The Dr. Lodi Podcast

Episode 149 - 5.25.25 Finding Balance: Your Journey to Radical Health Recovery

Dr. Thomas Lodi Episode 149

What if everything you've been taught about disease is fundamentally wrong?

Dr. Thomas Lodi takes us on a profound journey into a healing paradigm that reimagines how we understand health and recovery. Rather than viewing conditions as enemies to battle, he reveals why our symptoms are actually adaptive physiological responses—our body's intelligent attempt to maintain balance despite challenging circumstances.

This eye-opening session demolishes conventional thinking about cancer treatment, parasites, and chronic conditions. Dr. Lodi explains why the "war on cancer" metaphor fails patients and how identifying the underlying causes of imbalance leads to true healing. He thoroughly addresses questions about schwannomas (neural sheath tumors), parasite protocols, blood in stool, and prostate conditions with practical, actionable guidance.

One of the most illuminating segments tackles the relationship between cancer and glucose. Dr. Lodi clarifies why elimination strategies miss the point—every cell needs glucose, including healthy ones—and why balanced nutrition with healthy fats is critical for creating cell membranes that maintain the electrical charge necessary for health. This understanding turns conventional cancer nutritional advice on its head.

Throughout the session, Dr. Lodi emphasizes patient empowerment: "This is your journey. The doctor can't walk it for you. I can be your guide, but you mus

Send us a text

Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.

& so much more
A bi-monthly podcast where we share the stories of our Caregivers, patients and...

Listen on: Apple Podcasts   Spotify

Support the show

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

Join Dr. Lodi’s FREE Q&A livestreams every Sunday on Facebook, Instagram, and Tiktok (@drthomaslodi) and listen to the replays here.

Submit your question for next Sunday’s Q&A Livestream here:
https://drlodi.com/live/

Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/DrThomasLodi/
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/drthomaslodi/

Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.

Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast

Welcome to the Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast. This is the show for you if you’re...

Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

Join Dr. Lodi’s informative FREE Livestreams...

Speaker 1:

Good morning everyone, good evening, welcome to Sunday Night Live. Sunday Morning Live, you can hear Great, fantastic. What about this side? I don't know? There we go One person, hey, everybody. I think it's going to happen again. Sunday Night Live Anybody from Europe? Way too late for Europe. Great Everything, good, good, beautiful, great, everything's good, good, beautiful. Instagram always works. And there's Sydney, aka Alice Autumn Everyone you can hear. Now, I mean, you couldn't hear before. How weird. Okay, sunday Night Live. Actually it's Monday morning, but we'll pretend like it's Sunday night and let me find the thing. There we go, hey, great, everyone's coming in. All right.

Speaker 1:

So I was going to introduce Donna this week on this live stream. Donna Perrone, in New York, raw chef, not raw chef, just a person who has been raw for 35 years or so, and she's going to join our group. She'll be part of our membership group, so there'll be one day a week or one every week. It'll be very cool Because of Ops Connection Law. So are you guys back on From X? Anybody on X, anybody on Facebook? Hand pink waving that's cool. Pink hand waving or hand pink waving that's cool. Pink hand waving or hand pink waving. Anyway, who's uh is then? Can you guys hear me on on, uh, facebook, youtube. Yes, all right, cool, you can hear. All right, cool, I can hear now. All right, yeah, I have to do so anyway. So, because of the technical thing of of getting her on from new york I don't know why it's harder for her than it was, for I mean, this situation is harder, is more difficult than it was with Darren and Vanessa, but somehow it is so, anyway, cool. Anyway, hopefully next week, and then she'll be starting her Tuesday every other week session, so that's for people who are members of the groups Tuesday every other week session. So that's for people who are members of the groups.

Speaker 1:

Okay so, group members, you'll now have Vanessa and Darren, you know, and, as you know, darren's a kinesiologist, means muscle, a physiologist who specialized in muscles, and pretty amazing guy. And then Vanessa, who specialized in everything from raw food to you know, just as a nutritionist, basically, and there's a health coach, yoga instructor, instructor and meditation. She does pretty much everything. So they alternate, they're on weekly. So, anyway, if you join the groups, that's what happens.

Speaker 1:

You get them as well as sessions with me where we can interact, where I can ask you questions, you ask me questions and we go back and forth. That way we can actually work out a system. As you know, I get questions and there's not enough information to really answer it, so a lot of things remain vague. So that's, you know, really important. And then also that you know if you're on the, if we do webinars, there's no charge for the webinars anyway. And for those of you who didn't, who are not in the groups, um, hopefully you got a chance to see the vitamin c webinar last week and if not, I think it's available on the website drlodycom.

Speaker 1:

All right, so if anybody is dealing with an active CFC problem and you're anywhere near the US, call our clinic in Arizona and Oasis of Healing. I shouldn't have put and I shouldn't have been so grammatically correct because and gets people all thrown off. Should just put Oasis of Healing and nobody would. They never get it. So, anyway, too late. Now it's 20 years. So, yeah, do that. If you're not, well, that's the place to go. All right, because, yeah, we do everything. Okay, so now that's it. Oh, just another thing is that if you're on X or tiktok, then it's at dr thomas lodi md uh, mythology doctor at dr thomas lodi md. And if you're on instagram, facebook, youtube, linkedin rumble. Anything else it's at dr thomas lodiy with no MD. Why? Why, remember there's no whys? I mean, why, as my uncle told me a long time ago, why is an illegal question? Oh, by the way, there's really wonderful news. Everyone's got to know that. It's just so. I'm so delighted.

Speaker 1:

You know, the World Health Assembly adopted the historic pandemic agreement to make the world more equitable and safer from future pandemics that they had planned, and so Agreement adoption follows three years of intensive negotiation launched due to gaps and inequities identified in national and global COVID-19 response. So, guess what? Everyone voted and everyone agreed and there were no dissenters. Okay, this is our countries, this is our democracy, this is our democracy, our multiple democracies. Okay, every country voted yes, every country voted yes. There were two that were not there and everybody was there voted. Every country voted. What did they vote for?

Speaker 1:

In the event, you mean, when the next event occurs, every country in the world will turn over their sovereignty, their governance, to the United Nations and there will be one world government. That's what we have agreed on, and you know what, what we're doing about it, you and I. What are we doing? What are we doing? That's right, exactly, that's it. Exactly that's what we're doing. We're watching it happen.

Speaker 1:

I need to, I got to, I have to, I'm too busy, I can't, we don't have time. We just don't have time to save ourselves. What the heck happened to Restream? There we go. Yay, okay, cool, anyway. So we don't have time for it. Anyway, don't worry about it. It's just the end of freedom. It's not really anything to worry about. Who needs freedom? So let's do some answers, questions and answers. Where's that other place? There we go. Cool, leslie and Leslie.

Speaker 1:

I got diagnosed with a large, fist-sized schwannoma in my upper right abdomen. It is supposedly non-CFC-ish, as regarding a biopsy, I guess. As per biopsy, also supposedly fused to my vena cava, I am being pressed to immediately have surgery to remove it. It is rare, so they might just want it in the jar, but the surgeon could not tell me which nerve it is on or if it will be paralyzed, could not tell me if it actually fused to the vena cava. So they were making all sorts of melodramatic need to have full heart team in the room, so the whole heart team. It was also stated that the likelihood of me dying in surgery was very high, so I decided to walk out of the door and not go back.

Speaker 1:

I'm convinced, from my research, that this tumor, in addition to the uterine fibroid discovered at the same time, both have to do with parasites. I know this is a broad question, but what should I do? All right? Well, lastly and everybody listen parasites are a big problem, but we can't always, we can't say there's the problem. In fact, it's very rare that, except in situations where you have immediate overexposure to radiation or I don't know of another situation, but where you can say that's it, because there's never an it.

Speaker 1:

It's a multitude of things. It's a multitude of things. It's a confluence of all the, all the things that's going on in our lives and all the things that we're being exposed to Our diet, our state of mind, our levels of stress, our sympathetic to parasympathetic balance or disbalance, imbalance, our chemicals we're eating and drinking and putting on our skin and breathing in, and the EMF, and there's just so many. And how about our dental? There's so much going on that we can't say it's one thing. So there's just so many. And how about our dental? There's so much going on that we can't say it's one thing. So that's one thing. Make that clear Never think there's one thing, because then you might think there's only one thing I have to do to resolve the situation. That's what you don't want to get in that thinking. Okay, now, so what? That doesn't sound cute. Such a cute name schwannoma.

