou would'd go to a doctor.
They could do disodium edta orthey could do calcium edta or
they could do dmps iv or you cantake these orally.
You can get oral edta, you canget oral dmsa.
So the oral dms, you could do100 milligrams.
(01:28:39):
No, actually you could do 500milligrams to 1,000 at night
when you go to sleep.
And you do that at thebeginning when you go to sleep,
because when these heavy metalsare being moved sometimes it
(01:29:00):
makes you feel kind of hmm.
So it's better when you'resleeping than when you're awake.
Not always, I'd say.
The majority of people don'tanything, some people feel it.
But so DMSA is, I think, fairlyeasy to get.
(01:29:23):
Probably Jeff Bezos has some.
That would be a part of theheavy metal detox.
But if you haven't removed thesource, then it makes no sense.
You've got to eliminate thesource.
So for you it's prettyclear-cut what you have to do
(01:29:43):
Right.
Join our groups, mariela, so wecan interact.
You know I went later because Iwas so late to begin with and
(01:30:05):
I'm so sorry everybody.
I apologize, okay Now, but ifeverybody's willing to hang in
there for a little while, let'sdo that.
This is Angela.
Iodine Okay, hi, dr Lodi, I'mtaking iodine as part of my
(01:30:31):
prevention plan to stop CFCs.
Had a breast mastectomy twoyears ago, oh, to stop your CFCs
returning.
Have had it confirmed.
I've hypothyroidism, lowhypothyroid, low, low, low
thyroid.
I've been taking two iodinetablets a day for a while which
(01:30:57):
have not prevented it, sadly.
Should I cut iodine out orreduce it to low?
I'm taking levothyroxine, wow,okay.
So, angela, that's an importantpart of preventing CFCs from
(01:31:21):
rearing their heads again.
There we go, Okay, anyway, butthat's not all.
It's far from all, but it's onething, it's one aspect of it.
There's a lot more to that.
But with regard to iodine now,the reason that we have like
(01:31:47):
epidemic, pandemic, hypo, lowthyroid functioning is because
we're not getting enough iodinein our diets.
Just simply not getting enoughiodine in our diets, just simply
not getting enough.
We have had in the past 150years ago we did, we don't
anymore.
So not all of us did, of course, but the environment was more
(01:32:10):
suitable to one.
Getting their iodine needs metNow it's basically impossible
unless you eat a lot of seavegetables.
You know guacamole, dulse.
There's lots of sea vegetables,seaweed, and they will provide
(01:32:35):
biologically available iodine.
So iodine comes in two formsiodide, which is an anion, and
iodine, which is two iodidestogether making molecular iodine
.
We need both types, so Lugol'ssolution provides them in
(01:32:57):
probably the best formula youcan get and it's been around for
180 years, so prettytrustworthy.
But while you're taking iodine,it does lower thyroid output,
which is why it used to be usedfor Graves.
Graves is the opposite of whatthey call Hashimoto's.
(01:33:20):
Hashimoto's is autoimmunehypothyroidism, whereas Graves
is autoimmune hyperthyroidism.
In neither case is the immunedysregulation the cause.
In both situations it's iodine.
(01:33:47):
So if you give iodine to someonewith Graves who's making a lot
of thyroid, it'll slow downtheir production and get them
back to normal.
But that wasn't enough for them.
After Rockefeller came on board, we had to use not just iodine,
(01:34:12):
but now radioactive iodine.
Yeah, so you need to be oniodine, but iodine is not going
to quickly increase your thyroidoutput.
It takes about a year and ahalf to replenish your iodine
stores.
But during that time, whileyou're replenishing them since
the reason you're taking them inthe first place is because
(01:34:33):
you're low on thyroidineproduction I mean you're low on
thyroid production, you'll needto be taking iodine, but that
also suppresses thyroid output.
So the way you deal with that isyou take the iodine as
necessary, but you take enoughof a natural thyroid to keep
(01:34:54):
your body temperature, and wehave to rely on body temperature
as a measurement of thyroidfunction.
Okay, and it's much moreaccurate.
