The Dr. Lodi Podcast

Episode 122 - Dr. Lodi Live 11.10.24

Dr. Thomas Lodi

This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on November 10th, 2024.

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This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on Jan. 19th, 2025

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Dr. Lodi Live 11.10.24

[00:00:00] Okay, wow, I guess we're live. Yeah, we are. Nice. Is it nice? Very good. Ah Salaam e Alaikum and

Anyway, Sunday night, welcome to Sunday Night Live in planet Earth.

For those of you on the east coast of the United States, Sunday Night Live. We get all the way over here to Australia. It's Monday, it's Monday morning here, and I'm not in Australia. I'm in North Australia. So anyway, glad you're all here. It's been a weird morning again. So, and by, I can't be on TikTok because

after I was kicked off there, there's not enough followers. But anyway, good morning Nicole and Melody. Melody, good morning. Yay. So, what, what, what I'm, what we're gonna do is I'm gonna get, I wanna get out of all these platforms and just go over to X. I'm gonna get pretty much on X and just, just be me because I can't, I can't, I [00:01:00] can't be somebody else.

I don't know how to be somebody else, you know, so I can't do it and I can't think like other people. So I can't do it. Can't do it. So because Instagram and Facebook are going to be gone Monday. YouTube takes down everything because it's, and I, you know, are things going to change now? You know that we've had a, we've, this event occurred November 4th.

Are things going to change? Everybody thinks, right? I'm sure everybody thinks that this, we have a new

that things have changed. I mean, Let me ask you, don't you think it's a little too perfect? A little too perfect? I mean two days and after being elected, he's the world says, okay, we're done. We're done. We're gonna come to our senses now. Oh, and by the way, we're gonna take down all these CDC, [00:02:00] NIH is gonna be, everything, no more mandatory this, no more mandatory that.

Okay, so he's done. Anyway, it's really perfect. It's fantastic. I think it's great. I think, yay, yay, yay, yay. Did we win? Who knows? Did we have an election? What did, what happened? But it happened. And believe me, here's one thing I do know. If it happened, and it did, whatever it was it's what they wanted. So just remember that.

It's always what they want. Otherwise you're dead. So just keep that in mind. And when things are too perfect, because things aren't perfect, nothing's perfect, right? Except maybe a few moments in life, right? Maybe it's a perfect day, or. So anyway

here we are so we're gonna go to X because you know, I'm just telling you X at least it's going to be Uncensored I could do what I just talk instead of thinking how to how can I say this so that I'm not going to [00:03:00] Get censored and I don't want to do that. Otherwise we lose everything I mean the reason anybody would want to listen to me is because

of what I would Say normally not what I would

say under censorship. So anyway, so beware of just you know, just keep your eyes open because

If it happened and it did then it's allowed to why so what's going on? And why is it so perfect? I mean RFK juniors do everything we want. So it's and Trump's gonna do everything we want It's like like there's nothing left out. It's like completely perfect Everything is exactly perfect If you could make a list of everything you wanted to have changed so that when you feel like the world's going in the right direction, it's happening all at once.

They could have at least given Leigh a way to let him have a month or two in office to make it look like they did something, but it's just like, what? Anyway,

it's not pessimism, it's just realism. And I'm just saying, [00:04:00] I hope it's all real and it's gonna last. Okay, so. Enough of that stuff. Anyway, so, as you know, I'm not on TikTok anymore. And I hope, hey, I hope whether they, you know, Trump fixes that, right? He's gonna, he's gonna make sure that these large platforms can no longer do that.

That'd be great.

It'd be fantastic. But,

okay,

I'm gonna put that here. So, we're gonna answer questions today. I'm actually gonna answer some. Can you believe it?

Where are we? Yeah, okay, good, okay. So, oh, by the way

yeah, so, the new, if you're interested, the new TikTok is Dr. Lodi 2. 0. And I don't even know if I'm going to put any energy or waste any time with it because they're going to take me down. They put, they took down a we put up a benign post about something about Oasis. You know, and they said it's, you know, it did not meet community standards or something.

So they're going to take down anything. So, by the way, there are two groups using my, all my videos saying they're [00:05:00] mean on TikTok. And so we complain saying that they're mean. Hey, that's not us. And whatever and the response we got from TikTok is we investigated and it all seems fine and they have the same videos posted that they took us down for imagine it doesn't get any more bizarre.

So clearly TikToks, whatever the, you know, I just, I'm, I, I'm just wanting, I've got to get out of there.

So it's going to be X and rumble. Rumble is just, you know, it's not really a platform, so it's going to have to be X, Twitter X. And I'm afraid that Instagram and Facebook are going to go the same way. I'm surprised they're not, they haven't already. Anyway, so, the, so at X it's at, at Dr. Thomas Lody, MD.

And at Rumble it's at Dr. Thomas Lody. Okay. The rest, you all know, the rest are at Dr. Thomas Lody.

Anyway, we've [00:06:00] got the four groups going three groups going, the health and healing group. And this,

wait, that's okay. Yeah. So, all right. So that, so last week, last week on the health and healing group, the topic was menopause and andropause. And I was surprised to see that some people didn't know what Andropaus means. Well, it's the male version of Menopaus. Andro. And anyway, the topic is much broader than you think, right? It's not just something that happens to you when you get, when you're around late 40s and 50s, right? It's, it's a whole process. So anyways, it's, it's worth discussing and learning about, right? So that was what we did help you deal with. And by the way, why is it that, You know, the Hunza women were delivering children at the age 65.

Clearly, they didn't go on the menopause until late 60s, early 70s. So, you know, that was those things we want to talk about because the later you go on the menopause, obviously, the more, the longer period you had where you were, you know, fertile and [00:07:00] strong. So, and then the parasite group, which we'll be talking about this week,

doing a

What is pain a normal symptom though? What's the question? She says you're Pain, especially in her back, but also the rest of her body. Is this a normal symptom? Would you recommend? Unfortunately, the pain has been so bad, she has stopped. I'm not, I'm not sure.

Undergoing heavy hair loss. Sudden hair loss for no reason. What can I do to stop? Well, you, whatever is going, if it's, I don't know what you mean by sudden, you mean Like Friday night started losing hair. So

I can hear that you're frenetic and frantic and you know, you're going to pull your hair out. But you've got to give a more methodical answer. What did you join the group? One of the groups so we could I can because I what are the things that we do in this groups is I we deal with people's personal situations as long as you're not as long as as [00:08:00] long as you're okay with, you know, discussing in front of the other members we can do that.

And right. So So anyway, yeah. There's Health and Healing, there's the Parasite Group, and then there's the CFC Group. Okay? And CFC, Chronically Fermenting Cells, AKA Sagittarius Leo, Capricorn, Gemini, Leo, whatever it is. Okay? I hope you guys are getting that by innuendo. Okay. So, I'm not going to say that word because I hate it.

And anyway

so this week, on the Parasite Group, we're going to talk about, you know, I don't know if we're going to talk about this, but I'm going to focus on that because it's important. We actually already did it. Can I use natural substances rather than pharmaceuticals? You know, we did a whole, we discussed that with a different kind of topic, a different title, but basically the same thing, and we talked about it.

So I think we're going to do something else with parasites. But anyway, that'll be tomorrow, 24 hours from now. And then the CFC group, which will be [00:09:00] Thursday, my Thursday, your Wednesday. The topic, you know, we have these topics that I kind of give like a 30 minute break. Discussion on the PowerPoint so you can see and then it's open to you can either ask questions about that and it's real time so we can answer questions.

We can interact you can be focused on what we what I just presented or anything you want in that with regards to CFC. So that's the time to have these like you want to send a question up and I for me to answer it now. That's, that's the forum here. I'm going to look at the questions that have been submitted already.

But anyway So last week's CFC was Why do CFCs keep coming back? And this week is going to be on What supplements are a must when you have CFCs, right? So that's all very often asked, right? We've got all these, I've got to take out, you know, people will come in with a bag full of stuff, and I mean, [00:10:00] if you, if you really took one of each of those, you'd be full, you couldn't eat food.

And so, what are the musts? And that's important. So we're going to talk about that. And,

that's it. So remember these are going to be posted on all, all the social medias. Except for KotKit. KotKit is KitKot. KitKot is backwards. What?

Alright.

You know, that's, that may be part of why I'm so strange. Because I always turned words around since I was young. I would say, I'd see them backwards and I'd say them backwards. Let's get into our questions.

And, the first one is by The name is long COVID.

Whoa. Whoa.

Okay. It says, Hi. I've had long COVID for four and a half years. Extreme fatigue, brain fog, anxiety, shortness of breath are the worst symptoms. There are many more. [00:11:00] Do you know anything that will help? Get my life back for anyone who does. Thank you. Okay. So whoever you are, you, first of all, don't put your name as long COVID.

Come on.

It'd be like, that'd be like if I got sick and I vomited and I changed my name to vomit. Come on. You're long COVID. That's what you are, who you are. You're going to buy that. Okay. Now I'm happy to answer this question and I know you're coming from a serious place because you are having these symptoms and it's terrible.

It's horrible. Excuse me. And

but. Yeah, put your real or pick a nickname, anything, but not that. Okay. First of all, look before we, I'm going to get into that for sure. Okay. So you, you're, you're, you're symptoms are extreme fatigue. So extreme fatigue means to me that you really can't, you really can't do much, right? Can't get up and let me, there's no way [00:12:00] you could get up and accomplish something like make your bed or, you know, nothing like that, right?

Cause that's so that you're, it's just like, you're just sitting around probably that, that, that. Now, I've had I've worked with people who were I had one lady who was she was she thought she had Lyme's, was it Lyme's, or, or, or chronic fatigue, I think, I forget, but she was at the point where she'd have to put a cot, a place, a thing to sleep, right at the edge of her kitchen, so she would make her food and then she would go to sleep because she couldn't, didn't have the energy to eat it, and then when she'd wake up, she'd eat it.

Brain fog. Well, welcome to the club, I mean, anxiety and shortness of breath. Those are the worst symptoms. So, it sounds like you're really short of breath associated with fatigue, brain fog, and anxiety. Now, you're saying you have long COVID. First of all, everybody needs to [00:13:00] understand that everything, everything that arose out of that great hoax of 2020

is a lie.

Not 99. 9 percent of it, but everything. For example, and I, I won't do that now because someone has shut me down, but that's why we got to get the exit. I can be on X and I can just talk, okay, but I can't talk because I've got the invisible what's it, somebody's putting a pair of socks in my mouth.

So anyway, how do you know you have long COVID? How do you know that? Well, you know that there's no test for that.

What,

what there, you know,

so for the symptoms that you described, right, right, the fatigue, the brain fog, the anxiety, and the, what was the other one, shortness of breath, what else? What are the different situations that this occurs in? Well, something called chronic fatigue syndrome, right? And that's, you know, basically it, and the fatigue is so extreme that it gets, you know, of [00:14:00] course it gets worse with exertion.

Taking a shower becomes impossible. And then you get the brain fog and you know, and you go to sleep and you're sleeping and you don't wake up refreshed, you don't wake up renewed. So chronic fatigue syndrome, now remember the word syndrome means it's a cluster of symptoms. And I don't know how they really distinguish that from the diagnosis.

See, they're, they're, they're, they're, the whole process of developing a nomenclature is. bizarre because a diagnosis is like, for example, systemic lupus erythematosus SLE, which is also called lupus. It has like, is it 18, 16? I forget how many problems. If you have any, what is it, eight of them, then you fit in and you can have these eight and not those eight.

And then you fit into the, to that diagnostic category that you diagnose. In other words, it's not an exact, there's no [00:15:00] thing. This is a beautiful time to bring up and reiterate, remind us all. That there are no diseases out there. There are no diseases. They don't exist separate from us. They're not there and going to get us.

And we have to get rid of them. That doesn't happen. That doesn't exist. It's a fairy tale. It's a myth. And it came from the germ theory. The germ theory says they're out there and they're going to get us. You know, it's a western. It's us against them. You know? I'm going to hightail it over that there.

