All Episodes

September 24, 2025 113 mins

Prepare to have your understanding of CFCs completely transformed. In this eye-opening episode, Dr. Thomas Lodi challenges the conventional medical model by explaining why cancer should actually be called "chronically fermenting cells" (CFCs) - a term that accurately describes what's happening in the body rather than using misleading astrological terminology.

Dr. Lodi takes us deep into the cellular biology of cancer, revealing how cells switch to fermentation when they lose approximately 50-60% of their mitochondrial function due to cumulative toxic exposure. This adaptive response isn't something to attack but to understand as the body's intelligent survival mechanism. The conventional approach of cutting, burning, and poisoning completely misses the underlying cause and often makes matters worse.

With passionate clarity, he explains why removing tumors without addressing the toxicity that caused them is like cutting apples off a poisoned tree and expecting healthy fruit next season. Drawing from research published in Seminars in Cancer Biology, he demonstrates how conventional treatments can paradoxically promote tumor relapse and metastasis by enhancing the survival of cancer stem cells.

The path to true healing begins with eliminating toxins through biological dentistry, fresh juice cleanses, and restoring balance to all body systems. Dr. Lodi shares practical guidance on optimizing vitamin levels, balancing thyroid function through proper iodine intake, and supporting the immune system naturally. This regenerative approach creates an internal environment where chronically fermenting cells can either return to normal function or be properly eliminated.

Ready to reclaim your power in the healing journey? Join Dr. Lodi's supportive communities at drlody.com, where thousands have already discovered how to addres

Send us a text

Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.

Support the show

This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on Jan. 19th, 2025

Join Dr. Lodi’s FREE Q&A livestreams every Sunday on Facebook, Instagram, and Tiktok (@drthomaslodi) and listen to the replays here.

Submit your question for next Sunday’s Q&A Livestream here:
https://drlodi.com/live/

Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/DrThomasLodi/
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/drthomaslodi/

Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.

Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast

Welcome to the Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast. This is the show for you if you’re...

Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

Join Dr. Lodi’s informative FREE Livestreams...

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Welcome to Sunday Night Live.
We made it Very good.
Wow, we're on everything.
I can't believe it happened.
Welcome to Sunday Night Live.
And it's actually Mondaymorning over here, but we'll
pretend like it's Sunday nightanyway.
Okay, let's see.
Everybody's starting to come onnow.
And.

(00:45):
I've got to be over here.
All right, there we go we're on.
Excellent, amazing, I'll come,all right, oh, whatever, okay,

(01:46):
all right, from New York,upstate Iowa, fantastic,
fantastic, okay, good, all right.
And Sydney, sydney, we have afew people from Sydney,

(02:11):
australia, I think, and and Idon't think we ever get anyone
from New Zealand, anyway, sowelcome everyone to Sunday Night
Live, monday Morning Live hereon planet Earth, and the usual

(02:38):
Southern Arizona.
Yeah, that you might not wantto be Meaning quite soon.
Anyway, don't worry about it,just get out of there while you

(02:59):
can, okay.
Palestine, wow, amazing,fantastic, yeah, palestine, wow,
amazing, fantastic, yeah.
And Ohio, my gosh, beautiful,beautiful, okay, good.
So just the typical stuff youall know that we have.

(03:21):
We do this every Sunday night,monday morning, depending on
where you are in the world, andyou sent in questions already.
So I'm going to respond tothose questions, rather than
spontaneous questions that arisewhere we could have a dialogue,
and that's why we have thegroups that we have.
So, in the groups that we have,which is the health and healing

(03:43):
group, there's the parasitegroup group, there's the
parasite group and there's theCFC group, but for those of you
who are just starting, to havejust recently joined us.
Cfcs are chronically fermentingcells and that's what most
people refer to as theastrological sign cancer.
We don't use astrology in thatway.

(04:06):
Astrology is fantastic and trueand real, but it has nothing to
do with chronically fermentingcells.
So they're called CFCs.
So we have a CFC group as welland in each of those groups we
have private telegram chatswhere we're all talking all the

(04:28):
time, 24 hours a day, becausewe're all over the world.
But that way you get immediatefeedback from people that are on
the same journey as you and whomay have been on it a little
longer and have the information.
So it turns out that what'sgoing on in these telegram

(04:48):
groups is incredible, becauseeveryone that's in the group is
not everyone, but I mean mostpeople in the group have been
studying biology and beenstudying health and have been
through the allopathic grinder.

(05:11):
You know the allopathic uh,it's like, you know, like a meat
grinder is what it does and inthe end you come out, you come
out hamburger.
So you know you're going to getout of that grinder.
But anyway, these people havebeen through it and plus with
their knowledge.
So they're, in terms ofresources, where to get this,
where to get that?
What could I do if this happens?

(05:31):
What can I do now?
Because this is happening.
There's an amazing, beautiful,wonderful.
It's a siblinghood, brother,sisterhood that is going on
there, and nobody in thesegroups wants anything from you
except your health.
Okay, so there's no money,you're not going to pay them.

(05:52):
They're just telling you out oftheir desire to share whatever
they've learned.
So this is beautiful, sothere's a lot of amazing
information in this group.
Beautiful, so there's a lot ofamazing information in this
group.
But we also I come, we have umuh, zoom meetings, a group zoom
meetings, where we all talk forthree, four, five hours or

(06:12):
answer all questions, and I canask you, we can, we can, we can
kind of narrow down the realrealities of the question you're
asking and we, we could find.
I could find that because, likeright now, if I, if I read a
question about something and Idon't, I say yeah, but did this
happen?
Or if I don't know enough, it'shard to answer the question.

(06:34):
You know, I have to be verygeneral.
So that's why these groups aregreat and it gives us all the
time to interact.
Plus, there are other peoplethat you have access to.
Excuse me Orange juice, freshorange juice.

(06:56):
If you're in the CFC group, youhave access to Kathy's Corner,
and Kathy is a psychotherapistmany years 30 or so, 40, I don't
know around there and she's onthe same journey with us all.

(07:16):
So, yeah, do I have cash apps?
Do you have cash apps?
I'm not sure what that means.
All right, so, yeah, so you canjoin that group and in that

(07:38):
group, that's where we forgiveall the details of what's going
on in our lives.
But how are we feeling about it?
You know our feelings.
How important are they?
Right up there, just underneathkarma?
So, um, yeah, so, so, so, andand everyone shares and kathy

(08:00):
leach says it's pretty amazingthere's waiting lists.
So, anyway, there's that.
But you also have access toDarren, who's a kinesiologist.
Tells us how to move, why weshould move and how should we
move to do things like increaseour natural killer cells and
stuff like that, and to avoidsarcopenia, which happens to

(08:22):
people who are ill and to peoplewho are aging.
So that's where your musclesare wasting and more.
And then there's Vanessa, who'sa health coach, a nutritionist,
a yoga teacher, instructor,meditation instructor.
She's full of information andexperience.

(08:42):
And then you have Donna, who'sbeen eating uncooked plant foods
for about 35, 36, 37 years now.
So she's got a lot ofinformation to teach you.
And why do you want to do that?
Because you want it to bedelicious, otherwise you're not
going to continue eating it.
If it's not delicious, youwon't continue eating it, period

(09:05):
.
So, anyway, that's that.
And you can join those groups bygoing to drlodycom.
Drlodycom, which is my website,and you'll find out right away
how to join those groups.
So join them.
Join them.
Dot com, which is my website,and you'll find out right away
how to join those groups.
So join them.
Join them so that we caninteract more, and then that's

(09:29):
it.
And so on Instagram, you'rehere.
You know, you already knowRight On everything except for X
and what's that otherridiculous app that canceled me?
that that that canceled me?
Oh, that's right.
Tactic, tactic, tactic, tactic.

(09:54):
I look like your orthopedist.
Oh, good friend of mine becamean ortho.
We were in medical schooltogether.
He, he, uh, became an amazingorthopedist.
Yeah, toctec doesn't like me.
We're on there, but it doesn'tmatter, it's drthomaslodymd,

(10:21):
whereas all the rest likeFacebook, instagram, youtube,
rumble, et cetera, et cetera, etcetera, is whereas all the rest
, like facebook and instagram,youtube, rumble, etc.
Etc.
Etc is dr thomas lodi.
There's no md at the end.
all right, they all got thatgreat.
So let's take a look at whatwe're doing now today.
Is it here?
Yeah, and uh.

