All Episodes

July 30, 2025 79 mins
What if the problem isn’t you… It’s the outdated belief systems you never consented to.Dr. Salas joins Tony on Project Third-eye Opened to expose the hidden mental blocks sabotaging high achievers — diet, personal environment, state of mind - and how to rewire for predictable success without the personal development hamster wheel.28 years. 4,267 lives. One system. Tune in and clear your path.
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Our foundering fathers here in this country brought about the
only true revolution that has ever taken place in man's history.
Evolved the idea that you and I have within ourselves,
the god given right and the ability to determine our
own destiny.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
The United States of America the greatest nation in history,
ordained by our founders to be guided by divine providence.
But today we are witnessing the orchestrated disintegration of America.
Take a few seconds and take a look around your town,
your state, look at your country and your world, and

(00:38):
boldly ask what in the hell is going on?

Speaker 1 (00:43):
But freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.
We didn't pass it on to our children in the bloodstream.
The only way they can inherit the freedom we have
known is if we fight for it, protect it, defend it,
and then hand it to them with the well taught
lessons of how they are in their lifetime. Let's do
the same.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Welcome to the podcast Project Third Eye Opened, where we
dare to question with boldness the events that are unfolding
around us that others won't. At the end of the day,
it is we the people who will decide the destiny
of the nation. Now introducing your host, Tony el.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
Greedy Greedy is there one? This is Tony L.

Speaker 4 (01:34):
And this is a very special podcast presentation that we
that I'm bringing you. This is a doctor Aliens slas
very interesting gentlemen. I think one of the things that's
suck out most about.

Speaker 5 (01:49):
Him and reading his bio that he lived on a
boat and this sell the Sot de France for quite
a period of time.

Speaker 4 (01:59):
Christ with that that was that was an experience in
of itself. But he's all about.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
Get your getting your get your mind right.

Speaker 4 (02:08):
Heaven people get their mind right to think positively, and
particularly in this very challenging period of time that we
are going through.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
I think that's very important.

Speaker 4 (02:18):
I wanted to bring this knowledge information to you, so
Allen tell people about you.

Speaker 6 (02:27):
Yes, yes, Tony, are you doing so doing well?

Speaker 3 (02:30):
Doing well? Just this just this by night.

Speaker 4 (02:34):
So you're not currently sailing the South of France right
now or are you?

Speaker 6 (02:41):
Hm? Now, that was like one of my failther that
was my first life. I'm number three. So anyway, yes,
I used to uh to live on myself boat and
actually I also used to rent both in South of France.
So I was working like seven months a year, you know.
And I was like, you know, twenty two years old,

(03:02):
you know, I started at young. Yeah, so I was
living the life. I had long hair, the ear.

Speaker 4 (03:09):
Ring, the worries, the worries, no bills.

Speaker 6 (03:16):
Minding my own business, right, and the rest of the time,
when I was done working, like in the October beginning
of October, you know, the weathers started to be okay, right,
so I will sell a little bit in the Mediterranean, see,
and after I we'll buy a hairfare to go to
the South Hemisphere. Right. So basically I didn't know what
winter was like. No was for almost ten years, right.

(03:40):
I was the kind of a sun chest certain in right.
And so you will say, you know, I mean life
is great, right, I mean why even changing? But you know,
I had a calling. I saw my I saw myself
helping other people, right. And I didn't have anybody in
my family who were involved with health care at all. Right,
there was no doctor or nurse, no massage therapist, nobody.

(04:02):
And so I started to ask around with my client.
And one day I'm ending up talking to my client.
He told me, oh, you know what, Alan, there's a
there's a guy that is he is a Chinese doctor. Right,
he's from France by his doctor, maybe you should talk
to him. I say, hey, yes, I want to talk
to him, right, because I felt like there was a

(04:23):
wall and no door to go to the other side, right,
and so hopefully that guy will will be able to
help me. And sure enough when he came, we had
a conversation, right and uh and with some y and stuff,
and he told me, you know what, I'm going to
give you like three books to read right to get
your head straight about healing and what this is about.

(04:43):
And when you're done with a season, you come to
see me, I will give you a treatment and we
talk and sure enough I read with three books. And
the first book was called The Doo Without Taking, which
is a Chinese very deep philosophical book. And after he
gave me like the Hara h a r a, which

(05:04):
is like you know Japanese philosophy, and the harakiri. Will
you know when Japanese people commit suicide, they will use
a blade and just go in that god because haarah
means got right, and and go to that center a
little human being to commit suicide. But it was also

(05:25):
an a your philosophy, a posture and all that. So
it was very interesting. And the last book was about
the Man between the Earth and the Sky, which is
about acupunctual philosophy. So I really enjoyed this book and
I couldn't wait to talk to the guy right, And
so when the season was done, sure enough, you know,
I contacted her and we start talking and asked him

(05:45):
about Chinese medicine, right, and he said, well, you know,
there's different ways you can do that, but if you can,
if you want to do if you want to know
what you're doing, and you need to do it. Like
I did. I went to China and ten years in
China right to learn Chinese language, study old text. And
I said his name was Philip, Right, said Philip Man,

(06:07):
I'm thirty years old. I want to practice one day, right,
And so he told me, you know what, Alan, you
look strong? Why not chiropractic? And I replied, what's that?
And so sure enough he gave me some information.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
About some friends.

Speaker 7 (06:21):
What's it called chiropractic chiropractic? Yeah, so chiropractic, right, And
so I said what's that, right, and and gave me
some contact.

Speaker 6 (06:35):
You know, like some French people went to the US
to study chiropractic and showing up, I got some information
from the school, got translated by a friend of mine.
She was an English teacher, right, And what was fascinating
to me was they were talking about what they called
the innt intelligence, your own ability to heal yourself. And
this was really fascinating to me. And showing up, I

(06:56):
went to the US and I got my first just
man with a French girl in a college and she
gave me my first treatment. I said, okay, I'm going
to do that. So I went back and talked to
my parents. I said, oh, by the way, so imagine
and the gypsy long hair drunk every night, right, I'm
in fun, not crazy. And I told my parents, by

(07:16):
the way, I'm going to America to become a doctor.
So I mean, you should have seen their face while
they were laughing, basically, and my dad later on told me,
I said, I give you like three months and he
would have come back. But they didn't know. You see,
they didn't know tell me that how meaningfully was that
experience was for me? And I transformed transformat in he

(07:37):
has been in my life, so sure enough I saw
everything my boat, my boat business and to make a
long story short. I went to the US and I
graduate from a Cleveland chariropractice school, which is in school
by Kansas City, Missouri. Right, and met my wife. You know,
she's a French woman. I met in a bar and
where a kid. Her name is Maya, Right, And so

(08:00):
I started to treat people. Right. And so here's the thing, Tony.
With chiropractic, you know, people will get better pretty fast,
but after they will also plateau pretty fast, and just
to maintain their health problem, I still have to treat them.
So there was something wrong that didn't resonate with me
because I know one thing. I don't know lots of things,

(08:21):
you know for sure in my life, but this one
I know for sure. If you've got any problem, Tony,
and your problem maybe a health problem, maybe a prosperity problem,
maybe a relationship problem, it doesn't matter what problem it is.
If you want to resolve permanently your problem, you need
to know two things. Number one, you need to know
what's causing your problem. Right. If you don't know what's

(08:42):
causing your problem, how can you fix it? And number two,
you need to know how to fix it. So, if
you know what's causing your problem, you know how to
fix it, you can move on. There's no more problem.
You don't even think about your problem. It's resolved, is done,
You're moving on, right. So it leads me to believe
that maybe caw practic was not going towards to all

(09:04):
the cause of the problem of your health problem that
you can have. And also maybe you know, part of
the way to fix it was was not we could
do better, right. And so I started to research, and
I realized that twenty percent of the nerves that exit
on the side of your body, right, it's called the
peripheral nervous system, but go everywhere in your body. It's

(09:24):
only twenty percent, you know, And so why not doing
one hundred person?