There are no. The diabetes is not out there. I've got to be careful. I don't want to get it. It. Hypertension. He has hypertension. Has. I have it. I, I, I have it. Okay, there's no it. Okay, so chronic fatigue syndrome. You have it. Okay, now the other condition that will produce exactly the same symptoms is anemia.

If you're extremely anemic, you're not, blood's not, you don't have enough [00:16:00] oxygen. You don't have enough red blood cells carrying oxygen, so you're, you're, you're gonna have all these symptoms. Fatigue, of course, right, because you need oxygen to make energy. Brain fog because you're not going to be getting enough oxygen to your brain for it to work, and nothing's going to work.

Shortness of breath, absolutely. So anemia will do that. And when you feel

those things, of course you're going to get anxious. You don't like it. It's kind of scary. Thyroid problems can do this, right? Hypo, basically. Hypo, severe hypothyroid, low functioning thyroid, is exactly that. It'll cause fatigue, yeah. Because in, in severe hypothyroid, the person is has no energy. Remember what thyroid does.

Thyroid is is kind of the The thermostat or the carburetor for the energy output of the cell. Energy, energy. So if you don't put out energy and you don't have low energy, you're low energy fatigued. And then you get brain fog, of course. Brain fog is just because you're not making energy in your brain.

Yeah, your brain's not making it. And anxiety is because this is kind of weird, I don't like it. Yeah. [00:17:00] Okay. So thyroid will do that. Exactly what you're talking about. What you're calling, what you're calling long COVID. We got that name. There's no long COVID. There's a short COVID, long COVID. Is there yeah.

Can I say that without getting my head chopped off? I don't know. Anyway, there was none of that. There's no Guess what else does it? Vitamin deficiency. Vitamin D will do that. B12 deficiency. Folate. So B12 and folate are, as we all know, are, well, maybe we don't all know that, but they're necessary in our body's production of red blood cells which carry oxygen, right?

And so if you have a deficiency of those, again, you're going to have then anemia. But anyways, the severe deficiency of those will cause the same thing. Fatigue, brain fog, anxiety, and shortness of breath. The thyroid won't give you the shortness of breath, per se. Now how about sleep disorders?

What about like, [00:18:00] sleep apnea or anything, you know? You know, when we when we test people for sleep apnea, they wear this watch, they go to sleep in the morning, we can read it, and it'll show us how many, how often and how long were you not breathing? And it's surprising how many people have these periods.

We used to think of it as obstructive sleep apnea. So somebody that was obese, their basically soft tissues in their throat would obstruct their airway. But now it's happening with non obese people. We see that a lot. So it's not obstructive sleep apnea, it's just sleep apnea. Ap nea a. Remember the prefix ah, or ah an, means no.

It negates something. So anemia. Emea is blood. An, an means no blood. I mean, it's just, there's no blood, there's less blood. But, anemia, right? Ah, here's one. The word troth, you've heard, I don't know if you've heard, there's a root word.

A means it negates it. Alright, so, [00:19:00] I was trying to explain anxiety. Alright, apnea, but apnea, p n e is usually breathing. Right, like pneumonia is p n e u. Pneumonia. Okay, that comes from the Greek. So, apnea,

apnea means not breathing. So anyways, you're not, you're not getting enough sleep. You're not getting, you're not restoring things in your brain. You're not getting enough dreaming. And you're just, you're going to have all these same symptoms. If so, if you have what are called panic attacks, you have what are called know, anxiety disorders, panic attacks.

It's now chronic heart failure or, or, or severe lung problems are going to cause these things. All right. As in a severe asthma, severe semen heart failure to say that you, that there's a thing called long COVID and that you have it. There's no it to have you've got to get out and that's number one, you've got to get away from that. Don't, don't, don't fall into [00:20:00] there.

Someone who's depressed, the severe depression is going to have those same things. Not the shortness of breath could, could be, but normally the brain fogging fatigue and then all of the auto immune, which are not, which also don't exist, none of this exists. You know, I really don't like using their words because we're, we're, we're, we're saying that it exists.

There are not. Remember, the body is always doing what? It's adapting to the current situation so that everything, everything can function. That's what it's doing. There's adaptive physiology. You know, if I'm eating something that's causing a problem, my body will adapt to that so that I don't, because when I say it's causing a problem, that means it's blocking my ability to function.

So it's, you know, so, so, so, what my body's going to do is it's going to function anyway, but it has to do a few things to accommodate that. That's an adaptive response. All right. So, again, the only thing that gets into us [00:21:00] is not any made up ideas of diseases but toxicities. And we become more and more toxic, it accumulates, and we have problems.

Guess what else causes all of this? Guess what else? You all know? Okay? EMF exposure. Okay, so EMF exposure is going to give you, in addition to the lepid, leprosy, in addition to the, you know, fatigue and all that, there's a, there's a whole lot of things that we can get. You can get headaches, body aches.

cardiac arrhythmias. You'll definitely get anxiety. You get tingling, burning foggy brain, sleep disturbances. You know, that's it. All the, you know, everything that we think we're getting, Oh, he's got the, well, nobody gets the flu anymore. They only get COVID right. Yeah. So anyway, whatever we think it's, you know, EMF related and then 5g again, headaches, joint pain fatigue, mental fog, fog even shortness of breath.

Restlessness and what it's doing is on a [00:22:00] cellular level is it's now we know this and I don't, so listen to this. Our, when we're exposed to EMF, including 5G, which is just a microwave

electromagnetic frequency, it's microwaves smaller. When we're exposed, what they do is they, they activate something called the voltage gated calcium channel. And when it does that, calcium starts rushing into this, to the cell, like at a million per second. It's pretty, pretty quick. Because normally we have a, we have a, a, a gatekeeper there.

And it closes and opens as necessary. Because calcium is necessary for cellular function. So now it all goes in. It's going in at a millionth per second. It gets in there, and it stimulates all sorts of things. Nitric oxide gets produced, which becomes peroxynitrites. Then that gets converted into hydroxyl radicals.

The OH negative. So that's what accumulates. That OH negative, that hydroxyl radical, does the damage. That's what does the damage of EMF. On a [00:23:00] molecular level, that's what Which is why, taking the molecular hydrogen, molecular hydrogen, right, H2, Mercola said the one where you drop, you drop the pill in, it fizzes, and then after, right at the end of the fizz you drink it, where they have, they have molecular hydrogen generators, okay, yeah by drinking this.

But by getting the molecular oxygen, hydrogen in, remember, it's the smallest molecule in the universe. It's just two hydrogens, which are just a proton. There's two protons, and each one has their own electrons. It comes together, and you've got two of them, just like H2. It's more stable that way than with just an H byte cell.

Anyway, it doesn't need a carrier, it doesn't need a receptor, it just goes into all cells. And once it gets in there and it sees an OH negative, what does it do? It combines and turns it into H2O, which is water. So it neutralizes. It's like a specific Antioxidant whereas like vitamin e vitamin c all of them the vitamin a's the carotenoids [00:24:00] They are all the last they are all in general Antioxidants, they're going to neutralize anything that needs to be neutralized whereas this is going right for that.

So I like that

Anyway, just so you all know,

About that. So don't forget about that how important that is. All right by the way, so so if you're saying you have lung over there's no test for it. There's no test They don't have a test They can do the PCR. They can do the antibody test. Now, by the way, PCR, polymerase chain reaction, is a test it's a test for doing research. What it does, basically, you've all heard of PCR, maybe.

It's it's used in research. It was invented by a scientist called Kerry Mullis. He got a Nobel Prize for it. And he said, this is not to diagnose anything. You cannot diagnose anything. It's just that you, it identifies, when you identify a molecule, you can. It, there's a way of mo it, it kind of, it [00:25:00] blows it up so you can see it.

It's kind of like if something was really small and you wanted to really take a look at it, that's what it does. So it's really important in research because you can identify things that are you, you, you, you know, something happens, right? There's a, there's a, somebody gave some they took a medicine or they ate a food, food or poison and something happened and you wanna know what it is that happened.

You can hone in there and find out, blow up all the different aspects of it. But you can't use it to diagnose because what they're doing is, because since our, and this is what Cary Mullis said, Okay, I, I don't use PCR, I'm not a, scientist, I don't work in, in labs. What Cary Mullis said is that we've got at least one molecule of everything in the universe now.

So you could blow up anything, I mean blow it up, make it so that it's, make it big. But you can't say that that caused anything, right? He was very clear on that. He was very clear on that. And he had a he had a, [00:26:00] what do you call it? He came head to head with Fauci many times about that specific thing, other things too.

And by the way, so that's what they were doing when they were putting those things up your nose, right? Supposedly doing PCR. And he said, it's not diagnostic. The whole thing that happened in 2020, the whole hoax ran on that. That was what, if you were positive or negative, right? Not asymptomatic carrier.

So

just so that there was no you know, What do you call it? Outward objection to the whole thing. Carey Mullis conveniently died in August, 2019.

Anyway, if they're going to do, give you a diagnosis, which are hurts people they have, they have, they do PCR or antibody testing, or there's nothing else. There's nothing, there's no way to diagnose this. It's more of a getting a history for the person asking them about, and then, and then assigning this.[00:27:00] 

Saying, okay, all this has happened to you. We're gonna call it this. We're gonna call it, we're gonna make it an it. Okay? So that's it. So there's no, you can't say you have this because there is no it, you've got, you've got some, you've got some symptoms. Okay. So I hope I made that clear. I'm not gonna go into it anymore.

Now how do we fix it? What's wrong here? And this applies to everybody with everything. 'cause the fundamental thing that you, if you're sick with anything, if it's, you know, a runny nose or whatever, it's whatever it is that's. That's disturbing you. That's not allowing you to feel good and function. The first, or what is one of the major problems or symptoms is going to be fatigue.

Less energy. Okay? Now, once you are well into some bodily problem fatigue will be a major part of it. So what, when they came up with the concept of chronic fatigue syndrome, because they couldn't find any reason [00:28:00] for the fatigue except that you were fatigued, and they called it chronic fatigue syndrome.

But Lyme's causes that. KFC. But if you can find a, if you can identify a reason, I guess that's what they, they don't call it. Anyway, all of those are having a problem with what part of the cell? You all know that. You all know that for sure. You know that the mitochondria, right? Because the mitochondria make energy.

Six oxygens, one glucose. We've got 38 ATP, ATP energy molecules. They carry also lots of that. Yeah. Okay. So, so mitochondria are, in fact, just as a I think something that's you know, what's interesting for me, well, it should be interesting for you, and that is,

in comparative biology, when they looked at, they wanted to understand longevity, so they looked at animals that lived long, they called them long, longivous animals they got a term, they got to put a term on everything, long lived animals, [00:29:00] why, what's different about them than others, and, for example,

why does an elephant live much, much longer than a rabbit,

they're both vegan,

But if you feel that, if you feel the rabbit's heart, it's going and l is going

slower.

Anyway, do you know what it comes down to? And they've done all looking at all animals, all even humans, you know? And it comes down to one thing, and I'm gonna say it the scientific way and then I'll explain it. The pro, the, the prox ability, index of the mitochondrial membrane is inversely proportional to longevity.

Whoa. What that means is the, I mean, turn it around. So the ability. The ability of the mitochondria membrane to withstand the potential damaging effects of the environment around it. The ability of that membrane to withstand it correlates with how [00:30:00] long you age. Forget everything else. Forget everything else.

And

it's those that get disturbed when we get CFCs. And it's those that are a problem when we have chronic. And you name it, it's central. Why? Because it's how we produce energy. Anyway, so therefore, with CFCs, regardless of where you have your chronic disease fermenting cells. And those of you who don't remember, this is the word that they use.

This is the this is the real descriptive term of the word that they use, that they call cancer. Cancer. I'm only going to say it now, okay? Cancer is not,

they call cancer a group of chronically fermenting cells. Okay? I'm not going to say it hurts. It hurts you to hear it. You don't want to hear it. Okay? So, that's it. So, a certain number of mitochondria get disturbed and now you've got that. Well, how do we, how do we How do we, how do we make the mitochondria more active?

