Episode Transcript
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Welcome to the Healthy Alternatives Radio TVShow with doctor Janet Hull, bringing uncensored
alternative health topics and special guests revealingthe truth about natural health and nature's remedies.
After curing herself from a near deathexperience caused by aspertaine poisoning, Doctor
Hull became one of the world's mostrenowned artificial sweetener experts, combining her expertise
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in environmental toxicology with natural healing andhellistic nutrition. Doctor Hull is a best
selling author and expert in finding theroot causes of modern diseases using hair analysis.
Join doctor Hull in discovering what maybe at the root of your health
concerns, and remember that there arealways Healthy Alternatives. For more information on
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doctor Janet Hull and the Healthy AlternativesRadio TV show, visit Healthy Alternatives Radio
TV, dot com and now hereis the host of Healthy Alternatives, Doctor
Janet Hull. How do y'all?Welcome to Healthy Alternatives. Today's segment is
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on chronic pain and what is beingmarketed as chronic pain syndrome. We have
some healthy alternatives for you. Sufferingwith chronic pain is not fun and it's
definitely something everyone is looking for naturalsolutions to today we're going to be We
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have two guests, Jim Glenn whois with the Asia Redox Company, and
Jerry White, a physical therapist.Thank you so much for joining me.
Guys. Both these people have wonderfulstories to tell. They suffered our Jim
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suffered with chronic pain. Jerry workswith chronic pain patients and they have before
and after stories on what they weredoing before they found a Sea redox,
which seems to be doing some miraculousthings for people suffering with chronic pain.
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I wanted to briefly introduce what oursegment is going to be all about,
because when people suffer with chronic pain, they need to remember that the pain
is the number one problem. Thenumber two problem is how to fix the
pain, and that brings up thenumber three problem, and that's that the
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pharmaceutical companies have somewhat taken over chronicpain with prescribe medications, and we are
seeing more and more of fees onthe market today. They've even taken chronic
pain and labeled it as chronic painsyndrome. Now, when you're having a
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reaction to something, and y'all knowwith my work at the holistic network.
I dig and go down the rabbithole to try to find the cause of
the health symptoms, the cause ofthe health diagnoses and disease diagnoses. Nothing
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pops out of nowhere. You're notgoing to be suffering chronic pain if something
isn't causing it. And there's twocategories that I outline with chronic pain.
One goes the nutritional route and thelifestyle route. The other one goes to
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a physical a physical cause. Itcould be in a car accident, a
skiing accident, an injury during athletics. It could be nerve damage, and
chronic pain from nerve damage has gotto be one of the worst. So
we're looking at two different approaches toyour chronic pain, but we still want
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to go down that rabbit hole toidentify the cause of the pain. Once
the cause is identified, then thehealthy alternative solutions can be designed to help
get you through your pain much muchmore naturally. So I'm going to put
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on the reading specs here. Whatwe're at are three things when we talk
about chronic pain with solutions. Inthis show, we're going to be talking
about We're going to look at thesolution of good nutrition and changing your lifestyle,
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and then we're going to dig intoan incredible product that is out there
called a Sea Redox. Now,I had an experience with some pain.
I don't have chronic pain, thankgoodness, but I live on a ranch
in Texas, and I get onthe tractor and I do a lot of
dig in and a lot of treetrimming. And I was beginning to wear
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down what I would assume was anold physical injury on my left arm.
I'd wake up in the morning sostiff, I couldn't move my arm.
So I started I use the SeaRedox. I use it personally, and
I started using the Sea Redox,the cream and the liquid. I do
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the same thing. I trim trees, I dig holes, and I'm on
my tractor and I am not wakingup with any pain at all whatsoever.
Our health coach here at the HolisticNetwork is a personal trainer, and Jenna
Serrano had to stop her personal trainingbusiness because she has the onset of some
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scoliosis and she was in so muchpain after doing this for so many years
that she had to stop doing herphysical training and close her physical training business.
Well, by serendipity, Jim,was it you that she ran into.
It was actually a gentleman, FloydAnderson, up in Corpus Christi,
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Texas. Okay, yeah, sheran into Floy and Floyd told her about
a sea and Floyd gave her someassia to try. And by the time
she had finished what he had givenher, her body pain was gone.
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It was just gone. So shestarted back and she restarted her physical therapy
company and started getting back with herclients again. What I want to talk
about before I get the guys going, and I'm not going to bother them
when they're talking, So I'm gonnado all mine upfront. Chronic pain and
chronic pain syndrome is something that youcan do something about. It takes work,
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it takes faith, and it takesdedication. But when you do the
right things, one you've identified thecause. Two now you're looking at how
to fix it. And three we'retrying to do that without pharmaceutical dependencies.