(10:44):
Well, one last thing about thewebinar, the human diet.
I keep postponing episode fourbecause it's exposing the myths,
because, you know, is thereanyone out there who thinks that
?
Yeah, talk to it, talk to it.
You know what I have to sayabout it.
Anyway, does anybody out therethink that it's dangerous to eat

(11:04):
kale and spinach because of theoxalates?
You still believe that.
You're told that right.
So the question is, if someonetells you something, what do you
do?
Why did they cancel me?
They canceled me because theydon't like me, period.

(11:26):
For example, they said they'regoing to remove, delete videos.
So one video they deleted wasthe health benefits of propolis,
and I didn't know that wascontroversial.
Be a poet, be a.
And I didn't know that wascontroversial.
And then another one was oh, Imentioned that I had put

(11:48):
together a webinar on Ooh.
Paige.
Paige, what are you?

(12:08):
I canceled you because that'sI'm not sure who Paige is.
I'm not going to get into that.
You, because that's I'm notsure who Paige is.
I'm not going to get into that.
Oh, I know, it was the otherone, because I was mentioning

(12:36):
that I put together a webinar onparasites because there were so
many questions I don't know.
The third one, I don't know,because they just deleted it and
then deleted me.
So, and then there's anotherperson or a group that's using

(12:57):
my name, except they put a dot,d R dot, and they allow them to
be on, and that's not me.
But they had all my videos andeven the videos that they
deleted were on.
So what, they like me, yeah,okay, they like me anyway.
So, thank you.

(13:29):
Okay, sorry, enough of that,I'm done, I'm done.

(14:06):
Enough of that, I'm done, I'mdone.
Okay, let's get rid of this,okay, anyway.
So episode four people thinkthat oxalates are bad, so
they're not going to eat spinachand kale, which are really

(14:27):
amazing, important foods, andit's absolutely not true.
It's not true.
They're not going to causecalcium oxalate stones.
They don't.
That's not what causes them.
And so you want to find out thetruth?
I'm going to show you theresearch.
And we're going to discuss that.
We're going to discuss phytatesAre they bad?

(14:47):
We're going to discuss lignans.
Are they bad?
No, none of this is.
This is all bizarre propagandato lead you away from health for
some reason, and I don't know.
Well, I mean, mean, that'scrazy.
I do know there's a lot of sickpeople out there.
So, whatever, I don't know,whatever reason.

(15:13):
But soy, terrible, right, ifyou're a woman and a man, for
your prostate?
For a woman, not true.
The opposite is true.
Let's see.
How about seed oils?
Terrible, right.
Seed oils, no.
Seed oils, true?
No, not true.
Okay, so all of these myths?

(15:33):
If you would like to know thetruth because I'm not going to
give you my explanation I'mgoing to show you the research.
We're going to go over theresearch.
That's what this is about.
All right, no opinions,research and so?

(16:18):
So that's it.
So the myths.
And there are other myths too.
I can't remember what we talkedabout.
How about eating animals versusnot eating animals?
Being a vegetarian, meat isimportant, it's good food for us
humans.
We've evolved to the point ofElliot from the Soprano.

(16:39):
We've evolved to the point ofeating corpses.
Well, turns out, it's again nottrue?
You know, anyway, all of thesemyths we're going to investigate
, and not my opinion oranybody's opinion, we're just
going to look at research andnot just a little bit.

(16:59):
I mean, there's research.
I look at studies like wherethey did longitudinal studies
looking at 172 countries,millions of people over time, so

(17:21):
that kind of stuff.
All right, so this is real, andalso other parts of research
that go into the basicbiochemistry of it all.
So I'm telling you you shouldjoin that.
So that's why I keep postponingit, because I don't have people
not joining it, not signing upfor it.
Anyway, it's called exposing themyths and maybe I should change

(17:42):
the title.
I don't know.
Um, it's called Exposing theMyths.
Maybe I should change the title, I don't know.
I don't know, but I do want topresent that part four and then
we have part five.
So, anyway, that's it.

(18:05):
So it's a human diet webinar.
Just go, go to the websitedrlodycom, drlodycom, and you
can find out.
Um, uh, you know, but basicallyepisode four is scheduled at
this point for October 2nd, 8 PMEastern standard time.
And uh, yeah, 8 pm EasternStandard Time, and yeah, I hope

(18:29):
we can get to it this time.
I just hope that you know, andthen I'm going to go back and
make the whole series you know,the whole four episodes
available to, because this isall important stuff.
We need to understand this,because that's a lot of what the
questions are that I encounterhere.
All right, so let's see.

(18:51):
Where were we Now?
Okay, so let's get on with thequestions.
And this is Candice.
What do I think about BigPharma?
It's a marriage between John DRockefeller and Satan's daughter

(19:23):
, and they had a child calledBig Pharma.
So I think about it anyway.
So Candace is eight weekspregnant and I feel you can help
answer this.
Nowhere else to turn.
I have a very bad hormonal acne.

(19:43):
How can I clear in a holistic,safe way, topically and
internally?
All right, all right, wow,anyway, okay, so, yeah, well,

(20:06):
anyway, okay, so, yeah, so allright.
So let's look at it.
So, um, if you're, if thereit's, if it's hormonal, I mean,
if I'm not sure if you havecystic acne or not, that's where
you know they're very big, verybig, hard, painful cysts, you
know, but they're they're,they're fluid, painful cysts,
but they're fluid-filled cystswith pus, anyway, and they're

(20:33):
painful as well, anyway.
So diet plays an amazing andspecific role.
The two main contributors toacne, and especially acne
vulgaris, where it gets the maincontributors to acne, and
especially acne vulgaris, whereit gets very painful and large
and, of course, not at all theway we want to appear and it's a

(21:00):
terrible feeling, but anyway.
So diet and hormones are whatdrive it.
Okay, and so what happens?
Basically, we have these glandsin our skin called sebum and

(21:22):
they produce a waxy type ofsubstance called sebum.
That's necessary, keeps you.
You know, that's the, you know.
You know we put oil on our skin.
Well, our body makes that oil.
You know, we have it, you knowso.
But it what happens is if thoseglands are overstimulated, they
produce sebum and it clogs upand then it gets all inflamed
and that inflammation is whatwe're saying.
It's theamed, clogged sebumglands is what happens.

(21:46):
All right, and the reason let metalk about diet for a moment,
because the reason that's soimportant, because that's the
one thing the hormone aspect ofit all when you're pregnant is
really, you don't want to messaround with your hormones when
you're pregnant.
So I'll talk to you about howthey contribute and what's going
on, but you know that whenyou're pregnant, you don't want

(22:07):
to mess with hormones.
So, anyway, the big influencersare food that stimulate insulin
or insulin-like growth factor,which is IGF-1, which you may
know is basically growth hormone.
All right, so growth hormone isproduced in the pituitary gland

(22:29):
, it gets to the liver, it getsturned into IGF-1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
But IGF-1 is the main one,igf-2 also.
But so high glycemic foods, highglycemic index and high
glycemic load will affect that.
Now you all have heard of highglycemic index.

(22:52):
That means you eat somethingand the blood sugar goes to a
certain height and then backdown right.
That's the index.
So how high does your bloodsugar go after eating a specific
food?
That's the index.
So we want low glycemic index,we don't want it to go too high.
But actually more importantwould be the glycemic load.

(23:16):
The glycemic load is how longis it elevated?
So, for example, if you eat apiece of, you take a bite out of
a candy, like a Mars bar orSnickers or Milky, milky Way or
Reese's Remember all that goodstuff Take a bite out of that
and it's going to go way high.
But you eat a potato, it's notgoing to quite go that high.

(23:38):
A baked potato, it's not goingto quite go that high, it's
going to go maybe significantlyup messing around with your
insulin glucose dynamic.
It goes up and it stays therefor a while.
So if you're eating a lot ofhigh glycemic load stuff, at all
times your insulin is turned up.

(24:04):
And we won't go into the wholebiochemistry of insulin but,
like chronic inflammation, ittoo, that insulin glucose
dynamic, underlies and is partof all of the physiological
processes that are observed whenpeople have degenerative

(24:24):
conditions, whatever those areArthritis, cfcs, cancer, cfcs,
heart attacks, stroke, diabetesall these things are related.
Things are related.

