Episode Transcript
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Outlawed Peter fridd This is the OutlawedDay Show on KPRC ninth fifteen. I
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have to forget the vice. It'snever been there. They do it's nice.
I'm leaving hotels tore at the walls. I have a countance before it.
All this sum crazy, but Ihave time. I'm just looking to
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close at the sea. The crymy mother a ride. He just wanted
he five. I lost my lice. Now I don't ride. I haven't
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riding the back. I like thecourse in case. I'm wota. I'm
making backers. My fancy can't wait. They ran me letters down. I'm
green, so I gotte my fistolracords on the wall. Just leave a
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message. Baby, I'm called,but I'm saying I can't come. Bree
times and I don't a party sometimesto warn it fly when you can't do.
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It's the Boddle's fortune and fame.Everybody is so new friend, I
haven't changed. It's amazing. Rideit takes home. I keep on going
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this So the outlaw Nation lives hereon KPRTS nine fifty. This is the
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Outlaw Dan Show on Keith RC andnine fifty. Wow, I don't he
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created a good evening, y' all. Welcome to Rafael's silver Cloud. Loun
slipped me a little Crimson Timson,give in a lowdown brown. I wasn't
a school betty book. I'm onmy way into the Russavanta. I ain't
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going for open the program, ofcourse, I'm so God didn't only the
crack of dawn. Better be carefularound me. I want to pull on
your coat about something here tonight.Yeah, little news out, I can
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throw your direction the I used toknow a girl. Yeah, it was
a hubbub and ding ding ding.I said, baby, you gotta everything.
A week later it was a hubbubband ding ding dung baby and shout
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didn't last too long. I knowthings are tough all over. Thing getting
any better, but I was moved, kind of squivel a little bit,
kind of an emotional weather forecast foryou to see name. But I'm talking
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about it. Well, you know, I've been playing nightclubs and staying out
all night long. Coming home,lady gone for three months, come back,
and everything in your refrigerator turns intoa science project, so you get
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designs on a waitress goal. Shegot three or four kids she sawting out
of checks that she's counting out ofchange. He's a hey baby, eat
me. I'm a bear claw onthe radar range. Well, then it
gets meal cold. What we're talkingabout late night near him on the louieland
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what a chance of fall, chanceof shallows into the afternoon with a variable
high cloudingness, gust winds, gustalwinds at times around a corner of sons
that now rado. Yeah, Iknow things are tough, hollow Now back
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to eleven o'clock. This is asignificant year for me in the life of
your humble narrator. I'm fifty fiveyears old now and about lucky. I've
got another twenty years left in me. So I'm in the final third of
my life, hoping to improve myquality of life. And I've started to
do some cardio. I'm watching WhatDay my daughters do Nutritionus. I've been
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engaged and enlisted the help of ourfriends at Heritage Moue Tie at the urging
of my good friend Louise Evareese andMichael Chase Corley. But it's got to
be more than that. It's gotto be more than exercise and diet.
There are medical considerations, and thereare advancements and improvements. And we sat
down recently with doctor James Wrinkle fromtheir Wrinkle Institute without the WRI. I
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and KLi located out in the Cypressarea. I have a clinic out there
doing incredible stuff. I want toI want to share, well, not
only my conversation with doctor Jim,but I want to share my journey with
you. He is already helping peoplewe know overcoming catastrode medical incidents. There
are more people in my circle thatneed help, people with MS, people
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that are battling cancer. There isa revolution in esthetic medicine that I'm super
excited about it. As excited asI am about extending my life, I'm
excited about the good that we dofor the community at well. Dave is
your friend on KPRC nine fifty.Tell me about Carnival Custom Painting. How
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long a business? Who are theowners? Where are you located? What
if you feel your prices too high? How do I accept the proposal?
Describe the painting process to someone who'snever hired to paint it. Which paint
should use, hues? Which paycompany, which paint color? What does
Carnival painting do we do interior andexterior painting services, so we can paint
your entire house from the inside tothe out. We can stain any wood
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that you have, and we canput up faux walls, we can put
up sheet rock walls. We doinstallation of wood, installation of she rock.