So your body temperature, wemean your axillary body
(01:35:15):
temperature in the morningbefore you get out of bed to go
to the bathroom, because that'syour axillary body temperature
in the morning before you getout of bed to go to the bathroom
, because that's your basal bodytemperature.
And you do that three to fivemornings in a row.
And then you take the averageand if it's less than 97.8
degrees Fahrenheit or 36.8degrees Celsius, if it's less
(01:35:36):
than that, then it is what wecall subclinical hypothyroidism.
It's still.
It's a low thyroid function,which means we're going to have
to be taking a T4, t3 supplement.
That's what thyroid glandproduces T3, t4.
So if you're on levothyroxine,which is only T4, it's a
synthetic T4, you're not gettingthe T3.
(01:35:56):
And the T3 is the activehormone, whereas T4 is a
circulating prohormone that getsconverted to a T3 when it's
needed.
So if you're getting only theT4, you may not be able to
convert them properly, which iswhy I would never give just the
T4.
(01:36:17):
Convert them properly, which iswhy I would never give just a
T4.
(01:36:40):
But in addition, you'll betaking selen, lot of other
things, not just this.
Okay, so you know I feel like aspokesman or a salesman for my
groups, but I like them.
They're doing what we want themto do.
They're really helpful.
(01:37:01):
And then, angela, we've got somany more things for you to do.
This is one thing if you getthat one straight, but there are
many things you can do straight, but there are many things you
(01:37:26):
can do.
So the answer is don't cut outyour iodine you need to be
taking now.
If you're taking levothyroxineand you don't want to take a
natural supplement like Armouror Westroyd or Thyrovanse, if
you don't want to take that forsome reason and you want to just
take the synthetics, thenyou'll have to get in addition
(01:37:47):
to the levothyroxine is theCytomel.
Cytomel is synthetic T3 in theright proportion.
So you have to have your doctor, who prescribed the
levothyroxine, also to prescribethe Cytomel, or take neither of
them and just get on Thiravans,which you can order online, and
(01:38:10):
you start out with 75milligrams in the morning, empty
stomach, and you keep doingthat every morning for six to
five, uh, seven days and then,while you continue to take it in
the mornings, you do againanother basal body temperature
average and you see where you'reat.
If you're still below, you needto take another one.
Okay so, but you're, you'redoing, you're doing great and I
(01:38:35):
want you to not um, I want tomake sure you're doing
everything possible.
So cytomel would be what youtake for T3.
Okay, no, hi, this is Nick.
(01:39:02):
I have an enlarged prostate.
I saw your video aboutivermectin, menazole and
antiproteazole and I'm willingto try it.
I live in BC, canada.
I'd like to know how and howmuch to take and how long.
I am 76 kilograms.
Please help.
(01:39:30):
Doctors said to me noting,nothing can be done except
surgery.
Noting can be done or nothingcan be done except surgery.
Well, you know, these guys arejust stupid.
They're just stupid.
I don't know how else to say it.
Is there another word?
No, stupid.
(01:39:51):
Stupid covers it pretty much.
Okay, they're stupid becausethere's many things you could do
and surgery.
You know what?
When in doubt, cut it out.
Good, incredible User 2458,that's a strange name.
(01:40:13):
Thank you Got the glasses.
Strange name, thank you.
All right, nick.
An enlarged prostate happens toall men as they get older,
(01:40:34):
mainly because initially isbecause their testosterone
output is down.
They therefore don't have avery strong libido or and sexual
function decreases.
So they wind up not having notejaculating and not being able
(01:40:54):
to empty their prostates andthey get enlarged.
Not ejaculating and not beingable to empty their prostates,
and they get enlarged.
There's other hormonal changestoo that happen, you know, with
dihydrotestosterone and so.
But yeah, now enlarged prostate, now ivermectin, okay.
(01:41:23):
Well, there is a woman in one ofour groups whose father had
large worms come out with anenlarged prostate.
In fact, he even had someprostate CFCs and these worms
came out and they, they, theywere they.
These worms came out and theywere all better and the, the,
the prostate went back to normal.