Speaker 1:

A schwannoma is basically around all nerves, peripheral nerves. You know what a peripheral nerve is. Well, you know what the central nervous system is. The central nervous system is the brain and the spinal cord. That's it in the right, in the middle, and then there are cranial nerves. These are nerves that are peripheral, they come out of the central nervous system in the brain, cranial, and we have 12 cranial nerves. Right, we have the facial nerve, the ophthalmic nerve, we have the trigeminal nerve, all of them. Then the vagus nerve is number 10, and the vagus nerve, as you probably recall, is the nerve that is the, basically the parasympathetic system, right, which balances the sympathetic system, right.

Speaker 1:

That's that's cranial nerve number 10, and it comes down and you know it connects to everything and because it's kind of the, it's kind of um, it's the uh chill nerve, it allows one to chill and, when chilling, the blood vessels to go to your vital organs for digestion and for survival. You know, adrenal glands, the kidneys, the liver, intestines, all those, the heart, all them get nourished with blood. And the other one, the sympathetic, nourishes the uh muscles, basically the voluntary muscles and the shut so that's what it does the voluntary muscles and the central part of the brain. So we can get all the, we can coordinate all those things, but it shuts off the prefrontal cortex, basically shuts it off, so that we don't need to think right now we just need to move um and the same with the um, and so the parasympathetic does the opposite. So they should be in balance.

Speaker 1:

But the nerves that come out, so there's 12 cranial nerves come out of the brain. Then they control things like that, the tongue, the, all that, and the vagus nerve, and then, and then there's the, then there's the spinal nerves that come out. You have the cervical spine spine, uh spine right, the eighth vertebra of the cervix, and then you've got the 12 thoracic right, the chest, and then you've got the rest of the lumbar, five lumbar m, and then the sacral right, and each, when we say lumbar, each vertebra is a section and underneath it come out two nerves on each for either side and they have all kinds of whatever they're connecting to. They're doing two things they're picking up information and sending information, so they're called peripheral nerves. So all these peripheral nerves, in order to work, to work well, need to have a covering over them, just like when you plug something into the wall. The electrical wire is covered with a rubberish plastic material, and it's not only so you won't get hurt if you touch it, you won't get electrocuted, but it also allows for a rapid movement of electricity. If there's no wire around it, it will dissipate and it won't move so quickly. It's the same thing with our nerves, so that's why we have those there, and so they're made up of cells that they call Schwann cells, so it's called the Schwannoma it's such a cute name, but anyway. So these are basically the neural sheath around the neural so, and so they're found.

Speaker 1:

The schwannomas are found in the central nervous system, the spinal cord and the peripheral nerves. Okay, the most common schwannoma is the seventh nerve, the acoustic nerve. It's called an acoustic neuroma, they call it, or schwannoma. It's in the seventh nerve, okay. And then they occur in the GI tract Occasionally. You know it's rarely so. Now they keep.

Speaker 1:

If you look at them, they use the word type, this type. There's no type, there's only location. That's a confusing word. Okay, on purpose, by the way, you guys, we're going back to that thing that happened at the World Health Organization. Don't be passive about this. Okay, don't be passive about this. There is one other thing they have to do, and that is they have to pass, and it'll happen within a year. Okay, we have like a year left left. They have to pass this other thing about identifying the pathogen, or something like that, and once they've done that, it's done. Okay, so we've got to.

Speaker 1:

I don't know if you understand what this means. It means whatever you're doing right now, you won't be doing, you won't be doing, be locked up in smart cities, which is a euphemism for prisons. Don't let this happen, you guys. I can't. I just like, oh, come on, everybody, there's no rehearsals anymore. This is life. We're here, life it's happening. Curtains opened. Okay, no rehearsals. This is it. Life happening now, right now, right now. Or I know when you are, where I am, where I am, okay, and so what? We've got to? Well, I don't want to be stressed out. I have so much stress already. Okay, wait about two years or whenever they have the next pandemic, and stress, anyway. I don't know, I'm not sure what to say anymore.

Speaker 1:

So anyway, so schwannoma is benign, benign, meaning it doesn't metastasize. That's what they mean when they say benign versus malignant. Malignant means it spreads, but a benign one and a malignant one, they both keep growing. Usually, benign ones grow slower, more slowly. Yes, reason is there's. There's so rare. It's just that that location in which the schwannoma occurs in the gi tract is rare. It's like 0.4 percent, not not very of all of them. Right and so. And when they do happen in the stomach, the most in the gastrointestinal tract, it's usually usually the stomach. All right Now. And of course, if it becomes malignant then it's called leomyosin. It's just their names, right Now, what's interesting is you said that at the same time they had noticed a uterine fibroid.

Speaker 1:

But the reason I say that's interesting is not that it's interesting, it's just that it's interesting that they're often confused because they cause similar symptoms of fullness and pain in the same areas and stuff like that. And then actually a schwannoma could come off of the uterine ligament, right, this holds the uterus in place, or yeah, so they can often be confused. So the question is, do you have two things going on or not? And that's it. And fused to the vena cava. You know, that's very odd, I mean. I mean it could be, of course. And yeah, if it's fused to the Vima Cava, if they told you there's a high chance of dying, well, sure, yeah, at least they were honest in what they thought. But anyway, so here's the thing Whatever is going on there, we need to do the same things that we always need to do, regardless of what's going on anywhere, and that is let's clean up, let's get rid of the garbage, let's get rid of the toxins.

Speaker 1:

Starting with the head. You go to Emma Abramayan in Glendale right away. Call her. She's a biological dentist extraordinaire. Okay, go to her Wherever you are. Go to her. Or go to IAOMT and find yourself someone near you that is certified by them, not just a member.

Speaker 1:

But you got to take care of that, because that's really like one of the main plugs that goes into this. And then we got to start. Then we got to cleanse. You're going to do a juice cleanse for eight weeks Just celery, cucumber, celery, cucumber, kale, spinach, lemon, apples, until it tastes delicious, but not too sweet, sweet enough to taste delicious. Or if you want to do another, you want to put in a different fruit or carrots or whatever it is. But that's a good combination because it gives you everything, all the nutrients you need, except for fat and fiber, and you just drink it and get your colon clean, then do someatic therapies, and then, of course, you do the parasitics, antiparasitics, all right, because we all have parasites and they contribute, we don't know how much.

Speaker 1:

So now, when we talk about parasites, we always talk about the worms, which they call helminths, because they have to come up with a word that nobody would ever think of, and there's always a little difficulty Helminth, helminth. Why would they come up? Why would they say that? What Helminth? Couldn't they say helminth, helminth, that would have been easier. No, helminth, helminth, okay, great, I love it. Okay, so it's called a helminth.

Speaker 1:

So we have helminths and we have protozoa. Those are the ones, those are the internal ones, and then you have the external ones, which are usually arachnids, like little mites and stuff like that, and their larvae and the fly larvae and all the weird stuff. So, anyway, those are the ectoparasites. We have the endoparasites. Now, what we're not looking at when we talk about parasites are the parasites that um royal raymond rife found right, which he found were nano, nano sized organisms of some sort, right and he developed and he, he measured their frequency and then sent the same frequency in and they were gone, all right. So that's what he found. That's also what weber found in munich in the 70s, at munich, in in at the in Munich in the 70s, at the Max von Heffenhofer Institute, well-respected institute. He found that and so he saw these things.

Speaker 1:

And if you look at that web, on drlodycom website, there's a webinar. It's called Parasites and I used the word. I used the word because I have to get to the people that don't know. You know that word that we don't use CFC is chronically permanent details. There's that word that hurts me to say it, so I'm not going to say it.

Speaker 1:

Let's see what's the opposite of it. The opposite is come on, you guys, help me. What's the opposite of it. The opposite is come on, you guys, help me. What's the opposite of that? All right, so now I'm going to have to look it up. I'm going to have to look it up. Interesting, so just to let you know.

Speaker 1:

Right, right, right, right, right, right. Anyway, you know they're really different. Right, because Capricorn, which is the opposite of Cancer, and Cancer is a water sign. Right and it. Right because Capricorn, which is the opposite of cancer. And cancer is a water sign, right, and it's actually, let's see, it's an initiating sign. Okay, so every sign there's either an initiator, one that establishes a season, or one that's changing the season, preparing for the new. So you'll have a water sign, initiating, a water sign, they uh, defining a season, and one that's getting changing and getting ready for the next. You, you have that in each element right there fire, water. So cancer is over here and it's initiating. And what season is it initiating? Summer, and it's water. So it's therefore variable. And what is its planet? The moon, so the opposite of Capricorn. So Capricorn is the Earth sign and it is fixed. Is it fixed? No, I think it's known for ambition and discipline and practicality. Anyway, they're very different. The opposite of cancer is Capricorn.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, what we were talking about is the name of that webinar. It's called Parasites. I don't know why I picked Capricorn, but that's what I called it. Anyway, if you go watch that, I have on there these little films that Weber found little excerpts from his. He filmed what he could see. Now they were using powerful microscopes, not the normal ones that are used in labs. You know, standard, like twenty five hundred times. You know it's magnified twenty five hundred times. These are magnified sixty,000 times, just like what royal ray mcdrive had, and so they can see things that that you can't see with the 2,500, and so they saw and he saw these things and you and you'll you'll see that.