Basically, anything that you need insideyour house to get ready for sale
or get ready to move in,we can take care of it. There's
a myriad of businesses that are makinga butt ton of money putting piers and
beams and bounces people house. Thereality is houses in this area shift.
You get cracks sometimes along some ofthe stress points in the house, but
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you can with a good she rockguy, float those paint them. Am
I wrong realistically? With the sheetrock cracks and everything like that. We
do all the repairs on that.We install sheet rock, tear house,
she rock, fix all the crackscrevices in Houston. As you pointed out,
with the stress cracks and everything moveand shifting. If it's done poorly,
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buy a lot of guys that say, hey, I'm a sheet rock
guy. Well, it's not gonnalast very long. Usually you can get
about three to five years out ofa sheet rock crack. We actually warranty
for three years. We're one ofthe longest warranty in Houston. We're talking
about carnival painting. You also docommercial, so I'm assuming that's not just
all roller of work that you've gotsprayers and teams and ladders and scoffolding.
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Yes, sir, we do likecommercial. In terms of like office buildings,
we can pretty much do any officebuilding as long as it's not ten
story high rise. We can dopretty much everything in there outside anyway,
All right, what's the west casescenario interior designers, decorators or just a
motivated housewife. What's the worst casescenario of somebody to deal with us?
A client interior decorators? You knowwhy cause there spending somebody else's money.
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That's right. You reach out toa carnival painting, you ask your questions,
and then you dispatch someone to theirhouse and they go all right,
and you're bringing the little tape measure. Do you eyeball it? How does
all that work take me to theprocess? So we'll set up a free
estimate for you. What we're gonnado is either you can call us or
you can reach us through our websiteat Houston Carnival Painting dot com. We
also can be reached at seven onethree seven seven nine thirty five hundred seven
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seven nine thirty five hundred. Whydon't you call us for that free esmen,
We'll go ahead and send up anappointment time, we will come out.
We will look at whether it's aninterior. Next year we can walk
through it with you, find outexactly what the customer needs, what they
want, what their vision is forthe project, and then we can guide
them along how best to achieve thatas well as we can take care of
it for you. What's the timefrom them making a decision to you guys
being able to put the plan intoaction. So as soon as we get
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a signed copy of that contract,we will give them the first availability or
the first available start date that wehave. Typically we're about a week booked
out. Seven one three, sevenseven nine thirty five hundred. Yes,
sir, Carnival Custom Painting, Home, residential, commercial, they are float,
they are fixing, they are painting, they're trimming. The next project
called Carnival Custom Painting. That's sevento one three seven seven nine thirty five
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hundred seven to one three seven sevennine thirty five hundred Carnival Custom Painting.
Alright, alright, alright, allright, Geryl, Buddy Outlaw, Dave
Allen, Lonesome Dove Morris, ThankBanang. How do you vote? Got
Ron for us from Carnival Custom Painting. Until you Ride. He's like,
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you guys just talk about in theband until you ride. Um, you're
a father, Reese. Now doyou have more than which home? I
have my son Reese and my daughterCaitlin. Okay, right, doctor Jim
from the Wrinkle Institute. You havegirls Jessica Jaden and Jacquelin. You know,
a man surrounded by women is aman who's truly blessed. I am
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extremely sus What did you say?I have two daughters and two sons.
I get the best of both worlds. I've got all the love. And
then no, it's got the gate. You gotta you gotta talk into the
second's he got a little noisy inhere. And and I and I and
I want to have a candid conversation. We have forged a plan to So
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Ron came to me and he's like, Hey, I'm in my fifties,
have lived hardly thirties, and Iwant to feel like I've been my early
thirties, and I found a guywho can help me do it. He's
got a business, he's got acredo, he's got a philosophy, he's
got an approach, and I thinkthat you can help him. And so
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he came out to bike some Bugssponsored by our friends with Republic Earliday.
