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June 6, 2025 66 mins
What if everything you thought you knew about health was only half the story? In this eye-opening episode, Brandi Harvey sits down with Dr. Bobby Price, plant-based pharmacist, wellness architect, and detox specialist, to explore the truth about food, healing, and reclaiming your health from the inside out.

From reversing chronic illness to exposing the dangers of processed foods, Dr. Price breaks down how the body is designed to regenerate, heal, and thrive, if we give it what it truly needs. If you're ready to take your wellness into your own hands, this conversation is your wake-up call.

You can watch the full interview here: https://youtu.be/YCBGGIvse_E

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
A reptile dysfunction.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Man, it's tear us and relationships, and so much of
it is attributed to red meat, processed junk foods and snacks,
sugary drinks.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
I had your men in their twenties coming in asking
for ed medications. I'm noticing people are coming in with hypertension,
having strokes full of rectal cancer, which if you look
in the black community, forty percent more likely to get it,
twenty percent more likely to die for. And when you
look at our diets, our diets are by far the
most toxic diet of all of them.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
So you promotal plant based lifestyle.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
We have this propensity to be in a toxic relationship
with things that don't serve us. The food that I
was eating, even though it connected me culturally to my
family sort of bobbination compared to what the original food was.
The body in its original form is perfect. It's designed
to heal itself. If I get a cut here, you
get a cut there, You're not even going to know

(00:55):
you had to cut. So we know that the body
is capable of regenerating and healing itself, but we only
think that applies when it comes to a cut.

Speaker 4 (01:02):
But it also.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
Applies when we come to the inside of our bodies
as well too. At some point, we gotta to get
to a point where we recognize our body as a
spiritual temper.

Speaker 4 (01:11):
What would God eat?

Speaker 2 (01:12):
What are some foods that we can be putting into
our bodies?

Speaker 4 (01:15):
Ladies, That is song called wap.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
This is the whitewater.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
This is wattwater.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
They at the.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
Farmer's market today. Doctor Welcome to Vaught Empowered Talks. So
we don't just scratch the surface, we dive deep into
the lives of some of the world's most influential change makers.
I'm your host, Brandy Harvey. Y'all, we got a good
one today. We're talking about all things health. We're gonna

(01:43):
get your life together, y'all gonna be throwing some stuff
out today. Doctor Bobby Price is a certified plant based nutritionists,
exercise physiologists, and doctor of Pharmacy. He has extensive clinical
experience in the hospital setting, one on one patient contact,
in community pharmacy, and health care regulatory experience with the
food and drug administration. In his book Education Over Medication,

(02:05):
Doctor Price exposes the miss lies and truth about modern
foods and medicine. Doctor Price uses plant based foods, herbal medicine,
and holistic techniques to help others restore their wellbeing. Doctor
Price has been featured on Fox five, Medium, The Huffington Post,
and Parade, just to name a few. Doctor Bobby believes
that when we align our lives with nature, our bodies

(02:26):
have an innate ability to heal.

Speaker 1 (02:28):
Bot Empower's Talks.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Welcome herbal and holistic wellness advocate Doctor Bobby Price to
the show.

Speaker 4 (02:34):
Thank you for having me, Doctor Bobby.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
What's that friend?

Speaker 4 (02:38):
Man? Blessed? Blessed? How you're doing for to the conversation.
I'm doing well.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
Listen, this is gonna be a good one because we
was already pregaming before before we started, and.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
We pregame even before this life in the past, So
it's been a minute since we've talked, so it's good
to come back to this.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
I mean, you know, we got right back into the
swing of things, right. I mean, you have you spent
the very first beginning part of your career as a
pharmacist and so so many years of prescribing medication onto
many people who look like us.

Speaker 4 (03:11):
What did you see, man? You know what's funny was.

Speaker 3 (03:19):
I started out wanting to see the truth that was it, Like,
the idea was, let me help my people because in
my neighborhood and my family is riddled with cancer, is
riddle with diabetes, with hypertension, and so it became so
commonplace for me. I was just wanted to be sort
of an anchor and also a resource.

Speaker 4 (03:40):
And so as I'm.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
Working for the FDA and then start working in the
clinical setting in the hospital, I'm just noticing that people
my age are coming in that and this.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Is before you were even in your forties.

Speaker 4 (03:53):
No, this is in my late twenties.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (03:55):
Yeah, So I'm noticing people are coming in with hypertension,
and I'm noticing people my age and my late twenties
at the time coming in and having strokes.

Speaker 1 (04:05):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
I'm noticing that young men are having erectile dysfunction. I'm
noticing that women are having pernicious anemia to the point
where they have to have blood transfusions. And so it
was a wake up call for me because I got
diagnosed with high blood.

Speaker 4 (04:21):
Pressure when I was sixteen.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (04:23):
And that was despite the fact that I.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
Was an athlete, played football and basketball, played basketball in college,
and I still had high pertension. Only seven percent body fat,
still got high pertension. And so as I'm seeing people
my age come into the hospital and have strokes and
their blood pressure looks like mine, I realized that I
might need to get my life together before I help

(04:45):
somebody else get their life together. Yeah, and so it
became just very scary for me. And that's when I
went on my personal journey to kind of figure out, Okay,
if these people are still having strokes and heart attacks
on medication, and then I'm more than likely at some
point to have a stroke or heart attack on medication.

(05:06):
So I need to find out what the source is
because this is only to a certain degree, only treating
the symptoms and not addressing the casts. Yeah, and that's
kind of what led me down my rabbit hole.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
I mean, you were eating a very meat rich diet, yeah,
of course, Yeah, a lot of animal products.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
Yeah, I mean my mom, My mom is not only
to cook in the family, like she to cook in
the whole neighborhood. Well, my mom cooks people. You can
see people ride by and they'll see people there, so
they'll know that this food. So they stopped buy and
they're like, y'all got an extra plate.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (05:42):
So that was my mom growing up, and I'm my
oldest son. So that's how we bonded. Okay, So whenever
I would get ready to come home from college, my
mom would be like, all right, what do you want
to eat?

Speaker 1 (05:53):
And what were you telling her? Ribs chicken?

Speaker 3 (05:56):
You know the thing I never I stopped eating port
I saw Malcolm X in sixth grade.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
I stopped beating for it.

Speaker 3 (06:04):
But beef chicken, and you know, like everything you could
think of mac and cheese, the collar grease like, and
all of everything had meat in, including the vegetables and
so and so that was our routine. And so that
was my lifestyle. And you couldn't You could never tell

(06:26):
me that what I was eating was contributing to me
being at that point at twenty eight and not only
had hypertension, I had sleep happening here. Oh, I was
about fifty pounds over the weight that I came into college.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
Were you sleeping on the seapap machine at this point?

Speaker 4 (06:46):
So I had it, but it was so loud.

Speaker 2 (06:53):
Twenty eight years old, I mean, because I know people
that are twenty eight years old that sleep on the
machine every night.

Speaker 3 (06:59):
Yeah, I had the machine. So instead of using the machine,
I would just sound like a beer. And so throughout
the night, my girlfriend at the time would just bump
me or move me. Yeah, you know, throughout the night.
But yeah, I just inflammation all over my body. And
again twenty eight and I'm thinking to myself, there's no
way I'm twenty eight years old and I should feel

(07:22):
like I'm feeling like I'm sixty.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
And so it was just alarming and triggering at the
same time. And it just made me realize that no
matter how many degrees I had or what I had
learned through school and through my clinical practice, something was wrong.
And because it was a personal journey, that's what allowed

(07:46):
me to say, no matter what I've been taught, I
have to go outside of this and kind of figure
something out.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
I mean that takes you, this journey of figuring it out,
It takes you all around the world. You start learning
herbal medicine from shamans and and ramins and.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Everybody else, baby, all around the world.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
I mean, you went to Asia, you went to Africa,
you went to the Caribbean to learn how do I start.