You get dependent on pharmaceuticals because whenyou get off those pharmaceuticals, the pain
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comes back. So you have toget back on the pharmaceuticals in order to
mask the pain. Now the painthe pharmaceuticals are not addressing. How to
fix this problem and a lifetime ofpharmaceuticals. Using them long term can vary
well cause its own problems and itsown physical damage. So what we want
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to do is present for you natural, healthy, alternative ways to focus on
how you can rid yourself of chronicpain. There are two categories that I
had mentioned. One is a nutritionalcategory. There are many nutritional reasons why
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you're going to suffer chronic pain.One, let's say arthritis and rheumatoid arthritis.
This is a matter of adjusting yourpH and I'm not trying to make
this too simple, but if youadjust your pH and you improve your digestion
and the assimilation of the bone nutrientsthe bone and muscle nutrients and nerve nutrients
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that you are in adjusting. Ifyou improve these two things, then you
can secure that your bone nutrients aregetting inside the bone. When you have
arthritis and rheumatward arthritis, which willeventually put you in a wheelchair, your
bones and your nerves and your myalgia, they are not able to absorb what
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you're feeding them what they need tostay healthy, and so they are not
accepting these bone nutrients inside the bone, and these nutrients sit on the outside
of the bone, they begin tocrust they begin to harden, and before
you know it, you're feeling thearthritic pain of having this crustiness on the
outside of the bone in the joints. And so we can look at a
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healthy solution to arthritis and rheumatward arthritisby adjusting these two things, and of
course along the way we're always goingto be adjusting our dietary habits as well.
Another example of chronic pain headaches andmigraines. Headaches and migraines are the
number one symptom of artificial sweetener use, particularly aspartame use. So if you're
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taking your arthritis or your migraine medicationwith a diet cola, you're not going
to resolve your issue. It's alwaysgoing to be there. So it's very
important for you if you have migrainesto assess what you're eating and drinking,
and if you're into the diet sweeteners, cut those out, immediately, begin
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to detox and let's see what happens. Usually those migraines will go away.
If they don't, then a deeperproblem will arise, and then that can
be addressed as well. Fibromyalgia,Okay, that causes that low chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is a matter of detoxing sometoxins have deposited with the myalgia.
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And if you detox, get physicaltherapy, get some massage therapy, you
can then flush away those toxins thathave deposited with the mayalgia, and many
times help symptoms of fiber mayalgia willgo away. Now here's the second category,
physical injuries. If you've had aphysical injury such as a car accident
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or a sports accident, a physicalfallen off a ladder or fell off the
roof of your house, this isgoing to take a different approach, and
this is Jerry where we have Jerryhere. It's very important that you seek
out a physical therapist, a goodchiropractor, or a massage therapist, one
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or all. And will let Jerrygive us his opinion on that one.
But you need to begin with aphysical program to approach a physical cause,
and then from there you're going toneed supplements. You're going to need to
detox, You're going to need toreplace the supplements that are going to repair
as you begin to release and healdamage from a physical injury. Nerve damage
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is also extremely painful and chronic pain, and a good physical therapist and a
good health practitioner is going to beable to help you with the nerve end
of this. But it is very, very important when you're suffering with chronic
pain that you step back for asecond. You think to yourself, Okay,
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what's going on. We need tofigure out what's caused this. Then
I need to figure out how tofix this. And this is what we're
doing today. We're going to talkabout the ACA redox because this is at
the end of the line, meaningthat once you have researched and discovered for
yourself what you believe is the causeof your chronic pain, you put those
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solutions into place and implement them.Then I highly highly recommend looking into the
SCA redox because it seems to bethe cherry on the soda. It has
worked miracles in so many people,and so that's what we're going to be
talking about today. I want tothank you guys for joining me, and
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the next segment we'll have Jim talkingabout his experience. Welcome back to Healthy
Alternatives. We're talking about healthy waysto get rid of chronic pain, and
Jim, I am so happy tohave you here. Your experience is very,
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very motivating, and I'm sure alot of people are going to be
able to connect with it. You'rea tall guy. You're six five,
right, Nick? Six Okay,oh yeah, that extra yet you're right
right, Well, your background wasplaying basketball logically, so and I'm sure
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you're really good at it because youplayed in high school and in college and
you developed your back problems early on. But I'll let you get into details
with that. I just want tocomplete introducing everyone to you. You are
work. You have been working withthe Sea Redox Company since they were founded
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in two thousand and nine. AreThey hit the market in twenty ten,
but that was after years of researchin order to put this product available.
But I would love to know.I've got some questions to ask you at
the end of your segment, butI'd love to know about your experience.
You were a kid, you're ahigh schooler, you're a college basketball player.
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You started developing how issues and thenhow did you handle that throughout your
years before you discovered the Sea Redox. Yeah, thank you so much.