It's a benefiting the Texas Adaptive Aquaticsworking with my Ability Challenge Individuals and the
Epilepsy Foundation of Texas, a muchmaligned and often under recognize malady that hundreds
of thousands of people suffer from epilepsyand they suffer in silence because of a
stigma, insurance, et cetera.And so we met doctor James Wrinkle,
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Jimmy Jams, doctor Jim from thefrom the Wrinkle Institute, and began to
have he came and dinner, interviewedduring bikes some bugs and talked about some
of the treatment and some of thethings that you're doing with people. And
and then subsequently I've gone out tothe Wrinkle Institute and it's on uh FM
twenty nine twenty and uh looked atwhat he's doing and begun to talk about
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the philosophy, the arc of thisstory and I said, look, I
got I got a plan, andhe was gracious enough to say, oh,
yeah, you're a rock and rollstuff. And I said, look,
I've I've lived really hard, andI just turned fifty five, and
I've got kids that, uh,we're born in this decade. Uh,
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and I need to stay alive foranother twenty five or thirty years. But
I don't want to do the traditionalAmerican uh U say yeahs say yeah Father's
Day weekend celebration. We recorded theprogram here at Republic Harday David's him uh.
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And I said, so, Iyou know, most of the people
have the people I know that aremy own age, have really aged hard.
I can't imagine what they're gonna lookas sectogenarians and octogenarians. And I
don't want to do that. AndI feel like he's the guy, with
his approach that can help me facilitatethat. So I said, what I
want to do is a Homeric journeyof health. And he says, day,
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I don't. I don't think anybody'sgonna get the Homeric reference. I
go, oh, you know,you're probably right. We'll just fall out
a hero's journey, right and uhand and so just in the brief time
that we've interacted from JJ, oneof the nurses at the Wrinkle Institute who
suffered a stroke seven weeks ago.And I was able to see video of
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JJ basically a right side body paralysis, motor functions diminished and and and I
don't know the I don't, Idon't. It would belittle our conversation to
to mire down in the technical aspects. When you have a stroke, it
limits the neurological, the muscle memory, it's all debilitative. You have you
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have bell palsy and your face,your your arm. And I saw all
this on video. At the sametime, I'm watching JJ get like UV
blood wash and then sitting in ahyperbaric chamber and he's normal. It's JJ
ish. But I said to doctorSo, I said, so ten years
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ago, how long would it havetaken him JJ to recover to this point?
And he's looked at me because hewouldn't have this this is It would
have been years of physical therapy.But as far as the motor neurons and
that uh facet, and we livein a world where they're extending our lives,
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but our quality of life has notbeen extended, not traditionally, and
uh, i'm as I lived prettyhard. I mean, i'm i'm I
slid into third thinking I wasn't gonnaget to go to home and now I'm
like, okay, I don't wantAnd he said, Okay, that's exactly
what I want to do. Iwant to teach people, treat people and
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show people how to recapture their vitality. And there's a way to do that,
and big pharma and the medical insurancecompanies, and not an indictment of
doctors, but that it's designed tonot We're treating symptoms, not the problem,
right, I mean, getting gettingold is not necessary anymore. You're
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gonna age, but it's a number. And then going backwards, the technology
is so super advanced now we're ableto measure your your energy um pretty much
on age. We're literally doing ashow, Dave doctor. Jim's by a
motorcycle. Don't tell his wife,don't tell her, Oh, don't tell
anybody. And he's wearing flip flops. We're gonna have to sell him boots
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too. They'll be all right.It's not the first time I wrote a
motorcycle and flip flopsie. Yeah,So I mean that that's the beauty of
it, right after twenty years ofemergency medicine and going down this path of
just watching people suffer and getting moreand more pills and watching the kind of
the debilitated process of you know,nobody wants to wake up and feel old,
right, And now the technology hashas gotten so impressive that it's actually
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we're able to measure where you arebefore you actually get there. One of
the guys here at Republic, HarleyDavidson, we were having a chat when
we were looking at the motorcycles andhe's like, how does that work?
And I said, let me explain. Your body is a big giant biomechanical
battery, okay. And all wedo is we hook up a positive prope
and we hook up a negative prope, and then we run a computer system.
