Episode Transcript
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Speaker 4 (01:51):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, what condition condition.
Speaker 5 (02:00):
This morning?
Speaker 6 (02:00):
And with the sundown shining?
Speaker 7 (02:03):
And I found my mind in a brown paper peg.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
But then.
Speaker 8 (02:16):
I tripped on a clouding fairly eight miles high high.
Speaker 6 (02:20):
I told mine back on.
Speaker 7 (02:22):
A jagged sky.
Speaker 8 (02:24):
I just dropped in to see what condition my condition
was in.
Speaker 7 (02:31):
Yeah, yeah, my condition, my condition.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
Welcome everybody to doctor Krupa's Natural Health Towers. It is
October twenty second, and uh we are trying to broadcast
almost live from several locations. Who knows, but we do
have Susy and Bill and producer Steve and myself all
(03:07):
here tonight.
Speaker 6 (03:09):
Sissy, if you want to say hello, go ahead, good.
Speaker 5 (03:13):
Evening everyone, hally folks.
Speaker 3 (03:18):
Alrighty, that's the gang, and producer Steve is behind the curtain,
and I've told him many times if he ever wants
to jump in, just do it so you never know,
he may surprise us.
Speaker 6 (03:30):
We got some really cool looking stuff on the place,
Mats as I call him on Rumble's design, pretty neat
looking all right, Well, a couple of things.
Speaker 3 (03:43):
We were talking about my patient who had the stroke
and has fallen a few times, but overall doing pretty
good working from home as we learned how to use
the computer with that hand not cooperating quite as well.
And I was saying last week that they were making
(04:08):
it very difficult. That kept saying, first she's going to
be working from home. Then somebody said, your claim was denied.
But she never filed a claim. And as it turned out,
one of her supervisors, who she thought was a really
(04:30):
nice person and a professional I called to give an
update about the falling so they knew case that might.
Speaker 6 (04:39):
Help them with their decision.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
Well, this person did not have the decency or the
professionalism and probably couldn't spell. Supervisor with two dictionaries and
a half hour, contacted a boss above her to contact
the patient and say, have the doctor call them.
Speaker 6 (05:00):
They can't do anything.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
And so the patient wrote back and said, hey, the
doctor was given an update.
Speaker 6 (05:08):
Was not asking them to do anything. She said, from the.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
Very beginning, we've never asked for anything, just a courtesy
to let you know that they can't go to work,
they can't drive, and the falling could be an issue,
and we don't think you'd like to.
Speaker 6 (05:25):
Have that on your deal at work.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
So anyway, this gentleman talked to the patient and he said,
I'll make sure the head of HR knows the story
when they get back there on vacation. So the head
of HR came back. He explained everything, and the head
of HR called the other day and said, in fact,
(05:50):
I think it was late Monday, and said, hey, I've
looked at all this, no problem.
Speaker 6 (05:56):
You just keep working from home. So we said, thank god.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
All that stress and misery and kept acting like she
was filing acclaim and they were doing her some favor,
but then told her, no, your claim was denied. So
she thought, well she was getting fired. She was a
nervous wreck. The stress was unbelievable. And then we found
(06:21):
out that another employee, who she knows very well, who
lives pretty far from the old office, has a different boss.
And that employee said, if you guys are going to
make me come back to the office, I'm going to
(06:43):
turn in my resignation and find another job. And so
that employee did find another job that led her work
from home, but her boss, a little sharper, I guess,
went straight to HR and said, hey, we want to keeper,
and so they kept.
Speaker 6 (07:02):
Her and no big deal, no claims.
Speaker 3 (07:06):
There wasn't even a health issue there that she just
doesn't want to return.
Speaker 6 (07:10):
To the office, so they said, okay.
Speaker 3 (07:13):
So I guess it just makes a difference on when
you have a supervisor that knows how to make a
decision or a supervisor that passes the buck, because they
sent this case, made a case out of it, and
sent it to a third party company and probably paid
thousands of dollars and all of us went through a
(07:37):
ton of paperwork and headaches and mailing and faxing, and
it was a nightmare. And as it turned out, they
never should have done any of it, because the HR
lady looked at it like she did that employee that
didn't want to come back to the office and took
care of it.
Speaker 6 (07:56):
So I'm grateful for that. And I wanted to give
you guys the update because you had to listen to
all that last week, And she does a wonderful job
from home and they love her work, so everything worked
out good. So I'm very happy for that.
Speaker 3 (08:12):
All Right, tonight, we're talking about medicine cabinet at home,
what kind of things you ought to keep and what
you should do. And this came up because there's a
commercial on TV and they're advertising this wellness kit.
Speaker 6 (08:29):
And this wellness.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Kit has antibiotics, anti viral drugs, hydroxychloro quin, it's got
all the bad stuff.
Speaker 6 (08:41):
But they did include.
Speaker 3 (08:43):
Directions on how to take everything, and it's very expensive,
and I thought that's sad. They got people thinking this
is a good thing. And of course the people advertising
it were two mds. So I thought, you know what,
we need to give people some ideas on doing a
(09:04):
true medicine cabinet that is not full of things that
are worse than what you've got when you're sick, and
for everyday life, and this thing's in general. So what
I was thinking about was I like to have a
couple different things on a regular basis and not take
(09:26):
the same thing every day to keep your immune system healthy.
So like right now my cabinet, I've got imuplex and
I've got epimune, two different, two different immune system boosters,
(09:46):
and they both have different things about them and they're
just a wonderful Both of them are wonderful products. Then
for everyday life, I think you need cardioplus for your heart,
arteries and circulation. I think you need simplex F if
(10:07):
you're a woman, and simplex M if you're a man.
This addresses adrenals, thyroid, pituitary, ovs, or testes, depending on
what you are. And in this modern era, there's a
lot of people out there that don't know what they are,
so I don't know what to tell them. That's a
(10:29):
good way to keep the hormones balance and your body
working naturally like it should. And then say you get
an affection of some kind viral, bacterial.
Speaker 6 (10:42):
Fungal, we don't know. Well, there's several things.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
I like to keep garlic, either raw garlic or garlic
from many herb or standard process. They both have garlic
and ones in capsule and ones in the tablet form.
And I like garlic because it's anti fungal, anti bacterial,
(11:09):
and anti viral, so you got a lot of good things.
Plus it's good for circulation. So that's a nice thing
to have up there. And then god forbid you get
one of them colds or flus or one of them
things coming through. I always like to have conduplex, dimex
(11:31):
and andigraphists now condoplex and andographists kind of are a pair.
They go together, they work better together. And then dimex
is a separate issue. And there is some dimex and
contoplex but not at the same level. So sometimes I'll
choose dimex, and then sometimes we choose contoplex and andographis together,
(11:55):
and sometimes just one or the other. Just depends on
how your body responds. So these these are great basis.
Now a lot of people will say, well, how about
a multi vitamin. Well, Standard Process has lots of things
and many RB also that you could consider kind of
(12:17):
a multi but probably the number one thing is Catalan
and at Catlyn and it was the first product that
doctor Lee, who started Standard Process, came up with in
nineteen twenty nine, I believe, And it's just a wonderful,
(12:41):
wonderful product. And what he did is he took all
these whole foods that people probably weren't eating back then
and he made it into a tablet. And just to
give you an example about cattlean, it's got a mushroom powder,
wheat term, liver powder, desicated spleen for the adrenals, and
(13:06):
the spleen desicated kidney desicated adrenal separate rice brand that's
where you get a lot of good be vitamins like
with nutritional yeasts. So I mean listened to calcium lactate
peavine juice. This is one of doctor Lee's favorite for
vitamin e alfalfa juice and carrot powder.
Speaker 6 (13:30):
And they found out later back.
Speaker 3 (13:32):
When he created this, nobody really knew what he had done.
He just noticed that when he started feeding into patients
they all got better.
Speaker 6 (13:42):
And like the carrot.
Speaker 3 (13:44):
They found out that the carrot powder from organic natural
carrots had more than two hundred known nutrients and phyto
nutrients that were in the carrot. So God only knew
what he did back then, and he said many times,
we have no clue about all the things that are
(14:05):
in it, because in nineteen twenty nine they didn't know
how to test for a lot of vitamins and they
didn't even know what all the vitamins were. But he
knew by putting all these raw foods together and processing
it is to not kill the good stuff that when
he fed it to people, no matter what the issue,
(14:29):
people got better. So catalan is a really good and
must have on your shelf. And for a lot of
people who don't want to spend much money and don't
want to really stock their shelf. I would suggest catile
in is number one, and then anything after that in
(14:51):
a way of immune stuff and things to fight flu
and cold and all that stuff.
Speaker 6 (14:58):
Would be important. But catalan is a good start. And
then allergies.
Speaker 3 (15:06):
Many many people suffer with allergies, and my number one
first choice is alerplex by standard process. It's got new metrophin,
which is the protomorphagen for good lung and so you've
got that going for you. It's got cataplex ac to
(15:29):
fight infection.
Speaker 6 (15:31):
Uh, it's got I'm trying to remember every little thing
I think it's got.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
Let's take a look here that well, be sure, and
I don't have to sound totally crazy. Let's see good
old aliplex. Sometimes I don't know the alphabet, so if
you hear me taking longer than.
Speaker 6 (15:58):
Usual, that's why. All right. It's got neumotrophin for the lungs.
Speaker 3 (16:03):
It's got drenotrophin for the adrenals, very important when you're
fighting allergies, are sick, cataplex ac to help fight infection,
and the natural vitamin C very important for infection.
Speaker 6 (16:17):
And the adrenals.
Speaker 3 (16:19):
And then it's got beta call for the liver and
gall bladder, and it's got ntrnex, which is a they
call it a natural antihistamine, but it's not really like that.
It kind of helps make your liver work better by
being bigger because the problem is we don't want to
shut down all the histamine a lot of times that's important.
(16:43):
So with the intronex you help the liver do its
job kind of. So Alerplex is really good. There's another
product from many.
Speaker 6 (16:52):
Herb that's good. It's called alleur Go Allerco and it
it's got a lot of great stuff. And then they
have sinus Forte. You can always put some of that.
Some people are always having a lot of sinus issues,
so you know you can you can do that.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
But the Allerplex number one and then that it's a
L L E R G CO so allerge Co. That's
a Many Herb allergy and respiratory infections and asthma, all
that good stuff. So if you if you're fighting asthma
or allergies, Alerplex are the Allergo or both great and
(17:37):
then there's sinus Forte. If you're having a lot of
sinus issues and you need something more.
Speaker 6 (17:42):
Specific but.
