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October 21, 2025 88 mins

What if “disease” isn’t an enemy to defeat but your body’s adaptive signal asking you to change course? We dive into a practical, science-informed approach to chronically fermenting cells—often labeled cancer—by focusing on how the immune system learns, how stress blocks healing, and how simple daily habits can turn the tide.

We unpack the abscopal effect in plain language: when a single tumor is targeted locally, systemic lesions can shrink as the immune system finally sees more of the puzzle. You’ll hear how dendritic cells and T cells coordinate this response, how focused ultrasound, cryoablation, and hyperthermia can help, and why movement, heat, and a balanced microbiome increase the odds. We also explore minor autohemotherapy with ozone as a way to present antigenic fragments and wake up immune surveillance.

From there, we tackle the foundations most people skip. Stress is redefined as “not liking what is,” and it’s shown to suppress immunity and circulation. The fix is refreshingly doable: two minutes of focused breath, five times daily, plus consistent sleep and sunlight. Nutrition shifts to uncooked whole plants—fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds—eaten in a short daily window, with hours before bedtime to enhance repair. Water fasting and green-juice cleansing get a practical walkthrough for gut healing, autophagy, and microbiome reset, with real-world cases from psoriasis to ulcerative colitis.

We then zoom in on repurposed antiparasitics. Ivermectin’s inhibition of PAK1 can dim multiple growth pathways, while fenbendazole disrupts microtubules similar to certain chemotherapies, but within a broader strategy that prioritizes terrain: stress mastery, clean fuel, and steady circadian rhythm. Cases include infant breast lumps best left to resolve, sarcoma support through cleansing and nutrition, and sourcing guidance f

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_01 (00:47):
Good evening.
Welcome to Sunday Night Live,Sunday morning, Monday morning
live.
We're just alive.
That's all we're alive.

unknown (00:53):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (00:53):
And today is when?
It's today.
What time is it now?
There we go.
We're on time.
We made it to now.
Um, couldn't really be late forsuch a thing.
And here we go.
Wow.
Upstate New York.
Thoughts on Occupy.
Yes.
Okay.

unknown (01:09):
Absolutely.
Okay.

SPEAKER_01 (01:11):
Do we have to be?
Um, should I be?
Uh, are we there?
Hey, good morning, Mara.
Yay.
Another upstate New York.
Perfect.
Uh wait, what is this one?
This one is just one second, youguys.
Just a real minor thing here.
We're not gonna be doing therewe go.

unknown (01:30):
Come on.

SPEAKER_01 (01:31):
Yeah, well, whatever.
So here we are.
Good morning.
Good evening.
Okay, man.
Tons of questions.
Beautiful.
Let's get started.
We want to be on.
All right, cool.
Great.
All right.
So good.
Uh let's get started.
So today is oh, please shareabout upscalpel effect.
I will do that.

(01:52):
Thank you for reminding me.
Why don't I start out with that?
Okay.
Let's go over to here.
There we go.
Yeah.
All right.
Wow, these are so um, what doyou call it?
So uh, I mean, it's like lookingthrough a magnifying glass.
Do I have anything?
These are less than 10.
That's a banner.
Boy, those other ones are toomuch.

(02:13):
Okay, so let's get started.
Um, uh reminder um, you're verywelcome, everyone.
Hey, yeah, I'm so happy to behere as well.
So, by the way, you have CFCsand it's active um right now,
and you're anywhere near NorthAmerica, get over to an Oasis of
Healing in Arizona.
We've been doing this for 21years now, and uh we're starting

(02:34):
to get good at it.

SPEAKER_00 (02:35):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (02:36):
Long before all the ones that have popped up.
So we kind of helped developthis whole process.
Uh and uh so anyway, um, I justwanted a couple things to as a
reminder.
Remember, we have three groups,and the reason we have three
groups, by the way, CFC, if youdon't know chronically
fermenting cells, for those ofyou who don't know, that's

(02:56):
really what when they talk aboutthe word cancer, which is an
astrological sign, period, theymean chronically fermenting
cells.
And that's a more useful termbecause it communicates
information and no fear, andthat we need to deal with
information and not be freakedout with fear, freaked out with
fear.
F-O-W-F.

(03:17):
No, freaked out with fear.
Okay, all right, cool.
So, so we have three groupsbecause on these I see lots of
questions coming up here, andsadly I can't respond to them
because I have a lot ofquestions that were sent in, and
you know, I need to respect thatand answer those questions.
However, in order for us to havelive and continuous interaction,

(03:38):
that's the whole reason we havethese groups the health and
healing group, parasite group,and the CFC group.
Um, and that way we interact andwe dialogue.
I ask you, what do you mean bythat?
Did you get this?
We can really focus in on youryour real question.
Is because I know how hard it isto sit there and say, I want to
write the question, and youmight leave some important stuff

(03:58):
out just because that's the waywe are us humans.
Um, anyway, join those and yougo to drlody.com, drloadie.com,
drlodi.com, and you look rightthere, and you're gonna see
you've got three groups you canjoin.
That's how you join.
All right.
Now there's this weird one onTelegram, it's called the Dr.
Thomas Lodi community.
That's not me.

(04:19):
And of course, Telegram doesn'tcare.
I've complained formally ummultiple times, and they just
leave it up.
So it's still there, and itdoesn't, there's no they're
using my name.
Isn't that shouldn't that beillegal?
It should be, but that's the oldworld.
The new world is uh anything cango, all right.
Um now big business sellingtampons to man, yes, this is the

(04:41):
new world, right?
And you gotta be careful on aboat because if you're on a boat
uh you know in the ocean, youcould go over the side because
this is flat.
We're on a flat disk.
Uh I just all right, so here weare.
Oh, anyway, so uh by the way,we're we're doing um uh the
human diet, which is a reallyfundamental and critical part of
healing, and it's never uh forsome reason it's never uh

(05:03):
there's so much misinformation,it's crazy.
Um that's why I put togetherthis webinar.
It's got like four parts, right?
Nature's design, you know, howdid nature design us to eat,
right?
The second one is called CookedFood is poison, and the third
one is what does the researchsay?
So it's great, you have all youropinions.
What does the research say?
Fourth one is exposing the mythslike oxalates, anti-nutrients,

(05:27):
lignin, soy, all that stuff, allthose myths.
We're gonna expose them withwith with research to show you
that what are myths and what arenot myths.
Okay, we keep postponing thatone because we need to get a lot
of people to sign up for it.
I'm not I don't wanna I don'twanna waste such an important
webinar.

(05:48):
Okay, get the word out.
That's part four.
And just go to drlody.com andyou'll find out when it's gonna
be.
All right.
And um, as a reminder, at drThomas Lodi is how you find us
on Rumble, Facebook, YouTube,LinkedIn, Instagram, right?
Um, linked uh yeah, I said yeah,and then uh for X and TikTok,

(06:12):
it's at DR Thomas Lodi MD.
They have to md has to be inthere because they had my name
before and they they they andthey deleted me, they canceled
me.
I was canceled.
Uh anyway, that's that.
Fred Sanford with his eyeglassesdrawer.
Fred Sanford.
All right.

(06:32):
Now there was a request that Istart out with talking a little
bit about the abscopel effect.
And I that might be I think itmight be a good way to start out
because has anyone heard ofthat?
The abscopel effect?
All right, not sure if you'veall heard of it.
All right.
Well, it's a pretty interestingphenomenon and uh apparently

(06:54):
rare.
Keep getting these samequestions.
Okay, so sorry I'm distracted.
Okay, anyway, the abscopeleffect.
What is it?
It's when uh one tumor somewhereuh is being treated directly
with something like radiation orhyper local hyperthermia or uh
radio frequency ablation orcryotherapy, cryoablation, or

(07:18):
you know, anything to directlyaffect the tumor.
And uh the result is not onlythat tumor shrinks, but multiple
other tumors.
Uh milgram experiment, not surewhat that is.
Zimmerman, I always think of umBobby Boy, Bobby Dylan, but I'm
not sure what is meant byZimmerman.
So you knock out the first tumorand then all the other tumors
seem to shrink down.
And how does that happen?

(07:39):
And that happens because whenthe the the therapy you're
using, like like let's say uhradio frequency ablation or um
cryo therapy cryo ablation or oror uh just irradiating or any of
that sort of stuff, it causesnecrosis of the cell.
So it's not apoptosis, it'snecrosis.

(08:00):
And that necrosis causes thecell to split apart, and now all
of these fragments are therethat the immune system can
become um aware of and develop aresponse.
So rather than the whole cellwhere the immune system is just
going to be looking at theantigens that are on the surface
of the cell, when you break itopen, you've got all these

(08:22):
multiple, multiple antigens.
And so that stimulates an immuneresponse, which is
systemic-wide, and it shrinksthem down.
Now, it doesn't happen all thetime, but it it does happen.
Um, and you can increase itslikelihood of happening um in
several ways, right?
So keep in mind the tumor splitsapart.
So just like just like in anykind of wound or a brick uh or

(08:46):
trauma or anything like that,dendritic cells and macrophages
are the are the marines in thetrenches, and they show up and
they take bites out of thisstuff and they bring it back to
the T cells that are hanging inon the lymph nodes, waiting.
Because the T cells, afterthey're after they're born in
the bone marrow, they go to thethymus gland to get educated,
and then they get they'recompletely trained as assassins.

(09:08):
Then they go hang out in thelymph node where they you know
they have coffee and stuff.
You know, sometimes they playcards, but most of the time
they're they're alert andvigilant and waiting.
And then here comes themacrophages, dendritics showing
up with uh fragments of cells,and they and so then the the the
T cell that was what they call anaive T cell didn't have any
purpose in life, um, except todrink coffee, now has a purpose.

(09:31):
Ah, I'm gonna get that one, andthat's what happens, and so
that's kind of stimulating theimmune system to function,
right?
And uh the uh real quickly, wedo that also.
There's this there's a there'san ozone uh treatment called um
minor autohemo.
And minor minor autohemo, Kevin.