(24:49):
The two fundamental underlyingphysiological processes going on
are the chronic inflammationand the insulin.
Usually your fasting insulin ishigh and that's it.
It's called degrees of insulinresistance, which has many, many
, many terrible, terribleramifications, many, many
terrible, terrible ramifications.
Okay, so, anyway, so what givesyou high glycemic load besides

(25:10):
a baked potato, white bread,white rice, pasta?
Now, the thing is so itstimulates insulin.
Now, insulin you have to keep inmind is the reason growth
hormone called IGF-1,insulin-like growth factor, is
called insulin-like growthfactor because it has a 43%
homology with insulin.
What does that mean?
That means that in terms ofthis molecular structure, it's

(25:34):
about the same 43%, which meansthat insulin can bind to an
IGF-1 receptor and stimulategrowth.
And IGF-1 can bind to an IGF-1receptor and stimulate growth.
And IGF-1 can bind to aninsulin receptor and stimulate
the glucose metabolism.
All right, so the glycemic loadthe longer it's around, the

(26:01):
longer you've got elevatedinsulins, the more you're
stimulating IGF-1, which alsostimulates dehyd, uh, dehydro
testosterone.
So testosterone, um, and andwe'll get into a minute about
the hormones but, but theandrogens of male hormones
they're not just women happen tois they're called male hormone.
But, um, the testosterone gets,uh converted to the hydro

(26:31):
testosterone, which is much morepowerful, has a bigger kick
than testosterone, uh, all right.
So so, low glycemic index, lowglycemic load diets decrease
both the quantity and theseverity of the acne, right,
because it lowers IGF-1 levelsand it increases the IGF-PB3.

(26:54):
What is that?
That's basically the carrierprotein that carries IGF-1.
And the more that's bound tothat, less free igf-1 there is.
Just like sex hormone, but sexhormone binding globulin, uh
binds testosterone, and the moresex hormone, the binding

(27:16):
globulin you have, the less freetestosterone you have.
So you won't get the effects ofthe testosterone same with
growth hormone.
So that's part of what dietdoes.
The other thing is milk, milk,and it turns out it's not as
much with.
You know milk's up there andit's.

(27:37):
You know.
You have the whey protein andyou have the casein.
Okay, nasty, nasty stuff.
I'm telling you nasty, nastystuff.
Unless you're an infant, thenyou need it because it's going
to stimulate rapid growth,because you need to grow rapidly
so that you can become a viableperson, right, and that's what
the whole idea of breastfeedingis.
Make sure you've got lots ofthose.

(27:59):
It's got all the nutrients youneed, obviously, since you're
not only living but growing morerapidly than you ever will at
any time in your life.
But the but, the so, the so.
The casein and whey are veryimportant in that point.
But then they're not, becauseall mammals go through something
called weaning where mom saysis it, we're done, I'm closing

(28:22):
up shop, that we're done, I'mclosing up shop.
And when that happens, theydon't say well, gosh, you know
what honey, I can't give it toyou anymore, but you see that
goat over there.
There's nothing like that.
Only us humans who do bizarrethings like that.
We go drink the milk of anotherspecies.
And why do we pick cows?

(28:43):
Why don't we at least drinkgorilla milk or chimpanzee milk?
It's closer to us, it's morelike what we would want, right
Cow Do?
we drink pig milk.
Most people don't drink pigmilk.
Camel milk yeah, there you go.

(29:05):
Camel milk, right, because,right, right, our goal is to
look like a camel, but anyway,it's very, very clear.
The research is very, veryclear, showing that the more
consumption of milk, the worsethe acne.

(29:27):
So the best way to drink milkis nut, use nut milk, make fresh
nut milk.
You don't have to drink milkfrom a cow or a goat or anything
.
All right, anything all right.

(29:49):
So, and then, uh, what other is?
What are healthy foods?
That?
That that combat the acne arethe omega-3s and sixes.
But the the right ratio, it'salways ratio.
It's not ever one thing's bad,one thing's good, it's not, it's
a ratio, because they're allnecessary it's very important to
keep in mind.
So, um, and the problem, youknow, the typical western diet,
which is not just westernanymore, it's eastern, western,
northern, southern, um is a lotof saturated fat and fried and

(30:13):
it becomes extremely toxic,right?
So that's what's going on withthat.
All of that stuff is going, theIGF-1 as well, right, and then
it also does.
Something else very interestingin the Western diet is that it

(30:36):
increases the production of Th17lymphocytes.
So Th17 lymphocytes are Thelper cells that have got that.
There's one are T helper cells.
That have got that.
There's one pathway T helperscan go.
They go TH1, th2, th17.
And that's pretty much it.
I think there's one more, I'mnot remembering right now, but

(30:59):
the TH17, what it does is itshuts down your natural killer
cells and other T lymphocytes'ability to kill pathogens, or I
hate that word to kill what itneeds to kill, including CFCs or
whatever.
I'm not supposed to use thatword.
Okay, to cause the cell to beflatlined.

(31:20):
If you were giving the cell anEKG, it would have a flatlined.
If you were given the cell anEKG, it would have a flatline.
So you flatline cells.
So T17 blocks our white bloodcells from doing that.
All right.
So it's considered these kindsof refined carbs, saturated fats

(31:45):
, all that much higherprevalence of acne.
Okay, and it turns out can youimagine I can't believe it the
regular consumption ofvegetables and fiber and and
nuts decreases.

(32:07):
Can you imagine that?
Anyway, isn't that weird?
It's weird, yeah, okay.
So, anyway Now, but the mainthing is the hormones.
Now the androgens, which aretestosterone, androstenedione,
and then their metabolites, likethe hydrotestosterone, directly

(32:33):
stimulate these sebum glandsand make them overact.
What else does?
There's another one.
It's called progesterone.
Progesterone does that too.
So when a woman is pregnant,she's going to's called
progesterone.
Progesterone.
Does that too.
So when a woman is pregnant,she's going to have high
progesterone levels.
That's just part of it and youcan't mess with that.
You got to let that happen, soI wouldn't look at.

(32:54):
But, by the way, this the theacne associated with pregnancy
that happens to like 40 50 ofwomen, um, and it's usually more
prevalent the first, secondtrimester, but with some people
it's the third trimester.
But it resolves after you givebirth.
Sometimes it persists duringbreastfeeding because your

(33:17):
hormones are still not back tothe healthy balance that a woman
would have when she's notreproducing.
But so the only thing you candeal with is the food.
So eat healthy is another goodreason to eat healthy.

(33:38):
Eat healthfully, healthfully Usethat as a correct adverb.
All right, so do that.
Try this.
Eat uncooked, delicious plants,vegetables, fruit, seeds, nuts
in their natural form, andthere's delicious food.

(34:00):
So check out Donna, join ourgroup and check out Donna.
She had been meeting this wayfor 37 years.
Okay, now let's look atMarianne, here from Ontario, and
it's regarding lung CFCs.

(34:21):
Regarding lung CFCs diagnosedwith adenocarcinoma non-small
cell CFC in 2019.
Okay, so again, just so you alltake away all the myth, all the

(34:47):
mystique.
Okay, adenocarcinoma just meanschronically fermenting cells
that arise in the gland, that'sall.
Gland could be in the lung,pancreas, liver, colon, breast,
thyroid.
They're all adenocarcinomas,non-small cell lung CFC.
What does that mean?
Well, they're cells that arenot small.
Yeah, there are small cells andthere are larger cells in most

(35:10):
tissues.
Okay, so you realize.
This diagnosis told you nothing.
It arose in a gland, in cellsthat are not small.
Oh great, so does that help mefigure out how to resolve it?
No, oh then what's the value ofhaving the diagnosis?

(35:32):
Well, because then they can putyou on the sales algorithm and
they can tell you which productsand services are going to best
suit you on your journey.
And their journey ends in theplace you don't want it to end.
So I wouldn't get on theirjourney and you won't either, if
you understand what I'm saying.
So you watch.
She underwent a left lobectomy.
They took the upper.

(35:54):
Her upper lobe was taken out.
She got chemo and radiationfrom 2019 to 2020.
Regular follow-ups no majorrecurrence other than one lymph
node.
Pet and CT scans showed a largelymph node, chronic nasal drip,

(36:16):
hoarseness, recurrentlaryngitis, swallowing
discomfort suspected to be froma lymph node putting pressure on
the esophagus and airway.
Okay, so blood work showed thatthe neutrophils were high.
Remember, a neutrophil tolymphocyte ratio is a very
important indicator of activeCFC, so keep that in mind, low

(36:42):
normal vitamin D, low estradiolremaining marker, thyroid iron,
ferritin, inflammatory markers,normal Biopsy and tumor testing
Currently being tested for PD-L1, alk, egfr and other mutations.