Speaker 3 (17:45):
There's a lot of things you can put on your
shelf and hope you never need them. Like if you
got a lot of lung issues when you get sick,
most people that get the cold or the flu, the
last frontier is their lungs. That's where go last, and
it's that's where it leaves last. And we have things
(18:07):
like Restco from Betti Herb, Polmaco from Betty Herb, Bronc
effect from.
Speaker 6 (18:15):
Betti Herb, very very good to have. During the phony pandemic,
I had a lot of people trying different.
Speaker 3 (18:23):
Ones depending on what was going on with them. And
so those are some good things. And you know a
lot of the stuff I tell people, don't go out
and spend about a bunch of money all at once.
Buy a little bit along the way and stock your shelf,
and then if something comes up. A lot of my
(18:46):
patients from all over the country would pick up the
phone and call me and they'd say, hey, Doc, I
got this going on.
Speaker 6 (18:55):
Here's what I got on the shelf. What do you suggest?
Speaker 3 (18:58):
And then we worked through it that and so if
you've got things on the shelf and you need them, now,
that's great. I can tell you how to take them
and you don't have to be sick very long. And
you usually if they've got the things and we try them,
they get well pretty fast.
Speaker 6 (19:17):
Some things linger longer than others.
Speaker 3 (19:19):
It's a lot of things that have got to do
with stress and anxiety and life. So you know, we
have to address all those things. And sometimes we get
into like say you're dealing with a lot of stress
and anxiety, we might try Nevaton Forte by mini or
we might try a mental tranquilizer by standard process. They
(19:41):
have mentrand the weakest men checks the middle of the road,
and then they have ar checks for the guy that
is about ready to blow his stack. You've probably seen
them on TV at the so called protest.
Speaker 6 (19:57):
They need minchecks or art checks.
Speaker 3 (20:02):
So pretty simple to stock a medicine cabinet, and there's
a lot of like if you looked at my medicine cabinet,
you'd say, oh my god. And I just tell you
I'm a super hypochondriac and I have to take everything
for everything, But no, I.
Speaker 6 (20:20):
Try to stock it up.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
Sometimes family members will get sick and ask me for something.
In the old days, I kept in office in a
nice inventory and I had everything you can imagine.
Speaker 6 (20:32):
But I don't do that anymore.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
I don't have a full blown office. I have a
smaller home office, and so I don't stock the cabinet
like I used to because one, that's.
Speaker 6 (20:43):
Very expensive, and two, most of the patients.
Speaker 3 (20:46):
Can buy online now and we have different ways to
do that, so it doesn't make a lot of sense
for me to stock things to sell. But I do
keep a lot of things for me and my.
Speaker 6 (20:59):
Family and my pets. So if you're worried about your pets,
there's a few things you could stock for them.
Speaker 3 (21:07):
But I give my pets a lot of the things
that I take, and one of those I've always given
the pets Catalan.
Speaker 6 (21:17):
And I have a little little dog.
Speaker 3 (21:19):
That is getting up there in years and hit the
eye sight and all that's not like it used to be,
so I use iPLEX and Cardio Plus and try to
help him with all that the best we can. So
there's a lot of things you can do, though. Just
main reason I had this tonight was so many people
(21:41):
are watching TV and they see that stuff on TV,
that wellness kit and two mds talking like you gotta
have this, and it's very expensive and there's nothing in
there that I would ever give you. Now, if you
want to buy that, that's your business.
Speaker 6 (22:01):
You can do anything you like.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
But if you ask for my opinion, I would say
it's bad for you, and I wouldn't give you any
of that stuff no matter what, because I know it
in many cases it's going to be worse than whatever
problem you're taking it for.
Speaker 6 (22:20):
And I've seen that happen way too many times when
people were taking medications and they would.
Speaker 3 (22:26):
Tell me, well, I'm allergic to that. Listen, No, not really.
Your body was just telling me it doesn't belong in you.
Speaker 6 (22:33):
It's not an allergy. It's full blown get out of here.
You don't wong hear. And that's just what it's doing,
all right, Susie anything.
Speaker 9 (22:44):
Yeah, that just reminds me of being prepared for the
faith pandemic, and you know how how beneficial that was.
And I had ordered all of the suggested that we
have at our website. I think it's under resources doc
(23:07):
crouper dot com. And uh, I just had it, you
know in a look like a little emergency box kind
of like break the glass, you know, if there's an
emergency kind of a thing, and go and behold I
got a call from a friend who's son I was
so incoherent and it's so sick that he was incoherent,
(23:33):
and she came over, gave it to her. She paid
me for it, and she sent it next day air
and like a girlfriend, I think, picked it up and
I had written up all of the instructions and stuck it,
you know, in there with it. But yeah, the Catalan
(23:55):
I can't say enough about Catalan, and those who have
listened for a while knows I'm a huge fan of
contuplex and andigraphis and for some reason fix. If you
mix that in, especially on me, it all becomes the
perfect puzzle pieces.
Speaker 3 (24:17):
Yeah, and what we find out is like I had
a family of three, a grown son and a mother
and a father, and each one of them needed different
things a little bit in different dosages.
Speaker 6 (24:29):
So you just never know. So it's good to have
a few extra things in the cabinet bill.
Speaker 5 (24:40):
Yeah, that's it's a I've been thinking about this the
last few days too, book show about I was doing
a little looking around on the internet at some basic
first aid kits to have around the house because there's
you know, everybody hands band aids or stuff. But about
a week ago, I needed a little larger kind of
(25:05):
a situation, you know, a substantial A substantial cut was
a glass cut that a band aid would not have
worked on. Having. Having an essential kind of basic first
aid a ground is I think important. And then to
(25:27):
get into your aspect of it of you know, you
take care of the emergency first and then you begin
the healing process. But it's you know, it looks at
some of these first aid home first aid kids and
we're talking hundreds of dollars, several hundred dollars, which is
more than most people have any idea what to do
with them. But it's important, I think, to be able
(25:49):
to have the resource around to take care of some
physical emergency at least until if you need to to
have get into an emergency room. Were that kind of
you know, is serious enough injury to that's the requirement,
but to but to follow up as soon as possible
with all of the UH maturity you were talking about
(26:10):
and start the healing process.
Speaker 6 (26:11):
From me and so I.
Speaker 3 (26:14):
That sounds good, Susie UH and Huntley put together a
really good UH package like that, SUSI, you want tell
everybody about it.
Speaker 9 (26:24):
Yeah, And I think the name of the company has changed,
because it's funny that a lot of people are talking
about this. Steven was talking about him and that they
wanted over three hundred dollars, you know, for some kind
of emergency kit with like compression bandages, and you know,
(26:46):
a little over three hundred dollars, he said, And I'm going, oh, no, no.
And so back when you know, Obama was in office
and we were all convinced, you know that the sky
was going to fall, and you know, civil war was
gonna take place, and we just decided to be prudent,
you know, and gather up supplies. And I doing some
(27:10):
internet research and I found this company. At the time,
it was e MS I think Emergency Medical Supplies, but
the name's changed, and I'll look it up here in
a minute. But you can go in instead of buying
(27:30):
a kit that might have things that you don't necessarily need,
you can build your own kit. Now. We built a great,
big one and we ended up getting like a green
Kelly green whatever, army green duffel bag at Walmart, and
(27:51):
compression bandages and all different sizes of steriles, gauzes in
and different size you know, galls, pads and other bandages,
alcohol wipes that come individually wrapped or kind of a
(28:11):
good thing to have. They're right there, they're in your kit,
and you know, easy to grab and use. Stery strips.
Not everybody knows about scary strips. You don't always have
to run, you know, to the emergency room and get stitches.
Stitches cause in my opinion, scarring. And so you can
(28:35):
get different size scary strips and you know, you clean
the wound really really good. If it's deep enough that
you think you might need to go to the emergency room,
you definitely need to clean it good. Then you know,
dry it good. I mean you're going to control the bleeding,
and then you can start placing those stery strips cross
(29:01):
the the cut, the wood, the wound and basically you're
just bringing that that cut together. Now I'm gonna say,
because this is on the radio, if you second guessing yourself,
go to the emergency room and get stitches. We've used
(29:24):
the stairy strips quite quite a few times, and but
it's a personal call. If you don't feel right, go
to the emergency room. And so you just go and uh,
I'll find the name of that company. You can peruse it.
I mean, we found oh what do you what do
(29:45):
you call those? What? Well, we found tourniquets where we
got that? And I don't know when you start looking
through the list of everything that's available, and I think
this company pretty much caters to like, you know, stocking
an ambulance or ems or you know whatever. And they
(30:12):
also talk about things being military grade. So, for instance,
when I was looking for that website for Steve, and
I just went and looked to see, you know what
are compression bandage is going for now and there are
just a few cents over thirty two dollars. However, I got,
(30:33):
you know, a a compression bandage when you needed is
worth thirty two dollars. You know you might buy one
of those. You're not going to be dealing with a
whole platoon, hopefully with a gunshot wound. So I like
to build your own first aid kit over some of
(30:57):
the I don't know, some of the junk that comes
from the jugs from from the drug stores.
Speaker 5 (31:06):
And I can jump in on that. Yeah, you're right
about that building your own because the other ones have
a lot of stuff that you'll never use. But one
of the things I've noticed that I didn't notice it
wasn't aware of some years ago when I was involved
with the sort of stuff that they have, I had
dying wipes, just like the alcohol wipes. If you put
(31:27):
alcohol on a cut, it gets your attention, you know,
it really likes you. But I I a dying will
will keep that wound very clean and sanitize until until
you can get to one of the necessary not necessarily
having to go to emergency room, but one of the
standalone clinics that will do stitches or take care of
(31:49):
some of these not such serious wounds. And they're a
lot cheaper, right And.
Speaker 9 (31:57):
And one of the other products they have as hydrogen
peroxide in a spray bottle. You know, when you're you're
in a hurry, and it just makes more sense to
have something that's you know, easier to use. Another thing
you need is a dedicated pair of scissors, you know,
(32:21):
in that uh emergency first aid kit, maybe even a
couple of them, and just you know what, whatever else
you think that that you may need. It wouldn't be horrible,
you know, to throw a bottle of cardiac cardioplus in there,
(32:41):
at least a small one, you know, in the event
that you were dealing with a cardiac thing.
Speaker 6 (32:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (32:48):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (32:49):
And those Verry strips, you've got a lot of people
call them and their products butterfly bandages.
Speaker 6 (32:56):
So if you haven't heard the name.
Speaker 5 (32:59):
I don't think you. I don't think you can call
them Faery strips anymore.
Speaker 3 (33:04):
H And Sydney, I'm really disappointed. I didn't hear anywhere
in there about emergency Scotch, cigar beer, none of that.