(09:52):
What are you talking about,Kevin?
You guys weird talk aboutrandom.
Anyway, minor auto hemo is whenwe draw out some blood, 10cc,
and we mix in 10 cc's of ozone,you have a big 20cc syringe, and
you shake it vigorously so thecells break apart, just like
we're talking about with thatupscopal effect of getting the

(10:13):
primary tumor.
Break it apart, then you givethat uh ozonated sh traumatized
blood as an injectionintramuscularly, either into the
uh your gluteus back there orhere, a deltoid big muscle.
Of course, that goes in, that'sa trauma.
So the dendritic cells andmacroflass show up.
It's the same kind of thing.
So we used to do that everythree big every three days.

(10:35):
Oops, we lost you.
Am I back on now, you guys?
Hammy, am I back on?
Oops, it lost me.

unknown (10:42):
My God.

SPEAKER_01 (10:43):
Oops.
Okay, we're gonna have a lot ofoopses today.
I can tell we've already startedwith our oopses.
Um, so we used to do minor autohemology, which you know differs
than major auto hemorrhages,which is the way you put ozone
into the blood and all that sortof thing.
But um, so minor autohemology,we use that every three days.
So, because what it does iskinds of it's it's kind of a
reminder to the immune system ofwhat's going on.

(11:03):
Great, you can hear me.
Good, cool, cool.
Never went away.
See, they so they're just tryingto freak me out.
They're good at it, they'rereally good.
They've learned how to freak meout.
Now, um, of all the targetingtherapies uh on a tumor
directly, the one that seems tobe the most effective and also
the least damaging to non-tumorcells is something called, and

(11:26):
that's just where you use reallyhigh high-intensity uh sound
waves to break it up.
And we used to do that with um,well, I guess we still do, but
um, that was one of the waysyou'd break up kidney stones
that were in the kidneys, andthey were so big uh you they
couldn't fit down through theureter, and they caused
excruciating pain.
So they called it extraextracorporeal um histotripsy,

(11:47):
or I forget the exact term, butextracorporeal beast outside of
the body, sending sound wavesin.
They shattered the stone thatwas in the kidney, so turned
into like grains of sand thatjust came down easily.
So that's how that works.
So now we're using it fortumors, which is a great idea,
all right.
Um local hypothermia does it,radiation therapy does it.

(12:08):
Um, and uh so uh remember thatthe the thing that the thing
that limits anything, any of anytherapy on a tumor is going to
be poor accessibility, and thatpoor accessibility comes about
because of the blood vesselsthat that that uh supply a tumor
are like spaghetti and they haveno control mechanisms, and so
they're just kind of like that.

(12:29):
Uh and so they continually breakapart, and so now you lost your
flow again, and that stimulatesthat's low, and then you have
you wind up getting hypoxic inthat area because you the blood
vessels broke, so you're notgetting oxygen there, and that
hypoxia stimulates the growth ofnew blood vessels and new tumor
proliferation, and so these newblood vessels are growing so

(12:50):
quickly they're they don't havethe uh required amount of time
to become healthy blood vesselsthat are uh inner innervated
with the autonomic nervoussystem to control flow, if they
don't have that, right?
And so that's the problem.
So, how do you increase uh tumoraccessibility?
Exercise moving around isn'tgonna keep blood flow happening,
right?
Um you know that's one way.

(13:14):
Um whole body hypothermiaincreased uh increasing the
blood flow all over the body,um, you know, and uh you know
that does it and um so anyway,there's there's lots of ways to
enhance that, but that's whatthat is.
You wish I were so we're gonnaI'm gonna get into some of the
uh questions on on parasiticswith regards to CFC.

(13:36):
So, but anyway, um, so there areways of doing and one of the
most important, if not the mostimportant, is to control your
stress.
Uh, and stress is when you don'tlike what is, no matter what it
is, you can be stressed out overgetting a new job.
A lot of people would be happy.
You could be stressed out overum something that makes sense,
like someone standing there witha gun.

(13:58):
It's kind of yeah, so anyway,stress is when you don't like
what is, and as a result, yourbody goes into this your adrenal
glands kick in, you've got thiscortisol, and you've got
adrenaline, just and you're onfire.
Okay, so that's it.
What that does is shuts downyour immune system, shuts down
flow to all the organs exceptfor your muscles.

(14:18):
Stress really blocks out, justundoes everything.
So you gotta learn how to managethat.
You learn how to manage that byturning off your mind.
And how do you turn off yourmind?
Because you focus on one thingyou're breathing for two minutes
five times a day.
For two minutes, five times aday.
You sit down, you put whereveryou are, you find a place to be
quiet for two minutes.
Anyone can find two minutes, youknow, go into the bathroom.

(14:40):
You're at work, so you gotta goto the bathroom, go to the
bathroom, and put an eye maskon, earplugs if you need to, and
just for two minutes, veryintently listen to your
breathing for as long as youcan.
And when you find yourself offin the should be land, come back
quickly to that place.
Just two minutes, five times aday.

(15:02):
But be consistent, be religious,and eventually you're gonna find
what I'm talking about.
You're gonna wind up in a placecalled now, and your immune
system goes through the roof.
So you got to do that, okay?
Now, of course, if you're veryconventionally minded and you go
to a regular doctor, they'regonna give you beta blockers
because beta blockers block thephysiological responses of
stress, so they do work, butit's not something that it you

(15:26):
haven't developed any skills, soyou're gonna keep having this
problem, right?
Uh and of course the gutmicrobiome, and there are
certain bacteria that we need,right?
So the acromantia, thebacteroides, theotomicron, and
these other ones are reallyimportant for enhancing that
immune response that we'relooking for from the upscopical
pattern.
Okay, so anyway, um, that's it.

(15:48):
I can't, I won't do more thanthan than than that for now, but
I just want you to know thatexists and it's something very
to uh uh so someone just putsyou on pranal, your doctor,
that's why, because your doctordoesn't know anything about how
to resume reduce stressotherwise, and probably doesn't
even know what they're doing.
They read about it.
It's a good treatment.

(16:35):
I'm gonna do this treatment.
Why are you doing it?
I don't know, because it's inthe it's in it's in the
protocol, you know.
I've got to follow protocol,right?
Because I'm a yeah.
All right, so uh okay, whoa, wegot a lot of questions here.
Okay, now uh that's theupscalpel effect.
It's really, really, really uhan amazing thing.
But all in all, it tells you tooeven without having uh uh going

(16:57):
after a regular tumor, you canuse that minor autohemor uh
ozone therapy.
Um and every three days haveyour doctor do that.
It's so anyway, let's considerthat.
No, by the way, stress is whenyou don't like what is, okay?
And you're not gonna figure itout, you're not gonna work your
way out of it, you're not gonnadecide not to be stressed.

(17:19):
It's not um an intellectualprocess uh that you can do, it's
not thinking.

SPEAKER_00 (17:26):
Turn off your mind, relax, and float down the
street.
It is not dying, it is being.
Who wrote that song, buddy?
Anybody who wrote that song?
Turn off your mind and relax andfloat down the street.
anybody know?
Anyone one of you gotta know?
Not one.
I'm sad.
Anyway, the Beatles.

SPEAKER_01 (17:46):
All right, let's get into some questions here.
Number one question is fromStacy.
And so Stacy uh is asking, hiDr.
Lodi, thank you for yourresponse.
Last week, I'm the one who'sreading Jane McClellan's book.
I'm dealing with metastaticbreast CFCs.
I have two questions, please.
First, has it ever been knownfor a person with metastatic

(18:10):
CFCs to become free of CFCs justby using the three
antiparasitics such asNyclosumind, then Bendazol,
Ivermectin, diet change, mindsetprayer without blocking all
pathways that Jane recommends inher book?
So, first question, yes.
The answer is yes.
In fact, 2001, way back in 2001,um, we didn't uh in those days

(18:36):
uh know about theantiparasitics.
So we didn't use them.
We didn't use any of the otherrepurposed drugs that uh Jane
McClellan talked about.
In those days, all we had was uhIPT, vitamin C and ozo.
And not many people knew aboutIPT.
I was fortunate enough to betrained way back then, early on,

(18:59):
by Dr.
Donato Perez Garcia III,grandson of the man who invented
IPT back in the teens, 1918,1920.
Anyway, so we didn't have allthat.
And uh I've shared this storybefore, and she didn't even want

(19:23):
after I had a good talk with herabout how how how the whole
healing understanding of healingand and health and uh rather
than the disease model, thedisease model is a
Rockefellerian um construct thathas you running around quickly
chasing dragons and fairies.

(19:44):
These dragons and fairies,you're chasing them, you can't
catch them because they don'texist.
What are we talking about bydragons and fairies and other
mythological creatures?
We're talking about the diseasemodel, which is the BS model.
Okay, there are no diseases.
What the hell is this guytalking about?
Is he a real doctor?

(20:04):
Yeah, that's why I put these uphere.
I just want to because peopleare saying, well, can't it,
doctor?
One guy asked me, What's yourdoctorate in?
Oh well, I don't remember it.
It's MD, it's not a yeah.
So I said there's no disease,and there are no diseases.
What happens is the body is aphysiologically adapts to
whatever it needs to adapt tomaintain functional integrity.
All right, that's the wired-inmechanism in all biological

(20:29):
entities.
A tree, a bacterium, anybiological entity is got this
thing in it, this that's thissubstance, this breath of life,
this reality called life.
And life says, I want to live,and I'm gonna, and you gotta
push me over here.

(20:49):
I'm gonna so it's you know, uh,just think of life as uh a
quarterback trying to getthrough all that, okay.
So life is the quarterback, uh,and you're the ball.
All right, and uh let's hopethat quarterback's good, and it
will be good if you feed it,right?
Take care of that quarterback,right?