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Right?

Speaker 6 (09:29):
And so I became a cranial specialist because your brain
and the final code it's called the central nervous system,
and it's eighty percent of your nervous system the remaining power. Right,
So when you move the cranial bone, you can release
the tension over your over your brain because of the
main engines network, right. And so I did that and

(09:49):
I created my own any called technique. And after there
was some people Tony coming to see me, and they
said I've got near knee problem, right, and practice wouldn't
touch it, right, even the energy called technique that I developed,
and because it was inflammation, right, what we call chemical stress.
And so I said, okay, well you need to figure

(10:10):
out this one too, right. And so if you will
come to my office Tony, and you will be dinosed
with our Friday's by the medical doctor, I will have
to find what's causing Friday's. Right, we know of Fridays
it's inflammation in the joint. But okay, but one million
dollar question, it's what's causing it. So I will basically
check your body. Your body is called muscle testing, and

(10:31):
I will your body will tell me which organ and
the stress and what's causing the stress like that we
can removing if it's foods stativity for example, if you
have a problem with wheat or dairy or things like that,
will remove that to your diet. And sure enough, you
know you're need feeling so much better. Right, And so
I did that and made a practice.

Speaker 3 (10:50):
Let me let me let me as this a dactor.

Speaker 4 (10:55):
You have had experiences and European and American cultures in
regards to their diet, their food, and I'm often hearing
because I've.

Speaker 3 (11:12):
Talked with some not a lot.

Speaker 4 (11:17):
When Europeans come over here, they noticed that our food
quality isn't as great as we may think it is.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Like the bread is very sweet. We're hooked on sugar.

Speaker 4 (11:32):
Even when things say sugar free, they still are sweet and.

Speaker 3 (11:35):
Additive to it.

Speaker 4 (11:38):
Tell us about the difference in the quality of our
food environment compared to Europe.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
And do you see that as a problem.

Speaker 6 (11:50):
Waiting? So you know, I'm from France, so Francis like
everything is about food, man, Yeah, so because you know,
even especially in my generation. I'm sixty three years old now, right,
so my generation is all about like you're eating on
the table. You know, you're sharing story when you have

(12:11):
some people over on Sundays. So you started to have
like lunch and after you drink and you eat some
dessert until it's time to have dinner again. I don't
mean so all the social things in this country. I
will say Italy and Spain is the same, right, and

(12:32):
so we are like that. You know, everything is center
around food, and we know a lot. Our culture knows
a lot about food, you know, because we know about
basically the food are good for you, the one that
will make you fat, the one that and like sugar, right,
and so for us like for example, if I had
some people like my in laws that came from France

(12:54):
and they had barbecue, and Kansas City is very well
known for the barbecue, right, but there was super ries
that you know about the barbecue sauce. It was so sweet.
They say, we cannot even test the meat because it's
like overwhelming, which I cannot agree, right, you know, and
so and so things like that, right and so. But
even in American leguage, when somebody is nice, we say, oh,

(13:17):
this guy is so sweet or she's so sweet. So
even in the language, the sweetness and the sugar things
is integrated in the culture, right. And in France, we
we like to to have a test of the food
comes out right without masking it with with with too
much spissis you know, like sometime the Mexican not doing right.

(13:39):
We have very very hot paper and things like that.
So we like balancing food and of course well very
well known for our cuisine, right, and I think he's
very sophisticated. So so so if the cuisine is like bad,
people get educated about food, right, and we respect you know,
like age wine you know, we understand more about those

(14:00):
kind of things. And we've got some some not tradition
but kind of tradition in a way that you wouldn't
eat For example, in France Ima generation now it's different, right,
but they will don't eat like a steak with a
pepsi or coca cola, right, we will eat that with

(14:23):
wine or water. Right. And that's the wabforce. It's like,
what the heck, what are you doing? Right? And so
you know, there's some things like that that our culture
and can be maybe seems to be picky for outsiders,
you know, and things like that. But what shocked me
it's first the culture that didn't we were pretty clueless
about food, right, what is good food? And and and

(14:46):
and also in a way that basically you know, we
use we have lots of cheese and fermented cheese, right,
and and everything it's septicky, is like you want to
sanitize everything, right, and so you see, I mean, and
you take out lots of good stuff, right. And so
fermentation actually proved to be super healthy for the human

(15:07):
being that you know, and I have to say it's
it's because of a French guy named pastor, right, characterize everything.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
Right, How does the food affect the body?

Speaker 3 (15:21):
Does? I mean?

Speaker 4 (15:23):
I mean the reason I asked because fresh diet, as
you mentioned, a lot of cheese, a lot of pasta, bread, wine,
and our culture we're kind of saying that bread is bad,
but that may not.

Speaker 3 (15:39):
Necessarily be the case.

Speaker 4 (15:41):
And if it is, how does our different cultural diets
affect our body based on your experience?

Speaker 6 (15:50):
Well, first of all, the there's an hour for everything.
There's a time for everything. Like in France. You know
you've got the meal, you've got the three meals, and
there's set time about it. Uh, it will never occur,
like I mean, excepting the alcoholic which a disease is different,
but to drink in the morning, right, So if you've
got like a drink, it will be for example, probably

(16:15):
of France, we use like pasties which is kind of
anise and you use that at four to five pm, right,
So there's ritual olds like that. The body gets used
to that. Again, it's part of the culture. And the
quality of food is so much better. We appreciate we'll
go to the to the city market, you know, alarte,
just to get the food, local food, right, because now

(16:36):
you can talk to the guy and say, I'll ask
you know, how do you grow that? Right? What you
put in it? And it can give yourself some recipe
you know, how to how to use the you know
what he's selling and things like that. So for us
it's very important now you know, we are more Americanized
in a way. And the entire world actually they've got
you know, fast food and all that, which is basically

(16:59):
make people sick, right, because sugar is the number one
things that in your body by far, and and and
lots of people become insulin resistance. So it means the
body cannot deal with the sugar, and so it produced
lots of insulin that stay in the blog, right, and
and the sugar cannot go in the cell to to

(17:20):
energize the cell. Right, And so that's called insulin resistance.
And if you want to get fat, eat sugar, I
mean that's you know, that's not fat, that makes you fat,
you know, that's that's botomy.

Speaker 4 (17:34):
That's right, because because like France is very saturated butter fat.

Speaker 6 (17:40):
Yeah, it's very healthy, right.

Speaker 4 (17:42):
That's what I'm saying, So that there must be a difference,
and all their people understand one half food effects the
bat especially in as public experients in your medical feeling
chariropractice and the difference. Friends don't have the same ailments

(18:03):
as we do. I'm quite sure that you have experienced
that as far as our.

Speaker 3 (18:09):
Joints and and other things that you have run across
in your studies.

Speaker 4 (18:16):
How does that look and what can we do about it?
How do we become more aware? Do we just stop
eating things that are good tasting? Is a vegetarian it's
a vagant diet? Or just being more conscious and aware

(18:38):
of what you're eating.

Speaker 6 (18:42):
Well, that's a little good questions. But the basically to
keep it very simple. You know, guys like sugar. It's
not good for you, period, That's it, right? And so
now we've.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
All type of sugar is a brown sugar? Is it? Honey?

Speaker 6 (18:57):
Is it? Uh? Find refined refined sugar? Refined sugar? Okay, okay,
honeyeds no problem, refined sugar? Right? And so which is
the main sugar? Right?

Speaker 3 (19:08):
So cane sugar is good.

Speaker 6 (19:14):
Like straight sugar, refined sugar? Ah, this I don't know.
I mean, I do you have cane sugar in your
in your Okay? Well I will say it's not good,
you know, because it's refined the way the process can
you know, I don't think it's it's it's not it's
it's unrefined. Because some sugar, right.

Speaker 4 (19:36):
If it's if it's unrefined, if it's unbleached, like natural.