Speaker 9 (33:13):
Well, that's why the custom built is the best. I mean,
you know, if you don't have iodine or alcohol, but
you've got ever clear, you know, pour some of that
on it work. And if you want to get really hardcore.
And I've watched this and you know, with one eye
(33:33):
closed you can learn how to suit or someone Oh
yeah yeah, and we and we know how much Doc
likes wound care and stitches and cutting and things like that.
Speaker 5 (33:49):
Yeah, you know, I was looking looking too that if
if one of the I look at the American Red
Cross website and they have got a list of a
very big basic stuff to put in into a home
a home kit, and you know, you know, you look
at that. Yeah I don't need this, but this is
a good idea or I need you out two of these.
(34:10):
I don't need it, yeah, but at least it gives
you some information to start with. You go to a
drug store or or target or someplace and look at
their first age. Their shelfs full of stuff. Who knows
what any of this thing is. So if you got
a list of something like like the Red Cross has
got out, you don't have to do all of their stuff,
but at least it gives you a vocabulary.
Speaker 6 (34:31):
Yeah, that's a good idea. All right, guys, well we
are at break time. In fact, I went a little past.
Speaker 3 (34:38):
Sorry cuckoo. Anyway, this is doctor Krupa's Natural Health Ours.
We've got Susie, Bill, producer Steve and myself. Please listen
to our sponsors and we'll be right back.
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Speaker 6 (36:20):
To be amazed. I'll play him, the man, said a woman.
(36:43):
I heard.
Speaker 7 (36:44):
It's prapping tournament your love and so on.
Speaker 6 (36:47):
Turnround, let him go, Dennis.
Speaker 7 (36:49):
If you're gonna wat your stealth or you letting get
out of your seven, someone's gonna tell your life, cut
you down a side. Don't know me like that, don't
like that?
Speaker 6 (37:01):
Well, I love your baby to me like some me
like that.
Speaker 7 (37:07):
Don't tell me like that, And some.
Speaker 2 (37:10):
Day I need you baby.
Speaker 6 (37:11):
You don't tell me like that.
Speaker 7 (37:14):
Listen, Mitigan, you see maybe you will by me if.
Speaker 8 (37:18):
You were in a public guy, give you someone else
to try, either to watch this down or you're gonna
get hurt. You'll saf So I'm gonna tell you cut
your on the side like that.
Speaker 7 (37:32):
Can't talk to me like that. Well, I love you, beater,
don't don't don't don't don't to me like that.
Speaker 4 (37:40):
Don't know me like that?
Speaker 6 (37:42):
What if I meaning a beaver? All right, we are
back and don't do him like that. Shame on her.
Speaker 3 (37:54):
Welcome back to doctor Crooper's Natural Health Hours. We got
Susie producer Steve behind the curtain and me and we
just were talking about emergical emergency medical supplies and Susy
posted some stuff in the rumble chat, so you guys
(38:14):
can check that out.
Speaker 6 (38:16):
She put together a pretty good package.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
And saved a lot of money doing it that way.
And before that, we talked about your home medicine cabinet,
what products you might need, and there's always different ones
for different people.
Speaker 6 (38:34):
During the phony pandemic.
Speaker 3 (38:38):
I had families all around the country calling, and one
family in particular not in the Houston area. Three of
them all got sick at the same time, and the
grown son who was visiting and the mother got well
a lot quicker, but they followed my direction and it's
(39:00):
real well, and they weren't taking any other things. But
the father was taking a large bottle of what he
was told was vitamin see because he knew a nurse
in California who worked for a doctor and said these
were good, and it was all the scarbage ascid.
Speaker 6 (39:19):
It was terrible. And he was taking hydroxychloroquin because he
heard it on the internet and heard it had to
be good because they had it. And so anyway, once
I got him to stop taking all the junk and
explain to him what was going on, because I can't
tell them to stop.
Speaker 3 (39:38):
I can tell them I wouldn't give that to you,
and it's bad for you, and you need to make
a decision. But anyway, once he did all that and
we got him back on the right products, he was
well in a few days. But it got so bad
that he was very incoherent.
Speaker 6 (39:54):
The wife was so fed up. She said, he won't
listen to nothing, and when he gets like this, nobody
can help him. So he did let me talk to him.
We walked him off the edge and got him back
to healthy. And what I found is around the.
Speaker 3 (40:11):
Country when people would call, a lot of them already
had some things on the shelf which helped a lot,
and I'd say, let's try this and start that, and
everybody got better. The only people that took a little
longer to get well, we're the ones that had Google doctored.
(40:31):
Are listening to the news or the internet, and we're
taking products that were bad for them. And a lot
of people were taking a ton of a scarbic acid
thinking it was fighting the sea and it is not,
and it did not help them.
Speaker 6 (40:47):
And you know, you.
Speaker 3 (40:51):
Spend a lot of money and need to get nothing
good for you, So kind of nice to do this
stuff and have your shelfs. I have so many things
on my shelves that one whole section of the cabinet
is nothing but uh things that me and the family
and the pet stake.
Speaker 6 (41:11):
All right, Uh, I guess it's time.
Speaker 3 (41:15):
Is he anything before we go to that, before we
go to our wonderful jokes and such?
Speaker 6 (41:21):
No, you're not, You're already laughing. That's how funny they are.
Still anything?
Speaker 5 (41:28):
Yeah, I got a kind of something I've been thinking
about and maybe it's gonna isn't something that can be
answered real quickly. But you mentioned missioned many times taking cardioplus,
and we should be taking this is I don't know
quite how to graize.
Speaker 9 (41:48):
This is.
Speaker 5 (41:52):
Just continued taking of something like that reduce our body's
own ability to correct an issue. Do we create a
kind of dependence on like cardioplus is so that if
we stop taking it, we're all of a sudden going
to drift back because our heart isn't going to work right.
(42:12):
You see where I'm going with that is this is
this going to be a lifelong price? I take A
lot of people have a product. Is this company's going
to be taking the rest of my life?
Speaker 3 (42:20):
So I would like that you were taking it the
rest of your life, but not the way you were
looking at it. The nice thing about what we deal
with is we're basically feeding your body with the things
that were needed since the beginning of time to keep
things healthy. And in many days and many generations, the
(42:46):
food took care of a lot of that.
Speaker 6 (42:48):
The people knew.
Speaker 3 (42:48):
How to garden, they knew how to ranch, they knew
how to farm, they knew how to rotate crops, They
didn't use chemicals and pesticides and poisons and hormone. But
to your to your question, it was excellent about a
lot of the drugs because a lot of people are
(43:10):
on certain drugs, and first off, they probably lose their
effectiveness after a little while that the body can get
rid of stuff, and if you stop taking them, they
may have covered up a problem. Uh, And you don't
know about it until you stop taking that stuff.
Speaker 6 (43:32):
Whereas with the.
Speaker 5 (43:33):
Cardinals, the question that that somebody asked me is you
know if you take if if you do like the
pharmaceutical stuff and you quit taking some of this stuff,
it can it can make things worse. Yeah, Well, and
I said, yeah, it's because it's not natural product.
Speaker 6 (43:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (43:49):
The nice thing with our products is we're always feeding
the body and helping it maintain and so like perfect exams.
There was a doctor who had a heart patient and
he'd been to all the cardiologists and all the stuff,
and they were killing him with medications. So he went
(44:13):
to this other doctor who thinks like I do, and
the doctor put him on a heart protocol and one
of the things was cardioplus And the guy came back
a month later, which he wasn't supposed to wait a month,
and he said, I don't think your protocol is working
very well. And so the doctor looked at it and
(44:35):
he said, man, this has never failed me because it's
all natural and it's feeding your body.
Speaker 6 (44:41):
There's something you're not telling me.
Speaker 3 (44:44):
So he went through the list and he got the
cardioplus and he said, are you chewing the cardioplus? The
guy said no, that stuff tastes terrible, and the doctor said,
well that's your problem. It's about less than fifty percent
of effective because when you chew it, it gets into
their bloodstream right away and we don't have to worry
(45:06):
about digestion.
Speaker 6 (45:07):
Or the liver grabbing it immediately. And he said, if.
Speaker 3 (45:11):
You chew it, it's never let me down.
Speaker 6 (45:15):
It's never let a patient down.
Speaker 3 (45:17):
So what happens like cardioplus has got the heart protomorphagen.
That means you've got the good cells for the heart
tissue to regenerate and heal. So if there's damage, the
longer you're taking it, the more the heart's healing. It's
got natural coenzyme Q ten, very very important, and all
(45:41):
the poor people that are taking cholesterol drugs, the coenzyme
Q ten is shot. So them heart doctors are prescribing
two hundred milligrams of coenzyme Q ten and God only
knows where they get that from.
Speaker 6 (45:57):
But it's got the heart protamart. It's got.
Speaker 3 (46:04):
Vitamin We would call it B, but standard process calls
it vitamin G. Is have to be vitamins, the ones
that phaso dilate, So when you chew the cardio plus,
it's opening up your blood supply. It phaso dilates all
(46:24):
those vessels so that they can get.
Speaker 6 (46:27):
Blood to where it needs to be.
Speaker 3 (46:29):
And I've had patients call me and say, I remember
you talking about cardioplus and chewing it if I ever
felt pain in my chest or any problem, no matter
what it was, And they would say that was one
gentleman in the middle of the night, he started feeling
just pains, and he got up and he chewed a
(46:52):
bunch of cardio plus, and then about an hour later
he chewed more, and he said, whatever was wrong, it
fixed it. And so he chewed cardioplus all the time.
But that's the nice thing is that the things that
we take, if you stop taking them, hopefully you've healed
(47:12):
a lot and you're getting some good stuff in your food.
But just stopping them is not going to be a
problem unless you're deficient in something or you're eating poorly.
But it's nice to continue like cardioplus forever. That way,
your heart and arteries and circulation has got good things. Now,
(47:36):
you don't say if you came to me and you
were a heart patient that went to a cardiologist and
he wanted to put you on.
Speaker 6 (47:44):
All that bad stuff, Well.
Speaker 3 (47:46):
We might do it more dosages a day for a
period of time, and so we start getting you at
a better level where you're healthier, and then we try
to back off. So a lot of I know now
they might take cardioplus once a day, some take it
twice a day, and some have still taken it three
(48:08):
times a day because they believe in it. So everybody's
going to be a little different. But yeah, that's a
really good point, Bill. I never thought about the fact
that I'm not telling people you can stop stuff. You know,
it's not going to be like at the going to
the drug store and taking their things. And also, cardioplus
(48:30):
has got cataplex C, which is very important for artery health,
and it's got cataplex e two, which oxygenates the tissue
and the blood. That's very important. So longer you take
it probably better. They recommended for high blood pressure, congestive
(48:52):
heart failure, angina, any neuromuscular disorders, you know, any thing
like that. Very good for muscle because the heart is
a muscle. So if you're taking cardio plus, it helps
with all your muscle tone and all your muscle circulation
and blood flow.