How do we wake them up? How do we get them going [00:31:00] again? Because if we do that, if we do that, guess what's going to happen? If we stimulate them to proliferate, then you by definition will not have CFCs. So your CFCs will go away. You won't be chronically fatigued. Nothing, like all the, the foundation of our symptoms and our problems is based on energy.

We know that. And the law, and, and, and we, and we just found out that in terms of long term, our energy making organelles of course, there's different botanicals, you know, ginseng, you know, there are lots of different botanicals that can affect mitochondria, but nothing as powerful as its own endogenous, endogenous, from within, peptides that it produces, okay? So now, for example, when a cell is being stressed, for one, you know, it's being poisoned, it's It's losing you know, the the blood supply has been cut off, anything, whatever's causing it.

Poison or blood supply's cut off or a nutrient is not existent or anything, anything that is being stressed, the mitochondria produces its own [00:32:00] peptide, which leaves the mitochondria and goes to the nucleus, tells the nucleus to start producing antioxidant enzymes anti to protect the, the cells, protect itself.

So it stimulates the, it turns on the antioxidant program. That protects the mitochondria. And that also stimulates the mitochondria to double and to start growing and proliferating. It's called mitochondrial biogenesis. Okay, that's what happens. So, there are a couple of really cool peptides which you can get and then you can give yourself small injections and on a daily basis and wake up those mitochondria.

Should you do it CFCs? Absolutely. Should you do it if you don't have CFCs, if you're just tired, yeah. How about if you're just Anyway, everyone should do it because our mitochondria get damaged every day and they're replaced. Anyway, one is called MOTSC, M O T S C. Okay. And you know, that usually, that, that is released by our cells normally and within the cell [00:33:00] when we exercise or run.

And it stimulates, what's it called? Antioxidant response elements, A R E, which is a group of genes, et cetera. Another one is called SS31. And SS31, what's cool about that one is that It also goes to the it not only helps you know, produce antioxidants that protect mitochondria, but it goes down to where the, the cardiolipin, which is a particular fatty acid in there that allows the mitochondria to make energy, protects that so that, because once the mitochondria, once the cardiolipin, which is a fatty acid that's only produced in the mitochondria, nowhere else.

Once that gets oxidized, then the ability, because that's kind of, the cardiolipin is kind of the way that. It's the entryway to what's called the kreb cycle, or oxidative phosphorylation, which is the mechanism by which energy is produced in the mitochondria Anyway, so when those are, when that's when that's starting to get oxidized, you're gonna lose that.[00:34:00] 

And that's what happens as you get older, that gets sick and all that. Anyway, this this will stop that. So there's SS 31, there is MCMC and then there is human in like, hu human, IN human in. These are peptides. Very, very problem with peptides is that the

can't say it's, I still can't be, I still can't be me. Isn't that, isn't that, hey, wasn't there a song? I gotta be me. Anyway, that's, I want to sing that song, except I can't sing. So I won't. I mean, I can sing, but it's, I can't tell what I'm trying to sing. I'm that bad. I know that you don't want to hear value chemistry and you think I go into too much detail. A lot of you think that, but I'm telling you something. If, if you, if you're just, if you were just, Wanting certain questions to be answered the reason you have these questions is because there's a lack of knowledge I mean a question to say like if I don't know [00:35:00] where

where the nearest shopping mall is I'm gonna ask the question. Where's the nearest shopping mall? I don't have that knowledge. Whatever whatever I don't know you ask questions because you know, so what I but my Intention is is to teach give you enough knowledge of as a foundation so that there are certain questions.

You will no longer have foundational fundamental questions you will no longer have because you'll have a foundation of knowledge and then the other one is to teach you how to research how to learn all right okay so instead of just like answering a question which you can you can get ai now just ask him a question you get the answer

and then i wouldn't have to have lines what all i would do is just send in questions and i'll just say yes no oh but because that's not what we're looking for what we're looking for really you should be what you are really looking for and you might not know it is you're looking for understanding so, so that you [00:36:00] can proceed with your life.

You need, you don't understand something. Excuse me, like why am I sick? Why did I get this? I eat, right? I have a good life. I don't know. Why did I have, that's a big question, right? GHK Cu peptide. Yeah, yeah, very good. PEH sodium. Anyway, GHK Cu. Okay we're talking about peptides and somebody just asked the question.

GHK has been used for a long time in in beauty, in dermatology, right? It makes the skin. It stimulates the skin's like it's a fibroblasts. The fibroblasts are the organelles of the the cells that produce connective tissue and other things. But connective tissue, connective tissue is collagen and things like that, right?

Elastin and you know, kind of the, the, the, the, our padding, right? And so just as a, as an aside, anybody who's taking a collagen supplement, you're, you're Just think of it as a donation to whoever you're buying it from. It's not helping you at all. [00:37:00] And if you're rubbing collagen on your skin, you can't use it.

Because the only way that we can, we can only use the collagen that our body produces. You can't put a protein from any other source into your blood because you'll have an anaphylactic reaction. Our body has to break proteins down into their single amino acids. We can absorb the single amino acid and they'll go to the amino acid pool and they'll be used wherever they need to be used.

Not necessarily to make collagen or glutathione or anything. So.

So what makes more sense is to stimulate your own fibroblasts to make more collagen. So then you say, okay, so what do I need? What, what does my body need to make collagen? Vitamin C, Ascorbate, and all the other things. So anyway

the

so that's what the GHK does. It stimulates the fibroblasts to do their job. So that's, that makes sense. And it works. [00:38:00] Now they add the copper on it. CU is copper. They add copper on it because the copper is also has that ability. So they're, they're It's synergistic. But why is that a beneficial peptide for people with CFCs?

Because the GHK also turns off about 70 percent of the, of the epigenetic changes that came from you know, when, when the cell became a CFC. 70 percent of them.

All right. So I think, I think, so what I would do is so first of all, whenever you're sick with anything, you're not well. Rest. Tons of fluid. Water juices, fresh, if you can, you know, you know, best, best of all possible worlds, you're going to drink fresh juices as well mostly vegetable, like 90 percent vegetable, a little bit of fruit to make you taste good, it's good, you got to love it and then you got to cleanse, you got to cleanse, you got to get rid of toxins, when you're sick, you're toxic, same thing, okay, [00:39:00] you're toxic, just think of it, change the word from whatever, like diabetes, whatever, toxic, I'm toxic, just think of it that way, because that's really what it is, so you've got to eliminate these toxins.

Then, because then if you because if you stimulate your mitochondria to proliferate and to make energy, but they're still getting a talk, they're still getting intoxicated by your, by your environment, by its environment. You won't get out of that. All right. Okay, so I hope we understand that. Okay, so you don't have, there's no such thing as long covets.

You can't have it. There's no it. Okay, you've got this group of symptoms that can be caused by multiple things, including lines, you know, including it lines is, you know, it's been weaponized. Borrelia, you know,

don't think of an it as causing anything. Just think of the fact that I've, I mean, I've got no energy. Can't think. All right. I gotta, what is that? I mean, I'm not feeling good. I don't have no energy. How do I get my energy back? Okay. First thing I gotta do is get rid of any toxins in my body so that [00:40:00] I'm not being poisoned

and then I've got to wake up my mother tongue.

All right. Now let's talk. Okay. This one is from Amanda, Amanda, Amanda, Amanda. And the question is do dewormers Like ivermectin cause Hyperprogression of CFCs after initial positive results. I've heard that in the animal world, Ivermectin has caused a lot of problems, like super resistant parasites, to the point that entire herds of goats have had to be culled because nothing works due to overuse of Ivermectin.

And they weren't using it daily more like a few times a year. Have you heard this? Do dewormers also kill bacteria, including good bacteria? Okay, Amanda. You bring up very good points because, you know, I'm sure other people I have a similar question, all right Yeah, okay, so, now, first of all,

all right, yeah, [00:41:00] you're talking about water fasting

you know, water, I can see you guys are talking about water fasting what you need, what's important to understand is that there's a difference, you know, juice cleansing and water fasting are really different, they're very different. So the juice cleanse is a liquid diet, and it's gonna, you're just gonna flood your body with not a lot of nutrients and water, the juice is Vegetable juice with some fruit in it is basically highly nutritious water.

You drink so much that you're peeing all the time and you're basically just changing the fluids in your body. You're getting rid. That's what it's doing. It's a plant. A fast is going to be the, you're not necessarily drinking a ton of water, but you're drinking enough to stay hydrated. But now what's happening is you're relying on your body to really clean up and eliminate this.

It's like the only, it happens to some degree with juicing, but not like the fasting is a very special. That's an active process of restructuring the [00:42:00] body. Okay. And it happens at different

lengths of time. So what happens in two days and five days a week, two weeks, eight weeks, you know, six weeks, you can't get, yeah, depends on how, how big you are to start. But six weeks is usually max max. And if you can make it to that four weeks anyway, 41 days is what we do with CFC. Okay. So, but what's interesting to me is that and I, I just,

it's not interesting. It's just weird that 10 years ago, I almost lost my medical license for telling them, working with a patient and I, no, I didn't ask the question. I'm going to get to it. Give me a second. I'm segwaying memory. My middle name is not Louis. It's segway for advising someone in the past.

Now, suddenly everybody's an expert. I saw a book on fasting by a urologist, and I wanted to find the guy and say, Well, how [00:43:00] long have you been fasting? How long have you fasted? Everybody's an expert on fasting. I just don't get it. Anyway, be careful of who you fast with. Okay, now, the answer to the question with metastasis with ivermectin is this.

For us, all these ones, yes, they are classified by the conventional world as anti helminthics, which means anti against helminth, which is the worm, the D worm. But that, they, that's not all they do. And that's not, and that, so we're not going to do that. We're not going to fall into their mono, monocular view, okay?

These are they have multiple effects, right? Just ask Joe Tippins.

So,

now, we all have parasites. Those cattle that you were talking about had parasites. And what we talked about from the beginning, and you all know this, is that we never do just one. We cannot do just one of the [00:44:00] antihelminthia. You've got to do multiple, and the reason you have to do multiple is because they're slightly different in some, in the things they do,

and so you need to be going about this from multiple sides. If you go, if you do any one thing to the cell, to a cell, to the body, right, if you do that, the body will become used to that and accommodate. For example, if you're giving testosterone injections to a person. At first, they're going to have a higher testosterone and all the physiological responses from it.

Within a month or two or three, they won't because their body will downregulate the receptors and so they won't have the same effect. The body does that. It's adapting because it doesn't want to be out of balance. So therefore, if you're doing any one thing, the body's going to make sure that it's going to act as if that's not there.

So yeah, you'll become resistant. [00:45:00] So you never do monotherapy. You do multiple. What's happened is, yeah, and it is true, you are, you're right. So, there is there's absolutely, there's no evidence that it's causing CFCs to progress in, even in animals. Okay, in fact, you know, the studies are the opposite.

The studies with animals show the opposite. They show the opposite with animals. It's used in animals. It's used for different kinds of CFCs in animals. Okay, that's not, that part of what you asked, there's, it's a no. However, the other part is, does it cause resistance to parasites? And yes, it does. Why?

Because they've been using it for a long time. And why? And then they, when they say why, because it was a monotherapy. Right? And what it does, when you do a monotherapy, what happens is those, those organisms which aren't relying on the mechanisms that are shut down by the ivermectin are the ones that are left.

Because all the, all the, [00:46:00] the ones that rely on are gone. So now, the only ones left are the ones that don't really need that particular mechanism that ivermectin takes. So they're gonna, that's what you call it. producing resistance. But if so, that's why if you're only doing ivermectin, you're going to do that.

But if you're doing that and this and this and that, then there's no way it can there's no organism that's not using all, that's not using at least one of all these mechanisms. That's why you do multiple different anti halomethyls. Okay. So, and the other one is, the other reason that it happens is suboptimal dosing.