Speaker 3 (19:40):
Sugar, cane, brown sugar, is there a difference.

Speaker 6 (19:49):
It's still sugar.

Speaker 1 (19:50):
You know.

Speaker 6 (19:50):
It's like, for example, what is sugar? Let me find
what is sugar? Sugar also starches, you know, like breadish sugar,
potatoes is sugar. Pasta is sugar. So those are there's
there's a quick sugar that's gonna hat you and go
to your blood which is more like you know the
regular sugar candy that we think about that that they're

(20:13):
the slow you know progress in sugar that is like
that is like starches, right, and what's gonna happen is
gonna go instill in your bloodstream and still causing being
selling to rise in your blood and and.

Speaker 4 (20:27):
People and Italian people they eat a lot of pasta,
but they don't have nearly the health issues that we
have surrounding sugar and consumption of of cars.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
So how does that work well?

Speaker 6 (20:40):
Because it's that depends what you mix with it, Like
if you mix sugar with vegetables, it's no problem. If
you mix uh star cheese with with meat, that can
be a problem. If it's a bigtims starches that's healthy,
so you can have a steak by itself.

Speaker 3 (20:58):
So spaghetti with neat balls is the issue.

Speaker 6 (21:03):
Yeah, it's not the best. You would rather have spaghetti.
But but anyway, just to keep it very simple, you
need to limit to the amount of starches. And because
you know diet, there are so many different theory and
things like that. It runs for the carnival diet which
you eat only animal meat right to vegan right, they

(21:25):
don't have any eggs, no dairy or nothing right and
it starches right, and so there are so many things.
But what I can tell you when I test people,
you know, we want to test people if they do
have food sensitivity, it means that they can at digest
the food very well and that can create lots of issue.
And the one that the two category of food that

(21:47):
I found most people are sensitive too. It's gluten, which
is basically the protein of a wheat, and casine, which
is or lactose intolerance, which is basically the dairy moves
are with too many food category and some people they
have no problem with berry. I found an overwhelming people

(22:08):
having problem with blueton, which is bread and things like that.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
But now is it?

Speaker 4 (22:14):
Is it the bread because we've been eating bread since
the time of Roman time, right and and and sure,
y'all eat bread there. But again, is our bread made
differently that causes issues having gluten?

Speaker 3 (22:30):
Because when I was growing up people.

Speaker 4 (22:31):
That have.

Speaker 3 (22:33):
Gluten, we do know what guten was.

Speaker 4 (22:35):
I mean, gluten then become a thing reality until here recently.
So is it how we're making a bread because I'm
thinking that how Europeans make bread. In Europe, y'all not
have the same issues.

Speaker 3 (22:50):
Do you?

Speaker 6 (22:55):
Okay? So gluton is the chewing aspect of the wheat.
So when you bread, the sure it is, the more
gluten there is, there's more glutton in America and the
bread in America that France. Okay, that's number one. The
people react more to that. Number two. The way it's
done in America, just when when they're ready to harvest

(23:19):
the wheat, they will spread out round up on top
of it to dry, to dry up the wheat, and
so that round up it's some nasty chemical that it's forbidden.
You cannot sell round up in France. It's for widden
because it's unhealthy. So the round up will create a
substance in your got that is called glyphose, and glaphos

(23:41):
will create even more inflammation to your got. So when
you are eating the bread, not only there's more glueton,
but on top of that, there's more chemical that have
been spray at the end, at the moment of harvests.
Therefore they are much more harmful create life for that
in your gut and create a mess.

Speaker 4 (23:59):
But then they stopped using a round up because I
remember years ago that round up got got sued and
and and they lost their case. They still using round out.

Speaker 6 (24:11):
Yeah, you round up used to be made by Monsanto
and Buyer both around up, so it's still produced. You
can still go to the store. I found round up
the Monsanto should what should right and left? So they
say okay, we are we done right and so, and
they sold it to back to buyer.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
Wow, okay, okay. So how else is ah is it?

Speaker 4 (24:39):
Is it more of a cultural issue that you found
in regards to joint issues information.

Speaker 6 (24:46):
And now there's three things that can create a joint
inflammation in your body. There's food sensitivity. So like I said,
you know it can be gluten or their rit or
wheat or some theirya. And also parasite. You know, if
you do a powersite in your body, they can crave
and can go to your they can create inflammation in

(25:07):
your joint. And yeast overgrowth, right, which is the result
of having taken taken too many antibout dicks in your
body and having your intestinal florad pleading and that's crediting
some yeast right. And so those are the three things
that can create inflammation in your joint.

Speaker 3 (25:29):
How have you have you changed your diet since you've
been over here?

Speaker 6 (25:34):
Oh yeah, I'm I'm almost calm without diets. So I eat.
I don't eat a lot of starches, you know. And
if you want to lose weight, just stop any any carbs,
like go down to zero. Some people do some saldine,
you know, some eggs, you know, things like that, just

(25:55):
to lose the weight. And after you can reintegrate some
low glass in the stuff like like some lettuce, you know,
some things like that. There are low low sugar triggering food, right,
and that's how you're going to keep it up. So
bread is that that to metal to your health. Now, yeah,

(26:15):
because the bread is the bread is like the corn.
You know, the corn has been so modified to make
it sweeter. Right, the corn from the Inca, from the
Maya you know in Mexico, was totally different. It was
not as sweet. And what they did the crossed to
make it sweet. Because the things with sweetness is this.

(26:39):
You know, sugar will use the same receptan heroin and
cocaine in your brain, so it's very addictive. So the
food and the tory figure that out right, and so
that's why we put sugar on everything like that you
can get hooked on their food.

Speaker 3 (26:56):
So so it's not bread and Jenn well, it's like
it's it's like like my grandmother made her own bread.

Speaker 6 (27:07):
Such starches. But the brain in America, now what I said,
it's like because the right terrible, so it makes it worse.

Speaker 4 (27:22):
So if we did, like our grandparents make their own bread,
would that be different than.

Speaker 6 (27:30):
How It just depends No, just it's the same. It
just depends the wheat where the wheat is coming from.
If it's a weed that is organic, it means they
didn't spread. That will be better. If it's a weed
that comes from uh more than a hundred years ago.
It will be a much better quality and that sweet

(27:51):
and with less gluten next. So it's like, you know
some people I used to work with Amish people right
to treat them, and and there's a misunderstanding because they say,
oh yeah, I miss people is better. It's homemade and
all that. But if the product, that's what we understand
in France, it's start with a product. Do you have
a good product, right? Because the chef, the big time chef,

(28:16):
cooking chef in France, they will tell you you start
with a product. If you don't have a good product,
the food's gonna be not good, right, So start with
a quality product, right, And so we understand that in France.
So that's why you know, if some foods are coming
from the garden, right, we respect that because we know
that the guy didn't put pesticide or too many things

(28:38):
or maybe did some sustainability agriculture and things like that.
So it just you know, that's you know, that's why
it starts the quality.

Speaker 4 (28:52):
What's the biggest issue in regards to what's putting more
people under your care.