(37:04):
You know why they're looking forthose.
By the way, they're notmutations.
They say that.
Why are they looking for those?
Because they have drugs forthem.
Are they looking forprogesterone receptor?
Well, no, they don't have to,because this is not breast where

(37:24):
they have to.
But the reason they don't liketo look for it's because they
don't have a drug.
So next steps in treatmentradiation is being considered,
but final decisions will dependon biomarker results and
specialist recommendationspossible consideration of
targeted therapy orimmunotherapy depending on
mutation.
Pdl1 status, my concern inquestion.
I believe that doctors may onceagain be able to treat and

(37:48):
remove the recurrence, but youare deeply concerned.
It will again in the future.
I want guidance on how to stopthis cycle and what preventative
steps can be taken so that thecfc's never come back.
So please, marianne, stop usingthe astrological sign.
It's CFCs.

(38:08):
Please help us.
I want to get rid of it thistime.
I'm only 62 and I have so muchmore to do in my life.
Absolutely, you're willing todo anything.
I love it, because that's whatyou've got to do Everything, not
anything.
Everything.
What do you have to do?
Clean up, you've got to cleanup.
You need to join our CFC group.
That's really very importantfor you.

(38:29):
It'll save you so much havingto go all these places and
wasting time and money and hopemost of all, wasting hope.
Nothing more painful.
So so, first of all, you have tounderstand that they're not
going to get rid of it, becausethere's no way your body is

(38:50):
doing an adaptive, homeostatic,adaptive response.
So what our goal, then, is tomake that response no longer
necessary.
How do we do that?
By making it no longernecessary, by cleaning out all
the toxins, because toxins arethe cumulative effect of toxins

(39:11):
on a cell, result in loss ofmitochondria, and when you lose
a certain amount of mitochondria, like 50-60%, the cell has to
completely change its operatingsystem from normal, what they
call oxidative phosphorylationthrough mitochondria.
If they change it to substrate,uh, substrate level

(39:33):
phosphorylation, also known asglycolysis, also known as
fermentation.
So that's the switch from theway cells usually make energy to
fermenting, so they becomechronically fermenting cells.
That's what they become, that'swhat they are.
They're not astrologicalscience, okay so, but that
happens because of the toxins.
So the first thing you do iseliminate them.

(39:55):
How do you do that?
You go to a IAOMT IAOMTcertified biological dentist and
you get a thorough evaluationOMT certified biological dentist
.
And you get a thoroughevaluation.
Because if you have any rootcanals or extractions on
specific meridians that mayconnect to your lung, if those

(40:16):
are not resolved appropriately,the right way, which only the
biological dentist could do,then this condition will never
stop.
It will never not be that way,because that's driving it.
That's what's driving it.
There's that.
And then you've got a cleanhouse.
You've got to do a prolongedfresh juice cleanse.

(40:40):
You make the juice deliciousand you realize, my God, you
don't say, oh, I've got to drinkthe juice.
What do you mean?
You've got to drink the juicedelicious and you realize, my
God, you don't say, oh, I got todrink the juice.
What do you mean?
You got to drink the juice.
You don't have to getirradiated, you don't have to
get things cut out, you don'thave to get poisoned until your
hair falls out and your lunchcomes out.
You don't have to do that.
What you get to do is drinkjuices and eat really wonderful
foods.
That's what you get to doinstead of that.

(41:01):
So it's not.
You know, don't look at it thatway, don't look at it like, yay
, wow, fantastic, beautiful wayto resolve all this.
So okay, so that's what you doNow.
In addition to that, you've gotto restore balance in all of

(41:24):
your systems, and we go throughthis in our groups, especially
the CFC group.
All right, because looking atall this now, there are no
mutations.
But they're talking about PD-L1and immunotherapy.
It's not that the, the tumor,produces this growth.

(41:49):
It's made of mostly protein andsome glucarb in there.
Anyway, it's a glycoproteingrowth and it's called a ligand.
Why is it called a ligand?
Because it's going to fit intoa receptor, so something growth
and it's called a ligand.
Why is it called a ligand?
Because it's going to fit intoa receptor.
So something that fits into areceptor is a ligand.

(42:12):
So PD-L1, program-def-ligand-1,binds to the PDL receptor and
when it does that, it preventsthe T cell, your white blood
cell, from flatlining the CFC.

(42:35):
It prevents it.
So they give you a drug thateither blocks the PD-L1 or
blocks the receptor, either one,and then that can't happen and
then your T-cells can flatlinethe tumor, but sadly it only

(43:03):
provides a few extra months ofwhat they call progression-free
survival.
That's about it.
And why?
Because that's all you're doing.
You can't just do this onething.
And also, if the tumor is notalready infiltrated or not
infiltrated, but surrounded by Tcells that are being

(43:29):
inactivated by the tumor becauseof the PD-L1, if they're not
there, then using this drug,even though it blocks it, it has
no relevance because they'renot there.
So those are called the coldtumor.
If it's got lots of T cellsaround it that are ready to
gobble gobble, then it's calledthe hot tumor.

(43:51):
So with a hot tumor, of course,if you block that process and
the T cells are there, able todo what they're going to do,
then they do it.
But if you don't, if it's acold tumor, then it won't help.
So that should be ascertainedfirst.
But anyway, the research showsthat you can.

(44:14):
One of the way, if you want toconvert a cold tumor to a hot
tumor, ivermectin, look it up.
Don't believe me, look it up.
Put in ivermectin cold tumor,hot tumor on a search engine.
Pubmed is good, you know,because then you're going to
real research, but but youcanMed is good, you know,
because then you're going to doreal research, but you can do it

(44:36):
on anything you know, the CIA,google, or you can do it on
Brave or Yandex or any of it.
But do it and you'll find out,all right.
So that's what I remember.
And then, but that's fine.
But again, the immune system is.

(44:58):
It is incomprehensibly complex.
And so blocking or just doingone thing amidst these billions
of different chemical reactions,it's naive.
It's stupid to think thatyou're going to change the
course of nature by blocking onething.

(45:20):
You throw a big boulder intothe river to stop the water
flowing.
It's gonna flow around it.
That's just the nature ofnature.
So you've got to work on thisprocess from every possible
perspective.
All right, so that's like we'retalking about.
You eliminate the toxins,eliminate the toxins, and that's

(45:42):
not something you do, it'ssomething you continue to do
because we're continually beingexposed.
And then you make sure you livea life that's going to reduce
your exposure.
You live a life that's going toreduce your exposure.
You're not going to sit aroundin a room with Wi-Fi all over

(46:04):
you.
You're not going to live in aplace where there are many, many
5G towers around you and you'renot going to eat food that has
chemicals in it and you're notgoing to thermally degenerate
your food with heat and you'renot going to use toxic chemicals

(46:28):
that are in different clothingand skin products and things
like that, toothpastes and allthat You're going to eliminate
or at least to minimize theexposure you get.
You're going to drink waterthat's just kind of water, h2o,
with some minerals in it, andyou're going to optimize your

(46:51):
ascorbate, which is vitamin C.
You're going to optimizevitamin D way up there, overdose
with vitamin D, mixedcarotenoids, which are your
vitamin A, like lutein,zeaxanthine, beta carotene,
alpha carotene, gamma, andthere's all many.
It's called mixed carotenoidsbeta carotene, alpha carotene

(47:14):
gamma.
There's all many.
It's called mixed carotenoids.
And then you'll also getsomething called Velasta, which
is an astaxanthin that isprobably the most powerful of
them, of all of them, and youcan get Velasta via L-A-S-T-A,
dot net, I think, dot org,velasta the only way you can get

(47:34):
it is from them.
And melatonin, tons of melatonin.
You're going to go with maybe180 milligrams Not tonight, but
you'll work your way up to it.
And then you're going tobalance your iodine Thyroid
issue.
Because why?
The thyroid is one of the mainconductors of the immune system,

(47:54):
along with the adrenals.
So then you're going to do youradrenal.
So you're going to do all ofthis.
This is essential, essential.
And how do you do that?
How do you do all that?
This was all confusing.
It's overwhelming.
Yeah, that's why you joined thegroup cfc group because we're
all doing it.
That's what we're doing andwhen you've got access to the
information and we're sharinghow this person had was able,
ran into this problem and wasable to overcome it by this,
that's just.
It's just a beautiful,beautiful um group to belong to.

(48:19):
If you, especially you know inyour situation here.
So, and guess what'll happen ifyou do all of this?
It can't come back.
It doesn't come back because itnever left.
It's not like it left and thenthere's an it and then it came
knocking on the door.
It's not like that at all.
It got put into a situationwhere it wasn't large enough to

(48:39):
see anymore.
If you have a successfultreatment oh, your PET scan is
clean.
Wait, about nine months.
Yeah, talk to Joe Tippins,he'll tell you about that.
Anyway, this process will nothappen again if it doesn't need
to.
So you're going to make sure itdoesn't need to happen again.

