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August 6, 2025 • 26 mins
What is functional medicine Anti Aging weight loss

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The topics and opinions express in the following show are
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(00:21):
W FOURCY Radio.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
Welcome to the Ask the Experts Show on W FOURCY
Radio and Talkboard TV, where we bring you educational information
from top local experts in the fields of legal, health,
financial and home improvement. Now sit back and listen to
experts in family law, association, law, hearing laws, business brokers,

(00:47):
home care, along with many other topics. Now here are
your hosts, Spivo and Sophia.

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Hey, good morning America, Welcome to another s the Expert Show. Well,
we bring you the finest experts in the field of legal, health,
financial and home improvement. About three years ago they show.
We started welcoming people from Atlanta and then it grew
to Georgia and over the years now because the show

(01:19):
has become so important Fast Expert Show that we run
the show on a national basis, And I got to
tell you, I do about thirty five shows a month,
and I got to share this with you. This is
my favorite show to do. I have watched Doctor Taylor

(01:44):
evolve from we were just talking about it. We started
talking about weight loss and then hormone replacement, and this
is show that has evolved that you don't want to
miss it. I'm actually getting emails from people who say
they just found the show and they normally watched for
about five or ten minutes and they can't stop listening

(02:07):
to the show. I want to welcome doctor Eldrick Taylor. Thanks,
thank you so much. Steve.

Speaker 4 (02:14):
You know I I on my podcast that I had
I I, uh, what what am I saying to say?
Always try and give you credit for getting me started
on this road, is that I joined you? And well,
well no, I'm saying you know you. I was talking
about how it was kind of in a rut. You
kind of got me out of the rut because I

(02:36):
had stopped speaking and sharing information and then you asked
me to be on this show, and you know I
talked with my wife and she was like, yeah, you
ought to go back and start doing that. That'll be
an easier way for you to do it as other
doctors on the internet. Yeah, why don't you give it
a try. So that was seven years I mean that
was three years ago. And uh, you know from this show,

(02:58):
you and your producer and the person who creates this
invited me to do my own podcast. I was a
little hesitant at first, but as you see, this is
my I got a backdrop I got, I got all
of this stuff. I know. Yeah, but it started with
you know what, uh huh.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
Doctor Taylor. Every single you know I get, and I
hope people will subscribe to it the age or a
blueprint every I get. I cannot believe every single one
is different. Every one of them is so educational. But
most important, doctor, it touches people and it opens people's eyes.

(03:42):
And there's not too many people who can say that.

Speaker 4 (03:45):
Yeah, well, you know, I'm just I'm just trying to
share my experience. You know, my eyes got open after
I got out of medical school and practice for like
seven years. My eyes got opened that I haven't learned
all I needed to learn to do what I'm supposed
to do. I'm supposed to be helping people. I'm supposed
to be helping people get healthier, and that wasn't what

(04:06):
was happening the first seven years of my career. And
what really brought it home is that what I was
doing in my office I brought it home, was trying
to help my wife and it wasn't working. So I
saw it twenty four seven. So that was the beginning
of this, is that this does not work as well
as I was told that it was going to work.
And so that opened my eyes. So as my eyes

(04:28):
get open, I have to I have to share it.
It's like if I don't, it's just like it makes
me sick if I don't start talking about this, you know.
So that's kind of where it started and from that,
you know, twenty twenty five years ago. Yeah, I've evolved
and I've had my ups and downs, but I feel

(04:49):
like this is one of my ups and I want
to try and maintain that up as long as I
can and try and help people get to a higher
level of living and more knowledge, because knowledge really is power,
it really is.

Speaker 3 (05:04):
You're it's amazing. You're like to me, You're like a sponge.
You know, you can't get enough of this. And you
even traveled to agept and yeah, that you learn from
that trip, doctor Taylor.

Speaker 4 (05:18):
Yeah, it really brought home the importance of spirituality and
to understand that we're all connected and if you go
to a place like you, you'll start to feel that connection.
You're like, you know, it's like you've been there. You know,
you see those and you're like, you are in awe

(05:38):
at what human beings can do. And then it tells
you that if human beings were able to do that
six seven eight thousand years ago, what what should we
be able to do that we're not doing? You know,
what are we not building? You know they built these temples?
What are we not building?

