Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the
Telewellness Podcast.
I am your guest host, sandhyaSharma, a licensed professional
counselor, certified substanceabuse specialist and an
EMDR-trained practitioner.
Today's guest is Dr CarlRothschild.
Dr Rothschild has dedicated hislife to increasing vitality in
others.
He has led to thegroundbreaking research and
(00:22):
domain of red light therapy.
Dr Rothschild or Dr Carl, canyou please give us a brief
history in organs of red lighttherapy and what it is and the
history of it?
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Yes, I like to start
off with telling you what got me
involved in this in the firstplace.
Sure, so in 19, it's been goingback a little bit in 1972,
maybe 71, I was an undergraduatein a very good school in New
York and a university and I wastrying to decide what I wanted
(00:57):
to do.
I knew I was going to.
I loved biology.
I was always a biologist and Iloved everything about it and I
loved helping people, as cornyas that may sound.
And, uh, I started learningabout chiropractic.
And let me tell you, back inthat time and in New York,
chiropractic was nobody knewabout it.
And they did.
(01:17):
They thought it was a bunch ofhooey, you know, like I might as
well become a voodoo master orsomething like that, at any rate
.
But I started calling upchiropractors all over the
country and I never found onethat wasn't thrilled to have
become a chiropractor and I saidthat's what I want.
I want to help people.
Money was not my main focus.
I don't mind making money andit's always true.
(01:38):
Now, even though I'm 72 yearsold, I still feel that way, that
helping people is a criticalpart of what I want to do.
So I became a well, I came outfrom New York to California to
start chiropractic school in andaround Los Angeles and I opened
(02:01):
up in 1978, 79, give or take asa chiropractor, which is 47
years ago and in that time I didwell.
I mean, I enjoyed it, I helpedpeople, I liked learning new
stuff, and then about 20 years,in which is about 27 years ago,
I was introduced to red lighttherapy by, of people, an
(02:24):
orthopedic surgeon.
Now I say that because I willbe honest with you, orthopedic
surgeons are not a big fan ofred light therapy.
Why is that?
Go to an orthopedic surgeon,even unconsciously, they go.
Okay, on this hand I can maketens of thousands of dollars and
on this hand not.
What are they going to choose?
I mean it's an unfair.
And not, what are they going tochoose?
(02:46):
I mean it's an unfair in thiscountry, since it's very you
know, the medical world is verymoney oriented.
They're not a big fan of it.
But he's the one, ironically,that brought it to the United
States.
He's the first one that got FDAclearance and I knew him before
that.
He hands me this device thatlooks a lot like a flashlight
and he says here, help me savethe world.
(03:07):
And of course I thought he wascrazy.
Yeah, I'm going to take aflashlight and shine it on
somebody and of course, being awise guy from New York, I knew
everything.
You know, there I am with aflashlight, that I'm going to
change the world, so at any rate.
But I agreed to try it out andwithin a relatively short period
(03:29):
of time it revolutionized mypractice.
I was able to do things that wenever dreamt possible.
So the only thing we knew backthen was that you couldn't hurt
somebody.
That was it.
That was the only rule that weknew.
It can't hurt.
So why not try it?
So I would go to my patient andsay look, besides what I've been
working with you for all theseyears, what else you got?
(03:50):
So this lady said she has gumdisease.
I'm not a dentist, I don't know.
I mean, her teeth look terrible, her gums look terrible.
And we helped her gum diseaseand this guy with his kidney
problem and this disease andthis guy with his kidney problem
and this guy with his rippedAchilles tendon.
It wasn't ruptured, but it wasneeded surgery.
We sent the guy to theorthopedic surgeon, came back
(04:15):
with the report that he neededsurgery, but it was not going to
be for a few days.
So we treated him with thelight every day until that last
day of the week and late in theafternoon he went for the
surgical review and he didn'tneed surgery.
That's incredible and that'swhen we kind of even then we
knew, okay, this is reallyamazing.
So musculoskeletal, um thingswere a slam dunk, but also other
things, like I said that thatand the devices back then.
(04:38):
Our device was the state of theart at that time but it's depth
of penetration and again it wasonly about this big around.
Let's see, you know it's a,it's depth of penetration and
again it was only about this bigarray.
Mostly, you know it's a.
