2019 Podcasts

305: How To Build Muscle While Fasting

Episode 305: How To Build Muscle While Fasting

Author, public speaker, and biohacking coach Siim Land joins me today. He has written several books about intermittent fasting, autophagy, ketosis, and resistance training. We are having an important conversation about how fasting and muscle growth can go hand in hand. There are a lot of common questions and concerns about this topic; from finding that perfect balance of mTOR and autophagy to how much protein is too much – this is an interview you won’t want to miss.

More about Siim Land:
Siim Land is an author, public speaker and biohacking coach. Despite his young age (24), he's written several books about intermittent fasting, autophagy, ketosis and resistance training. Siim has a degree in anthropology and lives in Estonia.

Show Notes:

Siim Land's YouTube channel

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Download Siim Land's Metabolic Autophagy ebook – for free!

Order Dr. Pompa's Beyond Fasting book – now released!

Fastonic Cellular Molecular Hydrogen – support all forms of fasting with molecular H2!

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
You had these questions. How do I intermittent fast with exercise? When is the best time to eat after I exercise? How do I add diet variation into my life so I can live my life as normal? All right, on this episode, we’re going to answer all of these questions and so many more. Even how much protein should I ingest? Here’s another one. If I’m not interested in putting muscle on, is resistive training something that I need? You’re going to learn not only is it something you need but how it’s the key to antiaging. I think more importantly on this episode is you’re going to see a little bit more of how I live my life and the gentleman that I interview here so, really, a lot of information, a lot of questions so many of you had on this episode of CellTV.

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith, and today we welcome Siim Land, who is an author, public speaker, and biohacking coach. He has written several books about intermittent fasting, autophagy, ketosis, and resistance training. Today he’s here to talk about how fasting and muscle growth go hand in hand. There are a lot of common questions and concerns about this topic, and they will be addressed today. From finding that perfect balance of mTOR and autophagy to how much protein is too much, this is an interview you won’t want to miss. Let’s welcome Siim Land, who is joining us all the way from Estonia, and of course Dr. Pompa, who’s in Park City. Welcome, guys!

Dr. Pompa:
Hi.

Siim:
Hey.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, rarely do I get to interview someone this time of year where it’s colder where they are than it is where I am, although you told me I have more snow. I guess that’s good. It’s not as cold, and I have more snow. Snow can be fun. Listen, this is a topic that not many of us are talking about. I think that’s how you and I connected. We connect on this topic of—well, there’s the groups, right? You have your vegan, vegetarian group that hates this mTOR pathway. Those of you haven’t watched the show, it’s an anabolic pathway that can age you prematurely if you stay in it too long, which is true, and then you have the other side. You have your bodybuilders and workout people who hate autophagy because I’m going to lose muscle. However, you and I agree on that the balance between them is the key.

One of the things I want to talk about today is how do we do this? I mean, I talk about it in my book a lot. I even cite all the studies because I believe the key is going back and forth. The topic today is how do we do this? What does that look like? How much protein? How do I work in resistive training to this? How many fasts? How much time do I spend with either increased protein or calories to stimulate mTOR? Anyway, this is a topic that really is I think something that everyone needs to learn in their life. I believe we were genetically programmed for times of fast or famine, I should I say, and times of feast, which is what stimulates this pathway called mTOR.

Siim, what I just said may have confused some people, right? What the heck are we talking about? Let’s start there. I mean, try to make it more simple than I just said.

Siim:
Yeah, definitely, it’s very common for people to, let’s say, gravitate towards a certain idea in terms of when it comes to nutrition and diet, and a lot of the times, it’s just people are—they get good results by changing up their diet every once in a while. They quit the standard American diet. They go on a vegan diet, and they see some massive improvements in their health, or they go on a keto diet or something. Again, they see improvements. It’s never that this magical diet is the best diet for everyone. It’s the fact that they’re changing their body’s nutritional environment or metabolic status towards a certain direction, and that is allowing their body to start healing itself and to bring it back into balance.

You mentioned a few of these pathways that are constantly affecting this balance in your body such as autophagy and mTOR. Let’s say, for example, if your body is experiencing energy deprivation and starvation, then it’s going to turn on this pathway called autophagy or this process called autophagy. When it’s fed, when it’s eating, it turns on the other side of the coin, which is mTOR, and mTOR is the switch for growth and replication. From an evolutionary perspective or a perspective of survival, then your body can’t really activate those things at the same time because both of them require some resources. The body tries to be as energy efficient as possible in order to survive, and that’s why it has developed these different pathways and censors for directing the energy doors, one or the other. The problem in the modern world is that we’re never really experiencing “famine or starvation.” We are always in this overly fit, abundant state, and like I mentioned earlier, if you’re elevating mTOR all the time, you’re being fed, overfed constantly, then you may just accelerate aging. You will also predispose yourself to more disease and obesity. That’s why, in this modern world, we have to create these scenarios that mimic starvation and mimic some periods of famine so that we would keep our body in this homeostatic balance that we wouldn’t overexpress the anabolism and mTOR.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, yeah, in my book, I call it diet variation, feast-famine cycling. You’re right. I mean, we have to imitate what our bodies are genetically programmed to do. Look, when you look at whether you improve your muscle function or strength, your digestion, anything, your brain, it’s the principle of adaptation, meaning we create a stress, and if we adapt, we get stronger. We have to create the stresses. You and I right before we got on were talking about going from hot to cold, a sauna, out laying in the snow. Ashley was like you guys are nuts.

From hot to really freezing cold, hot to—what are we doing? We’re creating a stress, and the adaptation improves your immune system. The adaptation improves your hormones. We’re not doing anything different when we’re changing into diet. When we’re going from a pathway of autophagy to mTOR, we’re doing the same thing as hot or cold. Literally, we’re just causing the body to adapt. That’s the principle that Siim and I are following here, and that’s the principle that, really, it holds up under anything.

It’s really cool. I’m using this machine. It’s called an AVACEN, and the whole principle is it heats just part of your blood. Then your hypothalamus that senses your body temperature goes, oh-uh, only part of the blood is heated. It’s going to go—I’m going to go into heat stroke. What does it do? It opens up all of your capillaries and sends blood into every part of your body where it typically normally doesn’t have a lot of blood flow, and it creates this massive healing in your body. All based on stressing the body or at least getting the body to think it’s stressed, and then create this amazing adaptation to where it sends blood out to cool the body is what it’s trying to do, save its life.

All right, Siim, let me back up a second. We’ll tear this thing apart here for people, and I want people to realize, look, we’re going to tell you how to work out with this concept and how to put all these things together. How did you get into this, Siim? What’s your following? You have a big YouTube following out there. How did you land here?

Siim:
Originally, I was just into weightlifting back in high school, and at that time, I was also very curious and did a lot of research about nutrition and diet just to optimize my results and improve my body composition and strength. Just over the course of years I’ve learned about different diets like keto, paleo. I’ve done different versions of carbohydrate loading, intermittent fasting, extended fasting, and I also just started to broadcast those things into my blog, and from that time, it gradually grew into a YouTube channel and a podcast, which we had you on a few weeks ago as well. Yeah, I’ve just become very—almost like a self-experimenter who is researching about these things and sharing it with other people.

Dr. Pompa:
How many followers do you have? You have a big following.

Siim:
Yeah, on YouTube, I have 95,000 subscribers or something, so we’re close to 100,000. Yeah, on other, the social media platforms, I also have—on Instagram, it’s 28,000. The podcast itself also has, I don’t know, 10 to 20,000 followers. Yeah, it’s been gradually growing over the course of years.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that makes me happy because someone out there is speaking the right thing. In this area, believe me, you have people line up in their camps, man. You have the keto campers, the paleo people. Yeah, I just came up with that, keto campers, paleo people, actually. Then you have your vegan people and your vegetarian people, right? I mean, you have these people that line up on the autophagy side of things. Yet, how few are bringing it all together?

Okay, so let’s talk about it. I think we have a lot of listeners that are intermittent fasting, right? We both know that, intermittent fasting, a lot of people are gravitating even to one meal a day, which I have many days where I eat one meal, but doing too much of even intermittent fasting can produce too much autophagy and, therefore, too much of a catabolic state. It can lower our immunity. Talk a little bit about that, and talk about how you have found to bring balance to that.

Siim:
Yeah, definitely, I think the most common problem with fasting too frequently has to do with the thyroid, so to say, and your metabolic rate. Your thyroid is very vulnerable to stress and especially adrenaline and cortisol. Those things are actually very elevated when you are fasting. Like you said, fasting is a stressor. It’s a positive stressor, but with anything that is good, too much of it can become bad. It can become bad, and if you fast, let’s say, too often, too long all the time, then you will inevitably downregulate your thyroid. That can just slow down your metabolism. That can cause some other hormonal imbalances and, yeah, especially weaken your immune system, so you may get sick.

The way I personally overcome this is I change things up. On most days, I do eat one meal a day over the course of a few hours. On some other days, I just add an additional meal, and I eat two meals a day. It just breaks the pattern, so to say, that allows my body to recover from the fasting and allows me to still keep making progress. That’s an easy way of changing things up, and you can still do some form of fasting. For other people, they may even have to include maybe three meals a day depending on the situation, but the main idea is that you change it up a little bit. You can also change things up with your diet, so for example, I do think that eating somewhat of a low-carb diet that incorporates healthy fats and plenty of protein is a good idea for most people, especially the population that is insulin resistant or they have some sort of metabolic syndrome.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I agree.

Siim:
At the same time, some carb cycling is also very beneficial because of carbs especially are useful for boosting your thyroid and overcoming this slow metabolism, so to say. Those are actually more effective for overcoming metabolic adaptation and also breaking ketosis. This shift promotes this metabolic flexibility that teaches a body to use both carbs and fats in different situations. Yeah, doing it in cyclical manner also enables your body to maintain its resilience, so to say, so it doesn’t go into this very deprived state of being…

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I couldn’t agree more. Yeah, there’s times where I’m doing very strict low-carb ketosis for months, and then there’s times where I shift over to higher healthy carbohydrates for a time. I call that seasonal variation. What you’re talking about with the intermittent fasting—and again, for new viewers, intermittent fasting just means Siim and I eat in a window, whether it be four hours, six hours, or one meal. That’s intermittent fasting where you’re fasting maybe 15 hours, 20 hours, something every day. To our point, people with thyroid issues, I think, more women, they do better with variation. I find even sometimes three days of more eating or higher healthy carbohydrate eating they seem to need. Do you find the same thing?

Siim:
Yeah, your body has a weight limiting factor for restoring glycogen, so you can’t really fully absorb all the glycogen in one sitting. It has to be done over the course of several hours or several days, for example. Yeah, that’s why a single carbohydrate meal may not be as effective as doing it over several meals.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, exactly, throwing in certain days of the week, especially, like you said, for these more hormone, perimenopause, adrenal issues, or thyroid issues, absolutely. You know the problem with it, Siim, though, is that, just like anything else, someone moves to a vegan diet. They feel great, so now they’re always on a vegan diet, right? Someone moves to a paleo diet. They feel great. Now they’re always on a paleo diet, meaning they’re getting too much protein too long. The vegan person’s getting too much autophagy too long, so we stick to where we are.

No different with fasting, intermittent fasting. People do it, and then they realize, oh, my gosh, this is working, finally. Then they shift to even less, less, less, less meals, one meal, and they’re able to do it because they’re getting more used to it, metabolically flexible. They end up eating less and less and less and less, and it leads to destruction. Do you find that it’s hard to get people often times to do the feast days? I have to tell the people the feast days are as important as the fast days. Do you find the same thing?

Siim:
Yeah. I myself am also guilty of it every once in a while. Fasting, once you get used to it, it’s so comfortable. You enjoy the fast, the [14:55], the mental clarity, the feeling of bliss. You just want to do it, but at the same time, I have to remind myself again, yeah, that you had to break it up every once in a while.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I’m as guilty as you are. Honestly, you get to a point where it’s easier for me just to go about my busy day without eating, and I’m like, oh, my gosh. I, literally, often times have to eat. Now, I may not have that over the holidays. This is something when I get busy during my work week. When you have time off, it’s a little bit easier to remind yourself to eat.

Okay, so let’s bring it to your expertise here, working out. I don’t care if you’re the house mom or the workout enthusiast. This works for you, right? I really want you to give them a really good schedule, those listening, of how to balance this with, okay, intermittent fasting, some feast days, and resistive workouts. If you put all these together, there’s magic here and, yet, so few are putting it all together. Give them an example of how to put your workouts in, how to put your feast days in, and how to put your intermittent fasting in.

Siim:
Yeah, definitely. First of all, I want to back up a little bit of why would you want to do resistance training? The aspect of resistance training, the main goal of that or the main effect is that it promotes muscle growth and also promotes bone density and just general functionality.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, back up right there, Siim. I’m the sick person watching this. I don’t want muscle growth. I’m the woman who’s like that’s the last thing I want. You and I, that means something else. It means healthy people need muscle growth, right? Even if you want to stay skinny and healthy, you need muscle, right? Explain that a little bit.

Siim:
Yeah, exactly, building muscle isn’t about bodybuilding and going to the stage in bikinis. It’s about actually creating this lean muscle tissue that is functional, and it’s just making you more healthier. Muscle as an organ, also as a tissue is very healthy for improving your glucose tolerance, increases insulin sensitivity. It just improves even your cognitive functioning as well as just antiaging. Muscle is very critical for slowing down the aging process, so as you get older, your muscle mass is going to inevitably start to deteriorate. That also becomes a—it’s also going to become an increasingly more problem as you get older. The less muscle you have, the faster you’re going to age, and the faster you age, the less muscle you’re going to have. It’s a vicious cycle, in a sense.

Dr. Pompa:
Now you have everyone’s attention. We all need good quality muscle, so let’s put the program together.

Siim:
True, so you do it with—the best form of doing it is with weights. That has just shown over the course of decades that some form of weightlifting at a gym with weights, like free weights, or kettle bells, or something else, that’s the most effective way of doing it.

Dr. Pompa:
What about all the cardio and the aerobics classes and the bikes and all that stuff? You’re saying it’s better than that?

Siim:
Yeah, the cardio exercise is not going to stimulate muscle growth. It targets another completely energy system in the body, which is aerobics, so you’re not going to build any muscle with cardio. You’re only going to burn calories. The difference between resistance training and cardio workouts is that the cardio workouts only promote endurance and they burn calories whereas the resistance training exercise stimulates muscle growth, which is going to speed up your metabolism. It’s also going to enhance your bone density and also improves your hormonal profile. It’s a much more effective way for losing fat as well as slowing down the aging process.

Dr. Pompa:
I just read a study. I’m going to keep your train of thought here, but I’ll just interject this. They’re doing DNA methylation test, which is really a very accurate way of looking at how old you are, really how old you are at the cellular level and even your internal organs. They’re finding that people who do more cardio training actually have the worse scores. I mean, there’s a fine line, and I’m not against cardio. Listen, I was a cyclist. I actually want it, right? The resistive training, to your point, is far better for antiaging. It’s far better if you’re sick. It does better for your hormones. Too much of the other is very easy—especially if you’re already not adapting to stress, too much of the cardio could create more of an oxidative stress, but go ahead.

Siim:
Definitely, yeah. I myself, I work out with my own bodyweight. I do calisthenics on most days, but I also go to the gym two times a week where I do actual weights and heavier loads. When you look at the research, then, generally, two to three times a week of resistance training seems to be the minimum and seems to be the bare minimum for the optimal dose.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s what I do.

Siim:
You can also do it more frequently, but most people, let’s say, who are just exercising for their health and antiaging, then they don’t really want to do any more than that either, which is fine. You can just go to the gym and work out three times a week. Generally, it’s better to target full body compound movements that target multiple joints, and they also stimulate the entire body. They’re more effective in terms of the actual response that you get from the exercise. The biceps curl is also almost like the cardio workout of the resistance training. Instead of doing the biceps curl or the triceps pushup, you would want to focus more on the bench press or the barbell row. With the bench press, you’re also training your shoulders, your chest, a little bit of your lats, your back, and it strengthens the entire upper body in one movement whereas with the biceps curl you’re only training the biceps and the forearm and so on. You’re going to have to just spend more time doing it, and it’s going to be less effective.

That’s why full body, multi-joint compound lifts, the general powerlifting movements like the bench press, that’s what—the deadlift and the barbell row, those are the big four movements that I think everyone should incorporate in some shape or form. They’re also going to mimic the functional movement that you do in your everyday life. If you teach yourself how to deadlift correctly, then you’re also going to teach yourself how to lift up a bookcase from the floor better, and you’re not going to pull a muscle or something.

Dr. Pompa:
Do you have any examples of some of those that you put together in your website? Where would you point our people to be like, yeah, I want of Siim’s workouts and get some ideas there?

Siim:
Yeah, I do actually have a book, Metabolic Autophagy, that talks about how you combine both intermittent fasting with resistance training. It’s going to teach you how to balance mTOR with autophagy and how do you do it with both the fasting and the training.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, exactly, people want to know. People want to be like, okay, just show me what to do. I agree with you. If you’re looking for health and longevity, even two days a week of resistive training can be really amazing. Three, that number is what I do, two or three days. I do other outdoor activities in and around that, but the resistive training, that’s pretty much exactly what I do.

Okay, so then recommend. If we’re doing some of that resistive training—here’s a question I always get. Okay, so we know that we need protein to recover as well. We know this, folks, listening, this mTOR pathway, which is this anabolic pathway, muscle builders or bodybuilders, if you will, they exaggerate these couple things to make more muscle and be in mTOR: increase protein, increase calories, or even increase carbohydrates. Those will stimulate the mTOR pathway, right? The autophagy pathway is decrease calories or fasting and decrease protein, so we have these pathways that we’ve been talking about that are opposite.

Okay, so recovery from workout, how much protein? I mean, there’s always the debate. Again, let’s talk about health. The bodybuilders, they want massive amounts of protein. For our viewers and listeners, we want the optimal health balance. When do I ingest it? Do ingest more on my workout days? Do I ingest less on—give us a guideline with the protein thing.

Siim:
Yeah, definitely, you said it right that protein is very important for muscle growth, and it’s critical for longevity as well. If you’re undereating protein, you’re going at a low-protein diet. Then you may actually end up losing muscle mass, which is going to actually accelerate your aging process, which is the opposite that you want. I don’t think a low-protein diet is a good idea for longevity, and too much of it isn’t good either for the reason that you mentioned. If you look at the research, then they found that the maximum amount of—or the optimal amount of protein for muscle growth that maximizes muscle growth is around 0.8 grams per pound of lean body mass up to 1.2 grams per pound of lean body mass. That’s the upper limit that you wouldn’t see any increasing effect going beyond that. Generally, that’s the amount that is recommended for people who are very physically active. They work out three to five times a week or something. For the general population who just wants to be healthy, I would say that it’s slightly less. Maybe it can be—at minimum, I would still recommend 0.6 grams per pound of lean body mass and upward to 0.8, somewhere in there.

Dr. Pompa:
Give us an example for 125 pound person and a 150 pound person. It might be easier for 150.

Siim:
Yeah, for example, if a person is 120 pounds or 130 pounds, then at minimum I would say that 100 grams of protein per day is a good idea and upwards, like 120 grams upwards. You don’t need to go beyond one gram per pound of bodyweight. For example, if someone is 150 pounds, then the minimum for them is 125 grams and upward to 150 grams or something that—if you look at the RDA, the RDA…

Dr. Pompa:
On the lower scale of things, it would be actually lower. That was around that .8 number there, wasn’t it?

Siim:
Yeah, that’s true. If your person were aiming for 0.6, then I will say maybe 100 grams or something again.

Dr. Pompa:
For 150 pound person so at a 100 grams, yeah, I think that’s right. Yeah, .8, you’re right, .75 if it’s divided in half. If it’s .5, 150 pound person would be—75 grams of protein would be .5. A little more would be maybe 80, 90, yeah, okay. All right, yeah, I just want people to know what you’re—how we’re calculating that.

Siim:
Yeah, that’s true. I wouldn’t recommend going less than that, especially if you’re doing some form of intermittent fasting.

Dr. Pompa:
No, absolutely.

Siim:
The idea that mTOR accelerates aging, it’s also coming from the perspective of eating six meals a day. That’s why bodybuilders eat six times a day. mTOR also has a limiting factor, so to say. You can’t overstimulate mTOR in one sitting up to a certain threshold. Even if you eat, let’s say, 100 grams of protein in one sitting or 30 grams of protein in one sitting, the mTOR stimulation from that meal is still the same. The body, it’s not going to overstimulate mTOR because it can only absorb a certain amount of protein in one sitting. If you’re doing some form of intermittent fasting, then you don’t really have to worry about the protein that much because your eating frequency is smaller. You’re stimulating mTOR even in a smaller time frame, so you have less problems. You only would have to worry about it if you’re eating the standard American diet with frequent snacks and frequent meals where you’re keeping mTOR and insulin elevated all the time, but with fasting, that’s avoided. You’re protecting yourself against it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I just want to repeat what you said. If you’re an intermittent faster who is doing resistive training, the fact is is you probably have a greater risk of getting under protein. Again, remember protein is needed. We want protein to stimulate mTOR because mTOR is why you’re working out. mTOR is needed to make the muscle stronger, right? Again, Siim’s point I think is really well taken. I think today we have a lot of our viewers who are risking too little protein. Because they’re eating a lot of plant base, perhaps, it’s a little harder to get the amount of protein that you’re talking about. You’re better off, when you are eating, making sure you’re getting that amount. Again, just looking at those numbers, staying around that .7, .8 I guess is a healthy range there, so just do the math.