What does that mean? Sub, below, optimal, enough, I mean, perfect. So it's not, it's not, not enough dosage. And this is happening with everything. When you, when I, when I have somebody come in, they'll bring in a bag of supplements, and they're saying, I'm taking this, it doesn't work. Well,

and I look at them all, and they're great. I mean, you know, I don't know, I don't know the manufacturer, [00:47:00] what we think is in there. So anyway, that's a whole other topic. But let's assume that everything that it says, it says it has it, it has it. Let's say that. They all look great. Now, how much do I need? How much should I be taking?

We don't even consider those. So, if I'm not taking enough to achieve the goal I want, because what is my goal? What is my goal with vitamin C? What is my goal with vitamin A? I gotta have, I gotta know where I'm going with it. If we don't do that with anything, we have to do that. We have to know what we're attempting to accomplish by taking this, this, this, this.

Okay, we have to know. And we have to know how to measure whether or not we're taking enough, we're getting enough. That's the way to deal with it. And especially when it comes to paracetamol. If you are not It's not giving enough,

or it's not frequent enough. Why would you, because the frequency of taking something is to maintain blood levels. Because if I take it on Monday and I don't take it again until [00:48:00] Thursday my blood level is going to go down, and when the blood level goes down it's going to allow, it's going to stop working.

So you want to take it at the right frequency that we keep our blood level up so that we can continue to have its effect. So we need to know the dosage and the frequency. So, and you, and what you mentioned here in your question is the They weren't even doing it all the time. They were doing it just a couple of times a year or a few times a year.

Well, clearly what that's doing is it's, it's it's disturbing them. It doesn't get rid of them. It's disturbing them. And if they get disturbed, what do they do? They migrate. They say, well, let's get out of here. And they go to another organ now.

All right. So what they did,

the people that have had those problems with the cattle, right? And so we know that, right? We know that there's a particular worm in cattle and that have developed a high resistance to ivermectin. Yeah, because they were doing it, like you said, a couple times a year, three times a year, and not, it's not enough.

So the, so [00:49:00] the only, only worms that were left were ones that didn't need ivermectin, whatever ivermectin was doing, see? So if you want to produce resistance, that's how you do it. Now, it's happening in other conditions. So we all, we, I've talked about onchoceriasis often. Which is called river blindness.

Okay, so river blindness, about 250 million people worldwide, and they've been taking ivermectin 10 to 15 years. Well, it's starting to not work on some of them. There's no beta yet, completely, but we're seeing a slight number. Well, okay, yeah, of course, if you do any one thing long enough, it will not work.

You've got to do multiple things, and you've got to, you know, not only interventional, therapeutic Endeavors, but you also got to change the milieu. You've got to be cleansing and doing all that sort of thing Yeah, so your other the other part too, so you've got to be so you can't just be doing one thing.

, the other question is does it do the does ivermectin and all does it is it also antibacterial to [00:50:00] kill bacteria? and not a few I mean like uh In vitro in the dish, but we not we haven't seen it in in in in vivo. Well, not really But the real effect of these anti helmetics dewormers, I hate, I hate that word It's the only time that I actually prefer the, the, I can't believe it, the metaphor the dewormer, you know, like, especially if someone says, I'm taking a dewormer.

Anyway, I just don't like it. The

I completely lost that one scene. Anyway, doesn't matter. So, so what we need to do is, Stop looking, stop. You don't use one, one cat, whether it's cattle or whatever.

You know, they don't even do that. For example, when you go to get chemo, they don't usually don't give you one drug. They usually give you multiple for the same reason. You've gotta have multiple you've gotta be going after something from multiple different angles. So no, it doesn't kill bacteria that we, you know, that we, in [00:51:00] a significant way, does it disturb our dysbiosis.

Well, here's the thing, the Parasites disturb. Our biome. That is what disturbs it. And in fact, our biome can, our gut biome can never be restored to a healthy biome until the parasites are gone. So that's a pretty big deal. So that's right. So we've got to do that, but it's not that these are going to kill it.

So no, ivermectin doesn't specifically do that. I hope I answered your question. Did I? Okay. Maybe.

Okay. Where are we at? There we are. I don't want this. Go away. Yay.

Anyway, so what's the next question? The next question is from Logan. Logan, I was diagnosed with PCOS and insulin resistance. Is insulin resistance the same thing as diabetes? How can I assure these? Whoa, okay, Logan, we have to change your language, right? Okay, [00:52:00] you were diagnosed with PCOS. They told you that by the way, your name's not Logan now, you're, you're PCOS.

As in the fact, that's what they do. Okay, now

and insulin resistance. Okay. So, are they related? Okay, by the way, for those that you don't know, it's polycystic ovarian syndrome. So, it is a cluster of changes in the cells where the ovaries will get little cysts on them. Polycystic ovarian syndrome. And then it's also the ovaries are producing a lot of, or at least there's a lot of in the body, androgens.

Male mastodonizing. That's kind of the

You know, found it a fundamental definition of it. However, what goes along with it is like 70 percent of the people with that also have insulin resistance and a lot of them can get what's called metabolic syndrome. X metabolic syndrome. X is insulin resistance. [00:53:00] Central will be obesity high blood pressure.

They're calling it metabolic syndrome X. I would like you all to understand that what they're talking about, they're talking about as if they're separate. It's insulin resistance. There's PCOS and then there's metabolic syndrome. No, it's just all the same thing. Fundamental to them all are some basic things.

Number one, all of these conditions, whether we go with arthritis, whatever it is, all of these conditions have a chronic inflammatory process going on, chronic inflammation, all of it. Also there's also a problem with the dynamic between insulin and glucose fundamental to these, to these conditions.

chronic situations. Therefore, insulin resistance is, we call it that. What does insulin resistance mean? It means that you need more insulin to get the same effect on a cell than you [00:54:00] would normally, because it's resistant to insulin. And how do we, how do we measure this? We get, you take a blood when you're fasting, you haven't eaten all, you didn't eat since yesterday at 6pm, so we take your blood this morning, you're fasting.

We get your fasting insulin level. And most Americans and I don't know about Europeans now But I'm imagining it's less, it's lower than it is with Americans. But most Americans have a fasting insulin of around 12, 12 up to 15, some down to 10, you know. And actually, the reference range goes up to like 28.

I don't know how that's still the reference, because if you have 28, if your, if your number is 28 then you are

extremely insulin resistant. I don't know how that can be considered in the normal range, but it is. Anyway, where do you want to be? You want to be at around 3. Because if you're at, if you're at around 3, that means that your cells don't take a lot of it, don't require a lot of insulin to get the [00:55:00] effective insulin, alright?

And that's really an important thing to do, especially if you have CFCs, because remember, the CFCs are highly sensitive, not resistant, sensitive. In other words, a little bit of insulin, they're going to grab it. And what's that going to do? It's going to allow them to eat, alright? So, if they are insulin sensitive and you are insulin resistant, Then they're eating all the time and you're getting seconds or thirds, you know, so you want to get your you want to be as sensitive as you want your cells, your health, okay, it's just, it's right, it just makes sense.

And that is putting at least 18 hours between your last meal of today and your first meal tomorrow. You do that and there will be that all that period of time where you're not eating. Therefore, your body is getting used to not having to process food and glucose, but to maintain that. enough glucose when you're not absorbing.

And so you're, [00:56:00] and what's going to happen is since it's only dealing with that, the, the amount of insulin is going to come down, down, down, you're going to become more and more fine tuned insulin, insulin sensitive. And if you can get your insulin, if you can get your fasting insulin, nobody, most doctors don't test this.

I haven't met anyone who does. They test the hemoglobin A1C, they test the fasting glucose, like good little robots, but they don't test the fasting insulin. When you get it down to around three, now your healthy cells, normal cells, I wouldn't say they're exactly healthy, but the normal cells are now just as sensitive as these CFCs.

So that means the CFCs aren't going to get preference, and you're thinking, yeah, but they're still eating, but that's okay, because why? They need 19 times more glucose than, so if they're sharing it, that means they're getting, it's for them, it's a relative starvation.

Now, I just cleaned these so I can see, wow, okay, so, Okay, so insulin resistance. [00:57:00] Yeah, it goes along with PCOS. Now, it's not that it goes along and there's no it that goes with it. Okay, so PCOS, part of it is insulin. Because when you're, when you're ill, remember, there are two fundamental things that are going on, like, that are, are like the soil of illness, and that is chronic inflammation and the insulin glucose dynamic is disturbed.

Sometimes

you notice it, sometimes you don't. If you notice it, you say, Oh, it's associated with this other thing, and there's nothing. Yes. Now,

The

so the way that PCOS or remember I said it's part of PCOS is that it produces excess antigen, which is testosterone, androstenedione, things like that, what we call masculinizing.

So what those do is they actually block insulin signal so they can make the insulin resistance, even, even they can make it even worse because they're going to block the signaling and make it that the androgens.

[00:58:00] So yeah, so it's, it's all related and it's not, remember, it's not like there's different things in order to heal, to be restored to health from having from, from, from, from, from PCOS. Part of that is to cleanse and restore your body's health. And that would mean that you would, your, your insulin resistance would be resolved.

Now, your question, Logan, was how do I cure these? You can't cure anything because there's no thing. The cure, you cure diseases, so if diseases existed, you could cure them. They don't exist. What you're asking, and I want you to think about this, what you're asking is, let's, let's, let's break it down.

Fundamentally, you're saying, I'm not, I'm not well.

And, I wanna, I wanna get well. How can I get well? How can I be healthy? That's really what you're asking. But, they've got you thinking that you have [00:59:00] this one I gotta, I wanna get rid of this one thing. You don't wanna get rid of anything, you wanna be restored to health. Remember, everyone, you're not here to get rid of anything, because anything that you think is a thing, that is causing a problem, is there because of a fundamental toxicity.

And once that toxicity is gone, just think about it. Once the toxicity is gone, the body can do what? It can just function. It doesn't have to defend itself against toxins. And what does it do? How is it designed to function? Optimally. And what is optimal functioning? Thank you. It's just, it's language. Okay.

So you're don't want to get rid of or cure. You can't, you don't want to cure.

Can you imagine they've got us chasing after getting rid of a thing that doesn't exist. Doesn't that sound like 2020? There's an enemy out there. You better, you better wear some masks and, you know, stay in your house. There's a guy, you can't see the enemy, but it's there. I believe me. It's [01:00:00] we've seen, we've seen them.

Hmm. You stay down, but we stay in your house and we're going to take care of them. Okay, so everybody was gosh,

so they it was pretty good. Yeah, they got the whole world to shut down less than a month or a month So believe me, they're clever clever. So yeah, whatever's going on. It's good. They want it to be going on Whatever's going on is good. They wanted to go on keep don't believe me. You'll see I'm hope

I hope I'm making this clear so the problem you have going on with your ovaries and your androgens are is you've got a hormone imbalance you've got a Imbalance in your Insulin, glucose, dynamic. But who else has that? Everybody you've ever met.

That may be a two year old child. If there are any healthy two year old children. You know, children used to be the healthy, if you think of that. But now these poor children are not healthy. I mean, what is it, 52 [01:01:00] injections by the time you're, what, two? Or five, or whatever. I don't know. I can't believe it.

But poor children. I mean, can you imagine, you're born in the hospital, right? What's the first thing they do? They slap you. Welcome to planet Earth. Then they take you over here and they put stuff in your eye. My God, what a welcome, huh?

The first thing that I want to do is see you cry. Great. That's, you know, this is like, Now I want you to cry because it's for your safety. It's for your good.

You all remember La Boye? The mess, you know, when they were birthing people, birthing in a warm bath and slow lighting. But just cry. The whole idea is to make sure that the newborn is breathing. It's And they can put that up on the mother and the mother can hold it. It'll be breathing. You can see, you don't have to slap it and bright lights and stick things in it.

Born in the hospital, [01:02:00] dying in the hospital. Wow. Do you see what's happened to us folks? You're born in an institution. You're institutionalized. And before you get out, they give you a stamp and a shot and they get, they got, you've got a number, you've been issued and you've become a commodity.

Your hormones are imbalanced. So what, what needs to be done is They need to be evaluated. So I would evaluate them with like the Dutch task or we'll see how the,

I forget. There's another lab we use too but it's basically, it's urine, and they looks at, it looks at all the the hormone metabolites. And that's important because it's not just the apparent main hormone that's produced by the gland, by this, or, you know, this hormone producing cell. It's not just that hormone.