But we cannot assume thatthat's the only reason causing
(01:41:48):
prostate enlargement.
All right, so now.
So you would need to get sometestosterone and they're going
to look at your PSA and all that.
They're going to get confusedabout whether or not they should
do that.
And actually they shouldn't beconfused because there's a dr,
(01:42:27):
morgan teller, who is aurologist at at Harvard Medical
School, however, one of them.
So he he attended there as astudent and then asa and now as
an attending physician.
So what now?
If they say you have prostate,enlarged prostate, does that
mean they didn't biopsy it?
(01:42:48):
And that's how you know.
It's just enlarged and there'sno CFCs in it because they
biopsied it.
That's already a problem, butanyway, and the large prostate
can eventually, because it'scongested and there's no flow,
it's going to wind up having aCFC problem.
So what they usually do is theyput you on androgen deprivation
(01:43:13):
therapy, which they knock outyour thyroid, your testosterone
production.
So you know, the ivermectin is12 milligrams three times a day
and the fenbendazole is 222milligrams three times a day.
But you should be doing a lotof other things too, nick,
(01:43:43):
pretty much, and you got to tellyour doctors this.
Another reason for just youknow, overall not being as happy
as you used to be will bebecause of low testosterone.
So Dr Morgenthaler startedsomething called the Androgen
Society along with anotherdoctor, and they do.
(01:44:04):
A multidisciplinary, in-depth,constant review of androgen
therapy and the consensus atthis point of all the studies
shows clearly that testosteronedoes not contribute to prostate.
Cfcs.
Number one, number two takingit, even with CFCs, is not going
to be a problem if takencorrectly.
(01:44:25):
These are very, very importantthings to understand, because if
your husband, if you, would beput on androgen deprivation
therapy, everything the problemthat you're talking about would
get worse 10 to 15 years.
(01:44:55):
10 to 15 years.
You know, one of the otherproblems was in 2013,.
This is Dr Vegan.
By the way, it's spelledV-I-G-E-N, not V-E-G-A-N.
Dr Vegan published a study inthe American Journal I think
(01:45:18):
JAMA, I can't remember Journalof the American Medical
Association, where you show thattestosterone replacement can
cause problems with heart.
So now everybody's convinced notestosterone.
And then Morgan Teller camealong and has shown that that's
not the truth, and what we nowknow about androgens is that
they make the heart stronger,they make the brain stronger,
(01:45:40):
they make the muscles stronger.
So a lot of stuff.
The mythology that's out there.
Unfortunately, it's still outthere, but it's not true.
But that would help youtremendously as well.
So, yeah, so just to let youknow, there was a study in 2016
(01:46:22):
called the testosterone trials,where they had like 790 men over
65.
And they proved unequivocallythat it improves everything
Weight loss, sexual function,libido, mood, muscle mass,
everything.
It does not cause problems.
So that kind of is the data.
It's a large enough study andit's been repeated, so I'm not
(01:46:59):
sure we also have now.
Yeah, there's a lot more.
I just want to say a coupleother things about this.
Yeah, okay, and at this pointnow, many doctors who are up on
(01:47:28):
the research are waking up andrealizing you need to restore
hormone balance in men, justlike you do in women.
All right, and that's what thisis.
So it's very important.
And then again, remember atleast 21 times a month
(01:47:50):
ejaculation to keep it flowing.
All right, that's the data.
So you're in large prostatesurgery.
Don't even go with this guyagain.
He's not even a good.
He's not even good at hisincorrect stance in this
(01:48:11):
position.
He doesn't even understand hisown terrible position on it.
He doesn't know what he's doing.
Enlarged prostate welcome tothe world of maleness over the
age of 50.
That's what happens Unless youkeep things flowing, keep it
flowing and keep your balance ofall your hormones and your
other parts of your body.
(01:48:32):
It's just that's what it is.
It's maintaining that functionand that flow.
This is a who's the person?
(01:48:55):
There's no name here.
Anyway, cfc prevention I am onCelcept and IVIG for an
autoimmune necrotizing myopathy,statin-induced.