(21:10):
Feed it, yeah.
So, anyway, but that's what lifeis, and life uh uh needs to
live.
So it adapts to any situationthat it needs to adapt.
Oh, there's too much water, itswims.
Falling off the cliff, cliff, itflies.
That's how incredible it is.
It can do that.
These are these these adaptivehomeostatic responses are what

(21:34):
we what the Rockefellers want usto believe.
Yeah, and I'm talking aboutRocky and his boys, right?
Yeah, JD.
I know one day they're gonnaeliminate me.
Maybe shoot me in the ear, butif they do, I hope there's a a
flag behind me.
I'm just gonna stand up if theyshoot me in the ear.
Um, so there are so there's nothing there's nothing.

(21:54):
These are adaptive responses.
For example, I've got diabetestype two because I'm eating all
this pasta and stuff.

SPEAKER_00 (22:00):
Stop eating the pasta.

SPEAKER_01 (22:01):
My body will no longer need to be insulin
resistant.
Uh okay.
The same with any of them.
I got an arthritis.
My they're inflamed,inflammation, arthritis in the
joints, arthro.
How do I get rid of what do Itake to kill it?
I don't.
I change my life and mybiochemistry so that uh there uh

(22:23):
is no inflammatory responsebecause inflammation is a
response of the body to heal.
So you have acute inflammation,which is going to be red, hot,
swollen, and painful.
It's gonna be uh, but a chronicinflammation is and that's when
you wind up with things likearthritis, gastritis, irritis,
cervicitis, any colitis.
So you eliminate theinflammatory response by

(22:44):
eliminating those things thatare stimulating it, which are
toxins.
So they're always toxins andstress.
Toxins and stress are what?
And and the the other thing thatcauses the body to try to really
get inflamed is when it is beingundernourished or overnourished.
Actually, overnourishment is amisnomer because overnourishment
means you're getting a lot ofstuff you don't need and you're

(23:05):
not getting enough of the stuffyou do need.
So it's not like getting, youknow, you're not getting because
you know, guess what?
If you were eating real food,human food, you could not and
wouldn't not overeat.
It wouldn't be possible.
Wouldn't be possible.
And if you don't believe me,let's have a bet.
But you gotta be eating that wayfor at least a couple weeks
until your body is adjusted.

(23:26):
No, let me see you overeat.
I want to see you eat too manysalads, too many apples.

SPEAKER_00 (23:32):
Not gonna happen.

SPEAKER_01 (23:34):
I mean, if you're not eating anything else, that's
that's all you eat, right?
You're not eating, you know,bread and pizza, and you're only
eating uncooked plants.
You cannot overeat.
Anyway.
So, anyway, what is called whatare referred to as diseases are
the body uh adapting,homeostatically adapting to
maintain functional integrity ina situation where its needs are

(23:57):
not being met and it is beingthwarted by things it does not
need, called poisons.
All right, it's that simple.
I'm sorry, it's that simple,it's not complicated.
Well, anything that should thequestions, if you think about
what you're trying to do, right?
What are you trying to do?
You're trying to eliminate alltoxins and provide only what the
body needs.
And if you do that, the bodywill be in a harmonic balance.

(24:20):
And what it needs is it needs togo to sleep early, it needs to
move around during the day.
Okay, so it's not just the food,but the food needs to be food,
and the food is the food thatgrows.
It's what the earth provided,because the earth kind of we
arose out of the earth, by theway, right?
Because we're called earthlings,but don't tell anybody.
Don't tell, let's keep this asecret.
Um, but anyway, we areearthlings, shh, and uh

(24:42):
everything that we need isprovided to us by the earth
without augmentation.
Really?
Can you believe that?
We do not have to boil thegrapes, we do not have to boil
the uh apples.
Yeah, uh, we don't have tobarbecue the celery.
We don't to get the benefit.
Well, if you barbecue celery,it's gonna do what?

(25:02):
Well, it tastes better to peoplewho are used to eating that way.
Does it taste better to peoplethat are not used to eating that
way?

SPEAKER_00 (25:08):
No.

SPEAKER_01 (25:09):
Anyway, the the answer is yes.
And I had this woman who refusedto do even vitamin C or
anything.
She just said, I'm gonna live,I'm gonna do what she said,
because that that is all I need.
Everything went away.
She didn't even do it with thevitamin C.
Second question is uh yourecommend I take anti-expongal.
I'm taking black seed oil.
Do you think that's enough?

(25:29):
I'm submitting this questionagain from last week.
You weren't able to get to blackseed oil once per day.
I was thinking of moving up totwo teaspoons per day.
I also take fenbendazole twice aday, um, and and niclosamide.
Are you looking for it?
Because you the company I I hadsuggested, Niclofsam.com, is out

(25:50):
of apparently out of it for now,out of the medications.
Um, and you got iromectin.
Currently on neuralinixin andsepsidabine.
So, right, right.
So, all the things you'retalking about, yes, yes, yes,
yes.
So I've kind of answered that.
If you absolutely know you'regonna heal, because you know
that's all you need to do isrestore balance, you will heal.

(26:13):
Period.
You will heal.
And that's not anything that Ilike came up with, or that's
just called faith.
Faith is when you know what'sgonna happen before it happens,
not believe.
Believing doesn't get therebecause whenever you believe
something, you are also doubtingit.
Belief implies doubt, knowing isnot doubt.

(26:34):
When you know you're gonna heal,you heal pretty powerful
statement.
Is it true?
It's true.
The thing is, most people don'tknow that they don't know that
they're gonna heal, they don'trealize that they think maybe if
never okay.
And how do you go from fear tofaith by knowledge?
When you understand what's goingon, you now have knowledge, and

(26:54):
you well gosh, if if if I dothis, that'll happen because
that's just right when you seeit.
Well, yeah, I plant the seed andI'm gonna water it, make sure
the soil's good and all that,and I'm gonna wind up with a
with the tomato if I planted thetomato seed, right?
Unless there's something thatcomes in and blocks the process,
that's gonna happen.
Let's kind of know it.

(27:15):
You don't believe it.
You know, I really believe if Iwater that seed and I have good
soil, I believe it might turninto a tomato.
Well, believing is not knowing,knowing is knowing.
Okay, you don't do I believethat two plus two is four?
No, I know it is.
Do you know it is?
Okay, so anyway, you've got tocome to know, and the way you

(27:36):
come to know is with knowledge.
And how do you get knowledge?
Because you you study and youlook for it, all right, and you
don't just follow directions.
Well, he said then she said, andI heard, forget all that.
Read, find out.
I don't want someone's umopinion of having someone who
read the Bible and I'm gonnaread their take on it.
No way, I'm gonna read theBible.

(27:57):
I don't care what he thought orshe thought.
What do I think?

SPEAKER_00 (28:01):
Anyway, that's that.

SPEAKER_01 (28:02):
So, by the way, so that's the thing.
What you have to do, um, it'svery important, Stacy, is that
you understand that you've gotto become to the point where you
don't have to ask thesequestions because you know, you
know, right?
And uh just um, you know, incase uh, you know, like for
example, when we think of whenwe're talking about ivermectin

(28:23):
and all that stuff, uh and anduh and all the other
antiparasitics, how do theyeliminate CFCs?
How could they do that?
These are antiparasitics, andyou know, let me just give you a
quick quickie here.
Okay, so ivermectin, which isproduced by a uh a microorganism
in the soil, um, what it does isfundamentally for the for the uh

(28:46):
for the parasite, what it doesis it increases chloride ion
through the cell membranes,right?
Which completely disrupts thecells and uh in in the the
parasite, it winds up producingGABA agera, uh GABA amino
butyric acid, um, and that uh uhparalyzes its nerves and it

(29:07):
can't function and it diesthrough that way, right?
So it's a call it just increaseschloride ion flux.
That's what it does.
So, but it also uh it also turnsout to inhibit mitochondrial
complex one, right?
And it reduces the number ofreactive oxygen species or free
radicals, right?

(29:28):
So, and therefore it decreasesall this oxidative stress that
causes cells to eventuallyferment.
Um, and it signals the mainthing is that I think is that it
signals, it turns off thesepathways.
So the Pac-1 kinase pathway,which you may not have heard of,
but it is a door at the doorway,at the gateway, that all these

(29:50):
other pathways, such as the AKT,MTOR pathway, uh, WNT, there's
all these other pathways thatare NF Kappa Beta, ERC, all
these things that you may nothave heard of.
You may have seen them in yourreadings, but they are pathways,
biop biochemical pathways thatare required for for CFCs to
exist and to be vibrant andwell, right?

(30:11):
And so uh so but PAC one isright there at the beginning,
and and ivermectin inhibits it.
That's a big, big, big deal.
Okay.
And um, you know, the what doyou call it?
The uh in fact, okay, so so thepac one that we're talking
about.
Um what is PAC 20?
You've heard of P53, which is atumor suppressor gene, right?

(30:33):
There's P53, there's also P21,there's also PTEN.
But the P21, um, there's a P21activated kinase, so it's just
Pac one, right?
And what it does is it when youit would normally turn on all
these pathways, including theWNT, B catechin, the MAP kinase,

(30:53):
the AKTMTOR, all these pathwaysit would turn on.
So if you block it, you blockall of that.
And that's and when we'relooking at breasts, lung, colon,
prostate, cervical, all of themelanoma, it doesn't matter,
they're all using the variety ofthese different kinds of the
different parts of thesepathways, all right.
Um, you know, so it's tremendouswhat I've Hermington does.

(31:16):
Okay.
So, because when you considerPac One's pivotal role in the
whole process of CFCs andblocking it, that's a major,
major deal.
So it's become they're lookingfor ways of studying it now, and
they've already got the answer,but forget that because we can't
really make money out.

unknown (31:30):
All right.

SPEAKER_01 (31:31):
So it even shows that in triple negative BC.
Oh my god, triple negative CFCs,breast CFCs, it actually helps.
They don't like that becausethey're not going to make a ton
of money if we can make itbetter.
Um, how about liver CFCs?
All right, usually uh related towhat's called hepatitis B and
hepatitis C worldwide.