Speaker 3 (05:57):
You know?

Speaker 4 (05:57):
So I'm building this asis blue print platform. You're building
the ask the experts we are supposed to be building
and creating and all of this. And then that get
you know, that gave me the that gave me the
notion that hey, I can build something too, I can
build something great. And that's what you have to You
have to look at your surroundings and say, what is

(06:20):
what is that telling me? And what that did is
inspired me that I can do more than what I
think I can do, just like we can't figure out
how they can make those pyramids, but they did it.
And if you are and with your purpose, you'll be
able to do amazing things. And that's that's what that
trip to Egypt taught me. And I came back started

(06:41):
this age as blueprint, and we just came back in December.
So this is what eight months later, and I'm surprised
at what we've built and I want to keep building it.

Speaker 3 (06:51):
Hey, you know, I was thinking about this gentleman you
met over there, and God is amazing. What could God
put in front of you? Yeah, you had to go
all the way down to find this guy, and look
how he's touched your life. I mean, and I give
all credits. Lord Yeah knows what you need.

Speaker 4 (07:13):
Yeah, and when we need it, and you just have
to get opened and stop fighting against it. You know,
you have to be open and stop fighting against it.
I said on my podcast, is that I know Rebel
wants me to give her titles and I know you
do too of what I'm going to talk about, but
I have to wait. I have to wait on divine timing.
And that's what I have learned that's another thing I learned.

(07:36):
And Tuesday is the day that I get the inspiration.
So Monday, a patient came to me who was who
was coming to get cancer treatment for ivy viting ma
see for cancer, and she was telling me how she
told her oncologist and she told her pharmacist what she
was going to do, and they told her please don't
do it. And she said why and he said, well,

(07:57):
because it's going to interfere with our treatment. And so
but see, whenever I oh my gosh, yeah, So whenever
I talk to a patient, I tell them, hey, look,
this is what I think you need, but I want
you to do your own research. I want you to
be convinced that this is what you should do. Because
if a patient doesn't believe something is going to work,
it's probably not going to work. It's called the no

(08:19):
se Bow effect. You have the plus se Boll effect
that I think is going to work, you have the
no sea Bow effect says I think it's not going
to work. And whatever you think, you're right. If you
think it's not going to work, it's not going to work.
If you think it's going to work more than likely
or work. So anyway, so they were armed with this information.
And so even though those docs and the pharmacists told
her don't do it, she showed up in my office

(08:41):
and she told me that. And so what my podcast
that I did right before this was talking about the
research that substantiates vitamin C. And what I did is,
if you don't know about chat GTP, there's chat g
ET three point zero that does deep research. So I
asked her, I said, can you do deep research on
vitamin C and and cancer? And I only want the

(09:02):
most respected articles. I don't want you to give me
any flimflam articles. I want you to go through the
ones that have been pure reviewed. That's a respected journals
and it was over one hundred articles. It's over thirty
human studies, and they all talk about they all substantiate
the benefits of vitamin C, whether it's used alone or

(09:23):
with chemotherapy. And if you use it with chemotherapy, it
actually enhances the effectiveness of the chemotherapy. So it's exactly
opposite of what the doctor and the pharmacist told her.
And you say, well, how can that happen? It's because
doctors are they're bound by what we call the standard

(09:43):
of care. The standard of care simply says what are
most reasonable physicians doing in your area. So it doesn't
say what does science, what does the new research tell
you to do? It says, no, you need to do
what most doctors are doing in your area. And that's
why the pharmaceutical industry is so is so focused on

(10:09):
getting in doctors' offices and getting them to do something,
because if I can get enough reasonable physicians to do
a drug, even though it's poison, which chemotherapy is, if
I can get enough doctors to do it, it becomes
the standard of care. Whether it works, whether it's scientifically viable,
but if I can get enough doctors to do it,

(10:30):
that automatically becomes the standard of care. To me, that's
ridiculous is that you're not basing it on science. You're
just following the leaders. Really follow the leader, and whoever
can establish themselves as the leader and as the thought leader,
and I can get enough people to think like that,
that's the standard of care. So doctors are afraid to