Speaker 6 (29:07):
Is like, like why I compare? I got your question,
Tony food like you know, it's like when you've got
a car, right, what happens if you have bad gasoline?
You know, for example, there's water in the girls. Well
it's not going to work very well. That's the same
with you. Your gasoline is your food, right and so unfortunately,
So that's number one. So you need a good food

(29:29):
quality of gasoline. Well, already talk about that. Number two.
What you have been told is to tell your lie
what you have been told, like that fat will make
you fat. It's a bunch of botany what you have
been told about cholesterol. But it's a bad thing. It's
a bunch of botany. Cholesterol is fat. You need fat
for all your hormonal systems, right, And so that's there's

(29:51):
something in a book it's called the Cholesterol Myth. I
will encourage people to to to read it now. Also
that it is let me finish, okay, okay, let me
finish first, after what can do me? Okay? And the
first things, it's the pyramid. At the best of the pyramid,
what you're supposed to eat the most starches. That's a

(30:12):
recipe to get fat. You know, if you want to
fatten a car, what are you gonna give corn. Right,
you're gonna give starches, right, that's how you do it.
Say it does the corn? Was it tended in the
natural circle of things to eat corn? Heck no, they
are supposed to eat grass, which is a very low

(30:33):
glass and indict index, which is like there are lots
of sugar in grass. Obviously, compare grass like it's a
lettuce and corn is like very high on sugar. Right,
that's why they they fatten the cor right, So it
happens the same with us if you eat lots of starts,
you know. I mean, look at the movies, American movies
in the nineteen thirties, right, Look how the people are

(30:57):
skinny they were, right, and look, ye, what does been
changed the way you eat too much sugar? I agree
basically to make it very simple. So, I mean, there's
no secret here. So what you have been told about
the foot pre I mean, is bolony. So that's not
gonna make you healthy because being fat is not healthy.
You can love yourself being fat, now, yeah, that's not

(31:19):
a problem. That doesn't mean that you're healthy.

Speaker 4 (31:22):
Right yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. In fact, but when you say,
what what we've been told about? But uh, and such
as that it's not cholesterol.

Speaker 6 (31:35):
Spand on that the problem you have a problem. You
have a problem with how disease? How thissease? It's inflammation
and your artery, right, so it means your artery and flame. Right,
So so when you've got inflammation, the body will work
it out because we don't want to have If it's inflame,
it means there's a fire in your artery. That can

(31:55):
be it can be a whole, it can create a hole,
and after you can lose blood. Right, so you will
patch it with cholesterol, which is a form of calcium.
So we'll patch it, you know, so actually have being cholesterol.
It's a good thing. It's saving your life probably, right.
So the problem, the cause of the problem. Remember, you
need to find out what's causing the problem and how

(32:16):
to fix it. The cause of the problem is not
the cholesterol. It's the inflammation of the artery. So you
need to find out what's creating the inflammation in the artery, right,
and after you will have less cholesterol because you don't
need to have patches.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
You know.

Speaker 6 (32:34):
It's like you've got a hole in your wall. Right's
a brick wall and you need to do masonry on it, right,
the things. The cement is the cholesterol, right.

Speaker 3 (32:45):
So ea stake are they with the biggest layer of
fat on top of it?

Speaker 6 (32:51):
Yeah, it's not a big lay of fat. It's some patches.
Of course, if you if your health is out of control,
of course you're going to it's gonna plug up, right,
because nobody tried to patch back someone and do right, right, right, right.
And so that is not the cause of a problem.
The cause of your problem that you have. You have

(33:12):
been told it's a high college they or No, that's
a consequence of the cause of a problem. So if
you if you understand that, now you say, okay, the
question is not how much college I have. The question
is okay, what's causing inflammation in the arteries?

Speaker 3 (33:28):
Yes, yes, I definitely agree with that. Definitely agree with that.

Speaker 4 (33:31):
I mean, just like I said, Americans will look at
French diet and Italian diet and say that's just unhealthy.
But yeah, I'm somewhat healthier, healthier people than we are,
you know, and that's a reality.

Speaker 3 (33:46):
So there's a disconnect there, right from.

Speaker 6 (33:49):
What we see. Yeah, and there's also there's also I agree,
and there's also a nother factor. So we talk about culturally,
we know about we'll pay more to have a a
better quality product. Right, we go to the city market,
we are we need to travel a little bit to
find out the good stuff and say, hey, you know
this guy, go to see him, he has got really

(34:10):
good chill, right, and think so the world to mouth right.
And also so there's also a tradition like there's we're
not gonna eat at ten pm or just so the
body gets used to digest at the regular time. It's
like a well oiled machine. Right. And also the excess,
you know, it's kind of like you know the befairl

(34:32):
you can eat that's not blue but for you, right,
And so we eat less, right. And people therefore in
France and in Europe are more self conscious about gaining weight.
I remember some member my family came to America and
they're a little bit, you know, they're getting older, they've
got some fat and things like that, and they say, oh,

(34:53):
I love to come to America because I see people
who are much fatter than I am. Yeah, that makes me.
That makes me feel better because it's disgusting in Europe
and that now less because now they all those fast food.
But there in France and all that. So you know,
people people become a father and all that. But in

(35:14):
my time when I was living in France right which
I came in America in ninety nineteen ninety three, so
before that was really like that. Everybody was was very
much keener than American people for sure.

Speaker 4 (35:30):
So I know, with with the explosion of drive suits,
I'm seeing more and more dry thus open the back
open at midnight, people going through dry thus having big max.

Speaker 6 (35:43):
And I'm talking about you can't eat at any time,
that's not it. Yes, you're gonna You're gonna over eat.

Speaker 3 (35:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (35:51):
I mean it's like if if you give a pression
enough opportunities.

Speaker 3 (35:58):
To do bad, you know they're gonna do it, especially
if it tastes good.

Speaker 6 (36:06):
Yeah, that's wherever sugar comes in.

Speaker 3 (36:09):
Yes.

Speaker 4 (36:10):
So as you wrap up, what advice do you have
for people to get their minds and bodies right?

Speaker 3 (36:19):
Is a yoga? Is it meditation? Is it fasting?

Speaker 6 (36:27):
So you asked me to wrap up? You know the
theme of the things or you know I've got one
one minute? You tell you time, take your time. No,
it's gonna take too long. I don't want to. Basically,
you have to know that when you talk about be positive,

(36:47):
it's not gonna work for you because it's a part
of your mind what you call the conscious mind. And
the conscious mind is like your self identity, who you
think you are as a human being, right, It's what
you how you perceive your reality. It's basically what you're
aware of, like your thought, your emotion, your behavior, and

(37:09):
also your action. Right. So that's one part of your mind,
and you've got another mind it's called the subconscious mind, right,
And the subconscious mind basically record everything you have been
doing in your life from a zero two now. It's
also where all the automatic process in your body that happen, right,
Like you don't have to think about it, like your

(37:30):
digestion process, like your your heartbeat, like your you're breathing, right,
everything happen automatically. That comes from your subconscious mind. And
all the skill that you have as a podcaster or
maybe as a father, as whatever requires skill at your job, right,
that comes from your subconscious mind. And when you realize

(37:51):
and you can google what I said, right, when you
realize that your conscious mind who you think you are,
it's only depends who you reading five or ten percent
of your mind, meaning is that the subconscious mind. All
what you're not aware of is ninety to ninety five
percent of your mind, and that subconscious mind actually can
be programmed. You have been programmed. I've been programmed. Everybody

(38:15):
listening to that podcast has been programmed. So how does
it work? Well, you can, First of all, I have
to say, you can be programmed anytime, like in case
of PTSD, right, post traumatic stress disorder, a big trauma
can program you. Right, That's why they are mess after. Right,
they come back from the military and sometimes we get divorced,

(38:37):
they get homeless, and they cannot cope with what happened
what we have seen, right, that's PTSD, But more prevalently
it's like from a zero to nine years old, what's happening?
You like a sponge, your kid, and you like a sponge, right,
and you've got even different brain wave. You've got fedter
wave and better wave. So it's kind of like you
are in a hypnotic stage right of your life. And

(38:59):
so basically what you see in the outside, well, you
think it's true, you think it's good, right, and so
you assume things. Right. If you assume thing one to time,
it become a program and it's torn your subconscious mind
and whose program they are the one who are dictating
your present and molding your future. For example, if there's

(39:20):
a little girl that see dad that is a drunk
coming back every night and beat up his wife. So, Tony,
what do you think that woman she's a woman now,
that little girl that become a woman, what do you
think that woman's gonna attract as a romantic relationship a
piece of husband? That's it? And so now let me

(39:45):
make two points about that point number one. So she's
a woman now. And if I ask her, do you
enjoy to get bat up like your mom? She's gonna
say no. So the part of her mind, the conscious mind,
gonna say no. That the subconscious mine has been programmed
as men are predators and women are praying. So who's

(40:07):
in control of who? Here?