Siim:
It’s also important to emphasize the quality of that protein and the composition of that protein. You mentioned plant-based proteins. They are generally less mTOR stimulating than animal protein. Animal protein contains more of these anabolic amino acids like the branch-chained amino acids and leucine especially. Leucine is the key factor for stimulating mTOR. You can even achieve a higher mTOR response with less protein if the leucine content is higher, and generally, animal protein, especially like eggs or meat, they have more leucine than a plant protein. Let’s say, with fasting, you have also less to worry about when it comes to animal protein in terms of if you’re worried about mTOR, or methionine, or something.

Dr. Pompa:
I think the other point that you said I think is so well taken too is, if you are fasting, intermittent fasting, your risk of eating too much protein becomes much less. To your point, when you’re eating six meals a day, you could actually have the same amount of protein as someone intermittent fasting and have actually more problems stimulating mTOR, right? You have a lot of plant-based people who are eating many meals a day who at the end of the day could actually run into more aging problems than someone eating one or two meals a day. I think that was a really good point.

Siim:
Yeah, you said plant-based people can also experience higher rates of mTOR if they’re eating all the time. Glucose and sugar is also stimulating mTOR and insulin also elevates mTOR. Even if you’re eating a no animal protein diet but you’re doing it very frequently, then you still are not avoiding the constant stimulation of mTOR and accelerated aging.

Dr. Pompa:
Look, I’m not against a vegan diet or a vegetarian diet for short periods of time. You know what I mean. I mean, that’s Siim and I’s point is the problem is that people tend to do these things too long. I’m not against massive mTOR stimulation for short periods of time. With the intermittent fasting, I think the protein conversations are really an important one. I really don’t worry about my protein in a meal because I do intermittent fast. I don’t worry.

People always go, well, how much protein do you get in? It’s like, look, when I work out, I make sure I eat a normal amount of protein in my diet. If you looked at my amount of protein, it’s probably at least 100 to 120 grams of protein at the end of my day, and I get that in 1 or 2 meals even. Typically, I get it in two meals. Probably the days I do one meal I’m getting less, but on the other days, I’m getting more. On my feast days where I really eat a lot, I’m probably getting far more. I hope I am. I mean, I think I’ve figured it out to where I’m getting 150, 200 grams on some of those days purposely. Again, what we’re talking about is doing this feast-famine, high protein.

By the way, Siim, one of the things I’m doing with my—people who are looking to regain their health is I—instead of just doing high carbohydrate days, I have them do high protein days. I am so concerned about their protein for their recovery, and arguably, protein has more to do with their recovery than the carbohydrates often. I like to do high protein days, which stimulates mTOR. I don’t care if you get there—you can get there through carbohydrates. You can get there through calories. You can get there through, obviously, proteins. Protein, calories, carbs, all of it will get you there, but I think, for sick people, I love doing these high protein days.

Siim:
Yeah, that’s true. Protein is very valuable, and even overfeeding on protein doesn’t mean that you’re wasting it away. Let’s say protein can be absorbed over the course of several hours. Even if you are eating or let’s say you’re exceeding your body’s protein requirements in a meal, then your body is going to just slow down the digestion of the protein, and it’s still going to stay in your system for several hours afterwards. Your body’s going to prolong the anabolic response from that, and you’re still absorbing it. You’re not really wasting it away, and it’s very useful, especially if you’re fasting and having this higher pool of amino acids to pull from.

Dr. Pompa:
We spoke a little bit to the person on this side, the autophagy side. Now, what about the people out there that really want to put on muscle? What about the intermittent fasting? Is it better to put muscle on intermittent fasting or the old days of eating five, six meals a day? Which way actually is going to help me hormonally put muscle on?

Siim:
The problem with the bodybuilding advice of eating six meals a day is that that advice comes from people who are taking anabolic steroids. Their hormonal environment is already more prone to muscle growth, and they’re geared towards taking more advantage of that entire eating frequency. Let’s say natural people who are just wanting to building muscle, then for them it’s not that important to have that frequent meals. Of course, eating more often would help the muscle building process, but it’s not detrimental for them to skip meals either. Let’s say the average person can still eat, let’s say, two meals a day and be very successful at building muscle as long the calories and the protein content of the meals is sufficient. Arguably, you would still see a beneficial result in terms of the improved hormonal profile and improved body composition.

I like to see fasting or intermittent fasting where you fast for 16 hours and eat your food within 8 hours. That’s a good lean bulking style of dieting where you’re still eating enough, but you’re also able to maintain relative leanness without getting fat. If you’re trying to really push the envelope, then maybe going towards eating 3 meals a day with the span of maybe 14 hours or something. You don’t need to really go beyond that. You don’t need to eat from the moment you wake up until the moment you go to bed to build muscle.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, arguably, that’s where you run into trouble with too much mTOR stimulation. Now, some of the bodybuilders are eating in a window realizing they get this hormone benefit for growth when they are doing fasting. However, they’re pushing a lot of calories in the eating window. Maybe they’re eating three times a day, but they’re eating a lot of calories in the eating window. Does that work? Have you tried that?

Siim:
Yeah, definitely. You can still eat plenty of calories even if it’s in a small eating window and build muscle with it. Sometimes people just have a hard time of achieving that.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s me.

Siim:
Especially if they’re eating a whole foods diet, then it’s very hard to gain weight eating carrots, sweet potatoes, and chicken breast or something. In that case, they can safely just increase the calorie density of their meals. They don’t have to eat bok choy and lettuce or something like that. They can go for the fattier pieces of steak. Maybe add some sweet potatoes. Maybe add some fruit, or some nuts, or something that just have higher calories and help them to achieve a calorie surplus that way.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly, so you’re saying stick to your fat and protein in the eating window. You’re right. Basically, we’re getting the autophagy from the fasting. Let’s say we go 18 hours. Now we’re trying to eat all these calories to gain muscle in the window. You’re simply not hungry half the time, right? It’s like I don’t want to eat another meal, right? If you really bring the quality of protein and fats in, you can pull it off. Again, in the eating window is the mTOR stimulation. That means we either have to increase calories, protein, or carbs so one or the other or all of them to really get that going.

Siim:
One trick also that stimulates appetite is also combining carbs with the protein, and that can also result in a higher anabolic response. If you combine carbohydrates with protein, then you’re also going to raise mTOR and insulin slightly higher. That can also make you more hungrier in some aspects, and also makes it easier for you to overcome this palate fatigue that you may experience by eating in a smaller window.

Dr. Pompa:
Great advice. Bodybuilders have been doing that for years, carbohydrates and protein. It helps deliver the amino acids into the cell better for recovery. Okay, let’s talk about—this is a question we always get. What about meal timing around your workout? The old days, it was like I would run home from the gym if not bring protein with me to make sure I consume protein 20 minutes after my workout, right? Now, hormonally, we know there’s some differences that we’ve discovered along the way for that. Talk about the meal timing around the workouts because that’s probably one of the biggest questions I get.

Siim:
Yeah, definitely. I think it depends a lot on how you’ve been fasting either before or around the workout. If you’re coming from a fasted workout, then it is slightly more important to get the nutrients faster into your system and start the recovery process than it is if you were coming from a fed workout. If you eat before a workout, then you can safely fast for several hours after the workout. You’re still using the nutrients that you got from the first meal. If you are coming from a fasted workout, that can be somewhat more catabolic on your system. You’ve broken down your muscles during the workout, and if you continue to fast afterwards, then that can lead to just additional muscle loss, which is not ideal. In that case, I will suggest maybe trying to eat an hour or two after the workout if you’ve been fasting before.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s what I do. I try to eat—you still get that growth hormone rise. If you exercise on a fasted state, you’re getting that growth hormone rise, the sensitivity to the hormones. I try to ride that out for an hour or two after and then eat. The debate is this. My friend, Ben Greenfield, we’ve had the conversation, and I find nobody really knows the answer and probably because there’s never been a really good study. When is that optimal time to eat that first meal after you work out in a fasted state? Nobody seems to actually know the answer, and you and I landed in the same place. I like to give that growth hormone a little bit of time. How much time? I don’t know.

Siim:
Yeah, an hour or two is a good amount. Some of the beneficial adaptations you experience from the workout require the rise of cortisol and require the rise of growth hormone. If you suppress cortisol immediately after working out by taking a protein shake or something, then you may not see the optimal results. You need some of that stress to kick in and allow it to do its work.

Dr. Pompa:
Also, I mean, testosterone, the moment you start eating, your testosterone starts going down, right? There’s the time for both. Again, it’s what’s that—ride the hormonal optimization ride, or eat and start providing the protein needed to recover. We land in the same place, but I mean, maybe someone will come along and say a different time later. Maybe it’s different for everybody a little bit. I don’t know.

Siim:
I think, yeah, it depends on the person.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, we got ourselves very fat adapted, so our bodies really go into that state, growth hormone state, rise in testosterone state after a workout but maybe other people perhaps not. I don’t know.

Siim:
Yeah, it’s much easier for your body to deal with fasting if you are fat adapted and in ketosis. You’re going to experience less muscle catabolism, and you’re also going to experience less hunger. Probably, with a keto diet or if you’re fat adapted, then you can ride a wave for longer, and you have less negative side effects. Whereas someone who is a sugar burner, then for them the fasting is just going to cause more damage. They need to repair it more often.

Dr. Pompa:
This is a hard question to ask guys like us because every day is a little bit different. The question is, okay, what’s your average day look like with your workouts, your meals? We almost have to go, okay, well, on a feast day, as I call them, it looks like this. On a fasting day, it looks like this. Try to answer that question as best you can. I know we vary our routines. What does your workout routines look like with your diet?

Siim:
Yeah, well, on, I would say, five days of the week, I’m doing one meal a day with workouts. On those days, I fast probably about 20 hours or something, and I eat my food within 3 hours or somewhere along the lines of that. Sometimes it’s more. Sometimes it’s longer. Yeah, generally, I fast throughout the entire day. I consume only coffee or tea. Then, in the afternoon, I’m going to have a resistance training workout with calisthenics or weights.

The only caveat or the only difference that I do is that I actually consume a small amount of protein during the workout in the form of a protein shake. The idea is that, because I’m only eating once a day, I’m still in need of some amino acids in order to protect myself against the catabolism that I would experience during a fasted workout. I consume a small protein shake which is 100 calories doing the workout, and that is also going to…

Dr. Pompa:
What time is that workout, your workout later in the day?

Siim:
It’s in the afternoon, like around 4 p.m.

Dr. Pompa:
That way you’re getting that pure fast. If you did the shake, you’re going to break your autophagy.

Siim:
Yeah, exactly.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re getting that over there. Yeah, then, technically, you’re eating in a window.

Siim:
Four hours or something, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s what I do. Most of my eating days are within four hours. Then once I eat, then I eat. I mean, I may eat just whatever.

Siim:
It’s not like this one massive meal. It’s more like a feast over the course of several hours. You have a meal. You wait a little bit, and you continue eating. It is somewhat difficult to stuff yourself with all of the calories. If you extend the window, then it’s going to be somewhat easier.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s exactly what I do, and I witnessed that when I visited a tribe in Africa. When they started eating, they just ate, right? Like you said, it’s not like that they sat down to one meal. They had a very festive time of eating, and it was not just necessarily the one big meal. Of course, I’ll eat even up to the big meal. It’s like I just eat a little bit, little bit, little bit. Then I’ll eat maybe a big meal.

I do. I have a three, four hour eating window. It’s not like I sit in my kitchen and eat that whole time, but I start the eating process. I go do something else. I eat a little bit more. I go do something else. Then I eat my dinner. I’m eating in there.

Okay, so your workouts are a little later. Again, you start that—what about just taking—this is easy for people, and often times, this is what I do when I have them. I’ll take some amino acids when I work out or during that workout just to feed the body right there.

Siim:
Yeah, that’s the same principle. If you were to take those amino acids in the morning, then that would still stop the fasting.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I don’t want to do that.

Siim:
It will stop the autophagy, yeah. You would only get away with it if you take it during the workout and later in the day.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. That’s why you push it out, so you can actually do that. Yeah, you push your workout. Most people, I would say they like to work out in the morning. Then you and I wouldn’t like to do—if I do work out early in the morning, I don’t want to do that because I don’t want to break my fasting state, or I just make that a feast day. I make that a day where I do just take in way more calories than protein throughout the whole day. Days I work out early, I try to feast on those days more. I don’t know if you ever do that.

Siim:
Yeah, if you work out in the morning, then break a fast in the noontime or something and have two meals, three meals. You should never confine yourself into a certain specific way of eating. You should always maintain the flexibility and be able to adapt to different situations.

Dr. Pompa:
Another idea, Siim, is, if you’re saying , hey, the only time I can work out is 8 a.m., 7 a.m., who knows, you shift your eating window completely, right? You stop eating, say, at 3 in the afternoon, and your fast isn’t longer. You know what I’m saying? You can move your eating window for whatever works for your workouts or your job. I mean, who knows? You don’t have to do this eating window in the afternoon. You could make a shift.

Siim:
Yeah, that’s a good point, yeah. Arguably, some research says that early times that you are eating is better than later times with eating. Actually, if you compare them, then they’re not going to be—there’s not going to be any difference as long as the hours are matched. The magic comes from this operation of the eating window. Whether that be earlier or later, it doesn’t really matter.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I’ve played around with it. I’ve had conversations with Jason Fung about this and others where they—well, for people who are metabolically challenged, diabetes or whatnot, it seems that earlier eating does better for them and maybe, but clinically, I don’t know. I tend to just let people say where does it fit? I think you’re right. The magic’s in the fast no matter what, and there’s maybe a little benefit of where your eating window is. I agree with eating too close to bed is destructive for everybody. It disrupts your deep sleep, exactly. Giving yourself four hours before bed, that’s what I do, seems to taper down any negative that would come eating late.

Here’s the thing about eating too early. My argument is this, that we have the dawn effect, meaning, in the morning, your body—cortisol goes up. That wakes us up, the cortisol rise, and then glucose follows cortisol. Then we push glucose out into the systems. If you test your glucose in the morning, it should always be a little bit higher, and that’s why we don’t have appetite. A healthy person doesn’t have appetite. You’re releasing glucose, and you’re going about burning your glucose. For me, it’s like the body almost doesn’t want to eat in the morning. What’s your thoughts on that? There’s debate both side of this.

Siim:
Yeah, I agree with you in the sense that you shouldn’t feel hungry in the morning if you have a healthy, flexible metabolism. You’re coming from an overnight fast. You’re in semi-ketosis already, and that should give you enough energy to start the day and suppress your appetite. It’s definitely not ideal to be eating food if you have a little bit of cortisol and a little bit of blood sugar. Cortisol itself is deemed to be bad, but you actually need that cortisol to kick start the circadian rhythm and to start the day and mobilize the fat. At that point, it’s a good idea to have that cortisol elevated and maybe wait—I would suggest, if you prefer eating early in the morning, then still wait a few hours after waking up to allow the cortisol to go down.

Dr. Pompa:
My morning eaters, that’s what I tell them. Wait and let that cortisol come down, let that glucose come down, and typically, your body will tell you if you get hungry. Siim, this has been a great conversation. I think we really hashed it out on all of the topics: the amount of protein, when to work out, how to eat, how to vary your diet. You and I didn’t know each other before you interviewed me on your social media platform, but we really resonate around this topic. I’m glad there’s a few of us out there.

Siim:
Yeah, I’m also glad to talk with you and, definitely, likewise, spreading the good message with you.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely. Ashley will connect your media pages where people can watch you and get some workout advice and all that great stuff. Siim, thank you so much for being on Cellular Healing TV.

Siim:
Yeah, it was good talking to you.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. I hope you enjoyed today’s episode, which was brought to you be Fastonic Molecular Hydrogen. Please check it out at getfastonic.com. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 a.m. Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv, and please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, or sharing the show with anyone who may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.

304: Beyond Fasting Q&A

Episode 304: Beyond Fasting Q&A

Fasting is the world's oldest, most powerful biohack – it has been around for centuries, spans many cultures, and is embraced in all religions.

Ashley turns the interview around on me today, and she digs into why I chose to write a book about fasting, my years-long process of researching and developing my fasting strategies, and I will address some of the most common questions I receive about fasting on a daily basis.

Fasting is a therapeutic tool that can quite literally turn on longevity, turn off disease, and optimize your hormones; but you need a strategy for success. Learn all about how to properly fast in this episode, and I will walk you through key components of my new book, Beyond Fasting.

More about Dr. Pompa

Dr. Daniel Pompa is a global health leader and innovator on a mission to educate practitioners and the public on the origins of inflammation-driven disease, cellular detoxification, fasting strategies, and diet variation principles. Although trained as a Chiropractor, his authority comes from the victory within his own battle, having overcome neurotoxic illness that was rooted in heavy metal poisoning.

Show notes:

Beyond Fasting Book

Fasting Trio

Join Fasting For A Purpose for education, community support, and receive updates about my next 5 day group fast.

Transcript:

Ashley Smith:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Today, we are changing things up a bit. Today is extra special. We are talking to the most renowned expert on therapeutic fasting and cellular healing that we know. It’s Dr. Pompa himself.

Today’s episode will be dedicated to all things fasting. Dr. Pompa’s new book, Beyond Fasting is finally released after much anticipation. We wanted him to share all about why he chose to write a book about fasting, his years-long process of researching and developing his strategies, and we will get to some viewer questions that you submitted to us prior to this recording. We’ll save those for the end.

I can’t wait to get started. Fasting is a topic that Dr. Pompa quite literally wrote the book on. I’m blessed to introduce Dr. Dan Pompa. Hi, Dr. Pompa.

Dr. Pompa:
Hey, we haven’t done an interview like this in a while. You were so formal. I love it actually.

Ashley Smith:
I know; I had to bring you on like we do all of our guests, only deserving. Before we really get into it, just moments ago, we received a testimony from somebody who went through your seven-week program that’s in the book. She was so excited. This testimony is just amazing, so I just wanted to read just a little part of it.

She suffered from chronic fatigue, she had extreme exhaustion, loss of voice, migraines, low immune system, and weight loss resistance. Due to using some of the strategies in your book, she has completely transformed her health and turned it around. It really has not even been all that long. She just went through your book. It’s just—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I’ll post that on my Facebook, actually. It was put on my wife’s Facebook. It was just this morning.

Literally, the woman tried everything. When you read this—it’s long, but when you read it, your heart will break for her because she had a lot going on beyond even weight loss resistance. She followed the book exactly, Beyond Fasting. That’s what did it for her.

Anyways, she was kind enough to write that whole thing. Oddly enough too is I literally just got this testimony right before I got on. I clicked on it because I was looking for a different email. This was a gal, and I’ll just paraphrase it as well, but she said she just wanted to follow up.

She just got new bloodwork from her arthritis doctor. She’s five months off Humira. She had an autoimmune condition. Almost a full year now with no inflammation and excellent labs. “Thank you so much for your help and your information.” Anyways, that’s both of those.

Ashley Smith:
That’s amazing. The book has only really been out for a few weeks. The testimonies are already starting to pour in. You’ve been coaching people through fasting for a really long time. You have your Facebook group, Fasting for a Purpose. It’s almost 30,000 strong at this point and growing. That’s amazing. You decided to put it all into a book.

Let’s backtrack just a little bit because we do have a lot of new viewers and listeners and even the people who have been around for a long time might need a refresher. How did you get into fasting? What got you here?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I was into fasting in the 1990s when it wasn’t cool at all, actually. I joke and say it was me and some natural hygiene society people. Fasting is what we had in common. I loved it.

I went to seminars. I went to clinics that just focused on fasting. I read all of a guy named Herbert Shelton’s books. It was funny because although I was very into fasting and that was the world at that time that was into it, they were very into just vegan diets and I wasn’t. There was definitely a separation.

The thing that I loved about fasting was just I love the innate intelligence of the human body. That’s what fascinated me, even drove me into chiropractic school. The body has a wisdom to heal. I have but respect for that. I even raised my kids with that philosophy: if we can just remove the interference, the body knows what to do. I got my life back that way.

Fasting harnesses that innate intelligence. When you’re in a fasting state, the intelligence of the body just knows what to do and all the magic starts to happen. So much science today, we’ve learned what that innate intelligence is doing. Back in the 90s when I was super into it, we didn’t know. We just knew that magic happened when we fasted. Today’s science has shed some lights on why fasting is such a miracle thing.

By the way, it’s the oldest therapy known to man; I would still say the most powerful therapy and yet underutilized. I’ll say this as well, that I believe we’re genetically programmed to fast, and unfortunately, we’re not. Unless you get the flu or your body absolutely forces you to fast because it wants to recover, we’re not fasting. It’s a shame.

At my last seminar that you were at, I cited studies stating that because we’re not fasting, we are programmed to fast, that not only are we aging prematurely, but we are not basically resetting our DNA. This is leading to diseases today. I cited studies that show that. Fasting is something that’s been all the way back then.

By the way, another story, my wife was basically—they were telling her she had some cervical dysplasia which looked like cancer. She fasted for 11 days. That was way back when in the 90s, too. That was one of my first experiences as well to realize—as a matter fact, they said, you’ll be back unless you do this. We didn’t do that; she fasted. The fact was is we didn’t go back.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, that’s a great point. Our innate intelligence really is obvious when we are sick with the flu and we don’t—we just naturally don’t want to eat. It’s really the only time humans are just simply not interested in eating. Animals too, pets, they just know when to stop eating. I don’t know why people don’t make that connection that for long-term diseases like the things that grow really slowly in your bodies, why it wouldn’t do the same.

Fasting is simply not eating. You wrote a book that’s over 300 pages. What is it about just not eating that can fill 300 pages of a book?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, well, you can see what’s on that plate: ice. You can eat ice.

Ashley Smith:
Yes, one of the meals you’ll enjoy.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s the thing; you don’t just run a marathon; meaning, that if you did that—I guess you could. Some people could just run a marathon; however, your results would not be very good. However, if you train for the marathon, your results are spectacular. I’m not recommending running a marathon, but it is a good analogy.