It's about two, maybe two and ahalf inches, uh, diameter, and
so it wasn't really going tocover a lot part of the body.
And then about 14 years ago itwas discovered that there was an
(04:59):
element of light that I was notinvolved with called red light.
Now, up until that point I onlyused near infrared, and we're
gonna talk about infrared andnear infrared and far infrared
and all that stuff in a minute.
But there was an element oflight in the red light range
that actually helped with fatloss, and that's when I knew,
okay, this is huge.
(05:20):
I mean, if you, if anyone everwatches any daytime television
and sees the commercials, manyof them are about this and these
injections that you can get tohelp with weight loss.
So people are willing to donext to anything, almost
anything, whether it's dangerousor not, if it's going to help
them lose weight.
They will take poisons, theywill get injections, they will
(05:40):
do whatever it takes.
But imagine if you can dosomething that's absolutely
natural, that doesn't damageanything and it works and it's
successful.
Now it has to be paired up withsomebody who's not crazy and
going to go home and get drunkand overeat every night.
But if we put the person on areasonable diet and I hate the
(06:01):
word diet, by the way, becauseit means there's a beginning and
an end when the diet's over,they're going to put all that
weight back on.
So it's really about lifestylechanges.
And if we can make it gentlefor them to introduce to their
lifestyle where they can eatthis way for the rest of their
lives, which means it'scalorically neutral, they're not
overeating, we're not askingthem to starve.
(06:23):
Calorically neutral, they'renot overeating, we're not asking
them to starve, it's just acalorically neutral diet and
combine it with the red lighttherapy that I'm going to talk
about the mechanism in just amoment.
But when you combine those twothings together, unbelievably
wonderful results.
So there, I am hot and heavywith the fact that it can now do
weight loss.
So, sure enough, I got involvedwith manufacturing.
(06:44):
I said I want to be in thiseven bigger.
And I got involved withmanufacturing and we were
involved with lasers and padsand panels and all that stuff
and they were nice.
At the time we thought theywere the greatest thing ever.
But then something again prettyunique happened, called COVID,
and by that time we had hundredsof locations all over the
country and the practitionerswere wanting less physical
(07:06):
contact between the patient andthe provider and we came up with
something like this bed.
This is a, you know, sixthgeneration, but the first
generation, the first bed wedeveloped, was because you can
get in out of the bed yourself.
You don't need staff.
So when someone says what isthe cost, I said well, you're
saving yourself thousand dollarsa month, you don't need staff.
So when someone says what isthe cost, I said well, you're
(07:26):
saving yourself thousands ofdollars a month, you don't need
staff.
Right off, they get in the bed,the patient gets in the bed and
they get out of bed.
That's it.
It's quite simple.
You know, the first day theyget a little slight orientation
about takes minutes to just showthem which button to push,
which is the one that says on,and they get in the bed.
So we developed the bed just asa replacement of equipment that
we were developed, that we weremanufacturing.
(07:47):
Up to that point, and within arelatively short period of time,
after we had started shippingand and getting these beds to
different facilities, we startedgetting outrageously miraculous
feedback.
I mean, you wouldn't believe it.
I didn't believe it.
(08:07):
So, for example, let's take oneexample Arnett.
Arnett calls up one of ourpractitioners and said I'm
having a heart attack once, ifnot twice, a week and every time
he would die, literally die aweek.
And every time he would die,literally die, this
(08:28):
defibrillator that they hadimplanted in his chest many
years ago would zap him back tolife.
But by the time we met him, 12,13 years in, he was not doing
well.
You know, if you want to killoff a part of your body,
restrict blood flow, well,that's what was going on.
His heart was failing and hehad horrible pulse, blood
pressure, everything was wrongHis erectile dysfunction,
(08:48):
everything.
He had terrible erectiledysfunction.
He used to be an athlete.
Now, just to take a few stepswould put him out of breath.
So he was definitely in terribleshape and the practitioner said
I don't think I should treathim.
I don't want him having a heartattack.
In my office I said look, weknow one thing you couldn't hurt
this person.
So let's try it.
And a normal dose is 12 minutes.
(09:10):
How about just five minutes?
Let's just treat him for fiveminutes and stay in the room the
whole time.
Let's see what happens.