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The computer system measures the impedance throughall facets of the tissue, and
it prints out a report and says, this is a problem. Your brain
is a problem, your kidney isa problem, You're intestine is a problem.
Or if you're female, or youknow from that perspective, you have
menopause, your thyroids a problem,you have weight issues. All that stuff
comes out and on a computer reportthat's about fifty pages right now, and
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they're always advancing the technology, soit's something that's absolutely impressive. The problem
is that the knowledge that they hadaccumulated fifty years ago, one hundred years
ago is no longer useful because ofthe environmental factors at play and the genetic
degradation that's occurred from hormones, fromthe chemicals from the classics food so so,
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so everything is you're you're now asa physician, as a doctor,
as a researcher, as a scientist, everything's brand new. You're dealing with
a whole new set of variables.And unfortunately, and I'm not again you
know my background doctors and the medicalindustry and the medical schools, what they
learned thirty years ago is outdated.Yea every day, Yeah, I know
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what I mean, that's the beyof my teachers. My teachers always said
when we sat down, fifty percentof what you learn is gonna be wrong.
We just don't know which fifty percent. So I mean that goes to
show you're right. I mean,it's and that's the fascinating bit for me.
Right. The science is just absolutelyearth shattering and what it does and
what we can do for chronic peopleis we Like I said with the Dave
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when he came in for the officevisit, I was like, how would
you like to feel thirty? Andhe's like what, Like, yeah,
my goal is to take ten yearsoff and now as a technology advances,
we are slogan as we had qualityto your years, because nobody wants to
live forever and feel miserable. Sowe said the Roun on the way down.
My plan is to live to aboutone hundred and ten and then just
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turn off and go to sleep.Boom. You just got back from Miami.
There was a conference there and thefirst thing you said to me was,
Dave, these were a research scienceistsand doctors from around the world.
Japan and Germany are light years aheadof us, absolutely, but we have
the benefit thanks to these sorts ofseminars and conferences. Even if our own
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institutions are progressing, doctors like yourselfare reaching out and are seeking out the
education and the advancement, and sothe knowledge is out there. We just
need to accumulate it and dispense it. Yeah, I mean the beauty of
these groups. So I was atAmerican Academy and STEM cell physicians. It's
a bunch of all different walks oflife, all different kinds of people,
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researchers, PhDs, tissue engineers thatall sit in a collaborative group and give
up their research. They are notstingy. If you have been any kind
of anywhere or aged. Everybody likesto keep their trade secrets. That doesn't
exist in this field. It's sonew that they're trying to move it forward
that it's an absolute. It's everybody'sallowed to come to the party. It's
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funny because in so many industries thatis it's all proprietary information everybody. So
a million years ago, when theywere doing research in the automobile industry,
they were realizing that they were gettinga lot of kidney donors from front collisions.
The engine the transmission would come throughthe fall the firewall and it would
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kill the people in the car.The Swedes at Volvo, I think,
created a tilt down firewall that woulda head on collision that would force the
transmission, the engine wall out underneaththe vehicle. And you know what they
did, They shared it with everybodybecause at the end of the day,
if we can all elevate together,we all benefit there's no point in being
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stingy and having that sort of Ineed to benefit at the expense of other
people. We can all hopefully virateat a higher frequency to go. That's
the goal, right Yep. Therising tide raises all the boats. Tell
the Chinese that please, please,someone tell the Chinese that did you just
know they're listening? Hey hello,hello, Hello, No buddy outline Dave
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Alan, lunks of Dub Morris Ronfrom Tillia Ride and we're talking with doctor
James Rinkle from the Wrinkle Institute.We're gonna we're gonna go on a journey,
a hero's journey of health together.I know that your uh the Wrinkle
Institute is all encompassing, that youdo a lot of things. And I
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was talking to my wife the otherday. She's in her um early forties.