Speaker 1:

So, anyway, so we're talking about parasites and their relationship to developing, uh, chronically fermenting cells. We have to understand that when we're always addressing both the, the worms, and the and the protozoa, but we're not addressing these because we don't, we. They haven't been identified other than royal raymond wright calling them bx, and by uh, and then weber and uh, you know, and he actually shows them going into, they love. They start out by going into red blood cells because they eat the hemoglobin. It's's great, it's full of protein and stuff. So they eat the hemoglobin and then they explode. They get so big, they explode out. There's so many of them, they break open all that. Anyway, they wind up in the lymph. So this is how he saw it, he filmed it. Okay, so those parasites are.

Speaker 1:

We can't say, do the anti-helminthics like ivermectin, fenbendazole, nyclosamide, prasequantel, pomoate, do those have any effect on these guys? Because we don't know these guys. We haven't found them. Weber did, reif did, but the rest of us, the rest of the scientific community, hasn't been able to find them. I'm sure they could if they were looking, but they don't want to find them. So they did find, of course, the calcium. This is the calcium producing microorganisms that are involved in the growth of what are called atheromas, these little plaques on the arteries. That, because that's cardiology, I mean, it's a big thing. So anyway, so we don't know.

Speaker 1:

Now, the antiprotozoals, like nitrozoxanide, tinnitusol, metronidazole. They have different actions and they may be getting them too. But since we don't know, you use both of them because you want to deal with the helminth and you want to deal with the protozoas, and perhaps you're going to get these other guys too. Now, interestingly enough, the tetracyclines, doxycycline, minocycline, that class they are good for getting intracellular organisms and they've got different mechanisms of action. So they're probably really important. And and they are important usually with uh, with people that uh wind up getting um cfcs in the bone and things like that, but they turn off different mechanisms as well. So remember, all of these drugs that are that are eliminating these organisms are also turning off the biochemical pathways in the cfc's that allow them to exist. So that's why that's, like the, the great news about it.

Speaker 1:

So the other thing I I would recommend absolutely is to have access to a some sort of frequency generator. So there are many they say this is a rife frequency generator. We have all the rife frequencies. So this is nobody has the right frequencies.

Speaker 1:

Max Fishbein of the AMA ripped who went in there, you know, and they they stole it. It may be sitting in the house of Rothschild. House of Rothschild may be sitting in the house of Rockefeller. Uh, who knows? Because you know, when I, when I first started reading about this years ago, uh, and I found out, they said they have it in the Smithsonian. Wow, I want to see that. So I went over to the Smithsonian. They didn't know what I was talking about. So it was like, um, it was kind of like going into a 7-eleven over here and asking one of the clerks uh, anything, if it's anything to do outside of that 7-eleven, that means they don't know. So so it wasn't in the smithsonian. That's why I know where it is anyway. But there's a gb4000 and there's there's a spooky two. You know, those are the two that I think are probably the best now they can get all the frequencies and the problem is because if you get the right frequency, it's gone.

Speaker 1:

Remember what rife did, just as a reminder. They were doubting him so they gave him 16 terminally ill according to the terminally ill people with CFCs at USC Medical Center, it was in 1935, 36, I don't remember somewhere around that 16, he did three times wait three minutes a day every other day, three minutes every other day, and all 16 were completely resolved, their CFCs resolved. You can imagine that that's pretty incredible. So when someone gets 100%, you can't, you cannot. There's no statistical way of saying this just happened by some odd chance. All right, it means you're onto something, something. So that's the thing. So that's why these frequencies are important.

Speaker 1:

Now, with the gb4000, um, what you do is you, there's a, there's a range of frequencies that can get these guys, and so normally what they do is they do, it's called a sweep and it's getting all the different frequencies and it's and it's when you get to one that may be on target. The person will not feel well. Usually they have a name called the Herxheimer, but whatever, that's just a name, but it might mean that. So then you say, okay, we're going to focus on this and you do that for a few sessions, and you've got to be careful with these. You don't want to do too much in one day because you'll feel exhausted, that's all, but anyway. So I would include that I would find somebody who knows what they're doing with it, who's had a lot of experience, um, and so free, you can't leave, ever, leave frequency out of these, out of this.

Speaker 1:

Okay, very, very important. And wait, let me see, I suspect, for some stuff. Anyway, I don't know how to do this, you guys, I don't know how to do this. You got you know, hey, team, I don't know how to do this, so I don't know how to do this, so I can't do that, because I know donna's on instagram, but I don't know what to do. We'll talk about that later, I guess, because I don't know what to do. We'll talk about that later, I guess, because I don't know what to do. Anyway, you guys, let's get back to what we were talking about. Oh, that's right, yeah, because I wanted to get into that. So, anyway, that's the thing about parasites. So that's one thing Now.

Speaker 1:

So remember the word benign tumor means only one thing it's not going to spread, it's not going to metastasize, but that doesn't mean it's not going to grow. So benign tumors can be just as much of a problem, obviously, because they could take up too much room and prevent other organs from functioning. And, of course, if you've got a benign tumor in the brain, you're in trouble because it's going to grow and it's got some endpoints there called the, the skull. So it's a valid distinction, okay, but not to go back to them because they're only going to make you afraid.

Speaker 1:

What you've got to do is clean up. You've got to clean up. You got to do a long juice cleanse. First of all, colonics I would do initially. I would do colonics like every other day for maybe two weeks and I would do a six minimum six week juice cleanse, just drinking juices so much that you're peeing out of all ends. That's what I would do, all right, and the colonics. And then and find yourself a certified lymphatic therapist that if you can't you can't, that's okay.

Speaker 1:

But if you do find one who's got, who is also trained not only in manual lymphatics but is trained in using other rods, right, these rods are glass tubes that are filled with noble gases, and a noble gas is like argon, krypton, neon, and what they are is they have all of the electrons in their outer orbit, meaning they're not reactive. All the rest of the elements in the periodic table have unpaired electrons and so they're not reactive. All the rest of the elements in the periodic table have unpaired electrons and so they're reactive. And that's how. That's what chemistry is. Chemistry is electrons sharing or sharing electrons. That that's basically what, what, what? All of chemistry is all right, but the but these guys they're on the last vertical column on the right side and they have all the orbits filled and they're paired and so they're happy. They're not doing anything, gold, anyway.

Speaker 1:

So these wands, they go lightly, you know, go in for a session and come out and it's like 50 percent smaller, because most of it was, or that 50 percent was that she probably didn't get it all in that one session was congestion. So you know I would do that and then I would get on all of all the stuff we talked about. You know, the carotenoids, the tocopherols, tocotrienols, which are the vitamin E's. The carotenoids are the vitamin A's and then the vitamin D overdose on vitamin D it's. You know there's an article I shared on our group with our group groups about. Oh, by the way, I was talking about the groups earlier. The CFC group, in addition to having Vanessa, darren and Donna, will have Kathy, and Kathy is a psychotherapist who's, you know, going through this whole thing herself with you guys. And these are great sessions. Everyone loves it.

Speaker 1:

It's an opportunity to have a mind enema. It's good to have a mind enema. How good do you feel after you? Do you ever have a good colonic and you get all the way down to the cecum? If you can get to the cecum and clean out the cecum, you're like reborn. Well, same thing here. If you can just let it out and then, you know, let in the good stuff. You know.

Speaker 1:

You know one of the things in life is realizing what you have, what, what you have control over and what you don't have control. And once you know that, then you don't waste your time on stuff you don't have control over. Like you know, you don't get angry at the weather. I mean, unless you have harp up in alaska, unless you're a government official and you have harp and you can change the weather. Other than that, for us regular folks, we're not not gonna, you know, get all upset over whether or not it's raining or sunny. There's nothing I can do about it.