It's an honor to be here.Janet, really appreciate your time. Yeah,
I've been with the company now eightyears. The company is going on
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fourteen years old. But again,I played high school basketball. I moved
down to the Rear Grand Valley whereI played one year of basketball, down
to Pan American, and it waseven preseason before the season began, and
I had already sprained my ankle reallybad. I was out for about thirty
days forty five days with that.But then my first practice back, the
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coach said for me to get in. It was a practice session, and
the second I stood up, myback froze. No idea what I did.
I couldn't even I couldn't move.I was in bed for about a
week. I was getting a lotof therapy in the trainer's room and then
progressively since then, that kind ofended my career. But then I'm now
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sixty five. At fifty eight yearsold, I had been developing back issues.
I've actually have had ten lower backsurgeries over the last twenty five to
thirty years. Ten surgery they puta stimulator in my back. I've actually
have had six levels fused in mylower back, and that was the only
answer that I had. I didn'tknow of any other route to go was
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the traditional medical route. And soeight years ago actually this journey really began
nine years ago, and Jerry popsinto this story as well, because my
best friend, he's a banker,his wife's a youth pastor, and their
son had been playing football at Baylor. He had been a freshman made the
Baylor football team. They came homeand they went on a family cruise to
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Alaska and Chase Potter. He wason the ship one night and he started
getting bad headaches. They took himto the ship, they isolated him.
The next morning when they poured inSitka, they took him off the ship
by ambulance to the hospital. Hehad contracted a bug. And we have
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to be cautious because we're not anFDA drugs. We have to be cautious
in the lingo that we use withinAnd then the next day they air vacked
him to Seattle. That was ateaching hospital. They had over forty doctors
looking at him, and and thatnight, the first night, the next
day in Seattle, the medical teamsaid he will not survive. It was
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that close to going into his brainand he everything above his waist was gone.
It shut down. His eyes wereflickering, he couldn't swallow. Mom
and Dad, are just you knowfred out. Yeah, Well, we
had thousands upon thousands of people withinhours that were praying for Chase. And
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the doctor said at his bedside,he's not gonna wake up in the morning.
Oh, and so Chase heard thatand he did not go to sleep
that night. And so through prayer, the damage stopped. It did not
continue into his brain like they saidit would, and but yet he was
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still paralyzed above the waist. Tookhim about thirty days or so to get
him ambulance transferred back to San Antonio. They put him in warm springs and
within a month the insurance ran out. They said, there's nothing we can
do. A medical team and atthat point Robert had tried everything. They
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tried multiple other homeopathic type thing,good products, good things out there,
but it didn't do anything for Chase. And then through a chiropractor, he
made a phone call and that's howthey reached Jerry White. And then the
main questions, correct me if I'mwrong, Jerry, But it was like,
Okay, can this stuff hurt myson? And then is there any
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chance that will help him? Andso it was like, hey, let's
give it a shot. So withinChase could not move his arms more than
an inch and within five months,Chase could put his arms up and over
his head. There were about seventyknown cases that year. Multiple people passed
away, multiple people lost limbs,in very few if any improved. Chase
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did. So. That was whenI and I witnessed all of that,
but I didn't know what he wasusing to help him. And then one
day Robert called me, said Jim, I need to come over, and
he shared this technology with me,and I said, look, I don't
care what it is. I don'tcare what's in it. Sign me up,
you know, because if there's Andso I've had ten back surgery,
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I was addicted to pain pills.I was on one pain medication for twenty
five years. I ended up gettingnerve damage in my left thigh that I
was on three medications for that forseven years. And I'm an ex stockbroker.
My wife and I are very veryactive. People were very active,
but I couldn't do much. Iwas in so much discomfort and I was
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so highly medicated that I would comehome from working at the bank as a
stockbroker and I would sleep for anhour and a half to two hours.
We also have a lot of seasonalbreathing issues around this area, so I
was medicated for that as well.But I knew those medications were killing me.
But I had what was I goingto do? Because if I slowed
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down and the stimulator didn't do anythingfor me, I keep jokingly going,
I wish somebody would take it out, but I won't go through another surgery.
But I had no hope, Janet. And when this came into my
life, you know, signed meup and I started drinking more than most,
more than the suggested amount, andI was shocked. Within a very
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short period of time, my brainfog and I was on all my medications.
Still my brain was gone in avery short period of time. And
that was like, Holy mackerel,what is this stuff? And then the
discomfort in my back was ninety fivereduced, and I'm going to myself,
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what is this? And my wifewas not a really big believer in the
beginning. She's a nutrition coach,she's a health nut, but yet the
big sea runs in her family.But she said, no, no,
no, Jim, I don't needto do that. You're you're the one
messed up. And I have noother health issues that I was aware of
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before that. So my wife hadan infected fingernail for two years and cracked
heels and in a matter of aweek those went away, and so we
started looking into this. I wasintroduced to Jerry not too much thereafter and
is like, it doesn't matter matterwhat your issue is. These molecules that
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are native to the body will willwork and Jerry will get into that.