Speaker 6 (49:13):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (49:14):
Very good stuff. So yeah, cool question. I'm glad you
brought that up, because I forget that I don't always
explain that as good as I should. Maybe, so I
appreciate it.
Speaker 5 (49:27):
No, that's that's true. That's exactly what I wanted wanted
you to say. So that's that's fine. That's as I say.
It's it's something that I think we you know, it's
the pharmaceutical industry and the way that we've been brought
up listening to this stuff for most of our lives.
It's got us into a way of approaching these things
(49:48):
that may not may not work so good with natural
products and or may maybe is too much or maybe
it's too you know, so we don't know. And I
think if anything that we can get information about that,
it gets us on a better pathway. It's going to
be time really well spent.
Speaker 3 (50:07):
Yeah, And I always tell everybody, They'll say, is that
gonna bother.
Speaker 6 (50:11):
With my medication?
Speaker 3 (50:13):
And I'll say no, But your medication is bothering your
whole body, and it's causing a lot of problems. So
nothing we're giving you is gonna be anything that you
have to worry about from that point of view. But
you do have to worry about the medications causing problems
and depleting stuff. All right, Well, let's go to a
couple of funny things. Sus He was laughing just at
(50:35):
the thought of the jokes, and I got I got
one for you here, Susy. This is this is something
I could I could relate to for a woman doing this.
Speaker 6 (50:49):
Husband and wife are arguing on a road trip.
Speaker 3 (50:53):
I'm sure that's never happened to anybody, And the whole
road trip is this big one argument and just agreement
all the way.
Speaker 6 (51:03):
And they're out in.
Speaker 3 (51:03):
The countryside and they pass a large trench full of jackasses,
evidently as a rancher, and he's raising jackasses. And the
husband looks over at his wife and he said, relatives
of yours, and she said.
Speaker 6 (51:25):
Yeah, in lass. I thought that was great.
Speaker 3 (51:34):
Here's one from the dark web, Susie, since you brought
that up one time. Why is insurance higher for gay men.
Speaker 6 (51:46):
Auto insurance?
Speaker 3 (51:48):
Mh, Well, it's because they're always being rear ended. Oh Jesus,
I know I heard that.
Speaker 6 (52:00):
I said, I gotta tell that one, even though it's terrible,
all right.
Speaker 5 (52:07):
You know, eral quickly douck. You know, when I live
in California, we used to call those kinds of accident
in San Francisco recks.
Speaker 6 (52:17):
That's funny, all right.
Speaker 3 (52:18):
So a husband comes home from work and he comes
in the door and he tells his wife, I am
the man of the house. And when I walk in
that door, I expect a hot meal, and then I
expect you to bring me my slippers. And while I'm
(52:39):
watching ESPN Sports, I want you to run my bath.
Speaker 6 (52:44):
And then when I'm.
Speaker 3 (52:45):
Done with that bath, guess who's going to be dressing
me and combing my hair?
Speaker 6 (52:51):
My hair, little lady. And she looks at him and
she said, the funeral director. I could picture that happening.
And here's one.
Speaker 3 (53:08):
Bill would know more about this because he played in
Argon at the church.
Speaker 6 (53:12):
But this young kid was asking.
Speaker 3 (53:17):
Is mom, how come there's so many elderly people at church?
Speaker 6 (53:25):
And the mom said, they're cramming for finals. Josh, thank
you for the dark Web, fundy stuff, funny stuff. Yeah.
The the insurance one was I didn't like that choke,
but I had to tell it once I read it,
(53:46):
I had to tell it. All right, anything, Susie. We're
almost at break now.
Speaker 9 (53:52):
I'm less speechless.
Speaker 2 (53:55):
Bill.
Speaker 3 (53:57):
Oh good, I, uh, did you live in San Francisco
when you were out there or did you just hear that?
Speaker 9 (54:07):
Uh?
Speaker 5 (54:07):
No, I lived at Oakland right across the bay.
Speaker 3 (54:12):
I don't know anything about San Francisco except for that
they used to have really really great restaurant district and
a lot of wonderful buildings and businesses.
Speaker 6 (54:23):
And they said it's really going to hell yep, oh
yeah yeah. And uh, Adam Schiff is out there, the
corrupted guy that he is, all right.
Speaker 5 (54:38):
I think Trump calls him shifty Shift, which I like.
Speaker 6 (54:42):
Yeah. I like that too.
Speaker 3 (54:44):
I like when they did those memes with sombrero on
Jefferies and oh he got mad. He told Trump you
got something to say, you say it to my face.
And I don't think he wants to try to try
it challenge that old boy, because Trump looks like he
might pack a pretty mean punch. I've seen him swing
(55:07):
the golf club might not want to mess with him,
So I don't know. Uh So anyway, Susy posted the
emergency medical system supplies on Rumble, and we got a
very cool looking place, Matt, of all those kind of
(55:29):
supplies on there at the moment.
Speaker 2 (55:34):
That is.
Speaker 6 (55:35):
I just always amazed how cool this stuff is.
Speaker 3 (55:41):
Do you have to update that every so often, Susie,
or do I need to just click on it or
leave it alone?
Speaker 6 (55:46):
Or what.
Speaker 9 (55:50):
I've seen? You're talking about the Rumble.
Speaker 6 (55:52):
Right, yeah, rumble that like when we're looking at the place,
Matt does.
Speaker 9 (55:57):
That, Yeah, for some reason. Then you have to refresh it.
If it's just sitting there, you're not interacting or anything,
hit or refresh and it'll probably change it might change.
Speaker 3 (56:09):
It, alrighty, Well, we're almost at break when we come back. Bill,
I'm sure you got something up your sleeve to talk about.
Speaker 5 (56:17):
As long as it's sure shortly shirt on.
Speaker 6 (56:21):
So I don't know, well, A longs it's not San Francisco.
Speaker 3 (56:25):
I think we've uh that uh insurance joke was just enough.
My favorite though, was the husband telling his wife all
the things she's gonna take care of him? She said,
you know who's gonna comb my hair and dress me?
And she's a funeral director.
Speaker 6 (56:47):
I can see that happening. Oh, funny stuff, funny, funny,
all right, So we got a pretty good medicine captain.
Speaker 3 (56:56):
And if anybody has any questions you didn't want to
know what to stuff for, say you got a particular
thing that you're interested or concerned about, get in touch
with us. Go to the website. UH it's doc d
occupa k r o u p a dot com. SUSY's
created a really cool web page and you it's got
(57:18):
a section on a whole bunch of stuff there and
it's got a I forget what page it's on, but
there is a section on building your own uh products
and what what products we take and give you some
ideas of what we keep on hand. But you can
contact us and whether you got a question for producer Steve, Susy,
(57:40):
Bill or me, you get it to us and we
will get an answer back to you. We will certainly
take care of that. So Susy on that one on
the live chat, does it? Let you click on it
and bring it up or do they have to pace
it like before?
Speaker 9 (58:02):
I believe it's clickable. Let me try it. Yep, it's clickable,
but the live chat one is and for some reason,
the comments section, which is going to be to the left,
it's not clickable.
Speaker 3 (58:21):
Oh okay, well that's good, and you put it in
blows places I just saw yep.
Speaker 6 (58:27):
All right, well, great well, ladies.
Speaker 3 (58:29):
And gentlemen, we are at break time. This is doctor
Cooper's Natural Health Ours. We've got Susie Bill producers to
even myself. We're all here and we appreciate. We listen
to our sponsors and follow and like and all that
good stuff is great. We really appreciate it. And you
(58:50):
can check out the web page, and like I said,
if you've got questions, get in touch with us and
we will get back to you. Does the web page
go through uh, go Daddy, Suzy or is that separate?
Speaker 9 (59:08):
That's just the host, the domain host. So yeah, it's
not important that they know go daddy, just dot crouper
dot com.
Speaker 3 (59:20):
Okay, sounds great because I know I get stuff once
in a while and it'll say go daddy, and I
wasn't sure. All right, Well, there's the cuckoo clock saying
it's break time.
Speaker 6 (59:29):
Ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 3 (59:30):
Please listen to the sponsors and we will be right back.
Speaker 1 (59:41):
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the power is out for an extended period of time,
I'd like to suggest new man of Foods, a family
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as well as long term storage reliability. Newmana dot Com.
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(01:00:02):
eaten every day. Standard buckets are GMO free, contain no aspartame,
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to prepare for any disaster. That's newmana dot com.
Speaker 7 (01:00:28):
And you m a n n a dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:00:38):
You've heard me t Suzzy about not knowing the company's
name and putting tequila in her t. Well, the company name.
Speaker 6 (01:00:47):
Really isn't ranchers and dancers.
Speaker 3 (01:00:50):
It is renovation and design eight three zero three seven
seven two one three one, and she likes her te playing.
Speaker 6 (01:00:59):
By the way, what a company.
Speaker 3 (01:01:01):
When you tell them your budget, they take great pride
in meeting.
Speaker 6 (01:01:06):
It or going lower, not above.
Speaker 3 (01:01:09):
The quality is so great you'll have to see their
work to believe it. The true definition of craftsmanship is seen.
Speaker 6 (01:01:18):
In all their work.
Speaker 3 (01:01:20):
Welcome their family to yours and call Renovation and Design
eight three zero three seven seven two one three one.
Speaker 7 (01:01:55):
Let me down around and west about so never my baby.
I wait to see you, and I say, but I
got to steal.
Speaker 4 (01:02:05):
I need you, I need you, want anyone done, and
you don't. I have a song, So fill me up,
baby up, don't bring my home em I'll be over
up ten me all the time and again, but too late.
Speaker 6 (01:02:25):
I wait around and then to the door.
Speaker 4 (01:02:29):
I can't take any mores of you.
Speaker 7 (01:02:32):
You let me down again.
Speaker 4 (01:02:35):
The babies try to find him time, and I think
you have.
Speaker 7 (01:02:43):
A baby side. Don't wait and see why don't you
fail me up? My baby? Just to let me down?
Speaker 4 (01:02:57):
I dressed me around and then.
Speaker 6 (01:03:03):
All right we are back.
Speaker 3 (01:03:05):
Welcome back to doctor Crooper's Natural Health Tours.
Speaker 6 (01:03:08):
Says he did you see the chat room I know,
Bill can't see that, and if you look at the
screen you'll know why I wrote it.
Speaker 9 (01:03:19):
Oh, the the zoom chat.