Speaker 1 (08:08):
To use herbs to heal the body?

Speaker 3 (08:11):
Yeah? Yeah, And to be honest with you, without knowing it.
That journey really began when I was like sixteen, when
my grandmother passed away. I was literally in the room
when she passed away. I was the last person to
find out that my grandmother was about to pass away.
And I remember walking into the room and seeing people crying.

(08:32):
And I had never seen this in my grandmother's house
because it was like the movie's soul food every time
I went to my grandmother's house. And this time, when
I'm walking in, instead of cousins cracking jokes and laughter
and my aunt who drinks too much loud.

Speaker 4 (08:48):
You don't hear any of that.

Speaker 3 (08:49):
People just quiet and you hear sobbing, and so as
I'm walking in, I realized that this is probably the
last time I'm going to see my grandmother. And when
I get to the bed, her bed is around it,
and they kind of carve out some space for me,
and I stand next to her bed and I see
my grandmother like literally holding on for a life, and
I realized that she had been holding on for me.

(09:12):
And you know, initially, I like begging her don't leave,
because my grandmother was my everything.

Speaker 4 (09:19):
But then I realized how.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
Selfish it was, and I was just like thank you
for staying for me, grandmother. And it's two minutes later
ship passed away.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
And so what does your grandmother pass away from?

Speaker 4 (09:30):
Colorectal cancer?

Speaker 3 (09:32):
Which if you look in the black community and you
look at the statistics, forty percent more likely to get it,
twenty percent more likely to die for it. For African Americans. Yeah,
it is very aggressive when we get colorectal cancer. And
when you look at our diets, our diets are by
far the most toxic diets of all. They may taste

(09:54):
the best, but they are by far the most toxic.
And so that's sort of what led me to say,
all right, the answer isn't here in the US. And
that's what led me to move into Japan. I lived
there for almost five years, studying a group of people
the Okin Islands who lived to one hundred no disease.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
And that's a blue zone.

Speaker 3 (10:13):
That's a blue zone, and they primarily eat a plant
based diet. And going to China to learn traditional Chinese medicine,
going to Bali to learn about Balinese medicine, going to
India to learn about yoga meditation and arivedic medicine, spending
some time in Africa and South Africa, Namibia, Zambia, Ethiopia,

(10:36):
learning about herbal medicine there and then coming here back
to the Caribbean, going a few places like Honduras, doctor
Sabe's village there, and a few other places. And then
at that point that's when I came back here to
the US and I was like, all right, I learned
all of this over the course of seven years. Let
me figure out how I can share it with the people.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
I mean, you write the Book.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Of a Medication, and you say in the book, when
toxins accumulate, our health and vitality is connected to our
ability to eliminate waste from our bodies. Once the body
reaches its toxic threshold, disease will most certainly appear.

Speaker 4 (11:15):
Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (11:15):
And so you talked about the colitis, the knees and joints,
rheumatoid arthritis. Sometimes I think we listen to our families
and it's like, you just think you're supposed to get
arthritis when you get older. Yeah, but it's not. It's
because the knees and the joints have inflammation. It's because
the kidneys have.

Speaker 3 (11:32):
Inflammation, nephritis. Anything that says itis means inflammation. So really Yeah,
So nephritis is in the kidneys, nephron being nephrons that
are the little filtering units in the kidneys. You have
over a million, and when you get down to two
hundred and fifty thousand, that's when you're starting to go
on dialysis. Okay, So you're filtering units are essentially depleting.

(11:56):
And that's happening because inflammation and what is the need
to get rid of urine? What is urine uric acid,
And so as you build up acid in tissues, it
begins to break down those tissues, It begins to cause
the irritation, It begins to cause inflammation in those tissues.
But it's not just solely dependent in the kidneys. That

(12:17):
can happen in the knees, or the ankles or the
wrists and we call it arthritis. That could also happen
in the gut and we call it colitis, doesn't matter,
and the thyroid is called thyroiditis.

Speaker 4 (12:31):
Okay, So there is a matter what happens.

Speaker 3 (12:33):
But when disease begins, the form and the body is
going to begin with the irritation. That irritation is going
to cause the inflammation. That inflammation over time, like chronic
time it begins to cause the tissues to break down.
And as the tissues break down, that is what breaks
down organs, and that's what breaks down organ systems. So

(12:54):
it's always depended on where does it occur. Okay, So
if somebody has cardiovascular disease, is simply because that irritation,
that inflammation is happening in the cardiovascular system. And so
that's what I was learning as I'm going through my
journey that I'm realizing that I didn't get this information
when I was working in the hospital. Absolutely when I
was working for the FDA, And this is why we're

(13:17):
not addressing that. So when you get an inflamed tissue,
you go to the doctor, they give you an anti inflammatory,
but that didn't cause the actual irritation. It's probably the food. Yeah,
it's probably the lifestyle that actually caused the irritation. So
you can get rid of the inflammation and feel better.

(13:38):
But that's just like a check engine light. Your check
engine light can be on and you can go to
your mechanic and he could take one of the plugs
off of the battery and now resex the car and
you don't have a check engine light on it. But
you still need to change your oil.

Speaker 4 (13:54):
Change.

Speaker 3 (13:55):
You still need to change your oil. And that's what
happens in healthcare. Will only address seeing the symptoms. If
you have mucus, we give you mucinex. Okay, it stops
the mucus from coming up. But your body was actually
trying to produce the mucus to get the infection out.
So instead of you getting the infection out, now the
affection is growing in the body. Now you think you're

(14:16):
better because you're not producing mucus anymore.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
Yeah, And I think so often in this country, we're
just putting band aids over these wounds, right, these gaping wounds,
we just try to keep putting a band aid over it.
And then when we look at our community, right, the
statistics are there. Yeah, I mean, eighty percent of black
women overweight to obs yep. Sixty percent of us are

(14:40):
suffering from some sort of diabetes or chronic disease or illness.
According to the Department of Health and Human Services, thirteen
point four percent of black men and twelve point seven
percent of black women have been diagnosed with diabetes combined,
the rate of sixty percent higher than whites.

Speaker 4 (14:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (14:57):
Yeah, and again it always we have to go back
to the irritation, okay, because at the end of the day,
the body in its original form is perfect. It's designed
to heal itself. It's designed to regenerate itself. If I
get a cut here, you get a cut there, you
don't worry about it because you understand that the blood
is going to clot to stop the blood bleeding, and

(15:20):
then eventually it's going to create a scab, and that
scab is eventually going to heal, and then you're not
even going to know you had to cut. So we
know that the body is capable of regenerating and healing itself. Okay,
But we only think that applies when it comes to
a cut, But it also applies when we come to
the inside of our bodies as well too. But the

(15:41):
issue is that we're misaligned. We're misaligned in how we eat.
We're misaligned, and how we think. We're misaligned and how
we drink. We're misaligned in every way that contributes to
our health. We don't even get sunlight anymore. Most people
spend most of their day in home. Yeah, they get
in a car covered, they drive to a parking deck,

(16:03):
walk through covered parking into a building, spend eight hours there.

Speaker 4 (16:07):
They never see the sun come out dark down with
some people.