According to this pathologist.
I was only on statins for threemonths and it is well known
(01:49:19):
that people on celsep can getcfc's lymphoma.
I don't want to be on the onthese any longer.
What would you check?
I've tried to keep my ck levelsincrease all right, listen.
Levels increase All right,listen.
(01:49:42):
This autoimmune necrotizingmyopathy induced by statins.
What you need to do is to cleanout your body.
You've been poisoned, you'vebeen poisoned and they're
continuing to poison you.
Now they're giving you IVimmunoglobulins and I don't know
(01:50:03):
what they're doing at all.
Is it in any way helping at all?
So I'm not sure.
If you're, I don't have thepicture of your whole condition
so I can't tell you what to do.
Join our group and we can getinto it.
But basically an autoimmunenecrotizing myopathy.
(01:50:24):
So in other words, again, theimmune system is stupid and it's
going after the body Anyway.
So you've got to do a four tosix to eight week juice cleanse,
colon hydrotherapy, go to sleepearly, get your hormones
balanced, not unbalanced.
(01:50:49):
And if you're taking statinsbecause your cholesterol was
high, first of all, cholesterolis necessary, but we only need
the cholesterol that our bodiesmake.
It's not a vitamin.
We don't have to take it byeating animals to get their
cholesterol.
Okay, we need the amount thatwe can make.
(01:51:10):
Your immune system has beenchallenged in ways that we can
identify and in ways that wehaven't yet been able to
identify.
But regardless, what we need todo is just clean you out.
(01:51:31):
See, I don't know your whole.
You've got to come on thegroups because I've got to ask
you many questions but I can'tanswer any of these.
I can't really.
It's kind of a serioussituation.
You're in here and I can'treally give specific advice on
it unless I have moreinformation, alright.
So I'm not sure how to do thatunless you come on, okay.
(01:52:05):
So, oh the main.
Oh, there's a lot of greatquestions here.
I got a't have a chance toanswer.
There's one question here Isthe juice cleanse protocol
available?
Basically, I would recommend, ifyou don't have a juicer, to get
(01:52:25):
a Nama juicer, just because youcan put large amounts in.
It's easy to clean.
But the fundamental basicsrecipe is celery, cucumber,
spinach and kale, and then youcan add to that, if you want
(01:52:46):
plants, and then lemon andapples, and make it as delicious
as possible, without making ittoo sweet, but make it soon
enough to enjoy it and drinkthree liters a day.
Don't eat any solid food.
You can modify that.
(01:53:07):
It's just a good way to start,because the celery and cucumber
give you the volume of fluid,and then, between the kale and
the spinach and the celery andthe cucumber, you've got all the
amino acids you need and you'vegot phytonutrients, you've got
chelated minerals, you've got itall, except for fat and fiber,
like we've discussed, okay.
(01:53:36):
So, anyway, it's 10.16 now forme, which means it's 10.16 for
you guys in New York.
Anyway, I would like to startnext week With the next person
here, latasha, because it lookslike she's got some A lot of
(01:53:58):
stuff.
So, please, everyone send inthese questions.
So remember the format here onthe Sunday Night Lives are for
me to answer questions that havebeen sent in previously, and
then the format on the groups isyou ask questions spontaneously
at that moment and I can askyou and we can interact and we
can turn it into a consultationand we can do that weekly.
(01:54:19):
So it's well worth it.
Anyway.
So, wadi kaba and namaste,namaskar and aloha to everyone.
Thank you for waiting.
I'm very sorry, sorry, somedayI might have to move.
(01:54:39):
I might have to move Oxalates.
Okay, debbie, we will talkabout oxalates.
Remind me, next week I'm goingto do it again.
Oxalates.
It's another one of thoseabsurd scare tactics.
My God, all right.
So I promise you Okay and I'llexplain it.
(01:55:05):
I'm glad you brought that upbecause everyone's most people
are freaked out about it.
Anyway, aloha, sawadee kap, howdo we do this?
We do that, yeah, and we dothis.
We do that, yeah, and we do.
Thank you.