Speaker 1:

So, anyway, you figure out what you can do. What you can't do. That's really, really important. Otherwise, imagine wasting your time all day, every day, for a month, on something you couldn't change anyway. Wouldn't that be crazy? We do it all the time Anyway. So I just want to mention Kathy, because that's a very important, uh, part of it. So all that's part of being having membership plus okay.

Speaker 1:

So now, anyway, your likelihood of dying by the way, leslie is the same as mine, hers is everyone. We're all here today, gone to maui. We don't know if we're going to be here tomorrow. Right, none of us. So get rid of their prognostication, because it's an evil event. It's evil just like the diagnosis.

Speaker 1:

Wait, listen, I want you to sit back and listen to this. This is truth. I don't know if you know, but the human brain is capable of holding about 2.5 terabytes of information. So I think all the computers in the world are one terabyte, so we can hold 2.5. Nobody has, except for you.

Speaker 1:

Know what's her name? Remember that movie? Remember that movie with what's her name? The blonde woman actress. She drinks. She somehow I think there was a drug. It's in the think, was it. There was a drug. It's in the future. Sometime there was a drug they were selling and I think she was carrying it inside and it opened up and she got. She knew everything she got. Remember remember that woman, what was it? What was it called? It was a great movie anyway. So maybe she got up to at least one or one and 0.5 parabites, but we're not Okay.

Speaker 1:

So, anyway, okay, so there's something called a perfect memory. And do you know what they say about a perfect memory? You're not going to believe it. I guess you won't believe it.

Speaker 1:

If someone is diagnosed with a perfect memory, what do you mean? Diagnosed with a perfect memory? They call it hyper, hyper, what? Hyperesthesia? I can't remember the word Hyper. You've got an excess of memory? Aha, that's a diagnosis.

Speaker 1:

So these are sick people. These are sick people. So you don't go to them. You don't go to them, you don't talk to them, you don't ask them a question, you don't interact with them, you don't rely on them, you avoid them. So always keep a pair of sneakers, tennis shoes, right, you always keep a pair. And if you see anybody with a white coat run, remember that movie Run, forrest run. That's when you run.

Speaker 1:

So, anyway, you can get better, leslie. You just have to do all this stuff. You've got a lot of work to do with us all and we're all on that same road. That word, we're on the road to health. Right, we're all on the same road. We're not battling anything. We're on the road to health. I hope that's pretty clear. Come on, where is it? I give up. I'm going to let you come to me. Where are you there? You are Okay, great, wow, how cool is that? All right?

Speaker 1:

Next question is from Angela, and she says what other reason of blood in the stool? If tests are normal, if internal hemorrhoid, can it be a sign of parasites? So, angela, I'm not sure what that means. You said they found blood in the stool and if the tests are normal. So I guess you mean blood tests, right? So what are the signs of it? Well, here's the thing Blood in the stool.

Speaker 1:

There's two ways of looking at it. One is called hematokesia and the other one is called melanoma. So hematokizia is when the blood is red blood, right. And then melanin is when it's no longer just blood, it's been oxidized and it's dark. So you have dark tarry type stools, and dark means dark is actually black. It's not even brown. It's not a dark, dark, dark, dark brown. It's a black, black, black, black black. That's what it is. Okay, because when the hemoglobin gets oxidized it becomes that color.

Speaker 1:

Now, to distinguish, if you have any red blood in your stool, fresh blood, it will have originated, okay. So, okay, you know, okay, the melanin, not the red, the dark. It took so long to get down there. It got oxidized. Now that's anything in the esophagus, the stomach and the first part of the small intestines which is called the duodenum, that would be called the upper, and by the time any bleeding there gets down to the rectum it's black. But anything distal to the duodenum so, beginning with the jejunum, then the ilium and then the colon and the rectum and anus, that would come out as red. So that would be hematochesia versus melanoma. So, whatever you had.

Speaker 1:

So how do you test for melanoma? And a lot of times people don't know, and so one of the ways they used to test I'm not sure if they still do in the hospitals and clinics I'm sure they do Anyway, there's a little square piece of cardboard and you open up and it's got two little smaller squares in it and you take a drop of this stuff. What you do is you first get a sample of the person's stool and you touch it on there, then you turn it over and you put these drops on there. If it turns blue, it's blood. That's a test. What we used to do in clinics is we'd give a person this to take home with the drops and they would test over a few days and that would say how you had that and, if so, if it was not fresh blood and they saw it, then they have bleeding. Upper gi, upper gi.

Speaker 1:

Now the, the causes of the lower right, of course our hemorrhoids, like you said, and also the um, anal fissure, fissures, so that's a little like cuts in in the anus, okay, uh, small tears, okay, and those are painful, obviously. And then there's inflammatory bowel. Inflammatory bowel is Crohn's or ulcerative colitis that the names they have. But you'll not only have blood, you'll have probably mucus and diarrhea with those. So that would be, you know, but that's another cause of the red right. And then, of course, there is diverticular. You all know what diverticular are.

Speaker 1:

We've talked about it before, but just a reminder it's when you're eating non-human food a lot and your system is going because it can't move things along. It can't move things along because there's not enough fiber. So for the carnivores out there you need fiber. Oh my God, don't tell what's his name that guy. Who's that doctor? Remember I did that. Did you see that? Did I? Yeah, I don't know if you saw that that was called up veggies are not poison, or something where I commented on this guy's absurd mad talking, saying that we're apex predators and that we're, uh, we don't need plants at all. And he's like what you didn't just say, that did you? Oh, you Not only said it, you believe it, oh my God. Anyway, but anyway, fiber is just one of the things you won't get. But the fiber allows things to move along.

Speaker 1:

And then the gastrointestinal tract, peristalsis, moves. If you don't have the fiber it's going kind of like a. You know it can't get anywhere. It's just because peristalsis is right where it's a sequential move, uh, constriction of the tube, um, and that pushes things along. But this, it can't push it. So you do that and you wind up getting little, little pockets, and those pockets are called diverticuli. And then, if you get something, the pockets go inward in that way, up into the wall, and they get something in it and then little microorganisms start colonizing in there because there's food, uh, it's what's called an infection and it's called, and all things that are infections have the uh suffix itis. So it becomes diverticulitis, not diverticulosis.

Speaker 1:

Osis always means condition of it's just a condition. Itis means inflammation. Inflammation doesn't mean infection, it means inflammation. One of one of the causes of inflammation is what they call an infection, which is colonization. So, um, yeah, so anyway, that's what diverticular conditions are.

Speaker 1:

So what happens is these little diverticulite can bleed, and that would cause it to. And then the other possible thing that there's a thing called angio dysplasia, where the blood vessels going are kind of chaotic and they, so they can bleed. It's like I don't know if you've ever seen a spider angioma. It looks like a, it looks like a, it's got all these little lines going out of it, right, it's got a central part with all these lines coming up, and if you have one on your skin, you can press on it and it'll white out, and then you let go and it turns red again and spider angiomas. But if you have that kind of thing going on, so it's an angio-dysplasia.

Speaker 1:

And then there's ischemic colitis. Ischemic colitis could be where a blood vessel was blocked off for one reason or another and there was no blood flow to a particular area of the colon with the lower GI tract, and that part of the colon died. Because it was called an infarct Again another word, they couldn't have come up with a better word Infarct I-N-F-A-R-C-T. I was like Pelman infarct, they're sick, these guys are sick, so anyway. So that infarcted area is dead, and then, of course, you're going to have problems. You're going to wind up with bleeding, all right, ischemia can cause it.

Speaker 1:

And then there's infectious chlamydia from sexually transmitted conditions, right, and the sexually transmitted cause bleeding, of course are gonorrhea, um, syphilis, hsv. You know all these guys, all the nasty ones, right? So chlamydia, yeah, yeah, okay, so those can do it. And then, of course, there are other infections around that area. So with E coli, these weird E coli, they're like mutated ones.

Speaker 1:

And then the Clostridium difficile which we've you might know of, if you've been in the hospital and they give you a ton of antibiotics and you don't have an appendix, you might get something called that Clostridium difficile, which is another organism that's an opportunistic organism. So there's many reasons why there could be some blood coming out. And I don't know if you're having hematokesia, or if you're having melanoma. So yeah, there are other ones. And can it be parasite? Of course parasites will, will, could do that if they were in the lower part, um, only. But usually, you know, you know you'd have to have, you'd have that the, the, the, the, the, the larva in the into the lining and and not them, the adults. So, but yeah, I mean, it's absolutely possible, but I wouldn't, I wouldn't consider that first on the list.