Speaker 3 (16:11):
Yeah, we're designed to be in the sun, Like no
plant life would exist without the sun. We can collect
energy by simply putting up solar panels and be able
to power power an entire city. Okay, so that tells
you the power of the sun. But you know, having
this melanin this tells you that you need even more
sun than anybody else in the world as well too. Yeah,

(16:33):
you know, so we just so disconnected from nature, We're
so disconnected from divine law that this is why we're
so sick. And then the food isn't real. Nothing is
real anymore. The food isn't real. Most of this is
genetically modified and lab grown. Okay, so that's not real.
Our connections with each other, they're not real anymore as

(16:56):
well too, when you start to break down and really
look at what is really real anymore, Like nothing's real anymore.
Like we're literally living in that matrix that the movie
was talking about. Yeah, and that's why we're so disconnected
from ourselves.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
I mean, okay, so you promot a plant based lifestyle,
and I know that there are so many people out
here who they're gonna say, Oh, no, God, he can't
be talking about me. I got to have my meat,
do right. What do you tell those people, man?

Speaker 3 (17:28):
So that's part of the conversation that I was just having,
is we have this, we have this propensity to be
in a toxic relationship with things that don't serve us.
And so my thing to people is that, first of all,
understand that I come from that kind of food. So

(17:51):
first of all, it's no judgment at all. I used
to eat probably worse than most people eat. But when
the new information and came, I made changes not based
upon just on how I think and my beliefs, but
I made changes to my traditions and my cultures as
well too, because what I understood was is that the

(18:12):
food that I was eating, even though it connected me
culturally and traditionally to my family and friends and the
people that I love, it's an ambombination compared to what
the original food was.

Speaker 1 (18:26):
Yeah, it's not the same food.

Speaker 3 (18:27):
And so it's not the same food in that regard.
The other thing that I think is really important is
that people are always looking for the next clinical trial
or study to confirm what they should be eating.

Speaker 4 (18:38):
One day is keto.

Speaker 3 (18:39):
The next day is carnivore, the next day is vegan
like and so for me, like I was my own.

Speaker 4 (18:45):
Getting guinea pig.

Speaker 3 (18:47):
I reluctantly said, I'm not gonna eat meat for twenty
one days, and in twenty one days, I lost seventeen pounds.

Speaker 1 (18:54):
In twenty one days, lost seventeen.

Speaker 3 (18:57):
Just from stopping stop eating everything it wasn't natural, including
me and nothing that's not living. Okay, So if it's
not living, it's not natural. I didn't need it for
twenty one days, and then twenty one days I lost
seventeen times.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
I mean, Doc, I've done your detox. Doc has a detox.
It's an herbal detox. This cheriina never tasted before. I'm
gonna just go ahead and say you ain't never taste it.
Nothing like this detox.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
The first time I did it was a few years ago,
when I first met you. I did it for thirty days,
and I tell people this all the time.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
The story.

Speaker 2 (19:39):
I was going to speak at a conference in DC.
I had gotten custom clothes done. I started the detox
one week on. I had to get all the clothes
taken in. All the clothes were too big because I
had dropped so much weight just being on a raw
food diet because I did a raw for the thirty

(20:01):
days I did raw vegan for thirty days, I lost
so much weight.

Speaker 4 (20:06):
Can I explain why that happens?

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Yeah, all right.

Speaker 3 (20:08):
So one of the reasons why we gain so much
weight is to dilute the toxicity that's in our bodies.

Speaker 4 (20:16):
Okay, So let me give you an example.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
If I were to put a pen nail of mercury
in let's say two ounces of water, and had you
drink it, you would die, Okay, But if I were
to put that in let's say three gallons of water,
it dilutes the toxicity of it, of whatever that poison
may be. So now your body has the opportunity to

(20:41):
actually rid it of it. That's why a lot of
people when they say they're going to do it these
hot they start drinking a lot of water of seventy
five percent water.

Speaker 4 (20:47):
Okay.

Speaker 3 (20:48):
So what your body does when you're loading it with toxicity,
the toxic foods that you're eating, it starts to retain water.
That's the first thing that it does. It'll retain water
to dilute the toxicity. Okay, because otherwise it would accumulate
in all your detox organs, your liver, your kidneys, your
lymphatic system, your lungs, your digestis system, et cetera. Okay,

(21:12):
so you're going to retain water. The next thing it does,
because you've done it for too long, it will make
you start to gain fat. All right, Most of the
toxicity in our body is stored. In fact, this is
why it's so difficult for people to lose weight. That
calls that stubborn weight that just won't lose. Yeah, it's
because what happens is if you start to burn fat

(21:37):
and you're not eliminating, meaning we have elimination pathways. We
eliminate through our skin, when we sweat, et cetera. We
eliminate through our digestive system, when we have a bio movement,
we eliminate through urine, We eliminate through breathing, we eliminate
through our lymphatic system. Most of those get oversaturated, and
when they get oversaturated, they don't eliminate. That toxicity starts

(22:00):
to back up in the body, and the body and
it's ingenuity is trying.

Speaker 4 (22:03):
To figure out what to do with it. It stores
it inside of fat.

Speaker 3 (22:07):
Because now it's not in the blood supply, and the
blood supply goes everywhere in the body. So this is
why people will not lose weight. So when you're on
the detox, what happens You start to open up elimination pathway.

Speaker 2 (22:19):
Oh, maybe you gonna open up. Don't let this man
sit up here and tell you, y you gonna open up.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
Baby.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
You need to have your day planned. Yeah, and you
know where you're going, what time you're going to get there.
You need to have that thing drank by six o'clock
in the evening.

Speaker 4 (22:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (22:34):
And what I tell people is is that people just
aren't used to going to the bathroom like they should. Like,
if I eat three meals, I'm gonna have three bottoms
every day, every day, every day, every time I eat,
I have a boom.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
I love that. I love that. I love that for you.

Speaker 4 (22:53):
But that is normal, But people don't think it's normal.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
I keep hearing the doc.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
Yeah, people don't think it's normal because it's uncommon. But
what people are eating is making it uncommon. But if
you ate healthy, you would have a bioel movement every
time you ate. It's part of how you eliminate waste
when you eat food. The only thing your body wants
out of it is the nutrition, the vitamins, the minerals,

(23:19):
to trace elements, the amino acids, the healthy fast. All
of the other stuff is useless. Okay, I won't say useless,
because fiber is healthy for the gut. It feeds the
gut bacteria, but the rest can go. So once the
body gets the nutrients out, it's like, all right, get
rid of this other stuff.

Speaker 4 (23:37):
You need to get rid of it because.

Speaker 3 (23:39):
Otherwise it becomes waste and aspecal manner starts to accumulate,
it will start to rot and fester and create toxins
in the body. So that's why it's really important to
understand that when you're on the detox. A lot of
people just aren't used to going to the bathroom that much.
But like for me, I don't feel anything on the

(24:00):
detox because I'm always going to the bathroom. If I
eat five times a day, I'm going to have four
or five bio movements.

Speaker 4 (24:09):
And then think about this, it's more.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
Because part of it is getting rid of parasites in yeast.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
I mean, then that's what the the DETOXI is. One
of the tea's is a parasite clan. The other one
is a candy the clans, Yeah, so one of them.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
The thing is is that parasites and yeast are controlling
your taste buds. Yeah, they have hijacked your taste. But
it's why you love.

Speaker 4 (24:33):
Sugar, fat, salty, creamy. Yeah, it's not you.