(31:52):
Fourth leading cause.
If you know, I mean it's it'sit's it's the fourth leading
cause of CFC death worldwide.
So it's pretty significant,right?
Ivermectin knocks it out,prostate CFC and leukemia knocks
it out, right?
The chronic uh myeloid leukemiasand uh prostate all that knocks

(32:13):
it out.
Okay, that's ivermectin.
And then we're talking aboutfenazole.
Again, fenbendazole it does somuch stuff, you know, it
basically blocks themicrotubules, which is what's
the a lot of the chemotherapydrugs do, right?
That's what they do.
A lot of you know the well-knownum chemotherapy drugs like the
tact the taxanes and the vincaalkaloids, uh, taxanes, you

(32:36):
know, like packlitaxol, youknow, you know, taxate or taxol,
those that you we you, I'm sureyou've you've heard of those and
uh tubulin.
So blocking this tubulin,because tubulin, these
microtubules are how cellsthey're kind of like the uh
soft, soft skeletons.
And so when a cell needs todivide, which is what CFCs need
to do, they need to keepdividing.

(32:57):
It can't divide because if youblock those those those those
microtubules, it can't divide,it doesn't have it can't move.
All right, so you stop the wholething, and that's what
fembenzole does and mebendazole,etc.
Um, and right.
But that that's just one of thethings it does.
It also activates the the P30,the P38 map kinase pathway,

(33:20):
which all these pathways thatare activated are how these um
antiparasitics have uh relevancyto CFCs.
It's because that that's whatthey're doing, in addition to,
as we talked before, about thechloride and the and the CFCs,
chlorine entering the uh and theuh uh parasites.
It does all this stuff, it'spretty amazing.

(33:42):
It's just it's just incredible.
And what's incredible is that umthey don't just say, okay, well,
let's go with it, let's studyit.
They don't do that, they'restill looking for money and
drugs.
That's it.
Just so keep in mind.
Um, it's absolutely insane.
So I just want you to understandhow powerful this is.
All right, good.
Now, um let's look at the nextquestion.

(34:04):
And this is Gail.
Gail, yeah, Gail.
And she wants to know the breastCFC and psoriasis connection.
Hi, Dr.
Lodi, I'm a 45-year-old female.
I I have had psoriasis for manyyears and was diagnosed with
early stage breast CFC almost 18months ago.
I had a few biopsies and thendeclined surgery and have been
following an integrativehelipath diet changes,

(34:24):
supplements, including manyanti-inflammatories such as
curkelin, off-label medications,mabendazol, femendazole,
ivermectin, high dose ofmelatonin, and low dose of
naltrexol, high dose of vitaminC, detox including infrared
soliding optional dealing withtrauma.
Recently, I was looking intosimilar and various pathways of
psoriasis and breast CFCs, andit seems that there are many

(34:46):
similar pathways which promoteboth of these diseases.
What did I hear?
I heard I heard that word,disease.
It's a myth.
But because you're using it, youbought into it, and you're on
the Rockefeller train and youknow where the Rockefeller train
ends.
Everybody know where does theRockefeller train end?
Because wherever you get ontoit, it should it takes you to
the hospital.
And does it go out?

(35:07):
Which exit does it go out?
The Rockefeller train.
Anybody?
That's right.
The morgue.
The morgue.
Did I hear that correctly?
You heard that correctly.

unknown (35:15):
All right.

SPEAKER_01 (35:16):
So get off that train.
There's no diseases.
There's a disease over there.
There's three diseases in theother room there.
I even saw one right next tothat COVID.
There's a COVID on that desk.
You see the COVID right next toit.
Are two diseases.
I don't know what they are, butthey're diseases.
How do you know?
Well, I know.
Anyway, so um, this is allmadness.
Okay, the body is adapting.

(35:38):
That's it.
The body is adapting.
There's only physiology.
There's adaptive physiology.
Adaptive physiology.
Period.
It's not pathological.
What's the pathologicaldiagnosis?
These guys are insane, evil.
So uh let me just tell you,Gail, you're doing lots of
really good things.
And I but you said diet changes,I don't know what that means.

(35:59):
So that's why if you were in thegroups, we could talk about what
you mean by that.
And what supplements and howlong have you been doing it?
And what's what doses and whatfrequency?
And when do you go to sleep?
And um, how often do you uhpractice turning off your
thinking, your mind?
And there's so many things Ineed to ask you, but your real

(36:20):
question here really is aboutthe uh connection between
psoriasis and breast CFCs,right?
And so um it's what's kind ofcrazy is that uh um there is a
relationship between psoriasisand breast CFCs and lung and
colon and melanoma and uh uhlymphoma.

(36:45):
It turns out uh that there's arelationship between uh
psoriasis and diabetes.
And so uh if you look at thestudies for this kind of thing,
there's people that with breastCFCs have a 17% increase of
developing psoriasis, andconversely, having psoriasis is
also associated with anincreased risk of having breast
CFCs.

(37:05):
Not that big of a risk, not thata risk, and I don't know what
risk means, but anyway, um sobasically it was slightly
increased compared to thegeneral population when we're
looking at breast.
But we now know it's with withother ones.
When they did a they did a uhyou know a meta-analysis where
they look at multiple, multipleclinical trials and they try to
come up with some conclusionbased on multiple clinical

(37:27):
trials instead of just one.
And um, you know, and then uh inthis one, there was one large
one that was um published in2023, and it was called the you
know, the risk of breast CFCsamong patients with psoriasis,
systemic review andmeta-analysis.
And basically what they found inthe end was simply that mild to
moderate uh psoriasis didn'treally have a risk, increased

(37:53):
risk, did not have an elevatedrisk, mild to moderate, and
neither did the severe.
So that was one study, right?
And then there was otherstudies, the JAMA that showed
that well, it did, it had notonly that, it had an increased
risk for colon, kidney,laryngeal, liver, CFCs,
lymphomas, non lymphomas,esophageal, oral, all these, in

(38:14):
other words, that pancreatic,you name it, because we all know
that CFCs are the onlydifference between pancreatic
and breast and and and colon isthe first word, not the second
word.
All right, because the firstword is lymplication.
So wherever it is, wherever itis happening, is that's where
it's happening.
It's not different, it still hasto meet specific qualifications,

(38:35):
and that one specificqualification to call it
chronically fermenting cell isthat it is engaging in uh
aerobic glycolysis, which isfermentation in the presence of
oxygen, which normally doesn'thappen.
Fermentation is a process thatoccurs when there is no oxygen
available, but when a cell isable to ferment in the and does

(38:58):
ferment in the presence ofoxygen, it's called aerobic
glycolysis.
And if it's doing that, and ifit's not doing that, it's not a
CSC.
So it's pretty much thedefinition.
So um, gym location, that's allit is.
They're not different types,there's only one type, it's
called aerobic glycolysis, andit's gonna be different in the
ovary than it will in the eyebecause the ovary has different

(39:20):
functions than the eye or theskin.
So they have differentfunctions, so they do those
tissues do different things, butit's still fundamentally what's
going on is that it'schronically chromatic cells
because it's not this is notcomplicated, it's too simple,
and it's so simple I don'tbelieve it.
I don't believe it.
It's gotta be complicated, andwe gotta have big words, and
I've got to not know what you'retalking about to believe you.

(39:41):
If I don't know what you'retalking about, then I know
you're telling me the truth,right?
Yeah, that's how we think, andthat's how they want us to
think, and yeah, uh, sadly, mostpeople do.
All right, so um, anyway.
So, what is psoriasis?
Psoriasis is, according to theRocky and the gang, psoriasis is
an autoimmune condition.

(40:03):
Oh, you know what that is,right?
That's when the body, stupidbody, stupid body starts
attacking itself.
You know, it's and I want totell you how stupid this body
is.
It's engaging in um sextillionchemical reactions every second,
and a sextillion is 21 zero.
So 37 sextilian chemicalreactions every second.

(40:25):
Does that sound stupid to you?
No, especially since everyreaction is dependent on the
reaction next to it, right?
Does it feed this way or feedthat way?
Is that stupid?
No.
How about the fact that it'smaking at least 37 million new
cells per second?
Does that sound pretty stupid?
Pretty stupid, it's not stupid.

unknown (40:42):
It's not stupid.

SPEAKER_01 (40:43):
Um, it's beyond Intelli, it's beyond our
capability of even knowingwhat's going on.
We don't even know what's goingon.
We can't even observe what'sgoing on because we don't know,
we don't have the ability tocomprehend it.
So it's not stupid.
Okay, it doesn't attack itself.
Immune systems going whatever'shappening in nature, in biology,

(41:05):
is happening because it's musthappen.
It's called the law ofnecessity.
So if the body is doingsomething, it's doing it because
it has to, and there's a reason.
So if the immune system isactivated in one part of the
body and doing whatever it'sdoing, it's doing it because
something is activating it.
It doesn't just get bored andstart activating itself or make

(41:26):
a mistake.
You know, make a mistake.
Can you imagine?
It does not make mistakes, itcan't.
All right, so we have to we haveto restore our reverence and our
awe and our respect for natureand God, and not go running to
these guys with the white coat,these guys and girls with the
white coats who don't knowanything.

(41:50):
How can I say that?
Because I know these guys, wentto school with them, I was in
the hospital training with them,I worked with them after I
finished training and know them,and I wouldn't trust my life
with them.
So, I mean, some I would, ofcourse.
Of course, of course, not all ofthem, but just 99.9% that's it,

(42:12):
that I wouldn't trust.
So, anyway, psoriasis is anautoimmune condition.
So, therefore, what's that mean?
That means the immune system hasbeen disrupted.
It's something's going on.
So, the immune system is likehyper in one area and shut down
in another area, and it's justwhat they what they've defined
as hype is autoimmune.
So, fundamentally, basically,what does one understand now?