Speaker 1 (40:09):
Right?

Speaker 6 (40:09):
The subconscious mind and the subconscious mind, all whose negative
programming you're limiting, belief we call that are coming from
our undresults challenging are coming from a past or past,
froma that we had right, or past pattern that we
we got from other people, from our parents, you know,
from a close one. And things like that where not

(40:31):
necessary necessarily the best for us, but we we think
that's what we saw, so we we we make a
program out of it. And so for that woman, al so,
how she's gonna attract that man? Right, she's gonna say
you can you come and beat me up? Right, That's
not the way it's gonna happen. So it's kind of
a way it's gonna happen. It's like our subconscious mind

(40:53):
are all connected. Right. Doesn't mean that we have to
love everybody, right, but we all connected. And so here's
that's gonna happen. So I'm gonna be the subconscious mind
of that woman, right, And so a subconscious mind of
that woman is gonna whisper to her conscious mind, to
her self identity, and its gonna say, hey, look at
this guy. He has been bullied. Now is the bully.

(41:17):
He's got the predator program. That's a perfect match. And
now I'm gonna be the subconscious mind of that guy. Right.
And so the subconscious mind of that guy's going to say, hey,
look at that girl. Right, she's got the preyer program, right,
and your bully, we are a perfect match. And she
thinks that love is about being abused, right, And so

(41:38):
they're gonna fall in love, right, polarity is going to attract,
they're gonna fall in love. And there's three different case
scenario that's gonna happen to that woman. Case number one.
Case number one, she married the guy and yets stuck
in that abusive relationship for the rest of our life.
We all have heard of people like that or no,

(41:59):
people like that, and we say, why she's still with
this guy because of a sub conscious programming. It's not
a fault. She cannot help it. She has been programmed
that way, right, Tony. Case and your number two, what
may happen is like she's gonna go with that guy,
you know, and get tired, to get beat up and

(42:21):
find another guy, maybe abusing differently, maybe a little bit less.
And usually after a while, what those women are telling me,
they say, doctor Salahs, don't talk to me about men.
They're not good for me. I know, I don't want
any more man in my life. It's kind of Tony.
If there's a fire, you put your finger once, you
get burnt, you put your finger twice, you get burned,

(42:41):
and say, hold on, I'm not gonna put my finger again.
But it's not true healing. It's a certain awareness that
we acquired right but true healing because we can learn
obviously from our life expenses. So trulling will be She's
gonna attract somebody totally different, totally the opposite, Somebody that

(43:02):
is respectful of her, somebody that is that truly love
her for who she is, somebody that see her as
as a He call that respect right, and it's kind
to her. And that's how you know that you heal
from that. Right. And so when you said to be positive,
you cannot be positive consciously without having positive program subconsciously.

(43:27):
And so I credit a technique that can reprogram your mind. Right,
I talk the same language that your subconscious smile and
bring ninety percent of your mind power to the party.
Like that, you can use it for your benefit because
you know, there are so many times that we know
why I'm doing this. You know I'm always doing bad

(43:49):
things with women, I'm always doing things with money or
things like that. Why I'm I sabotaging myself? Well, it's
not your fault. You have been programmed that way. Now
when you understand what's causing your problem. The good news,
Since I've been programmed, you can be reprogrammed. And that's
why the man clearing is about. And just to finish

(44:10):
it up, there's three step. It's kind of like you've
got to you've got to comput a computer program, right,
So let's compare the mind to a computer, right. So
your brain will be the hard dry, your software will
be the subconscious mind. The output of a software will
be your conscious mind, and your behavior will be reflected

(44:33):
on the screen of life. Right. So if you've got
lots of positive because you've got too kind of programming,
you've got program that are serving you, right, like being positive, right,
the program that are serving you right, So it means
that your mind is working for you instead of against you.
And we call that empowering belief. And Tony, we've got

(44:54):
program that are not serving you any longer, like that
little girl, right, and so and this program it's like
it's going. It's kind of when you've got some days
that you mean, ah, man, I wish I will have
stayed asleep because all what I'm doing is counterproductive, you know,
So your mind is working against you and we call
that limiting belief, right, And wo's limiting belief like we

(45:17):
have seen in that example of that little girl right
with the abusing father, right, And so it's a controlling
your present, right and shaping and molding a few. So
the past is controlling your present and molding your future.
So if you can erase the negative programming, the limiting
belief from the past, you're not gonna have negative behavior

(45:41):
or damage full of self sabotaging behavior. And so when
you've got a program in your computer that you don't
like what you do to me that program is not
working for you, what you're gonna do Step number one,
you're gonna delete the progress. Yeah, well, first you're gonna
delete the program step number one of the man clearing.

(46:02):
Step number two you're gonna download a new program that
are serving you better. And step number three you're gonna
love the outcome what you see on the screen of life.
So the man clearing programming, it's you deal it what
you don't want, you download what you want instead, right,
and after number three, you want to make sure that
you can create that into your life, that you can

(46:23):
manifest that. But it's not the fontaise in your head, right,
And so that's what I created.

Speaker 2 (46:29):
And this.

Speaker 6 (46:31):
Seince your mind is everything. Your mind is everything that
For example, if i'm if I'm swimming with my friend,
and we're in a beautiful island and there's like the
reef and and we'll were watching all the fish and
we're having a blast, right. And after we get carried
away and we go a little bit further and we
cannot see the bottom of the ocean. I have no

(46:53):
problem myself with that, but I did not know my
friend I will have panic attack. So we're still enjoying
the ocean. We still can watch the fish. Right, Like
my friend almost drowned because now she's freaking out because
she cannot see the ocean, and we are still in

(47:14):
the same element that the mind has some fear as
some and the fears are coming from your limiting belief programming, right,
because maybe when she was young she freak out, she
could on see see the ocean and it stayed within
her right. And so although it's the same environment we

(47:35):
had fawn before that we change one thing and the
mind respond to our mind's gonna respond totally differently. Our
mind's gonna totally panic and she's gonna have a totally
different experience although the environment barely changed, you understand, So
do you.

Speaker 3 (47:51):
See a difference and genders in this country like when
you first got here to now how well are might
have been conditioned and changed.

Speaker 6 (48:09):
Yeah, exactly, you're talking about what we call culture or programming,
because we can be programmed with the outside. That's that's
what m commercials used to program to buy well, you know,
to reach a subconscious spine. And they're you know something
that you know they used to put like being between friends,

(48:30):
They used to put some tiny things to reach a
subconscious spine. And you cannot see by from the nakedized, right,
and so they now it's forbidden, right, but but still
so they say, so, yeah, the culture of programming is
about that. You know, it's about for the good and bad.
You know, there's some culture that we don't understand. You know,

(48:51):
some culture for example with women that we cut off
the clitorist right in some tribe and things like that,
and so for us it's crazy. For them, it's that's
the way they were brought up. So yeah, so there's
you know, and we know how powerful our mind is
because even when you when they do research. Right, let's see,
if if there's a research about heartburn, right, so I

(49:13):
go to the research and they say you take that pill,
you have no more heartburn. That's okay. I'm going to
give you a shot. I take the pill. I have
no more heart burn, right, and I say, man, your
pill works. He said, hold on, doctor Sallas. We never
give you the right pill. We give you your ship.
And they call that the placible effect, right, the placible effect,

(49:35):
and they brush it up like it's the placible effect.
So it means my belief in my subconscious mind, not
in my conscious mind. I mean you can believe in
your conscious mind too. That you need to believe all
so deeper than that. Maybe you have a family member
that took a pill and saved his life and you say, oh,
pill are good for me, and you got that program right,
you see me. Oh, the believe a higher level, you know,

(50:01):
subconscious mind, conscious mind, that the pill will heal me,
heal me. And they call that the Placibo effect. They
brush it up, they say, oh, it's on even placid
Bo effect. Now, that's how true healing works.