Speaker 3 (24:37):
So whenever you get ready to say I'm not eating
that no more, but you cannot stop doing it, it's
because the parasites and the yeast have taken over. And
all you gotta do is get a tongue scraper. Start
scraping your tongue in the morning, and if it's white,
it'll tell you you're full of yeast. Okay, if you got
if you clench your teeth that night when you sleep,

(24:57):
grind your teeth that night, you got parasites. You got
an itchy anus at night, you got parasites. If you
have brain fog, all of these things are telling you
you have parasites. But the issue is that you're not.
There's nothing when you go to your doctor and you
complain about these things. The irritable bowelsy syndrome, that's parasites. Absolutely,

(25:18):
a large percentage of diabetes is parasites. Too, because they
get inside of the pancreas lay all of these eggs,
and you're pancreas is what releases insulin to control your
blood sugar. What is Parasites in yeast love sugar. So
now your blood sugar level stay high for the parasites
in the yeast. So it's just really important to understand

(25:39):
that as we unravel all of this, these things, these
critters that are in your body. And this is also
why people have issues sleeping because, like they say, the
freaks come out at night, like the parasites in the
yeast wake up at night. This is why people are
waking up at night, having problems leading sleeping, having nightmares,
et cetera.

Speaker 4 (25:59):
All of these.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Wow, parasite nightmares are contributed to parasites.

Speaker 3 (26:04):
Yeah, if you're having consistent nightmares, yeah, it can be
contributed to parasites.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
Wow. Well thing, God, I don't have nightmares. But we
were talking about this off camera before we started.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Part of why I gave up alcohol was because I
could not sleep. I'm up and I was up and
down the whole night, stomach flip flopping and turning and
doing jumping jacks, and I can't get a good night's sleep.

Speaker 4 (26:29):
Throws your circadian rhythm.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
Yeah, you know.

Speaker 3 (26:32):
And the unfortunate thing is that, as I was telling
you earlier, there were studies that came out that said
that a glass of alcohol or a glass of wine
is actually heart healthy for you. But of course, like
you have to always follow the money when it comes
to a study, and most of the studies that were
conducted were funded and supported by the alcohol industry, and

(26:54):
the independent studies they showed that not only is alcohol
point blank of toxin for the body it is, that's
why they that's why they say you're intoxicated. Yeah, okay,
it's not only a brain poison, but it's a liver poison.
It's a poison for the overall body. But in those
independent studies it showed that alcohol increased all causes of mortality.

(27:15):
So if you had diabetes, it increased the risk of
you dying from diabetes, If you had cardiovascular disease, it
increase your risk from diep or caloriovascular disease, If cancer
increase your risk, it increases the risk for all causes
of mortality. And so as I was telling you, I
stopped drinking in twenty fifteen, it had nothing to do

(27:38):
with me understanding there's knowledge, because I didn't have it then.

Speaker 4 (27:41):
But what it for me, What it was is if I.

Speaker 3 (27:44):
Can't go out and enjoy myself without having to put
something in my hand to feel socially comfortable and not
socially awkward, if I have to loosen myself up by
intoxicating myself, for me, that says something to me and
about me. If I had to drink alcohol to be
able to go to sleep, it's telling me that something

(28:06):
is off. It would be parasites and so for me,
it came from that standpoint. But in any case, it's
just harmful to the body.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
You said something, right, You said that if I couldn't
have a good time and I couldn't go out and
be myself without having something in my hand. There are
so many people who will listen to this, like I
can't go have no plan based yet, Yeah, because where
I'm gonna go eat, I'm gonna have fun. I'm gonna
go to the holiday, I'm gonna show up to the party.
How I'm gonna come to the cookout? And I can't

(28:36):
get no ribs and no chicken on that on that grill.

Speaker 3 (28:39):
Man, I'm gonna tell you something. We're also in an
age of a lack of self love and self care.
And I believe that when you cannot make decisions that
you know, you know that this is leading to not
only you know the decline in my health, and I

(29:00):
can see it in my family generationally. I can see
the diabetes, I can see the strokes, I can see
the cancer, and I can see what's consistent in my
family is that we all eat the same way. Okay,
it's not just genes, because when you look at cancer,
only five percent of cancers come from genes. And it's
not breast cancer, it's not prostate cancer, it's not color work,

(29:22):
none of those are associated primarily with genes. It's from
our lifestyles, from the food that we're eating. And so
what I always tell people, you need to dig deeper
when it comes to self destructive and self sabotaging behavior.
And that's what I looked in within myself and said, Okay,
if I'm eating food that I know as a scientist,

(29:45):
as a clinician, that I know is destructive to me,
then what did they say about me? What's going on
inside of me? What kind of unresolved traumas have I
not healed? You know, what kind of things are what
kind of things are being promoted in my brain and
my programming that is telling me it's okay to harm yourself.

Speaker 2 (30:10):
Oh, Doc, I told you before when we were talking,
I had to ask myself that question with alcohol.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
I was like, the next day.

Speaker 2 (30:18):
After that last drink, I said, how, Brandy, can you
say you love yourself if you keep showing up doing
this type of shit to you?

Speaker 1 (30:26):
Yes? Okay, right?

Speaker 2 (30:28):
Like, And I think that so many people we don't
think about it, right because we've been so programmed. We've
been so conditioned to eat a certain way, to think
a certain way, to believe a certain way. And so
that reprogramming comes with a lot of work.

Speaker 3 (30:41):
Yeah, it's a lot of work. And you know, I
wrote another book called you Know that you know a
lot of people don't know about, but in my opinion,
I think it's probably the most important book that people
have to start with. It's called Life Is My Gurul,
And the whole premise of the book is that life
is literally teaching you as a as a spiritual form

(31:03):
lessons and quite often what happens is all of that
unresolved trauma that we're not, you know, looking at that.
We swept under the rug that we disowned and disconnected
ourselves from a lot of times, what we do is
we self sabotaged because of trauma that happened when we
was eight years old.

Speaker 4 (31:23):
Yeah, you know a lot.

Speaker 3 (31:24):
Of times what we don't understand is that you know
that hurt that somebody did to you, now you're doing
perpetrating to yourself. And so for me, it just became
a very important point for me to kind of get.

Speaker 4 (31:38):
To a space what I could see me.

Speaker 3 (31:41):
I could see the parts of me that hurt, and
most of it was a twelve year old boy.

Speaker 4 (31:47):
It wasn't a grown man. The grown man had.

Speaker 3 (31:51):
Mastered all of his you know, life experiences, but I
didn't correct what happened when I was twelve years old.
And so it's just really important for people to understand
that if you have self sabotaging behaviors, whether it doesn't
matter if it's your addiction to ice cream or your
addiction to alcohol or whatever it may be, but you
know that this is not good for you, then it's

(32:13):
time to kind of do some digging. And I'll tell people,
like healing isn't easy. You know, a lot of people
have mastered the conversation and the linguistics and the articulation
of healing, so they understand words like being what a
narcissist is? They understand, you know, all of these words

(32:34):
that say, I've done therapy. But people have done therapy,
but they haven't become the therapy. They haven't become the healing.
And so a lot of people believe that they can
go around healing healing. They believe that they can go
overhealing under it, but you can't. You have to go
through healing. And when you go through healing, it is uncomfortable.

(32:55):
You know, to go back and look at trauma. It
does not feel good. You have to have common versations
with yourself and other people that are very uncomfortable. You know,
when you're going through real healing, not treatment. Okay, treatment
is turning off symptoms. But when you go through real healing,
you gotta go through the mucus coming up. You got
to go through all those bowel movements that you didn't have.

(33:17):
You eat three meals a day, seven days a week.
That's twenty one meals in a week times fifty two. Okay,
we're talking like five thousand meals in a year. Yeah, okay,
but you only had.

Speaker 1 (33:31):
One Bob moving a week.

Speaker 3 (33:33):
Yeah, a lot of people having three Bob movies in
the week. Where are the other four thousand meals?

Speaker 1 (33:39):
Ooh, they are stuck in there, trapped in a closet.

Speaker 4 (33:42):
Full of poo.

Speaker 3 (33:43):
So my thing is to people is when you're going
through healing, just know that the sign and symptom that
you're actually healing is the discomfort. You know, like it's
just like forgiveness. Yeah, you know, it's uncomfortable.