(42:35):
The immune system's in trouble,it's spinning its wheels in the
wrong direction.
The wrong direction.
That's how we think, but it'sdoing what it needs to do,
anyway.
That immune disruption,dysregulation allows for CFCs to
develop, of course, because youdon't have the normal
regulatory, healthy regulatoryprocesses uh that uh are are the

(42:57):
work of the immune system.
The immune system is no longerin this particular situation,
it's not able to perform thefunctions that it would because
it's doing something else, it'sbeen hijacked.
All right, so of course, CFCscan develop.
So it's nothing specific aboutpsoriasis.
They like to draw these, theylike to anything they can do to
keep you scared and and to andresearching uh ways to combat

(43:20):
this ways to militarily takeover and kill something.
I gotta get the give me the nameof that enemy.
And there was the name the enemyis now oh, triple negative.
I gotta so in other words, weget names of enemies, right?
We get the boogeyman and we goafter them, you know.
Um, we're gonna call this one aSaddam Hussein.
We're gonna call this one umwhat's his name?
Bin Laden.
This was Bin Laden over here inuh oh, it's diabetes.

(43:42):
I thought it was Bin Laden.
I'm I'm uh my bad.
Uh but anyway, Bin LadenDiabetes, they're both you gotta
get them, you gotta kill them,get rid of them, right?
Okay, I hope you can you seewhat I've learned over the years
is that explaining things topeople in a rational way doesn't
work repeatedly doesn't work.

(44:04):
So the way you can get throughthose blocks, those walls is um
humor.
Because when someone's laughing,you can sneak in.
Shock, did he say that?
Yeah, it gets in, and one otherway it's called sarcasm.
Sarcasm just kind of winds itsway right in there, and without
knowing it, you've got thepoint.
So I uh learned to speak fluentsarcasm.

(44:26):
I've been practicing while Iwent to school for it, yeah.
Um, and at the sarcasticacademy.
Um got straight A's, so um, andum that's what I use in case you
didn't know.
Um that's the psoriasis.
So don't think about thepsoriasis, don't they got the
they want you into this littlesegued rabbit hole where they're

(44:48):
gonna get you down there, andyou're gonna in the end they're
gonna hand you some drugs.
That's the purpose of this.
All right, and they're and keepthey're gonna keep you scared
and hand you drugs, keep youscared and hand you drugs, keep
you scared and hand you drugs,keep you scared and hand you
drugs.
That's the name of the game.
Okay, so um, anyway, I hadpeople who had psoriasis, and I

(45:12):
mean I had a guy it was a justI've never seen anything since
before or since, but thepsoriasis was so bad, so bad,
like good and bad.
The psoriasis was so severe, soum extensive that every morning
when he woke up, he had tochange his sheet because there

(45:34):
was about a quarter inch, halfan inch of skin exfoliated that
covered his entire sheet.
And what did we do to help him?
I taught him how to do nothing.
And guess what happened when hedid nothing?
It cleared up.
So, what the hell is this guytalking about?
We look at those vaporized.
It's called fasting, cleansing.

(45:55):
We started with the juicecleanse, we went into water
fast, and there was a few crazynights there.
Um, but it took us about amonth, and we were down to being
having just a few areas likewhere people with moderate
psoriasis would have, and thenyou know, eventually uh it went
away.
But you have to be persistent.

(46:17):
So that's that.
That's that.
I just want to tell you about sowhen someone's got psoriasis
with uh but no apparently, butapparently not having any CFCs.
And remember, as I said,psoriasis is an autoimmune
inflammatory condition, right?
So we also see associations withother diseases like Crohn's

(46:38):
disease and ulcerative colitis,which are autoimmune
inflammatory, and they're alsoassociated with CFCs.
Because what we're talking aboutis a disrupted immune system
that uh that that that precludesthe required regulatory actions
of the immune system, and so youwind up getting these things.
That's why it's not nothingspecific to that.
So get out.
That's Rockefeller Ring, whichends at the what where does it

(47:00):
end?
The train, all aboard for right.
Can you see in there?
JD, all aboard for the morgue,all aboard for the morgue, all
aboard for the morgue.
Don't get on the train.
And am I crazy?
I guess so.
Are they not crazy?
I guess not.

(47:21):
So I'll take the crazy group.
Let's go to the next question,Gail.
I hope you got that.
Okay, this is Enola, and I wastrying to find the link to order
prescriptions for parasites.
My main problem is CandidaAlpicans, in my opinion.
It's systemic.
My symptoms started afterstarting birth control 50 years
ago.

(47:41):
I finally did lots of reading,and that's where I diagnosed
myself.
No help with any doctors.
I tried CDs, I tried CDs andended up with severe die off.
CDs.
You tried CDs and you ended upwith a severe die-off, and then
diarrhea for 11 days, messed meup, not able to leave the house.
Took many months not having torun to the bathroom.

(48:03):
Wow, what those CDs?
That was five years ago, andstill with severe constipation.
I believe now that I stopped theCDs too soon of being very ill.
Someone help me.
What's a CD?
Anyone know what a CD is?
You guys?
Hey everybody in Instagram land.

(48:23):
What the hell is a CD?
Tell me.
CDs.
What are CDs?
Anyone?
Uh CDs.
So cash deposits.
What are CDs?
Uh look uh take a look at the uhPhoenix group, okay, Tammy.
Tell me if there's anythingwrong with this picture here.
Okay.

(48:43):
Stephanie Michael.
Oh, large disease.
Is that what CD is?
Thank you.
Boy, my God.
We rec who's now StephanieMichael is recommending that you
go to the Everwell Herbal Clinicand replying to Yulia.
You recommend that Yulia go andyou recommend that Jennifer

(49:05):
Jawowski goes and you recommendthat Shelly Castaya, you
recommend that everybody goes tothe Everwell Herbal Clinic.
Whoops.
Wow, what happened?
Are we back on now?
Just said uh it just said thatwe are.
Am I back on?
It said I'm off.
All right.
So I don't know.
See someone's saying C D iscarbon diox.

(49:26):
Somebody's saying it's what?
Chronic disease.
Whatever it is.
Okay, let's just go back to thequestion because um I'm gonna go
back to the question.
Okay, so uh I took many monthsand run that was five years ago,
and still have severeconstipation.
So you were having diarrhea, butnow you have constipation and
you think that you stopped theCDs too soon.
The CDs, this doesn't sound likegreat.

(49:48):
You didn't see a break.
Great, they're just freakingtrying to freak me out.
Chlorine dioxide, is that it?
Is it I took the CDs?
So please, you guys, from nowon, don't use acronyms.
Just say the word because Idon't know why I don't know you
took CDs.
I don't know.
I used to have a CD player, youI used to play CDs.

(50:10):
I don't know what you mean byCDs.
I'm sad.
Sorry.
So please, you guys, don't usethese things, okay?
Um was that Candida?
No, I don't know.
Anyway, whatever's insane.
So you stopped the CDs too soon,you became ill.
So so much inflammation cameagain and again.
It was so painful.
It drew me off the toilet andlaid down.

(50:31):
One wonderful thing is it tookaway all the pain.
You mean CBD?

unknown (50:35):
I don't know.

SPEAKER_01 (50:36):
For many years I suffered.
Doctor gave me two months offluconazole plus nystatin, no
help.
Tried many essential oils.
I know someone that has givenmycopungin IV and her candida is
gone.
I would love to be well.
I know your institute is for CFCpatients, but I'm looking for
somewhere to go.

(50:56):
Water fast.
Hope you can help me, please.
All right, very good.
So, you know, the beautifulthing is it sounds like you're
ready to do whatever'snecessary, and that's the
beginning of healing.
That's how healing begins.
So, and especially the mind, themind, the the the condition
one's mind has to be in to say,I'll do anything to heal, means

(51:17):
that the your pain and sufferinghas done its job.
And pain and suffering, the jobof I'm thinking it might be
chlorine.
So, um, and and the job of painand suffering is to render, is
to get rid of all of ourarrogance, to get rid of all of
our uh presumptiveness, to getrid of our uh objections and

(51:39):
resistance and negotiating andsay, I don't know, I'll do
whatever.
And you completely open up to aworld called health, and this is
where God comes in, and that'sit.
That's enough.
So you've reached that place.
It's beautiful.
So you said you'll water fast,whatever you'll do.
So, yes, and whatever's going onwith you, if you have a candida,

(52:00):
Albacans overgrowth, becausecandida is albacons are part of
our normal flora, so they'reactually not, it's not like I'm
being attacked by them.
It's just that they found someparking places.
Some people moved out and theymoved in, and so who moved out
were the ones we needed.
So, in other words, we lost theum microorganisms that we need

(52:23):
to have there because theyweren't being fed, they weren't
being fed because this dependson what you're eating, because
what you're eating is whatthey're eating.
So, what you have for dinner iswhat they have for dinner,
period.
So, if you've got a dysbiosis,you've got a problem with the
relative proportions ofmicroorganisms, it's because
you're feeding that way.
If you change the diet, thenyou'll be feeding other ones and

(52:46):
not those, and that's just howit works.
So, yes, cleansing, waterfasting, and water fasting is
tremendous.
Um, water fasting actuallyre-establishes uh the gut, it
actually uh uh restores uh theintegrity of the mucosal barrier
in the gut.
So leaky gut is is healed byfasting and cleansing.

(53:08):
Fasting actually heals it.
It does.
This is well published, so itdoes it in multiple ways and it
allows for the restoration of ahealthy gut biome.
Can you imagine?
Now you're not feeding itanything, but by not feeding
them anything, you're allowingthem to go back into the way
that they're the mostcomfortable.
So now when you eat again, onceyou re-eat again after you've

(53:28):
done a you've done a water fast,that's when you eat only foods
that gonna that are gonnamaintain a healthy gut biome.
By the way, if you have acompletely healthy,
well-balanced gut biome, you'rehealthy.
There, you're there's not therecan be nothing wrong with there
will be no discomfort at all.
So water fast, the only place Iknow of in the United States of,

(53:49):
I mean the divided states ofAmerica is in Northern
California, in Santa Rosa.
It's a place called True North,and they're pretty good.
So that's the only place I knowof in the U.S.
There may be other ones.
I mean in the DS.
Okay.
Divided States of America.
Anyway, um, and then with theregarding fluganazole and nice

(54:12):
stat and all the other ones, youcan get them online.
There's um various pharmacies.
I'm sure someone will write itin the group, but they're uh uh
someone will write it in thegroup.
But there, there are we've andif you join our groups, you
should join our group.
Really, um uh you know, jointhis group, the parasite group,
and we'll we'll talk all aboutthat.
But these we there's amazing theyou know, the other members of

(54:34):
the group have these incredibleuh resources because they've
been going through this a longtime of where you can get just
about anything without I thinkto have um without having to
talk to any white white coatedum warlocks or uh witches.
So and that's it.
Water fast is the beginning ofthe attitude, and then the water
you're you're on your way,you're on your way.