Speaker 6 (01:03:24):
Yeah, the yeah, that chat.
Speaker 9 (01:03:27):
That Yeah, that's that's weird. On the phone, I'll look
at it. But oh, that Buttercup dude, that buttercup dude,
he is a sucker.
Speaker 6 (01:03:42):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:03:42):
Sometimes the music grabs me and I don't always like
the words, but that's one of them.
Speaker 5 (01:03:48):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:03:49):
It's really sad too, because too many times the guys
the bad the one getting his heart broke where you know.
That's why I like some of the songs like uh
uh where the where the woman is? Uh he then
for a change, because the guy is not always the
one that should be getting to be the victim. Anyway, Bill,
(01:04:12):
we're ready for you to take it away.
Speaker 1 (01:04:16):
Okay.
Speaker 5 (01:04:18):
So yeah, I don't know how you can how you
can tell what those lyrics are, but if you you
can obviously pick them up. So that's that's fine. What
are the things that really kind of came to mind
this week? Was to focus this week something I've been
thinking about for several months. But it's it has to
(01:04:40):
do with patterns, life patterns and balances and and what
what do we do when things get get out of balance?
And and why do that? Why does that happen? And
how do we get to tell We've talked around about
this the past couple of three weeks, but looking at
it from a different perspective. You know, over the past
(01:05:03):
I don't know months, I would occasionally talk about music
or art or literature or one of one of those
kind of out there areas, and and I said, well,
this is a way to get into that, because the
whole thing about patterns and balances is very much a
(01:05:25):
part of what that is. And staying with the music
part of it for just just a moment, and I'm
going to this is it has to do with what
we call Western music. And this is not because Kay
Rogers one of those kinds of guys, and Western music
has to do basically with Western civilization, with European music,
(01:05:48):
European civilization, and that's what that's the context that I'm
working on here. But looking at at music, there are
there are five basic aspects to it. Obviously, the melody
which includes the words, but in your case, you talked
about that, but melody is one the harmony the chords
(01:06:11):
that supports the melody is another. But the three areas
that I want to focus on are are rhythm and
tempo and time and the rhythm. The rhythm in music
is either in three four or most of the pieces
(01:06:31):
you play in two or in four to four. Uh
marches tend to be in two four waltzes or in
three four. But the rhythm is an integral part of
that whole mix. You can't have any kind of of music,
any kind of sound, without some sort of rhythm temple.
(01:06:54):
How fast does it go? Is it slow? The chopin
extruminal marches of our slow piece? There are many pieces
that are very fast, so the tempo is is critical
to that. And finally the time, and by time, i'm
talking about duration, how long does the piece last? And
(01:07:17):
all art, not just music, but these last three things,
the rhythm, tempo, and duration, All art incorporate these. The
difference is only is and how what the manifestation is?
Is it going to be a painting? Is there going
to be a poem? Is it going to be a sculpture?
Is going to be a dance? They all incorporate these
(01:07:39):
three aspects. And where I wound up going with this
is that when when weird things happen to our lives,
where something traumatic or something exciting, something good, something beyond
(01:07:59):
the ordinary, our patterns of living become altered. You know,
we have we have many aspects of our lives. We
have our work aspect, we have our social aspects, we
have our our family, our very own personal, private way
(01:08:19):
of looking at things. And each one of those areas as,
every one of those areas has its own dynamic and
its own kind of set of rules, but it also
has they also have their own rituals, their own patterns.
And one of the things is as a musician that
we look for, hopefully our patterns. You know, you think
(01:08:43):
of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony that the opening motive uh three
three sixteenth. In the quarter note, it says, bubbapup. Okay.
That's a pattern. How often does that pattern recur? When
does it come back? Has it changed? How is it?
How does it fluctuate? These patterns are part of our
(01:09:06):
lives because they're predictable, and it's a predictability that lends
us some sense of security, some sense of safety, some
sense of things are okay. And each one of our
lives patterns, you know, we get up in the morning,
we fix our coffee, we feed the dog, we get
(01:09:27):
ready to go to work, we go to The pattern
is there and it has a rhythm. We may do
the same things in the same sequence, but one takes
a little bit longer than the other, and it kind
of throws the whole thing off. The rhythm has changed
the temple of our rituals, of our life. Patterns also
(01:09:52):
fluctuate their times when we hurry through things that ordinarily
we wouldn't, or that we take more time with it.
We normally go through very quick. This fluctuation of these
these things are what what certainly in my in my profession,
in yours too, that we'd look for when somebody comes
(01:10:13):
into our office and says, I got a problem. Okay,
well what in your life is different? What's changed? And
these patterns become disruptive? Has have the rhythm of your
day changed? Hey, if you've got a new boss, you've
got a new car, you've got problems at home? Has
(01:10:35):
your life rhythm changed? Have things the speed of things?
Have you felt like you've lost control? The tempo of
your life changed so that you no longer feel like
you have control over part of it or a lot
of it makes a difference. And how long has this
change been going on? Has it been going on for
(01:10:57):
six months? Has it been going on for two weeks?
You know, from your perspective, if somebody's got a need
problem and it's been going on for six months, it
tells you one thing. This it's been going on for
a week because you did something to it, that tells
you something else. Once we can begin to look at
why our patterns have changed and understand that that change
(01:11:21):
in that pattern structure affects our balance, our perspective, or
our sense of our gyroscopic sense of keeping it even keel.
How does that balance begin to be reassertive? You know,
one of the things that I talk about is these
(01:11:43):
kinds of phenomenon in our life that happened in our life,
our life experiences, not how do you fix it, because
that's not something that you can generalize. Enough is you've
pointed out many times with nutritional things, everybody's different, totally individualistic.
(01:12:04):
How do we how do we begin to work through difficulty? Well,
we we work through difficulty in our own way, and
everybody's going to do it in their own way, and
we have to be able to understand that the reassertion
of our balance and our patterns to get a sense
of control, to have a sense of being able to
(01:12:27):
manage our own outlook is really, certainly in my late
great business, that's really what what the point of it
all was, how do we how do we help someone
recognize that they have the ability within themselves to take
care of just about any problem they got, They just
(01:12:49):
need somebody to give them permission to do it. It's
how do we how do we support that? How do
we begin to help them reidentify that patters that lent
some sense of order to their life, that lents some
sense of stability to their life, find out what the
(01:13:09):
stressor was, begin to work on it. Sometimes, as you know,
we've talked last week or so about stress and that,
you know, sometimes we need to need to do something
fairly dramatic to alleviate that stress. Sometimes it's it can
be a little more subtle, a little more gradual, but
we do have to begin to identify what has caused
(01:13:35):
the disruption of those patterns and what has caused a
disbalance in our life and our perspective and the way
that we look at our environment as well as ourselfs
being able to do that ain't always easy. As we've
mentioned several times that sometimes this is is very very
(01:13:55):
difficult process and a painful process because as it might
mean that we have to re order a fairly significant
part of our lives in order to gain that sense
regain that sense of balance, to gain that sense of
control that all of us have to have and all
of us need. So they gave you know, when we
(01:14:17):
look at at art or a painting or a sculpture,
these are all just just parts of life. And I
occasionally wake up at two or three in the morning
and think about things because that's that's a nice quiet
time of day. There's not much going on anywhere and
(01:14:40):
it but they're being able to isolate some thoughts and
kind of codify perspectives and realize that that art, any art,
whether it's literature or music, or painting or sculpture or dance, whatever,
any art, it is sort of the final pity of
(01:15:01):
a lost moment. Any piece of art stops at the
moment it was created. A painting is only a painting
of that thing at that moment. If you repaint the
same thing again an hour later or a week later,
or it would be different. So any piece of art
(01:15:24):
where there's music or poetry is really the encapsulation of
a moment, and that moment has gone forever.
Speaker 10 (01:15:34):
Is a.
Speaker 5 (01:15:39):
Kind of an out there notion, but really it's really
sort of a metaphysical trip into nostalgia. And we can
learn from that because it's one of the few places
that we can be safe, because you know, once the
painting is painted, it doesn't change. We can go back
and look at it. We may see different things, we
may notice things that we never noticed before, but that's
(01:16:02):
because we've changed, not because it has. And recognizing that
our own flexibility, our own fluctuation in our lifestyle, helps
us recognize that the patterns that we've kind of accepted
as our daily, weekly rituals have also gradually been changing.
(01:16:24):
But it hasn't always been an uncomfortable change. You know,
there's basically two kinds of art. I realized there's comfortable
art and there's uncomfortable art. Comfortable art is a landscape
where it's a nice, placid, peaceful. Uncomfortable art is Jackson
(01:16:47):
Pollock or because it makes you look at things differently.
And I realized in going through that process that all
art basically is un comfortable art because it makes it
makes us look at things a little differently, and that uncomfortability,
(01:17:09):
the contrast between contentment and tension is part of every
piece of art that was ever produced. It's like life.
If there's tension, there's relaxation. There's times when we can
enjoy things, and there are times when that's pretty tough
(01:17:31):
to enjoy things, but that's part of the flow of it.
That basic challenge I think that we all fake is
how to regain that sense of balance, that sense of
patterns that allows us to kind of be who we
are and why we're here.
Speaker 3 (01:17:51):
So there you go, deep, deep, deep, I guess in
the music world. You're in the art world, and it
just kind of falls into play with all these things
you're talking about. Yeah, I uh, there's so much about
(01:18:14):
music I don't know. Uh, And if you ask our producer,
you're going to hear things like mushy. Yeah, that's funny.
But anyway, I think it's really interesting. Some very deep
thought You must when you wake up in the middle
of the night. You must really have some deep, deep
(01:18:36):
thoughts go through your head for all the stuff to
come up.
Speaker 6 (01:18:40):
Susy, anything you want to.
Speaker 5 (01:18:41):
Ask about The only reason about the only reason I
look forward to get up at three in the morning
is it's quiet and I can think about things.
Speaker 6 (01:18:51):
Susy.
Speaker 9 (01:18:53):
Yeah, just uh, it's it's good stuff. The part about
you know, tension and then they thing, you know, there's
relaxation and it's just a roller coaster sometimes.
Speaker 6 (01:19:06):
Yep, this is true, interesting good stuff. I like.
Speaker 3 (01:19:16):
I said, I don't have a group, any group that
I can say I like everything they do. But if
there was one group that I wish could have been
around longer, it was Leonard Skinner. They all died in
(01:19:36):
a plane crash I don't know how many years ago
on this day, and very sad. They crashed because they
had run out of fuel and had to crash land
and that was very sad. But they had some great.
Speaker 5 (01:19:54):
What's that I said, sort of like life.