It's how it's metabolized in the body, because maybe 70, 80 percent of the effect that we think a particular hormone has on our body. It's not due to the parent, but to the metabolites that are produced. In other words, metabolites means it's been modified by the liver to a, to something different. So it's called a metabolic, a [01:03:00] metabolic intermediate.

It hasn't been eliminated. Once it's eliminated, that's the final path. But there's a metabolic intermediate, and those intermediates have actions. Okay, so we do that, and now, and then the thing about the urine hormone test is we can then not only look at the sex hormones in testosterone, estrogen, progesterone, But we are, we're also looking at cortisol, we're looking at aldosterone, and thyroid.

So we're looking at them all, pituitary. So we can see them all, because it's an orchestra. Remember, you, you can't tune up the woodwinds and not tune up the brasses. Right? You've got to tune up the whole orchestra if you want to have a beautiful symphony. Okay, so you can't just focus on one thing. You can't, because there is no one thing.

So, you've got imbalance in hormones. Imbalance in your, your glucose insulin dynamic. Without testing. Or asking questions, you've also got an [01:04:00] imbalance, I know, you have an imbalance in your gastrointestinal tract. And, what else do you have? You have an imbalance in your autonomic nervous system.

Sympathetic and parasympathetic, you're sympathetic overdrive. And, what else? Your immune system is imbalanced. And what else? Your mind is, except for the

very short amount of time that you spend in delta sleep during the day, during the night. Unless you're a night shift manager. The very short amount of time that you spend in Delta. Other than that, your mind's awake, your mind's on. What's your mind doing is something we call thinking and thinking is the thing that happens.

It's not like you do it. Let me think about that. What do you, you know what that means? When you say that, I'm going to, I'm going to go think about that. We don't know what we're talking about. Think what are you doing? I'm [01:05:00] thinking, you know, it's, it's not a thing that you do is the thing that happened, which you should be saying, I want to go watch my thoughts.

I'm going to, I'm going to keep track of what's going, what's being turned on. All right. So anyway. You got to learn to turn it off. So if, so if all we can do, all we can ever do, remember, we don't know how to do anything else. We can't

do anything else for people and for ourselves. And that is to bring into balance these systems, the gastrointestinal system, all right? It's got to heal and you've got to restore the gut, the proper gut biome. You've got to restore the immune system back into balance. Because if we were to do an lymphocyte subset, we would see that you're in disarray.

You've got to restore balance in the hormones.

And then the autonomic nerves, you've got to get your, your parasympathetic. That is the part of your, your, your autonomic thing of autonomic is automatic. So, you know, there's a voluntary nervous system, right? Where I'm going to lift my hand. I lift my hand, but the nerves that are controlling [01:06:00] my blood vessels to dilate my glands, to secrete my heart to slow down, you know, all of those.

that nervous intervention, inter innovation, innovation that is controlling the functioning of my organs and stuff is all they call autonomic.

It's broken down into two basic fundamentals. There's the on, and there's what I really mean by that is that what on the sympathetic, you switched over to muscles have a lot of blood and they're ready to go. Your eyes are dilated and you're ready to fight. Or get it out of there, run and then all the other stuff is turned off.

But on the parasympathetic side, that was sympathetic. On the parasympathetic, the blood is going to your organs, to your gastrointestinal, so that you can really, you're digesting and all that stuff. So it's a, it's a healing living. It's part of being alive. Whereas the other one is emergency. You're going to get out of here, right?

That's the emergency, the [01:07:00] sympathetic and the parasympathetic. So we're all on sympathetic, out of, out of balance with sympathetic overdrive. What does that do? That stimulates cortisol do? It increases blood sugar. Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. So it's all a very it's a way to, it like turns on all of the different aspects in our body that deal with emergencies.

It turns them on all the time. What happens? They get exhausted. Then they don't even work for what they need to be working for. So you get adrenal fatigue. You get all these things. So what we have to learn to do is how do we augment and stimulate the parasympathetic system. So we're going to bring all of these into balance.

So you need a doctor who's going to work with you, Logan instead of to restore balance and restore your health. And I could be saying, not Logan, I could be saying any one of your names with regard and with every situation you think you have, it's all the same. We need to get rid of the toxins.

And that's our goal. And we're going to find out that if we go after that goal, if that, [01:08:00] if that's our goal, then all the problems, whatever we think they were, you know, I have arthritis and I have I have Crohn's, and I have diabetes, and I have cataracts, and I have,

those are just different fruit on the same tree.

Okay, I guess I'm,

okay, here's one from Ian Victor. My wife was diagnosed with terrible, in April, with breast CFCs, stage 4, metastasized in her bones. She had thyroid in 19, thyroid CFCs in 1995, and breast CFCs in 2010. She is now on a strict keto diet, including lemon water in the morning, green juice a day. Okay, we need one.

And a good number of supplements. She is now on electrozool and ribosafil.

I am worried the medicines are hampering her recovery. She was doing great before starting the meds. [01:09:00] Now her RBCs and WBCs are low. So I'm afraid that if the meds are weakening her immune system, the CFCs will proliferate. What can we do? Ian excuse me. Ian, Victor, you're right on. They are.

Okay. So, I want you to, okay. So you said she had thyroid CFCs in 1995. I guess she was treated for that and they no longer has it. She developed breast CFCs in 2010, which has now progressed to stage four that she's had that long time. Anyway, I'd like you to know something. I hope you have gone to a biological dentist.

I have a feeling you haven't because why? Well, the breast and the thyroid are on the same meridian, the dental meridian. Okay. Thyroid, breast, stomach. And then on the, if it's the right side, it's pancreas is on the left side. It's spleen, but those are the. organs that are on that same meridian, all right?

And if you have [01:10:00] not, if you've got either a root canal there or you have a cavitation, which above it, above the tooth or below the tooth in the jaw,

excuse me, or anything else that's in, or root canal next to it, but it's extending over. Anyway, if you don't take care of that, you'll never, it'll never, nothing will have worked. You got to pull the plug. So having thyroid and breast is a big alarm, red flag, as they say. Now. Stage 4 to the bones, and we remember that stage 4 means that it started, wherever.

Stage 2 is what? So stage 1 is just a lump, small group of cells. Actually it's a lot, more than a billion, but,

but it hasn't disturbed the architecture of that organ or gland or whatever. Now it's growing and it is starting to disturb the architecture of the gland or, that's stage [01:11:00] 2. Stage 3 is, means now it's gone into the limb of the, of the, that system that drains that organ. And stage 4 means it went to another organ.

That's all it means. I mean, that's what it means. So in her case, it means it went to the bone,

which is common for breasts to do that.

She's on a keto diet. I think you mean ketogenic diet. She's on a diet that's promoting, stimulating ketones. Ketones are what? They're breakdown products of fatty acids. When fatty acids break down, they break down into ketones. There are three ketones. Ketone bodies, they call them. They can be utilized to produce energy.

So that, and when do the ketones break down? When did the fatty acids get broken down into ketone bodies? When there's not enough glucose, because glucose is the primary fuel source of the body. So when the glucose goes low, it starts to utilize ketones. Except the body needs to maintain a [01:12:00] basal glucose level.

Because why? Because glucose is not only fuel, it also serves as the carbon backbone for a lot of the molecules that our body produces. Like fatty acids, cholesterol, proteins. You know, different things that we make, amino acids. So glucose does not only serve as a potential source of energy, but also as a potential source of parts, structure.

Can't get, can't get, you can't live without, you can't get it out. You can't live without it. If you successfully got all the glucose out of your body, you'd be dead. Your body won't allow that because it's going to turn muscle into glucose.

So the idea of a ketogenic diet means, the idea is that I'm going to only eat Things that will result in fat production or the fatty a fatty acid is being broken down into ketone bodies So that I will be in a [01:13:00] state of ketosis

Now most people think that the ketogenic diet is just eating like the Atkins diet eating a lot of flesh

Fat flesh just not eating carbs.

That's not a ketogenic diet because it's 10 if more than 10

percent of of the caloric intake of the amount that you're taking in, eating, is protein. It will, that protein, which will break down into amino acids, will go through the liver and become, be turned into glucose. It's called gluconeogenesis. So if you're on a strict ketogenic diet, you would have to have 80 percent fat, 10 percent carbs, and 10 percent protein.

Which, if that's an animal based 80 percent fat, Then we're talking about pretty disgusting.

Yeah, give me some bacon, but [01:14:00] leave out the meat. I just, well, I just want the fat. That's ketogenic. Anyway, you see that pork chop? Give me the, I just want the fat. Maybe a little, little bit of the meat. That steak, I just need the fat. Kind of disgusting. Alright, so,

now, cause, and also remember, if you're doing green juice, I don't know what you're doing with it. But So, my advice, forget the ketogenic diet. Because you're not ketogenic, you're not doing 80 percent fat. To be ketogenic, that means you're going to have to have actually a greater amount of ketones in your blood than, and that's hard to do.

So even on a very strict 80 percent fat diet, you still have to fast on water at least one or two days a week to keep you in there. So most people, when they say they're on a ketogenic diet, they're really not. Yeah, they're producing more ketones than usual, but it's not that they're, the idea is that your body relies on ketones, no longer glucose, which is what [01:15:00] happens when you go.

On a water fast. That will do it quickly.

Now, she's on so anyway, I would say go on a healthy diet, which is a hundred percent uncooked plants, seeds.

And there's a way to eat them and all that and make them delicious and yes, you're not going to be just eating celery and, you know, spinach and lettuce.

By the way, I'm I'm, we're going to be starting a a

I guess let me just use the common terms. A raw food instruction training for people. All right? It'll be a, and I'd like to do it live. Maybe we'll do some fundamentals in a course that you can do at your own pace. I'd like to do it live, but we're going to have the person who is really, really amazing at taste making, taking anything that you love that's unhealthy and let's have, how do we make it, how do we get close to the taste that you need, that you're looking for healthy.

So we'll call it the taste good anyway, I'm writing this book. I will someday [01:16:00] finish. It's called why it has to taste good. And that's why it has to taste good, otherwise you're not going to eat it. Number one and if you do eat it, you're gonna hate it and that's going to suppress your immune system So it's not gonna work.

Anyway, so we're gonna start that and I want I want to You all to get involved and we're talking about what do you what do I need in my kitchen? First of all to make a to do this to accomplish this so I can make delicious food. That's healthy for me What do I need? These are all the things I need.

Okay, what can I afford? I can afford just a couple things Well, let's say if you can only afford a couple things. Let's start with this this this Let's get going on it. Let's get going. The question is not it. Should I eat healthy? Well, you answered me. Okay. Cause there's someone at our center right now at Oasis who's saying I just can't eat afterward.

I don't, I don't like it. Okay. So I need to remind this person and say, listen, I understand you can't eat it. You need to eat this, but you have to understand within a few, I don't know, weeks, months you'll ICU where you're not going to be eating the food you like. And. You might not be eating it, and that won't [01:17:00] be bad for you either.

I mean, you'll be okay with that since you're going to be extremely nauseous and you won't have any appetite. But you'll be eating through a catheter going into your central veins.

So if you don't want to change, if you don't want to adapt, if you don't want to arise to the occasion, what is the occasion? The occasion is your body is completely toxic and out of balance, and the only way it can get untoxic and back into balance is by your changing the way you're treating your body.

There's not another way. There's not another way and it's not going to come from something that someone's going to give you in an I Your IV is not going to get rid of those toxins. In other words, this is your journey So if you're saying I don't want to do that, okay, you know, I get it But just understand what's going to happen by that by doing that

And usually if someone is saying I don't want to do that. I don't want to do this It's because they haven't suffered enough See, one of the most [01:18:00] benevolent

situations that God put us in is giving us pain and suffering. Why? Because in spite of the fact that we think we're smart, we're intelligent and the animals are dumb. If we're going to say that, let's define intelligence. For me, a fundamental to any definition of the word intelligence, it must include, intelligence must include the ability to survive maximumly in your environment.