(10:53):
get out of the standard of care. I'm not afraid.
And in order to in order to do what you
are supposed to do in this life, you have to
get over fear. Fear is what stagnates people. It keeps
them in a rut. It's all about fear. And doctors
are fearful and that's why they don't do what they're

(11:15):
really supposed to do. And I believe that with all
my heart because I've talked to enough physicians. I've stood
on stages and talked to physicians and they're scared. They're
all scared about if the medical Board is going to
come after them, and those and they're legitimate fears, they're
legitimate fears, but those are man made fears. They are

(11:37):
man made, and they're not They're keeping you from the truth.
And that's why I'm going to the public. Because they
don't know about the standard of care. They're not bound
by the standard of care. So if I give them
the knowledge, and if enough of them can go and
convince enough doctors with and they're armed with the knowledge,
that can become the standard of care. All you have

(12:00):
to do is convince enough doctors to do it. And
I'm counting on the patients to do it. Because that's
why the pharmaceutical industry says, ask your doctor about this drug.
I want you to ask your doctor about vitamin c
Ask your doctor about saliva testing, ask your doctor about
how biodonical harmones really work. Ask your doctor about why

(12:21):
don't you incorporate my soul and my spirit into your treatment?
Because that's what holistic medicine is all about, is making
sure and that's why I call myself the spiritual MD.
Is that you have to combine all of that in
order to actually be whole. And that's really holistic medicine.
Because you ask me, how do I describe my practice? Now,

(12:41):
I guess I really am a holistic doctor because I
understand how to make a whole person. And how did
I do that is because that's my goal every morning
when I get up and meditate and all that is
how can I become whole? Because I can't teach you
how to do something that I haven't done. That's so
you see, this program is evolving because I'm evolving, and

(13:05):
so I have to talk about things that happened to
me as I evolve. So I'm gonna be quiet and
see you have another question.

Speaker 3 (13:13):
Well, no, I listen. I'm mesmerized when I do your show.
So you talk about vitamin C and cancer. Yeah, and
someone just wrote, does that mean they have to get
a higher dosage of vitamin C than normal.

Speaker 4 (13:30):
Yeah, so I'm talking about IV vitamin C because your
body can only absorb so much vitamin C at one time.
If you take a thousand milligrams of vitamin C orally,
which is one gram, then you only will absorb twenty
five to thirty percent of that. And if you say, well, okay,
I'm going to take a bigger dose, well, when you
take bigger doses, you end up getting diarrhea. If you

(13:52):
take more than five grams, you'll end up getting diarrhea.
It's because your body can't absorb all of that. Now, IV,
we start out in cancer patients giving them fifty grams,
so fifty times what you would be taken orally. Because
that thousand milligrams is one gram, I'm talking about giving
it fifty grams. That's where we start. If the cancer
is more passive, we do it once a week. Okay,

(14:16):
we do it once a week. And I'm going to
do another episode about this test called signa tera that
looks at fragments of DNA from the cancer and so
you can look and see are those fragments increasing That
means your treatment is not working or is it decreasing.
That means your treatment is working. And you can do
that like every three to six weeks to see if
your treatment is working. But we give every vitamin C

(14:38):
every week and we do it sometimes we do it
for ten weeks. We see what the treatment, you know,
how it's going. But it's every week. We give fifty
sometimes we give seventy five, and we can go up
to one hundred grams at one sitting. And so with that,
I'll just say it quickly. Vitamin C. What it does
is it enhances It makes the healthy sales healthier so

(15:01):
that it can encapsulate that cancer and keep it from spreading.
The other thing it does it actually generates hydro peroxide.
And what hydro peroxide does, It creates an ox It
creates oxygen. I said, hydrogen peroxide is H two O
two and water is H two oh, so it creates
HydroD peroxide. Well, it creates that extra oxygen and water,

(15:23):
and cancer cells don't like oxygen. So if you can
hyper or superoxygenate yourself, that's why cancer patients will go
to hyperbaric oxygen treatment because they hyperoxygenate themselves and cancers
don't like it. And the cancer cells actually die off
from this extra oxygen, and so that's what vitamin C