I'm supposed to say, though hegave me the look. He said,
dude, don't she Oh no,no, now, no, one's
gonna make goda. My wife isin her late thirties. She doesn't listen
to the show, thank god.Uh So, so we're at a point
now and her mother experienced early menopause, and I know that there's it's not
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a fab hormone replacement therapy. AndI brought this up quietly to my mother,
who's in her eighties, and shesaid, I was in a horrible
car accident forty years ago and itcreated early menopause. She goes, I
did hormone replacement, and the traditionalphilosophy then was that it wasn't something you
did for a long period of time. In fact, doctors were like,
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I will not treat you. Iwill not continue to do it. You
could have a heart attack and youcould die. And so she was She
went to the mail clinic and shetalked to him, and she found a
doctor that said, no, you'regonna need this. And so for forty
plus years she's been on hormone replacementtherapy. And she said that at one
point she tried to go off.They were up at the lake in Minnesota,
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White Earth Lake, you know,missus Andrews. I think she assaulted
three neighbors, stabbed her husband,and drove the car into the lake.
So she goes, so I gotback out on the hormones. So there's
so many different facets to our qualityof life that are advancing and growing.
And I sat down with a bunchof supercross riders, Crazy Chris and his
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gang. These guys they won thePike's Peak Challenge that are trying to go
do the aisle of Man. Thesethese these are gearheads and they're like sitting
down going and you know those thosefarm fresh eggs. You know you're careful
because there's plastics sitting like a like, what what do you guys? On
Twitter? And they go, theygo, dude, there is so much
knowledge that is not it's not necessarilysuppressed, but it's not advocated. It's
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not advanced, right, And whatI'm realizing is instead of being jaded and
cynical, that we need to createa collective of people that are forward thinking,
that are cutting edge, and thatwe can share and proselytize and preach
without being preachy and go, look, this is the example that we're following.
I'm not forcing it on you.I'm not gonna be like a vegetarian
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until you thirteen times in an hourhow I'm eating lagoons. But you know
what, let's start sharing this knowledge. Ron, how long have you been
under doctor Jim's care at the WrinkleInstitute? Uh? Two years? You're
COVID? Right? Was the startCOVID. You're you're hard rocking party monster
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dude, run businesses, play inbars a couple nights a week. And
he said to me, He goes, doctor Jim goes, He goes,
here's the Remember when you were twentiesand you you raged all night and you're
up and work the next day.I go, yeah, he goes,
Remember when you were thirties and you'reraged all night and it took your dinner
cover. He goes, where whereare you at now? I go about
three four days and he goes,yeah, he goes, what you've done
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is your body. It's refractatory periodhas increased because overall you've done damage to
your body that we can treat.YEP, you sure can actually party like
a rock star at night and I'mup in the morning working ready to go.
Yeah that was in twenty You're like, okay, do I take the
one hour sleeper? Do I playthrough? And as you get older and
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older, you're like, I gottaI gotta take that that ninety minutes to
sleep, Like please, please,for the love of God, playing through
now just like I can't. Icouldn't even fathom play through at this point.
And we're not advocating stressing out yourbody or your lymphatic system or your
endercon system where you're an I'm notI'm not saying doing that. I'm just
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saying, hey, I want toget old and not feel old. Well,
I mean you every father's day,a father's day weekend, it kind
of hits home, right, Dadsare going hard all the time, just
like moms do. And you know, it's just one of those things where
you know, they take care ofthe kids, they take care of the
job, they take care of thehouse, and then they forget to take
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care of themselves. It's like anythingelse, right you Uh, you don't
drive your f two fifty two hundredand fifty thousand miles without changing the oil,
all right, So why do youthink you can do that in your
body? And that's the beautiful That'sthe beauty of our bodies is that it
will redo it and it will resetitself. All it needs is just some
a little bit of input, andthat's the beauty of it. Well,
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your check engine light can be astroke, right, it can be a
complete breakdown, it can be afatty liver. But the bottom line is
it's all treatable now, yep.And it's actually something that we can actually
measure. And that's the biggest thing, right. Science is all based on
measurements, and we couldn't really measureit before everybody's met people in the community
where you know, it's like,well Bill did great for the last five
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months and then all of a suddenhe was gone, What the heck happened?