I mean intelligence can be anything it can be other stuff too, but you got to be able to you got to have the intelligence to survive Right, for example, you know enough not to go walking off with a cliff That's one level. Okay. I'm just saying that's so if we're not going to include that then we're not we're talking about different things That's what I don't feel.

Anyway, so are we intelligent? No, why because we have to Even if someone tells us something and we look and we look at [01:19:00] it. We say yeah that yeah, that makes sense But I don't care. I like La la la la, okay So what happens? We've got to keep doing it until we suffer from it. And then we'll say, oh, okay, it's just the way we are.

So if someone doesn't want to change, don't, but understand what's going to happen.

So we're going to have that, we're going to have that thing. I'm working on it right now. I'm trying to set that up. I think it's going to be fun. I'd like if anybody out there listening, I'd like you to send in somehow. I don't know where you send stuff to us. Letting us know that you'd be interested in this, these groups.

Learning how to carry the field. Which I, you know, I get it now. Okay. How do I do it?

The ribosaclip is just turning off

you know, basically it's dealing with its estrogen. Okay. And the letrozole is like an aromatase inhibitor, like third generation aromatase inhibitor. Right. We [01:20:00] all know what that is because everyone is probably aware that they used to take an astrozole, which is still around, but anyway, but you know, there's a, the CDK four and six pathways are what the ribosic blocks.

Anyway the bottom line is that it decreases the amount of estrogen and the and the electrosol decreases the amount of estrogen because they're, because it's, there's no, she's probably been told that the specimen they saw had a lot of estrogen, had estrogen receptors, right? So those estrogen receptor alpha, which is the one that makes things grow.

So they're going to stop, they're going to get rid of the estrogen. So, so it's just a narrow, narrow view that is. Let's get up further. Let's look a little bit. Let's get up like it about about up like a hundred feet above it What do we see? Oh, all right. Oh, so it's the alpha receptor that's doing it No, so the beta receptor what happens if that gets stimulated?

Oh, [01:21:00] that'll make it shrink Hmm, so I don't necessarily have to knock out all my estrus because I might there are other parts that need it like my coronary arteries And there's blood That need that, right? So I just need to increase the beta receptors. Anyway, so if you take a certain and a different look at it, you'll see that this is not going to work.

It will work maybe for a while, but it's going to put you more out of balance. And remember, what is our problem? Why are we ill? Because we're out of balance. So again, by making, so when they went, took it even further, they gave a shot of Lupron. So she must be post menopausal already, so they wouldn't do that.

So she, if she's post, if she's already had something menopausal, so they usually give up. You know, that's when they'll get the or aromatase, the AIS, the aromatase inhibitor. But yeah, so, so all they're working on is that, is decreasing it. And you know, they're effective, I mean, letrozole, letrozole is effective in blocking androgens from being [01:22:00] converted into estrogens, which is, they'll do. And that's how post menopausal women really get their estrogens, because their ovaries aren't making estrogens, they're just converting androgens that are made by their adrenals, right?

So, Anyway, that doesn't solve the problem. Why is all this happening? Hasn't been looked at. Okay, so you've got to do that I don't know if you've been doing that the end picture, but your wife you've got to check. I mean, I've these dental marine depressed thyroid You got it. Dr. Emma Abraham in Glendale, California is number one in the world and that

what you can do is you live here Not there so you can say okay. How can I find the right biological dentist here? So I think on my website I have a list of some that I got from. Dr Emma around different parts of the country. But you can do your own vetting with that, right? You can just make sure that, you know, look at their services and stuff.

Or, you can get your initial consultation [01:23:00] with Dr. Emma and via Zoom, and then she can help you decide where to go. Anyway, you gotta be on that. Then yes, these drugs are not the answer, and they're gonna cause low RBCs and WBs, and you don't need them. And and, and you gotta go back and watch some of my other videos.

Lives because I have spoken about this multiple times and that is soy will block will Stimulate the beta and kind of low level on the alpha, but it'll block the out So we'll flaxseed in fact flaxseed is going to down regulate alpha

The cruciferous vegetables do very similar things like broccoli and cabbage So you need to really eat a lot of that stuff eat a lot of soy you can get up You got to detox. You got to do, there's so many things you can be doing instead of having this military, but I got to get rid of this thing. But this thing is there because it's, it needs to be there right now because it's adapting.

That's not the idea to get rid of it. The [01:24:00] idea is to make sure it doesn't have to be, it doesn't have to be there. Because the body can only do what is necessary. Let's make it unnecessary.

I, I, I would, you guys should, you've got to be bored by now with, with what I say. Because I'm always saying the same thing about whatever the question is. It's the same thing. The medications is not that they're weakening her immune system. Directly what they're doing is other things that are on their toxins.

They are toxic But our immune system needs to be stimulated to She probably needs thymus and alpha 1 peptide to wake up her t cells because she's

Probably at least in her 50s

means that she doesn't have much the thymus land anymore,

which is how we make t cells mature season t cells

so Ian Victor, you've got to find a Functional doctor that will Collaborate with me. That'd be great. I'll be helping to work with that person because You It's a whole entire program. Start with benzene. Go to that biological event. [01:25:00] It's okay. Next person is Marcia. And she says, what are the best recommendations for someone who's diagnosed with metastatic breast CFCs?

What can we do to eliminate metastasis? Marcia, I hope you were just listening because that's exactly what we were talking about. Biological event. You got it. That's all. And then juice cleansing, colon hypotherapy, lymphatic work, going to sleep early, moving around all day, learning to turn off the mind by meditating and balancing your hormones.

Balancing your gastrointestinal tract, fasting, cleansing, all those things are what you need to do. Now, bones, it's in the bones, you've got to also be, there's one toxin you need to take, it's called doxycycline. Doxycycline, so this is for this is for Ian Victor, and this is for Lauren. This is Lauren, I want you to know that if you have is it Lauren?

No, Marcia, I'm sorry. Marcia if you have Metastatic breast CFCs. Most likely it went, it's in the bone, but if it's not, you don't want it to, so the [01:26:00] doxycycline would prevent it. 100 milligrams twice a day of doxycycline. 100 milligrams twice a day. But you're not going to just eliminate. Your question is, how do I eliminate metastasis?

You want to turn off the whole thing. Do everything we were just, I just, we just talked about. Now this is Lauren. Lauren says, how do I get rid of ascites? How can I book a consultation when you've discussed the treatment? I discussed treatment. So, you know, I am really having a conundrum. How do I still consult with people when I don't have any time right now to sleep?

And I get it. I want to consult with people because tragically there's nobody out there. I mean, you know, I'm not saying that because for any self aggrandizement, that's not, that's just, I don't

know. It's tragic, but I would love to. So how do I do this? You guys, you guys have any ideas? Can we take groups of people? And do a [01:27:00] group can we do like a group consultation where you know, that's what my groups are about So join the cfc group and we'll work with your situation That's what they're about So come to that group and you'll get a lot more than that You'll get a lot more than working with your personal thing with your exact like my my this is up.

That's down Okay, and I you'll go you'll get a program. You'll get a program on how to how to You know all the supplements that it's that's what you should do. Lauren join the cfc group go to You dot com and go on there and join the inner circle. Join the CFC group

and Ian Victor. Same thing. Okay. Now, the ascites, how do you get rid of ascites? Ascites is an accumulation of fluid in the in the abdomen, right? In the abdominal cavity. Alright, the reason it's accumulating is because the the there's a portal vein which is the main vein that drains all of the intestines.

It's small intestine which is the stomach. Uh [01:28:00] uh

I mean, small intestines large intestines, all of that, they all coalesce into one vein that goes into the liver. It's called the portal vein. And why? Because all the stuff you've eaten, it's got to go through the liver and be detoxified or modified before it goes into systemic circulation, right? And

so what happens is somehow it's either that there are like lymph nodes that are large around that. Portal venous is going to liver or there's a mass in the liver or masses in the liver. That's kind of block blocking it Right and what that'll do is cause the it to back up and when it backs up going through the walls of the vein Of the blood a bit large vein are is the it's just the fluid All right The red blood cells and white blood cells are still not going to get through the walls like that The fluid will and that fluid is the same color as urine.

It's the same color. If you've ever seen your bloods spun Right. And you have the red at the top and then it's got that sort of like a [01:29:00] yellow, yellowish, that's called serum or plasma, but that's just the blood without, that's your blood without the red blood cells and white blood cells. And so that just kind of extravasates through the blood vessel and into the, into the abdominal cavity.

It's like that, right? That's what it, so there's a blockage there or there's not a blockage there. Some people have what's I mean the medical term is carcinomatosis, which is just means a lot of little implants and It's a tumor all over the inside of the abdominal cavity, the peritoneal cavity that are producing fluids.

So one way or another. And then the, you know, the other thing that can do it, produce it, it's just having being extremely malnourished and having a low albumin, but that low albumin is going to cause fluids to accumulate everywhere. So not just in the belly. Anyway, so what do you do with it? Well, first of all, when it gets you know, get to the point where.

It's inhibiting functions, like she, she won't be able to lie down, right? She won't be able to breathe because [01:30:00] the fluid's pressing on her diaphragm. Her diaphragm, she can't take deep breaths, so that's that. It can be so much that it'll block her, she won't be able to eat. She'll only eat a little, like one mouthful, and she'll be full.

So when it's doing that, you're gonna have to go get a drink. And then, how do I not get it, how do I get it not to come back? Well, here's where you have to use some medications, right? So one of the ways to keep the blood and fluid to flow to not go into the abdominal cavity, but just to go out in the urine.

So you've got to stay a little hydrated because you want to go out in the urine, not in that cavity. So you want to get a lot of extra fluids you want to be drinking, but your doctor will put you on something called Lasix, which is furosemide, right? And how did I forget? I've been using this for 40 years now. How do I forget the name of it? Anyway, it's another diuretic. I'll think of it in a minute. It's another diuretic that is, like, see, Lasix will cause you to lose potassium. So if you're on [01:31:00] LASIK, LASIKs you're gonna be, you're gonna be you're gonna, your potassium's gonna go low and you're gonna be in trouble.

That's why they have to always monitor your electrolytes. Or give you, like, like if they give you, if the doctor were to put you on LASIKs, which is furosemide, they would also put you on potassium. Which you're gonna lose. But this other Diuretic is what they call a potassium sparing.

Spironolactone diuretic. And you just take 25 milligrams four times a day. So you take the Lasix, depending on where your kidneys at, usually 40 milligrams once in the morning. And the Spironolactone, 25 milligrams four times a day. You don't have to worry about the potassium. And you, it's gonna be trying to divert the fluid from gathering in your belly and you'll pee it out.

You're gonna be taking a lot of fluids though, because if you're doing, if it's making you pee and you're not taking fluids, you're gonna get dehydrated. And that's the worst thing you can do. So you gotta get a doctor that knows how to, that knows that you should do that. That's what you gotta do. So, And I'm not sure if [01:32:00] Lauren, if you were able to do that.

Now if you call our clinic, An Oasis of Healing, in Arizona, and you say that you would like to,

You're interested in coming to the center to speak to me that they would

wait a minute. Are these sane?

Okay, so ian victor. You've got a you've had a several times She's on we talked about that lectures also You've got a cleanse and I told you you got to you got to look at that Because you're you're giving me in another one of your things you're doing alternative treatments as she is We are wait the oncologist put her on the shoulder and they said that he cannot cure it But they they can stop the spread if so, you're going to stay him You want to go to a guy who says he can't cure you?

Well, at least that way he's honest because there's no curing something that doesn't exist. There's no it. There is, there are chronically permanent cells that are doing it as a, as a homeostatic corrective response. And all you have to do is remove that reason why they're doing that. Okay. It's a whole different idea.

We're also doing alternatives that [01:33:00] as she is scared of leaving the meds, scared of leaving the meds that are not working by the way, you already said they're not working. She's on a strict Keto, including green juice. That's not Keto. Lemon water. That's not Keto. Intermittent fasting, 15 or 16 hour window.