(15:45):
does it. And so that's why it enhances the chemotherapy
because now you have another chemotherapy agent which really isn't
a chemal co vitamin C, which is actually acting synergistically.
Are actually increased seeing the efficacy of the chemotherapy. It's
not interfering with it. And that's why I'm saying that

(16:05):
doctor told her the exact opposite of the information that
she needed. And so that's why I did that podcast
because and that's why I have that document that they
can download and take to the doctor that's saying, hey,
you're telling me one thing, but I've got thirty studies
from peer review journals that are saying the exact opposite

(16:26):
of what you're saying. And I want you to help
open the doctor's eyes because a patient actually opened my
eyes about biodemical harmones. And most of the things that
I do in my office now is because a patient
asked me or brought me information and I researched it
and I said, the patient's absolutely right, and I need
to offer it to other patients. So well, that's my

(16:48):
goal is to is to get you to get your wife.
Oh my wife helped. Oh yeah, because she was my
test patient. You know. We talk about, you know, God
and the Lord. I used to joke, I said, but
God had me marry a woman who could teach me

(17:08):
what I needed to know because she had hormone problems,
she has stress problems, she had and so she was
my wife guinea pig, and so I could look at,
you know, what I needed to do for her. Also,
she's a doctor also, so we we have evolved together.
You know, she she's originally trained in psychiatry and family practice.

(17:33):
I've done I'm did obgy n. So yeah, we have
definitely evolved together. And I'll tell you the fact that
we have evolved professionally has also helped us evolve relationally.
I don't know when I'm going to do this podcast,
but I was going to do that this week. But
I want to talk about how I'm seeing all these couples.

(17:56):
This is a little bit off subject, but I'm going
to do this podcast. And since I'm talking about evolving
relationship with our relationship is that? Why did you know
that divorces after thirty years of marriage have almost doubled
or they have doubled since twenty since nineteen ninety. And

(18:18):
I know in my life, I've seen couples who've been
married for these long d races of time, all of
a sudden they get divorced and we're like, how can
you get divorced after thirty forty, you know, twenty thirty
years of marriage. Well, it's because they didn't evolve together.
Is that you know, they went through marriage, they went
through children, and now they have evolved into this new

(18:42):
stage of life. And sometimes you lose yourself in those
twenty or thirty years and now the kids are gone,
your parents are gone, and now it's just you two.
And if you haven't evolved together, you get this separation.
And people they think that if they go and get
a new relationship that that's going to help them, but

(19:04):
usually it doesn't. And it's because that they haven't evolved together.
They've kind of lived this separate life and a lot
of times the only thing that brought them together were
the children. And now when the children leave, they don't
have anything holding them together anymore. And sometimes it's due
to hormonal changes, is due to stress. So that's why

(19:25):
I'm getting back to my two books are your hormones
making you sick and stress. Usually those are the two
things that bring you apart. And if you don't understand
how to handle your hormones and handle stress, it can
lead to divorce. And I'm telling you divorce is I
haven't experienced it. I don't want to experience it. But
my patients tell me that divorces are stressful, and it's

(19:49):
probably one of the biggest stresses. And you don't need
that stress when you're fifty or sixty years old. I
don't think so, Taylor.

Speaker 3 (19:57):
Do you think as we get older, My mother used
to tell me this all the time. We look, we
don't have the kind of patience we had when we
were younger.

Speaker 4 (20:08):
You know, Yeah, I just don't think we tolerate as much.
You know, when you get older. I know, in my
life I have cut out some things that I probably
should have cut out a long time ago. Okay, I mean,
and I'm talking about relationships, and you know, things that
I thought were essential in my life, I found out

(20:31):
that they're really not essential. And I think when you
get you know, fifty years old, sixty years old, you know,
we kid about to get off my lawn kind of thing.
You know, the angry old man, get off my lawn,
But I think that's the extreme. But I know in
my life I had to I had to cut off

(20:51):
some relationships in order for me to evolve into what
I needed to be. And if you're not, I think,
if you're and your spouse aren't on that road together,
it can cause difficulty. Because I'll be honest with you.
Before I kind of made this shift, I could see
my wife and I like separating out. We weren't as