The book is really what we do and what I train my doctors to do. It’s part of my fasting and fasting strategies, my diet variation strategies, which are all in the book. All of that is part of what we do as a group of doctors to really help a lot of people. We would not be able to fix and help the people we help without these fasting strategies. That seven-week program that’s laid out there is what we do as a group of doctors to get the results that we need during a fast to really transform lives.

Again, it’s one thing fasting, but you have to understand that fasting is a stress. If you adapt to a stress like exercise, you get stronger, better. If you don’t adapt to the stress, you actually can get weaker. Again, you want to work up to the fast to maximize the results of the fast and to make it easier; when you follow the program, it makes the fasting easier. It ensures that you adapt to the fast and therefore get the results that you probably have read so many about fasting.

Many people struggle because they’re violating some very—principles. It also tells you what to expect during the fast, how to break the fast. Yes, but it does give you a whole seven-week program on how to maximize those results.

Ashley Smith:
You’ve seen people who have—they’ve never even thought of missing a meal before. You’ve seen them go through this program and they say, wow, that wasn’t bad. That actually was fairly easy because I felt—

Dr. Pompa:
When you follow that program, it is much easier. If you just fast, well, yeah, not only will it be harder, but you’re not going to get the results; arguably, you might get negative results. The point is that’s why we wrote the book.

Ashley Smith:
That’s a good point, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely. I wrote the book because people need to know. This is what we’ve been doing for years; many years of studying fasting. I finally put down all of my little tricks in the chapters.

Ashley Smith:
If it was simple enough, if someone was just on a standard American diet and they were addicted to carbohydrates and sugar, if it were easy for them to just start fasting, you wouldn’t need to write a book on it and train your doctors to coach their clients. You really have to get to that place.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, well, look, if we had a perfect health and a perfect normal environment and so many people weren’t hormonally challenged, you could just fast. The American Indians, believe me, they could just fast. The tribe that I talk about in the book that I met in Africa, they could just fast because they were extremely fat-adapted. They were able when they’re not eating to immediately switch over to fat as a fuel source.

Unfortunately, that’s not the case for most people today. Even if you are a really healthy person, you can just fast. If you follow that seven-week program, you’re still going to increase your results. There’s all kinds of little things in there that everybody needs to hear, but most people need this to get the results while fasting.

Ashley Smith:
Absolutely; well, let’s talk about the seven weeks. We can just walk people through so they would know what to expect. Week One is the week that people might—when they’re afraid to start this whole program, Week One is really just easing them in. What do you have them do in Week One?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, okay, Week One, Chapter One. That’s how easy it is. Look, we want to maximize the results of the fast and make it easy so we right away Day One, we get these amazing results on a fast. In the book, I talk about the seven benefits.

One of which is called autophagy, where the body when you’re not eating, it will start eating because it needs nutrition. It needs energy. It will eat all of your bad cells. Then it stimulates the stem cell. That stem cell will create a new cell. Literally, we renew ourselves during a time of fasting. That’s one of the amazing benefits.

I said we’re programed to fast as well as turn off bad genes. The stressors in life, toxins in life, emotional stressors in life turn on bad genes. Now, we have symptoms and conditions that we get diagnosed for that we don’t like, but those genes were triggered. Fasting is one of the most powerful ways to turn them off. Again, we’re programmed to fast to turn off bad genes.

Oh, and it resets our gut. A lot of people are trying to fix your gut by just throwing bacteria at it, probiotics, not so simple. My doctors would all tell you the real way we fix the gut is by these fasting strategies that I talk about in the book.

Alright, when we look at the benefits of fasting, and there’s others we could get to later, but we want to become fat-adapted to maximize this autophagy. Typically, most people wouldn’t enter into where the body starts eating the bad cells until later, Day Three, Day Four of a fast. If you become fat-adapted going into the fast, you can start this autophagy process Day One.

What does it mean to be fat-adapted? This is all in Chapter One. What it means, you’ve heard a lot about ketosis in a ketogenic diet. Now, once you get to Chapter Three and Four, you’ll learn that I’m not recommending you stay in this ketosis like many people are saying today. I talk about my diet variation strategies that we implement as well.

The fact is that cells can only use two things for energy: sugar or fat. When we become fat-adapted, we’re shifting the cell over to be very efficient at using fast; a matter of fact, 95% of the energy then comes from fat. What happens when you’re not eating? Someone who is stuck as a sugar burner, well, they either give you cravings that you can’t resist because I need energy; I need sugar. Then you break the fast or the fast is so hard that you just can’t emotionally handle it; either one is bad. Or it will do one more thing; it will break your muscle down into sugar. One of the criticisms of fasting, oh, you might lose muscle. Not if you shift over to be fat-adapted.

When you go into the fast fat-adapted, when you stop eating, your body starts immediately using its fat. Now, I’m very lean, so are you, but we still have about 50,000 stored calories of fat in our body that we could go a month or more without eating and our body would burn that fat. We want that. When you become fat-adapted, your body will go after the bad cells first on Day One. We don’t want to enter the fast stuck as a sugar burner because then you will go after muscle or you will end up with too many cravings and break your fast and have all these emotional tangles in your brain.

Step One: become fat-adapted. Get yourselves using fat as energy. You go into the fast with no cravings, autophagy getting rid of your bad cells. That’s the point of Chapter One.

Ashley Smith:
Wow, and just briefly, becoming fat-adapted, what does that mean exactly as far as what are people going to be eating? Are they just going to start incorporating more healthy fats into their diet if they’re not used to eating a lot of fat?

Dr. Pompa:
To become fat-adapted, we first off, to get the cells to shift from a sugar burner to a fat burner, we want to lower the carbohydrates to a point, and we teach you how to do this in the book, to a point to where it has to start going for the fat. Eventually, it does. Now, that may take two or three weeks. We talk about that in the book and even some strategies to make that happen faster. Even we tell you how to test, so you know when you become fat-adapted. There’s some simple test you can do so you know.

Alright, once that fat-adaptation happens, one of the first things is you go, oh my gosh, I can think clear and I have lasting energy. Even without a test, you know when that process happens. Here’s the best part. You helped contribute to this and so did some others. We have all the recipes. We have all the foods not to eat. You want to start bringing in—lower the carbohydrates and bringing healthier fats into the diet. Of course, we don’t have time to go into that; that’s why you need the book. We have all the food lists, and what to do, and how to do that.

Ashley Smith:
Absolutely, and a lot of people can benefit even people who are vegetarian. It’s not a high protein approach in any way.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s not. You can actually do it on any diet.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, which is helpful. Okay, so they spend a week getting fat-adapted. Like you said, sometimes you just know. Testing is great, but sometimes—not even sometimes; you just know when you’re burning fat for fuel because you have this brain clarity.

A lot of people say the Number One thing they notice is their brain fog is gone. You just are so clear-headed. You can focus and work long hours without eating. That’s an amazing perk. Once they get to that state, what happens in Week Two, Chapter Two?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, Week Two, Chapter Two. Now, again, I said it may take two to three weeks for someone to adapt, but we still step you along week by week. That’s what’s nice.

Ashley Smith:
You don’t move on until you’re ready.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, right, you can do this in two weeks, but really each lesson can happen in a week. That makes it really easy. Okay, so when we look at studies on anti-aging, it’s very clear. When I say anti-aging, yes, age slower, but really, it’s age without all of the diseases that we attribute to aging: heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes, all of it has become common in this country. I wouldn’t say it’s normal, but it has become common. It’s not normal at all; that’s the point. However, we can avoid that.

Again, I visited a tribe that doesn’t have these diseases. They do a lot of these principles. I learned a lot from them. When we look at studies on living long healthy without disease, there’s one thing, only really one thing that holds up: eat less. When we look at and understand eating less, if you eat less, just cut calories long-term, your metabolism goes down, so it doesn’t work long-term; it works short-term. What I talk about in this chapter is eat less by eating less often.

One of the first things that we do is we just cut out all of your snacks. We talk about eating basically in a smaller window, yes, but we talk about just eating three meals a day. Then we start squeezing your eating window down a lot like these very healthy cultures and tribes do. Why are we doing this? Because again, we’re looking at what we’re doing in the fast. We’re getting your cells used to burning fat when you’re not eating.

If you’re eating all of the time and you’re eating five, six meals a day—and by the way, in the book, I cite that most people, if you ask how many times a day do you eat, they say, oh three times. Actually, it’s not true. They eat between 8 and even 21 times a day; meaning, every time you put food in your mouth, it’s a meal. You raise glucose and insulin. You’re always challenging your body, utilizing its energy in this simulation of food. It’s not good.

You want to live longer, eat less by eating less often. We start squeezing your eating window down. Now, that means you’re fasting. You’re starting to get your body used to using its fat during a fast when you’re not fasting.

By the way, we can almost jump to Week Three at this point because now we take it a step further. We squeeze your window down and now we just have you eating perhaps two meals a day. Once we get you into this state of what we call intermittent fasting, now we’re extending your fasting time even more. What are we doing? We’re getting the cells stronger. Basically, I call it—in the book, I call it metabolic mitochondrial fitness. The mitochondria is where you burn fat and make energy not to confuse anybody.

What happens is when we squeeze in the window and force it to go longer without food and longer without food, what happens is it gets stronger and stronger. It gets more fit and more fit. When we go into the fast, it’s fit. It’s ready. It adapts to the stress. You get the maximum result. You get the maximum autophagy.

I love to say this is that bad cells don’t adapt. By stressing it, by basically bringing in this eating window, what’s happening is we’re gaining healthier mitochondria, healthier cells, preparing us for the fast. Intermittent fasting then is something we evolve you into. That means we can even get you fasting for 20 hours a day, not every day. We’ll get there. When we do this, we’re preparing the cells.

Ashley Smith:
What constitutes an intermittent fast? What’s the shortest amount of hours that you would consider an intermittent fast?

Dr. Pompa:
It can even be a 24-hour period where you just literally eat one meal. I give a lot of different strategies. In that testimony you read, it’s in my head because I just read it; my wife read it to me actually this morning. It was on her—posted on her Facebook.

The women was down to eating in a four-hour window. She made a great point. She said, “It’s not for everyone. Dr. Pompa in his book basically gives you a strategy on where to start.” Now, she has her kids doing it. Her kids eating windows much wider. She had such benefits from it that she transitioned that into her family as well.

To her point, she didn’t start with eating in a four-hour window. She started with one of my other strategies where you just keep bringing the window in. Yeah, it’s something that you work up to, but it can be—and there’s strategies in the book where you have certain days of the week where you literally fast for 23, 24 hours. That’s when you really start noticing that your body starts digging into those really fat stores that you haven’t touched for years.

Ashley Smith:
I’m just going to take this to another point for a second. A lot of women are probably listening who are questioning, can I do this? I have a thyroid condition, or my hormones have been very erratic due to either period menopause or menopause, or they have adrenal fatigue. Is this something that they can do if they’re struggling a little bit?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, now you go into the next—actually, it’s funny you asked the question right here because you go into the next chapters. The next chapters, especially Chapter Four, are dealing with that very topic. Many women listening, and men, but probably more women, they go very low carb. It works for a little bit or it doesn’t work at all and they struggle. Then intermittent fasting, they hear all these amazing results, but for them, fasting doesn’t work, so enters the next chapter. In Chapter Four, we really—I dig very deep into this topic of diet variation, feast-famine cycles.

When we look at studies, and I cite them in the book, when we look at low-fat diets, high-fat diets, ketosis, all the different diets, there’s one that shines superior. It is basically varying the diet; meaning, we said, look, I’m in the camp of keto, paleo, vegan, vegetarian. Everyone likes to basically camp in their diet, but the fact is varying the diet is where the magic is. There’s reasons for that. One of which it creates—the body has to adapt. Again, if it adapts, it becomes stronger. It adapts by something called hormone optimization.

The reason why people struggle to lose weight or use fat as energy is because they’re not hormonally optimized. This strategy of diet variation and feast-famine cycles, which I’ll explain in a minute, is a strategy that breaks through that and gets you to adapt and hormonally optimize. Now, that your hormones are better and your cells hear them better, you actually start using fat. This is a breakthrough strategy that again, we’ve done this for years. I’ve taught these principles for years. Really nobody else is actually teaching them.

The point is that even during the week, feast days for the women that you mentioned are actually as important as the fast days. In the book, I talk about my 5-1-1, where we have a day where you actually purposely eat more. You remind the body it’s not in a starving mode because if it thinks that, it will start holding on to every bit of its fat. Then nothing works for you. We have to remind it it’s not starving by giving feast days. Sometimes a couple of feast days a week works better for some people. Then we also throw in the fast days. That’s called feast-famine.

In the studies that I mentioned, when they compared diets, when they did feast-famine, and in the one study in particular, they went basically a famine day where they just ate maybe 500 calories. Then the next day, they eat the standard American diet. They didn’t even eat a healthy diet. Fast day, famine day, fast day, famine day. It actually worked better than all the diets. I actually interviewed that scientist. I said, “Why?” She said, “Because what happens is it forces the body to adapt to the changes.”

The bottom line is when we change diets, when we add feast and famine, what happens is again our DNA is set up for that. The body adapts via hormones. That hormone optimization is why, I believe, is why it actually works best for weight loss and to become fat-adapted.

To your point, thyroid conditions, adrenal problems, hormone problems, you need more feast-famine. That’s the magic for you. Chapter Four and Five really just blow that wide open for you.

Ashley Smith:
That’s great. Once you get through Weeks Four and Five where you’re really starting to flex that—the eating windows and the feast-famine cycles, Week Six is the very magical week of entering into a five-day water fast, right?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly, we do that. By the way, I’ll say this too, in the book, in that last chapter that you mentioned is really a strategy also ladies for doing this strategy even monthly. Of course, I even talk about how to do this strategy seasonally. That’s there. Even five days of feasting a month right before your cycle actually is transformative for women who struggle on low-carb or fasting states. It changes hormonally their whole month. That’s how good this strategy works.

Actually, you did a great graph for the book because we talked about how to put in a partial fast where we just decrease calories for five days of the month. It’s called a partial fast. There’s a whole section on the book on how to partial fast.

By the way, folks, you have a choice of what fast you do in the book. I educate you on the different fasting strategies so you don’t just have to do a five-day water fast; you could actually do a five-day partial fast. The partial fast is decreasing calories for a very limited time.

Anyways, five days a month, partial and then five days a month feasting, especially right before a woman’s cycle transforms hormones. Again, for all the reasons that I said, it enforces this adaptation. By the way, ladies, if you notice the week before your cycle, you typically have cravings. That’s because you actually need higher glucose levels and insulin levels actually to make certain hormone transitions. There’s reasons for that. We’re getting into that strategy in that chapter. Okay, yes, you’re right. Now, it brings us to the fast.

Ashley Smith:
Yes, the fast. It is a little bit choose your own adventure; it’s not just a water fast. Some people even start with a partial fast and they think it was great, but the next time, maybe they want to try a water fast. It’s not always something everyone wants to jump into. You did mention briefly a partial fast is just lowering your calories. There’s a few different options. You can do your own with your own food or there’s kits you can buy, the Fasting Mimicking Diet by ProLon.

Dr. Pompa:
Yep, the ProLon’s one. If you have more digestive issues, we teach you how—in the book, we teach you how to design your own partial fast. You can keep it to the foods that you know you do okay with. Then, of course, we lay out the water fast in its entirety on how to do that and evolve into that.

In that chapter now, we break it down on what you do ahead and obviously what to do preparing for the fast. What happens each day: Day One, Day Two, Day Three. There’s a reason for five days. Years I’ve done five-day fasts because typically we start seeing people just breakthrough on Day Four. We wanted them just to have one more day where they finally break through where their body’s just in that healing mode.

Now, science has now shown that Day Four we see this max autophagy happening where your body is getting rid of all those bad, nasty cells that are misbehaving, driving inflammation, making you feel not well. Then Day Five, something magical happens. You get the maximum rise of stem cells. In the book, I talk about how to measure your blood level ketones and glucose levels in a ratio to find out when you actually hit what we call max autophagy. It’s fun because you’ll be able to see I crossed into max autophagy, what we call this target range 1:1 ratio on Day Two or Three, whatever it is. You’ll be able to know when that happens and it’s pretty cool.

That’s why we do a five day fast because we know we hit this maximum autophagy and stem cell creation. Again, that’s whether you’re doing a partial fast or a pure water fast. Either one, you’ll know when you enter that range.

Ashley Smith:
If somebody’s feeling amazing at the end of Day Five, and they know they’re at max autophagy and they are just flying, they’re just so clear-headed that they feel amazing, should they still end their fast at that—at the end of Day Five?

Dr. Pompa:
Look, I’m a fan—I discuss this as far as the benefit that we’ve learned of multiple five-day fasts as opposed to the risk of not knowing when to stop a fast because there’s signs like what’s your tongue color? Does your hunger come back? Did you stop losing weight? I discuss more extending fasting beyond five days in the book. I think people who have a lot more bodyweight can do that, but there are some other risks there.

One of the recommendations is multiple five-day fasts is really the magic whether it’s doing a fast every other month, four a year, two a year, even one a year is transformative for people. Multiple fasts is I think the safest option. Again, you always check with your doctor during fasts; I cite that in the book. The bottom line is certain extended fasts even longer can be as you’ll read in the book very beneficial for some people.

Ashley Smith:
There can be too much of a good thing with anything. Even with your running analogy earlier, people can run way too much where they just run themselves literally into the ground. In between two extended fasts, how long would you say is optimal to wait, a minimum?

Dr. Pompa:
Are we talking five-day fasts or are you—

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, a five-day fast.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, okay. Some people, we do a fast once a month for a period of time. Again, those are typically people who have the body stores to do that. Believe it or not, we use fasting as even a strategy on how to gain weight for people. If someone who’s very frail is fasting, believe it or not, it can be a strategy. I talk about that in the book as well. What happens is your body gets rid of the bad cells in the gut, which could be why you can’t gain weight, and the bad muscle cells that aren’t recovering.

I challenged one of my sons to do this because he wanted to gain muscle. I won the bet because his body ate the bad muscle that wasn’t recovering, I’m sure is assimilation, and his gut got better. A month later, he had gained more weight than he lost during the fast and more weight than when he started because the body will start recovering. It will actually gain new cells. Remember, autophagy, the body gets rid of the bad cells, but it replaces the bad cells with new cells, muscle cells that now have the ability to recover faster. Now, the body starts to gain muscle.

Even some bodybuilders now are utilizing intermittent fasting as a hormone optimization. Again, a strategy to gain weight. We don’t think of fasting—we appreciate it for weight loss, of course, as your testimony there you read, but not weight gain.

The point is that some people can do multiple fasts every month for a period of time and get a benefit. Some people, it’s better to spread them out, give their body a time to replace those cells; maybe they need two months between fasts, maybe three or four. Sometimes we’ll do a partial fast, a water fast; next month, a partial fast; next month, water fast. Sometimes we alternate. Again, it depends on the strategy, but there’s some ideas in the book as well.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, and that’s a testament to the innate intelligence. Again, your body does what it needs to do. If you need to gain weight, or lose weight, or maintain your weight and just approach maybe some cells in your body that are creating disease. Your body just knows what to do really.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, that’s great. Week Seven is my favorite week. I think it’s a lot of peoples. What happens after the fasting? We’re not done. What happens then?

Dr. Pompa:
I think I started that chapter with, “Warning, don’t blow it now.”

Ashley Smith:
It’s my favorite, but it’s also a little—yeah, you have to be very careful.

Dr. Pompa:
Warning; yeah, the fact is you are still in this—you just went through all this autophagy getting rid of the bad. Now, your body is in this renewal phase with all these new stem cells. The worse thing you can do is stress it when it’s—all of a sudden, it hits all these—this food in its stomach. It can’t digest it. That stress could shut off that stem cell formation and healing. We don’t want that.

Ashley Smith:
Breaking a fast is as important as fasting itself.

Dr. Pompa:
Yes, and I have watched so many people destroy it. First of all, your microbiome has changed, which is a really good thing because one of the benefits of fasting is it resets your microbiome. Your HCL is low, so we don’t Day One just start eating meat back in the diet; it can’t break it down right away. We wait a few days.

Then we also don’t want to just go right back to the same caloric intake. Your body just doesn’t have the enzymes ready yet. Your microbiome, all your bacteria are lower, good ones and bad ones. As a matter of fact, we utilize this breaking the fast to inoculate with new bacteria and really change that dysbiosis that may be occurring. We want foods that are re-inoculating to the bacteria, help basically your good guys come about and be stronger because all your bacteria are lower, all your enzymes are lower; therefore, we just can’t throw a bunch of calories at it as well.

We break it with a partial fast which keeps the healing going even after the fast. Again, we lay it out: this is what you do Day One, Day Two, Day Three. Everything is in there on how to break it.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, there’s a lot of strategies. There’s exactly how many calories to eat on Day One, Day Two, Day Three. There’s some great food lists and recipes. There’s tons of beautiful recipes in a fasting book which is pretty cool.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, which is awesome; just don’t read them when you’re fasting.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, exactly.

Dr. Pompa:
Just so you know, for different body sizes, those recommendations are very different. The book lays it out if you’re 200 pounds versus 100 pounds. How you break the fast, calorically, will be very different.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, and you would think it wouldn’t be hard to stay within a small bit of food after fasting, but some people once they start eating again, they just can’t stop. You really have to—a lot of people start fasting in the evening and then they end their fast in the evening so they can just eat a small meal and go to bed. Sometimes if you eat too early in the day, you just want to keep eating all day.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s true. It makes it a little bit harder. Put it this way; if you have a plan, you’ll be successful. If you don’t have a plan to break your fast, you’re—it’s not going to go well. Have a plan. The book helps you with that; have a plan.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, a plan is great. Because of your Fasting for a Purpose group, we see people all the time. You just did a group fast about a month ago or so. It was tens of thousands of people that did this fast with you. Everyone did so well. Then there’s the few who went through the fast and they just broke it the wrong way. They just ate just way too much, or they ate pizza, or way too much meat and protein.