(49:01):
That's what you're going to do.
Join the group.
Joanne dental, I believe yousaid there is a specific
treatment to flatline thebacteria that reside in the jaw
upper or lower.
I probably have, due to manycrowns and wisdom teeth pulled

(49:23):
years ago.
Can you tell me what that is?
Thank you, you may have heardthat wrong because, if you,
because, for example, you hadyour wisdom teeth which meant
that you had been pulled by aregular dentist who did not take

(49:43):
out the periodontal ligament,which is the conduit, doorway,
bridge for these microorganismsinto your jaw, and they get into
your jaw upper and lower andthey get into your jawbone and
there is not a lot of whiteblood cells there and there's no

(50:04):
big artery bringing in a bunchof white blood cells, so they're
relatively free to roam, butthey're also whatever you're
taking antibiotic or whateveryou're taking won't be delivered
there.
So that's the problem with thatarea.
So when it comes to dental, andespecially when it's gone beyond

(50:25):
the tooth and the root into thejawbone, it's really a
mechanical process.
You've got to get in there anddig it out and then sterilize it
with ozone and then seal itwith your own platelet-rich
fibrin from your blood.
You've got to do it that way.
So I hope that makes sense toyou All.

(50:50):
Right now you can get 6%food-grade hydrogen peroxide and
rinse and swish with that, butit's not going to get into your
jawbone and there's almostnothing you can do like that
topically.
By the way, I forgot the ladywith the acne related to

(51:12):
pregnancy.
There's a lot of topicaltreatments you can do.
If you remember what'shappening, you've got sebum
clogged, sebum glands that arenow being colonized by bacteria
as well.
So using 6% hydrogen peroxideor a colloidal silver, a good
quality colloidal silver, likethe stuff made by Natural
Immunogenics.

(51:33):
It's called Argentin 23.
That's one aspect of it.
But again, since it's somethingthat's coming from within,
you've got to deal with fromwithin and that's your food, the
diet, the thing You're notgoing to mess with hormones.
I just wanted to finish that.

(51:53):
But anyway, with regards tothese bacteria in the jaw, you
can't get into the jaw, soyou've got to have a qualified,
experienced, well-trained,certified biological dentist.
Do that, especially if you'vegot crowns.
If you've got crowns, who knowswhat's going on under there?
If it's into your, what's goingon?
So you've got crowns, who knowswhat's going on under there?

(52:14):
If it's into your, you've gotto go to ByJoy and you've got to
go to biological.
Now, I'm not sure where youlive, but again, keep in mind
that Dr Emma Abramayun inGlendale, california is the best
in the world, so if you can getto her, that would be great.

(52:35):
California is the best in theworld, so if you can get to her,

(53:06):
that would be great.
Wow, you guys are on grass-fedbeef.
You mean grass-fed cows,grass-fed beef.
You mean grass-fed cows.

(53:36):
Wow, wow, there's so much.
I'm sorry to read this becauseI can see there's a lot of
confusion about that.
Sugar is sugar.
Well, that's true, sugar issugar, anyway, but carbohydrates
are not necessarily used forfuel.
Lots of carbohydrates in ourbody that are not used for fuel

(53:57):
that don't contribute to thesugar concept.
Anyway, we're not.
I'm not going to get into that,we'll get it, you know, if you
want to really, um, if youreally want to know, if you
really want to know some of thisstuff, what's the food seminar?
Anyway, let's get back.
Yes, real quickly there to UniQ.

(54:22):
Yes, milk thistle, silymarin,which is a derivative of it,
alpha lipoic acid Powerful,powerful ways to restore liver
function.
Really, I mean, you can takesomeone who's in cirrhosis and

(54:42):
bring them back to normal thisway.
And sleeping without tons ofmedicine.
There's a lot of ways.
It's called sleep hygiene andthere's a lot of ways to do that
.
I can't.
I've got to respect the peoplethat sent in the question, so
please send.
You know, but sleep is a greatone and I have a talk on it.

(55:05):
And you just joined the liveremoving your wisdom teeth, if
there's nothing wrong with them.
No, no, and you just joined thelive removing your wisdom teeth
if there's nothing wrong withthem.
No, it's like saying I'm goingto remove my finger, nothing
wrong with it, I'm going to takeit off, though.
It's absurd.
It's absurd.
Anyway, I've got to get back.
I've got to respect the peoplethat said that in the questions.

(55:27):
Okay, so, joanne, I hope Ianswered that this is from Lisa
and she said so, joanne, I hopeI answered that this is from
Lisa.
And she said I had a dead tooththat was infected and I had it
holistically removed with ozoneand PRF and bone grafts.
Should I be taking specificparasite protocol for that?
It sounds like you had abiological dentist when they

(55:55):
cleaned out the.
When they took the dead toothout and cleaned out the area
that you're talking about, thatwas infected.
No doubt they sent it off to.
It's called DNA Connections, Iguess, where they look for all
the different DNA in there sothat they can identify the

(56:17):
organisms.
They can identify thisanaerobic funguses and protozoal
parasites and a lot of timesthere are protozoal parasites.
Protozoa, which meanssingle-celled organisms, they're
not the worms, celled organisms, they're not the worms.
But once you've cleaned it outand you've sealed it off with

(56:39):
the PRF, you're done.
You did it, it's done.
If the dentist didn't get themall, it couldn't happen, because
someone who's good and carefulwith the ozone and all that
should be able to.
But if that know, if someonewho's good and careful and the
ozone and all that should beable to, but if that happened,
still there's no, anything youtake Orally is not going to get

(57:06):
into the job Pretty much, exceptyou know, that's not true.
I mean, there are situationswhere there's bone infections
called osteomyelitis and theygive real powerful intravenous

(57:26):
antibiotics and you canpenetrate it that way.
But that's not the situationand that's not what you're
asking really.
You're asking about theparasite.
You want to do the parasiteprotocol anyway, which is the
one we talk about, three weekson one week off, three weeks on

(57:48):
one week off, right, severaldifferent anti-helminthics,
which are worms, andantiprotoxins and antifungals,
and we do that real hard forthree weeks and then off one
week for three weeks.
We do multiple, multiple cyclesand while we're doing it,
because all of these medicationsare metabolized by the liver,
the liver gets strained.

(58:08):
You take silymarin, milk,thistle, alpha lipoic acid, nac,
n-acetylcysteine.
You can take all these thingsto help keep the liver healthy,
protected, alright.

(58:33):
So this is from Stephanie, andhow do I safely flush out my
kidneys?
I was in the hospital inJanuary and had a kidney stone
on each side and currently havea sharp pain in my upper
mid-right side of my back.

(58:55):
When I breathe in Upper, upper,upper feels like a kidney stone
but seems higher than thepictures of where they say the
pain should be.
What can I do to flush this outand prevent it from reoccurring

(59:21):
?
All right, yeah, so if you'retalking about upper, you're
talking about in the chest, theback part of the chest, right.
That's called the thorax.
That wouldn't be kidney andkidney kidney stone.
Pain is not breathing,breathing in breathing has no

(59:47):
relationship to it.
It's a, as you know already,it's a severe pain that really
keeps you moving around andwrithing.
It's a writhing pain.
You know.
You know pain, pain can.
It's severe pain.
There's pain where I can't move.
I can't move because I move.
It hurts.
There's that kind of pain andthe other pain is you can't, you

(01:00:09):
gotta.
It's called writhing, you'reright, right, because it's just
pain.
So the pain from a stone in thekidney is writhing, pain,
writhing, and you know that ifyou've had them and you had a
kidney stone.
Now, if you had a kidney stone.
You want to prevent those in thefuture.

(01:00:30):
You're going to stay wellhydrated, drink lots and lots of
fluid.
You're going to be eating foodsthat are going to cause your
body to be alkaline as possibleAlkalinity and hydration.
You cannot have any stone.
And by all the green plant foodall green is called chlorophyll

(01:00:58):
in plants and the chlorophyllmolecule at the very center is a
mineral called magnesium, andthe more magnesium you have, the
less calcium can bind tooxalate, because the magnesium
binds to it, so the calciumcannot.