Speaker 3 (50:16):
You are placible.

Speaker 6 (50:17):
If we can use your mind, Tony, if we can
use your mind and bring the subconscious mind to the
to the to the process of healing, growth and transformation,
that's how so could miracle happened because we use one
hundred percent of our manpower and what we believe in
will happen.

Speaker 4 (50:34):
What's the difference between subconscious and conscious for people whom when.

Speaker 3 (50:37):
I know that that there's a difference.

Speaker 6 (50:40):
Well, like I said, the conscious mind is your self identity.
Remember we say it's only five or ten percent of
your mind. So your conscious man and your self identity,
what you're aware of, your thought, your emotion, your behavior,
and your action, who you think you are as an individual,
and a subconscious mind is hidden and mysterious, right, and

(51:04):
we don't really know what happened. To give you an example,
your conscious mind can process eleven bit per second of data, right,
and your conscious mind processes eleven million bit per second.
So I'm here right now, we are talking, I'm getting
eleven bit per second of data or what's going on

(51:25):
around me that in the same time, my subconscious minds
getting eleven million times more almost minus eleven right information? Right?
So you know we are conceived. You know, I always
say we are conceived to succeed and we are programmed
to fail. And when we're conceived, you see what I mean,

(51:47):
When we're conceived, we've got all the goodness, Like even
when a baby is born, you can see doesn't analytical mind, right,
he's got less program. He can have program for a
mom when he was you know, inside belly. Of course
it's possible that's so much less program than us. And
we all look so much more innocent and all that.
That's why we love babies. Why we say, oh, I
look at that, you know. And and but what a

(52:10):
conception we've got all the good is and after we've
got program that comes in the way, and and and
especially limiting belief right that that can prevent us to
be who you are and are definitely holding you back
and can create patterns that that seems to be like
we're sabotaging ourselves.

Speaker 3 (52:30):
Do you see limit believe to be chronic in our culture?

Speaker 6 (52:38):
In every culture, everybody has been programmed everybody. You cannot
escape that.

Speaker 3 (52:43):
But is it great? Is it greater in American culture
for the European culture?

Speaker 6 (52:51):
Well, the culture will be different. But ultimately what matters
culture is one aspect of your programming. But the TV
or that we inform of the bad news, right or
another program fear will go into programming and limiting belief right,
So like that you cannot be detached and it cannot

(53:11):
be yourself at peace with an upon helf. Basically, that's
the way we were conceived to be, right, and so
we used to match our heads. So we shut down
the heart because of trauma, because of fear that we
have right, and so we operate too much in there
right too, we use too much the analytical sense, right,
and we are too much in our head and so
but also, you know, what are your circumstances, right? Some

(53:34):
people life is not fair. Some people they are exposed
to much more potential trauma than others. That depends their upbringing.
Like the little girl. You know, let's pretend the dad
will also built her up right, and let's pretend that
she has to escape, you know, and she got into
she got caught into human trafficking and now she's a prostitute. Right,

(53:57):
I mean, so look at all the trauma that she
will have to deal and so it just depends, you know,
how much exposure of negativity you have been exposed to
during your life. But the good news, the good news,
I want to say, if you have been programmed, you say,
oh my goodness, what I'm gonna do? No, we've got
the man clearing technique and reprogram you. And so the

(54:20):
way we're gonna I will have you know, and you're
gonna use your own ability to heal yourself. It's kind
of giving you the technology to use ninety percent of
your mind that you couldn't have access before, and use
that to reprogramming to deal ite what you don't want
in your life and download what you want instead and
make sure it's gonna materialize in your life, because.

Speaker 3 (54:41):
I will start. The American ideal is a subconscious thing
before it's conscious.

Speaker 4 (54:57):
Like people who come from Europe that they're mainly socialists
construct as far as the system is concerned. Everybody wants
to come over here to America because it's freedom. But
then many come over here and they can't handle it
because it's too much going on. Like like I always,
I always hear your opinions say, y'all gotta work over here. Yeah,

(55:22):
we do, because we're not paying you to stay home.
Well more so now they usually back in the day.

Speaker 3 (55:29):
But the consciousness of having to go and ask you work.

Speaker 4 (55:36):
Is an impairment to to a lot of people who
are used to the ideology of socialism.

Speaker 3 (55:46):
Talk about that.

Speaker 6 (55:48):
So it's called collectief consciousness.

Speaker 1 (55:50):
Right.

Speaker 6 (55:50):
So because remember I said, with subconscious minding, we're all
connected to each other. So a group of people, we
have a self chief consciousness, right, So we called it
the American spirit. While the American spirit because it was
a new country. So you have to be a pioneer.
So you have to have that spirit of you know,
going to to and undown territory, right, just to do

(56:16):
and to start from scratch and all that. So it
takes a certain spirit, right, and so you have to
be a hard worker too. So and in Europe that
has been there for so long, right, and so all
this has been built already, you know, I mean like
two hundred years old thing is nothing in Europe and
America is like what to audio, it's crazy, right and

(56:40):
so and so it's like that's what we call the
old Europe, right, And so the spirit and the and
the collective consciousness is different. Therefore, but don't forget that
the people that most of the people except for black
Americans mainly and Mexican people all but all the others

(57:01):
were coming from Europe. And they were already people who
were like kind of nothing to lose or artitude, right,
because they were so poor, or because for political reasons
they say, okay, you're going to go to America. So
they already had that spirit, right, I have nothing to lose, right,
and so I'm just gonna I've got a chance to

(57:22):
go to an American made a name of myself, which
in Europe everything was already structure in a way that
you couldn't go to to more than your cast or
more than your social background, was right, and so that's
what makes it attractive to lots of people to come
from Europe to America.

Speaker 3 (57:43):
Right, how do you break that?

Speaker 6 (57:48):
Well, well, first of all, do you want to what
do you want to break? You know, you want to
break things that are not selling you, right, That's the
way I see things.

Speaker 1 (57:57):
Right.

Speaker 6 (57:57):
So if there's something that are not serving you, yes,
you know you want to break it because you're not
serving you, right, you want to? You want because we
have been told even in American culture, you have to
work hard and play hard as woo your boss what
it is says WHOA. It doesn't have to be hard.

(58:19):
You can be accomplishing things without you know, killing yourself
at a task or doing over hours for free, like
I see in corporate America in France, it will never happen.
So we as good and bad things with that spirit
like on everything right, Like it's always vers pro cons
on every thing. So you want to eliminate the cons

(58:39):
you know, as much as possible because for me, I mean,
life has to be Why not being easy and pleasurable
doesn't mean that you don't accomplish things. I mean, in
my life I had like I feel like three lives
right and I'm still going and I will never retired.
But you see, my job is not my job. I
don't feel like working talking to you, I don't feel

(59:00):
like working. Only I'm teaching. I'm having fun. I'm passionate
about what I do. And think that's the key. When
you can't find your purpose in life and what is
my mission in life? It happens that my mission in
life was given to me. I've been blessed, right, but
I never stopped since you know, I was renting boat
in suff of France, being on my boat and I

(59:21):
saw myself helping people. I never stop. I will never
stop until my last breath.

Speaker 3 (59:29):
Is it the lack of people find their purpose in life?

Speaker 1 (59:33):
Is that.

Speaker 3 (59:35):
The issue? Large? Yes that you see?

Speaker 6 (59:39):
Yes, yes, because it's it's a different. People who love
what they do, right, So when you love what they do,
they just different. And the difference with people who say
just a job, well, just a job. So I just understand.
You know, people have to make a living, right, But
if you have to make a living and you love
what you do, right, you've got that attitude. While you

(01:00:01):
know you can be uh, you know, cleaning up stuff.
But if you're android what to do, why not, right,
If you're enjoying what to do, that become your purpose
to make sure Oh yeah, I'm here, I'm a part
of the community. I'm serving the community because I'm cleaning
up the classroom for example, and I'm proud of what
I do. So your mindset, that's what makes the difference,

(01:00:23):
you know. And when you've got a purpose, your mindset,
it's going to be into it. Right.