Speaker 1 (33:59):
Well, doc, I.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
Tell people all the time, you know when they say
people are fullish, you know zushi, because they are really
full of.

Speaker 4 (34:06):
They literally fullish.

Speaker 3 (34:08):
So in that case, it's like when somebody tells me, well,
my intuition says, how can your intuition be correct when
you're fullish? Especially when you're where does your intuition come from?

Speaker 1 (34:20):
You're good?

Speaker 4 (34:21):
You're good.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
So if you ain't had more than twenty one by
movements this week, maybe we can't even trust it.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
We can't trust you.

Speaker 3 (34:32):
But you gotta have that conversation with yourself because that's
a form of toxicity too.

Speaker 4 (34:36):
When you leave waste in the gut.

Speaker 3 (34:38):
Yeah, that's this is why, in my opinion, black and
brown people lead in the category of colorectal cancer. This
is why Chack with Bozeman, Yeah, died at forty three
of colorectal cancer. It's because we don't understand first of
all what we're eating, but also the trauma.

Speaker 4 (35:01):
The trauma is a part of that too, you know.

Speaker 3 (35:04):
So it's just really important for us to get into
space where we go back to the type of healing.
Not only that you know, our grandmother, but our ancestors
only knew.

Speaker 4 (35:16):
Yeah, this is not healing.

Speaker 3 (35:18):
And what we're in now like this, what we call healthcare,
is the third leading cause of death in America. So
if you're leaning on that, you're leaning on the third
leading cause of death to be your savior when it
comes to your health. If that's the reason why you're
eating the foods that you're eating, you're drinking the drink

(35:38):
that you're drinking, and you're dependent on that to save
you from cancer, to save you from a stroke, to
save you from a heart attack, to save you from
my autoimmune condition.

Speaker 4 (35:49):
You should know that the.

Speaker 3 (35:50):
Leading cause of bankruptcy is medical debt.

Speaker 1 (35:55):
The leading cause of bankruptcy is medical debt is medical debt.

Speaker 3 (35:59):
Wow. So you know what I tell people is that
because a lot of times what people say about a
plant based die or it's.

Speaker 2 (36:06):
More expensive, it's more expensive to buy the meat, Well
it's more expensive.

Speaker 4 (36:11):
Or have diabetes.

Speaker 3 (36:13):
Oh listen, it's more expensive to get a stint or
a bypass surgery. You know, it's more expensive to get
a cancer diagnosis.

Speaker 4 (36:25):
It's far more expensive.

Speaker 3 (36:27):
And not only that, like, at some point we got
to get to a point where we recognize our body
as a spiritual temple. And once we get to a
point where we understand that this is a spiritual temple,
it's a temple for my spirit. I was meant to
come here and have a spiritual experience as a human being. Okay,

(36:51):
not not necessarily come here as a human being.

Speaker 4 (36:56):
We didn't come here as a human being. We came
here as a spirit.

Speaker 3 (36:59):
So with that being said that, if this is my
vehicle for my human experience, I have to treat this
like a spiritual experience. I have to see it from
a divine eye and stop looking at it like a
human because we're here to see it from a divine space.
So what would God do in this situation? What would
God eat? Would God eat something dead or would God

(37:21):
eat something alive? If God saw that he was punishing
himself taking away his life.

Speaker 4 (37:28):
Spoon and forth by forth, what would he do?

Speaker 3 (37:32):
Like when we start to look at it from that perspective,
now you change how you see you now when you
hear I was made in his likeness and image. Now
you understand, you understand, And so we just we have
to get to that point because we just don't understand.
This is why the world is so crazy right now.

(37:53):
We're so disconnected from ourselfs. This is why it's so
easy for us to look on TV and see another
person murdered and then flip, We.

Speaker 2 (38:00):
Just go about our day, go right about it, you
go back scrolling right. We see it all the time.

Speaker 3 (38:06):
Yeah, So we just totally disconnected. And I believe that
our whole purpose here is to become evolved. It's for
us to become the highest versions of ourselves.

Speaker 2 (38:17):
We'll talk about the highest version and we talk about
this connection. I need you to help bring some relationships
back together. Dot Okay, this is how we're gonna bring
some relationships back together. Because a rectile dysfunction man's tears
some relationships up indeed, and so much of it is
attributed to highly processed meat, red meat, processed junk foods

(38:41):
and snacks, sugary drinks. In rectile dysfunction, especially in younger
me it is an early sign of cardiovascular disease and
may decrease quality of life.

Speaker 4 (38:50):
Absolutely.

Speaker 3 (38:52):
Yeah, and so man, I'll tell you so, let me
just keep it all the way. Well, I remember in
my twenties when I started my journey, I did not
know that I had an issue in the bedroom. It
wasn't until I went plant based, and after three months
I lost a significant amount of weight initially, so I

(39:15):
lost like fifty pounds total in about sixty days.

Speaker 4 (39:18):
All right. And I remember the girl that I was
dating at the time.

Speaker 3 (39:22):
She hated the weight loss because to her, like I
just looked like a football player with the fifty pounds
on and then off. It looked like our aged backwards
like twenty years.

Speaker 1 (39:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (39:31):
Now he was like you, all right, you know, well,
you want something exactly.

Speaker 4 (39:36):
You know how black families are, They like you sick,
and you sick?

Speaker 1 (39:40):
You want something? He take drugs, now, girl, you know what?
He we got to pray for him. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (39:44):
Yeah, So I remember her saying I asked her because
for me, I was like, damn, I got abs again,
like it was amazing. So I was like, what do
you think about the weight loss? That just made me
ask her, and she was like, I don't like it.

Speaker 2 (40:00):
But she was like, this is the same girlfriend that
was nudging you because you sounded like a farad night.

Speaker 3 (40:06):
And she's like, I don't like the weight loss. She
was like, it makes you look so young when you're
with me, and I just what she was really trying
to say is I don't feel like you can protect
me there. But she was like but in the bedroom,
she was like, I didn't know it could get better
like this, And I was like, what do you mean,
how was it before?

Speaker 4 (40:27):
And she was like, well that's over. You gotta talk about.

Speaker 1 (40:31):
She said, I don't want your feelings.

Speaker 3 (40:34):
So like what I understood, and that was I was
at the beginning stages of.

Speaker 1 (40:39):
Ed okay, because you weren't able to.

Speaker 2 (40:43):
Get it up or you just getting it up wasn't
a problem, okay, Stamina.

Speaker 3 (40:49):
Stamina wasn't a problem being fully erect.

Speaker 1 (40:53):
Oh, it was kind of like it's kind of here
but kind of not.

Speaker 3 (40:56):
Yeah, because what I I like when I talked to men.
Most men don't know what a fully erect penis is.
But if you remember back to when you was a
little boy and you got your first erection, your penis came.

Speaker 4 (41:10):
Up like this. Yeah, it almost pointed at you. Okay.

Speaker 3 (41:15):
So I always tell men that's how you measure how
healthy your erection is. If it's up like this, you're
super healthy. If it's down like this, okay, we got
some little work to do. If it's at ninety degrees,
still good, but you're heading in the wrong direction. And
once your erection, you're erected, but your penis is pointing

(41:36):
down okay, but not up. Now you know you're at
the stage where you need to do something about it.

Speaker 2 (41:43):
This is why I wanted to have this conversation with you,
because I told you before. It's one thing when you
hear female physicians and doctors talk about men and erect
how dysfunction. But it's another thing when you hear it
from a man who has the working parts to let
the men know what life can really be like.

Speaker 1 (42:03):
Yeah, if they change your diet too.