Speaker 6 (01:19:58):
Oh yeah, but they had some They had some great songs,
very naturally artistic. And the lead singer died and he
was great.
Speaker 3 (01:20:11):
His brother lives and he was He carried on the band,
but it was never the same. But I really liked
Leonard Skinner. They had a lot of songs that I like.
Not every song, but a lot of them. I like
and that's It's always been that way with me. A
lot of times I'll like the music and I won't
like the words. Sometimes I like both. Sometimes I like
(01:20:35):
the words and not the music so much just depends
on the story. Sometimes things just grab you.
Speaker 6 (01:20:44):
I don't know, Bill, with with the classics, do you
find that sometimes something just grabs you and you like
it right away? Or do things kind of grow on
you have to after you hear them? Are all.
Speaker 5 (01:21:00):
Yes, both of those things. I think you know. There
are there are pieces of betam and that I don't like.
There are pieces of rock Money and Off that I
don't like. There's some stross I don't like, and there's
some some stuff that I do like. I mean, I
think that's just that's just who we are. There's something
(01:21:22):
in this that I don't like the term, but it's
something that resonates within us at that particular moment that
attaches us to it. And Yeah, the more you listen
to it, uh, the more you find out about it
and the more you like it. I Mean, there are
pieces that I've listened to intently for fifty years, and
every time I hear it, I always hear a little
(01:21:42):
something different. I said kind of laughing about this the
other day, because you and I were talking about how
loss of hearing effects are our our ability to hear music,
and I thought, yeah, the good thing is I don't
have to hear bad performances anymore.
Speaker 6 (01:22:01):
Yeah, but we want you to hear music.
Speaker 5 (01:22:05):
I can hear it in my head. You know, here's
another one of those three o'clock morning Just the most
sublime music ever is Silence.
Speaker 6 (01:22:17):
Wow. Interesting.
Speaker 3 (01:22:20):
You know it's funny to me because I'll hear people
say that's my favorite group. I gotta go see them
in concert, and I might like some of their songs,
but I can't. There is no group that I can
say I like everything. And I've never liked concerts because
(01:22:40):
it's always too crowded, and I just I never liked
all the crowd. But I would have went to Woodstock
if I had the chances, for the.
Speaker 6 (01:22:49):
Hell of it.
Speaker 9 (01:22:50):
But I don't even remember how long ago it was.
There was a concert that I never ever got to
go to, you know. One I was a teenager, you know,
and I did the whole thing, you know, I did
the Who, I did Pink Floyd, I did zz Top,
(01:23:12):
I did Cotton Bowl with Rod Stewart, and uh, I
forget who else was there. But I never got to
see the Eagles. Well, I bought every single Eagles album,
and you know what I really liked was the I
liked the harmony. I loved the Eagles, and uh, you know,
(01:23:36):
I still have my I still have my vinyl. I
even saw led Zeppelin. Oh, Creden's clear Water Revival was
with Rod Stewart at the Cotton Bowl. What was funny
was the first concert that me and my best friend
went to, one of the mothers had to go, and
(01:23:58):
so her mother went to Zazy Top with us, and
then my mother went to the Cotton Bowl with us
and lo and behold, right in front of us was
these people with like the heroine sores all over them.
And I'm like, great, I'll never get to go to
another concert. So back to the Eagles. So I'm driving
(01:24:20):
from Harper to Kerrville and I hear on the radio
that the Eagles, if you if you remember they did
their last concert was they said, We're not doing another concert.
This is it. It's you know, we'll do another concert
when hell freezes over. So they I don't even remember
(01:24:45):
how long ago it was my son was in high school,
so it was, you know, quite a while ago, and
it was called the Hell Freezes Over Tour, and so
I went ahead real quickly and I ran my errand
I came home. I got online.
Speaker 5 (01:25:02):
I was going to order.
Speaker 9 (01:25:03):
Tickets, and I was expecting to spend you know, fifty
seventy five whatever. It was so out at ticket Master.
So I had to go buy two tickets from some
kind of a ticket reseller. And I hate to admit
(01:25:29):
that I spent five hundred dollars on two tickets.
Speaker 6 (01:25:33):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (01:25:35):
Yeah, I wouldn't mind watching that concert on TV, but
I don't like all the crowds, and there's always there's.
Speaker 9 (01:25:42):
Always wasn't bad. It was so nice. It was so nice,
And of course Joe Walsh was with them, and we
sat in a balcony that looked over the stage and
you're talking about you know, older five folks, you know,
you're you're talking about people who grew up listening to
(01:26:05):
the Eagles, and it was so I don't remember the
name of the Colosseum, but it wasn't wild, it wasn't crazy.
You know, weed wasn't you know, in the air. And
at one point it was so dead gun cool. They
had a eagle handler and so this bird, this eagle
(01:26:28):
was let loose. It flew across the coliseum and landed
on someone's arm. He had on a really long you know,
like bird of prey leather glove, if you will, And
that was just the coolest thing.
Speaker 6 (01:26:44):
That is neat.
Speaker 3 (01:26:46):
I did not know when, but I know Vince Gill
was started out with the Eagles.
Speaker 9 (01:26:53):
I didn't know that.
Speaker 6 (01:26:54):
Yeah, he was with the Eagles way way back.
Speaker 9 (01:26:57):
Yeah, you know, it makes me sad. And I can't
remember his name. I should Maybe it was JD. Souther Sotherer, No,
it wasn't him. I think one of them died, in
my opinion, needlessly from complications of coliitis. How sad is that?
Speaker 6 (01:27:20):
That's sad?
Speaker 3 (01:27:22):
Well, you know, every group that you mentioned there were
songs that I liked, But I I was never like
the real heavy metal like Metallica. There's not much there
that ever grabbed me. But every group that you mentioned
there were songs that I could relate to.
Speaker 9 (01:27:42):
Yeah. I saw Pink Floyd at the SMU Coliseum and
set on the front row on the floor.
Speaker 6 (01:27:54):
Had several things I liked.
Speaker 3 (01:27:56):
I was Alice Cooper had several songs that I liked
a lot.
Speaker 9 (01:28:00):
Yeah, and I think I saw Alice Cooper. Pink Floyd
wasn't right there at the top. A friend wanted to go,
and I'm like, okay, let's go. But that was back
when you paid, you know, fifteen or twenty dollars for
a ticket. The reason I remember the Pink Floyd concert
was because that's where I lost a contact. Lens.
Speaker 6 (01:28:22):
No, well, you went to a lot of concerts. I
mean a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:28:27):
I don't think I know anybody that's been there that
many that I know all I've missed.
Speaker 9 (01:28:31):
I've missed a whole lot. Naming them off. Yeah, I've
been to a ton.
Speaker 6 (01:28:37):
Yeah, I haven't done that.
Speaker 3 (01:28:38):
I always unless it was when I was younger and
we went to the park and they had a concert.
Speaker 6 (01:28:44):
I'll never forget.
Speaker 3 (01:28:47):
Six Flags over mid America outside of Saint Louis. In fact,
it's in Eureka, Missouri, where my mom's living now.
Speaker 6 (01:28:56):
They had what was it lash Cadillac and the Continental Kids.
I'm trying to remember.
Speaker 3 (01:29:04):
Anyway, they came on stage and we went over to
the concert because we were there. I think I might
even have been on a date. I'm trying to remember.
It's been a couple hundred years. But anyway, they came
on stage. He'll never forget everybody.
Speaker 6 (01:29:23):
Screaming and hollering. They're all excited, and.
Speaker 3 (01:29:28):
He says, does anybody have any requests? And they start,
people start hollering songs and he said, well, just shove it,
because we're not going to play with anything you want.
Speaker 9 (01:29:39):
Then that's hilarious. You know, that's one of the good
things about growing up in the Dallas area, in East
Dallas by what it's called White Rock Lake. Every summer
they had every week there was there was concerts, you know, outdoors,
(01:30:01):
and you know that was free, and so that's where
we went, you know, quite a few times. You know.
It wasn't the big headliners, but it was somewhere to go.
It was free and it was music.
Speaker 3 (01:30:12):
Yeah, well that's the kind of stuff that I went to.
Like I saw Kiss many many moons ago.
Speaker 6 (01:30:18):
They well are there.
Speaker 3 (01:30:21):
Was he the lead singer or the guy that formed
the band just died the other day.
Speaker 9 (01:30:26):
Yeah, I heard that, you know, one of my favorite
concerts and I almost forgot I was, you know, being
a being a band geek. One of my favorite and
we performed a lot of their music was Chicago Saturday
in the Park. I could probably still pick up a
clarinet and play that maybe, but yeah, Chicago concert was
(01:30:51):
just I was geeky. I mean, I wasn't. I didn't
do country. I didn't do you know really well, well,
hard rock wasn't a thing back then. I mean hard
rock would have been kiss or Alice Cooper or you
know in my day.
Speaker 6 (01:31:09):
Yeah, well, hey, I went to Henry Mancini.
Speaker 9 (01:31:14):
There we go. I saw him on TV.
Speaker 6 (01:31:18):
All right, guys, well we're at break.
Speaker 3 (01:31:19):
When we come back, we'll help Susie with the name
of the business. And we got a little birthday song
since we missed her birthday that we'll play for and
then she'll have some recipes hopefully. So anyway, please listen
to our sponsors. We will be right back, Susie, Bill,
(01:31:39):
producer Steve, and myself.
Speaker 1 (01:31:47):
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(01:32:08):
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Speaker 1 (01:32:32):
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Speaker 2 (01:33:00):
Burning end of.
Speaker 6 (01:33:01):
A midnight cigarette. She broke his part.
Speaker 8 (01:33:09):
He spent his whole life trying to forget. We watched
him drink his pain away a little lad time, but
he never could get drunk enough to get her off
his mind until the night he put that bottle to
(01:33:33):
his head and pulled the trigger. He finally drank away
her memory. Life is short, but this time it was bigger.
Speaker 7 (01:33:51):
Then the strength he had to get up off his knees.
Speaker 8 (01:33:58):
We found him with his face down in the pillow,
with a note.
Speaker 7 (01:34:05):
That said I love her to hide. And when we
buried him beneath the willow, the angel saying whiskey Long.
Speaker 8 (01:34:20):
By Li La Lah Lah Lah La La Li La
La La La La.
Speaker 7 (01:34:31):
La La La La.
Speaker 2 (01:34:34):
La La La La Lola.
Speaker 7 (01:34:39):
The rooms God.
Speaker 10 (01:34:42):
Nobody knew how much she blamed the sound.
Speaker 9 (01:34:49):
Us and.
Speaker 7 (01:34:52):
She tried hid the whiskey on her breath.