Speaker 1:

However, whatever you're going to do to clean up part of that needs to be a parasite clean. So, for everybody, whatever we're doing, we've got to do parasite cleanses. Yeah, yeah, I've got my. Here in this horrible third world country where we're really suffering, we just go into the pharmacy and say can I have some? Okay, oh, you're out of it. Can you order a box for me? Sure, okay, how about Nyclosomib? Oh, here we are. Proziquanto, we'll have to order that one. Okay, nidazoxanide, tinnitazole, okay, so that's that. Oh, by the way, the thing that everyone's always concerned about is is the bleeding due to CFCs, and of all the rectal bleeding, the cfcs is 3.4 percent of it. So it's very, very small. It's more than the no, but I'm just saying it's. It's one of the least likely, but they make a big deal about it now.

Speaker 1:

So I would recommend that you do a parasite cleanse and all that stuff and don't have to figure out what it is or where it came from. You don't have to. Here's the beauty of being of, of, of being a right on the on the healing paradigm and, uh, be on the road to health, is that you don't need to wallow in the quagmire of G, because if you wallow in the quagmire of disease, because if you wallow in the quagmire of disease, you're gonna get dirty. Instead of that, what you do is you realize there are no diseases, there's just adaptive physiology. So what I'm gonna do is balance my physiology. And what do I do that? I'm gonna clean out the stuff. So all the stuff that we do in part of that is a parasite cleanse. So don't there's no, it All right now.

Speaker 1:

The next question is from Sean, and I sent the message a while back, figured I would give it at least one last shot. I really need help with parasites. I saw a video on Dr Lodi that gave me hope that there is someone out there that understands. Please get back to me, even if it's no. Thanks, sean. Okay, sean, I hope you're listening. Someone out there that understands. Please get back to me, even if it's no. Thanks, sean. Okay, sean, I hope you're listening. Sean, please listen. If you're not listening, somebody tell sean to watch this because it'll be recorded on instagram, facebook and all that stuff. So, um, it'll be archived. But, sean and anybody else who might have similar questions, go to my website, where that must be where you ask the question.

Speaker 1:

But on there there is the three groups and one is the parasite group. Why wouldn't you join that? You join the parasite group. Then we will talk about your situation directly Me and you talk and we'll interact and you'll hear everybody else's and you'll learn a lot and you'll figure this out and you'll get protocols. So join. There is a way of doing it, because I can no longer do consoles because it's not physically possible. There's too many people. It's just not physically possible. That's why we have these groups, all right, so because not? If I didn't sleep, I couldn't do it. If I was 24 hours a day just doing, I couldn't, because there's way too many people. So that's why we have these groups. Okay, sean, please come join the group. You'll like it. You'll learn a lot more than you ever expected.

Speaker 1:

Okay, paula, I'm 69 and I was diagnosed. You know it was. This is pain, I get it. Thank you, my chair here.

Speaker 1:

I was diagnosed with stomach CFCs with linitis plastica this past January. I refused standard treatment, which is chemo and stomach removal. Yeah, you got a problem? Okay, well, they're going to cut it out, that'll solve it. So I refused standard treatment and opted to treat holistically diet, supplement, exercise. Yeah, good, I've developed cachexia and it is worsening. I started 124 pounds and I'm now down to 100 pounds. How can I reverse this and what is your best advice for a protocol of this type of cfc? I have not found the practitioner in my area to guide me.

Speaker 1:

Unfortunately, paula, in the, whatever area you're in is the is the area that they don't exist. I know that. I get that. So, anyway, yeah, it's tragic, but anyway, uh, linitus plastica is a stupid name again, as they like. So what it means is that the lining, the inside lining of the stomach, gets, uh is like, involved, diffususely involved. It's not like a single tumor anywhere, it's just the lining in the inside of the stomach. And linitis it comes because if you look at it under a microscope, it looks like linen. You know it looks like fiber. Anyway, that's just a name.

Speaker 1:

If you're developing cachexia, okay, so you're 124. Now you're 100, okay, so I don't know how tall you are, anything like that, but I'm assuming that that's a significant loss, um, for your height, and that you're getting actually muscle atrophy and things like that, right, and you're losing type 2 muscle fibers. So cachexia, for everyone who might not know is when you it's so when you're fasting let's say you're doing a water fast your body will be surviving on all the energy, would be surviving on fat. So fat is metabolized into ketones and these ketones are used to fuel the body and you're in a metabolic state called ketosis. When you run out of fat and you're not eating, then you start to consume muscles and organs and that's called cachexia, or it's also called starvation. So there's a difference between starvation and fasting. Okay, so now it sounds like, if you're pretty sure, if this is what's happening you have used all your fat stores and that includes the fat around our organs called visceral fat. So you've used all that and now your body is actually consuming the muscles and organs. All right, so well. So first of all, we have to we have to address that as well as everything else. So everything else. I'm hoping you already went to a biologic I don't know where you are, but find Emma Abrama in Glendale, california. And, if not, try to find another biological dentist, i-a-o-m-t certified, not just a member. Some of the best you know. How do we deal with cachexia if that's truly what you have? Some of the best you know? How do we deal with cachexia if that's truly what you have With cachexia, one of the amazing ways to deal with it, which is going to be quite shocking to people, is glutamine.

Speaker 1:

So glutamine is, as you know, an amino acid. It's also one of the second, it's the second favorite fuel, or only fuel. There are only two fuels for CFCs right, and that is glucose and glutamine. For cfcs right, and that is glucose and glutamine. But glutamine also is necessary for the body to make other molecules like proteins, because the glutamine has the nitrogen, the amino group you know, to make nucleic acids, which are dna and rna's a lot of really important stuff and also use. It also makes available its carbons for molecular biosynthesis right, and same with glucose. Carbons are available for biosynthesis in addition to fuel, but glutamine is also the primary fuel source for the lymphocytes, which are your T cells, your B cells, your helper cells, your natural killers, all those that you need.

Speaker 1:

So if you were to not get it, if it was possible, it's not possible to eliminate glutamine. Not possible because it's a non-essential amino acid, meaning we make it. All we need is the nine essentials and then we're going to make the other 11, and glutamine is one of those other 11. So we're going to make it anyway. Whether you don't have to eat it, you'll make it, so your body makes it. It Anyway, you don't have to eat it, you'll make it, so your body makes it. It's the most abundant amino acid in the body anyway, but it's the primary fuel source for your intestines. So for them to be strong and be able to digest and absorb, you need glutamine. So that's why it helps. It helps that and it also feeds the lymphocytes and while you're feeding the lymphocytes, they're strong and they can help as well. You understand? So it's really a good good and it's proven in the literature.

Speaker 1:

I don't say things unless I know it. I've read studies on it. So glutamine is used very much for cachexia. The other thing you need to get is we need to give you. You got to make sure you're getting all of the macronutrients and the micronutrients. You got to be getting them all and you're going to be healing the gut, so you're going to not only need the glutamine and the aloe. Aloe, there's glutalamine, I think that's made by Selcor glutalamine. You want to get acromantia in there, those somewhere here. Acromantia, it's a microorganism that likes to fix tight junctions. All right, so now you know so doing all of that.

Speaker 1:

And then I would do also a rectal infusion of bifidobacter bifidus, which is another microorganism, and bifinate you can get. I think it's called bifinate and it comes in a powder and you mix it in water and make a slush. Then you draw up with a syringe right and then on the end of the syringe you put a little. Then you draw up with a syringe right and then on the end of the syringe you put a little. Um, if you find a urinary catheter and just cut it because they're really long, cut it and just put a little tube on there and then when you're lying down, you insert it into your rectum and you push in those that, those microorganisms. Then you un, un, unloosen the syringe, pull up some water and then put that in just to clean them out, because there's a lot of it got stuck in the tube.

Speaker 1:

So you put these microorganisms in there and you're using the acromantia and you're taking oral probiotics as well, and you're taking glutamine and aloe and the acromantia and then you want to make sure you're eating. So you're eating. You want to eat fats. You need fats, okay. So that means chia seed pudding, you need ground up flax seeds with in a nut milk, with, uh, broccoli sprouts two handfuls of broccoli sprouts, and you make that and strawberries, whatever you want. You got to get your fats in there, okay, because you've got to make fat like 60 percent diet, 70 percent fats, fats, healthy fats okay. The rest, you're going to get everything that's plant is either protein, it's either amino acid, which is protein, is amino acid. So it's either amino acid or carbohydrate, and you need carbohydrates.