Right, Bills bick Bill's light wenton and that was the end of
it. So, um, nowwe're able to get it before, you
know, like the all the lightscome on in the warning system. We
can catch it at the beginning andonly one system based and then it actually
the computer gives us really artificial intelligence, gives us really great uh inputs and
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in roads of how to manage them, and we can go backwards from diet
to supplements to sleep, to meditationto relaxation. It gives us all those
impotent impotence inputs, um, sothat we can we got in about how
back at the fifties the whole worldwas run by a bunch of impotente angry
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men like no wonder, we wereall on the edge, like we're gonna
we're gonna burn this place down becauseyou've got nothing to live for, nothing
to live for. So when somebodycomes in and we'll we'll my blog.
So we're gonna come in and dothis. Somer does a homage. So,
so is this like, what doyou take a me up to a
bunch of electrodes on on on atreadmill? Is it? Is it a
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blood panel? Is it? Howdoes it? What's the process? So?
I mean we we do an introprocess. It takes about five minutes.
It's that's the computer bit um thatgives us just a general overview of
what's happening in the in the system. It measures all the impedance. We
get hormones, we get electrolytes,we get your brain activity, kidney,
liver um. But generalized processing.All that's done in about five minutes um.
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And then we work backwards from there, rere engineer the body, giving
back all of that it needs,and then we continue to measure it and
change those parameters. Yeah, easy, breezy. It sounds complicated, but
with modern technology, Uh pretty sure. It's a because I'm too late for
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you, Alan, It's never toolate. It's never too late. He
did his sixties. He waited toolong. That's not true. My parents
were well into their seventies when beforeI got into this, and there was
they were partners for over fifty yearsand all the complications of blood pressure,
medicines and menopause. There was noromance for them. And then we started
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to treat them. And then thing, you know, my father saying,
I don't know what you're giving yourmother, but you need to give me
more. So you are it's possible, which is way way way better than
they go. Well, we realizewe're gonna live for longer. We hate
each other, We're gonna go.Wait, I was just gonna stay here
till I died because I thought itwas gonna be till death. Did we
part two more weeks? Right?Oh, wait, we're gonna live longer.
(34:54):
I'm not saying my wife hates man. I just gladually doesn't listen to
the show. Um, so we'retalking with doctor James Wrinkle of the Wrinkle
Institute. That's r I and kl E. Uh. They do everything
from hormone replacement therapy. Uh,they've got the laser fat sculpteam thing true
scope. No, they've got they'vegot the No. I'm I don't want
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anybody to think that it's just highend endrocrite system stuff. I mean,
you do everything. It's a fullservice institute. If you just want to
go in and get get a littlebotox for your for your frown uh line
or what do they call it,a worried line? Yeah, they got
that too. They got everything.It's full service. But seeing what you've
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done with JJ and his recovery fromhis stroke, and I've talked to you
off the air about my friend that'sgot MS, which is apparently treatable.
Now, uh, we're referring somebodyin that's got apparently some sort of a
bone Americans. We're looking at alot of different people. I am so
excited that Ron has brought doctor Jimto the table, and I want to
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spread the word and I want everybodyto find out right, because there's enough.
It's not like it's the fine out. Who are those people that go
to the door to door and theytry to get you into heaven, even
that they only believe that the fivehundred and sixty five people did. Yeah,
we would be stingy if there wasa finite amount, but there's not.
This is unlimited unlimited health, unlimitedlife, unlimited happiness to that end,
(36:23):
I asked at each one of you, do three things for me.
Be the voice of reason in thesea of in Saturday. If you see
a wrong, make it up right. So you get a chance to help
a fell a human being, Justdo it. Because we're all part of
the crazy human terminal experience together.It may not seem this way to you,
but the universal unfolded exactly what itshould be. I know this would
be true because I mind myself livingin a community of light minded individuals.
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People say hopes for yours, dreamsand ideals as I have, and together
we make this a better place tolive. Happy Father's Day, everybody,
as we'd like to say around here, we're gonna say audio spitches, as
we like to say around here,Audios bitches. Happy Father's Day, Happy
Father's Day.