Speaker 10 (01:34:59):
She first drag her pain away, but you got he
could get drug enough to get him off.
Speaker 9 (01:35:11):
To the.
Speaker 7 (01:35:15):
Bottle to home and pull the triggers. Find a drag
away his men.
Speaker 2 (01:35:29):
Show.
Speaker 7 (01:35:30):
This time it was bigger then the string she had
to get up off her.
Speaker 3 (01:35:41):
All right, we are back, Welcome back to Doctor Crooper's
Natural Hottowers. It is the time of the show where
we help Susie with the name of the business. And
I know for a fact that it is called Renewed
and Dazzling Construction.
Speaker 9 (01:35:56):
Susy, Yeah, we're pretty dazsoling. It's renovation and design construction
or custom homes. We're located in Texas Hill Country. And
you can go dot creepy dot com and go to
the ABAT page. Scroll down there's a link they'll take
you to our website and uh or we can be
(01:36:20):
reached today three zero three seven seven two and three one.
Speaker 3 (01:36:26):
All right, and before we go to the recipes, because
I don't want you to feel old just because you
had a birthday. I got this sweet romantic friendship kind
of song for your birthday.
Speaker 6 (01:36:38):
So here we go.
Speaker 7 (01:36:41):
What a drag is getting old? It's a different today.
Speaker 9 (01:36:56):
I hear every say now that I need something today
to comma down.
Speaker 4 (01:37:03):
And though see is not really hill, there's a little
yellow film. She goes running for the shelter of her
mother's Little Helper.
Speaker 9 (01:37:12):
Handed Custer and her way and.
Speaker 6 (01:37:15):
Gets at her busy day.
Speaker 7 (01:37:22):
Things are different today.
Speaker 6 (01:37:24):
I hear every mother's saying cook in rescue for her
husband's just a dread.
Speaker 4 (01:37:31):
So she bandon it's the pink and she bands a
frozen steak and goes running for the shelter of her
mother's little Helper.
Speaker 6 (01:37:41):
At Helper and her way get.
Speaker 2 (01:37:43):
A group of busy day.
Speaker 7 (01:37:50):
Dat her pe some moora pieces outside. It's a normal
wanta drag.
Speaker 5 (01:38:02):
Get it.
Speaker 6 (01:38:05):
All right? There you go. This is he a little
cheer you up music about getting older.
Speaker 9 (01:38:09):
Well that's just wrong.
Speaker 6 (01:38:12):
Take it away.
Speaker 9 (01:38:14):
Okay. So I don't know what my thing is about
apples right now. Maybe it's fall, who knows, But this
is an apple fritter bread. And so this is a
lot easier, you know than making apple fritters. Just a
nine five pen and there you go. It takes like
fifteen minutes put it together and an hour of cook time.
(01:38:39):
And maybe there's someone new listening. But what we do
is we take recipes and we fix them. Like this
one calls for a third of a cup of light
brown sugar. We're gonna use a third of a cup
of raw hocaine sugar, teaspoons of cinnamon, and two medium
(01:39:05):
apples diced, and I recommend the green Grannie Smith. That's
gonna be for your apple cinnamon filling. And then you've
got your cinnamon bread batter. And that's a third of
half of a cup of butter, two thirds of a
cup of brown sugar. Again, that's saying that, And we're
(01:39:25):
gonna use raw whole caine sugar substitutes perfectly well. Two eggs,
two teaspoons of vanilla. And here's another fix, one and
a half cups of all purpose flour. You can use
(01:39:45):
your ancient grain, whatever your favorite is, organic flour, half
of a teaspoon of salt, two teaspoons of bacon powder.
And I haven't said this in a whild, but I
would think I listeners know, make sure your bacon powder
is fresh and eighth of a tea spring of nutmeg.
(01:40:07):
And we've talked about this before. I don't like the
stuff that's already ground. It's virtually no, no full flavor
to it. So I get the whole nutmegs and you
can get a little ceramic nutmeg greater. And it's not
just for nutmeg. You can take you a portion of
(01:40:30):
ginger root and you know, rub it against the little
nubs that are on there. You could do the same
thing with turmeric. So you know, a little gadget like that,
you could use it for many things. So I buy
the whole whole nutmegs and then just keep them in
their original jar and keep them in the fridge. Half
(01:40:51):
of a cup of milk, and then the glaze, of course,
is half of the cup of powdered sugar. You can
get that an organic uh it's steel sugar, and then
one to one and a half tablespoons of milk. You know,
if you've got a favorite Keto low carb whatever you
(01:41:15):
want to call it, UH glaze, then you know use that.
You can use half of a cup of powdered aulos
or you can use Doc's favorite half a cup of
powdered monk fruit and so uh, Like I said, this
goes into a a nine by five loaf pan, and
(01:41:40):
then you're just going to add your apples, your rawle
cat and your cinnamon and just kind of toss it.
Then stand mixer or your electric mixer. You're going to
whip your butter and your raw holcane sugar until it's
(01:42:06):
lighter in color and fluffy. Then you're going to add
your eggs in your vanilla, and then you're going to
put in your dry ingredients flour, salt, baking powder, in nutmeg.
You can do that in a separate bowl if you want.
I generally don't. But then you're going to add your
(01:42:31):
milk and then you're going to put this in your
well greased loaf pan. And a tip I've mentioned before
is I keep my butter wrappers and a little baggy
and keep them in my fridge so I can pull
one of those out and grease my loaf pan with it. Okay,
(01:42:54):
so you put about half of your cinnamon batter on
the body, then you put your apple mixture, and then
you put put half of your apple mixture. I'm sorry.
Then you put the rest of your batter and then
you sprinkle the rest of your apple mixture on top,
(01:43:18):
and you're gonna bake it for about fifty to sixty
minutes until a toothpick comes out clean, and that's that's.
Then you're gonna let it cool completely and then put
whatever glade if you want some, on top of it.
(01:43:41):
And they have it. It's pretty simple. It's good for
breakfast or dessert. And like always, if you go to
doctor d r U Krupa's Natural Health Hours and I
see I have a typo in there in that fabulous,
I'll fix it now. Natural does not naturally have two
(01:44:02):
a's in the beginning of it. It's I've got three
a's in there. So that's that's different. That's nice.
Speaker 6 (01:44:11):
I just you were drinking.
Speaker 9 (01:44:14):
Well you know, some brain cells are or have been
compromised with the ear thing. Okay, So under comments, I
have a link to the recipe and I got a
clickable link in the live chat section.
Speaker 6 (01:44:36):
Sounds good, And Bill, I heard you laughing. You encouraged her.
Speaker 5 (01:44:44):
Your encouraged her.
Speaker 6 (01:44:45):
Don't do that. Shame for shame.
Speaker 9 (01:44:50):
Yeah, there's something there's something wrong with your mouth because
I don't taste an after fruit with after taste with
monk fruit.
Speaker 3 (01:44:59):
Well, yeah, but you've had it for a long time,
so I'm sure if I did it more often.
Speaker 6 (01:45:04):
It's just like anything. If you're if you're exposed to
it more and more, you adapt to it. What do
people say, Well, they say that's a learned taste, acquired taste.
Speaker 9 (01:45:17):
I had a friend over probably about a month or
so ago. It was someone that was volunteering at the river,
and so we had coffee and she goes, do you
buy a chance have any monk fruit? And I got
the biggest smile on my face and I pulled out
my bottle of monk fruit drops.
Speaker 3 (01:45:36):
Oh my god, I'm sure that's illegal in at least
fifty two states.
Speaker 9 (01:45:45):
Right, And then she put it in her coffee.
Speaker 3 (01:45:49):
Yeah, there's nothing better than whole caine sugar. I don't
care what anybody says, Bill, what do you put anything
in your coffee?
Speaker 6 (01:45:58):
Or just black?
Speaker 2 (01:46:03):
Everyone?
Speaker 5 (01:46:04):
Mostly it's just black. But every once in a while
I'll indulge of a half pint carton of whipping cream
and I'll put that in my coffee. Not the whole,
not the whole thing, but about a table spood.
Speaker 3 (01:46:17):
That's interesting. I never thought about whipping cream. Where do
they get whipping cream from?
Speaker 5 (01:46:25):
They have to beat up the cows.
Speaker 9 (01:46:27):
Okay, I thought it was cows that tumbled down the hill.
Speaker 6 (01:46:36):
Why do you think I'd know better than to ask
you to anything?
Speaker 9 (01:46:41):
Who? Where does chocolate milk come from?
Speaker 6 (01:46:44):
I don't know, but I don't go there.
Speaker 5 (01:46:46):
Don't don't go there, Do not go there.
Speaker 6 (01:46:49):
It's racist.
Speaker 9 (01:46:52):
Brown cows.
Speaker 6 (01:46:54):
Yeah, I love it.
Speaker 2 (01:46:56):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (01:46:56):
That'd be like, you know, asking you a Bill of
question like that. It would be like asking Mushy if
he liked one of my songs and we know that,
who did Mushy River? Susie, you're our buddy.
Speaker 9 (01:47:15):
I don't know. I'm gonna yeah, I'm sending in a
Mushy song requests for next week's show, So look forward
to that. I like that.
Speaker 3 (01:47:28):
And Bill, there are some things I've been looking uh,
and the musicians are the ones that are talking about
it because there's a frequency loss and some of these
devices that are out there help bring that frequency back.
If if you want to be able to test it,
I'm sure you could look around and find something on
(01:47:49):
your own.
Speaker 6 (01:47:50):
But I did see several that might be worth looking into.
And they they didn't break the.
Speaker 5 (01:47:55):
Bank, well, then they can't be good.
Speaker 6 (01:48:00):
Yeah, And I you know, in our house, I tried
out a type a long time ago, and I didn't
like it that much, but it was if you needed it,
it was there. And then I tried that newer one.
Speaker 3 (01:48:19):
I sent you Nebro or whatever it's called Nebrew, and
it seemed to work better than anything, and you didn't
even notice it was in your ear. And I'm kind
of familiar with that because one of my family members
had spinal meningitis as a little kid and they lost
complete hearing in the left side and a pretty good
(01:48:45):
portion in the right side.
Speaker 6 (01:48:46):
And in those days, nobody knew what to do.
Speaker 3 (01:48:49):
I'm sure we could help with the spinal meningitis is
so sad, but they've had to get some very expensive,
finely tuned hearing aids for a certain kind of loss
on that right side because the left side doesn't hear anything.
And so I know a little bit about him, but
most of that stuffs very expensive. My brother has worn
(01:49:11):
hearing aids for years, uh, and he's got some very
fancy expensive ones, and my mom too, I was I've
been lucky. I can hear pretty good, but the left side.