That patient goes home thatnight that was almost two years
ago Hasn't had a heart attacksince.
Wow, now, if this was one, onlyone story.
Now, by the way, he has hadmore treatment, but after just
(09:32):
even that first visit he noticeda huge change.
But no more heart attacks.
So hundreds of heart attacks,hundreds of heart attacks.
No more heart attacks clearlylife-changing.
Yes yeah, in fact, that'sexactly what many people say.
I have a relatively famous guythat and and he has it at his
home and he said I interviewedhim and he said it's absolutely
(09:54):
life-altering and that was aphrase that we use.
Like you say, life-changing,life-altering, it will change
people's lives.
So, at any rate then, yeah,yeah, we kept getting more and
more unbelievable success andbeautiful results.
I want to tell you what welearned.
What we learned was that it'sabout bathing the whole body at
(10:14):
the same time.
Up until that point, we weredoing parts of the body, but
when you bathe them from the topof the head to the bottom of
the feet, left and right, frontand back, inside and out,
covering as many cells of thebody as you possibly can, that's
when you get these incredibleresults.
So I'm going to talk about themechanism and why affecting all
these cells at the same time isso important, but I'm going to
(10:36):
table that for a second.
I want to tell you that I wantto point out, first of all, our
YouTube channel.
If you want to see great, greatvideos, go to at trifecta light
dot com.
No, wait a minute, go toyoutube and put in at trifecta
light official.
That's all you need to put inthere and you'll get to our
(10:58):
videos.
I'm going to also send you abunch of links and stuff like
that that you can share withyour audience, including these
testimonial videos.
Excellent, if you get a chanceto see Arnett's, I'm going to
talk a moment about.
Jessica's and Steve's.
I'm going to talk about, maybefor a second, jerisha, you know.
I mean, they are emblazoned inmy brain because I'm the one
(11:18):
that interviewed them and Ioften don't know what to expect.
I didn't know that Jessica wasgoing to tell me that she had 16
outrageously serious conditionsand now she doesn't.
I didn't know that Jerisha hadhad a stroke and after eight
visits with the bed she wasbetter than before she ever had
the stroke.
So we're going to talk aboutthat in a moment.
(11:41):
So we're going to talk aboutthe YouTube channel.
Please go there if you get achance.
Also, if you see me.
Oh so, also on the left here, ifyou're looking, you can see
that that's my book.
I wrote the book on red lighttherapy.
It's called illuminated healingand it's a great read.
And if you'll send me, by theway, your your address, I would
(12:02):
love to send you a free copy ofit.
Thank you, uh, but it's uh,it's on amazon and you can get
it as a actual book.
You can get it as a kindle,which means you can read it
online, or you can get it as anaudible.
Uh, if you want to listen to me, talk for eight hours or so,
whatever.
Um, so, and that's about thebook.
Now, on the top right here ofthis, you'll see.
(12:24):
So that's about the book.
Now, on the top right here ofthis, you'll see the website.
It's trifectalightcom.
I would love for you to visittrifectalightcom.
There's a lot of goodinformation, but, in particular,
if you go to the Contact Uspage, on the left side of that
Contact Us page, you can send arequest to find a location
closest to you.
(12:46):
Now here's what I'm going totell you.
I don't care what you got.
If you're in perfect shape,maybe you're not a great
candidate, because I don't knowif you'll see a difference.
But if you have any issues, Idon't care what it is.
I don't care if it's a rarehereditary disease that they've
given up on you with.
I don't care if it's post-Jabor post-COVID, or long COVID, as
(13:06):
they call it.
I don't care what it is.
Try six visits, remember.
I'm going to tell you two things.
One about side effects.
In the 50 years that thisthing's been studied, there has
never been a recorded sideeffect Never.
So what's the worst that willhappen is nothing, and that
doesn't typically happen.
And on the other hand, is theword called contraindications.
(13:29):
So what are contraindications?
Those are people that shouldnot get in the beds, and between
me and you there really are noreal contraindications.
It means anyone can get intobed.
However, from a legal standpoint, the common denominator is
always pregnant women.
Any therapist, any kind ofelectrical equipment, anything,
(13:54):
they'll always say well, maybenot pregnant women.