Dr. Pompa:
What happens is your inflammation goes like this. What happens then, you start just killing your stem cells that you just created. Don’t do it.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, absolutely. That is great. I just love that everything is so—just so well packaged in this book. It’s so easy to read. It’s just mapped out. You can really go week by week. One question we typically get is during the fast, can people still drink their bulletproof coffees, can they still take all their supplements?

Dr. Pompa:
The most frequent asked questions are in the book, which that’s one of them. Yeah, look, during a water fast, the answer’s absolutely not. The only thing I would say—and again, if you’re on certain medications, you have to check with your doctor. You have to stay on the medications maybe. Here’s the thing; you have to check with your doctor because you need way less of certain medications, so caution.

Yeah, we don’t even like taking supplements during a fast to push the body. Now, there are a few like certain electrolytes, there’s exceptions. If someone is releasing a lot of toxins because of the autophagy process, Bind is—can be a life-changer and savior, so would Cyto. We call it the fasting trio and those three supplements are in there. In a water fast, we want people just to water fast. There’s some electrolytes like taking in sea salt that’s helpful.

On a partial fast, you can take some supplements and get away with a little more because you’re eating some food. We’re not relying strictly on innate intelligence like a water fast. That’s why we don’t want to push the body one way or another on a pure water fast. I still recommend no caffeine. You could do a decaf tea because, again, caffeine would push you a little too much.

Now, in the intermittent fasting state, I tell you how to know; meaning, that if you’re going to fast 15 hours or 20 hours when we talked about that in the earlier chapters, three. I tell how to know if your coffee is actually working for you. There’s a way to test for that utilizing glucose levels. You can check that out because your coffee may or may not work for you during intermittent fasting, but we definitely don’t want it during an extended fast.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, that’s great to know. Everyone wants to ask can I still have my blank. If it’s a water fast, it’s only water and a nice, rich mineral salt as well is also—could be important. People want their apple cider vinegar and stuff like that. Typically—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, right. Can I drink lemon water? Look, see, the problem is when you’re doing just a water fast, we want to rely completely on the innate intelligence in your body. Lemon water, now, we’re forcing a more acid gut. We don’t want to do that.

We don’t want to push the body; we want it to do its thing. That’s the beauty of a water fast. I think that’s why water fasting to me is still the most powerful because we’re relying completely on the innate intelligence. Partial fasting, still major benefits. We still don’t want to push the body too hard.

Ashley Smith:
If it’s stimulating your digestion, a lot of times if it’s—if you’re putting something like lemon water in your mouth, you’re just creating enzymes in your saliva and you’re really turning on your digestion.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right. In a water fast, that’s not good. In a partial fast, you could do lemon water. Not a big deal because you’re already eating other foods. Again, if it’s water, it’s water.

Ashley Smith:
Not to call you out, but there are purists like you who don’t even love brushing your teeth on a water fast because it’s—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, it’s true. Because again, the flavor can stimulate digestive enzymes. Then it stimulates the gut. That potentially could make you hungry. I like to just run with it completely.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, exactly. If somebody doesn’t feel comfortable going the five days or they can’t make it the five days, would you say just say see if you could go even a day, or two, or three, and they’ll still get benefits from that?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. Just do better next time. Again, the more fasting you do, the better—it’s like fitness; the more workouts you do, the better—the more fit you become. The more fat-adapted you become, the more you practice these strategies, the healthier cells become. Bad cells don’t adapt. You get more new cells. Yeah, there’s no failure; just do the best you can.

Ashley Smith:
It really is like a muscle, absolutely. Now, who shouldn’t fast would you say?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, obviously, pregnant women, nursing women, your milk could dry up. I would say anorexics shouldn’t fast because there’s a phycological thing with food going on there, no bulimias, bulimics, I would not fast. Yeah, there’s certain conditions. Again, certain diabetics can in fact fast, but check with your doctor. You’re going to need a lot less insulin.

Ashley Smith:
Okay, and then you also earlier in the conversation mentioned children. What would you say—children obviously are a little bit—they’re a lot different, but they shouldn’t be eating all hours of the day and night and snacking every three minutes. What would you say—

Dr. Pompa:
That’s a US thing, a United States thing.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
We think in this country that children need snacks every two hours: through school, snack time, this time, snack time.

Ashley Smith:
It’s ridiculous.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s the fact is that the teachers and the parents who would make the argument, yeah, but the moment I give Johnny the snack, he gets with it again and his behavior gets better. Of course, you’ve trained the dog to okay, I need the food. The fact is they’re—they’ve already become sugar burners, so they need sugar, they need sugar, so they need snacks. Kids should in fact easily be fat burners. When they’re not eating, they should be burning their own fat. Now, we’ve trained their cells to only want sugar.

The fact is kids can and should go longer periods without food. Again, they don’t have to go as long as an adult. They’re growing; no doubt, they should in fact eat more, but you want to do it in at least three meals. Some kids even do it in two meals instinctively. They get up; they’re not hungry. They eat a big lunch and a big dinner. No problem, they’ll end up with the same amount of calories at the end of the day then the kid who ate four meals, the child who eats two meals.

That’s a fact. They’ll end up with the same amount of protein. The child who ate two meals had more time at autophagy fasting getting rid of bad cells. That’s the point.

When I saw the tribe in Africa, the kids were doing the same thing the parents were. They ate one Longo meal a day in three or four hours. They didn’t run around eating all day. That just didn’t happen.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, kids also have that innate intelligence as well where a lot of them, they don’t wake up hungry. They don’t really want a big breakfast and we force it upon them. Just our culture is like you have to eat the minute you wake up and eat all day. There are strategies that can help the entire family which is great.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and you can choose your eating window. I talk about that in the chapter on intermittent fasting. You can shift it for what works for your schedule or your family’s schedule. You’re not boxed into one eating window; choose your window.

Ashley Smith:
Yeah, absolutely. This has been a great conversation. I think we got through everybody’s questions which is great. Thank you so much for doing this.

We’re really excited about this book. It has been long time coming. You can all order it at beyondfastingbook.com. I’ll put some links in the show notes as well.

Yeah, we’re excited to see what you come up with next, too. I know you have some other ideas floating around your head. That will be great. Alright, well, thanks again. See you later, everyone.

Dr. Pompa:
Alright, thanks, Ashley.

303: Naturally Rebuild Your Teeth With Biomimetic Dentistry

Episode 303: Naturally Rebuild Your Teeth With Biomimetic Dentistry

It has been said that 80-85% of disease starts in the mouth. Listeners of CHTV know by now that your dental issues may be why you're not getting well. My guest today is a Master of Biomimetic Dentistry and he is here to talk about rebuilding the teeth back to the specifications of Mother Nature. Biomimetic Dentistry goes beyond even Biological Dentistry – from properly filling a cavity to cosmetic procedures to even addressing how your bite might be causing you back pain, headaches, and other health problems, and what to do to address it.

More about Dr. Paul O'Malley:

Dr. Paul O'Malley is a 30-year Master of Biomimetic Dentistry who is on the cutting-edge of rebuilding the teeth back to the specifications of Mother Nature. He is the inventor of oral probiotics and enamel-remineralizing toothpaste, IAOMT certified to remove mercury fillings properly, and has a record of over 10,000 veneers and over 10,000 dentures delivered.

Show notes:

1. Try Dr. O'Malley's Great Oral Health products: use the coupon code: 4HealthRH10 * for 10% off your first purchase.

2. Episode #224 with Dr. Paul O'Malley: The Dangers of Crowns

3. Order Dr. Pompa's Beyond Fasting book! Released December 2019

4. CytoDetox: Total detoxification support where it matters most – at the cellular level

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
I’ve heard it said that 80 to 85% of disease starts in the mouth. I think you’ve heard me say that. Dental is huge as far as why you may not be getting well. I think you’ve heard me say that too. However, you may not have heard the word biomimetic dentistry.

This is a type of dentistry that goes beyond your regular bio-dentistry, if you will, and even how to fill in a cavity that will last your lifetime as opposed to cracking, leaking, and causing new problems, even how to do cosmetic dentistry right. Stay tuned to the show; also, how your bite unknowingly may be causing your neck pain, back pain, headaches, health problems. It might give you jaw pain, but there’s something you can do about it and how to check for it all on this show. Stay tuned. It’s a good one.

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Today we welcome back Dr. Paul O’Malley, who is a master of biomimetic dentistry and an IAOMT certified holistic dentist. He’s here to talk about how important your bite is when addressing your dental work.

He will also explain why biomimetic dentistry is on the cutting edge for restoring teeth back to the way nature intended them to be. We always love our dental episodes here on Cell TV. Today is no different. Let’s get started. Welcome, Dr. Paul O’Malley and Dr. Pompa. Welcome, both of you.

Dr. O’Malley:
Thank you very much. Happy to be back on the show again.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly, part two. That’s how important this show is. If 80 to 85% of disease starts in the mouth, you better listen up, folks. We have a different reason than you may think today. First of all, you mentioned biomimetic dentistry. We talked about it in part one, but it’s worth reviewing. What the heck, Dr. Paul, is biomimetic dentistry?

Dr. O’Malley:
Good question. Bio means life. Mimetic means copying. How do we rebuild and restructure the teeth that are broken down as close to Mother Nature as possible? There’s actually published scientific literature that’s been called by even some of my mentors—and they put together very beautiful courses. We started teaching how to follow some of the scientific literature to reconstruct the tooth.

You have to take a tooth apart in the laboratory just like an engineer would and go how much does the inner part of the tooth known as the dentin, how much does it flex? How much does the enamel flex? How abrasive and erosion-resistant is it? What materials do we have out there that can mimic that? That’s what biomimetic dentistry does. It helps follow those protocols.

Dr. Pompa:
I don’t want to rehash part one completely. I’ve watched your videos. Even putting in a filling, a ceramic inlay, you do it in layers. There’s a reason for that. I’ll let you explain the reason for that.

Ultimately, when fillings are done incorrectly or just stuffed in, it pulls from the tooth. It creates cracks. Not only does the filling not last, but it creates other health problems and other infection problems later. That’s part of biomimetic dentistry when we’re really just imitating what’s more natural for teeth. Explain that process.

Dr. O’Malley:
That’s right. We build up the teeth that have had cavities, and we do it in such a way—first of all, we make sure we remove only the decay and only as much as is needed to remove. We use a stain to make sure we’re getting all of the decay. A new paradigm shift in dentistry is that in the deep area of the decay, if the tooth is viable, vital, alive, and responds to cold that is doing well, we can leave a small amount of decay in the center part of the tooth as long as we seal and surround it. By doing that, we can build the tooth up.

We put the bonding in in layers, which follows adhesion technology. When you put the layers in, one side of the tooth is not competing with the other side. I want to hold it harder than this side or that side. It’s a balance that’s created. It’s sort of like building a house with many bricks instead of one solid wall. If a solid wall were to break down, you have to replace the whole thing. In the mouth, we do the same thing in a bunch of small layers to mimic Mother Nature and also decrease the amount of shrinkage that can happen when we put the blue light on.

The traditional conventional dentist puts a large glob of filling in because they’re thinking about the patient. Let’s go fast. We don’t want the patient in there very long, be productive, and all these types of models. They put a big piece in, put the blue light in. It looks beautiful. It looks great.

The patient walks away. They’re fine. Within three to five years that thing is leaking, and it’s got bacteria and everything underneath it. Then they come back, insurance pays for it again. Now they need a bigger one. Then the same thing happens again.

Now they need a crown. It continues down this road until there’s no tooth left. Now you need a root canal. You lost the tooth. Now you need a dental implant. It’s a shame.

It doesn’t need to go that way anymore. With biomimetic dentistry we can seal that tooth. Once it’s sealed, it appears as though it’s staying that way. We have 20-year studies, and it looks like it’s going to keep going that way theoretically. If it does break down, it’s a small area that breaks down.

We’re more interested in the life and longevity of the tooth, not the darn restoration. We’re not trying to make the hardest restoration in the world and sit there and figure out a way to make that thing last. We’re more interested in protecting the tooth, protecting the nerve.

Dr. Pompa:
Obviously, the health of the patient.

Dr. O’Malley:
That’s the big one.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s the big one, without saying, at least on this show. Let’s talk about today’s topic, which you know this. I have had some major bite issues in my day. I’ve had periodontal disease, which creates a lot of shifting, a lot of problems, recession in my gums. Restoring my mouth to a healthy mouth, and I told you now, I don’t even get plaque.

I was told you have to brush better, do this, do that, floss. I flossed after every meal. I do Waterpik. Nobody did better than me. I still had plaque. I got my teeth cleaned all the time.

After I got every bit of infection out of my mouth, I got my bite right, I’ve never had a drop of plaque since. There’s a different issue here. We talk about bite. People right now listening may say that’s my problem because my jaw is sore. I get headaches. I have neck pain. Could that be my jaw?

I don’t know if I have bite problem. I don’t have any symptoms. We have two sides of the coin; people with symptoms, people with no symptoms. Let’s start here because I want everyone to understand how this impacts them and why you need to have this evaluated correctly. Why would having a bite off knowingly or unknowningly be an issue for your health in general and for your teeth?

Dr. O’Malley:
There’s three things. This is based on studies and observations by Dr. Kois and Frank Spear. I passed that information along because I found it to be empirically true. There’s three things besides an accident that cause people to lose their teeth. Two of them are bacterial related and one is the bite.

The first is gum disease, the second is cavities, and the third is a bad bite. All three of those things can lead to tooth loss. Along the way of the tooth loss, they can get infections of the gums, infections of the root. Now we’re talking about system-wide, whole-body reaction. As we talked about in our earlier show, we start talking about root canals. Now all of a sudden we’re into a big gray area of the grayest area. Is someone going to get sick from the thing? Are they not?
Let’s just not even go there in the first place. What do we do? People that are watching the show and listening and studying and learning about these different things, by doing their own research—they can actually look in their own mouth and see am I rubbing my teeth? Is it detrimental? Are they rubbing through the enamel?

They can go watch my free dental course, freeholisticcourse.com. I talk a little bit about that. I show models and everything. If they go in the mirror and start looking, they can see I’m 26 years old. They start looking at their teeth and going I’m starting to wear these teeth down. I should get that checked.

That’s the perfect time. That’s the time they go into the dentist and say I might be having some wear here. Is there anything we can do? Then the dentist says I see a little bit of wear. Let’s watch.

The patient could be a little more proactive and say I know I’m rubbing my teeth. Can we just make a night guard or something like that? The doc will go we can do that for you now. I’ve seen those people that are wearing night guards 25, 30 years later. That has basically slowed or stopped the progression.

Fast forward that to Mrs. Smith, a fictitious person. She’s worn her teeth out. She’s brushing with the wrong things. She’s swishing with apple cider vinegar. Who knows any of these kind of things? All of a sudden she comes into my office, and the teeth are worn off. The patient is 45 years old, and you go what do you do?

You can’t kick the can down the road because within ten years she’s going to be needing root canals on so many teeth. What do we do? We have to find where the best bite position is, number one. Number two, how do we biomimetically reconstruct and build those teeth without grinding them down? It can be done. Dr. Pompa, I actually had a couple patients just with that that I recently finished on my website, DrPaulOMalley.com

Dr. Pompa:
You have great video on your website that people should go watch. You do cosmetic work. You show how you barely want to take off living teeth. The whole point of biomimetics is just keeping that structure.

Dr. O’Malley:
For me, it’s not having this podcast. It’s just to get the word out there. It’s not for me to say everybody just call my office. That’s not the purpose for me. It’s basically my philanthropic humanitarian thing to educate people.

Slowly and surely, even as one of the board members in the Academy of Biomimetic Dentistry, I would like to improve the membership and improve the training and this word out there. I’d like it to be the standard of care for everybody out there. At least they should have the option that you don’t have to have your teeth ground down. You can have them reconstructed gently and built up and really preserve the nerve and preserve your health. You can also preventatively have your bite evaluated and looked at. Make sure you’re not in the danger zone for the future and have that treated preemptively.

Dr. Pompa:
I used to do structural correction chiropractics, and we would look at the structure of C1, the top bone of the spine, the curvature all the way down. Structure effects function. One of the things I learned along the way is that people with bite issues, we found we couldn’t fix their cervical spine. I would argue that the person who just throws a night guard in will save their teeth if they wear the night guard. However, the brain knows from a [probe receptive] standpoint that something’s not right.

Walking around during the day when they don’t have the guard in, when this is off, it translates into that upper cervical. When that’s off, all the way down to your sacrum could be off. I had a dentist that we worked with that would send some of the people. Then magically we were able to change their spine. They had back pain. It would translate into less or no back pain.

The point is that this had so much do [probe receptivity]. That means if it was a dark room, I know my hand is behind me because there are certain nerves in my joints to tell my brain your arms are behind you. Those are [probe receptors]. The point I’m making is there’s certain [probe receptors] that know when things aren’t lining up right. That translates into your whole body.

Dr. O’Malley:
I think the ideal scene would be to have chiropractor and dentist working together to find the right bite position and things like that. It’s sort of like with biomimetic dentistry; if we can first get the dentist to at least do a sealant around the tooth when they’ve opened it up, that’s a first gradient step. That’s better than leaving it exposed and just cementing things on. The same way with people that have the worn teeth, if we can raise the awareness, they can minimally get some type of night guard until they can work with a chiropractor. I tell you, on the flip side, I found this interesting. A few of my chiropractor friends that I’ve worked with some patients back and forth, the adjustments begin to hold well once the night guard is in place.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re taking half the stress away.

Dr. O’Malley:
We know there is that whole connection there. My theory on it, the $64 billion question, why do I grind? That’s a big question. I think it’s a genetic thing. Some practitioners say it’s from parasites. I haven’t seen parasites go away and then the grinding goes away, so I don’t know for sure. You may have some comment on that.

I do find that some people just grind their teeth no matter how we fix them, how we restore them. They’re going to still try to grind. Even if I do the perfect reconstruction, at the end, they’ll have a night guard in the correct bite position. Now they’re correct during the day. They’re basically protected at nighttime. It’s a tough factor out there.

You get someone that’s 35 years old, and they have flattened teeth already. If you’re not careful reconstructing and rebuilding the teeth, they’re going to break everything that you put in there as a dentist. It all has to be planned out. More and more chiros, if they got together with the general dentist, it’s a home run.
Dr. Pompa:
On that topic of why do people grind, the reason why nobody knows is because it’s multi-faceted. A body under stress will release stress. It could be upper cervical problems. It could be emotional problems, trapped emotions. That’s a whole other show.

In neurotoxicity we see it. In gut stress we can see it. The point is it can be all of the above. The body under some form of stress is where we see the body releasing the stress in some aspect. It’s so multi-faceted there. I think the point is that it can lead to a lot more problems. You may not know the reason why you grind, but at least deal with the grinding first.

Dr. O’Malley:
The fact that you are grinding.

Dr. Pompa:
I’ll say this about myself; I ground. You can look at the history of my teeth and see you look like you were a grinder. It hasn’t gotten worse since I had my mouth fixed. I was neurotoxic. I had sleep issues. I used to have to sleep with my mouth open. Now I sleep all night with my mouth closed.

I don’t grind. Which one did it? Just getting healthy honestly changed my paradigm. We have to start somewhere. Start with the obvious. We have to get the bite right.

Dr. O’Malley:
Along that line, the research shows that people who grind their teeth, 50% have sleep apnea. That becomes a dangerous component. Check and see are you rubbing or grinding your teeth? Take a look at it. Try to do all the holistic and health things you can to see if it can reverse it, slow it, calm it down.

Get with the dentist. Get with the chiropractor. These are the different modalities that you have. Also, you want to do a competent sleep study to make sure you’re getting enough oxygen so that your cardiovascular is not at risk. You probably are aware of this, Dr. Pompa, that the correlation between teeth grinding and sleep apnea is I think it’s the genetic aspect of the body waking that person up to make sure they get a breath.

You need some oxygen. Take a good breath. Also, I believe it helps with the cerebral spinal fluid helping it pump around. If they’re proclined, it’s probably putting pressure in that area. They don’t have as good of circulation as a normal, healthy person might have. That’s my theory only.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m going to add to the theory. We know now that your brain actually has lymphatic channels. We never knew that that long ago. Here’s what we also know now; most of that lymphatic drainage, there’s toxins constantly that need to come out of the brain even from just making energy in your brain. It’s through the lymphatic system.

Now we know that someone who’s grinding and clenching at night actually blocks and effects lymphatics. If you think of your body as an hourglass, your head being the top of the hourglass, your tonsils being that skinny part, and your body being the rest, the bite has so much to do with it. You can just feel it around your tonsils in your throat. This bite issue effects lymphatic drainage. Therefore, now we know that when you’re not draining lymphatic at night, that effects your REM sleep, which ultimately effects your deep sleep, effects your recovery, which effects your toxicity in your brain leading to neurodegenerative diseases, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, brain loss, memory loss.

Do you see what I’m saying? This bite thing is deeper than people think. Here’s the big question; we can look at our mouth, and you gave us some great advice there. Are our teeth chipping? Do we see wear, abnormal wear?

Let’s say we go to our dentist. I fear this happening. You put the little graphite paper in. Now you look around. Is there better testing we could do for bite that we can check this problem that we may or may not know we have?

Dr. O’Malley:
That’s a good question. I think the patients out there, the people watching this show out there, they have to be their own advocate a little bit just like in healthcare. They have to see if they have the telltale signs. Those are some of the best ways. We’ve been able to put up some things, you and I, to show them what worn teeth look like in the beginning stage, middle, and later stages. People can go wow, I have that.

They have to sort of direct and guide their dentist. I’d like you to make me a night guard. The dentist might say you seem to be okay. That’s a short-term thing. Meanwhile, investigate all the other things body-wise.