And I think from riding with your window down and
loud music and shooting guns and riding a motorcycle all
(01:49:32):
those things.
Speaker 6 (01:49:35):
And Scotch. Now, Scotch is good for me. Scotch. Scotch
improves blood flow, so you could hear better. And that's
my story. And sy, I just noticed that we have
not cheeral health.
Speaker 9 (01:49:53):
I know that was you.
Speaker 6 (01:49:58):
Yeah, I did, and I'm taking it you did. Mushy
River also, no, oh, so that was your partner in crime,
our producer.
Speaker 2 (01:50:10):
So you see.
Speaker 6 (01:50:11):
Now it's really bad. I got three of them ganging
up on me, ladies and gentlemen. It's just not right.
Speaker 3 (01:50:16):
I'm I'm such a easy going, wonderful, saintly kind of person,
and they'd just all three ganging up on me.
Speaker 9 (01:50:25):
Yeah, with all those dark Web jokes.
Speaker 6 (01:50:30):
Hey, you got admit. Some of the jokes are funny.
Some of them are really funny, and some of them.
Speaker 3 (01:50:35):
If you think about it, are just downright unbelievable funny,
like the one with the lady telling him the funeral
director is going to be combing your hair and dressing you.
Speaker 6 (01:50:46):
I mean, I can see that happening.
Speaker 3 (01:50:52):
I've known, I've known women that if you came in
and told them all that, you're probably gonna need a
funeral director. And then Cissy carries her own gun, guys,
so you would never want to tell her that. And
Granny on Beverly Hillbillies grabbed the shotgun. All right, Well,
(01:51:15):
anything you guys want to talk about, we got about
nine minutes or so here, Sissy.
Speaker 2 (01:51:20):
Anything.
Speaker 9 (01:51:25):
Well, that's a very deep subject, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (01:51:29):
Well, yeah, I'm sure you were thinking I wish I
could come up with jokes as good as docs. Well,
you know, there you go, Bill you're encourager when you left.
Speaker 6 (01:51:41):
Don't do that.
Speaker 5 (01:51:43):
The log Shiloh set it all. There's you know, and.
Speaker 9 (01:51:49):
I've done it. I mean, how many people have gone
out there and literally done a start for well, if
you do a start for our or bad dad jokes,
the internet's full of it. If you look for the opposite,
it's very very hard to find. So it's it's not fair,
(01:52:12):
it's misogynistic, and you know, it triggers me. It's offensive.
I think I need to have a protest. You know, no,
no bad joke, no bad dad joke day. You know,
they're doing no kings. I mean, why couldn't we have
(01:52:36):
like no bad dad joke day? So I don't know.
I guess the only thing I'd like to bring up,
you know, not necessarily, but I got to go to
my happy place for my birthday, went to the coast,
and you know, I was kind of concerned. Of course
(01:52:56):
I didn't I didn't get in the water. I mean
other than my feet. It's next week is a shark
week at the coast for the migration. I'm like, give
me a break. I mean, there's always always someone who
comes to the party early, so I'm not going to
be out there. But the other thing they were saying
(01:53:21):
was that it was just like hoardes supposed to be
hordes or jellyfish, and.
Speaker 6 (01:53:25):
I saw one.
Speaker 9 (01:53:28):
But yeah, I just, you know, I get what Bill's
saying about three am. You know, sometimes the music is
just absolute quietness. The music to me is the waves.
And I don't like to be next to people. And
(01:53:51):
I will drive up and down the beach until I
find a really nice secluded place because I don't want
to be around rug rats, screaming people fishing, and I
can just sit there and it just recharges me. So, yeah,
I was glad to go down the corpus slash poor day,
(01:54:15):
if you will, and and just chill for three days.
Speaker 3 (01:54:19):
Well, I'm glad you had a good birthday. That sounds great, Bill,
Anything you want to close with.
Speaker 5 (01:54:27):
Nope, Yeah, I think we all we all need a
place like that. And and one of the remarkable things
about having an actual place like that, seems to me,
is that no matter when or where you are, you
can always go there in your head. And and that's
(01:54:50):
the real healing benefit of having those places and in
your life. That they kind of recharge as you as
so as I said, they kind of recharge recharger. That's
a good thing.
Speaker 9 (01:55:03):
You know. The water's been gorgeous down there for weeks,
just like a turquoise like ill not quite like Florida water.
Of course, we don't have the white white sand that
Florida has, but the beaches were clean. It upsets me
(01:55:24):
when I see children playing on the dunes and I
look and I'm like, Okay, who's the parents to these
kids letting them play up there where rattlesnakes like to
hang out. People don't understand that the dunes at the
Texas Coast is where room snakes like to live.
Speaker 6 (01:55:48):
Yeah, that's not fun, not fun at all.
Speaker 9 (01:55:53):
I never let my kids. Yeah, I never let my
kids play on the dudes ever.
Speaker 6 (01:56:00):
Smart. I really like these face uh, these place mats.
You guys, you together, you have done some fabulous stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:56:10):
Right now, we're looking at Susie's Food and stuff Bill
neat Little looks like a little fast food restaurant.
Speaker 6 (01:56:18):
Really cool. It's got fork and if looks really cool.
Speaker 9 (01:56:22):
Yeah, you know, I was thinking, you know, even if
you listen on a different platform, whether it's Apple Play
or you know, iHeartRadio, go over to Rumble and look
up the Doctor Krupa's National half hours and give us
a like, we wish you would like to build those numbers.
Speaker 3 (01:56:45):
Yeah, that would be great. Well, I said, it's this
is a great team. I am so grateful for everybody.
And the place mats are so cool. I look forward
every week just to seeing what you guys have come
up with. And Mushy River come on, I mean, and
(01:57:06):
then it then it had a sign build that said
caution music.
Speaker 9 (01:57:10):
I had.
Speaker 2 (01:57:12):
No I did.
Speaker 9 (01:57:13):
I did not make that one.
Speaker 6 (01:57:15):
No, I know who made that one. I know who
made that one. But I liked it. It was still cool.
It was funny.
Speaker 3 (01:57:26):
So and every week I never know what songs I'm
coming up with, just they just hit me. And some
of them are pretty funny. I like Susie's birthday song
today that was the Rolling Stones.
Speaker 9 (01:57:47):
Well, sounds like Steven assumed you were going to play
a mushy song.
Speaker 3 (01:57:58):
Well, I've heard his music and I used to be
over there with him and participated in his show, so
I know a lot about his music, and some of
it I like.
Speaker 6 (01:58:09):
Some of it I wouldn't ever thought of. But he's
you know, he's like all of us.
Speaker 3 (01:58:14):
We've all got our own things that we like, and
each one of us is different. Thank God for me,
every week is different because I just I'll be doing
something that a song will pop up.
Speaker 6 (01:58:25):
And Bill, I know what you.
Speaker 3 (01:58:26):
Mean about that three o'clock in the morning, because my
poor little dog is having trouble remembering to go outside.
And at three in the morning, I heard him make
a noise, and I jump up, and I'm worried about
falling back asleep.
Speaker 6 (01:58:42):
Because I don't want him to end up going in
the house. I want to make sure I get him outside.
So I start hearing songs in my head and get
him stuck there, and it's interesting. You can hear it's
so good and there's no music playing nowhere.
Speaker 9 (01:59:00):
I think he could do You think he could train
him or encourage him to use a puppy pad.
Speaker 3 (01:59:07):
No, because he's used to going out. It's just sometimes
he used to bark. He'd come over to my side
of the bed and he would bark, and I'd get
up and take him out, you know, open.
Speaker 6 (01:59:18):
The door for him. During the day, the door.
Speaker 3 (01:59:21):
Is open because the patio has a doggy door, so
that's not a problem. But I'm afraid to leave it
open the night because the kitty camp might decide to
go out there and take a look around, and her mama.
Speaker 6 (01:59:33):
Would not like that. All right, guys, Well was that susy,
I said, no, Yeah, that's what mama says. She said,
you might get curious.
Speaker 3 (01:59:45):
I said, you just tell her it's a big litter
box out there, and she used to go putty out there.
Speaker 6 (01:59:49):
No, anyway, it is that time, guys. A good show.
Speaker 3 (01:59:56):
I love all the place, mats and great topic Bill,
great recipes, Susie, And I'm looking into that chocolate you
talked about. I guess you could just get any kind
of that chocolate from that taza and put a little
bit in your chili and let it just melt and
work into really a good flavor.
Speaker 6 (02:00:18):
So I got to try that.
Speaker 3 (02:00:20):
I looked at that website, Bill, I don't know if
Susie sent it to you, but they had some great
looking chocolate and some pretty pretty reasonable prices for some
samples things. So all right, well, ladies and gentlemen, we
cannot thank you enough for being here. I've got to
do this real quick because this is so rare. I
(02:00:41):
have never seen this many nations and we're running a
little over, but that's okay, nobody cusses me too bad.
We have South Africa, Uruguay, Ukraine, Senegal, Paraguay, Palestine, Peru, Kazistan, Jardan, Iraq, Azerbaide,
john Tunisia, Russia, Mexico, Israel, Colombia, Canada, Czechi, which used
(02:01:08):
to be Czech Republic, in the Argentine of Bangladesh, Australia,
United Kingdom, Brazil, and the United States.
Speaker 6 (02:01:17):
That's the most we have ever had. It is really cool.
We are so grateful to all of you that are
tuned in and listening and I know you love this
team as much as I do.
Speaker 9 (02:01:29):
It is.
Speaker 3 (02:01:30):
A unique thing because if it wasn't all of us together,
it would not be this good.
Speaker 6 (02:01:36):
And it's a lot of fun.
Speaker 3 (02:01:37):
So anyway, May God bless you all with health and
happiness and keep your lives peaceful, free and safe.
Speaker 6 (02:01:48):
And it is that time for good scotch, good cigars,
and good night. Good know I all. It seems the
love I've known has always been the most destructive kind.
Guess that's why now I feel so old before my time. Yesterday,
(02:02:16):
when I was young, the taste of life was sweet
as rain upon my tongue. I teased at light, as
if it were a foolish game, the way that.
Speaker 2 (02:02:31):
Even breeze may tease a candle flame.
Speaker 6 (02:02:35):
The thousand dreams I dreamed, the splendid things I plan.
I always built to last on weekend.
Speaker 2 (02:02:44):
Shifting sand.
Speaker 6 (02:02:46):
I lived by night and.
Speaker 7 (02:02:49):
Shun the naked light of day.
Speaker 6 (02:02:52):
And only now I see how the.
Speaker 7 (02:02:55):
Years ran away.
Speaker 4 (02:02:57):
Yesterday, when I was young,