Now the red light would behelpful for the mother and the
fetus, but if that baby comesout anything other than perfect,
that is, those parents become apart of the most litigious
community on the planet.
They want to sue anybody in theneighborhood and I'll tell my
(14:14):
practitioners you know what?
Let's not be in thatneighborhood.
How about?
If we don't treat the pregnantwoman until the day after
delivery, then get her in thebed right away, especially after
C-section.
Her recovery will be outrageous.
So much faster, so much lesspain associated with that, and
that goes to any surgery, by theway.
So when we get people withplastic surgery especially I'm
(14:36):
sure you've heard of tummy tucksand everyone thinks you know,
they have no idea what'sinvolved the the plastic surgeon
facility is not going to tellthem hey, you're going to be out
of work for a long time.
They go, you'll be back to workin a few days and it's not that
painful.
It's very painful duringinvasive surgery.
We've worked with plasticsurgeons because they recognize
if they get a patient gets inthe bed right after this surgery
(14:58):
, so the surgery the surgeondoesn't mind because he's
getting paid.
You see, if this was instead ofthe surgery, the surgeon doing
his work, then he'd be upset,but he's still doing the plastic
surgery and then they're usingthis type of therapy right after
the surgery to accelerate thehealing and it gets much faster
as well as much more thorough.
(15:19):
So, anyhow.
So we were talking about all thejoys I have.
We talked about the website Onthe left side.
Find a location close to youand I'm asking you to go six
visits.
I'm not in practice, so I'm notasking you to come to my office
.
I think for your own sake andremember, I know you might have
a hard time believing this, butI really want to help and we as
(15:41):
a group my network want to helpas many people as we possibly
can.
So if you go to the website, goto the right side of the
Contact Us page and it will I'msorry left side of the contact
and it will ask you for yourlocation and we can't list all
the locations for privacyreasons, but we'll find a
location closest to you and tryit.
For six visits A dose is 12minutes.
(16:03):
It's not a huge investment andI've hardly ever heard of
anybody after six visits notseeing a change.
Now you might need more.
Most likely you'll need moretreatment.
But imagine somebody like Ican't remember his name, but
anyhow, there's this guy.
He had Leber's hereditary opticneuropathy.
What is that?
(16:24):
It's LHON, which is a.
It's essentially like multiplesclerosis of the retina.
Now multiple sclerosis iseating away the nervous tissue.
So, this is eating away at thevery central nerve in your eye
called the retina, and it'seating away at it.
And so this gentleman wasguaranteed to be blind by the
(16:49):
time, way before he was 30.
He didn't notice anything muchuntil he was in the second or
third year in college and hestarted realizing he was going
blind and the doctors finallyrealized that he had lhon which
is crazy, you know and they hadnothing to do for him.
They couldn't help hisheadaches or migraine, they
couldn't help his insomnia,except for loads of drugs and,
(17:11):
uh, they certainly couldn't haltthe progression of this, this
disgusting disease.
And we did.
You're able to halt theprogression.
Now, in some diseases you canreverse the problem.
In other words, you know, let'ssay they have a arthritis or
even an autoimmune.
We'll see, not only does ithalt the progression but seems
to reverse, so that they're theissues removed, so to speak.
(17:37):
But with some of these, likemultiple sclerosis and LHON,
what we're able to do is haltthe progression.
So he's not going to be totallyblind.
That's the miracle.
And do you know, that's what mylife has been about hearing from
people saying thank you forgiving me my life back.
Thank you for giving me my lifeback.
(17:58):
That's why, as a hippie in the1970s, when I decided that I was
going to my hippie, being ahippie back then meant for me
money was not going to be myfocus, and healing and helping
people were, and that's what Idid, and I'm so thrilled that
you know and for the people thatwant to use this as a business,
(18:29):
when you go to the website, onthe Contact Us page on the right
side, you can see if this makessense for you to buy, either
for your home.
You know I'm 72 years old.
I get in the bed three times aweek and will do so for the rest
of my life, because it's notabout where I'm at, it's where I
don't want to be part of it,and so I liken well-being and
health like a flame that burnsbright, bright from the
beginning.
All the ways that a candleburning bright from the
beginning, all the ways down tothe bottom and then sputters out
(18:51):
and dies.
That's how you should live yourlife Well.