(21:12):
close as we needed to be. But then when we
got on this road together, we came back together. And
so I even talk about in these in the podcast
that I'm preparing, is that I was worried that I
was going to be a victim of that is that
because I was in a rut, she was kind of

(21:34):
in a rut. We really weren't expanding and evolving, and
that causes frustration. And my wife could see the frustration
in me. I could see the frustration in her, and
it caused some conflicts. But when you're determined and when
you are committed and it's a real death do you part,

(21:54):
You figure out a way to reconnect. And that's what
we've done. That's something I need to share with people
is that sometimes the voice is not the answer. Now,
if you're in an abusive relationship, no doubt, but if
you've seen that you separated, if you can find some
kind of connection, some kind of common goal, some kind
of common interest, like you had when you had your kids.

(22:15):
The common interest was to educate the kids, make them independent.
So you had that common goal. A lot of times
when you become empty nesters, you don't have that goal anymore.
And my wife and I we found another goal, something
else to excite us, because we all need a spark
in life. We all need something to excite us to

(22:36):
make us want to get get up in the morning
and get together with our spouse or whatever. And so
I found that I found that spark in this and
that spark has kind of overflowed into our relationship and
made our relationship even after thirty nine years. I'm going
to tell you, my wife and our relationship is better
than it's ever been. So again, that's the.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
Exact obviously, think I think teaching is your spark too, doctor.

Speaker 4 (23:03):
Oh it is, you know. Let me tell you. Let
me tell you my my the chairman of my department
in ob G y N who I really He wrote
the textbook on G y N surgery. So he was
my chairman. And in my fourth year, when I was
about to leave the residency, he said, doctor Taylor, you're
a teacher. And when it said yeah, and he said

(23:25):
early that early, and I said, no, I don't want to.
I don't want to. I was thinking I need. He
wanted me to be a professor in medical school and
I don't. I don't want to do that. I know
that's not what I want to do. But he was right.
People see in you what you can become that you
can't see. And I remember that he told me that,

(23:47):
and I was I rejected it, but he was absolutely right.
I am a teacher and I am a communicator. Communicators
make simple, make difficult things seem simple. Educators make make
simple things seem difficult. Okay, so so.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
Yeah, you that podcast. Tell people when your podcast is.

Speaker 4 (24:08):
Well, it's it's nine o'clock every Wednesday. It's a it's
a fifty minute podcast. And if you want to know
more about vitamin C and cancer, uh, go to Asless
Blueprint podcast dot com. All of my podcasts are there.
You can see it live on YouTube on my YouTube channel,
and on that Ageless Blueprint podcast dot com and all

(24:31):
of my past podcast and the one that I just
did right before we get this show. It's right there.
But yeah, yep, I'm I'm a teacher. I have to
just come to grips with that.

Speaker 3 (24:43):
And we run this show every week. That's how important
this show is. We're on ninety different platforms, so many
ways to watch and listen to the show. Doctor Taylor.
You know what, someone just wrote that you and I
seemed to click. And we've been doing this for a

(25:04):
while now, I feel like I know you so well.
We've never met in person, but we have some I mean,
the Lord is important to us and and I just
believe that you touch somebody every week. And I got
to tell you, I have never felt so blessed. I've

(25:25):
been doing this for fifteen years. I have never felt
so blessed to have a show like yours. And we
don't know what we're going to be.

Speaker 5 (25:35):
Talking about next month, but you know what the God
believe is. Someone just wrote, why don't you do a
show on deed Talks And I bet you it'll probably
come up and we're talking about cancer in vitamin C.

Speaker 4 (25:50):
Yeah, so let me just say this one thing. You know,
my dad was a Baptist minis So one of the
songs that sing is that if I can touch somebody
along the way, than my living shall not be in vain.
So all I need to do is touch one person
on every podcast, and my living will not be in vain.
So that's my goal. You're amazing. I love you all right,

(26:13):
thank you. We'll see you next month. Thank you, doctor Taylor. Uh,
We're going to go to a quick break and we'll
be right back.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Thanks for tuning in today to the Ask the Expert
Show on the W four CY Radio and Talk for
TV tue in next week and every week to hear
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