So I did a really quick withmy background as a broker, I did
a really deep dive into the company, into our founder, and it turns
out that it's real. You know. It allows everything alive to literally heal
itself. It's waking up the genesin the DNA, and it's allowing the
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body to do what God made thebody to do, which is to heal
itself. But Janet, we havesince I used to have little things in
my vision field. They want alittle floaters. Yeah, so I've had
we can't even remember so many ofthe things that we had then that we
don't have today. Is we've beenon in now eight years. In a
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couple of weeks, it'll be eightyears. And then when I got introduced
to Jerry, and he is probablythe foremost knowledgeable man on the planet,
about what these molecules are doing.I don't need to know all of that.
I just need to know Jerry.And so getting around him and then
listening to what he was talking topeople that I was introducing this too,
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it was like, holy mackerel,you know. So, so I've now
made it a business. My wifeand I have about eight years ago because
we're kind of going as a humanitarian. I care right about people, so
we kind of go, well,everybody needs to hear about this, and
so we've now it's also a businessopportunity for the right people. But you
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know, we've seen it work.It doesn't matter what the issue is.
Well, I have a couple ofquestions for you. Yeah, one is
you know we always say natural,this is natural, alternative, natural medicine.
Why do you use the word native. I've never heard that used before.
Yeah, great question, and I'msure Jerry will elaborate. But you
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know, blueberries and blackberries. Igrow ginger. I'm in Santonio. I
go ginger around a water feature thatI have and my wife eats it.
Well, people can be allergic tothat. That's it's natural. But people
can be allergic to that. Blueberriesand blackberries are natural, but they're not
natively grown inside of me. Well, this technology is made from salt and
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water, which is natively seventy percentof our bodies are made from salt and
water. And then Jerry may gointo that, but that's native, which
means there can be zero toxicity,there can be zero negative reaction because I'm
putting more of me back into me. And Yeah, these molecules start their
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decline about a puberty and or otherstressors and or other illnesses will cause it
to go down quicker, and that'swhy we age. Well, I have
another question for you. Yes,you mentioned that you didn't even know what
your health symptoms were when you wereon the pain medications until after you got
off the pain medications. Can youkind of give people a grasp on what
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a lifetime of pain medications is goingto make them feel like as opposed to
when they get off the pain medsand they get on native products like asia.
The difference that you felt. That'sa really emotional question for me.
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We don't have to answer it ifyou don't want to. A corner.
No, Jay, I've never beenasked that question because where I was was
a bad place. I was takingfive hundred pills a month, and I
was a zombie and my children probablynever really knew me the way that they
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would know me today. Because Ihad brain fall. I was out of
it again. When I would comehome from the office, I would sleep
an hour and a half to twohours every day, and then at night
I would be taking the medication.And I didn't take it as as a
stockbroker. I didn't want to takeit during the market hours from you know,
from A thirty to three, soI would as soon as the market
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closed, you know, I wastaking my pills. Wow. I don't
know what it was like to havea normal life until this came into my
life. And and when and ittook me three months to get off all
my medication with my medical help andJerry and a few others, myself off
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and I went to my pain doctorand he I showed him the pretty blue
bottle and he whatever, because alot of medical people just don't know what
this is and they go, well, it's made from saltwater. Well that's
ridiculous, but they didn't know.But it was my body, Janet.
But I really that's awesome question thatyou asked. Because I was in a
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bad place. Now I'm in thebest place, and we've got We've got
thirty seconds to the break, sokeep going. Oh I love where I
am. I'm sixty five years old. I've got my life ahead of me.
I have no fear, I haveno ent of My discomfort's gone.
My wife and I are hyper hyperactivepeople. We're going to be going to
Jerry's house in a couple of monthswhere he takes us out into the wild
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and we just go have a blast. I love he's my mentor. But
what we have everybody deserves to hearabout it. We're a fourteen year old
company in thirty three countries, andmy mission is to share this with everyone.
All righty, we're gonna take abreak and we'll be back with Jerry
White. Alrighty, welcome back,Jim. Thank you so much for all
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of that, because it segues usinto Jerry here. Jerry, you are
a research scientist like I am,and so you're always going down rabbit holes
because you've got to going down thoseto try to figure out how to fix
these issues. But you're a certifiedphysical therapist and you have done some amazing
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work with UM. You started UMhere. Let me put on my reading
glasses. Here. You started theorthopedic the gait, orthopedic and Neurological lab
at Shriner's Hospital, pretty pretty goodstuff. And then you were also an
adjunct professor at the Biomechanics and PhysiologyDepartment at Eastern Washington University and UM in
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the Physical Therapy School. So youknow what you're doing, but being a
research scientist, you're just not doingthe mechanics of physical therapy. You're,
like I said, going down thoserabbit holes. So when you first found
this to see a rabbit hole,tell us or your story about that.