Your well-being should be likethat, not where the last 20% of
your life you're an invalid,where you're not enjoying life,
where you can't do much morethan just sit and gaze out the
window, if you even have awindow in the home that you have
at the senior citizen place.
(19:12):
I want to not have that, andI'll tell you why.
Some people don't take care ofthemselves and you know what?
it's about.
It's about fear.
They're not afraid enoughbecause they have no idea what
their 75 year old self istelling them right now, because
you can hear it in thebackground while they're doing
all these wrong things in theirlife.
In the background is their 75year old self screaming.
(19:35):
Please don't do that, becausewhen I'm seven, when you're 75,
you know do you want to bevibrant and alive or you want to
be half dead?
And and including healthy ideashow you eat, the exercise you
get and the sunlight.
Now the bed is essentiallysunlight.
What we've done is we've takenfour elements of sunlight.
(19:56):
None of the uv light or some ofthe other lights that are not
healthy, just red and nearinfrared.
That's all we've taken is fourtwo elements of red, two
elements of near infrared,magnify it many times and then
drive it into the person's bodyto cover the head to toe, and
we're going to talk about themechanism in just a moment.
But it is about sunlight, so Iwant to bring up that term
(20:19):
infrared.
In fact, I want to make myselfa note, so I do that in future
also.
So the word is infrared, andI'm sure most of you have heard
the word infrared.
Yes, but there is no such thingas just infrared.
It's either far infrared, whichis a deep penetrating heat, or
near infrared, which we used tocall cold laser or cold therapy,
(20:40):
because it doesn't get hot.
So if you're using red lightand you notice it's getting hot,
it's because you're using acheap knockoff of the medical
grade, high end type of devicethat you deserve and that's what
we've created Our bed.
When you get off the bed you'llfeel comfortably warm, not cold.
(21:03):
It's not like it's freezing,but it's comfortably warm and
not hot.
Why is heat the problem?
Heat is absolutely the enemy,because heat brings more fluid
to the surface, more blood tothe surface.
That's why, if I take a heatpack off someone's back, it's
bright red.
Well, why is that?
Because more blood has come tothe surface.
That's the exact same thing youdon't want.
You don't want the heatcreating that blood coming to
(21:26):
the surface, because it willblock the penetration of the
light.
What we always talk about isbeing under the radar Don't even
let the body know something'shappening Under the radar and
getting that treatment to havethe deepest penetration possible
.
So again I will talk about heatis the enemy that we're going
to get back to the trifectalightcom.
(21:48):
Contact us page right side.
Buy it for your home If youwant.
If you have more money thanhealth, that's what you should
do.
But if you want a business,most of the people who buy like
90% or so are really in it forthe business.
If you want a business and mostof the people who buy like 90%
or so are really in it for thebusiness If you want to see
something like a magnet like Ihave never seen before, it will
drive more people to yourfacility than you can imagine
(22:09):
and then the patients that youhave will refer like you can't
imagine.
Let me tell you, satisfiedpatients don't refer.
It's excited patients thatrefer.
This guy couldn't walk.
Now he's walking.
Excitement.
This guy was going blind, nowhe's not Excitement.
I just talked to this one lady.
She was horrible arthritis andnow she doesn't, and she said,
(22:32):
as a kind of an aside, shewasn't emphasizing this.
She also said, by the way, Ireferred 18 patients to that
office that I was going to andthat's what happens.
You get a lot of referrals.
So go to the website and see ifthis makes sense.
Don't do this if it doesn'tmake sense, but if it makes
sense, if you know anythingabout the body or the skin, or
anything to do with theestheticians, the hair
(22:54):
restoration, anything to do withweight loss, because I'm
telling you that it helps withweight loss.
Anything to do with weight loss, because I'm telling you that
it helps with weight loss.
Anything to do with fitness, orany health practitioner who
recognizes that maybe helpingpeople is more important than
how much money you make.
Let me state that differently.
You can make plenty of moneydoing red light therapy, but not
like you can do with surgery,not like the drug industry is
(23:16):
making.
So, with that said, let's talkabout the actual mechanism
involved.
I want to see if there's alsoalso if you just have any
questions for me in general onthe bottom of that contact us
page.
You can just ask questionsthere and put in there.