(01:01:21):
So you cannot get calcium.
Oxalate stones, which are 80 to90% of all stones, kidney
stones Also, the oxalate stones,more than 50% of them, are made

(01:01:49):
in the body, endogenouslyproduced, not from what we
ingest, but remaining hydrated,alkaline and eating foods that
have lots of magnesium or takemagnesium, magnesium oxide,
oxide, magnesium oxide.
You can't get them anyway.
So, anyway, you want to preventthese in the future.
But what you're talking about,if it hurts when you're

(01:02:10):
breathing see if you're okay inmy, my right upper middle when I
breathe in, all right.
So understand that.
What happens when you breathein is that because the pain
you're going to feel is going tobe, you know, there's not a lot

(01:02:34):
of major structures up in thechest except for lungs and heart
.
I mean there's blood vesselsand lymphatic vessels and things
like that.
I mean there's a lot of stuffgoing on in there, but I mean in
terms of so, and usually the,the.
When you have pain withbreathing in, like that, it's

(01:02:58):
because something is irritatingthe pleura.
The pleura is tissue thatsurrounds the lung and then it
also is attached to the chestwall.
No-transcript, you know, Idon't have enough information at

(01:03:42):
all to even guess what's goingon, but it sounds like pleuritic
.
It could also be, you know,lymph node or there's not much
else there, so that when you'rebreathing you know your chest

(01:04:02):
changes shape, right, and itjust puts pressure on something.
So what you need to do is youneed to get someone to examine
you who knows what they're doing, listening to your lungs and
listening.
There's different ways you canlisten and things you can do,
and then you can also get anultrasound, a chest X-ray, just

(01:04:23):
to try to see what's going on.
But a good examination by acompetent physician should
pretty much tell you the truepossibilities of what it is.
But it sounds pluralistic theway you're describing it.
Definitely not a stone.

(01:04:44):
This is from P.
Quick answer what signs when thebody is lacking iodine?
Well, if it's lacking iodine,the main thing is that it's not
able to make enough thyroid.

(01:05:05):
So you're going to behypothyroid and everything's
going to be slow and you'regoing to lose your hair and
you're going to be tired and youcan't to lose your hair and
you're going to be tired and youcan't lose weight.
You're not eating much but youcan't lose weight.
Hypothyroid is the main thing.
The other things are way toomuch to get into.

(01:05:29):
But basically we need iodinefor healthy immune function and
metabolizing the hormones andstuff we won't get into.
But basically we need iodinefor healthy immune function and
metabolizing the hormones andstuff we won't get into that.
We'll just talk about the maineffect on thyroid.
Quick answer right, ingrid?
Breast CFCs Metronidazole 500milligrams, two to three times a

(01:05:59):
day, usually, usually.
So breast CFCs Ingrid, you donot have an astrological sign.
Potassium iodide Potassiumiodide is good for what?

(01:06:20):
It's good for thyroid, yeah,but not all the really amazing
benefits you get from moleculariodine.
That's why Lugol's solution,which is a combination of
molecular iodine and potassiumiodine, gives you both.
So you want that Anyway.

(01:06:43):
So, ingrid, I recently receivedthe diagnosis.
Don't take it, throw it away,you don't want it.
My MRI, the MRI, not yours, youdon't want it, they did it.
It shows no signs of metastasisand the mass is about four
centimeters.
At this point, I feel veryoverwhelmed, which is exactly
what they wanted to do, and withguidance on my next steps, so

(01:07:05):
happy that you came in at thispoint.
I understand that surgery andchemotherapy are the standard
recommendations, but I'm notready to move in that direction
right now.
No, get rid of them right now,ever.
I am looking for support inunderstanding how my condition
is progressing and whatmonitoring.

(01:07:25):
I'm also exploring integrativeapproaches, including IV therapy
and the use of PEMF machines.
I would like to know if youcould provide mental oversight
or referral.
Yeah, absolutely, yeah,absolutely so.
Ingrid, I'm not sure where youare, but if you're in the US, I

(01:07:48):
do have a clinic there.
It's called Anoasis of Healingin Arizona.
That's what we do is helppeople in these situations.
You can also join our group,the CFC group.
Go to drlodycom, drlodycom andget on there and join the CFC
group and in there you're goingto have thousands of people

(01:08:10):
guiding you.
You're going to just love itand you're going to get all the
information.
We'll tell you where to start.
What's step two, step three?
That's it.
That's exactly what you'relooking for, ingrid, and you
might not know it, but this isit, and I'm glad you contacted
us.

(01:08:34):
Don't let them.
Oh, you've got a diagnosis.
The mass is 40.
Did they biopsy it already?
Anyway, see, that's why Ireally, that's why in the groups
we can talk.
So, anyway, the MRI, okay, allright.

(01:08:56):
So listen, here's the thingabout metastasis when you have a
main tumor, it sends outinhibitory signals to all the
little satellite colonies thathave gone through the lymph and
the blood vessels that are allaround, and it sent out these

(01:09:18):
signals that inhibit it fromgrowing blood vessels so that it
can't get big.
The minute you biopsy or removeit, you eliminate the ability
to send out those inhibitorysignals and everything can start
growing.
So it's not that you, inaddition to the biopsy and the

(01:09:39):
surgery spreading some CFC stemcells, in addition to that,
you've also released theinhibition on the satellites
that are already there and nowthey start growing.
So when should we get a biopsy?
Never.
When should we do surgery?

(01:10:03):
Ah, there are times to getsurgery and that's a very long
topic, but basically this if, if, if, if, if a tumor is
impacting a vital or about toimpact the vital function, like

(01:10:23):
breathing, eating, bowelmovements, urination or anything
like that.
You know you've got to one ofthe one of the choices is um,
what noise out there?
I go, uh.
One of the choices is to uh, um, do surgery.

(01:10:44):
Right, and and and.
And.
It depends on um and it dependson the situation.
Like, for example, we had afellow with a tumor in his

(01:11:08):
descending colon and his stoolwas very, very thin.
He wasn't able to pass stool.
It was very thin, it was, hewasn't able to to pass stool and
it was blocking it.
So he was, this was a, we hadto.
There was no, there was noother way.
In this situation, he has tohave surgery.
Okay, so there are times thatsurgery is necessary.
But when you have a lumpsomewhere, a little mass
somewhere, um and um, remove,because if removing it would

(01:11:33):
solve the problem, great, but itdoesn't solve it, it doesn't
end it, it makes it worse, butit doesn't end it.
And why do they want to do it?
Because they need a definitivediagnosis.
What the heck?
Why do they need a definitivediagnosis?
What does that mean?
Do you know what a diagnosis is?
Read them, just like we wereearlier.

(01:11:54):
It tells you what they see.
It's a description of what theysee Invasive ductal carcinoma
Okay, carcinoma.
Okay, we know what that means,right?
It's derived from ectoderm orendoderm in the embryonic stage.
Invasive ductal means it was inthe duct.

(01:12:15):
That makes sense, becausebreasts are made of little sacks
that produce milk and ductsthat carry it to the nipple, so
it's in the duct.
Invasive means it went throughthe wall.
Okay, my God.
So that's what?
And they call that a diagnosis.
All they said was it's thereand it went through the wall.

(01:12:35):
Okay, so it doesn't help you.
It helps them because now theyhave the proper nomenclature to
put it on their sales algorithmand they can sell you what to do
algorithm.
And they can tell you what todo, hi Mara, they can sell you

(01:12:58):
stuff.
Now, that's what the goal is.
The goal has nothing to do withresolution of problems and
restoration of health.
That would be fantastic, butit's not the way it is.
Anyway, I wish, yeah, I know,it's crazy.
Next door, now they're nextdoor, they're, um, they're,

(01:13:19):
they're, they're building aresort.
You know, and I came here.
It was fantastic, and now, no,I'm not having it.
So next door, next door,they're building this resort.
Next door they're building thisresort.
So there you know, I came here.
It was pristine, beautiful,right across from the ocean.
You know, like 100 meters.

(01:13:40):
I'm standing in the ocean Rightnow.
I'll be standing there withthousands of other people.
It's crazy.
So, anyway, um, okay, so thisisn't actually we're answering,

(01:14:04):
actually fatima, who's the nextquestion too.
So here's the thing you've gota tumor somewhere, you've got a
mass somewhere.
Now, by taking it and get a,getting what it, and getting
what's called a histologicaldescription, which they call a
histological diagnosis, it's nota diagnosis, I mean, I guess it
is because they put a name onit.
But you could call it a banana,you could have called it a
turtle, you could have called ita kneecap, you could have

(01:14:27):
called it anything.
Because it didn't give you thetwo bits of information you want
to know.
And what are those two bits ofinformation you want to know?
How did I get this and how do Iget rid of it?
Right, right, it doesn't tellyou that.
If it doesn't tell you that ithas no value to you, to them, it
does, because they can tell youwhat they can sell you.
Now, whatever they're going tosell you and process they're
going to do, it's not going tohelp you.