When you first discovered to see areadox a couple of housewives, it was
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very very interesting. UM. Ihad been working on a number of very
interesting projects and one of those wasunusual paint syndromes. Get a little closer
to your mind. All right,let's see if I is that any help
at all? A little bit better? M you're a little light. UM,
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I'll try. I'll try. Hellocomputer, go to work and turn
up. Keep going. I didn'tmean to wrupt you. I'm sorry.
As a as a as a physicaltherapist. One of the things that was
great about the Shriner's Hospital system wasthat they were there for a very specific
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reason, and that was to giveaway free healthcare little kids. So they
would they had to pretty much unlimitedbudget. So when we looked at some
of the most unusual things on planetEarth, things that kids couldn't get better
from, these guys would fly themin, bring their family in, and
I had an opportunity to do somethingthat most healthcare professionals don't get to do,
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and that was sometimes I could workwith one single patient and their aspects
of what they were doing for thirtydays in a row. Didn't have to
get polluted with time constraints and getstuck, but go after what the real
causes were, and I would througha lot of different things that the average
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therapists wouldn't have an opportunity to gothrough. Became a certified magnetic therapist for
eighteen years looking at how magnetic fieldsaffected how you sensed the pain in your
life. Worked on that with amputeesand one of the interesting syndromes called phantom
limb where it hurts but it's notthere anymore. And I did some really
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interesting things with trying to determine howthe body receives this pain, and we
are work with amputees and spinal cordinjuries and people with brain injuries and all
these other areas of unusual pain.Well, this housewife called me up.
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She had been working with me onthe other project for a number of years,
and she said, there's this stuff. And they brought us down to
this laboratory and there were some peopleand they just it sounds like way too
good to be true, and theysaid, we'd like to have you go
down and take a look at itand tell us if it's even possible.
They said, I got a lotof other things going on in people talking
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about this and that, and Ijust don't have time for it. So
for three years I blew them off. One day, though, I did
go there, and it absolutely changedeverything about how I view physiology, cell
biology, human embryology, and howwe develop and what changes over the course
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of our lifetime. What we're aboutto crack the can on here right now
is probably the greatest discovering biological sciencein at least two lifetimes. Wow,
this is nuts, and it's hardto kind of get into a lot of
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the basics. But if I tellyou that this subject today, let's narrow
it down, is chronic pain.Chronic pain in terms of the relationship of
this material to chronic pain. Chronicpain is a word that you can use
in medicine, but you're not allowedto use in supplements. So each one
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of us has our own perception ofwhat life feels like and the problems in
life, and if it occurs fora long time doesn't go away, we
call it chronic. And if it'sa short term, really right at the
beginning, it's called acute, andkind of that's the big deal. So
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today when we talk about this ideaof chronic pain, it's probably one of
the most costly things we deal within the healthcare system. So today when
I talk about this stuff, we'renot we're not talking about pain. But
what I want to help you understandis that there are some very interesting reactions
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in human beings that are very differentthan animals. Let's say, for example,
the most effective chronic pain medication thatwe had at the time when I
was working in the lab worked aboutsixty percent of the time on people.
Well, animals that worked about onehundred percent. And you know the difference
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perception and the stressers in your lifeand how tolerant you your life is interesting
and so pretty interesting stuff, andso then we have to grapple with that,
and we when we're trying to dissectand pull apart with this chronic pain
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concept, feels like to that particularindividual, the causes can come from pretty
crazy areas and they might be reallysurprising to you. So history or understanding
the person understanding where they're coming fromis really really important. The neat thing
is once I found this concept,this technology, it's it's based on a
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science called redocs signaling brand new science. Actually the predominant naming of this science
reducer oxidizers. How two different typesof molecules that are created when you do
metabolism. And so in order forany cell to be alive and do its
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functions, it has to produce itsown energy. Whether you're a plant,
an animal, microbe, you cannotborrow somebody else's energy. That the cell
itself has to make its own energy. In terms of the cell, it
has to make its own energy,and it goes through a very specific cycle
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that's done in these little organelles calledmitochondria. How important are they pretty important?
And have mitochondria in making those you'dbe dead in three and a half
minutes, you would never have survived. Conception. You have to burn sugars
and fats in the presence of oxygento make ATP, which is this magical
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energy sort of battery that we userecycle that make it over and over again.
Well, here's the part that makesthis or native to the body instead
of natural. What we're working withis a technology that doesn't use water.