You talked about the lymphatics, the position of the neck, toxicities, and all these kind of things that they can start doing to see can they begin to lessen that. Otherwise, the fear that I have is that someone might get too aggressive with the patients. We don’t want that either. Someone might go I have TMJ. My jaw pops.

Let me just say this; do you have any pain? No, I don’t have any pain. It just pops every now and then. Don’t say that out loud when you see the dentist. You’re going to get over treated. I love my colleagues. They want to help so bad.

There’s signs and there’s symptoms. If there’s symptoms, then we want to do something to alleviate those symptoms. The signs would be the wear. There could be some popping and clicking that goes on in the joint. The popping and clicking could come from a person who has loose ligament up there in the disc that’s up there that slips on and off, which it shouldn’t do. There’s exercises a person can do to help tighten that disc. There are things like that that can help.

The biggest thing is they have to look in their own mouth and go are my teeth worn? What they’d have to do is see what do healthy teeth look like? If I zoomed in close, you’d see my teeth are super healthy. I just don’t grind. I don’t clench. There’s no wear on any of my teeth.

I can see yours. That’s what it takes is to get in and look. You can even have your phone light back there and really look in there and see. Do you see signs of wear?
Dr. Pompa:
Before we got on the call, we were chatting. I’m fascinated by this because I know the impact on health. Tell our viewers and listeners what it feels like. A really clever thing you can do is move your jaw back and forth. That should feel like something or not. Describe that to them because that’s a great test too.

Dr. O’Malley:
We were talking earlier about Mother Nature has the jaw worked out pretty darn well until the introduction of sugars 400 years ago that started mutating mouths and making mouths crooked and twisted. When you go back more than 400 years, the arch forms are pretty wide. The bites and the jaws are stronger. That aside, what people can do now is they can actually—Mother Nature made it so when you close your teeth and clench, you can actually feel the muscles at the side. When I clench, it pops those muscles out.

People watching it can feel that. Now when you slide your teeth straight forward on the front teeth, you can’t really do it. It’s uncomfortable. It’s the same as when you go off to the side. You shouldn’t be able to do it.

Once you’re in the regular bite straight up and down, clench tight; only slide your teeth forward, back, sideways, etc. The only teeth touching should be the front six teeth top and bottom. Anything else rubbing and catching, that’s called an interference in dentistry. If you have a really good dentist, they’ll understand that.

They can take a small little polishing diamond and buff that out. It will clear that out of the way so that those muscles will shut off. Otherwise, if you go to the dentist and those back teeth are catching, those muscles won’t shut off. It’s just like countertops rubbing on each other.

Then the other telltale sign the patients or people out there will see is near the gum line. They’ll be able to take their fingernail and find hatchet areas, dug out grooves that can be sensitive when they get their teeth cleaned. That’s almost always from clenching. They can tell by moving their jaw around. The front six teeth should be the only ones touching.

They can look at their teeth to see if there’s wear or chipping along the edges of the front teeth. They can also feel along the gum line do they have those little trench marks. That’s another telltale sign along with recession. Recession is a combination of genetics, gum disease, and a clenching bite that’s causing those gums to run away.

Dr. Pompa:
I had it. I had all of it. I can tell you, you fix your mouth, you fix the health of your body. The oral microbiome affects the microbiome in the gut. The bite affects you structurally. There’s nerves, as we’ve discovered. There’s nerve meridians that connect each tooth to different organs.

No wonder 80% of the disease starts in the mouth. I’m telling you, if you’re biting wrong, you’re sending neurological signals down these meridians as well as destroying you structurally. There’s so many factors, Paul.

Dr. O’Malley:
That’s right. There’s a lot. You look in history, some of the really athletic, strong-looking figures that lived well into their 80s and 90s, Jack LaLanne is one. There he is pulling a barge in the water with his teeth. The health and the strength of the body, it’s almost like a barometer. You can look at someone’s teeth and go wow, they have a good constitution. They have [26:46] constitution. The good news is something can be done about it so they can prevent those problems from being a long-term chronic situation to the body.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely. Here’s the thing, a lot of people are getting cosmetic dentistry done, which done right can be a great thing. I had some areas that absolutely needed to be fixed. It can also be the thing that throws the bite off. Talk a little bit about cosmetic dentistry done correctly, biomimetically. Also, if done incorrectly, it throws the bite off.

Dr. O’Malley:
If you do it biomimetically, obviously you’re going to look at the teeth from the standpoint of what’s broken down, what needs to be rebuilt. If you have to take the bite into consideration, let’s make sure we have the bite in the right position, if it’s comfortable. Let’s prepare or grind on the teeth as little as possible. What does that mean? Maybe ultra thin veneers on the front teeth if they’re needed; on the back we can do ultra thin onlays.

We might actually open that bite a little bit to create space. Generally we can because a person that’s really ground their teeth have lost vertical dimension from their nose to their chin. Hallelujah, that means we can open that bite a little bit. Now we have more space in there, and we can build those teeth back up rather than grind them down. I’ve had so many patients come to me that have been all over the country seeing the top gurus. They said I came to see you because I know you’re not going to do crowns on my teeth and grind them down. Everybody else wanted to do crowns on my teeth.

The biomimetic dentists generally know how to rebuild teeth. Some are a little bit more skilled than others. Your audience would have to investigate that and go to the Academy of Biomimetic Dentistry. They can research whose been trained and who does different things and search that for themselves. When you get into cosmetic dentistry, you want to make sure that form follows function. It’s very important.

First in my practice we eradicate all disease and infection. If they have mercury fillings and toxic metals in there, we remove those after the infection is healed up. We don’t want to do extractions and clean out and then remove mercury. It dumps back into those socket areas. We want to make sure that everything is calm, clean, and we’re not creating a further exacerbation.

There’s various steps to go through to minimize toxicity to the body on a holistic side. On the biomimetic side there’s various steps to go through to do this minimally. I like to say we want to do the leastest to the teeth to get the mostest result.

Dr. Pompa:
I like your English. It’s so true because you have to look long term. I think that dentistry is moving away from just grinding down teeth to nothing and putting crowns on. Like you said, veneers, a lot of dentists grind them all the way down to stumps and put the veneer on. I don’t know if you can provide some of your videos, but just how minimally you take off when you did some veneer work on people, I thought it was brilliant. I thought your video was well done.

Dr. O’Malley:
Thank you. That’s the education course that we put out, freeholisticdentalcourse.com. That one we just got rave reviews on it. I just put it out. I wanted people to know there’s a difference out there. A veneer is not a veneer is not a veneer.

Then if you’re looking at the whole body of the person, how can you do this minimally? We want to make sure the teeth are going to last a lifetime in a healthy fashion. If one of my restorations breaks, there’s still 90% of the tooth left there to build up. Some of the docs are saying we need harder crowns. We need stronger materials. It’s not necessarily so.

We need minimal preparation. We need proper materials that mimic Mother Nature and we get long-term results; more importantly, the longevity of the tooth. That’s what we’re looking for. That can help the longevity of a person’s health.

An interesting thing with the cosmetic is you talked earlier about an emotional side to things. Some people are so distraught emotionally, they don’t smile in any of their pictures. They’re just sucking in. They’re withholding a beautiful emotion that they could release, and they can’t because they feel so bad about themselves. Now they can go get cosmetic dentistry, but you want to make sure the form follows function. You find someone that gets everything done right, minimally invasively, the teeth are all sealed, and then the person not only has a beautiful smile, feels good outwardly now expressing themselves, but they’re going to have teeth for life and a healthy body as well.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s great. Another big question on this topic of literally maintaining our teeth; what’s your feeling about regular toothpaste? What’s your feeling about healthy toothpastes someone buys in Whole Foods? What you use in your mouth is huge for your microbiome and the health of your teeth. Talk about both worlds.

Dr. O’Malley:
Well, earlier on the show we were talking about three things cause people to lose their teeth. One is the bite, which we’ve just talked about. The other is gum disease and tooth decay. Literally it’s an epidemic worldwide. It’s listed as such because there’s four billion people right now as we’re speaking that have severe gum disease or cavities right at this moment. How detrimental to their body as well.

We can put people on the moon. Now we’re going to go to Mars and all that. Gosh, darn it, why can’t we handle this epidemic that’s out there? We can. We can do it through diet and all these types of things, which the more proper way to better foods is more natural foods, better diet, less sugar, less carbs, all that. That’s a very tough uphill battle when you’ve got a trillion dollars of commercials out there pushing sodas, Coca-Colas, Twinkies, fruit snacks load with sugar, etc. What can we do?

All those things are caused from an imbalance in bacteria that happens not only in the gut; it happens in the mouth too. When it comes to toothpaste and the natural type of toothpaste, even I looked back in 2003, 2004 at all the natural ones, and they actually weren’t that great, in my opinion as a holistic dentist. My daughter, who was five-and-a-half, six at the time, we set up shop in my kitchen. My wife was very gracious to allow us to do that. We started mixing ingredients.

I told my daughter, “We’re going to make a toothpaste.” She goes, “Okay, dad.” We started making our own toothpaste. Literally I tried putting so many different things in. I tried putting probiotics in there, but they always would die. It wouldn’t be in the right ratio. I have to separate those out.

We made a probiotic just for the mouth, all natural, chewable, more like a lozenge people can take at nighttime to reduce the bacteria that causes cavities, gum disease, and ear, nose, and throat infections. I kept working on that darn toothpaste. Finally, this year I’ve released the toothpaste that came out at my company, Great Oral Health. That’s the probiotic, Great Oral Health.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, kids love this thing.
Dr. O’Malley:
It’s amazing as long as they haven’t been brought up on sugary stuff. Some of the kids want it to be more sugary. It’s like yeah, this is not a sugar. This is a medicine, but at least it’s a favorable flavor. That’s the probiotic.

In our profession the problem has been we’ve been trying to burn this stuff out, kill it, cut it out, nuke the stuff, whatever. It’s a failed concept. It’s only one half of the ledger. Not only do we have to get rid of the bad, but we have a back filler put in the good. That product you just showed is the probiotic, the back filler is filling in the good bacteria.

Only 2% of the population never gets gum disease or cavities worldwide. The rest of the 98%, if we don’t supplement, we’re missing the boat on that. Unfortunately, it’s a lifestyle change. Fortunately, there’s something that can be done.

When it comes to the toothpaste, my opinion on this is that we don’t need fluoride. Fluoride is listed as a toxin anyways. Who needs that stuff? It’s 300 parts to 1 million parts per million in toothpaste. In the water supply they put maybe one part per million in there. A harmful form of fluoride, it’s a like a hydrofluorosilicic, which is a waste product. That can be a whole other show, right?

When they use fluoride in toothpaste, it’s more of a chemistry-based proper type of fluoride. It’s not mixed with all these little toxins in it. In itself, it’s listed as a poison or toxin. What does that stuff do? It helps bind to the enamel. There’s conflicting studies on that.

It might make that enamel a little bit harder. I find that it acts like a pesticide. It tends to stick around and helps prevent bacteria from laying their acids and sticking around there, and that’s it. You’re using a pesticide to do it because it kills bugs, but it’s a bit toxic to have too much in the mouth.

If you look at the Center for Disease Control, they have a lot of calls. They swallow that stuff. If they swallow it too much, they’ve got to go to the hospital and get their stomach pumped or it can be lethal. There’s a little sign on that.
I said I want to do natural stuff, so fluoride is out. What can we do? Any good natural toothpaste should be loaded aloe vera. It should have xylitol in it. It should have some antioxidants in it, not just it looks cool on the label, but stuff that can be highly effective.

Dr. Pompa:
Many of our viewers know Dr. Gerry. He’s been very critical of commercial toothpaste, but more so healthier toothpaste, more natural toothpaste. Even from the standpoint of some of the natural ingredients, even natural sweeteners are too harsh on the oral microbiome. What’s your feeling on some of those?

Dr. O’Malley:
I agree with that. The formulation that I put together, tie in the xylitol, the aloe vera, the antioxidants, it has organic essential oil, and it has a small amount of tee tree oil. We want to kill the bacteria, but we also want to rebuild the teeth. It’s loaded with an ingredient called hydroxyapatite. Hydroxyapatite is basically a fancy name for calcium for the teeth, but it’s a nano particle size.

There’s double-blind studies on it that shows that it will re-mineralize the tooth’s structure on a micro level. It will do that. The beauty is that it re-mineralizes it in a white crystalline form. It can slightly over time even improve the color of the teeth at the same time it’s healing. My view was always let’s rebuild and help these teeth get a chance for Mother Nature to rebuild them. That’s the ingredients that should be in there.

I’ll say one last thing; 99.99% to almost infinity percent of the toothpastes out there are chalk full of glycerin. They have vegetable glycerin in them. Instead of animal glycerin, they go to vegetable. They look better on the label. Glycerin is really meant to help bind everything together, hold it together, preserve it a little bit, etc. There’s nothing wrong with it. It’s not like you’re going to die from the stuff.

On the teeth it’s apparently negative charged and hard to wash off. You might need 6 or 8 or 12 swishes with water to get the stuff off. It binds on there. It’s negative charged. Plague is positive charged. Who knew?

That’s why people brushing with regular toothpaste that has glycerin in it, their teeth feel dirty within half an hour. Mine is 99.99% free of glycerin, and it has that ultimate clean feeling. It’s helping in the re-mineralization process naturally with the mouth.

Dr. Pompa:
You mentioned xylitol. Some people are critical of xylitol because it’s a killer. It has an effect against bacteria. What’s your feeling on xylitol?

Dr. O’Malley:
The studies look pretty good on it. Xylitol is sort of like the Trojan horse. Xylitol goes in there, and the bacteria that cause cavities and some of the others that are there go yum. This looks just like sugar. Let’s get some. That’s their fuel.

These bacteria love sugar. It’s like gasoline for them on a fire. They try to digest it. They’re trying and trying and can’t quite digest that molecule of xylitol. What happens is they expend all their energy and die naturally.

Apparently over time, so far as I’ve been researching, they haven’t built a resistance to this, which is great. It’s probably going to be as effective as these toothpastes that have fluoride in it. You can’t have a small amount in there. You can’t have 3% xylitol or 12% xylitol. It’s not enough. It has to be enough that it can be effective.

Dr. Pompa:
Does it have a negative effect on the good oral microbiome, the good bacteria?

Dr. O’Malley:
No, apparently not. It’s going to help reduce the more pathogenic bacteria that proliferate off of a high carbohydrate, high sugar content of foods. Basically all the bacteria are just competing for food. If we take the probiotic and dump it in there, they’re going to start competing for food too. They also have a little Star Wars-like activity in them. They can shoot around at the pathogenic bacteria and take them out, these good bacteria. It’s all competing.

If there’s not enough food source, they drown out the harmful bacteria. That’s the concept behind it. If I just have a toothpaste all by itself and that’s all I had as part of my protocol, I’d be like everybody else out there. We’d only be hitting one side of the ledger, which is wipe out the bad stuff. Just look at the epidemic. It’s not successful.

Dr. Pompa:
It doesn’t work. It hasn’t worked.

Dr. O’Malley:
We’ve got to balance the bacteria.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s an old model. We have hit structure. We hit function. We even hit the oral microbiome. Again, I would argue that you can use the perfect toothpaste, you can do a lot of things right.

One of the things, I had these pockets. I had some cavitations, which teeth were extracted, formed, healed over, and formed these nasty caves with bacteria and other pathogens in them. I also had deep pockets. My bite was off for so many years, recession. I had periodontal disease. The three things you said, obviously I had toxicity issues, but I did have bite issues, structural issues in the mouth.

Dr. O’Malley:
That’s why we have to balance out the structure. If all I did is promoted my company, Great Oral Health, and buy the essential oils to kill the bacteria, the toothpaste to help keep everything fresh and healthy and balanced and re-mineralize the teeth, and then the probiotic to balance the bite, then what we’re going to end up with is still people that have a structural problem with their bite. They’re still going to get into trouble. We have to handle all three of those.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely. Give me your information. What do you want to send people?

Dr. O’Malley:
They can go to DrPaulOMalley.com. That’s my website. They can sign up there for the free holistic course. They can also peruse around and look at everything. The other is just freeholisticdentalcourse.com. My oral care company is called Great Oral Health. Just go to GreatOralHealth.com. I want great oral health for everybody. It’s your goal too.

Dr. Pompa:
It is. Dr. Paul, thank you, a wealth of knowledge always on the show.

Dr. O’Malley:
Thanks a lot.

Dr. Pompa:
If you haven’t watched episode one, more about biomimetic dentistry, Ashley will put the link up. You can link back to part one. I think you can watch these in either order. Obviously, we gave a little more information on how you do teeth. That’s awesome. Thanks for being on, Paul.

Dr. O’Malley:
Thanks. You’re awesome. I appreciate the show. Thanks a lot. Bye-bye.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. This episode was brought to you by CytoDetox. Please check it out at buyCytonow.com. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10:00 a.m. Eastern.

We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at CellularHealing.tv. Please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, and sharing the show with anyone you think may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.

302: Kava: The Nootropic More Powerful Than CBD

Episode 302: Kava: The Nootropic More Powerful Than CBD

I know you know today's guest, former client, now product consultant and friend – Cameron George. Well, Cam wears many hats, and he's here to share one more.
Cameron (or ‘Kava Cam', as my kids call him) has devoted many years to the development of a full-spectrum kava oil, and it's been a big part of his own healing journey in the process.
Kava is a healing root that is more powerful than CBD, and supports a calm mind, a positive mood, enhanced sociability, better focus, deeper sleep, and has anti-inflammatory properties… as long as it is real Kava. Until Cam developed his own, it has been nearly impossible to source. This healing kava supplement was truly birthed out of Cameron's pain to purpose story, and we are honored to share it with you.

More about Cameron George:

Cameron is the founder of KAVAPLEX, a project that has been many years in development and is centered around delivering safe, palatable, user friendly traditional Kava products to the modern world.

Since Discovering the amazing effects of traditional Kava during his own chronic illness, Cameron spent many years investigating every aspect of Kava and has collaborated with many of the most prominent experts in the world in the fields of Kava research and historical Kava use.

The goal of this project is to provide the safest and most effective Kava products on the market, as well as educate the public on the complex story surrounding Kava, explaining some of the myths, the massive variation of quality on the market, and the many amazing benefits that Kava can offer when it’s used correctly in its traditional form.

It is an initiative to educate on the clear distinction that the scientific literature and historical accounts have made between Safe and questionable Kava products, as well as advocate the use of only lab tested safe Kava varieties.

Show notes:
Try Kava for yourself and use the code ‘pompa' for 20% off: KAVAPLEX

CHTV episode 282: How to Biohack Your Fasts

CHTV episode 173: Using Plant Medicine for Anxiety

CHTV episode 70: Overcoming Multiple Chemical Sensitivity

Dr. Pompa's new release Beyond Fasting is now shipping! Order here!

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
Cameron George, I’m sure you’ve heard the name if you’ve been watching Cell TV. If not, well, his story, unbelievable. However, we didn’t tell his story today. My kids call him Kava Cameron or Kava Cam. Why? Because he’s a wealth of knowledge on kava. I know you’ve heard of the CBD craze. I believe, Cam believes, others believe kava is more powerful.

Wait until you see the benefits of kava. It has to be real kava. He talks about that. He devoted many years to this because it was one of the products that saved his life and allowed him to be able to detox because he was stuck on Benzodiazepines because of all his sensitivities from being sick. This was from pain to purpose and now he’s Kava Cam. You’re going to hear an amazing story, yes, but he’s going to talk about an amazing product that I use all the time: sleep, anxiety, you name it, even just neurotropic, breaking through brain fog, and using it even during the day let alone sleeping at night. Alright, stay tuned; you’ll love Cam.

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Today, we welcome back a familiar guest and friend to the show, Cameron George. You’ll likely remember him as Dr. Pompa’s former patient and now researcher/developer of the fasting and stem cell products mentioned in “Episode 282.”

Cameron is also the founder of KAVAPLEX, a project that has been many years in development and is centered around delivering safe, palatable, user-friendly, traditional kava products to the modern world. Cameron is here to share the many amazing benefits that kava can offer when it’s used correctly in its traditional form. I cannot wait to hear more. I will turn this over to you two as I know your conversations are always filled with tons of well-researched material. Let’s get started and welcome Cameron George and Dr. Pompa to the show; welcome, guys.

Cameron George:
Thanks so much for having me.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, well, my kids call you Kava Cam. Kava Cam, welcome to Cell TV. You’re no beginner here; you’ve been on Cell TV one, two—is this your third or fourth?

Cameron George:
Oh, it’s the fourth or maybe fifth because we did—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, anyway, if you haven’t watched the episodes from the very beginning, Ashley will put all the episodes in because you have to hear Cam’s story. We definitely don’t have time to tell it, but it’s from pain to purpose like mine. Through it, Cam, like myself, found a passion for researching. We have to tell a little bit about it because how kava? Why did Cam get so into kava?

There’s a medication that’s a benzodiazepine which basically calms the nerve system and allowed Cam to function even during the detox and during life. We were trying desperately to get him off of this med. The problem is he wasn’t able to. He started researching different plants, different herbs. Kava was the magic for him.

Tell that portion of the story, Cam, so they understand how you got so into every nuance of kava. You are the kava king, man, everything. Now, you’ve developed a new product that I think all of our viewers are going to benefit from.

Cameron George:
Yeah, it’s interesting how I just fell into this. It was one of those right place, right time type of things. This is a plant that’s just like many other supplements, compounds, plant compounds that are available. It’s nothing new, but it’s a rediscovery and something that needs to be introduced in the correct way into the modern context for more practical use so that people can actually get the true benefits of it.

Yeah, I’ve told my story many times on here before for people who have heard it, I’m sure. I was one sick puppy. I was one of these really complex cases that are becoming, unfortunately, more and more common, very unexplainable plethora of different symptoms.