Speaker 1:

By the way, carbohydrates are one of the three macronutrients that we need to be alive, so don't think carbs are bad. In fact, there are carbohydrates that are not metabolizable that are part to be alive. So you don't think carbs are bad. In fact, there are carbohydrates that are not metabolizable that are part of our structure, glycoproteins that are in our cells, and you know, single mind. I mean, carbs are also part of everything that are not metabolized. If they're metabolized, those are usually the monosaccharides, like you know glucose, fructose, galactose.

Speaker 1:

So anyway, you got to do that and got to get, you know, you got to get your vitamin C, d, a up, your melatonin up. You got to do everything we do all the time. You've got to do it on right away and you've got to erase whatever they said. Well, erase whatever they said. Ok, all right.

Speaker 1:

So now, as far as the what, what's going on in your stomach too. So let's say that you, most of your stomach, is taken up by this process going, which means the food is going to go, it won't be able to have the opportunity of the stomach's contribution to digestion. Okay, so what you do then is, at that point you would say I'm going to get, make everything, make sure that everything is kind of almost like in a smoothie form for now, which is your chia porridge, which is your flaxseed, broccoli, sprout, nut milk smoothie and nut butters, seed butters, raw, and then you're going to have blended soups, spinach and avocado, delicious blend. You blend them up like four avocados, two bunches of spinach, blend them up, put in a little bit of lemon and you've got a delicious, delicious soup. A little sea salt on it, you know. So you want to get things like that. You can take broccoli of raw almond butter, mix it up and water and it's delicious soup. So you can make soups and stuff like that, so that that doesn't really require mechanical uh, movement of the stomach.

Speaker 1:

You know, the stomach also contributes other things, um, you know, but usually in for the digestion of protein. So you know, don't worry about it. You just get it past the stomach into the duodenum, which is where all the real work of digestion happens, and then you absorb down. You absorb some of the duodenum, but most of the jejunum and the ileum. So you've got all that going. So you'll be fine. You'll be fine. You just got to do this.

Speaker 1:

I hope you're listening, I hope you're there. Join our group, paula. Join our group. Join the C group DrLodycom. Join the CFC group.

Speaker 1:

Connie, can you email me the list and dosages for parasite protocol? Can you prescribe them? Thanks, okay. So here's the thing, connie, again, just like with, was it Sean? Yeah, drlodycom, there's a parasite group. Join it. There's a parasite webinar that there's parasites in capricorn cancer. What watch that? And so there's basic fundamental dosages, but all of this depends. There's not one size fits all, so we have to, you know. That's why if you join the groups, we can talk about you. But but basically I'm depending on what you're talking about. I don't know. When you say parasites, it's a wide range of possible situations, so I don't know what to say to you exactly. So, all right, okay, connie and Sean, I hope you guys are listening. This is Nicole.

Speaker 1:

Hello, my husband, 63, just received news this morning. Three of his 12 biopsies are stage 1 and 2 CFCs. They said biopsy was necessary because his father passed from prostate CFCs. That was as good as any reason. I guess we need to biopsy this because your father had a problem, so we need to biopsy First of all. That makes no sense on any level. But anyway, I just saw your video on why biopsies are not recommended.

Speaker 1:

My husband, six foot, 185 pounds, walks daily, eats a pretty healthy diet, except for the occasional restaurant. When asked what we can do or supplements to take, the doctor said we will do genetic testing and follow up in three months. One thing you learned from that visit, nicole, with this doctor, is you learned one place in the world never to go again, never go back. Let's not even get into his absurdities.

Speaker 1:

Okay, let's say you're doing a digital exam, right, that's a finger, a finger in the rectum, on the prostate, and you find a lump there. What could it be? A lump, not the whole thing. The whole thing's enlarged. We know it's an enlarged prostate, but there's a lump and it's hard. What could it be? Nothing else, nothing else, nothing else. So you don't need to biopsy it. Furthermore, if they biopsy it and they find out that it is like they did, then they're going to want to rip your husband apart, cut it out, burn him.

Speaker 1:

So, anyway, going to do genetic testing to find out what you want to know, what they want to find out. Why do they want to do genetic testing? You know, there's one reason, only one reason, only one reason, and that is what. What do I hear it? So they can justify a sales recommendation. You see, ever since they defined the genetic, the human genome it was the early 2000s they finally did it the human genome project was finished, yay. Now thousands and thousands of drugs targeting these different things on the genome. You know, if you put Mengele together with you know, I mean the guy that made, for instance. Put them together and, fauci, you'll come up with where we're at today. It's madness.

Speaker 1:

Ok, so genetics are how could we have a gene to develop CFCs evolutionarily? Why Evolutionary wise, an evolutionary perspective? Then we know that the fundamental precept concept is called survival of the fittest, right. So survival of the fittest says that those organisms that are getting sick and dying early, et cetera, will not be able to reproduce as much and that eventually you'll wind up with a group that don't. So genes that are defective like that, if they existed, will fall out of the pool. It's called natural selection. Natural selection, survival of the fittest. That's the fundamental rule of this absurd concept that what's his name? Came up with.

Speaker 1:

He didn't come up with it, he's just the one that got credit for it, but it was talked about for a long time, so over the time that we've been around on this planet. By the way, it's a planet, it's not a disc. I know there's people out there right now are going to disconnect. I'm out of here, man. This guy thinks that we live on a planet, I'm out of here, and he thinks we shouldn't eat dead animals. Unbelievable. I'm so old school. You know what I mean. Old school. Yeah, I go way back to Adam and Eve, old school. Adam and Eve, genesis 129. I guess that's old school. Anyway, I don't want to go too far off that, okay. So here's what I want to say.

Speaker 1:

You tell your husband and you understand that you've, you've done enough. You did the biopsy, all that, and you know that what's going on. And plus, uh, your wonderful doctor said he's just going to wait for three months and then do genetic testing. And, uh, you know, you do genetic testing. Suppose he finds out that you, according to their thinking that, oh, you've got the gene for prostate CFCs. So now, if you guys have a son, the minute the son is born, just remove his prostate and we're done, yeah, a newborn prostatectomy. Get that out of there. This kid will be fine.

Speaker 1:

It's beyond insane. But what's insane about this insanity is that nobody knows it's insane. Everybody thinks it's the real. They think it's real, this is real. No, it's not real. It's not only not real, it's not real.

Speaker 1:

So what you got to do, what your husband has to do, you should do it with him, because it's called the secondhand health. It's better than secondhand smoke. Secondhand health is when you have someone who's restoring their health, on the journey to health, and you want to support them, so you do it with them, and so you guys do everything. I talked about dentistry, biological You've heard me say it a thousand times. Do that. Join the group, join the CFC group. Do this, take care of it yourself.

Speaker 1:

The doctor can't walk this journey for you. It's your journey. You can walk it and I'm going to tell you how to walk it. I'm going to be your guide, but I can't walk it for you either. You're going to walk this. This is your journey. You got tapped on the shoulder by God. God said hey, the path you're on is a little shorter than you'd like. Make a right-hand turn. You make that right-hand turn and it goes. I'm telling you All. Right, now, here we go with. Who is this? Wait a minute, this is who. Let's see. That was Nicole. Now we're with Dr Adrian.

Speaker 1:

I would like to get a consultation with Dr Loda. I have very difficult chronic fatigue, long history of Lyme patient. I would treasure the chance of a consult with this patient. So I'm a little confused. So, doctor, do you have a patient that you wanted me to consult with? I guess it sounds like that. Yeah, anyway, I'm not doing like individual consults anymore, as I said, there's way too many. But please join the group and you can join the health and healing group.

Speaker 1:

But Lyme's chronic, chronic fatigue, all that sort of thing we're talking about basically. Fundamentally, fatigue means we don't. I don't have any energy. I don't have any energy. There's something at going on with my mitochondria. Somehow the mitochondria are not producing enough energy. That's where the energy is produced In reality. What we need to do is go. I know this must be frustrating to many people, but we're going to do the same thing Start with the head, just cleaning out the parotid.

Speaker 1:

Now, lyme's is a very strange phenomenon. You know the Lyme is a spirochete-like syphilis and they played around with it in Bethesda, maryland, at the government bioweapons production facility and many people have been affected by that. So that's one thing. And when we think of different, you know, usually with Lyme's the treatments are always just a multitude of antibiotics and stuff like that, because it becomes a military offensive against this organism. And really we've got to always remember that an organism can only exist if it has the proper milieu in which to exist. If it does like, a fish cannot exist. There's no water, all right, so. So we've got to work on the milieu. You've got to work on the milieu as well as that. So you make the milieu inhospitable to the organism and it can't be there, take away its food and other things as well. So anyway, I'm just talking broadly and generally, the other things with limes and these sort of things is again frequency Rife.