Get this to Dr Rothschild ifit's something you want to tell
me or ask me about.
(23:38):
Now let's talk about themechanism.
There are two mechanisms.
On the left side, uh, or onthis side, so to speak, and it's
a make-believe side, is fatloss and on the other side is
everything else, that's thehealing and everything else I'm
going to be talking about, but Iwant to get fat loss out of the
way.
There's nothing more attractivethat will bring more people
(23:59):
into a facility than fat loss.
Just telling you it's popularthan heck, as we already talked
about.
But imagine doing it in such ahealing way that you, you don't
damage any tissues.
You don't remove any tissues,because, as a natural healer
myself, I'm never interested indamaging.
Removing chiropractic's aboutnot putting anything in the body
that doesn't belong there andnot yanking anything out that
(24:22):
does belong there.
It's about trying to help thebody and, again, the way
chiropractic works, the way alot of other natural healing.
It's about cleaning.
Let's say, for example,somebody has a wound.
We're going to clean up thewound, maybe even put stitches,
put a bandage over it, and thenget the heck out of the way and
allow the innate intelligence ofthe body to do its thing.
(24:43):
We honor the body.
We believe that the body knowsa heck of a lot more than we do,
so we'll help it.
It's got an arrow in yourshoulder.
Let's get the arrow out, okay,that makes sense.
Patch it up and then let theinnate do its thing, so at any
rate.
So now we're going to talk aboutthe element of the mechanism of
fat loss.
(25:03):
So this was discovered about 14years ago, of course, by
accident, uh, as manydiscoveries in the world of any
kind, in the science world andall over, these are often done,
uh, by accident.
So they discovered that therewas an element of red light,
only red light, no other colors,no other images, nothing.
Only red light can actuallyhelp with shrinking fat cells.
(25:26):
That was the first thing thatthey learned.
The second thing is theythought it was melting the fat
and that's why it worked.
But that's not what's happening.
So fat cells are changed butnothing's melted.
And, by the way, this is notlike freezing the fat or boiling
fat or lazing the fat.
It's not about taking fat out.
(25:47):
It's not about radiofrequencyor ultrasonic cavitation.
All that's about destroyingtissue.
Fat cells just have a bad rapbecause they have a lousy name.
They are essential tissue thatare involved with stem cell
production.
They're involved with hormoneproduction and you don't want to
get rid of essential tissue.
So, rather than do that, couldyou imagine if we can keep the
(26:10):
fat cells fully intact but justmake a slight change?
That's very temporary.
And what they learned was thiselement of red light will
actually change the permeabilityof the fat cell walls.
Now that means that the fatcell walls become more porous,
but only for a temporary periodof time, maybe up to a day, and
so the fat contents are allowedto leak out.
(26:33):
And with this unique protocol,we move the fat away from the
fat cells and eventually to theliver for use or elimination.
It's not complicated.
It was.
They didn't understand it untilthey did.
Now we realize how interestingthat is.
The only thing we need to do isa few things to work with that
protocol to get the fat away andto make sure the liver is as
healthy as possible by givinghealthy liver support you know,
(26:57):
supplements or whatever but alsoto do all the other things to
help the lymphatic system to doits job.
And that's fat loss.
And it works.
And when you pair it with asmart diet, a smart diet is
calorically neutral, as Imentioned before.
But also it's about stayingaway from these four things.
Now, these four things the lessyou you're involved with these
(27:18):
four things, the better.
Most people are not going to beable to eliminate them
completely, but do the best youcan.
And that's starchycarbohydrates, simple sugars,
soda and alcohol.
And all of those things areabout creating sugar.
They're all metabolized liketheir sugar like pasta is like a
(27:39):
bowl of sugar and you tell theperson, would you eat a bowl of
sugar?
No, but when you eat the bowlof pasta, your body recognizes
that eventually as as sugar andit raises the blood glucose
level so high, so fast, that itfreaks the body out.
And there's a whole I do awhole class on this, so I'm not
going to go into that in anymore detail but try to eliminate
(28:01):
those four things.
Start your carbohydrate symbol.
Sugar, sodas and alcohol is theworst of those.
Again, I'm not going to go intothe detail, but of all, if you
can either eliminate or at leastlessen alcohol, that would also
be very helpful.