In a nutshell, it was full-blown autoimmunity. Started with brain fog and fatigue and ended up in full-blown environmental illness, chemical sensitivity, consistent seizures, reactions, anaphylactic reactions. I was reacting to everything in my environment, which happens whenever the body’s metaphorical stress bucket becomes overburdened and immune system goes crazy, nervous system goes crazy, limbic system goes crazy as part of a protective response because the system has been so stressed out. It’s essentially a form of PTSD that manifests both neurologically and immunologically. It’s just a complete explosion and hypersensitization of the body.

Dr. Pompa:
I was there, too. After I got my life back in many ways, energy, focus, could work out, I was left in this state of hypersensitivity to chemicals, molds, environment. It was a disaster for me. I didn’t have this when I was going through that. Here’s the product you actually spent so much time researching and creating. Okay, so with that, Cam, Klonopin became your—you couldn’t live life without it. Explain what that did and why and what we knew we had to replace to get off of that.

Cameron George:
Yeah, absolutely. This is really going to hit home for so many people out there because I’d say out of all the clients and patients, the doctors in our network and elsewhere, functional medicine doctors, standard allopathic doctors as well, one of the key symptoms that most people in the midst of a chronic disease process express is anxiety and insomnia. That’s because so many of these chronic illnesses are a combination of different stressors that rev up the body’s nervous system and the body’s limbic system as well. A lot of these are neurotoxic in origin, so these are neurotoxic illnesses or at least neurotoxins play a key role in the accumulation. That was a key part of the solution of how I got myself out of it as well, too.

Anyway, because so many of these conditions are conditions that express anxiety as one of its key symptoms—and also one of the symptoms that makes it very difficult to even have your wits about you enough to pull together and do the combination of things that’s actually going to get you well. Because whenever you’re in a state of perpetual anxiety and sleeplessness, it’s very difficult to have a clear perspective on anything and remain motivated and just sane. That was the situation that I was in except for mine was even on the absolute extreme where the reactions that I was having were sending me into seizures, sending me to an anaphylactic type of situations. They were actually dangerous and at some points actually quite lethal. Even if you’re on the more mild part of that spectrum and you’re one of the millions of people out there suffering with sleeplessness, anxiety, irritability, just one of the key signs of chronic illness, a lot of people end up on these benzodiazepine-like drugs, not because they want to go on medication; who wants to go on a medication or be dependent on one? This epidemic of anxiety, sleeplessness, depression, all of these things is exploded so tremendously that people are desperate—

Dr. Pompa:
Let’s face it, it works for most people. It gives them some type of symptom relief, not everybody. Here’s the problem is it works on the short-term, but the long-term effect becomes disastrous and very difficult to come off.

Cameron George:
Just like any drug, the principle of synthetic pharmacology is the art of borrowing from tomorrow to pay for today, basically with your chemistry just like using alcohol. If you have anxiety or depression and you use alcohol, if you take a few shots of vodka or tequila you get results, but that’s not a solution because you’re going to end up worse and worse and worse the more you do that because instead of creating more of these chemicals that you’re lacking, these inhibitory chemicals that calm your bodies, these hormones like serotonin and GABA and these things, you’re actually just using up what you have. You end up more in debt with your own body’s chemistry.

This is something like whenever we were in the midst of my process, I was heavily dependent on these benzodiazepine-like drugs. The problem was is that I had gotten a level of tolerance; they weren’t even helping me anymore. If I were to stop them or start to taper, my nervous system would go through the roof because it was so depleted from the use of it.

I would also go into a withdrawal process. Like any withdrawal process, your body tends to ricochet in the opposite direction. The withdrawals actually can be lethal at their worst when it comes to benzodiazepines, similar to what we see with opiates and things as well.

Obviously, whenever we were in the midst of my process years ago, we got to a point where I couldn’t tolerate anything because I was so sensitive. I couldn’t take the smallest dosage of a supplement. I wasn’t sleeping. My nervous system, it’s a negative feedback loop. I just kept getting more and more revved up. My anxiety was through the absolute roof. I just needed something to make the process a little easier to get my reactions down, to calm my nervous system, allow me to sleep, make the detox more tolerable so I wouldn’t be in total, absolute meltdown every second of every day.

We were looking for a plant-based analog; meaning something out of the plant or fungal kingdom, out of the natural world that acted in a similar way on the nervous system that bound to the same receptors as these benzodiazepine drugs but without creating the tolerance and withdrawal type of symptoms that you get from the synthetic compounds. Which is something that is a feasible thing to be looking for in nature because a lot of times when you talk about plant compounds, these things just like our bodies they’re naturally occurring. They’re far more complex than just a single molecule like a synthetic drug is. Our body recognizes them and can interface with these natural compounds because it’s a living system as well.

A plant is from a living system. It can interface with your body. Many times, plants are not addictive for that reason because the body doesn’t see them as foreign. It’s able to interface with those compounds without creating the depleting effect on your chemistry. These are much more compatible.

Dr. Pompa:
Right, and so people coming off are looking for something like this. Which at that time, we didn’t know if it would work or not. I just said, hey—

Cameron George:
Goal.

Dr. Pompa:
Every natural compound let’s find that works on the same receptors that these benzos do and let’s see what happens. Really, you’ve tried them all; you did it all. It wasn’t just kava; you realized it was specific strains of kava, that it had to be kava done the right way. Talk about that.

By the way, folks, if anxiety, sleep, everything that Cam just said, this helps; however, it goes beyond that. We’ve learned a lot about this. This helps the body in autophagy. This helps the body do so many things. Athletes can use it for a better recovery, deeper sleep.

There’s a lot that benzo—I would argue the craze right now of CBD, I think this is the next craze because it does so many things that CBD does better actually. I’m not throwing CBD under the bus because oftentimes the combination of the two is actually really good, but oftentimes, this actually works better for people than CBD. Cam, talk about all the—what you found out about the right kava. Most of the kava that you go to the store and buy, it’s crap, doesn’t work because most people like myself would go, oh, I tried kava; I didn’t notice anything.

Cameron George:
Yeah, absolutely. I think the CBD comparison is a fantastic one. It’s one that I always use when trying to get people to understand the significance of a product like this or of a plant compound like this because most of us are aware that there are a huge—that there’s a huge number of different applications that have become popular in regards to CBD. It’s not just something that’s being totted for anxiety relief, and stabilizing mood, and enhancing deep sleep, but it also has immune modulation effects, and reducing inflammation, and has some possible mechanisms that could help in the process of beating cancer.

We talk about the cannabinoid system and stuff. Kava’s the same way. The reason is because these compounds that come out of nature have hundreds of different active constituents, so like I said, are very biological compatible—or biologically compatible. It’s because they come from the natural world.

Just like with cannabis and just like with hemp and CBD, kava we know now after going through all of the research, which there’s more on kava than there is just about any other plant out there besides cannabis and a few others, that it has so many different applications outside of what it’s most famous for which is anxiety relief and mood-lifting and stuff. It has a lot of different metabolic effects. I’ll go into some of those in a moment.

Just to address the quality issue, whenever I first started researching kava—and first of all, yeah, we tried a lot of different compounds, CBD being one of them. CBD is great, but it just wasn’t enough. All the other ones like chamomile, valerian, passionflower, lemon balm, all of these other compounds that bind to these really inhibitory receptors, these GABA receptors that are so crucial to kava’s central mechanism, they just aren’t strong enough. They’re very subtle. They’re good for a healthy person, but they really don’t have that acutely medicinal punch that say like alcohol or benzodiazepines would.

If you research anxiolytic compounds that appear in nature, then you’re going to come across kava. Whenever I first came across it, I said, well, I’ve already tried kava. I had; there are actually some preparations you can buy over the counter at Whole Foods and other health food stores that are called kava kava. That’s like an American type of name that’s given to kava extracts which are not kava at all in 99.9% of cases. I really didn’t think that it was that big of a deal because I had tried those capsules before; it was akin to the effects that I would get off of a cup of chamomile tea or a soothing cup of like Reishi Mushroom Four Sigmatic Tea or something. I just wasn’t that impressed with it. I’m like, well, it’s in the same wheelhouse of some of those other inhibitory compounds.

Then I got in contact with a couple of individuals who were from the islands which is where kava originates, so from Fiji was my first contact and then in Vanuatu which is an island chain right off of Fiji. Like I said, that’s where it originates. I said, “Well, I’ve tried kava. Can you tell me anything else about kava, how to use it? Am I doing something wrong because the literature is showing all of these effects, the anthropological accounts are showing all these? It’s absolutely sacred to this whole group of people going back 3,000 years. What am I missing?”

They said, “Well, you haven’t tried real kava. You’ve tried these extracts.” I said, “Well, what’s the difference?” We started to go down that rabbit hole, started to look into the literature, and some of the doctors, researchers, scientists that were making these clear distinctions between the two types.

Basically, traditional kava is a drink preparation in these islands that they’ve been preparing out of the roots of Piper Methysticum, which is a small shrub in the pepper family. You have to make the traditional preparation with either pressure or some kind of a grinding and kneading and a specific type of extraction to get out the full entourage of active constituents that all work together to bring out its full effects. Whenever you use tradition extraction methods like the methods that are used for these products that you find in health food stores, you use what’s called a solvent. A solvent is a substance like alcohol or sometimes—

Dr. Pompa:
When you say traditional, you mean in this country traditional, not kava traditional.

Cameron George:
Right, yeah, exactly. True traditional kava is what I’m talking about that’s actually the drink. That’s really where the magic is. Traditional extracts in our country and countries around the world are the ones that you find in capsules and all these other different forms. They’re made by using what’s called a solvent like alcohol or sometimes something a lot worse like acetone or methane or some of these things.

Basically, it’s a substance that you mix with it to perform an extraction. It grabs to certain things and pulls them out. The problem is that kava’s potency really relies on the entourage of all of these compounds: the larger ones, the mid-sized ones, the smaller ones, all of the active constituents which are called kavalactones, and then all the enzymes that help accentuate those kavalactones in your body as well as increase their bioavailability, help them make it to the cell, etc. The problem is that solvents grab a few of those compounds and separate it out. You reduce the potency by like 80 or 90% whenever you do that. You kill some of the effects totally. You end up with something that’s just a small shade of what real kava actually became famous for.

Once I made contact with some individuals in these islands, that started sending me some good high-quality, good strands of really good kava root and told me how to prepare it traditionally. I prepared it. It’s a tedious process. You have to squeeze it in this strainer bag for 30 minutes. You get gunk everywhere. It comes out in a film that comes to the surface. There’s tannins and root fibers. You end up with something that looks a lot like muddy water.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I saw it.

Cameron George:
It tastes like it, too. It’s basically muddy water is what you’re drinking. I got effects so quickly off of doing that. The first time I took it, I noticed it. Then there’s also accumulative crescendoing effect with kava because it builds up in your system. It upregulates these systems as opposed to what you get with a synthetic drug where you get less and less of an effect. The longer you take it, it’s the opposite. As I started to use it, after about two weeks, I was totally blown away by it. After a month even—

Dr. Pompa:
I think that’s an important point. I forget the challenge that you say, maybe it’s the 21-day challenge because if you can keep people on longer, the effects actually go up, which is opposite of many like a street drug or a drug. It’s like you have more of an effect in the beginning and it gets less. This is opposite; it works up.

Cameron George:
Yeah, and this is just the—one of the amazing things about plant intelligence and about plant pharmacology is that its complexity interfaces with your body totally differently than we would think of with like a synthetic pharmaceutical. We know that with any synthetic pharmaceutical, you’re going to get the most prominent effects the first time you take it. Your body is going to create a tolerance around that because it’s a foreign molecule. It’s going to say, hey, we have too much of these chemicals. We’re going to stop producing that chemical in our own body. With kava, and cannabis is like this too to some degree, it’s very complex. It interfaces with the receptors in a very different way that we know actually now from some of the data coming out that it causes more of a reverse tolerance.

Dr. Pompa:
Cannabis again, cannabis is CBD, folks.

Cameron George:
Yeah, right, exactly. Yeah, cannabis is marijuana or CBD depending on which type that you’re using. We know now from some of the data coming out that we’re actually seeing what we call a reverse tolerance and what the traditional natives have called a reverse tolerance for many years where it’s just the opposite. The more you use, the more of an effect that you get and the less you actually need. This is happening because instead of downregulating and depleting that chemical in your body—in this case, it’s working on the GABA system which is the primary system for the breaks of your nervous system. It just shuts the system down, allows you to sleep, relax, all that stuff. That’s what benzos work on.

Instead of depleting that system, we actually see an increase in GABA receptor density and GABA A activity in the nervous system over a long-term use that continues to increase the longer a person uses it. Then eventually, it levels off. It’s not only giving an acute therapeutic action to the person like a benzo would, but it’s also helping to rehabilitate the underlying deficient in the nervous system which is just—this is part of plant intelligence. There’s an intelligence whenever you get things out of the natural world that you just can’t mimic with a synthetic compound. The efficiency is just—that’s where a lot of science is really going is understanding that we have to use science not to contradict or undermine the intelligence of the body, but to actually be able to harness the intelligence in nature and amplify it in various ways through extraction methods and potency and so on.

Dr. Pompa:
Talk about KAVAPLEX. My son loves it. I love it. Talk about from what you just said, what you ended up doing with this because that process is very difficult as you said.

Cameron George:
Oh, it is.

Dr. Pompa:
The muddy water, we don’t want to be making muddy water. Talk about how this came to be. It was a Godsend. Right now, I just took some of it. I actually really like the test; for kava, that says a lot because kava’s strong.

Cameron George:
Oh, it does. That’s funny because that was the first problem that you and I ran into whenever we started trying it on other clients and basically giving it do the doctors and really unofficially promoting it because we were seeing such profound effects. In myself, just to touch on a couple of the effects that I got from it, I was able to get off benzodiazepines in a couple of months, basically, unheard of. My reactions reduced by 70 or 80% within that two to three months. It was just miraculous. I never would have expected results like that. Once we knew we had something special with it, this was something that just hadn’t been brought into the Western context in its true traditional form, it’s this hidden gem, then it was a question of, okay, now we’re giving it to people or recommending it to people and 80% of them are coming back and saying, this stuff takes like garbage.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, remember my clients that were like really needed this, I’d be like oh yeah, just call Cam. He’ll walk you through it because it’s like walking people through this process and then convincing them to drink muddy water. The ones who did, they got the result.

Cameron George:
Exactly; well, the thing is not only is it tedious, but if you screw it up, and if you don’t get the water to the right temperatures, and if you don’t apply the right amount of pressure, then it’s not nearly as strong. You’ll get a different effect every time. It’s a nightmare. Then you have crap everywhere in your kitchen. It takes a long time to clean up. It gets your strainers all gunky and stuff. Yeah, the taste is not good at all.

Then you have to—it’s one thing to do that once in a while, but we’re asking these people to do it every single day. That takes 30 minutes out of your day to do it. Again, a lot of people—

Dr. Pompa:
That’s why I was like, Cam, you’ve got to make this process simpler. We’ve got to get the traditional kava with right kavalactones in a product that’s simple.

Cameron George:
Right; then, we started doing some r&d. Once we realized that we really wanted to roll with this and to bring this into the marketplace in a real way—because no one else is doing it. We’re so far ahead on this. Obviously, people have tried but with traditional solvents. They don’t understand the unique pharmacology of and the chemical composition of kava and actually how to get out its full spectrum of constituents in a palatable, user-friendly form.

I had already been doing r&d on different stuff because I just—I spent the better part of the last decade just scouring medical scientific literature, building relationships with people across the industry: doctors, scientists, researchers, product formulators, all kinds of stuff. I already had built up a reservoir of knowledge on this stuff, which now came in handy obviously. I started looking at different ways that we could extract this.

Basically, a good friend of mine who’s a mechanical engineer from Germany had developed a method of processing seed oils that yeah, that were absolutely undamaged, which is just a profound thing because it’s very difficult to do that, to press at really low temperatures without grinding the plant material or the seeds and pulling oxygen down into it, and oxidizing the compounds. Kava, hemp, all of these things have the same problem. We needed a solvent-less extraction. We needed something that was applying pressure without heating it up past 95 degrees or a little bit higher than that probably but was difficult to find.

We finished up this process and developed the process, which is a special hydraulic pressing method that on the other side you get basically a pristine kava oil. We also use a type of sunflower that we press it with to get an undamaged sunflower oil out of it that’s not inflammatory like standard damaged sunflower oils a lot of times are. The lecithin in that acts as a carrier for the lactones. We press those two things together and then we pull out this very pristine oil on the other end that whenever we subject it to lipid peroxidation testing and what’s called a kavalactone chemo-type test.

Basically, that means we’re looking at the kava plant material before, we’re creating the extraction, and then we’re measuring it in the oil afterwards. We get what’s called a chemical fingerprint, like a six-digit chemical fingerprint. That tells us the ratios and the amounts of the active compounds of the six major active compounds. Measure it before and after and they’re almost identical; meaning that we haven’t created any denaturing. We’ve actually harnessed the full-spectrum of the active compounds.

It was a unique breakthrough. It actually sounds even simpler than it really was to dial the pressures in and even just the mechanical work behind the scenes on developing this pressing technology was huge in and of itself. That was a thing. Once we knew that we had something great, then we made it in a palatable form that tasted fine, too. Then we started testing it out on clients and patients. We got something that was really unique. Now, it’s palatable and user-friendly.

Dr. Pompa:
What’s the typical dose and when would somebody take this?

Cameron George:
Yeah, I think I may have touched on this before as—in regards to when a person would take it. The strain of kava that we used in the launching of this particular product is a strain that can be taken pretty much any time of day. There’s two hundred different strains of kava; just like with cannabis, some are more daytime, some are more nighttime, some are more nootropic and cognitively activating, and some are more sedating. This one is really balanced, so it’s not going to put you asleep, but it’s still going to relieve anxiety. It elicits a calm focus that runs in the background. It’s from a strain called Borogu, a really popular strand within Vanuatu.

They can take it basically any time of day. Obviously, do a little of experimentation. I usually recommend late afternoon. I usually would take one to two droppers full. You can go quite a bit higher than that because it’s a food-grade product; it’s not concentrated or denatured in any way. You can take up to four to eight droppers full if you really want to go to that next level with it.

You can also mix it in like a bulletproof style coffee if you’re wanting to take it as a nootropic but take the edge off of the caffeine. Both caffeine and MCT both intensify the absorption, both you speed up the absorption. It kicks a lot harder whenever you add it with either MCT or caffeine or both, so people are doing that as well.

You get good results basically any time of day. We wanted to make it as versatile as possible with this first product. We have a lot of other products on the horizon that in development right now. Some are actually much stronger; some are dialed into specifically nighttime; some are dialed into more of a powerful nootropic that’s not sedating at all.

This first part we wanted to make really versatile. We wanted to make it in a concentration that was subtle enough that you could take it any time of day. With this strain, you could take it at any time of day and it would run in the background. It’s not too overly intense so it’s extremely versatile.

We do have a product that we’re going to be launching in the next couple of months, hopefully, in November, that’s going to come in little packets. If you guys have seen companies out there like Four Sigmatic that have those mushroom packets, it’s a new powdered extract that’s quite a bit—that kicks quite a bit harder than this one, but sometimes less is more. It’s going to be geared more towards nighttime and that next level of therapeutic application.

Dr. Pompa:
My son broke his back; some of you watching this or listening to this know that. Cam was gracious enough to send Daniel some of those new versions coming out. Daniel fell in love with them.

Obviously, you break your back and he was bedbound they told him for 12 weeks; 2 weeks later, he was actually up walking. What a story there, but yeah, he should have been dead and he should have been paralyzed; he was neither. Obviously, we had to get him off of OxyContin. The kavas you sent were part of that, him coming off of that very quickly actually, so thank you.

Cameron George:
Yeah, it’s really amazing. Kava is definitely one of these safe, psychoactive hidden gems. It’s psychoactive in a form where you still maintain your sobriety. It doesn’t interfere with fine motor skills or anything like that.

We’ve seen everything in the literature. There’s just such a huge body of research on kava for drug and alcohol abuse, for pain, reduction in inflammation, for epilepsy and seizure disorders, there’s even a whole paradigm of research. A lot of the excitement is around kava as a therapeutic agent in cancer, too because we know that it activates autophagy and helps with keto-adaptation. It helps put your body into that self-recycling mode that we talk a lot about and we talked about on past shows with the Cell Clear. It’s an extra adjunct to that whole process in the body which we’re huge fans of. For keto-adaptation, suppressing appetite, activating autophagy, as well as the anxiolytic effects, reducing cortisol, enhancing mode. It really just is a profound substance.

Some of the products we have coming in the future that are more even geared towards more therapeutic and some even recreational, safe recreational as an alcohol alternative and stuff. We have a line of drinks that we’re working on that are even more potent on that side of things. Kava is an amazing, safe recreational agent that people can migrate to instead of alcohol all the time, instead of benzodiazepines, obviously, and any type of illicit drugs. It gives you that social enhancement without impairing any of your fine motor skills and totally not addictive. In the islands, they’d have kava bars. In Vanuatu in Fiji, they have 20 times, 10 to 20 times as many kava bars as they have regular bars because they prefer it to regular alcohol.

There’s a big application just bringing something in like kava into the culture because I think we’re looking for things right now. The CBD craze has proved that that are non-pharmaceutical alternatives, natural alternatives to pharmaceutical and drug agents that are non-addictive because we need these safe crutches even though that kava is not the ultimate big answer. There’s no magic pill or powder or lotion or potion. I’m not saying that kava totally healed me and made me well, but it was a crutch but a safe crutch that made my process way easier.

Dr. Pompa:
It allowed you to go higher levels of detox. We got you up to regular doses of detox where you all have to understand he was taking drops of cellular detox at one point, like one or two drops. It’s like—

Cameron George:
It made my life.