Speaker 3 (01:00:28):
I mean when you first came over here, what was
the biggest shock.

Speaker 4 (01:00:38):
Thought wise transitioning from your home to American life and
why we never went back?

Speaker 6 (01:00:49):
Okay, so the first shock was in France when you
say how are you doing? We say, come all right?
If you expect something that they're going to share and
French French people are more susceptible to share things that
are bothering them. In America, when you say are you
doing everything is fine? Perfect? Right? Smart, and said, damn,

(01:01:15):
I was scut at food. I said, American people are
so happy all the time, you know, And I started
to know more than and behind the scene. That was
the that's funny, right, that was that was really the
main things for me, right and and yeah, and so

(01:01:37):
like there's a little bit less antimiate in a way,
right because of that, right, and so that I found
and in Europe that also, I have to say to
give you guys credit that Hey, you know, I was
more familiar with Europe and how it works, right, and so,
but you know, I got used to it. I mean,
I love this country because you know, I studied, I
got a fall in love, and I'm remarried, you know,

(01:02:00):
because lots of things happened to my life with an
American woman. She's black, American and Mexican, right, And I
found a lot of my life in this country, you know.
And I've got a kid. He's eight years old and
his name is Amie so and yeah, so I met
my life here and I love that I studied here

(01:02:20):
because it's so much more pragmatic, goes straight to the
point compared to in Europe. We're gonna be focused on
the exception too much instead of you know and so.
But I have to say at the end of high school,
I don't know now again, right, but in my age group,
at the end of our school we had more general

(01:02:42):
culture than in America. In America seems to be more specialized.
You know, you're going to be very good on your field.
So I'm glad like I did college there because he
gave me that straight to the point kind of attitude,
you know, and and and also don't bother too much
with the exception and just whatever works for the majority

(01:03:03):
it's good, right, doesn't mean that you cannot dig over
how you can improve it, which I always do, right.
But yeah, that's the major things that was a shock
culturally for me.

Speaker 3 (01:03:16):
How we are wired here be good and a bad. Well,
do you see that our culture.

Speaker 4 (01:03:28):
Frowns more on people who are trying to be successful,
like their conscious subconscious is different and they have Yeah,
they have definitely a hate of mentality for like a
better word.

Speaker 6 (01:03:44):
Let me give you an example. I come from suff
of France, right in saff of France, if you said,
you know, what are you doing? Man, until it will say, well,
I'm doing good.

Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
You know.

Speaker 6 (01:03:53):
I don't work too hard. I spend lots of time
with our family. I've got some passion. I go fishing
all the time, do horseback riding. I'm really enjoying life. Right.
And so if I go, now, if I come to America,
talk to the guy, how are you doing? And the
girls go tell me, I'm busy. You know, you have
to be busy. They always busy, busy, busy, you know,

(01:04:16):
doing things. And and so if I told him if
I have the same thing, I said, and he asked
me how you're doing, I said, oh, well, you know what,
I'm really enjoying my family. I spend lots of time
with them. I work a little bit enough, you know,
to to leave O care right, and but I'm doing
all these things, you know, and They're going to think
I'm a loser, you know. So if you say that

(01:04:40):
in friends, you said, man, you understand about life. You know,
it's about quality of life and joining yourself. Especially in
South in Paris, not they are different. We we'll think
I'm a loser, right, you see what I mean? And
so it's basically it's like the two extreme stuff of
friends are lay back and things like that. And in
America especially you go to New York City of things

(01:05:00):
like that, it's like crazy. You know, they always like
like the ouncer and all that and so and so.
You need balance in life, you know, you need to
have balance. You need to be able to have a
satisfaction in your job, satisfaction in your relationship, and your prosperity.

Speaker 4 (01:05:19):
For me, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:05:20):
I don't want to be rich. I don't care. You know,
I having millions of dollars, I don't I don't give
a name. I don't but I just want, you know,
enough to provide to my family. But also for me,
what is important on my purpose, it's to helping others. Right,
I'm wired to help overs. I tell my passion. If
I have to stay upside down, you know too, and

(01:05:41):
you will make you feel better, I'll do it. I'll
do it, you know. So that's the thing. So when
you've got that, you find that purpose. So you've got
all that energy, that passion that immenate from you. And
it's contagious. You know, people say, man, you know, look
you sixty three, I start martial arts two years ago.
I'm almost a black belt now, but I mean, and

(01:06:06):
I used to play tennis. I use I want a horse,
you know. So I used to say I'm all as
curious about things, you know. So you don't want to
lose your I'm a free spirit, but you don't want
to lose your child spirit, right. You always wanted to discover,
always wanted to be spirit because to be an adult.

(01:06:27):
For me, it's it's this retirement. It's the of life.
You always want to learn. It's a path that you're
going through your life until you die. And you don't
want to be and you don't want to be sitiling down.
And I'm not you know, not going further right, But
to miss I'm silly and crazy, and so I'm always

(01:06:48):
curious about things. And thanks God the energy because I
take care of my mind and my body, right, and
so it doesn't happen by chance like that all and
so it's a blessing. You can do things like martial
arts and sparring and then get getting busted and getting
your butt kick, you know, at my edge, you know,

(01:07:09):
and and and laugh about it. Right, What do you say.

Speaker 3 (01:07:14):
When you're talking about conscious and subconscious And you mentioned
the environment like being around other people who have the
same mentality positive and negative.

Speaker 4 (01:07:32):
How do you see that playing out based on the
clients and the people that you're seeing.

Speaker 3 (01:07:38):
Is environment important? The people who you hear.

Speaker 6 (01:07:43):
You have a you have a product of your environment.
That you have a product of your vironment because you're
going to program your subconscious mind. You know, if you
for example, if in uh, like I said, if you know,
if your identities like you walk hard right and play hard,
which is you know, collective consciousness of many Americans, that

(01:08:05):
you're going to have that program. And if somebody told
you otherwise, I think it's crazy, right, you loser and
you're lazy and all that. But it's good because that
person has a different programming because maybe that person was
living in the tropic and tropical things and in an
island and everything. It's easy. You can collect food, you
can go fishing, and you don't have to do in more.

(01:08:28):
You know to live an enjoy life, right, and if
you have been told that in order to enjoy life
you have to be someone, you know, you have to
have lots of money. And the more money you have,
you know, compared to your neighbor, you'd be more successful.
And to be successful, it's to be rich at any
price or what I mean. I don't want to say
too many bad things because that's not there's some good

(01:08:50):
stuff too. And you have to have to be ambitious
somewhat I think you know, but he has to be
a well placed ambitious. You have to be ambitious upon yourself,
not looking at the others and compare it. You have
to be an ambitious for yourself.

Speaker 4 (01:09:07):
Because when I look at my culture, my people, I say,
we have an anti achievement consciousness as a group of
people where we push each other down. We don't help
or encourage us each other to achieve, to climb that mount,

(01:09:29):
to do better as we may have done in the past.
I see that more and more of an issue when
you look at the young people today.

Speaker 3 (01:09:41):
They don't have that drive, that ambition.

Speaker 4 (01:09:45):
They have a lack of achievement mentality, especially when it
comes to work low uh work ethics.

Speaker 3 (01:09:57):
Do you see that a lot in your practice?

Speaker 6 (01:10:03):
Well, I treat you know long term pen and stress,
so chronic disease or to immune disease like you know,
things like people. I think that people they cannot help
them because they don't know what's causing the problem and.

Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
And so.