(54:55):
All you gotta do is not mess upagain.
All right, ploy, hi ploy.
My name is Ploy.
So I dika kun ploy pull to ploy,yindap bone broth fasting.
Anything you can get in bonebroth, and look it up, look out
what's in bone broth.
You can also get in um if youwanted to uh make a vegetable

(55:18):
broth, you can get it all, andyou don't have to have an animal
killed and then boil theirbones.
I don't know about that.
I really have vegetable brothand boiled bones.
Who knows what's in them bones,anyway.
You don't have to eat, believeme, you can get and I know this
might be a shock to many people,but you can actually be restored

(55:40):
to health without eating corpsesof any kind.
It's amazing.
It's called the corpless diet,corpseless diet.
This corpseless diet actuallyworks, it actually works.
So please remember thatcorpseless.
It's the CL diet, anyway.
Uh, understand that.
All right.

(56:01):
So, what we want to do, Enola,is restore balance, get your gut
healed, and restore balance, andit will all be healthy, right?
We need to balance yourhormones, we need to balance
balance every part of your body.
Autonomic nervous system getsyou out of sympathetic because I
know you're like stressed outfrom this.
Of course, that's pretty normalresponse to having these kinds

(56:23):
of problems, absolutely normal.
So we've got to work on allthose levels uh with dealing
with the stress, with diet, withclean fasting, uh, you know,
colon hydrotherapy.
There's all many things thatneed to be done.
It's a full-on program, and theresults is you're gonna feel
fantastic and be happy andoptimistic and full of energy
and have clarity, and all thatstuff happens.

(56:44):
So uh it's worth it.
So join our join our group so Ican talk to you.
I want to talk to you.
All right.
All right, now this is I neverleft YouTube.
Cool, so strange.
Because they kept saying, youknow, so Diane just came on.
What's the best for gut health?
First of all, cleansing, youknow, do a juice cleansing, do a
water fast, uh, and then whenyou restore, go back to eating,

(57:06):
eat only human food, which isuncooked plants, fruit, nuts,
and seeds.
Eat in the six-hour way, they'llstop eating five hours before
sleep, and you will have you'redone.
You're done, you're done.
And learn to turn this guy off.
That's it all.
Lady, you've got a mad womaninside of you, I got a mad man
inside of me.

unknown (57:23):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_01 (57:24):
Okay, so now here.
This is uh Maureen, and Maureensays that um granddaughter born
with tumor cysts in the rightbreast, three large cysts on top
of hundreds of little ones.
They're not fluid to be popped,no blood flow.
Doctors injected antibiotic toshrink, barely shrinking them
two years now.
No good answers, name forcondition, looking for direction

(57:47):
and possibilities to organicallydissolve them.
Maureen, where did you go towhat kind of doctors?
I mean, my god, that's crazy.
All right, so anyway, it's notuncommon for babies, it's not
common, but babies, both maleand female, can be born with

(58:08):
lumps, or maybe one breast orboth, but usually one, where
it's a little lump and a mass.
And this is due to what the babyjust came out of a of the womb
of a woman whose hormones werebah on fire to have a baby.
So all of these hormones, whichhave effect on breast tissue,

(58:29):
have an effect.
So 99% of the babies that areborn with little lumps in their
breasts are it's gonna resolve.
You don't mess with it.
And so, what happens if youstart rubbing it and all that
sort of stuff?
You traumatize it, it getsinfected, and then you wind up
with what's called a mastitis,an infection of the breast,
right?
And so if that is that's whathappened, so then they inject

(58:50):
antibiotics into it.
You know, I just find it yougotta admit, these guys are
creative, they're creative in away.
They're creative, but on theother hand, they're not creative
because they keep doing the samething.
Pope, cut, poison, it's insane.
So here you got a baby with onebreast that is having a little

(59:11):
bit has some lumps in it, andyou what you get.
It's well known that themother's hormones will do that.
It's well known, it can happento male or female, but now if
it's been going on two years,that means they messed with it,
and now you this is a secondarysituation, it's a secondary
condition, it's not the primary,the primary would have gone away
nor healthy.
So the best thing you can do nowis stop doing anything and let

(59:35):
the baby be.
You know, give the baby healthyfood.
It's probably off breast milk.
I hope if the baby wasbreastfed, um, and I hope the
mother was feeding herself humanfood.
Um, and uh so but two years now,so um, and then just leave that
baby, leave it, don't give itany drugs.

(59:56):
Babies don't need drugs, and youhave to do all kinds of testing
and all that stuff.
Just say, just assume that Godactually knows what it's doing,
she's doing it stuff.
Understand that the intelligentdesign of all that is, the
underlying fabric of existence,which is intelligence, which is
God, which is how it allhappens, um, is pretty smart.

(01:00:19):
And it's gonna work out.
It's gonna work out, and if youcan just leave it alone, all
right.
So we find that we heal when weget out of the way, when we stop
intervening, healing is whathappens, it's a hardwired
process into all biology, andit's what we were talking about
prior previously abouthomeostasis and all this.

(01:00:42):
So, we're not we're not gonnatalk about anything different at
this point, okay?
So it's always the same thing.
So they inducted anti bioantibiotic to make it shrink.
Yup, I don't know what to say.
I don't know what to say.

unknown (01:00:55):
My god.

SPEAKER_01 (01:00:55):
So, anyway, that's for your your your your your
granddaughter.
So believe me, make sure themother's healthy and the baby's
eating, you know, carrots,celery, avocados.
Um, uh you know, you can blendup raw broccoli, and you you can
get raw broccoli.

(01:01:15):
Blend it up with some get someraw almond butter or raw cashew
butter or some other goodbutter, fresh uncooked raw
butter, um, pumpkin seed butter.
Blend it all up and a little bitof water, and um it's delicious.
The baby will love it, uh andyou can blend up spinach and

(01:01:36):
avocado and a little bit oflemon, and you've got a
delicious, delicious, and it'ssoft and it's full of extremely
nutritious and it's real food.
The body will recognize it.
You can make babies healthy justby giving them a chance to be
healthy and don't put thingsinto them.
They don't need drugs orchemicals.

(01:01:57):
They need they need smiles andlove and activity and sunlight
and good sleep, and they need tobe eating food that the earth
produced, not food that wasproduced in a laboratory called
the kitchen.
Kitchen's a laboratory, it'swhere they thermally degenerate
uh food, thermally degeneratehealthy food substances.

(01:02:18):
I've got some organic uhtomatoes here, but I boiled the
shit out of them.
Now I got all right, great.
That's a good tomato sauce.
You think it's as nutritious asthe tomatoes were?
Yeah, yeah.
But I I I I I simmered them along time.
Got more lycopene.
I can prove that.
All right, you can prove it'sgot more lycopene.
Now tell me where I can find alycopene tree.

(01:02:41):
Because if lycopene is soimportant, we must have trees
that are pure lycopene.
We don't.
What do we get?
We get lycopene mixed withbeta-carotene, gamba peritene,
lutein, uh uh uh tacopherols,tocotrianols, uh,
phytoestrogens.
It's in there, it's fiber,ascorbates, uh, thiamine.
It's all B12, cabulamine, it'sall mixed up together in a

(01:03:04):
beautiful amalgamation that isperfect sustenance for humans.
That does not require thermaldegeneration.
This does not take brilliance,this takes no brilliance.
Get rid of your brilliance, getrid of your intelligence, relax
and let your mind open youreyes, and you say, Oh gosh,

(01:03:25):
that's true.
That makes sense.
It grew that way.
I guess I can eat it that way.
Oh my god, is that true?
You mean I can eat this.
You better cook it, you bettergive it up because there's
bacteria, there's amicroorganism.
You uh you don't know how you II I wish what I was saying was
like not spot on, but they saythat.

(01:03:47):
Do you know they thoughtchemotherapy?
I don't think you'd have any uhfresh vegetables or fruits
because of the bacteria.
You get we all you should wantto do with these people is uh uh
have tongue ectomies to take outthe uh remove their tongues and
insert them into their rectumsbecause that's what they need,
that's how they need to be.
Okay, that way um they can uhit'll be a benefit to the world
because you won't have to hearthem.

(01:04:08):
So the bacteria and themicroorganisms that we are
exposed to is how our immunesystem develops, develops
competence.
When we look at studies ofchildren born in what we call
unfavorable conditions, like theghetto and poverty, and we find
that their immune systems arestronger than the middle class

(01:04:30):
and the upper class.
Why?
Because they're exposed to allkinds of stuff, and their immune
systems are powerful, they don'thave eczema and uh atopy and all
these you know white boysyndromes.
Um, they don't have that,they're strong immune systems,
and if you're gonna getcolostrum, because I want

(01:04:51):
colostrum, it's an immunesystem.
You're gonna get colostrum fromwhere?
I'm gonna get it from a cow.
Why are you gonna get it from acow?
Because the cow has its face inthe dirt all day long, and it
has a powerful immune systembecause it has to.
So you want a powerful immunesystem, make it work out.
Okay, but you want some strongmuscles, work out.