(01:14:58):
Let me ask you, anybody who's inany kind of business whatever
business you're in, whetheryou're the owner or you're not
does your company, does you,spend any amount of time trying
to diminish the number ofcustomers they have?
I mean, you know it's calledbusiness.
This is the healthcare industry.
There's no healthcare industry.

(01:15:19):
They don't even know whathealth is.
They don't even describe it,they don't know what it is.
That's the absence of disease.
Well, first of all, there areno such thing as diseases, so we
already have that.
It's like saying it's theabsence of dragons or it's the
absence of eight-headedbutterflies, yeah, okay.

(01:15:41):
Well, I'm already there becauseI'm on the way.
Anyway, it's insane.
So health is not the absence ofanything, it's the presence of
something.
It's the presence of theability to regenerate,
rejuvenate and procreate.
Regenerate, rejuvenate andprocreate.
Health is that it's alsosomething called optimal
functioning.
Optimally functioning organismis a healthy organism, and

(01:16:07):
that's an organism that isgetting all of its biological
needs and, in our case,biological and psychological
needs and spiritual needs, met.
When all those are met, we arein a condition called health so,
and you can't buy it.
There's nothing blocked.

(01:16:30):
There's like this one tumorover here that's blocking it.
If it wasn't for this, I'd bereally healthy.
No, because that happened,because there's not a lot of
health going on.
There's not a lot of healthyfunction.
So our terms are all wrong.
We don't have.
We're in a web.
It's like it's a sticky web ofyou know, like snakes do this

(01:17:01):
and spiders do this, where theyspit out the toxicity of poison
to render their praise Helpless.
They've spit this linguisticweb and now we're sinking.
We're in this quagmire.

(01:17:23):
Now we're sinking, we're inthis quagmire, we're sinking.
So it's really easy.
All you got to do is changeyour vocabulary and you're no
longer there anymore.
It's like turning.
It's like you're on Channel 5.
I turn to Channel 7.
I'm no longer in Channel 5.
It's words, words, words.
You got to get out of theirwords.

(01:17:44):
None of their words are true.
None.
How many?
None, not even one None, howabout?
No, they lie.
They lie when they don't knowthey're lying and they lie when
they know they're lying.
They can't help it because theynever learned the truth and if
they did, they certainly notgoing to talk about it because

(01:18:05):
it's going to get in the way.
Steve, uh, I'm not sure why youwould say such a thing.
I mean, whoa, what is mydoctorate in?
Yeah, I'm going to do, Idecided to do what this wall

(01:18:30):
here, I'm going to put up all my, all my certificates, okay, so
you guys can see, cause I getquestions like that.
Okay, what is your doctorate in?
Psychology?
And I'm a medical doctor,medical doctor, md.
Okay, joey, but I mean this guy, steve, what are you talking

(01:18:54):
about?
Man, it has nothing to do withanything.
Anyway, if you guys didn't see,that're okay, you don't need to
see it.
So, anyway.
So the reason we don't take itout is because it doesn't help
anyway.
If you had a poisoned appletree, everyone that ate an apple

(01:19:15):
from the tree, right.
So you call the tree doctor.
The tree doctor comes in andcuts all the apples off.
Did you solve the problem?
No, you didn't, because nextfall you're going to have
another harvest.
Okay, so it's not getting ridof them.

(01:19:57):
As I said, if it's impending,it's causing a major problem,
then you've got to take it out,but if it's not, then no, you've
got to work systemically.
Because, hammy, if you're there, read this.

(01:20:24):
Hammy, hammy, read, read, read,okay Now.
So the point is, it's not goingto help.
It's not going to help.
It's going to help, it's notgoing to do anything.
And a lot of people say I justwant to get it out.

(01:20:46):
I want to get it out.
But you know what there aretests to do to see if, like a
pet scan, to see if it's evenactive, because it may just be
residual scar tissue, you don'tknow.
But if it's just a risen, thenobviously it's not going to be
that.
But anyway you can make it go.
You can make it and all theother manifestations that you
can't yet see.
Resolve, cutting them offdoesn't help.

(01:21:10):
I mean because you're going toget there's more.
That's not the only thing thereis, they're all over
Microscopically.
Anyone with what's called stageone already has,
microscopically, stage four thathave just been held at bay, and
so you don't want to doanything that's going to make

(01:21:30):
those grow.
You want to just have them undo, become Okay.
You want them to becomeunbecomecome.
You want them to unbecome.
It's very unbecoming.
They need to unbecome, okay.
So that's what we need to do.

(01:21:50):
So this is for uh, both, uh,ingrid, we, we, we talk about
all the things iv, iv therapies,the PEMF, everything that you
need to know to resolve thiswhole situation and go back to
living your natural life.
That's this group, the CFC group.

(01:22:12):
Join it.
And Fatima, I am a FEMA 42, andI have stage 1 CFCs,
chronically fermenting cells.
There is no astrological signin your breast.
I promise If you were to openup the breast you would not see

(01:22:32):
an astrological sign.
So why call it that?
Okay, I have stage one breastCFC and my doctor recommended
surgery.
No, your doctor didn't.
The American Society ofClinical Oncology recommended it
because they need to get youinto their system.
And he's just, he's a mindlessparrot.
A mindless parrot.

(01:22:54):
But of course he's got a whitecoat on a white coat on
Recommended surgery andradiation.
Oh my God, why did he?
He must be so brilliant, howdid he come up with it?
And hormone treatment for fiveyears.
Make sure that you don't get tolive your life.
He wants to make sure you don'tget to live your life because

(01:23:14):
he's doing what he needs to doand you know what.
As long as he pretends not toknow, then he can go to sleep at
night.
So stage one means it's in theoriginal location and it hasn't

(01:23:35):
even disturbed the normalarchitecture there.
Yet it's nothing.
There's no.
And he wants to now.
No, he wants to wipe you out.
Everything he's recommendedwill destroy you Surgery and
radiation.
Radiating what If you took out?
Let's say you take it out.
Let's say you do the surgery.

(01:23:56):
Now what are you going toradiate?
There's no answer to thatquestion, but they still do it
anyway.
Well, just in case.
Just in case, what doctor?
Well, you mean there might bestem cells in there?
Yeah, but you know this.
Data shows, the research showsthat radiation and chemo have no

(01:24:16):
effect on stem cells.
In fact, they make them growmore.
Right, you know that, doctor,because you're a brilliant
doctor and I know you know that.
So what the hell are youtelling me at this point?
Alright, you have to realizeyou're not talking to human
beings and he didn't decideanything.

(01:24:38):
My recommendation, fatima, isyou join our CFC group right
away.
Do not get surgery, do not geta biopsy, do not do anything.
Join the group first and getsome information and then make
your decision.
I'm not telling you not to doanything or to do anything.
I'm just saying now is yourtime and you're doing it.
It's beautiful, both you andIngrid.
You're doing it.
You're doing your due diligence.
I mean, the decisions you'remaking now are a little more

(01:25:01):
important than you know buying anew car or buying a house,
which people always do their duediligence.
Well, here's a very, veryimportant.
And you're doing it, you'refinding out, so that's great.
So the next step is CFC landdrlodycom.
Drlodycom.
Go to my website.
Find out how to get into theCFC group so that you can have

(01:25:21):
all of this and more questionsanswered.
All right, so this is Diana.
Diana.
Parasite cleanse safe withchemo.
Purchase bulk supplementanti-parasitic.
Now I need to know if this canbe used safely with chemo.
Well, chemo's not safe.

(01:25:43):
Great, oops, something wentwrong and we shut off your page.
How nice of you.
How's the band?

(01:26:09):
What's going on?
You guys Come on.
I don't know what's going on.
It's saying refresh the page.
Am I on now?

(01:26:39):
Am I on?
Okay, good.
All right, anyway, look at, I'mlive on YouTube.

(01:27:10):
Okay, good, yeah, so good, okay, we're all in there.
Okay, great, okay, okay, great,thank you, all right.
So I don't know, it's wigglingand all kinds of stuff.
So beautiful, okay, so whereare we?
Let's get back to our Question.
Where were we?
Where were we?
Ah, so okay, parasite cleanseis safe with chemo.

(01:27:38):
So Chemo is not safe.
And if you're going to do it,diane, if you're going to do
chemotherapy, what would be inyour best interest is to
research and find out.
Should I do this?
Is this in my best interest?
Number one, number two if I doit, how should I have it done?