Speaker 3 (42:05):
Yeah, even waking up when a morning erection is normal
for a man like.

Speaker 4 (42:09):
That's a sign of health as well too.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
And so what men don't understand about our erection is
it's all about blood flow. This is why it's totally
connected card of your vascular disease. When your blood flow
begins to suffer, the first place it suffers for men
is going to be in their erection.

Speaker 4 (42:30):
Okay. So that's a sign of a lack of nitric oxide. Okay.

Speaker 3 (42:36):
Natra Oxide is what causes the blood vessels to dilate
and get bigger. As they dilate, they allow more blood
flow to come through. Okay, But as you're eating foods
that are very inflammatory, it causes those blood vessels to constrict.
Now it's much more difficult to get blood flow into
that area.

Speaker 4 (42:55):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (42:56):
So is that that's the sugary processed foods, the drinks,
that's the alcohol, that's the process meats, that's the red meats,
that's all of those things.

Speaker 4 (43:03):
That's all of those things. Because they're inflammatory.

Speaker 3 (43:06):
You eat foods that inflame the body, they're going to
cause the blood vessels to get tight. Now think about plumbing,
because God's understand this perfectly. If you have a very
cold day and some of the water inside of your
plumbing begins to freeze, and then you turn the water
on to get water to your faucet. It's going to

(43:29):
create so much pressure because the ice is in there, okay.
And what does water do when it freezes, It expands, okay,
creating more pressure, making it more difficult for blood to flow.
So this is why men have to understand if you're
eating an inflammatory diet at some point, especially you know,

(43:51):
going into your thirties now, which it used to be
going into your fifties and your sixties yea, but now
it's going into your thirties.

Speaker 4 (43:58):
Okay.

Speaker 3 (43:58):
But even me, I remember when I was working at
a hospital, I had your men in their twenties coming
in asking for ed medications because they have real issues.
So it's starting as early in the twenties now. But
that's not just a sign that you're going to have
a problem in the bedroom. It's also a sign that
you're going to have a problem with your heart health

(44:19):
as well too.

Speaker 2 (44:22):
I mean, when we look at the food, what are
some foods that we can be putting into our bodies
that will bring down the inflammation.

Speaker 3 (44:30):
So yeah, there's a few foods that that could be
helpful for somebody who's suffering with ED. The first thing
you want to do is get the inflammation out all right,
because the inflammation is causing the constriction.

Speaker 4 (44:45):
That's what's slowing down the blood flow.

Speaker 3 (44:47):
And if your blood flow is being sort of blocked
to your heart and your kidneys, the last thing your
body cares about is your penis. Okay, So that is
what it is. Your body gonna make some CEO decisions.

Speaker 1 (45:03):
Yeah, and you would is not not do a part
of it.

Speaker 4 (45:06):
Wood ain't all good.

Speaker 3 (45:08):
So you know, the first thing you want to do
is get some anti inflammatory foods in your diet. That's
going to be you know, your green leafy vegetables. Stay
away from things like spinach and kill because they have
oxalis in it. Go more towards a rugular dandelion lee.

Speaker 1 (45:23):
Wait, stay away from kale.

Speaker 3 (45:26):
I would say stay away from kill and spinish because
they have oxalis and oxla is oxleor acid. And if
you're trying to get rid of inflammation, it may not
be good for a person who's trying.

Speaker 4 (45:38):
To get rid of information.

Speaker 3 (45:40):
So then switch over to more of the green leafy
vegetables like a rugular and dandelion leaf because they're bitter,
but they're also more alcalizing to the body. And even
thing that's alkalizing to the body is anti inflammatory. So
get your green juice on, get your green smoothie on. Okay,
that's going to be important. Get some antioxidants in the

(46:01):
body because that's going to fight off not only the inflammation,
but also free radicals in the body as well too.
That's gonna be things like fruit, you know, especially your
tropical exotic fruits.

Speaker 4 (46:12):
Okay, so get some you know, pomegranate in there.

Speaker 3 (46:16):
That's good for nitric oxide that dilates the blood vessels.
Get some susop if you can find it, and there
as well too, that'll be helpful as well too. But
get your fruits on, get your berries on, all right,
antioxidants and try to get a range of colors, especially
the blues and the purples because they have antocyanin, which
is very anti inflammatory.

Speaker 2 (46:37):
So that's the blueberries, that's the dark scenic rapes, the blackberries.

Speaker 1 (46:42):
Yes, all of those are going to be really good for.

Speaker 4 (46:44):
Yeah, so get those going.

Speaker 3 (46:46):
And then I would say get some healthy fats in
because healthy fats are going to have omega three. So
my healthy fats are going to be things like seamss Okay,
to get my mega threes, I get that.

Speaker 4 (46:57):
From seaweed and dulce.

Speaker 3 (47:00):
I also get it from avocado on really great sort
of source as well too. Other nuts and seas, you know, walnuts,
brazil nuts, you know, just getting some hemp seed as
well too. So those are my choice that I go
to as well too. And then I didn't mention before,

(47:22):
but one of the best sort of fruits that you
could have is watermelon.

Speaker 4 (47:27):
Okay. Now Beyonce did a song about watermelon, is about
a whole nother thing, okay.

Speaker 3 (47:34):
But what men don't know about watermelon being good for
them is that especially the ryin of the watermelon, that
little white part, and make sure you get seated that
white part. Eat that part too, because that's the part
that has citraline and argentine in it.

Speaker 1 (47:49):
Now, that was the part when we was growing up
as kids. Don't eat that part. It's gonna make your
stomach hurt.

Speaker 3 (47:53):
Nah, that's the good part. That's what the citraline in
the argentine is that causes the blood vessels to dilate. Okay,
So that's I mean, women, if you love your man
get your man some watermelon juice.

Speaker 2 (48:06):
Maybe they had they had the farmer's market today. Okay,
I'm gonna see him over there.

Speaker 4 (48:11):
For the ladies. Ladies, they could do Okra.

Speaker 1 (48:13):
Water, the okra like Okrah is such a staple in
my diet.

Speaker 4 (48:17):
Man, it is Okra water.

Speaker 1 (48:20):
I have tried the Okrah water.

Speaker 4 (48:22):
It's a little let me tell.

Speaker 1 (48:25):
You, so it's a little. It's a slippery, ladies, it's slippery.

Speaker 3 (48:29):
They had a song called Okay, okay, this is the
white water, this wattewater. So men, get your woman ok water. Okay,
so you know he gonna be good in the bedroom,
and you definitely gonna be good.

Speaker 2 (48:48):
You gotta go get your watermelon and your wap water,
the Okra water.

Speaker 4 (48:52):
Yes, indeed.

Speaker 1 (48:53):
Okay. So women should be drinking Okrah water.

Speaker 4 (48:58):
I mean men can too, because it helps us well
with Yeah.

Speaker 2 (49:02):
Yeah, and Doc said he gonna get it all angles,
he said he gonna have it.

Speaker 3 (49:05):
Let me tell you something. Don't play in the bedroom
with your woman. Yeah, Like, that's one of the things
that you want to have a healthy relationship. There's two
primary reasons why a lot of relationships fall apart finances,
sex and money and Okay, so work on your money.

(49:27):
You can always have the bedroom together though.

Speaker 2 (49:30):
Because listen, some some folks who ain't got no money,
they got the bedroom.

Speaker 4 (49:34):
Win.

Speaker 3 (49:38):
They got some situationships just based on keeping the bedroom.

Speaker 1 (49:43):
To this, so they got to play some live Yeah.

Speaker 3 (49:45):
So you know, like there's no reason why you can't
have a fruitful, pun intended, healthy sexual relationship with your partner.
Like that's where another place to have fun and enjoy
each other and experience each also in a spiritual way
as well.