She's lost 15, 15 kilos of fat. That means she was really awake. She's also on a protocol of mebendazole, doxy. Alternating these two monthly. Aspirin, okay, and she's on the the, the this is basically Jane McClelland's and the core oncology groups. So the metformin, The atorvastatin, ivermectin, yeah, so basically that.

She's taking supplements like berberine, milk thistle, quercetin, turmeric, jugamunk, which you didn't tell me how much, how often, so I don't know. Are you, is she taking adequate amounts? You've got to know. And are you taking adequate amounts of those other drugs? Are you just trying everything? In other words, you've got to have a conductor of that [01:34:00] orchestra.

If you don't know if you're taking enough of anything, and if you're not, then none, you shouldn't be taking it. If you're not taking enough to achieve a goal that you're looking for, then you're just, you know, Wasting money and she, her liver's got to deal with it. So you have noticed the CA 15 diphtheria and PET scan results.

Not improving after starting the medicine. Okay, so and she wants to stay with these medicines, even though they're not helping. You got to realize how they, that, the spell. I put a spell on you. Put a spell on her, on you too. You got to get out of there. You got to run. Forrest, run. Get out of there, man.

These guys, these guys, and girls. And I'm going to leave it at that. So Ian, I can see you're

you're desperate and I understand that and you're in the UK And so you can't go to go to Emma, but you've got to find one. Now. There's a guy in Spain Dr. Jose who's an excellent oral surgeon. He will tell you what's going on. [01:35:00] Dr. Jose in Spain I don't know of any biological dentists in Europe other than this guy.

These guys amazing. You'll love him and i'm going to get i'm going to ask his permission post his You might take contact information on our website. I'm gonna see how I can do that. So, Ian, get, get in touch with whoever you do at our center, at our website. Okay, so, and I hope someone who's on my team is listening to this so they can remind me to get this done, okay?

Somebody, please, thank you. Lisa, I know a few women that are bad, who, that battled breast CFCs, triple positive. They chose to get a mastectomy after treatment. After treatment, you mean chemotherapy. And, and they were Still CFC free after 5 7 years. Those of us who chose lumpectomy and holistic approach have recurrence.

1 2 years. Why? Well, you [01:36:00] set up a scenario here that is not It's just, you've observed What you've observed is not necessarily what happens. I don't know the situations that you've observed. How many people, But I can tell by your language that you're in the Rockefeller mode. Right, because they're battling.

They're battling. I'm gonna, I'm gonna get them. I'm gonna get them. I'm going to get them because they are bad. They're not me. They're after me. I'm going to get them. That whole thing is delusional. And I know you're saying lately, you know, Dr. Lodi, you don't have a tumor here.

Yeah, I've seen what I've seen. You don't want to see, but I, and I can, I agree. That's not you. That's not you. That's not who you are. That's not, doesn't look like a normal breast or whatever. Pancreas. Yeah, I get that. But it is, it is, it is, it is, it is a, an adaptive response to but it still came out [01:37:00] of you.

You can't say it's not you, it came out of you. Nothing got in you, it came out of you. Okay, so understand that. And understand that your body is trying desperately to survive.

I'm not saying, I'm not saying we want to stop that, we want it to go away. That's, yes, that's, but I just want you to keep that in mind. So, the word battle. So if she's battling, triple positive. Again, so now you're buying their whole story. With the triple positive, triple negative, all that stuff. As if that meant something.

All it means, and I want you to hear this, please hear this, all it means is this. What? It means that if you're positive for E, a progesterone receptor, and you're positive for HER2, then you are, can get certain drugs that are specific for that. Now if you're PR positive, progesterone receptor positive, we don't talk about that much.

Because they don't have a drug. So my question is, if you're not going to talk, if you're not going to do anything, you're not going to drink, [01:38:00] then why measure it?

Anyway, so, that's the only reason. And so they say that, well, they're, you know, you know, they say that the most, the breast CFC with the most, the highest the worst, the worst of the bunch, triple negative. Why? Because they have no drugs to slow it down. You know what number two is? Triple positive. Now how does that make sense?

How's the worst thing you can have is to have none of them and the second worst thing that you can have is to have all of them. Okay, right there you should say, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. So, but you, so if I have just the ERs and not that, that's better than having what? I mean, none of this makes sense. Okay, you got to understand that.

But if you say I'm going to, I get it, you know, don't get, because you're getting a myth. It's a myth. Anyway, the answer to your question is if they had a mastectomy after treatment, meaning they had chemotherapy, I think you're saying. And then they had a mastectomy. How many days are there? [01:39:00] 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12?

How many days? And those of us who chose lumpectomy. Because you know, look at the surgical literature. In the surgical literature, the literature that's published by surgeons, peer reviewed journals. They're saying that there's usually no difference between lumpectomy and mastectomy. That's pretty much the case.

And a holistic approach. You have a recurrence a lot sooner. Well, it's not holistic if you, I mean, if you did the lumpectomy, that's not at all. Well, that's not at all integrated. I would never recommend a lumpectomy, now, or a mastectomy, unless if,

I mean, there are times there's a lumpectomy, but, I mean, it's not like initially.

We need to go after the two fundamental things. What's making this happen? What's causing it? We don't get rid, if we don't address that, nothing we do will work. You have to understand that.

For example, I got I got a garbage [01:40:00] can here in my house, and I put in

all the uneaten leftover food, right? And that means it's like, whatever, we have dinner, and, you know, and then the leftover cake, and the leftover cookies, and all that stuff's in there, right? And I I've got two or three of those, because I don't like to empty the trash, so I just, you know, so they're usually full.

Now I've got a bunch of ants coming in now. Do you realize that no matter what I can spray everything I want? I can spray this and that and this and that I can leave Things by the door and all that I do all this stuff to get rid of those ants But if I don't get rid of that, I'm not gonna succeed. Got clear?

Not gonna succeed. So whatever you have going on wherever it is, you gotta get rid of that. You gotta get rid of it. Why? Number two, what do you got to do? Balance systems, restore your physiology that has been disturbed, and most of all, balance, restore the immune system. But it depends on [01:41:00] the hormone. I mean, hormone, if you realize that the, that the adrenals and the thyroid pretty much are the, one of the bosses of the immune system, if you want to look at it in those terms, they're interrelated.

There's the neuroendocrine hormone immune system. Whoa. And we got to bring it all into balance. But basically, get rid of what's causing it and get the immune system back on board. But to get that on board, you have to have done all this other stuff. You do that, and it's gone. You don't do that, and it won't go away.

Hmm, period.

But I want, you know, but I don't want, I don't want to change my diet. Okay?

Don't change it. Keep doing it. Anyway, so, I don't, when you say you did holistic, I don't know what that means. And the approach, there's not THE holistic, there's no THE holistic approach. Some people will say, and I tried it, I tried the alternative, it didn't work. What'd you do? Well, I did vitamin C and I was able to do it.

Okay, how much, what was the source of the vitamin C? [01:42:00] And how much did you do? And how much were you taking orally? And did you get the therapeutic? Okay, now what was the other one? Oh, oh, so how much? How frequent? What kind of equipment? So we got it. You said you were doing all this stuff. We have to make sure that you were doing it sufficiently to have achieved the goal.

Not that, well, I did this one a couple times a week. You know, it's not like that. It's not like, well, if I just do a little bit of it. No, because there's specific, it's like, Yeah, I don't want to go overboard. I'm not going to give myself all the oxygen. I'm not going to give enough oxygen. You've got to give adequate amounts of oxygen to live.

Not sub optimal.

I know I'm all over the place.

But these are, you know, these are really you know, Listen, if I'm, don't think, oh, you're stuck on only those three or four questions. No. If you've been listening, you've got the tools to deal with whatever. You remember, my goal, and your goal should be, but [01:43:00] my goal is that you'll never need another doctor the rest of your life.

Why? Because they don't, first of all, they don't know what they're doing. They don't know, they don't know what they're doing. Number one. And number two, what needs to happen is very clear, very simple, and only you can do it.

So, I don't think that the Lisa, I don't think they were, I don't think it's a holistic approach.

I don't have the whole story for me, so we'd have to talk more, but I don't want you to think that. Oh my gosh, we did something wrong. We didn't get the mastectomy. The mastectomy would have, look at the data on mastectomy.

Remember, the holistic with a W approach to health is the only approach. You can't do it. I'm only gonna do, I'm gonna get my body healthy by working on my right arm. Ah, well, I mean, oh, both arms. It's crazy. You gotta work on the body. It's the whole body. Anyway, so, Lysand Sound. Lysand Sound. [01:44:00] Lysand Sound Therapy.

Oh, it's your name. Infrared light for a breast CFC. What do you think about Royal Rife's sound and light therapy computer generated program for healing the body and detox. What is your experience utilizing this tool among other therapies?

Okay, so, yeah, Lisa, yeah, okay. Lysand Sound Therapy. Hmm. I guess that's your name on

Anyway, so, you know.

Royal Reif Sound and Light. Okay, Royal Raymond Reif

invented a microscope and a frequency generator. With

the frequency generator, he was able to either send in the same frequency that it, that whatever he's targeting, the same frequency as it produced, being produced by it. And as we know, when the one, when two frequencies, [01:45:00] when the two frequencies come together, one plus one is two, and it blows up. It's too much energy.

The other thing you can do is that, because of the physics, the laws of physics, with waves, right, so you've got a wave going this way, if you come in with a wave going exactly 180 degrees opposite, it's a flat line that's doesn't there. Either way you can.

So here's what it was with frequencies, it wasn't with sound. Now does sound work? Yes, it's a, it's a frequency, it's a very powerful frequency, and it's, it's, it's it's actually more fundamental. To assess the substance of reality than is E. M. F. Electromagnetic.

And I want you just for a moment to think about music. I don't know if you listen to music a lot or a little bit or not at all. But

profoundly an immediate effect on your body. Listen to an old song that you, that you loved when you [01:46:00] were 15. You're like, you're gone. It's, you're gone. Listen to something, whatever you enjoyed at that, during your adolescence.

Or earlier adolescence. You know, if you got, if you really got founded in music earlier but you know, music can make you laugh. It can make you cry. It can make you melancholy. It can make you angry.

And God said, let there be light. So sound begets, precedes manifestation. I think if you can get sound, now there are certain sound. We know that there are waves that are doing a lot of research in France. There are specific sound waves that are

they can, they can destroy the frequencies of. Tumors and light. So this stuff is very good. It's very good. Now, the problem is this. We don't know, Lisa, we don't know the frequency of what's happening in someone's body. And so people claim that they have Reif's, Royal Raymond Reif's, they have his his frequencies. [01:47:00] That's just

not likely to be true because when they went and they invaded him and destroyed his, took everything, took all of his notes, his, his microscope generator, they took everything. The poor man died in Tijuana, an alcoholic, years later. They destroyed this man. And he was never, and he, he, he actually helped resolve 16 out of 16, 100 percent people with CFCs that were about to die.

He helped resolve it. Three minutes, every third day. Because he knew the frequency. We don't know the frequencies. We, so we're guessing. So we, so that's the problem. So my answer, Lisa, is It's fantastic if you can get the frequencies and no one's got the frequencies. And if they tell you they do, they don't, because if they [01:48:00] did, they would be, so everybody would find out eventually they'd be there and there'd be no CFCs.

And you can't say, well, I doing, I'm doing this, this, this, and right. Without you're doing, if you're doing it right, the right, I mean, the way it needs to be done, you'd be done. That's so how, how important is it? Great. Upmost. And I experienced with it is the GB 4, 000 is the easiest to use and probably the best.

But again, we don't know the frequencies. We can guess, there's that

Okay, last one, because I know it's late, you guys. Chiquita. Cervical CFCs. I have just been diagnosed with stage 4 cervical CFCs. I would like to know what I can take to get rid of this beast. I'm supposed to start chemo November 18th, but do not want to harm my body. Okay, what can I do? Okay, so Chiquita, I'm glad it's not yet November 18th.

Okay.