(01:05:11):
You want a strong mind?
Read, debate, you're gonna havea strong mind.
Want a strong immune system, letit get exposed.
Maureen, you and your daughtertake care of the baby and give
it sunshine, rest, play, andreal food.
Chewing carrots, chew on eitherso if she if she's teething,

(01:05:32):
that's a great thing.
Carrots.
Now, this is Mark.
Um, and my daughter has a softtissue sarcoma.
She's been going forchemotherapy treatment and is
approximately halfway throughthis treatment.
I am concerned for her healthand her well-being and her state
of mind.
We are looking at vermin andfenbendazole for a starting
point along with propernutrition and possibly having

(01:05:55):
her body in a slightly alkalinestate.
What advice can you give me forher?
So, the protocol I'm thinking offor her is a seven-day fast with
essential minerals from seasalt.
After we break the fast, theplan would be to take ivermectin
paste, 0.75 grams per day for170-pound female, and a seven

(01:06:16):
milliliter dose of pan cureequal guard, oral suspension for
five days on four days off.
My daughter means everything tome know anything, hard time
keeping herself with all theconfusion regards, Mark.
Okay, UK.
Okay, Mark, so good, good.
I'm so happy your daughter hasyou for a father.

(01:06:41):
That's fantastic because you'reyou're you're recognizing all
the stuff that's going on, anduh yeah, so now a soft tissue
sarcoma.
Well, all right, so just a justa reminder, Mark, you know, what
a what with a uh what a softtissue sarcoma is.
It's uh all of the sarcoma meansis that it's a CFC, a

(01:07:02):
chronically fermenting group ofcells called a tumor that grows
out of, begins in tissues thatoriginated in the mesoderm of
the embryo.
So the embryo has an endoderm,mesoderm, ectoderm, an inside, a
middle, and an outside isbasically what it has.
So if it comes from the middlepart, it's called a sarcoma.

(01:07:25):
And the middle part includesbones, muscles, joints,
cartilage, connective tissue,you know, all this stuff.
Um uh and uh yeah, so so it canbe a bone, they call it
osteosarcoma, or it can be a outof it can be rhabdomyosarcoma,
which is from muscle, or itcould be chondrosarcoma, it can

(01:07:47):
arise from cartilage, it can soanything that it arises is how
it gets its name.
So soft tissue would benon-bony.
Any any of the other tissuesthat it would arise from would
be that are non-bony, non-hard.
That's a soft tissue sarcoma.
It's still what it is, isaerobic glycolysis, like we
discussed before.
That's what it is, period.
It's just that it started here,and if it started in us in

(01:08:08):
tissues that it derives from theoutside, called the ectoderm or
the inside the endoderm, then itwould be called a carcinoma.
That's all it's justterminology, which has one
purpose, and that is uh they'requite successful with that
purpose, and that is to keep youcompletely confused.
And they've done it, they've gotyou what and you're and you're
uh sadly your daughter'sconfused, and all that stuff.

(01:08:30):
So the proper nutrition is yes,and so you should know by now
you and your daughter need tojoin the CFC group.
Period.
You got a sarcoma, join the CFCgroup.
Go to drloti.com, drlodi.com,drlodi.com, and find the CFC
group and join it.
One of you joins it, and thenyou're you other are they both
there.
So um join it.

(01:08:51):
You'll have two meetings with mea week, dialogue talking.
You'll get advice from athousand other brilliant people,
loving, brilliant people.
You'll have teaching from uh thebest of the best, and you'll
have the emotional aspect, thefear which I can sense in you.
Um it in Kathy's Corner, whichwill be available to you if

(01:09:11):
you're CFC.
So in Kathy's Corner, you'll beable to uh share with other
people that are going throughthis similar situation, right?
And of course we're afraid, ofcourse it's freaking us out, of
course.
That's like you know, there's aguy with a gun over there, and
my and I'm gonna say, I'm notworried.
No, because when they tell youyou've got this thing, they just
told you you're gonna die.

(01:09:32):
So they got you freaked.
We're gonna unfreak you.
Kathy's corner is the unfreakedcorner, the defreaking, well,
defreaking corner, yeah.
Anyway, but all of that, so joinand then we'll really help you
out because I just a lot ofquestions I have about what
you're doing, because you you'reright, proper nutrition and all
that stuff.
Uh I love the fact that you'retalking about beginning it all

(01:09:53):
with a cleanse and a fast.
That sounds beautiful.
I'd like to help you with thatand and and give you some
direction in it, depending onwhere she's at.
Now, you say she's 170 pounds.
Uh, sounds kind of heavy for afemale, unless she's very tall.
So I didn't get her height, so Idon't know what that means.
But if she's that big and umshe's uh like the standard

(01:10:14):
height of of a woman, what foranywhere from what five five two
to five six is that then thatwould be heavy, kind of and uh
which might mean metabolicproblems, which means there are
metabolic problems associatedwith that kind of weight,
because it's fat, it's fat, it'snot muscles.

(01:10:35):
I'm sure that she's not like oneof those female bodybuilders,
right?
That's yeah, so it's probablyfat, and that fat is gonna uh
contribute to the metabolicdysfunction of the body.
Um and that's under the all thatunderlying stuff is gonna
prevent all this from he all thehealing from happening.
And yes, the ideas of theivermectin and and and the

(01:10:55):
fenbendazol are great, but youcan get them without being in
paste and stuff like that.
You can just get some pills andstuff like that.
And um there are places you cando that.
For example, at our um, if youcontact uh hello at drloody.com,
hello at drloody.com, uh myassistant can help you get some
of these things.

(01:11:16):
But anyway, so Mark, you'rereally on the right track.
And if your daughter's like uhyou know has the same if she's
saying, Yes, dad, you're right,I want to do this, then they're
perfect.
If she's resisting it, it'll bedifficult.
But so anyway, let's do this,Mark.
Um, but you're really on theright thing, and I don't want

(01:11:37):
you to be freaked out by alltheir names, but right now
they're poisoning her, and Ipromise you, poison does not uh
allow for health.
Poison is not the way to heal.
This is uncommon sense.
Imagine this.
Suppose I were to give thesechemotherapeutic drugs to you or

(01:11:57):
to me or to anybody who's justlike the average person who's
walking around who's got no realproblems, and you give them this
uh chemotherapy, what willhappen?
They'll get sick, they're notgonna feel good.
So now we just gave this poisonto a healthy person who that
they don't feel good, they'resick from it.
So, how do we make this jump tothink, well, now if I give it to

(01:12:18):
a sick person, they're gonna getwell?
You realize the madness, butthat's why the Rockefeller
exists.
That that's that that that's thethe genius, the genius of Rocky
in a game.
They got us believing thingsthat we know can't possibly be
true, but we're doing it.
That's how powerful these guysare.
If they weren't the uhsomething, if they weren't more

(01:12:42):
severe than evil, they deserve astanding ovation because what
they've done.
You're on the absolute beautifulright track.
Trlodi.com, join the CFC group,and let's get let's get her off
that train and get her on thetrain to paradise, the train to
health, healing, where we're allon that train.
That's all the train that we'reall on.
It's the train to health, tohealing, to uh living life fully

(01:13:06):
and loving it.
That's the train we're allreally on.
Now, here's Dolores.
This is my first session.
I'm on a journey to heal my dadfrom lung CFC's medical doctor
noted nodules back in the lungsin 2016 that followed with many
testing years later.
Doctors didn't ever tell my dadas to why she was sending him

(01:13:28):
for tests.
So I tell him, yeah, he's justyou know, a patient.
Yeah, go over there and do that.
And then when you're done, goover there and do that.
Don't ask any questions, youpatient.
I'm familiar with that.
And in July 2024, these testsbecame more rapid.
What?
So we went from 2016 up to 2024all just testing, not knowing

(01:13:48):
why.
And in 2024, July, they came upwith an actual diagnosis of CFCs
present and advising him on thephone in November of 2024 that
he had CFCs.
As his daughter, they kept thisfrom me and had completed two
biopsies before my involvement.
A third biopsy biopsy had to becompleted, but was evasive, and

(01:14:12):
my dad held off due to surgerycomplications from opening him
up for three biopsies.
Fast forward to February 2025, Ihad my dad do a metal detox in
December.
Prior to my dad's cancerdiagnosis, CFC diagnosis.
I had knowledge of ivermectinand feminizole and its cure for

(01:14:33):
CFCs, but due to living inOntario, Canada, I had no source
or knowledge of how to obtainthe product of treatment.
I locate, I located fimbendazolefrom Lithuania and sourced
ivermectin from India.
I got my dad on both, but stilljust from my research.
I had to take six ivermectin,then take fimbendazole for six

(01:14:54):
days.
My dad decided to do chemo, andhe's been very ill from it.
He lost mobility and mentalhealth was declining.
He's gone from walking with acane to a walker due to lack of
energy.
He finally got his last PET scanresults, and he's gone one spot
with CFCs.

(01:15:15):
I need to purchase ivermectin,but due to the tariffs and
border issues, I'm not able topour ivermectin from India.
My dad changed his diet 100%when I'm diagnosed with CFCs.
He no longer eats sugar orprocessed food.
Can you help me, please?
My dad wants to live, and I needsources for ivermectin and
mebenzone.
We live in Canada and I needthis product and guidance on

(01:15:36):
treatment.
I do have CFC naturopath indealing with that lives in
Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
But he doesn't know averagingabout parasites treatment for
CFCs.
All right, Dolores.
Wow.
All right, so they messed aroundwith him from 2016 to 2025 and

(01:15:57):
then told him he had CFCs, andthen they wanted to poison him,
and they poisoned him, and hedoesn't feel good about being
poisoned.
He's feeling sick and he's losthis mobility and all that sort
of thing.
So the obvious thing that youwill do and he will do clearly,
clearly, I don't even have tosay it, do I?
If I have to say it, I don'tshouldn't say it, but I will
because I'm a sayer, I like tosay things.
Uh stop doing the poison.

(01:16:21):
It doesn't feel good from it.
Stop it.
Well, maybe he's getting better.
No, getting getting better isnot you do not demonstrate
restoration of health bybecoming weaker and losing
mobility and mental healthdeclining.
That's not it.

unknown (01:16:38):
Okay.