Speaker 2 (50:02):
Too, before you get out of here, because this is
one of the things that two things right when we
talk about fruit, one seeded fruit, because you and I
were talking about seed the grapes, and if you can
find the seed of grapes, you eat the seed the grapes,
but not the cotton candy grapes. Because I've seen people

(50:24):
doing the reals baby, and they say these my favorite grapes.
I got the cotton candy grapes, And I'm like.

Speaker 3 (50:29):
Oh lord man, I'm gonna tell you, like it's difficult
for me to go in the grocery store because it's
like I started seeing stuff that I've never seen before.

Speaker 4 (50:38):
Like I grew up my dad is from Miami.

Speaker 3 (50:41):
So in the summers, you know, like I remember like
going to watermelon farms and throwing watermelons during the summer,
and I could tell you I never saw a watermelon
without a seed.

Speaker 1 (50:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (50:55):
So like the first time I saw a watermelon without
a seed, I was like, WHOA, what's wrong with this one.
I went back to the store, took that one back.
I was like, yo, something's wrong with the watermelon. Didn't
have no season. And I was like, oh no, it's seedless.
I was like how, And they couldn't explain to me how.
And so like people have to understand we come from

(51:16):
a seed, like every human came from a seed that seemen.
Humans don't exist without a seed. Yeah, okay, life comes
from a seed. Okay, you can't have food, like they
said Genesis one twenty nine, I have given you every
fruit bearing seed. Okay, that was our food in the garden.

(51:38):
That's what That's all we needed. Yeah, okay, So to
go from a divine space of not only do you
I give you this seed. I give you the seed
one time, and it's going to produce for you for
a lifetime in generations. Your grandchildren will have this mango okay.

(51:59):
And this treat that I have in the backyard, and
if an animal comes along and takes one of those
mangos and takes it two doors down and it drops
into the ground, I will create another tree for you.
That's Divinity working for us. So we have to understand
what a seed is God. That's God giving us abundance.

(52:20):
That's God giving, like when you have your children from
a seed, now your children can have children, and now
their children can have true it's the same process with food.

Speaker 4 (52:30):
It's no different.

Speaker 3 (52:32):
So that's the source and the sign of life that
people just don't understand. But this is also part of
the abomination and the disconnection that they've given us very
slowly over time. So first the seeds, we were there,
but they were white seeds and a watermelon and you
saw it and you said, well, I mean it's still seeds.

(52:53):
And then it showed up with no seeds and you
were like, well, it's convenient. Okay. That's how they work
us with everything. But that's why I always say, like
for me, like it's very difficult for me to go
to the grocery store because I'm looking around and I'm
seeing the cotton, candy grapes and you know pink pink pineapple, like.

Speaker 4 (53:12):
This is wild work.

Speaker 2 (53:15):
I saw it online of saying how to take it
to pink.

Speaker 3 (53:19):
It's modified, genetically modified. So when you take something, I'll
give you offences. Tomato. The reason why tomatoes can grow
in the winter now because again everything isn't just like
on my farm. Everything is not only seated, it's seasonal.

Speaker 1 (53:40):
It's seasonal.

Speaker 4 (53:42):
We have seasons in life.

Speaker 3 (53:44):
Different things grow during different seasons because during the winter
season you're supposed to have things that are growing that
are good for the immunities. During the summer season, you
have things that are growing that are fruitful in water.
So that's how you have a lot of melons that
go in the summer because now it's hydrating you because
it's hot. Everything makes sense, okay, but when you think

(54:05):
about how they've manipulated something like a tomato, all right,
the reason why I can grow in the winter now
instead of being something that grows in the summer, is
because now they've genetically modified it, and they spice a
tomato with an Arctic flounder, which is a fish that
lives in the Arctic. So now you know now that

(54:28):
tomato can survive during the winter because it has the
genes of an Arctic flounder fish that can survive in
frigid temperatures in the water.

Speaker 1 (54:37):
This is the first time I'm ever hearing this.

Speaker 3 (54:39):
Yeah, but this is the abomination that's happening with the food.
This is why I'm telling you. This is the matrix.
Nothing is real anymore. The food isn't real anymore. Most
this conversation is real, but most of our conversations aren't
real anymore. The news isn't real anymore. Nothing is real.

(55:00):
People helping people isn't really. Nothing's real anymore. The water's tainted,
the air is polluted. They're trying to use technology to
block out the sun. The drugs don't heal anything. Nothing
is real, Nothing is what it's supposed to be. So
it's up to us to get conscious and wake up
and stop seeing with these two eyes, because these two

(55:21):
eyes get tricked and start looking with this eye, start
looking with our divine eye.

Speaker 2 (55:26):
Well, then it's getting calcified because all of their floor
ride in the water.

Speaker 4 (55:31):
But that's also part of the waking up.

Speaker 3 (55:33):
When we begin to wake up and realize the floor
ride is calcifying our penial gland. Yeah, and that that
penial gland is actually useful, just like every other thing
in our bodies, you know, like when you remove your gallbladder,
you needed that.

Speaker 4 (55:49):
Okay, when you remove your appendix, you needed that.

Speaker 3 (55:52):
When you go to your dentists and get a root
canal and they remove the root and the nerve and
the blood supplied to that, that tooth is dead. It
looks like it's still alive, but it is dead. And
when an affection occurs in that tooth, it means that
no immunity could get to that tooth anymore because they
remove the blood vessels.

Speaker 2 (56:12):
I'm so glad you're bringing this up because of course
you hear a lot of conversation around and the correlation
between breast cancer through canals.

Speaker 1 (56:20):
Yeah, and then when.

Speaker 2 (56:21):
People get their wisdom teeth extracted, yep, around the disease
that is triggered because you get your wisdom teeth.

Speaker 3 (56:27):
One hundred percent. Yeah, yeah, you have to understand, like
I just mentioned.

Speaker 2 (56:32):
I'm like the only person with me and my sister
are like the only people with their wisdom teeth.

Speaker 3 (56:36):
You cannot leave dead tissue in the body. This is
why I'm saying you can't eat dead flesh. This is
what when you leave that tissue in the body, it
begins to necrotize, and then it turns into game green, okay,
and then it will kill all of you. This is
why when diabetics, their blood is so thick that blood

(56:56):
can't flow to that area anymore, and then it becomes infected.
And because blood can't flow there, that means that your
immunity can't get there anymore. The tissue begins to dye.
All right, they have to cut it off because if
you don't cut it off, it will infect and kill
all of you, all right, So it's no different when

(57:18):
you get a root canal, all right. It's important that
you understand that that tooth is dead, and that most
of the time you got a root canal is because
of an infection was there. But because that tooth is
dead now it gives rise to infection in the mouth.
So a lot of times if you get a root
canal on your right side and then you find breast

(57:39):
cancer in your right breast, it makes sense. Okay, We've
already saw the studies that are connecting a lot of
infections in the mouth to cardiovascular disease. But now we're
starting to see it with breast cancer as well too.

Speaker 2 (57:57):
There are going to be so many people who said, oh,
that's a conspiracy theory.

Speaker 1 (58:03):
I don't even believe that. I can't.

Speaker 2 (58:05):
I can't get with that. Yeah, I got breast cancer
because it running my family. Yeah, I got breast cancer
because it you know, I got cancer because my grandmama.
And I got hypertension because my grandmother. What do you
say about that.