Dr. Pompa:
With the kava, we were able to ramp up so much faster just to knock down the sensitivity. Here’s a good one though with all the news right now of the vaping. People are going to have to move away from a lot of the things they’re vaping. They’re even getting bad CBD with bad marijuana. Some of the preservatives that are in there, I’ve been saying gosh, I wouldn’t want to oxidize that in my lungs. Could kava help people make a transition from some of those things?

Cameron George:
Absolutely, because kava affects multiple different systems in the brain that regulate cravings, and that regulate mood, and that regulate spasticity, and all of those things we just discussed. It affects the GABA system, so we touched on that. That’s its most profound mechanism, but it also affects the serotonin in a light way and then the dopamine system pretty substantially, in some strains more than others. It acts as a monoamine oxidase inhibitor, a monoamine oxidase B inhibitor to be specific. Basically, what that means is that it helps block an enzyme that metabolizes or breaks down these dopamine-like citicolines in our nerve system that regulate our cravings and give us pleasure and such. It affects dopamine in a way that doesn’t deplete it. That’s very rare for a substance because most things that affect the dopamine system are highly addictive for that reason because they create a dysregulation and a downregulation, a desensitization.

The more you use say cocaine or say like a psychostimulant like Adderall, it’s going to desensitize your receptors to dopamine. We don’t see that with kava. It’s actually able to prop up that dopamine system and keep you satiated while you’re transitioning off of substances of abuse. That’s a common denominator of all of these substances of abuse.

That’s why it’s good for all of them and better for some that hit on some of the same different chemical systems as kava because it affects dopamine. Anything that’s addictive basically affects dopamine at some degree, whether it be nicotine, whether it be opiates, whether it be psychostimulants, Adderall, all of those things. Even though they’re psychostimulants and this is something that’s relieving anxiety, it has that component to it. It’s great at just relieving the stressful process of transitioning off anything. If you’re trying to adapt or you’re in any transitional process in your life that’s causing—that requires an adaptation, adaptations are stressful. This helps taper down the stress hormones and make you more adaptable to almost any change.

Dr. Pompa:
I had a client that used it successfully for just controlling their appetite. When we were keto adapting them, they were having trouble fat adapting. There’s another benefit.

Look, we’re at a hard stop, but tell them—I think we have a special link with Revelation Health has offered something. I’m sure Ashley will provide it to get KAVAPLEX on Revelation Health. I don’t know; try it. That’s all I can tell you. There’s so many darn uses. You just saw me just taking it now.

Cam, yeah, you’re a wealth of knowledge, man, especially in the world of kava, Kava Cam, as my kids say. You have all the answers. I’m sure we’ll have you on again, especially as some of the new products come out because they’re so useful. Our followers are health-seekers, people looking for—to get their life back. This is a tool, man, that was invaluable to you and many.

Cameron George:
I’m sure I’ll be doing a lot of product myth-busting on Heath Hunters too as well. We’ll have a chance to take some deep dives into some different myths around products I’m sure.

Dr. Pompa:
I love it, man; we love it. We see what’s real and works because we were both so sick for so long.

Cameron George:
Right, it’s the real deal; it’s not a gimmick. One of my big pet peeves is some of the just horrible quality control that goes on in the supplement industry and in most industries. They’re trying to cut their costs and so on. If you don’t have quality as one of your cornerstone ideals or one of your cornerstone motivations for what you’re trying to do, then you’re going to end up compromising quality. Cleanliness and therapeutic potency are two top priorities. Then we let the price needs to be what it may, but we’re also working constantly on getting the product down for—

Dr. Pompa:
I wasn’t interested in—I used to drive a Ford Bobcat, okay. I wasn’t interested in one of those; I was interested in a Ferrari. You created it. Alright, Cam, we’ll have you on again. Thanks for being on Cell TV.

Cameron George:
Awesome, see you, guys.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 AM Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv. Please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, or sharing the show with anyone who may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.

301: The Emotional Side of Recovery From Dieting, Addictions, and Breast Implant Illness

Episode 301: The Emotional Side of Recovery From Dieting, Addictions, and Breast Implant Illness

Emotional side of breast implants – world changer. dieting, addictions. the magic is in the details. changed thinking. changed life. huge solution.

Holistic Health Practitioner, Sarah Anne Stewart is joining the show today to share her personal journey with breast implant illness and eating disorders and how, in return, she has become an advocate for body positivity, healing relationships with food, and redefining self-love.

More about Sarah Anne Stewart:

As a Certified Holistic Health Practitioner (AADP), Sarah runs a leading mindfulness based private coaching practice in Los Angeles. Sarah's unique heart-centered approach has helped hundreds of women across the globe make sustainable lifestyle changes and heal their relationship with food and their bodies. Sarah is the founder of the Awesome Inside Out Movement, an advisor to international wellness brands, and soon to be Hay House author.

Show notes:
1. Heal your relationship with food with Sarah's 21 day program.

2. Order Dr. Pompa's Beyond Fasting book! Released December 2019.

3. CytoDetox: Total detoxification support where it matters most – at the cellular level.

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
I've done a few shows this year on Cell TV about breast implants. I didn't really cover the emotional side of breast implants; the why, the why you may have gotten breast implants or why you're on the fence of removing them.

This next guest, Sara Stewart, being from the modeling world, she tackles this hard and she is a world changer now. She goes beyond breast implants in this interview into dieting, into the addictions that go from one thing like breast implants to the next to the next. I think the magic in this interview was the details that she gives about how she changed her thinking and ultimately, her life. Huge solution, because I know so many of you are battling this out there watching this; we get the emails. We have some great solutions to offer on this show. Stay tuned.

Ashley:
Hi, welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I'm Ashley Smith. Holistic health practitioner Sara Ann Stewart is joining the show today to share her personal journey with breast implant illness and eating disorders; how in return she has become an advocate for body positivity, healing relationships with food, and redefining self-love. Sara leads a mindfulness based private coaching practice in Los Angeles and her unique heart-centered approach has helped hundreds of women across the globe make sustainable lifestyle changes and heal their relationship with food and their bodies. Let's get started and welcome Sara Ann Stewart and of course, Dr. Pompa. Welcome both of you.

Sara Ann:
Thank you.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, we're excited to have you. I said right before we started the show, Sara, that this has been a passion of mine this year, this breast implants. The reason why is because I've run into it now so many times with women not getting well, wondering what's going on, their hormone dysregulation, I mean, all the typical symptoms, and it ends up being breast implants. However, we haven't done enough, borderline any, on dealing with really the problem here, dealing with self-image. So many women have watched our show, we've gotten the emails and it's well, maybe this will help me get well. Really, even if they believe that it is, it's this body image and the stigma and all of that that they're really dealing with. You bring a very unique answer here and I think some solutions that we haven’t brought on other shows that are really important. This goes beyond breast implants; this goes into chronic dieting. I believe you have some really unique answers here that we're going to hit on this whole show. So big show, can't wait.

Sara Ann:
Thank you. Thank you so much for having me. It's an honor to be here and I am so grateful and privileged to be able to talk about these topics.

Dr. Pompa:
You're not afraid. You're a beautiful woman. You have obviously battled this in your arena and everything that you've done and I said hey, if you're not the role model yet for women, you need to be. Let's help you get there. I'm being really serious because most of the women watching this really aren't making the move. They're not going, “Okay, that's it; I'm getting these breast implants out,” and it's because there is a bigger issue here. Let’s start with your story. Let's go right after it. Tell me a little bit.

Sara Ann:
I grew up in a really holistic environment. My father was a public speaker. He traveled the country, talking about my body connection, and psychology, and why we should be meditating and doing yoga, and all of these things that were really good. Back in the day, we would go from town to town and there was no internet. We would knock on doors and hold these different classes in halls and schools and so forth. I grew up in a world that was really, really holistic.

When my father was diagnosed with the devastating news of terminal cancer, he looked at the doctor in the face and said, “Have you ever seen a miracle?” The doctor said, “No, in the 20 years of doing this work, I've never seen one.” My father said, “You're going to see one.” He went home and went against all medical advice and started going on a very clean vegan diet, studying the Gerson Program in Hippocrates Institute, doing these different protocols [04:42] and really diving into what had happened throughout his life where his body was able to be able to get sick. He dove into all of these different—on the nutrition side, the healing protocols that would heal his body. He was also doing the emotional, mental, spiritual work as well. I witnessed my father completely cure cancer after seven years—sorry, seven months and he's been cancer-free for 20-plus years. I had this profound knowledge of holistic health growing up but I was scouted to model when I was 15. Within a week of signing my contract, I developed a series of eating disorders that lasted for a decade.

Dr. Pompa:
Go figure.

Sara Ann:
Go figure. I went into this thinking, oh my gosh, I should have such a good head on my shoulders. Look at this family that I come from. Look at my father; I'm going to be okay. I just want to see the world. This scout promised me that I would become a star and make all this money and get to have this experience. I'm like, what could go wrong? Flash-forward ten years, I was told by a doctor, “If you do not leave this industry, you are going to lose your life to anorexia.” I'm in a series of other eating disorders and I thought to myself, how has this happened? The amount of shame and guilt and just pain inside of me looking back on my life and thinking, I can't call my parents. I'm addicted to Adderall; I am now addicted to laxatives. I'm anorexic, bulimic, all of these things which you would never expect coming from how I was raised.

On one hand, I had this beautiful knowledge of how food is healing and then on the other hand, I saw it basically destroy my life. I thought the answer was give up my career as a model, pick up my bags, go back-packing. What I didn't know is that your mind goes with you everywhere that you go.

Dr. Pompa:
Damn.

Sara Ann:
I'm trying to run from this problem by the shutting off social media and leaving my career behind, and the anxiety got worse. I went back to school for nutrition and the anxiety got even worse because I was studying all these different protocols but yet I didn't know how to actually listen to my own body. I hadn't made the connection that I actually had this intuition inside of me that could lead me to the direction of what was best for me.

It was a long journey. I ended up turning to meditation, mindfulness, reprogramming the subconscious beliefs and stories and all of these things that I had picked up for ten years. After working with a meditation teacher for a couple years, I finally was free of these addictive patterns. From when I was modeling, I had gotten breast implants to keep my career going. Then, I started to get really, really sick. I realized that I didn't know what was going on for several months.

I went from doctor to doctor to doctor and come across some posts about breasts implants illness. I ignored it, I ignored it, I ignored it some more until so many women who were coming out and thank God for social media because all of these other courageous women were standing up and speaking out. I was like, I think my doctors are missing something. I went back to my doctors and my doctor said, “Not your implants.” I went to some other doctor and then finally found a doctor who was finally like, “Yeah, you should really get those out; it's really important.” Then, I finally listened and then all my symptoms went away. A year later, I'm symptom-free and have my life back.

Dr. Pompa:
Your whole story hits on what I say all the time: it's physical, chemical or emotional. Obviously, you had emotional things. You pointed out you had to change your thinking; you had to change your mind which then changed your patterns, etc. If you didn't do that first, I don't know if you had the guts being a model—at least, that was your career at one point—to do that. Again, there's a lot of women watching this who aren't models. It's not their image or their identity and yet they're still struggling because they think that's what makes them beautiful or attractive to a man or their husband or boyfriend, whatever it is. You had to go through the mind change and then okay, the physical interference [08:57] you got your life back. Always, it's typically both. It's the mind and the physical that play into this.

All right. Let's focus on this mind change because as I've pointed out, a lot of people, a lot of women watching this won't even be able to take the job because they're thinking about their body. Their image is too much for them to bear, this identity and so help them. I mean, I don't even know where to start but I don't want to leave them in the dust here either because ultimately, it's a mind shift of the way we think—is our paradigm. How we view our world is how our world becomes around us. Whatever illness you're dealing with or whatever struggle, what you learned is what everybody watching and listening to needs to learn. Let's start there.

Sara Ann:
I want to start with wherever you are, I hold so much compassion and love for that space because I talk about self-love, self-worth, self-esteem all day long with my clients, and the moment that I made the decision to get my implants out, I went into tons of self-doubt, worry, concern, fears, all the emotions that you can expect from changing your physical body and having something that you had inside of you for nine plus years. Then, all of a sudden, you’re going to wake up from a surgery and look very, very different. I want to just first address that all of those emotions are very real, and they’re okay to have. I think a lot of times what I see is that we will feel them, and then we’ll use fear or other addictions to suppress the emotion that we’re feeling. For instance, just dealing with the emotion and confronting it and being okay with it and moving through it. I think that’s the first part that’s really important is just to identify that it is okay and perfectly normal to have these feelings.

I think it’s also really important to look at, for me specifically, my environment. Who was around, and who was influencing my decision to take my implants out? I can say this with so much love. Again, you are the only person that should be determining what you’re doing with your body. That’s it. That’s my number one thing I tell all the girls. I have hundreds of girls reach out to me now all day long. It’s mind-blowing to me what’s happening with the explants and what’s happening culturally with this whole movement. I’m always like your husband, your partner, or your—whatever relationship you’re in should not be impacting your decision, and only you know in your heart what the best decision is for you.

What broke my heart is when I started to share my story about getting my implants out. They were like, well, what is your husband going to think? I was like I haven’t thought about that yet. What is he going to think? I went into all of this almost depression and sadness. I was like what if he’s not happy? What if it changes our sex life? What if it changes our intimacy? What if it changes our relationship? What if he isn’t happy, instead of connecting to myself?

I had to pull out all of my resources, the forgiveness letters, the affirmations, the meditation, the mindfulness component to sit in front of the mirror naked and say I love my body regardless of what even my husband thinks, right? This is my body. I’m in this body. I’m the only person that has control over my health, and this is the stuff that is needed 100% to get my health back in line. I’m going to stop negating all of these other women or all of these stories and telling myself that it might not be my implants and doing tens of thousands of dollars in detoxing to, again, try to prove that it’s not the implants. I think that that’s what so many women are doing. I get messages from women who are like, well, what kind of implants do you have? Oh, thank God. I don’t have those implants.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s it, yeah.

Sarah Anne:
It’s all implants.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s all implants.

Sarah Anne:
It’s all implants, and I’m like it doesn’t matter if it’s saline, or gel, or whatever. I’m like just because I had a certain implant doesn’t mean that I’m the only person to get them with this type of implant. I think a lot of times we’re trying to solve—we’re trying to pinpoint is it related to implants? I can just speak from the women I’ve spoken to, and again, everyone’s different. If something is suppressing your immune system where you can’t get better, whether it’s your thyroid, your adrenals, why not take them out, right? Why not?

Dr. Pompa:
The why not is where we’re going here, right? It’s the image that they have. Okay, so I mean, back up. You said that you had to sit in front of a mirror, look at your body, and say, okay, I love my body. Okay, that was maybe the beginning. I mean, take us through more.

I mean, you nailed it. I mean, I can’t tell you how many women are watching this right now that are exactly in the battle where you sit, right? How is this going to affect my relationship with my husband, how people view me, how this thing—I mean, it’s all of that self-talk. I mean, if you don’t have that—I don’t even know how you wouldn’t. Of course you have those thoughts. Everyone does.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, of course you have it because there was a reason why you got them in. If you loved your—and that was the part for me.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, good point.

Sarah Anne:
That was the part for me. It was, wow, I have to have so much compassion and love and understanding and forgiveness for myself. Nine years prior I sold my car. I called my father in a moment of shame and said I need the money. He was like what’s happening? I never called him for money before. I went in, and I signed the docs. Two weeks later I had implants. I didn’t even think. I didn’t think about the repercussions of this action until nine years later. It was just like in, out, done.

Dr. Pompa:
Everybody’s doing it, right?

Sarah Anne:
Totally. I was told that you have to have certain proportions to be a model and to sell lingerie. Then those stories and those beliefs even if you’re not a model are transpired to the mass media because of marketing. What blows my mind is that—I just did this piece. I looked at a magazine from 1954, and it’s the same marketing tactics as they’re using today. To think that we’ve been immune to these marketing tactics and how they’re selling things, we haven’t been, and so we have to identify that these stories that we’re holding aren’t our stories. They’re stories our grandmother told our mothers, our mothers told us, kids on the playground told us, what we’re seeing on social media. There’s CGI and AI bots now that try to manipulate the way women feel about themselves. It’s like this is a massive problem, but only we have the power to change culture.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re right. We have the power to change culture and how we perceive culture, right? We can’t affect the boy on the playground who was giving attention to the girl with the bigger boobs, and that’s still in your head. I mean, come on. I mean, those realities happen, right? Boys going through puberty, it’s like, hey, that’s different. I mean, that’s the reality. Girls are like, oh, he’s attracted to that girl. She’s not even as pretty as me, but look what she has. The psychology gets started there, right?

How do we unwind it, Sarah? I mean, yes, it has been reinforced by advertisements and culture. It’s reinforced from the playground all the way to now. I mean, that’s a lot of changing my thinking, I mean, if I’m woman thinking about this.

Sarah Anne:
A hundred percent. The number one thing for me was radical self-responsibility. It was the responsibility that I—these thoughts in my mind are not my thoughts. They’re part of what I was conditioned to believe growing up, but I will no longer allow the thoughts to dictate my reality and my life and, most importantly, my health. I think when I was able to separate that this is just a thought and it’s moving through my mind—and it doesn’t define me. It doesn’t define my worth. It doesn’t define my self-esteem, my self-confidence. I can literally disassociate myself from the thoughts that are coming in of fear, worry, concern. Who will I be without these implants? Get back to my truth, which is I’m worthy of everything I desire with or without implants, with or without blonde hair, with or—whatever it is, whether I was looking a certain way or being a certain way. I just had to keep separating what was my truth and what was not my truth.

At the core of who you are, you know what your truth is, and I just believe everyone is worthy of a beautiful, healthy life. I understand deeply that these beliefs are so engrained in us. I did a lot of forgiveness work around the girl who wanted her modeling career to continue and the reason I got them, and I think that that’s almost the place to start for a lot of women. It’s like why when you were 19 did you make the decision? Why did you make a decision for this guy that you were dating at the time? I know, for myself and I’m speaking candidly, there were so many times I wanted to change my body type for the person I was dating. That’s just, again, part of our culture. I had to keep going back to, wow, I’m in a relationship now where that’s not needed, and I would never expect that from my husband to ask of anything like that from me.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s funny. We were just at dinner this week with a friend of mine and four of us sitting around the table. I don’t even remember how the subject came up, but him or I, big boobs, yeah, it doesn’t do it for us. I’m stating that to show you that it’s not a reality that every guy. It’s probably split the same as some guys like long hair/short hair, dark hair/light hair. I mean, that’s the point is that you are what you are, and I promise you, there’s guys out there that like you exactly the way you are, perfect. They would look at you and say, oh, my gosh, perfection. When you try to be for who is really what the question is. Are you trying to gain—if 25% of the men like bigger boobs, you’re trying to be in that 25%? Why?

Okay, now, you’re very big into, obviously, meditation, even to the point where it’s like, hey, believe it or not, you can meditate and stay lean, lose fat. We’ll get there in a minute. Your meditation must’ve been a big part of how you changed your thinking into the new thinking of, hey, this is me, and it’s great.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I think it’s just—I think what meditation does is it quiets the external. It gets you back to yourself. It gets you back to your truth. It gets you back to the place where you can connect with your heart and say I’ve been suffering for two years trying to figure this out and no longer will I allow myself—this is my truth, and no longer will I allow myself to continue to suffer and risk my health for years to come for vanity, for ego, for how I look. It took a long time of sitting quiet in my mind and shutting out the noise and all the voices and all the people and all the opinions and even all the doctors’ opinions. I had so many different doctors telling me it is your implants. It’s not your implants. It was like, at a certain point, I got to the point where I was like ten doctors have told me it’s not, and then this one doctor is saying it is. I’m weighing yes or no. Finally, I just was like I have to listen to the voice inside of me that knows it’s my implants, that has the courage to get them out, that forgives my 20-year-old self that did this back in the day, and I’m moving forward with my life in a healthy place.

The thing is, if we don’t do the inner work now, it’s going—the consequence is lifelong. Your body’s always going to be changing through pregnancy, through aging, through hormones, through all of these things that we see, and I think we’re at a place holistically and with food where we definitely have antiaging hacks. We can definitely take care of ourselves, but your body is going to change. Why not fall in love with your body right now as it is so that as your body changes you can continue to love it and appreciate it and have gratitude for the body that gets you through life and allows you to have all these experiences?

Dr. Pompa:
Look, I mean, I’m hoping this is the—we’re being forced to as a society to understand that this mindset that’s being forced upon us with food as well as body image, I mean, all of it is—we’ve got to break it. You were in the industry. You also live in a place where it’s just abundant boob jobs, right? You see how many getting sick or at least they have a lot of symptoms that they’re probably not associating with their breasts. What do you think? This is going to come to a head with autoimmune and everything that we know it causes.

Sarah Anne:
I’m hearing a lot of women come out and even a lot of women in my community, my friends, that are, oh, I didn’t realize it wasn’t normal to wake up with brain fog. Oh, my memory is going, and I didn’t even think about the fact that it could be my—there’s these subtle symptoms that are creeping up on them. Oh, I realize I’m having joint pain. I’m having pain in my arms. Oh, I realize I’m having acne at 30. I can’t get rid of it. I don’t know what’s happening. Oh, I realize I’ve had a rash for a year. I’m like those are not normal symptoms. Something is happening.

I think that, as we all have the courage to communicate and talk about this problem, more and more and more women are noticing that these symptoms that they are deeming just getting older, or they’re saying that, oh, well, I just thought it was my IUD, or these other things that potentially could be causing problems as well, but they’re starting to wake up that the implants could be causing these symptoms. It’s not normal to have migraines. It’s not normal to…

Dr. Pompa:
No, not at all.