Speaker 1:

Gb4000, let me just tell you something here, doctor. When I first ran into the GB4000, I was over here at Life Co in Phuket here, and a woman came from Australia who had chronic fatigue for I forget how many years and she had spent a ton of money in Europe and then in America to no avail. So she was back in Australia and she actually needed. She had a cot, like a little bed in her kitchen, so when she would make her food she'd have to sleep first before she could eat it, because she had to have more energy and then she would eat it. Things were to that extent, anyway. So she came to LifeCo and just at that same time I had a friend of mine who was a physician in the UK and he had a GB4000.

Speaker 1:

And now I always was under the it was my belief or my understanding, that nobody had a real rifle machine, because if they did they wouldn't come to me or if they'd be extremely famous. So here's what happened. This guy said, okay, I'll treat her. So he gave her one treatment. It takes about an hour and a half or whatever. She went into a room, you know, because the life clothes. We had all these little bungalows around the clinic Beautiful place and she didn't come out for four days. On the fifth day she emerged completely healthy and has been that way since. I've never seen such a thing. During those four days she was really sick. She had what's called a Herxheim. So when I saw that I said I guess that's what turned me on to the GB4000.

Speaker 1:

And so in At Lifeco we were cleansing all of that stuff. So we've got to do it all and frequencies and the parasite, all of it, all of it. We can do it. So if you join the group you or her, the patient, or you join the group, we can deal one-on-one specifically, not one-on-one, but everybody will be on the group. But anyway we can deal specifically with your situation. So please join Now.

Speaker 1:

This is what's the real story about CFCs and sugar, even from fruits. Is sugar a fuel for CFCs, regardless of its sources, how to reduce and eliminate inflammation of the prostate, to stop excessive urination, especially at nighttime. Zambi, n-z-a-m-b-e Zambi, zambi I'm going to assume the N is silent. I just call it Zambi. If it was Zambi it would be oh, so Zambi. The real story about CFCs and sugar? That's a good question. I'm sure everybody's asking that.

Speaker 1:

And the real story is this the fundamental metabolic hallmark of CFCs is called the Warburg effect. It's also called aerobic glycolysis, and you can always change the word glycolysis, but you can exchange it or it's synonymous with fermentation. So aerobic fermentation. Fermentation usually takes place when there's no oxygen, but when it's taking place whether there's oxygen or not, that's called the Warburg effect, aerobic fermentation, glycolysis, and that's all based upon sugar, glucose. So yes, absolutely, it needs glucose. You know what else needs glucose? Every other cell in your body.

Speaker 1:

And if you were to say I'm going to do beyond a ketogenic diet, I'm going to drink just water. Because if I drink just water, not only am I not getting any glucose, but I'm not getting any glutamine, whoa. So there we go, it's going to start. So we do that. And on day 40 or 41, because we're checking every day, but on the day we do a finger stick just to see what your glucose is. I haven't had anything to eat in 41 days. Your glucose is still normal.

Speaker 1:

Why is that? Because we need it for biosynthesis fuel, et cetera, and if we're not going to get it in our mouth, our body is going to extract it from our body. So that lady was talking about cachexia. That's what's happening. Same with the glutamine You'll never run out of glutamine. So the whole idea of it is that.

Speaker 1:

So that's the real story is that, yeah, that's the fuel, one of the fuels, but it also is a necessary part of life. You need the carbon, the carbons from the molecule, and you need the fuel because none of your body will work without it. So if you successfully eliminated all the glutamine and all the glucose from your body, you would be dead. So you can't do it, you don't want to do it. So what you want to do really is you want to restore balance. You need carbs, you need glucose, you need fructose, you need galactose, you need these things, but you need them in proper balance. So that's the whole thing. It's balance.

Speaker 1:

Am I getting enough? I'm getting the proper amount of it? And how do you get it? You get it from natural sources, from plants. You know spinach as glucose, avocados have me this glucose everywhere except in, maybe, muscle fiber, even brain, I think you're going to find some glucose Heart organ, yeah so, and as I said, if you don't eat it, your body will make it out of you. So you need to not worry about that as much. What you need to concern yourself with is how do I get enough fats? Why do I need fats? Because fats are.

Speaker 1:

They form the membranes around cells and the membranes around the little organelles inside of the cells, and those membranes are how life exists the membranes on the outside of the cell that keeps the cell, that allows the cell to be a distinct entity from all the other cells and to have its individual little light universe. There is this it's called a phospho bilayer. In other words, it's a phosphate and a fatty acid Phosphate and fatty, so they're phospholipids, and when you put them in water, these parts that are lipid soluble will be attracted, and then the two phosphates will be on the end because they conduct charge. So you have two conductors separated by an insulator, and that's the definition of a capacitor. The capacitor holds charge. So, in addition to our membranes interacting with the environment in which they are, which is called the extracellular fluid, and with all of their receptors and spores and all the things, all the apparatus that they have to interact with and transmit messages to the nucleus and to the other organelles inside the cell. In addition to that, it is holding in the charge that allows it to be alive. And we all need a specific charge, and the charge is about minus 56 kilojoules per mole or minus 22 millivolts for health.

Speaker 1:

But when you have CFC's and stuff like that, you've got to get up to 70 millivolts. And in order to do that, you've got to have some really strong, healthy membranes. And how do you get that? By eating fats, not bad fats. They throw a low fat diet. You should have a no fat, bad fat diet, unhealthy fat. But for the healthy fats you need to get over that bridge. You've got to get 60 70 percent of your diet so that you can, because, remember, you're making 37 million new cells per second and each cell needs a membrane. And inside the cells, the nucleus needs a membrane, the mitochondria need a membrane, lysosomes need a membrane.

Speaker 1:

Reticular, endo, endo, reticular plasma yeah, I forget how to say. Uh, whatever that is. Um, they all need membranes. Okay, that's what's going on. And if you've got those membranes and you can hold in that charge, if you can get up to minus 70 millivolts, if they're got, they can't exist.

Speaker 1:

That's a fundamental issue you need to do. That means you've got enough. You've got enough. What do you have in there? You have a charge. What is that charge? The charge is basically electrons which are carried by atp. So the energy is in there. But you can't hold that much energy without the proper plasma membrane. You've got to get the membranes, that's it. That's it. So the goal is how do I get electrons in there and how do I stop losing electrons? How do I get that? I need this. Good, healthy fats. That's what you worry about, Not glucose and all this stuff. Don't eat sugar, don't eat candy, don't eat ice cream, I mean, don't eat those kinds of things. But if you're going to get glucose in your healthy foods, which are plants, fruits, plants, seeds, nuts.

Speaker 1:

Clifford, can I combine DMSO with ivermectin and fenbendazole? I would be see. This is where it'd be very helpful to be on a group. So I could ask you do you mean topically, because DMSO is really good to drive things into the body? If you mean orally. Nah, I mean I wouldn't drink DMSO. You can get it IV, you can get it topically, but yeah, so I'm not sure what you mean. Angel, I'm trying to get all the items on the protocol Dr Lodi has mentioned, but the states are super expensive. Any way to get best deals and list of places with a reliably sourced medications, go to drlodycom and you'll find that stuff. And you'll find it on the webinar about parasites on the website fa at hello at drlodycom, ask for fa and she can help you also get and I know it's very expensive in the states, but so she's got access to so she can help you with that.

Speaker 1:

All right then, eric, is ivermectin, vendazole in general, considered safe for patients with three or more heart stents and a recent bile stent due to pancreatic tumor? Also, would blood thinners have any adverse interaction with ivermectin and metazole? Eric, ivermectin and metazole is safe for pancreatic, number one and regardless if you've had stents, there's no relevance with stents in the heart or the bile duct and blood thinners. But it sounds like there's a lot more going on. You're probably taking a lot of medications. I don't know if you're getting chemo, if you had medications or what. So there's a lot of stuff going on. If you're on blood thinners, that means you had a blood clot somewhere and they probably got you on uh. If you're home, they have you on one of them oral medications and uh, it has no relationship to these.

Speaker 1:

You can take this ivermectin metazole, which you should, along with the nitroxanide. You should take those because that is part of the whole thing and they're also going to turn off this whole process. But you need to take a ton of vitamin D three K, two D three slash K to take a ton of that. Just go on the, eric. You know, when you ask and other people ask these individual questions about specific things, you're missing the whole picture. It's none of these individual things, it's the whole.