Speaker 6 (01:10:17):
But but still, but what I can say is like, yeah,
in my time, you know, I used to be a swimmer, right,
and so I was like, yeah, I just I just
I was like state champion right in France on backstroke
and I had one medal. That's it. But here, every

(01:10:39):
everybody you participate, you've got a medal. So the expectation
and the boy is so low because all we're gonna
have was feeling if they don't add anything. That's a
bunch of nonsense. But that's the way there have been
programmed in their subconscious mind. It means.

Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
To be you laugh at us for that.

Speaker 6 (01:11:00):
Do you mean it's ever in France it's the same.
I'm sure it's the same now everywhere. Really it's that generation. Yeah,
I'm sure. Oh wow, Oh I'm sure. I don't know
because I don't have kids in France, but I never have.
But you know, the things that the matter. It's like
now they said that, oh, you just need to show
up and you've got to be rewarded. Yeah, that's why

(01:11:20):
why they will walk, you know. So that's their programming.
So there's the environmental programming coming from your family, coming
from the people that you know. There's the internal programming
now coming from the media, all that problem with social media,
all that stuff that, oh, you look at my life

(01:11:40):
is so good, right, and so you're going to post
when everything is fine, which is which is a fantasy,
which is not life. We know there's ups and down
in life. Everybody goes through that. That's that's normal, right.
And you've got the programming by as a as a nation. Right.
So you've got so many layers. And after you've got
the collective consciousness, like Carl Young described as the archetype, right,

(01:12:02):
the symbolism of things that are truth of the entire humanity.

Speaker 1 (01:12:06):
Right.

Speaker 6 (01:12:06):
And so you've got so many programming And so I
always I will define myself as a truth picker, freedom
seeker and knowledge right, And so for me never start.
And so because you cannot be free without knowing what

(01:12:26):
keep you in jail, in your mental gail, right, you
cannot do that. So you need to have that knowledge, right,
and that from that knowledge you're go and get the
truth or as close as the truth as you can,
and that will set you free.

Speaker 3 (01:12:42):
Wow. Wow, okay, great, Like I said, we gotta talk forever.
But tell people how to.

Speaker 4 (01:12:53):
Reach out to you, how to follow you, how to
keep up with all your karate and swimming and sailing.

Speaker 6 (01:13:02):
Well, you don't have to spark with me, okay anyway,
So yeah, so you know that I just want It's
a simple message, right, It's like, give you's something that
bother on you and you've got a health issue and
nobody could help you. It's not your fault. It's because
they didn't crack your code. They didn't find out what's

(01:13:22):
what was causing your problem of it. Oh and they
don't know how to fix it.

Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
You know.

Speaker 6 (01:13:27):
It happens that if you if you try mind clearing,
because we, like you said, Tony, we can talk about
that forever. But true knowledge is when you experience things.
So if they come, you know, and go to my
website it's called the mind clearing dot com. The mind
clearing dot Com. They're going to contact, they can contact.
They will have a form that appeals right, and if

(01:13:49):
they want to get a treatment, it's one hour. They
will get a treatment with me and we can do
via zoom or whatever things. Right. You don't have to
come to Kansas City of course, and so we do bat,
I will give you twenty percent off because you know
you will experience it. So, for example, if you got
pain right bothering you and nobody was able to crack
the cod of your pain, right, so we'll I will

(01:14:12):
ask you what's the pen number one to ten ten
being the worst, or all the things that are bothering you,
if it's a negative thought or negative feeling, anxiety or depression,
whatever you have. And so I will say, give you
a number one to ten, ten is the worst. So
give me an number of seven or eight, right, and
the end of a session should be zero and one. Now,
if it comes back, it means there's more resistance, but

(01:14:34):
will trigger the program. And so we'll do a diversation
and will ask you, oh, oh, your neck pain come back.
What were you doing? Oh? I get anger at my wife,
So anger will create that, right, So we will treat that.
We'll do the man creing on your anger, you know,
and creating the pain. And you say, you know what,
I spent like two hours on my computer and my

(01:14:54):
next pain come back. So we will reprogram that like that,
there's normal trigger for your pen. And seventy to eighty
percent of the people within two visits, the pen goes
away and never come back. So that's how I knew. Yeah,
it doesn't have to take a long time when you
speak the same language, but your subconscious mind. Right, like

(01:15:15):
we speak the same language. Now if I will speak French,
will be in big trouble. All right, I assume you
don't speak French. See that's a problem, right, And so
now we speak the same language. When you can speak
the same language with your subconscious mind is just giving
instruction and I don't want this, I want this. That's it.
It's that simple. And so if you think I've been

(01:15:36):
everywhere and try everything with no success, give it a
short way. You have to lose, you know, get a
treatment and you will see, you know, you will see.
And so just be open mind. You know there's things
that really work. I've been doing that twenty eight years, right,
I've been working on that man clearing for three years, right,
and it's still I had a breakthrough on the man
clearing last week. Actually, it's always something that I want

(01:15:59):
to improve. Improved. Improved doesn't mean that I've got very
good web results. Now you can go on my website
and look at those crazy testimonial right, we were able
to treat somebody who was a holder holder, right, she
was accumulating things in what treatment? That's it. She bought
like a contain air and with a daughter they clear

(01:16:20):
up everything.

Speaker 3 (01:16:21):
That's wow.

Speaker 6 (01:16:23):
Yeah, So when that it's it's when you bring ninety
percent of your mind power to a party, right, that's
how you think it's miracle and things like that. It's
not you were you were not even born. You were
conceived that way, right, with all of that, and you
just get the access back by using the man clearing technique.

(01:16:43):
And if you want to learn for yourself, because you
want to transform yourself and also you want to have
your loved ones, you don't have to have a PhD
on head, you have to have a PhD on relationship.
You don't have to have a PhD on on reaching
your goal and being successful. Right, you just can learn
it for yourself. But the way I treat myself every day, right,

(01:17:03):
and so you can do that for yourself also, right,
and so and it's like as easy do you need
a PhD to go on your computer and click dele
to your program? No, do you need a PhD to
go on the place store and get a new program
to put on a computer. No, and do you need
a PhD after to get the result and the outcome

(01:17:24):
that you want to know? It's that easy, just a
learning process you know that you need to go through
and I will. I'm here to teach you that. And
but you can do it on your own, because there's
no better healing that to empower people to heal themselves,
empowered people to transform themselves, empower people. That's all they

(01:17:47):
don't want you to know. I guarantee you that because
after you'll be free men. And our society they don't
want free men. The government don't want free men. Government.

Speaker 5 (01:18:00):
Man.

Speaker 6 (01:18:00):
It's like if you go there on there and man,
you know mind control. That's what good man means.

Speaker 3 (01:18:07):
Wow, wow, that that's that's awesome. And I must say,
for sixty three years old, you're doing very good.

Speaker 6 (01:18:14):
Fifty three I turned I turned sixty three. I'm sorry,
I forgot I turned sixty three and May fourth.

Speaker 4 (01:18:20):
Okay, so I turned sixty in August. So if I'm
going on the same track as you, I feel better now.
I feel better now. Oh life is good. Life is good.

Speaker 3 (01:18:34):
So thank thank you.

Speaker 4 (01:18:35):
Doctor, and definitely you're having anything new come up. Definitely
reach out to me and love talking to you more.

Speaker 6 (01:18:42):
He wants to pleasure Toney.

Speaker 2 (01:18:43):
You know you guys, Thanks for listening to today's show,
and don't forget to like and subscribe to this podcast

(01:19:06):
and look for Project Thirdeye Open on your favorite social
media platforms. Check out our web page at Projectthirdiopen dot
com and that's third I with the letter I Projectthirdiopen
dot com. Drop us a note at tonyel at Projectthirdiopen
dot com. That's tonyel At Projectthirdiyopen dot com. As you

(01:19:30):
wait for our next podcast to drop, don't take anything
we've satisfact. Instead, do your own homework, make up your
own mind, then take action until next time. Be blessed,
be good, and be free
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.