The active is the results of whathappens to that salt water during the crib
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cycle or the breaking down of batsand sugars to make oxygen. You see,
if you tried to go through thesteps of pulling a carbon off of
that six carbon sugar in the beginningof this chain called the crib cycle,
and you tried to do it inthe laboratory, you would require fire heat.
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But what we've discovered over time isthat fire doesn't work well inside the
cell. Internal combustion, you knowsort of thing. But multiple steps along
the way, it requires a thingcalled a catalyst to make the step work.
And what is a catalyst. It'ssomething that's used in the equation comes
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up with some byproducts. And theweird thing about it is those byproducts can
go back together and cause the originalcatalysts to still be there and useful.
As my granddad used to say,it's slickered and hot buttered door knobs.
So you get to use this catalystover and over again. And the surprising
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part of this science is saying thesereducers and oxidizers, these these these different
opposites that are made from the partsof salt and water, sodium, chloride,
hydrogen, oxygen pulled apart and legosput back together in a different way
in creating reducers an oxidizers that allowsthat magical equation to occur, to start
(37:44):
pulling off carbon and make an ATP. But those intermediaries used to call them
ancillary molecules, dont waste of time. They're toxic. The corrosive there,
those are what oxidize oxidation. Well, if you didn't do that, you'd
be dead. And yet when youput them in the right categories and balances,
(38:08):
it makes a very interesting thing wenever looked at before. The cells
in your body have to have instantaneousrecognition and response in order to adapt to
the world you live in. Youhave to understand when it's time to make
new cells. They have to understandif we do exercise. Something has to
(38:31):
cause the system to say, let'sbuild something better than what we had before.
Plus it's adaptation to the different environments, right absolutely, and those different
environments can be hot and cold ortoo much stress while you're gosh, go
through the litany radio waves, microwaves, lack of sleep, lack of nutrition,
(38:53):
poor nutrition, poison in the air, poison in the water, poisoning
in your marriage, poison in yourrelationships, lack of sleep, lack of
exercise, all these types of thingsand nutritional imbalances have to be monitored and
adapted too. So here's the quethe interesting question, it's how does this
(39:14):
cell do that? And what's veryvery interesting, you know, in the
light of all of this, iswe now have a material that you can
use that allows the cells to figureit out for themselves. So you're given
them the tools and they know whatto do with it exactly. And that's
(39:34):
remarkable. It's absolutely remarkable because they'renative. That means they're made in the
cell, and if you didn't makethem, you'd be dead. And we
thought they were useless. But nowwhat we find is that there's always a
comparative analysis going beyond on the burnkind of like sampling the exhaust in a
car to tell what's wrong with thecar. The cell is always doing that
(40:00):
and then uses these particular molecular piecesto communicate, says hope, Shoot,
dude, there's a hole in theleft side of this cell, and it
says, Okay, I want toget the articular activating system and the mitochondrial
applicators, and we got to goto the DNA, and we got to
(40:20):
go to the RNN. We gotto start building some replacement stuff. There's
a controller. So here's what itlooks like. There are a number of
different things that we'll talk about morepractically that everybody can understand. We all
know that in nutrition is incredibly important. You've built a career around that.
But here's the interesting part. Thenutrients, the minerals, the vitamins,
(40:45):
the hormones, the co factors.Everything that goes along with that are spare
parts and tools, and your bodycan use those spare parts and tools in
appropriate fashions. Sometimes they can geta little off base with it. But
(41:06):
what this material is is the communicationtools that are used by the contractor to
know what to do with the spareparts and tools. Well, we've got
thirty seconds for our next break.And I want to pick back up on
this when we get back Jerry andJim. When you allow your body to
(41:28):
have its intelligence and you have faiththat it knows more than you do,
and you give it the right tools, it's amazing to see what it can
do. Well, here's the key. You used to do it all the
time, right, Yes, sowhen you were young and in the embryo.
This is when we get back intoembryologic development. Well, we'll get
(41:49):
into that in the next segment.We've got to take our break. Welcome
back, guys. I hated tocut you off on that one. That
that was a good nugget you weregiving us there. Jerry and I have
a couple of questions to ask you. Is this why since we're saltwater beings,
but is this why fish and lifein the sea doesn't seem to age
(42:14):
or to become ill. And mysecond question is if a cell sees a
mutation or a lack of oxygen likea cancer, does it then, as
you were just saying, Jerry,on how it recycles and brings out all
of the good, the good healingrepair. Is this how you can prevent
(42:35):
cancer or help with cancer using readocs. I don't know. We can't talk
about that, but we'll get intosome things here. The first answer to
your question is very interesting. Didyou know that the salinity or salt content
in your body, in your bloodand in your cells, is this as
(43:00):
sea water? Right? Yeah,and so pretty good start to a basic
formulation from which life operates. Andwe used to think it was because it
was simply an electrolyte. And ifyou didn't have the electrolyte, you die.