SPEAKER_01 (01:16:39):
So ivermectin and fenbendazole, yes.
And you can you're in Canada.
So I, you know, I'm not I don'tknow about Canada.
I know that you can contact umyou know my hello at
drloodie.com, hello drie.com,and um see what if we can help
in any way get it there.
Um, I know there are somepharmacies, uh, a couple

(01:17:01):
pharmacies in the US that hiLeona Yosha that you can get
them from too.
And um, so please again join ourgroups because you have all
these resources.
I don't um, you know, I'll knowall the resources off the top of
my head of the differentpharmacies and and all that sort
of thing.
Uh, but go to our website,drloty.com, and you'll find um a

(01:17:24):
lot of stuff on there.
Um, but your dad can definitelybe healed.
Uh, you've got to quickly stoppoisoning him.
Not you.
Don't let the witches andwarlocks poison him.
All right.
I promise you, poison does notproduce health.
It's hard to believe I know, Iget it.

(01:17:45):
But just leap of faith there.
CFC's Don, okay.
CFC's chronically fermentingcells, which are really what's
happening to the cells in atumor.
Okay, they call it by anastrological term, right?
Virgo, Leo, Gemini, and somepeople call it cancer.
Cancer.

(01:18:06):
Not an astrological sign.
These are chronically fermentingcells.
That's what they are.
So we call them that becausethat's what they are.
They're not an astrologicalsign.
So it's that's they are, andalso now that you have
information, you know what theyare, you can deal with it.
How did they become fermenting?
You have a you can develop amethodology for dealing with
them.
Okay, I'm glad you asked thequestion.

(01:18:27):
And now, so your poor dad.
Now, and you know what the coolthing is he changed his diet
100, but it but I but but 100,I'm not sure because you just
mentioned that he stopped eatingsugar and processed foods.
That's a fantastic beginning,but it's got to be a lot more
than that.
So, really need to get you onhere, okay?
So, Dolores, please join.

(01:18:49):
And so here we are.
Well, we're this is with Iva.
Eva, Iva, Eva.
Hello, my daughter was onantibiotics for acne, then got
C.
diff straight seven days aftercompleting the course, and CMV
infection was also found.
All this, I think, caused severeulcerative colitis.
They put her on biologics, whichis not working totally, maybe to

(01:19:13):
some extent.
What do I do to heal their gut?
I'm sorry, I don't know what uhyou mean by biologics.
So she was not antibiotics andshe got C.
diff.
C.
diff is Clostridia deficile,which is uh uh an opportunistic
bacteria that causes all kindsof rectal bleeding, diarrhea,
stuff like that.
So then they give you anotherantibiotic to get rid of that.
You've got to just restore ahealthy biosis, a healthy gut

(01:19:36):
biome, and we know how to dothat, and especially with um,
you know, if your daughter's gotleaky gut, which most people do,
uh, you heal that with fasting,um, and then you heal that you
know for a period of time.
So the water fasting is I mean,it's pretty amazing.
So you understand too that umwhen when when when a when you

(01:19:58):
when a person is water fasting,you're resting the gut.
You know, if you have a sprainedankle, you're not gonna run,
you're gonna elevate it and restit, and it will heal.
So when we allow a damaged organto rest, it heals.
That's what it does, it repairsitself.
Okay, so during a water fast,what the body does is it it

(01:20:18):
repairs by uh engaging inautophagy, meaning that it
starts eating up all theunnecessary stuff and
eliminating it, right?
Um, and uh so it gets rid of youknow organisms that it doesn't
need, it gets rid of toxins andthings, it just cleans all that
stuff out, right?
And then therefore the bodydoesn't need to heal from this

(01:20:41):
from the chronic irritation fromthese guys, so that healing is
inflammation, so inflammationgoes down, right?
And then when that happens, thenthe repair is that the gut will
repair itself, all right?
So it helps so the fastingallows for the for the gut to
repair itself to heal, and itallows for the um uh so um uh

(01:21:06):
hand me.
All right, all right, yeah,we're here.
I don't know what happened.
Hey, Instagram, you didn't knowthat, but everybody else we got
lost for a while there.
Um, so pretty crazy.
So it's a question is it coulduse diver iberromagnet during a
water fast, and absolutely notyou don't need to use anything
during a water fast during awater fast.
You are allowing the body to dowhat it will divinely correct

(01:21:32):
everything.
It's crazy, it's incredible,it's beautiful.
Okay, anyway, we're back.
I don't know how we got off andall that stuff.
I don't know where I'm I but I'mback.
I hope everyone sees that now.
Uh all right, cool.
So we're back on.
And what time is it?
Yeah, we got three minutes.
Yay! Let's not stop, let's keepgoing wherever we can.

(01:21:52):
Now, um, so they put they theyput her on biologics, whatever
the hell that is, and and andyou don't need to I don't need
to know and all that sort ofthing.
But what you need to do is whatwe've talked about before by
doing the water fasting, yourgut will heal.
So she's got to be willing to dothat.
Uh, and then eat healthy food,which is real food, which is
organic plant.

(01:22:13):
Eat it within a six-hour windowand stop eating five hours
before sleep.
Very simple.
And don't eat other than that.
And you're gonna eat seeds andnuts and nut butters and sea
butters, and you're gonna eatuh, you know, salads, and you're
gonna eat, you know, incredible.
There's delicious, wonderfuluncooked foods that are
fantastic, raw foods, they callthem.
But they're fantastic and it'sdelicious, and you're you'll
have a healthy gut biome.

(01:22:34):
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
And hopefully your daughterstill has her appendix because
she'll get uh restoration of heruh healthy gut flora more
quickly.
All right.
Well, in that case, how longwater fast?
Well, as long as she can, aminimum of a week for her, and
then again later on.
But you know, as long as shecan, the longer the heal.

(01:22:57):
But you gotta be drinking lotsof water during that time.
You gotta be drinking at leastthree letters liters a day, and
then uh twice a day, you getlike a half to a full teaspoon
of a good, healthy sea salt, andyou put it in half a glass of
water, swish it around and drinkit so twice a day so you can get
a good uh amount of thoseelectrolytes.
Okay, very important.
Okay.
Um, now this is Sue.

(01:23:18):
The next one is I have beensuffering from burning mouth
syndrome for eight over eightyears.
Eating a healthy diet, workingon stress reduction, and being
active.
What holistic measures can beimplemented to reverse this?
Increased pain at night isassociated with an increased
heart rate.
Can this lead to oral CFCs?
Well, okay, so burning mouthsyndrome.

(01:23:39):
Very bizarre that it actuallygot a name, but you know,
they're gonna name anything,right?
Uh yeah, yeah, yeah.
They gotta, they gotta, they gota name for this stuff.
It's it's it's it's it's justamazing.
So, just for those who might notbe aware of it, burning mouth
syndrome is basically um affectsthe tongue mostly, but can
affect anywhere else in themouth.

(01:24:01):
And it feels like the mouth isburning.
And the lips, the gums, the roofof the mouth, every everywhere.
It feels like it's burning.
It's got like it was scalded.
You know, if you scalded it withuh you drank really hot water or
eat something really hot withcheese, like a pizza, and burn
the top of your mouth, whatever.
But as a result, you lose lossof taste.
Things taste like metallic andyeah, just not not very good.

(01:24:26):
Um, and then you can wind upwith a stinging and a numbness
and everything, and we call itburning mouth syndrome, and then
of course there's secondaryburning mouth syndrome, which is
even crazier, and that is uh,you know, basically coming from
something else, like uh youknow, you're having a dry mouth,
you're not getting enoughnutrients, you have allergies
and stuff like that.
So there's all kinds of reasonsthat can result in it.

(01:24:47):
But fundamentally, even thoughthey say that they don't know
what it is, uh, it isneurological.
Why do we say that?
Because we have tingling,numbness, burning, those are all
neurological.
They're not they're they'rethey're they're it's
neurologically mediatedsymptoms.
So we know it's neurological,and so we've got to think of the
cranial nerve five, uh, which ispretty much in there a lot.

(01:25:09):
Cranial nerve five is right inthere with tongue and uh jaw and
all that.
So we have to look at cranialnerve five, maybe cranial nerve
seven might be involved.
But those are really what needsto be uh evaluated.
So, what you do in thissituation and any situation
similar is cleanse becauseobviously toxins have overridden
everything and are affectingneurologic us neurologically.

(01:25:32):
So we have to get rid of thetoxins first of all.
We've got to do a good thoroughdetoxification, okay?
Um, a th good thoroughdetoxification, it's very, very
important.
Um, it's essential.
So I would do a juice cleanse, agreen juice cleanse, celery,
cucumber, kale, spinach, lemon,and green apple or a red apple,

(01:25:53):
doesn't matter, make it tastegood or pineapple, whatever,
make it taste good.
Uh, and drink three, four litersa day, stop eating, and just do
that for like two weeks and justcleanse two weeks, three weeks,
as long as you can.
And cleanse, and you're gonnasee everything get better.
Get your colon cleaned out, goto sleep early by nine o'clock.
Just do this.
I promise you, it's gonna startto get better.
Just do it.

(01:26:14):
And then let me know.
Come back, join our group, jointhe health and healing group.
Okay, it's the least costly ofall of them.
Go to diarrholi.com,drloady.com, join health and
healing.
Okay, I want to see you there,okay?
I'm expecting to see you there.
Aren't you folks, guys, ladies,and everyone else, boys and
girls, even the embryos that arein there listening.

(01:26:34):
Thank you for coming this week,and I'll see you next week.
And if you're in the groups,I'll see you tomorrow and your
Wednesday, my Thursday.
Anyway, fantastic, wonderful.
And we didn't get too manytechnical nonsense this time, so
thank the Liberty T, the gods ofuh electromagnetic frequencies.
Yeah, somebody copy mammascarand aloha to everyone.
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