Pair that with red lighttherapy and you'll have very
good results with fat loss.
So now let's talk about the asimportant as fat loss is and as
(28:24):
many new patients as it's goingto drive to a facility.
I want to move over to mymiracle wavelength, and that's
near infrared and again.
So now talking about infrared,we said there's far infrared,
near infrared.
Far infrared is hot.
That's fine, but what we'redoing when we're doing it?
We don't want heat, so we don'thave nothing.
(28:44):
We have nothing to do with farinfrared.
Near infrared is the coldtherapy, and what they found was
that near infrared and again,it's an element of sunlight, and
that near infrared stimulatescertain tissues in the body
called the mitochondria.
Now, when I went to school maybemost of you have heard of the
word mitochondria when I went toschool, we learned that there
(29:11):
was one mitochondria for everycell, and that's not true.
In fact, the heart, which hasthe highest demand for energy,
has over 5,000 mitochondria ineach cell.
I'm going to talk about whatthe mitochondria does in a
second, but I wanted to give youan idea how prevalent, how
important the mitochondria is.
So much so that themitochondrial system, or the
mitochondria in a person's bodymakes up and I want this to sink
(29:35):
in 10% of your body weight.
Wow, now think about it.
Your body is made up of boneand hair and skin and blood and
so many other things, and yet,and still, 10% of your body
weight is made up ofmitochondria.
So mitochondria is reallycritical.
(29:56):
What does the mitochondria do?
Mitochondria is the reason whyyou and I breathe oxygen and eat
food, to create this energymolecule that becomes the energy
currency of the body, and withthis energy currency called ATP,
we're then able to function.
You have less ATP than you need, it will lead to disease and
eventually death.
You have the right amount andyour body should be able to
(30:18):
fight off anything and recoverfrom just about anything,
because all the functions I'mtalking about include one of the
most important things calledhealing.
You need your mitochondria todo its job, to get the
mitochondria to get to generatethat ATP production.
Now there's one little otherthing that you want to know, and
(30:38):
that is there are tissues inthe body that are called
chromophores.
Chromophore is sensitive tolight energy.
Not every cell in your body isstimulated by light energy.
Some of them are, and the onesthat are are called chromophores
.
And in each mitochondria is achromophore called cytochrome C
oxidase, and this cytochrome Coxidase, which is an enzyme, is
(31:04):
stimulated by that certain typesof wavelengths of light energy
and, most importantly, is thenear infrared which will get the
most effect and will stimulatethe cytochrome c oxidase to then
stimulate the mitochondria tocome back to life.
So it is thought thateveryone's going to eventually
(31:25):
have lousy cytochrome C oxidaseand mitochondrial dysfunction is
a disease.
So mitochondrial dysfunction isa disease process that they
assume we're all going to haveas you get older.
There are books on it and thisis relatively new I mean, they
didn't know about this years ago, but now they do how important
the mitochondria is, and it'sjust the assumption that as you
(31:48):
get older, forget about it.
But I'm telling you, using thered light bed, we can bring the
mitochondrial system back tonormal, not more, not less, but
what your body requires for youto be as healthy as you possibly
can.
So I want to also introduce youto Google Scholar.
(32:09):
So I want to also introduce youto Google Scholar, and this is
a way for you people out therewho think this is crazy.
Again, remember, it sounds likesnake oil to some people
because it's so involved with somany tissues of the body.
Well, guess what it is.
Every tissue of your body ismade up of cells.
(32:31):
Every cell in your body hasmitochondria and if we can
stimulate as many of thosemitochondria to come back to
life, that's why these resultsare not subtle.
That's why Steve who, when hewas 12 years old, contracted
Lyme disease and it ruined hischildhood, it ruined his
education, it ruined his sociallife and he had no career
(32:51):
because he had no energy.
Just getting from the car tohis apartment was a big deal.
By the time we met him, he wasso depressed.
He was 40 years.
He had been suffering with thisLyme disease, no energy and so
many other symptoms.
And when you get a chance, Iwant you, when I send you these
videos, I'd love for you to sendthem out, but Steve's is really
(33:14):
one of those that, besidesArnett and Jessica's, you're
probably going to get goosebumps, like I do, because when Steve
it's like we talked before.
It's totally life altering.