Because if you put in an IVsolution and a runner that falls on
(43:21):
the side of the road, younever put in water. You kill them.
In the IV, you put inappropriate solution of salt water. Now
that's saltwater. Now we're just discoveringhas many many more uses in the development
of health. So let's let's takea look this this material that you're talking
(43:45):
about today. It comes in aliquid form and a gel form. We
have to be very careful to say. It went through seventeen years of study
at the FDA as of potentially workingto tour became i'm an IVY drug,
and it failed in that process.And part of the reason was because they're
(44:10):
in out of money. After seventeenyears. Part of it was because it
couldn't hurt you, so you can'tcall it a drug, so it falls
in another category. Ain't that weird? So because it can't hurt you,
it goes into a new category thatsays, we can't imply that this has
got medical benefits. We can't talkabout diagnostic things. But what we can
(44:32):
do is we can say to somebody, want to see something cool. And
so what we talk about is that, what if the communication in your body
got messed up by lifestyle, stressand environment? Is that even remotely and
age and drugs? Is that evenremotely possible? And on most of our
(44:55):
minds, probably you can get messedup by lifestyle, stress, environment,
age and all that stuff. Andif that's true and you take away the
problem, that'd be better. Personallytoday is exposed to more toxicity in fifteen
(45:19):
minutes than someone living one hundred yearsago got in an entire lifetime. So
we're coming up with all kinds ofthings. Faster and orders, lifestyle and
stress and environment, all of thesethings play critical roles. They mess with
the communication. Correct the communication itdoesn't know how to do it wrong.
(45:43):
That's the really amazing part. Butlet me give you an example of why
we get older and why when weget older you don't work as well.
You've got a viewing positive audience here, and I'd ask them to think about
it. Can you do what youused to do when you were twelve?
Did you know that before you werebefore puberty, you could play all day
(46:05):
long and you never got sore?But afterwards you go to double practices when
you're a football or track team injunior high and you could hardly get up
the stairs. Do you know whathappened? When you're a little kid under
the age of puberty, you burnfats and you burn sugars, or burn
fats first and sugars second. Afterpuberty, you burn sugars first and fats
(46:31):
second, and when those sugars burn, they burn dirty, end up with
lack of acid, you get sore. So we found that we could literally
remind the system how to burn thefats first. Interesting going back to what
it was when you're a little kid. So now let's take a look at
Did you know that the cells ina little kid turn over faster make new
(46:54):
replacements. Then when you get older, we look at skin in first place,
a little kid under the age oftwo won't form a scar, usually
from a gut. Just close itand it closes so quickly it doesn't need
a scar. But by the timeyou're four, you have to form a
scar, and then it'll be therefor the rest of your lifetime. The
scars made of cells, like theskin has made of cells, but it
(47:16):
keeps staying there. We've now seenthis unusual ability for the cell that is
a scar that's been replacing scar yearsand years and years later to get new
information and in one cell cycle goback and being skin. Isn't that interesting?
(47:37):
And so if that happens at theskin level, what's happening at your
heart and your brain, your liver, your intestines, your digestive tract and
all these others. Is if itcould read the DNA and the ways it
read it. When you were littlein the developmental stages, it used to
build an entire set of new organsand a whole body from nothing. And
(48:00):
then after birth, if you cutthe finger off, it didn't get to
grow back. What was missing itwas this series of molecules called redox signaling
molecules. So at the core ofit, when we start adding these things
back, your function changes. Soyour subject today is what happens with people
who hurt so bad they can't makeit go away, and they've tried everything
(48:22):
else and they can't make it goaway. Well, the first thing I
would tell you is that I justsaw one the other day. This is
a problem where they had an infectionjust in the nerve that comes out just
in front of your ear, andone branch goes to the top over your
eye, and you get the sensoryfor your eye on your forehead, and
(48:45):
then one goes right here that affectslike every toothache you ever had in the
whole world, all at once,and the third leg of it does the
bottom. What would happen if youmade that whole nerve go nuts and they
all started hurting it at the sametime. They call it suicide disease.
Yeah, I wouldn't feel good.Trigeminal neuralgia. Now I'm not supposed to
(49:07):
mention diagnostic categories. But these peopleare intractable in their discomfort and they will
not go away. And I nowhave the third person in a row that
told me, and this is completelycoincidental. It really had nothing to do
with this redoct but it over thecourse of about two weeks with twelve ounces
(49:34):
a day. I think it wastwelve. They might have gone out to
twenty four. You just use enoughof it, can't hurt it. That
they had completely overcome all of thesymptoms of discomfort. It did a very
interesting one yesterday. Lady had agenetic disorder where the bones started to pop
(50:00):
on. It's an unusual disorder.She was only one of three people in
the world or in the United Statesthat have this disorder. Her son has
it as well, and very disfiguringand so forth. She was in her
sixties. But she never should havesurvived the past. They said about thirteen.