Speaker 3 (58:17):
I think it's a cop out. I think it's people
willing to compromise themselves because it's easier when your doctor
tells you something simple. And I'll tell you the number
one cause a death for cardiologists, it's heart disease. That's

(58:37):
the number one cause of death for somebody who treats
heart disease is heart disease. And this is coming from
somebody who's a coinition. So I'm telling you, we don't
know what we're talking about when it comes to healing.
When it comes to treatment, we know exactly what we're
talking about. But when it comes to actual healing and health,
we know nothing about it. We don't only know about

(59:00):
treating symptoms. So the idea that something can be a conspiracy, well,
first of all, look at the new studies that are
coming out. They've done many studies on let me give
you them. For instance, they've done many studies on a
drug called ivermectin. Now, most people when they hear ivermectin,
they think of a de warmer for their pet or horse.

Speaker 1 (59:21):
All right, okay, yeah, I've never heard of it. Don't
hit a pet though.

Speaker 4 (59:24):
Well, you know you've heard of de warmers for de wormers.

Speaker 3 (59:28):
Yeah, yeah, de worming is parasites.

Speaker 4 (59:31):
Yes, the number one cause of death for dogs. You
know what it is. It's not parasites, right, cancer.

Speaker 1 (59:39):
The number one cause of death in dogs is cancer.

Speaker 4 (59:43):
Cancer.

Speaker 3 (59:43):
And what do they constantly do when you go to
a vet putting them on de wormers parasite medications? Okay,
So what I'm telling people is that they're never going
to tell you that the cancer industry is a billion
dollar industr tree. They low geo with chemo, they love
over radiation, they give you mammograms, they give you they

(01:00:06):
do surgeries and cut things.

Speaker 4 (01:00:07):
Out of you. Okay, But all of the.

Speaker 3 (01:00:11):
New information is showing you not only when you look
at parasites over here and cancer over here, their metabolism
is the same okay, and let me explain what I
mean by that. When you look at a healthy cell,
we metabolize using glucose, using cellular respiration, meaning we need
oxygen okay, to metabolize and make energy.

Speaker 4 (01:00:33):
All right.

Speaker 3 (01:00:34):
When you look at cancer, cancer doesn't use that mechanism.
That's how you can distinguish between a cancer cell and
a healthy cell. A cancer cell uses fermentation.

Speaker 4 (01:00:45):
Okay.

Speaker 3 (01:00:45):
When something is fermenting, what is it doing? In many
cases it's dying, creating, it's rotting. Okay. So cancer uses fermentation,
it does not use what a healthy cell uses. It
also uses a lot of glutamate okay, which is an
amino acid. And guess what else uses that same metabolic

(01:01:06):
pathway of glue to make parasites. They cannot function without it,
all right. So that's why they've done the studies with
iromectin and a lot of dogs, a lot of horses,
but also now humans now and they're showing you that
when you put somebody who has cancer on iremectin, it
starts to kill off the cancer. So is the cancer

(01:01:28):
cancer or is it cancer and parasites or is it
just parasites?

Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
Wow?

Speaker 2 (01:01:34):
But they can get on the detox and maybe start
cleaning these parasites out.

Speaker 3 (01:01:38):
And that's why part of what my detox does is
so important to get rid of parasites, because most people
have them. If you eat sushi, if you eat salmon, okay,
if you consume a lot of meat, okay, Because all
you gotta do is, next time you get that pork

(01:01:58):
chop and you bring it home, set it out, pour
some cocla on it, pull some acid, which is what
cocla is, and.

Speaker 4 (01:02:05):
You will see all of these parasites come out of it. Okay.

Speaker 3 (01:02:09):
Now in your mind, you're thinking, well, I cook it,
so I kill it.

Speaker 1 (01:02:12):
No, they ball up and then they expand out.

Speaker 3 (01:02:16):
Not only that heat doesn't kill the eggs that they lay,
So the eggs that are in the meat. You might
have killed some of the parasites, but you didn't kill
the eggs. So when they go in your body, you're
still getting parasites.

Speaker 4 (01:02:31):
So this is why stay and then your pancreas.

Speaker 3 (01:02:34):
Yeah, they're hatching in your gut and then they're just
going to every part of the body. I mean, I
had I had somebody I was working with had cancer
in the neck, and I created this this my detox
and then a tincture that on that side of their neck.
They would go home and every night they would just
lean to the left and just hold it in their

(01:02:56):
mouth for like five minutes so it can soak into
the tissues. Ten days later, he felt something wiggling in
the side of his jaw, re standing it was a parasite.

Speaker 1 (01:03:11):
Oh my god. Oh see, I'm too visual.

Speaker 3 (01:03:16):
Yeah, But the point I'm trying to make is that
it's just important for us to know that that would
have never been addressed in the hospital. Yeah, that would
have never got addressed in the hospital, because we don't
look for toxins, We don't look for parasites. We don't
even look for heavy metals, even though we know heavy
metals are in vaccines, we know heavy metals are in

(01:03:37):
our deodorant. We know heavy metals are in rice. Okay,
we know that heavy metals are all over the place.
They're in our water.

Speaker 1 (01:03:46):
That heavy metals are in rice.

Speaker 4 (01:03:49):
Yeah, yeah. Arsenic is found in.

Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
Rice, white rice. Yeah, brown rice rice.

Speaker 3 (01:03:55):
Actually brown rice has more heavy metals in it because
it has the hole on it sort of absorb more.

Speaker 1 (01:04:02):
But you suggest eating wild rice. You talk about that
in your.

Speaker 3 (01:04:06):
Well the heavy metals are coming from traditional farms here
in America, whereas wild rice typically isn't growing here. Yeah,
and I also just suggest that people don't eat a
lot of grains as well too, you know. So my
thing is is that it's just really important for people
to understand that the way that we see health, the

(01:04:27):
goggles in which we see health, is really sick care.

Speaker 4 (01:04:30):
It's not health care.

Speaker 1 (01:04:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:04:32):
And so the way that when I say we, I'm
saying us as health care professionals, but I'm also saying
us as patients too. Both of us are seeing health
through sickness pathology. We can't see it through healing. And
so it's important for us to get to a space
where we could actually see it through a healing eye.

Speaker 4 (01:04:53):
How do I heal from this?

Speaker 3 (01:04:54):
Meaning how do I not only manipulate my biochemistry because
that's treatment, but how do I correct my biochemistry? Yeah,
because that's what it that's what it takes to heal.
You have to correct biochemistry. You have to correct your thinking,
you have to correct you know, tissue inflammation, You have
to correct a lot of things. But treatment isn't doing that.

(01:05:17):
It's only manipulating. Okay, it's only turning off symptoms. And
like I said before, when you turn off the check
in the light, you still need the oil change. And
if you go a long enough time without getting that
oil change, not only you're gonna have issues with your
oil now you're gonna.

Speaker 4 (01:05:34):
Have a have to replace the entire engine.

Speaker 2 (01:05:38):
Who well, doctor Bobby, we're gonna have to do the
do do the reset.

Speaker 1 (01:05:41):
We're gonna have to do the detox on the show.

Speaker 2 (01:05:43):
All the bought empowers phoons were gonna get on the detox,
get these parasites. As we close out, Doc, one word
you are committed to in this season of your life alignment.

Speaker 3 (01:05:56):
I'm aligning myself back with God. I'm aligning myself back
with the I am parts of myself. I'm aligning myself
with my purpose and my mission and aligning myself with
health and healing and trying to be an example with
that alignment.

Speaker 4 (01:06:10):
So everything is about alignment. Now you know none of
me all of God, None.

Speaker 2 (01:06:19):
Of me all of God. Thank you, doctor Bobby. This
was a good one. Vaught in Power Talks. Be sure
to share this with somebody who needs to be more
aligned in this season.

Speaker 1 (01:06:28):
Less of you are more God.

Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
I'm your go Brandy Harvey until next time, eat well,
give a damn move your body every single day.

Speaker 1 (01:06:34):
Peace,
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