So Steve gets in the bed after40 years of suffering and when
(33:34):
he gets out of the bed henotices no difference and he
just dismissed this as useless.
I'm not going to tell youanymore.
I want you to listen and watchthis video, sure, steve.
So I'm going to send it to youand, and if you could send it to
your audience, I think they'lllove it.
And we talked about Arnett withthe heart attacks, jerusha with
(33:56):
the stroke, and then there'sJessica who, when I contacted
her, she had 16 very seriousconditions.
What started off was aconversation about her Lyme
disease, but it became threeforms of psoriasis gluteate
psoriasis, plaque psoriasis andpsoriatic arthritis.
(34:17):
The psoriatic arthritis led todactylitis, which means she had
sausage toes and woke up oftenwith these black and blue,
swollen and very painful toes inthe morning.
So many other symptoms.
I mean so many other thingsgoing on the shingles, uh, as I
said already, lyme disease, justmany, many things.
(34:39):
But one thing in particular thatstruck me is that while I'm
talking to her I asked her you.
She said she had uveitis.
That means in this eye, one ofher eyes, she.
The pressure on that eye was180, but it's supposed to be
closer to 10.
And that, left untreated, willlead to blindness.
So the treatment for her wasdrops in her eye, which cost her
(35:02):
400 a month copay and aninjection right in her eye once
a month, which I when you watchthe video you'll see how
reaction when I said well,what's that like getting an
injection in your eye?
Watch that video and you'll seewhich, what her impression of
that is.
But at any rate, after arelatively short period of time,
(35:23):
all 16 things have resolved,including 20 years of constant
diarrhea.
Doesn't have that anymore.
The shingles, of course, thepsoriasis, all that stuff.
Watch that video, it'sunbelievable.
So, with that said, I do want totell you that when people get
(35:44):
in the bed they just have theireyes closed.
Imagine they wouldn't wear thegoggles.
I'm telling you, the light canget through the brain to the
brain through getting throughthe skull, so you know it can
get through the eyelid.
And talking about the brain, ithelps psychological and
emotional issues tremendously.
You don't, you won't.
It's this is not the time ofthe year for this, but there's
no seasonal blues when you'reusing this bed, because you
(36:07):
won't have that problem.
But way beyond that, we had thisone lady that was very
depressed.
She hated her life and then shewrote me this.
It says if this is how normalpeople feel every day, I can't
believe I've been missing outall this time.
She's no longer depressed justafter two weeks of using red
(36:28):
light therapy.
She's no longer depressed justafter two weeks of using red
light therapy.
So even the emotional issuespsychological and emotional, all
of it, yeah, and then all thephysical stuff.
So when people get in the bed,they don't wear the goggles.
It's keep their eyes closed andtheir mouth open because we want
to get into the mouth.
But let's get back to the eyes.
Why do you need to keep youreyes closed or open?
(36:50):
It doesn't matter.
If you open your eyes, it'slike having a very strong
flashlight in your eye.
It's very strong, so just keepyour eyes closed, because some
people get a little headache.
There's no long term danger toit.
But you just keep your eyesclosed and let that glorious,
miraculous energy seep throughthe eyelid and get into your eye
.
And I'm telling you, likefloaters people talking to me
(37:14):
about floaters you know littleants or gnats.
They're gone within two weekstypically.
I can't promise you anything,I'm just telling you you should
try it, remember.
The worst that'll happen isnothing.
You need six visits.
Go to the websitetrifectalightcom.
Go to the Contact Us page andcheck out whether we have a
location closest to you or not.
Speaker 1 (37:34):
Excellent.
Well, thank you so much, doctor.
It's been such a pleasurehaving you on our podcast today
and I really appreciate yougiving us the origin and the
history and the benefits of redlight therapy.
It sounds like it's prettymiraculous in how life changed,
life altering, as we mentionedbefore.
Um, I would like for certainfor us to find out a little more
(37:54):
about your uh services and whatyou offer, so we'll make sure
to put all the notes in thenotes page.
Your website and the book thatyou also wrote and hopefully you
know, continue to heal so manypeople out there that are
struggling with everyday chronicissues.
Thank you so much, drRothschild.
Speaker 2 (38:12):
You're very welcome.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
Thank you, take care,
bye-bye, bye-bye.