And she said, well, thispossibly couldn't make a difference in the
(50:22):
discomfort that I feel. And Isaid, well, what is that discomfort
that you feel right now? AndI said, can you squat? She
said absolutely not. If I gotpart way down, I'd fall down.
And I said, well, okay, here's gonna put your hand on the
table. I want you to squatdown a little bit and stop when you
get to a point I feel likeCharlie Chaplin or something here. Stop at
(50:50):
a point when that I can measureyour fingertip to the floor just before it
starts to become real problematic. Andshe said, well, right there,
and it was twenty twenty one inchesfrom the ground. And then I said,
now I want to test your reflexes. And I said, I want
to find out how your body's reactingto the world around it. And so
(51:13):
I had her put her hands ina basket like this, you know,
and then hold him down here,and then said, okay, pretend I'm
going to try to climb over thefence and go steal some watermelons. Don't
lift and don't fall forward. SoI pushed down on her hands, and
she had an interesting response. Willcertainty, she fell right forward, kind
of predictable because that was a reflexresponse. The other thing though, that
(51:35):
happened to her was she said,I have this really significant nerve discomfort.
And this nerve discomfort got so badthat it was almost again to that point
we call intractable. It's just overwhelming. You can't think of anything else.
It's just like, I don't thinkI like you, and I'm not happy
you did that. So I said, I want you to apply this technology
(52:00):
her neck. Why here, becauseit's the easiest place to find with no
clothes on it in the wintertime.But it really doesn't matter a whole lot.
You could apply it right. ButI had her put it on her
fingers as well, and I said, I want to find out if your
body, your system is going tohear and react in a different way.
So I said, arms down toyour side. Let's have you a squat
(52:22):
down like that, and I'm goingto measure the distance from the floor.
She went from twenty three inches toseventeen. And this had been a lifetime
that they said that can't move Andshe goes, this is crazy. Did
the deal with a bucket in herhands. She couldn't fall over with eight
(52:42):
times the force that we did before. And then she said the most unbelievable
part is I literally about five minutesinto it, she said, I cannot
feel the discomfort in my fingers.That went from three to ten when I
did the test, now it waszero. Now these are things that we
thought we can't take care of thatcan we identify each one of the mechanical
(53:07):
steps that causes the perception in thatperson. I could go on a lot
of your TV channels for a longtime and show you some really cool possibilities,
but the real reality is we're notexactly sure. Well, I can't
believe that we only have a coupleminutes left in this in this interview,
(53:30):
I could talk to you guys allweek. I mean, well, and
of course that's what you guys do. You talk to people about this constantly
and you can never really get enough. Jerry Jim, We definitely want to
have you back on again because there'seven more to go into. And I
think the storytelling and the case historiesand the success stories are what people need
(53:53):
to be reminded of that they're outthere and that they can they can achieve
this if they work hard and ifthey believe they can and if they have
the right tools. Sure tell uswhere people can go to get more information
about the Acridox tool and how theycan get into contact with with someone that
(54:16):
can put them on the right path. Yeah, and that's where I would
say, we have a website mywife and I do is called healthy h
A l T H Y Heart hE A R T the word and soul
dot com healthy heart and spell itoutsoul dot com. That is our website
(54:38):
where it's this information. And thenI would say, if they want my
email address if that's okay, Janet, Oh, absolutely, that's up to
you. Yeah, and my emailaddress is Jim Jim mental initial M from
Michael. My last name is GlennG. L E. Double n Than
Jr. For Junior at Outlook dotcom. Jim M. Glenn, Junior
(55:00):
at Outlook dot com. Look,we're here to service other people. If
we don't do this, people aren'tgoing to hear about it because we only
use this way of contracting. Reachingout to people is the word of mouth,
which I believe to be the bestmarketing form on the planet. Well,
once in a while, people willgo to the Internet and start to
start looking up the name and itsterms and all of that sort of stuff.
(55:22):
And here's what people have to understand. If you're a real researcher,
you would go to Google, scholardot com. Okay, not the bathroom
wall of the Internet, which isGoogle. You could find anything there.
It reminds me of the commercial ofthe people who are just abducted by aliens.
We just said. There can beall kinds of stories on there that
(55:45):
you just you got to be aroundsomebody who cares, somebody who can understand,
and the people that work with youto use this in a way that
give you a best chance, andso get in touch with people like Jim
and and to do that. Thankyou so much, guys for your time.
And I hope that this healthy alternativehas helped others get rid of their
(56:05):
chronic pain. Thank you so muchfor joining us today. Next week we're
going to be talking with someone whowas sent home to die from cancer.
That was fifteen years ago. Sothank you so very much for joining us
on Healthy Alternatives today.