Speaker 1:

You've got to do it all. This is a, the curtains open, it's showtime. There's no rehearsals. You can't get it wrong now. Ok, you've got to do it right and you've been preparing all your life. You're ready to do it. So what you're going to do is you're going to join the cfc group, eric. You're going to join the cfc group. I would definitely join the cfc so you can get. I have a basic plan available and all that sort of thing that you can see how you can apply it, we can talk about it and this get you on the right road. And there are all these other people that are doing it, that are on there with you and they'll share it with you. You've got to join that, okay, and you'll see that.

Speaker 1:

Any individual questions? So if I were just to say to you no, there's no problem, imagine I just said, okay, yeah, ivermectin and Thymenzel is safe with heart stents, biliary stents and with blood thinners. That and with blood thinners. That's not all you needed to hear, right? And that's not all I need to know. I need to know are you taking other medications? What's your liver function? There's a lot I need to know. Did you get the shot, the bioweapon shot? Did any of you get the? You should, whenever you send a question, mention please whether or not you have been got the bioweapon shot or not, because I need to know that. That's very important.

Speaker 1:

All right, and next one is the top part's cut off. I don't know if it is it Lurie L-U-R-Y. Anyway, I'm 64 and diagnosticated with lymphoma stage 4A, systemic ALK negative. A systemic ALK negative. Alcl with multiple cutaneous lesions. Fish demonstrates presence of DUSP22. No TP63.

Speaker 1:

Alternative treatments IVs and Celsius 42 local regional hypothermia and six sessions of chemo Cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, brendazole and brentuximab. Last CT looks good and new PET scan on June 4th. I need your help with ivermectin plus mybendazole protocol so that it won't come back. Oh, it's Dan and Lurie. Okay, yeah, one second. All right back back, back, dan. They've got you.

Speaker 1:

You've even all of their nonsense, whatever it is that they think they have uncovered. I want you to understand something it means nothing. It has no relevance in any universe, on any planet, in any dimension that either James Kirk or Spock are aware of. There might be other dimensions either James Kirk or Spock are aware of, there might be other dimensions, but according to them. What I'm saying here is that none of this stuff matters, because you know why. They can't do anything anyway.

Speaker 1:

Whether or not there was TP63 or there wasn't, or the presence of DUSP22 or not, they still can't do anything. So those things mean nothing, mean nothing. Once again, mean what? Nothing. So they've got you chasing the looking at the reflection of a drop on the wing of an insect on the tree in the forest instead of looking at the forest. So, anyway, what they've done is what the same thing they would have done. If they didn't have all that, they would have given you chemotherapy.

Speaker 1:

So now and then they've got you believing that it's gone. It is gone, and so you want to know how you can prevent it from coming back. It's not gone, there's nothing. The process that was going on in your lymph nodes, whatever caused it, is still there. And if you gave it a haircut you gave it a haircut it's going to come back because you haven't turned off the process. Now the mebenzazole and the vibramectin will help in eliminating stem cells and it will help in turning up the process. But if you don't unplug the source, if you don't remove the source, if you're still feeding it, no matter what you do, it's going to be back, it's going to continue. I mean, it's not that it leaves, it's just that it's shrunken down to being unobservable, and that's what they call remission. And then, oh, it came back. And it didn't't come back. It never went away.

Speaker 1:

So you have got to be doing all the things. You can't. I hope you understand that. I hope you understand. Join the group. Cfc group drlodycom. We've got to because listen, it's great, I'm glad that there's none there now. They're all gone. That's fantastic. If they're all gone. That's fantastic. I mean you can't see any of those. That means you have stem cells and you don't have any large masses, which is cool, but you've also got poison from the chemo and the chemo has promoted all the six steps necessary for successful metastasis. So it's on the road to coming back or to being seen again.

Speaker 1:

So right now is the perfect time for you to clean up and do what you've got to do, and let's keep things unobservable. You can do it starting with the same thing I hope you've been listening this whole time the head, bio-dentistry cleansing. And then, when we get past all of that, when we're doing that, we're also going to do intravenous vitamin C. We're going to do intravenous ozone. We're going to do other therapies that that are beneficial for your healthy cells and lethal for the CFC's perfect instead of lethal for everything, like chemo is.

Speaker 1:

So, instead of it being a cytotoxic therapy, it's a metabolic therapy, meaning that understanding the metabolism of CFCs, you put the CFCs in a situation that they can't metabolize, but healthy cells can because they have the right enzymes. It's a metabolic therapy. It's not a destructive therapy. Okay, very important, but you've got to clean everything out. And, yes, the iron-mectin bend is very important, but you've got to clean everything out. And, yes, the Ironman is all important, so is Niklosomite and Dan. Please join the CFC group so we can do that, help you because you're ready. You're ready. You've gone through whatever they've done to you. Now you're ready. It looks like you're still standing, still ready to go. Let's do it. Let's take your energy and your motivation and let's go to the finish line. Let's do it okay, okay, irina, do you think panchakarma in india, the authentic one is a good approach to detoxification of the body?

Speaker 1:

For this condition, lung cfcs my husband had no biopsy, only contrast ct showing one enlarged nodule and tumor in the right lung and one oncomarker, such as an MRI delivery, abdominal ultrasound. Everything's okay. We need to add vitamin E. One question to my husband Worrying about to take melatonin supplements, as Google is saying it's toxic.

Speaker 1:

Please, I didn't just read that. You don't really think Google tells the truth? They don't. Come on, melatonin is toxic 1,000 milligrams a day. No one's taking 1,000 milligrams a day 180, 200, 300, but not 1,000. Blind people make melatonin all day because they're in the dark all day and they have very high melatonin levels and they get less CFCs than us who can see melatonin levels and they get less cfcs than us who can see.

Speaker 1:

Melatonin cleans up free radicals. It quenches the hydroxyl radical, the uh subroxide radical, it um stimulates natural killer cells, t-cells. It does many, many things. So good, good, good, I'm glad. Okay, so join the inner circle. Good, I'm glad you're gonna do that, ire, irina. Okay. So now the prostate exam. Let's see where we are. Oh, that was normal. Okay, so what you're saying is everything else is fine, but it's just the lung CFCs, right, okay. So now, so what is the question? Really? You got to do the whole thing.

Speaker 1:

Oh, your question was about Panchakarma. Yeah, yeah, yeah, panchakarma, it's really. I mean, you know, panchakarma is ancient, it's Ayurvedic and it's pretty amazing. You know, there's a couple things they do. So Panchakarma really means five processes, five ways to go, right. So you know usually what they'll do before they begin that five detoxification process. They do two, you know, one is called Sneha and the other one's called Zvedana, right, and these are two different, you know, one is a massage and the other one is they use this, you're kind of in this thing and they have a herbal steam and you might do that for a week or so. Anyway, so they have ways of preparing it where what they say it does is it just kind of gets your body ripened and ready for the cleansing right and the cleanse there's five basic cleanses of in panchakarma. Okay, and you know, sometimes they might induce vomiting. They might, and they can clean the colon. There's different things that they do. So it's it's pretty amazing, it's ancient. Uh, absolutely highly recommend it.

Speaker 1:

The beautiful thing about ayurvedic medicine is that tcm, traditional chinese medicine and all the indigenous medicines, instead of trying to fix something, they're trying to restore balance. That's what they're trying to do because they know that. They know that there's nothing to fix. You're just out of balance. It's really the way to look at things. So I would definitely absolutely do it.

Speaker 1:

Panchakarma means five actions and they do these five actions once they've ripened you. So absolutely, but that and all the other stuff we're talking about you've got to do. But then if you're going to go to Panchakarma, make sure you go to a place that is the real deal, not a sales thing. Okay, there's always those kinds of people everywhere in India as well. So, yeah, but melatonin is not only not dangerous, it's necessary and you've heard it before, right of an ADC iodine with thyroid to balance the adrenals, balance melatonin and then all the other stuff, and it works. It works. It works if you are, but that includes freeing your mind.

Speaker 1:

So one of the things you might do in India is really get into learning how to find that place inside of you that is eternal, all right. So remember, we're in a whirlpool of illusion and we're circling eternity, illusion, circling eternity, illusion, circling eternity. And the only hesitancy about that is that the price of admission into eternity is us Got to leave that out. So that's our vanity and all that that keeps us out of eternity. Anyway, so that's it for today. And sawadika namaste namaskar. And that's it for today. And sawadika namaste namaskar, and aloha, everyone, see you next week. And oh, aloha, I keep talking about that. Wait, how do I do this? I do this that. Oh, okay, don't do it. Where is it? There we go. Yeah, there you guys are. Okay, cool, aloha, everyone.

People on this episode