First of all, understand

Do you have, do you have AI on your computer, you know, we've got it there whether we like it [01:49:00] or not, right, so if you go on a

Google or Brave or any of them and you put in a, you ask a question like cervical, you know, use their word, stage four chemotherapy, and it, you know, maybe you'll find it several articles or press the thing for AI and it'll give you, they will let the research, they will have looked over all the research and they'll give you the conclusion.

And you'll see that what they're, what they're, what they're offering you is of no benefit in terms of you being able to be alive. It's not going to say, keep you alive. That's not what they're offering you.

Read the, read the research. They can't, they're going to say we can't help you, but we can poison you while you're, and make sure that you don't stay a living. That's, they're not telling you that, but that's what's happening. All right. So I can lie to you in two ways. I can tell you a direct lie, or I can just not tell you the [01:50:00] truth.

One is commission. One is omission. If you have stage four cervical, they're, what they're doing is they already know it's not going to work. We do know what? We know that it's going to make the metastasis worse. Am I making this up? No, I'm not making it up. Is this misinformation? No. If it's misinformation, then all of the medical journals and oncology journals are engaging in misinformation because that's where I got that.

So we know that. So what do we got to do? We have to really, Chiquita, you've got to, you know, The cervical is on the these. Your top four incisors and your bottom four. That's right on your cervical meridian. So you got, I mean, I don't know what else is going on in your mouth, but that's number one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.

Then you got to start a cleanse. You got to clean your colon, your glands, and you got to know that this is gonna, this is gonna resolve. Just like go in the kitchen and get a little knife and slice your finger. And then I want you to watch over the next three days what [01:51:00] happens. Four days, five days. It's gone.

This body heals. I'm telling you, it heals. And it only heals from that. No, it heals. That's what it does. It's designed to heal. And if something gets in the way, it's got to get adapted. And those adaptations we call diseases. They're not. Anyway, believe me, we need to clean up, get rid of all those things, wake up your immune systems, restore everything like that.

Now, I don't know the degree to which the Stage 4 is, I don't know where it is in your situation. Join our group, the CFC group, and we can get into your situation. Join it. Go to DrLewis. com Get Inner Circle, join the CFC group, and we'll be, and you'll get a lot more because every week we're doing all sorts of stuff.

Alright and I'm telling you, Chiquita, I don't know where you live, but

you can join that from anywhere. But but we'll work with you. So, and then, you know, whatever I say to anybody applies to everybody. Whatever I say to anybody applies to everybody. Why? Because how many people are in the world? There's only one of us in the world. What's he talking about? What a [01:52:00] weird dude.

Like, who's this guy? How are you finding this guy? Is he really a doctor? You you just read the comments.

Not only did I go to medical school and get that degree as a mythology doctor, but I went to all these other schools. But you know what I was before that? You're never going to guess. I was a human. And what am I still? So,

and I'm not a, there's no, how can you be a doctor? How can you be a doctor? Be a carpenter. Carpentry is something I, you know, I like to do those things.

Our language, okay, we need a new, I'm going to start a linguistics course. We've got to start a linguistics course so that we can learn to communicate. I really communicate. Right now we don't really communicate that well. We just throw out emotions at each other. And we don't, you know, we curse each other.

And we care, you know, It's like you've got this ugly thing that they gave you. Stage forward. We're just throwing around emotions and concepts and all that. [01:53:00] We're not, like, communicating. Anyway You know, it's not time. It's still now, but the clocks are, like, not on our side. They're, like, they keep moving, right?

Like calendars, right? Anyway

I guess it's whoops. I guess it's like time to go. I hate that. And should we do one more question? Cause I mean, there's a lot of good questions here. And I didn't get, I feel like I didn't get out of section one. I'm going to go. Oh, here. Okay. Valerie, this is an urgent question. I was told I needed a biopsy for a lung mass to determine the lung CFC or metastasis from triple negative breast treated conventionally two years ago.

Is it necessary? I'm already getting a PET scan and a brain scan. I have decided I'm not doing conventional chemotherapy or radiation because it didn't work the first time. Okay, great, Valerie, so I'm glad you're like, connecting the dots. It didn't work the first time, it's not going to work the second time.

It doesn't work on ever, ever, okay? I know people are going to say, And, [01:54:00] and, and, yeah, yeah, I mean, it saved my life. Alright, really, remember something. I'm not doing this right now and every week for what? What am I doing right now? What am I getting? I'm doing it because I'm just sharing with you what I know.

So if you don't like what I'm saying, that's fine. Okay. But I'm not, there's no other, I know the agenda. There's no, I'm no, no reason for me to say what I say. I'm like getting anything for it other than I know to be true. Anyway. So here's the thing. Now, if they, okay, let's say they did the biopsy and they found that, that this lung mass was came from your colon

or your stomach, or it's a primary lung. You're starting to look, okay, let's say that's out. What are they going to do? The same thing they're going to do if a kid, if it's from the press.

And if you had triple [01:55:00] negative last time, then that means they didn't have any tools. I mean, they didn't have any drugs, like they couldn't use any of their estrogen blockers or anything like that. So they would have to only use chemo and all the chemos are interchangeable. You look at them, they're all using the same chemos.

Every, they have a few that are different, like with some brain, just still not working. None of them were. So, good. You don't need to get a biopsy because if you get a biopsy, what's going to happen is it's going to, whatever it is, it's going to spread it, number one. I've got the literature. I didn't make that up, you guys.

That's not misinformation. I'm going to show you the literature. I want to show you the literature. It's published. I read it. I didn't, like, make it up. Okay, why would I make it up? How could I make up something like that?

Why would you make up, why would someone make that up? I mean, I don't even, anyway, I don't even get it, but I read that. Not just one place, multiple places. So that's the thing. But I'd say, well, look, [01:56:00] all right. But if it's going to give us an answer that we could now, even if it did spread it, we could get rid of it.

I'd say, sure, let's try it. I mean, but it's not, it's not going to give us an answer that's going to allow us to,

to do that. So that's why I'm saying that. All right, Valerie, join the CFC group, go to drloyd. com and get on there. And the industry goes, join the CFC group. We'll deal with that and more. And, you know, in the meantime, No, you're right with the chemo and radiation. They don't work. I mean, they don't, they don't, they work, but not which they don't give you what you want.

But please join the group and then don't do the biopsy for now. Oh, by the way, I can't give you, I, listen, I can't give anybody medical advice. I'm not telling you not to do what I'm going to tell you is, and let me restate that, that if I were in the situation that you

don't think I'm not giving anybody medical advice. I'm just telling you what I would do or what, like what I would do for a patient. If I had a patient. But I can't tell you and [01:57:00] it's true. I can't tell you because I don't know your whole situation. I haven't met you. I don't know your lab tests. There's so much I don't know that I can't tell you what to do.

And, and, and, and, you know, but in general in situations like that are there times when you'd have to do, yeah, there's always, there's always mitigating circumstances like you might have to, yeah, there's, you've got, you might have, there are times you have to do radiation. Absolutely. There are times you have to do surgery.

Absolutely. There are times you, you know, there are times absolutely, so I don't know your situation, but what I do know is that if it is what I, the way I'm seeing it, then I, I wouldn't do that. However, I don't know exactly how yours is. So, that's why if you can join the CFC group, we can, I can get more information out of you and from you and we can have a more of a dialogue.

Okay. And then okay. And then here's Wendy real quick. I have 53 aching muscles for a long term. I believe it is low testosterone. Just to test, test, test waiting for the results. I believe testosterone and estrogen are both [01:58:00] low. How do I raise them? I believe that low testosterone can make your muscles ache.

Actually, what you might find is that, Hmm, but, I think you're going to find that your testosterone is higher than your estrogen. And However, you'll find out. The Dutch test will help you. Muscle aches not necessarily testosterone. There's a lot of reasons for muscle aches. But all aches and all pains are coming from low voltage.

It's not enough. voltage energy. So, you know, I'm looking at diet. I'm looking at chronic inflammation. I'm thinking you know, I don't know. Do you exercise? You move around a lot. Do not move around a lot. Are you, are you, do you have a pretty sedentary lifestyle? Are you you know, if you, if like the Low testosterone and estrogen.

Remember you want to bring everything back into balance. So even if you're post menopausal, even if you're 85 years old, we want to bring you back to the balance and cycling that a 40 year old woman would have, right? So one of the ways you can know about testosterone is think about it. Do you have any libido?

Is your libido like [01:59:00] normal? Is your libido now? I mean, are you still, you still think about it? You still think, are you still oriented that way? Or is that like out of your mind, right? Cause that's one. Subjective way of knowing whether or not your testosterone is low, right? If you say, huh, I didn't really think about that, then yeah, you might have low testosterone.

But if you think about it, or are active, then it's probably okay, that's okay. So that's one way of knowing without doing the Dutch test. But that's not the real question. The question is, are they in balance? Are, are your, and then are your estrogens being metabolized? Is your estrone going to the 2 Is your estradiol going to 2 methoxyestradiol?

That'd be great. Where's it going? How's it going? Because that is a big determinant of the consequences. Right? So we've got to know that. And we've got to also know how you're preparing the soil. What soil? What is he talking about? Soil? What do you got? Your body. Okay? Because your body is soil.

Stuff's going to grow out of [02:00:00] it. Right? And, you know, so you want to make sure that you are a gardener. So,

I, and I did look this up. Okay. What are the questions? How do I raise? Oh, how do you raise them? Okay, you, okay, okay, so, by the way, estrogens and testosterone, estrogens, testosterone, progesterone those are, those are hormones. They're made by

well, the ovaries make the estrogen, progesterone, and the, and the adrenal gland makes the testosterone androstenedione. Nothing is similar to testosterone, and it also makes cortisol and all that, which is, which is we think of as the stress hormone. Response. So you gotta do, you gotta bring them all into balance and you're not gonna wake up your ovaries.

So you're gonna have to get an exogenous means from outside from a compounding pharmacist that, that can prove show to you that they got their yams or whatever they're using to make it position, be plant-based. biologically identical. Biologically identical means it's the exact same molecule [02:01:00] your body produces, right?

So we're not getting anything synthetic like they have in conventional retail pharmacies where they have progestin. Progestin is, progestin is the equivalent of smoking three packs of camels by morning, by noon, and then another three packs by six. It's progestin. But you want to get right, you want to get in balance, you want to get the proper, so you get a doctor to write a prescription.

to figure out what's going on, you get biologically identical hormones that bring your, restore balance, right? Not just bring them up, but they're, yeah, if they're low, you'll bring them up, but you'll bring them up with balance and balancing the thyroid and balancing them up. You get them all balanced and then you got to balance the other parts of your body too, but that's it.

And then if you're low on estrogen, you know, if a woman's really low on estrogen, her vaginal lining will get dry and she was, I mean, not at 53, but a little older [02:02:00] bleed just wiping themselves after they urinate. So it can be really terrible. It's called atrophic vaginitis. So, and, and believe me, all you know, if you're going through menopause is that you, your libido is down, you're not having your periods anymore.

You may be having hot flashes or not, but you don't realize that your cognitive decline, you're declining cognitively. Your heart's at risk of having your osteoporosis, all the things you don't know about it. And the same for men. We all men will know is that I got your opposite. Huh? You know, I'm just not as, as I used to be.

I used to be really, but I'm not anymore. And men have lost their motivation, and they lose, ah, you know. For men, it's like more of insidious, because there's no loss of menstrual cycle. They can say, aha, there's, but it's more insidious. But it's loss of libido, it's loss of erectile function. It's a loss of motivation.

And, you know, and maybe insomnia, and, [02:03:00] yeah. Restoring balance is all we ever want to do because the body is divinely crafted. It's going to work Perfectly. It's going to restore balance right now. We don't want to do anything that's going to either make a new imbalance or a work or Or add to the make a current imbalance worse.

That doesn't make sense life lukewarm life, whatever we wanna restore balance. Okay. So anyway, I've taken up enough of your, all your time. So sweaty cup, copy my cup and I'll see you next week. And you know, listen, I'm hoping that everything we think is happening is happening. Let's just pretend that it's all, yay, it's working.

Yay for our side, blah, blah, blah. Okay. Let's hope that's real. Okay. I do. 

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