(01:28:01):
What is the best way to getthis done?
But you've got to answer thesequestions.
But, yes, now you know, it's nota matter of whether or not
parasite medicines are safe withchemo.
You know, if your liver ishealthy, then there should be no

(01:28:34):
problem at all.
The only problem is, as Imentioned before, is that these
parasite medicines are allneutralized in the liver and
therefore the liver is doing alot of work, that it it's like a
lot of real, specific work thatit usually doesn't all at once,
and so it gets inflamed andenzymes, and so we take.

(01:28:57):
We take, you know, milk thistle, silymin, silymin, silybinum,
silymarin, you know, which areall derivatives of the milk
thistle, silymin, silymin,silybinum, silymarin, which are
all derivatives of milk thistle,and alpha-lipoic acid and all
that stuff.
We take that to support theliver, to keep it healthy, while
we're giving it a little extrawork to do right.
That's what we do right Now.

(01:29:30):
I got to answer that questionthere, but anyway, al
A-I-R-L-L-L.
So anyway, how do you get theprotocol?
Cfc group, join the CFC group.
Drlodycom.
Cfc group, drlodycom.
Join it and you'll get all theprotocols and more, much more

(01:29:51):
more.
That's just the beginning andthere's no protocol.
The protocol is you.
The protocol is you as you do.
Because as you begin yourjourney of of back to health,
it's like a dance.
You'll find out this is workingand that's not working, and

(01:30:12):
it's a.
It's a dance, it's a processand you and it's a great dance.
We're all the same music, gotthe same drummers in there.
But we all just dance a littlebit differently.
That's all so.

(01:30:37):
So Anyway, I hope youunderstand Chemotherapy.
I mean, if we were on a Zoomright now, I could show you the
research.
Look up a study called theParadoxical.
What is it?

(01:30:58):
It's called the Paradoxical Igot to find this for you guys,
because I want you to here.
What is it?
It's called the parent I got to.
I got to find this for you guysbecause I want you to here.
The name of the article is theparadoxical.
Paradoxical effects ofchemotherapy on tumor relapse.
And was the other?

(01:31:18):
Come on, why did you not finishthe title?
Give me the title, Okay.
Paradoxical effects ofchemotherapy on tumor relapse
and metastasis promotion.
Paradoxical effects ofchemotherapy on tumor relapse
and metastasis promotion.
Okay.
Published in Seminars on CancerBiology in February of 2020.

(01:31:39):
Biology in February of 2020.
I mean, can I just read alittle bit to you?
Let me just read, so pleasehumor me and listen, okay.

(01:31:59):
Several lines of compellingpreclinical evidence identify
chemotherapy as a potentiallydouble-edged sword.
Therapeutic efficacy on theprimary tumor may, in fact, be
counterbalanced by the inductionof tumor post-reactive
responses supportive forsurvival and dissemination of
cancer cell subpopulation.
At the primary tumor site,chemotherapy has been reported

(01:32:23):
to promote selection ofchemo-resistant and
disseminating tumor cellsendowed with properties of
cancer stem cells throughactivation of autocrine and
paracrine self-renewal.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Resistance CSCs cancer stemcells represent seeds for tumor

(01:32:47):
relapse, and increasedinfiltration by immune cells,
Together with enhanced vascularpermeability induced by
chemotherapy, facilitates tumorcell intravization the first
step of the metastatic cascade.

(01:33:08):
It goes off.
And this is just one study.
There's thousands.
So do your homework, Read thisstuff, Find out about it and
join our groups.
All right, so I don't make thisup.
This was published in 2020seminars in cancer biology,
February 2020.
Paradoxical effects ofchemotherapy on tumor relapse

(01:33:30):
and metastasis promotion.
Read it.
There's many others.
I got there's hundreds and I'mnot going to do them all now,
but I'm just letting you knowthat I don't make this stuff up.
It would be extremely boring tosit around and make this stuff
up.
It would be extremely boring tosit around and make up stuff
like this.
All right, yeah, they're goingto wipe you out.
They're going to wipe you out.

(01:33:55):
I know I've been doing this 40years.
I've watched my mother bekilled by them, Flatline, sorry,
Talk, tick, Talk, tick, Tick,tock.
All you other people who careabout my safety and care about
the safety of everybody In theinterest of community standards,

(01:34:18):
we're going to eliminate yourvoice.
While we're at it.
We're going to eliminate yourvoice.
While we're at it, we're goingto castrate you.
It's called incidentalcastration.
When they were doing surgery onsomething in the abdomen and
they see an appendix.
It's called an incidentalappendectomy.
Incidental means I was there,we took it out For me.

(01:34:39):
They're going to silence me anddo an incidental appendectomy.
Incidental means you know I wasthere, we took it out.
So for me they're going tosilence me and do an incidental
castration.
Orchiectomy, bilateralorchiectomy yes.
Now.
I got to get back to you guys.
Please join these groupsOtherwise, because, remember,
this format is for me to answerquestions that have been sent in

(01:35:02):
and I've got to respect that.
You have to respect it, we allhave to respect it, because
those who did it did it Allright.
So, ingrid and Fatima, you'vegot it.
And Diane, you're going to goread that article, aren't you?
Yes, so the parasite cleanse issafe and it's very.

(01:35:30):
I would do it, and if I hadsomeone in my family who was
having a problem like that, Iwould suggest to them they do it
.
So just read about Kien andread about your situation and

(01:35:55):
join our group so you'll knowall right, because there's lots
of ladies in our group who havegone through the same thing and
men, they've gone through thesame things and they're on the
other side now they're going totell you Okay, so now this is
Teresa and having strange, it'scolon and rectal CFCs.

(01:36:18):
She wants to do a parasitecleanse, having strange symptoms
, colonoscopy, endoscopy OnMonday, interested in a detox
and parasite removal, all right,so that, see there, teresa, See
, this is why you've got to bein these groups, because that

(01:36:39):
doesn't help me know anything.
If you're doing a colonoscopyand an endoscopy, right, they're
looking at your your esophagus,stomach and part of your small
intestines and they're lookingat your colon.
Why, what's the reason?
Are you having black stools orbloody stools?
Bloody stools?

(01:37:10):
So I don't.
Oh, you think you have.
They think you might have colonor rectal CFCs.
Is that it?
So why an endoscopy For therectal or colon CFT?
It must be that you had someblood or dark stools, black

(01:37:33):
tarry stools, called melanin and, of course, if you're a doctor
and you're talking to otherdoctors, you say she had
melanotic stools.
They love to talk like that asif it's an indication of
intelligence.

(01:37:54):
It's not.
Well, I'm not sure what's goingon with you, but I know that if
you let those guys look hereand there, they're going to find
something that needs to beattacked.
Remember, these guys areworking for the military.
Rocky and the gang.
You know Rocky and the gang.
That's not Rocky and Bullwinkle, it's John D Rocky and his

(01:38:19):
descendants.
Yeah, just like a spider latesall these eggs.
Yeah.
Yeah, most of his descendantsdid hatch.
Did hatch Definitely notmammals.

(01:38:42):
So anyway, teresa, I don'tunderstand really what's going
on.
But interested in a detox?
Fantastic, no matter what'sgoing on, that's the first thing
you should do.
That's beautiful and you wantto take care of your mouth.
You're going to go to abiological dentist and while

(01:39:04):
you're going there, you're goingto start your juice cleanse.
And you're going to do a juicecleanse for, I don't know, eight
weeks, a minimum of three weeks.
Okay, just do it.
You get to do that instead ofgetting radiated and surgeries
then.
Thank you, thank you, the audio, okay.

(01:41:47):
So what's going on?
I'm in.
I mean, it says I'm in.
I don't know, I know, well, Idon't know.
The camera says when I go tothe camera section, it says Osmo
.
Yes, it says Osmo, I chose Osmo.

(01:42:08):
Yeah, osmo, it's on the OsmoPocket 3, I know.

(01:42:37):
Okay.
Well, I don't know what to saybecause the camera's on.
When I go to the settings, itsays Osmo 3, so it's got the
camera.
So I don't know what'shappening.
I don't know what's happening.
Are we having fun yet?

(01:43:09):
Is this more fun than you'veever had, watching this guy
interact with circuits?
All right, anyway, you guys, Idid open the camera settings.

(01:43:34):
I did open the camera settings.
Video Osmo 3.
I have three choices, but Ichose Osmo 3.
I chose Osmo 3.

(01:43:55):
I pressed it again and Ipressed it again and I pressed
it again.
It's not working no-transcript.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.