Sarah Anne:
To be chronically exhausted where you have to sleep every day, I mean, I’ve been hearing these things from women. It’s just mind-blowing to me.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I couldn’t agree more. That’s why I wanted you to say exactly what you said. Those little symptoms are the oil light going on in the car going something’s wrong. Something’s wrong. You can cut the wire, put tape over it, but something’s wrong. If you have breast implants, pay attention.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, that’s what happened to me. I was numbing the problem. It’s interesting. As we use food or other things to suppress our emotions, we can also use glutathione injections, ozone treatments, supplements, all these different protocols to suppress the actual thing that our body’s trying to speak to us through, which is our symptoms. I was suppressing my symptoms and saying I’m okay because I can get out of bed. I was only okay with three cups of coffee and getting the ozone and getting the glutathione and getting my IVs every week. Finally, my doctor was like you can keep covering up the problem, or you can walk across the street, and go get your implants out. I’m like, yeah, exactly.

I know this stuff. I’m in holistic health, but yet, we think we can mitigate and get through life. Why do you want to get through life? I don’t want to get through life. I want to thrive.

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely, I’m a guy who talks cause all day long, whether it’s if you still have silver fillings in your mouth that contain 50% mercury. Yeah, you’re not immune to mercury. It’s going in your brain. I feel fine now. Maybe you do. Maybe that morning brain fog or the fact you need three cups of coffee to survive, maybe you’re not so fine. If you’d of asked me the week before I got sick if I was healthy, oh, healthiest guy I know. A week later, voom, my bucket overflowed. You’d of said the same thing before your stuff started, right?

How many kids today are on Adderall? You mentioned Adderall. My kids tell me, dad, this is a big problem. They’re using Adderall to take tests, to function. They buy it cheaply at school from probably kids who have prescriptions. Who knows? Then they’re using marijuana to bring it down on the other side. I mean, is this is a trend that my kids are just making up, or is it real?

Sarah Anne:
I mean, I know, from my experience, I became very addicted to it during—while I was modeling for the weight loss component of it, which is so sad for me to even look back, and the consequence, again, the consequence of even just Adderall withdrawal. I look at what I put my body through, and I think that’s something else that, if you were to take yourself and just look down on your life and just see what behavior and how you’re treating your body on a daily basis, would you be proud of that person and how they’re taking care of your body? When I look back on my life, I had—for a long time, I had so much shame around how I took care of my—I was multiple laxatives every single day, multiple Adderall pills, barely eat. I’m like, how was I so destructive to my body, and what kind of mindset created that? I’m like, a person who really didn’t love themselves.

I cannot blame the modeling industry. I cannot blame my agent. I can’t even blame media or social conditioning. I’m like, at the end of the day, I made these choices to my body, and I chose not to do the inner work for many, many years to get to a place where I love myself where I can look at social conditioning. I can look at media, and I cannot get triggered by it anymore. I can say, oh, that’s nice that this advertisement wants to advertise in that way. I feel sad that they’re exploiting girls like that.

Dr. Pompa:
What you’ve done is you’ve changed your thinking, woken up to the fact that, that advertisement, I know exactly what they were doing. I control my identity. I control who I am. Everybody watching this, you have to go through that mind change, right? I see that. I see that people—when I coach people for their health, there’s a certain mindset that I can tell right away that they’re going to get well and one—and I try not to take these people. No, there’s a mindset that they’re stuck in a bad way of thinking; the same thinking that got them there.

I train doctors. I just did a mastermind where I was talking about functioning from your true identity, so getting breast implants immediately warps your true identity. The point was is you’re never fully happy until you’re functioning from your true identity. You’re never fully successful. In other words, there’s just a non-authenticity that comes about when you’re not functioning fully in your identity. The mind shift that I see you made, it was being completely identifying with your true identity. What I told them to do is make a timeline. Go back into your life, whether it’s kids on the playground, whether it’s teachers, family members, brothers, sisters, events, and look at times that may have warped your identity. Go back and revisit those times, and change the way you think about those times. Then it’s easier to often times—we all have to do this, by the way, at every level, right?

Sarah Anne:
Yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Did you do anything like that? Did you go back? I guess you said, I mean, you went back at 19 and said, hey, I forgive myself for doing this. You had to go back in those times and reevaluate them.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I think a powerful thing for me with the timeline was just seeing that my insecurities and my addictions got transferred from one thing to the next until I was able to really dive deep into the inner work. When I met my coach, [Andres], who teaches meditation, he said you are going to have to unlearn all the ways that you were taught to suffer, and you’re going to have to unlearn this with an immense amount of courage because it’s going to shake your identity. It’s going to shake everything you know to be true about yourself, and that takes courage. It’s hard. It’s challenging. What I realized a lot with women that say, oh, what are your thoughts on breast implants, I’m like I’m not going to discourage you from getting them, but I do recommend for six months to a year to get a life coach. Get someone to help you with self-love, self-worth, self-confidence, loving yourself. So many women have reached out to me, and they’re like, oh, wow! I didn’t need them because I healed the pain that existed in me that I thought the breast implants would give me.

What I see so often is people get the breast implants, and they want the next thing and the next thing and the next thing. They keep thinking these external things are going to fuel the insecurity that lives within them. When they heal the wound from their childhood, from their father, from the mother, from whatever happened—I had to do this with my mother. I realized that the only reason I was in the modeling industry was because of my relationship with my mother, and I wanted external validation and love from someone outside of myself. When I healed that wound, everything started to shift, and I was no longer looking for all these things to heal that place in myself because it was already healed.

Dr. Pompa:
Is this a safe question to ask then if we say to women, okay, why do you want the breast implants, or why did you get the breast implants? Should they evaluate that first? The answer I think it would—I want to look better. Then you would say, well, why do you think you look not good? Then you would back up to say—I mean, is that a good thing to back into that?

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I think inquiry and question is always such a profound way to bring forward your truth. Again, I’m just speaking for myself. I cannot speak for any other woman and their desires and what place those are coming from. I just know when I’ve done the inquiry work where I write a question of why did I want my implants and then you just free-flow write. What are they providing me? Was it safety? Is it comfort? Is it love? What are the reasons behind these? You allow yourself to free-flow on these type of questions.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s what I want to hear. That’s the free-flow, the free flowing on those questions. Love comes to mind, right? That’s why, okay, security. Whatever it is, write it down. That’s what you’re saying.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I want to find my partner. I want to find my soulmate. These things are very normal, and they’re okay. I don’t want to shame anyone for wanting them for those things, but I just want to address that the healing is always going to be internal. Before or after the implant, we have to heal the part of ourselves that feels less than. Otherwise, in ten years, it will be something else. In 20 years, it will be—we’ll always be searching outside of ourselves.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s the point is that it’s going to be that next thing, next thing, next thing because you’re not really satisfied with your true identity. I mean, you may get the guy, but it could be the wrong guy, maybe not. It could be. I mean, a lot of bad things can happen because you’re not identifying the true identity, so it’s never too late. That’s the whole point here is evaluate why. Evaluate what it makes you feel like with or without. I think you have to dig into these hard thoughts and topics. Then when you do, then you have to start telling yourself a different story, correct?

Sarah Anne:
Right.

Dr. Pompa:
I mean, that’s what you did. That’s what I’m hearing.

Sarah Anne:
I think we also need to empower other women to make choices based on their health. One thing I recognized when I got my implants out, I would say 90% of the questions were how do they look? Are they saggy? Do you have scars? Do you like your doctor? Did she do a good job? Maybe 10%, maybe 5% of the questions was how are you feeling? Are you feeling better? Are your symptoms gone?

I’m just realizing based on how we empower one another from woman to woman. It’s like I’m very careful now. I’m very cautious that when I talk to women it’s like, oh, are you feeling better? Are you more alive? Do you have your energy back? These are the things that matter, not if I have a scar. What matters is my health. Our minds are just completely reverse, and that’s no one’s fault. It’s just how we’re taught.

If we empowered each other to say, wow, I support you 100% to get your health back. I support you to feel alive with your kids. I want you to live a long time because we’re close, and I want to be friends with you to the—‘til we’re old. It’s like those sort of things I think we can start to empower each other and change culture.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s the problem. Teenagers, I mean, maybe 20s as well, the value is being attractive. The value is looking a certain way, having friends, right. I watched my teenager. It’s like, oh, my God, the greatest value or I should say the greatest fear is not being accepted, right? They don’t think about health as a value until it’s not there, right? I mean, when I was sick, if you’d of told me to take my ears off, I would’ve taken my ears off to feel good again. I mean, it’s like I’d of walked around without ears and been like, yeah, I took those off, and now I feel good again. I mean, the point is is my values change, right? Your values change very rapidly.

I interviewed a gentleman born without legs and amazing guy. His name’s [Shawn]. I tell you what, he talked about a scenario where he was in a room with women who were struggling with weight loss and diet and failures, and for a moment, they forgot who they were in front of. They were making all these excuses, reasons why they would—not following a diet, da-da-da-da-da. The one woman heard herself at one point, and she stopped. He said, visibly, she looked down, just realized who she was in front of, and she said I should just probably stop talking now.

My point of even telling that story is his point was it’s all mindset. It’s all mindset, right? I mean, he had no excuses. It’s like his identity—I asked him the question did you go through one day ever of feeling sorry for yourself because you didn’t have legs? He’s like, oh, my God, now way. It’s like this has made me who I am. This gives me the platform. It’s his mindset, or the opposite could’ve been true. It’s like, yeah, I went through 20 years of misery feeling sorry for myself. He never went through that.

I mean, the point is is that you have legs, right? He didn’t. He’s a world changer, oh, my gosh, this guy, amazing marriage, amazing relationships, changing the world, mindset. Legs, boobs, hair, really, it’s a choice. It still is a choice, isn’t it?

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I don’t think we’re going to—at the end of our life, I don’t think we’re going to be like I wish I cared more about that 20 extra calories I ate today, or that extra thing I binge on, or the margarita. We’re going to be like did we live? Did we enjoy our life? Did we have fun? Did we play? Were we excited? It’s like we’re not going to sit there and think about, oh, I wish I would’ve had smaller thighs. It’s not going to be the thing that we wish we would’ve worried about more.

I just think, when you look back on your life, where are you investing your energy? It’s a conscious choice. It’s like I’m not going to drive my energy towards trendy diets, newest fads, all these things that just keep me in a cycle, the habitual cycle. I’m going to focus on sustainability, prevention, health, well-being, the things that are going to actually bring me joy, happiness, the things that impact my cognitive health.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s painful. It’s painful to get rejected, right? We’ve all been there. I mean, I have dyslexia. I mean, we have a story, but it’s painful nonetheless. I think that because it’s so painful we do a lot of things to avoid it, right? We do a lot of destructive things trying to avoid it because we were hurt at one point. I mean, I so always try to get my children and those God puts before me to understand that it’s choice, life and happiness. Saying you know what? I’m done with that thinking. It’s a choice.

Am I oversimplifying it? It’s like I know when I look back at my life and I interview successful people like you that you said you made a choice. There was a decision made. I’m just done thinking that way. It’s getting me nowhere. It’s leading to this, that, and the other thing. I mean, could it be just that easy as saying, okay, I know I don’t want to be hurt anymore? You know what? I’m choosing to protect myself, which is ultimately hurting me.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I think it can be. I think there is quite a bit of—I want to say willpower or discipline. We have to become conscious in every moment we have the choice. We can say we have the choice, and then every moment we have the choice, again, because our subconscious is dictating 95% of our choices to some extent. I believe that the better we feel in our bodies the better our choices become. I always see that people heal their addictions with food, and they create this food freedom when they heal their relationship with their body. When you heal your relationship with your body, you’re not going to want to put that stuff in your body. I love my body so much that I—yes, I’ll have a glass of wine and a piece of cake once in a while, but the most part, I want to nourish and care and take care of my body as well as I possibly can.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I agree. Okay, let’s complicate this even just a little. I’m serious. I always think of my viewers, right? I think how the viewer is going, okay, look at you two. You two are thin. You don’t have my problem. I’m 200 pounds. I’m 250 pounds, whatever it is, right?

What do you say to this person, meaning that, look, I sit in front of the mirror, and I don’t care what you say. I don’t like what I see, right? What do you say to this?

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I think we have to be very careful, especially now that your size for how you look on the outside does not dictate what’s happening inside your mind, and we have to be compassionate and loving towards everyone because we have no idea what they’re experiencing in their mind. Even though I might look a certain way, it doesn’t mean that I don’t go home and doubt myself or have fears and have my own anxiety and so forth.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s a great answer. I sat as a boy, and I was stupid. I couldn’t read. I had dyslexia, right? That’s a great answer. In other words, okay, yours is that. You don’t know mine, not this. You know what I’m saying?

I don’t care what it is. We still have to change the way we’re thinking about ourselves, and then the symptom may be weight loss resistance. The symptom may be whatever I was dealing with, the insecurity and acting blah, blah, blah. It’s like, no matter what, we have to be comfortable here.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I can say, when I was a size O, when I was a size 14, I was miserable on both sides of the spectrum. I was close to 200 pounds, and I was still absolutely miserable, and I was 108 pounds and miserable. Your size and your physical appearance doesn’t dictate your happiness. I think so often we look at social media and make the assumption that these people look a certain way, so they’re happy. Some of the most miserable people I know are Instagram models and people who are celebrities and people who look and appear like they have a perfect life, but behind the scene, you have no idea what’s happening.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I guess, if you could be whatever way you would say is perfect, unfortunately, you have to have the same brain, and that was your point earlier, right? It’s your life, but it’s like, unfortunately, my brain had to come with me.

Sarah Anne:
A hundred percent.

Dr. Pompa:
Whether you’re 250, or 125, or whatever it is, it’s like, unfortunately, you have the same brain. You’re going to be just as miserable and uncomfortable here as you are here. That’s a fact, unfortunately, right?

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I mean, I remember when I hit my dream weight. I looked at the scale, and I’m like, wait, I’m supposed to feel elated and excited and so happy right now. I was like nothing has changed. Now I have to maintain this. There was no peace. There was no joy. There was no happiness. There was no fulfillment that you get from actually recognizing and disconnecting from your body and connecting to your truth in the place within you. Your soul, the part of you that has a purpose, has your why, has your mission, has all of the reasons why you are on this planet is so much greater than your physical body. When you connect to those places in yourself and recognizing that you have this reason to live, then it’s so much less about your body and fitting into your jeans, and if the jeans don’t fit, you stretch them out. You do some lunges, and you buy a new pair.

Dr. Pompa:
To make the argument, hey, he didn’t have legs. You’re 250 pounds. What’s worse? I mean, I would say not having legs. He chose to be absolutely happy and changing the world, and he’s absolutely amazing. He has amazing relationships. It’s a mindset. It really is.

Then now let’s make the argument, though. Once you get the mindset, now that was what transformed your life. All of a sudden now, the weight problem is being the symptom can actually—let’s face it. I would argue that, being 200 pounds, you have a bigger problem, and that’s some of the health issues that are coming. The mindset shift then could actually help you with the health issue, and obviously, you start losing normal amount of weight. You talk about that.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I think we have to be conscious too of—when I was gaining weight, I—again, as I shared, I left, and I was like, oh, I love myself now. I’m out of the modeling industry. I can do whatever I want with my body, so I can drink. I can party. I can eat fast food. Again, I was like, oh, I love myself, and loving myself looked like doing whatever I wanted. Then, like you said, from a chronic sickness side of things, had no energy, was exhausted. Felt like shit every day, brain fog. It was the same sort of symptoms that I was just experiencing with the breast implant illness because I was eating fast food and not caring for myself. It was almost more sabotage than self-love.

I think right now culturally we’re in an interesting time where a lot of talk and conversation is, well, I love myself, so just do whatever you want. I always argue that that’s not real self-love. Self-love is caring for your body exactly as is it right now, loving yourself exactly as it is, and holding the vision that you want to have a healthier mindset. You want to have a healthier body. You want to continue on this sustainable life path to remaining healthy. I think that’s a very different mindset than I’m going to do whatever I want, and that’s the trap that I got stuck in. That’s the trap that I see so often other woman get stuck into.

They come to me. They’re like, well, I heard online I can just do whatever I want, so I’m drinking diet soda and eating pizza all night. I’m like is that going to help you sustain your why, the reason why you’re on this planet, why you want to be here, why you want to live, and the impact you want to create? The answer’s always no, and that doesn’t mean don’t go enjoy a beer or have a piece of pizza. I love pizza as well, but it’s like it’s recognizing am I choosing and making decisions because I deeply love myself and my body, or am I choosing them because I am using self-love as a way to, again, suppress the work that really needs to be done?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, really, when you do that, again, you’re functioning outside your true identity, right? Self-destruction is now part of your true identity. I believe in all of our true identity is gifts that God gives us and ability to make a difference and have a purpose and a promise with that. When you’re living that life that you described, you’re outside of your identity again. There’s no way that’s going to lead you to that promise, so one final thought in the sense that, meditation, you connected even to being able to be a healthy weight, weight loss, healthy instead of being addicted to food, your diets, bounding back and forth. Make that connection for our viewers.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, so when I decided to study more nutrition and I went back to school, and I thought, okay, well, I’m going to switch careers. The answer to my health problems is to know more information, and I think so often we think this way. We go online, and we’re researching, researching, researching, researching. We’re trying to get all the information, which is absolutely great. It’s great that there’s all this access to information. I know right before this call we were joking. We were like there’s so much information out there now. There’s no excuse to not find it, right?

For me specifically, it gave me more anxiety to the point where I was like, well, now I don’t know what to do because I have all these different expert opinions, and I’m more confused and so going back to meditation, which we’re now seeing is one of the most profound things for weight loss. People think, well, okay, how can sitting doing nothing help me lose weight? It indirectly helps you lose weight because it changes the neuropathways in your brain, which then allow you to indirectly make different decisions. When you’re meditating, you’re actually reprogramming the part of your brain that doesn’t love yourself. You’re impacting the part of yourself that maybe feels lonely at night when you come home, and the first thing your reach for is food. You’re reprogramming the part of yourself that can have more compassion for yourself. It’s helping improve your sleep, which then gives you more energy through the day, so you’re not reaching for the soda in the afternoon. It helps you become present, so you can become mindful while you’re eating.

It does so many things that indirectly impact our health and wellness choices that it almost is—for me and my clients, it’s like a nonnegotiable. I always am like this is the one thing I always recommend. Of course, if they don’t want to start with it, I completely understand because it does take a lot of courage to sit with yourself and confront your own thoughts. It’s not about clearing your thoughts. It’s just about recognizing, oh, that’s not my thought. I’m going to allow it to move through me and not allow it to impact my decisions and my actions.

Dr. Pompa:
How much of this do you do in a day? When do you do it in a day? Give us very specifics on how to do it.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, so I work with a coach and a meditation teacher from India that I’ve been traveling with and doing a lot of work with for several years. My specific practice is 20 minutes in the morning and 20 minutes at night, nonnegotiable, sometimes more. I do mantra meditation in which he gives me a mantra. Then based on where I am in my life, I’m using that mantra to repeat over and over again. To start, it can be as simple as two minute—literally, two minutes. Just sitting quiet in your mind, holding your heart, and just breathing. I think we forget to breathe. We don’t even know how to breathe anymore. We’re breathing from a state of fight or flight instead of rest and digest.

I’m always like if you can even just connect to your breath for a few minutes so that you can make a conscious decision. In the moment of an experience where you’re like, oh, I shouldn’t be walking to the fridge at 12 o’clock at night, why am I doing that? Take a moment to sit, breathe. Connect to your heart. What am I trying to suppress in this moment? I think, if you can consciously become aware of the emotions you’re trying to suppress, you can heal the emotion, and recognize that you can do something else to shift that emotion.

Another type of meditation I really love is a walking meditation where you just—when people are triggered to go eat food, I’m like, well, why don’t we do something else like walk, and just say let go as you walk? Let go. Let go with every foot. You could do walking meditation. You can get a visualization meditation. I don’t think there’s a right or wrong.

One of my best friends, Dina Kaplan, she runs The Path. She says every type of meditation rewires a different part of your brain, and you really have to figure out what works best for you. I just say have the courage to just start, and don’t be scared of your thoughts. Your thoughts, again, aren’t yours. Just because you have a thought doesn’t make you a bad person. It makes you human, and once you allow yourself to be able to let go of the thought, you no longer will be acting from a place of the thought that surfaces that then creates the emotion and then the behavior.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, so if you just sat there for 20 minutes and have the choice to throw out the bad thoughts, yeah, I’ll keep that one, bad thought. Keep that one. Keep that. A point, it’s going to work. It really is. Then like you said, breathe deeply. I heard basically a five second inhale, five second outhale puts us in that parasympathetic state.

Science is all over this. I mean, you can change your gut. You can change your cortisol. All of those things affect your hormones. As I always say, folks, the big problem with weight loss resistance and why people get—it’s hormones. Ultimately, what are we doing about it? Your thoughts, man, we have control over them. That’s great.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, I’ve seen people do nothing different and just meditate, and they lose weight. It’s mind-blowing to me.

Dr. Pompa:
There’s been studies done on that. I mean, literally, do nothing different. Change our thoughts. I always bring up The Biology of Belief [00:51:02] science. I’ve interviewed Bruce Lipton a couple times, and our thoughts change our cells, change the proteins we make, which is ultimately changing you. You become a new you when you change your thoughts. It’s scientifically proven. Twenty minutes a day, I challenge you all to do it. Start there for today.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, that would be the best. If you can, start with 20 minutes.

Dr. Pompa:
Just think positively about yourself. What is your true identity? Throw away bad thoughts, right?

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, visualize what it would like for you to have—one of my favorite exercises is start in the morning and just visualizing your day, making healthy choices throughout the day. Your body can’t recognize what is true, what it is in your mind and you’re visualizing and what’s actually happening.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right.

Sarah Anne:
If you can start setting yourself up to have these incredible days from start to finish where you’re [00:51:54]….

Dr. Pompa:
You’ll create it.

Sarah Anne:
…making the healthiest choices, how amazing? It becomes easy.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you’ll create that day. I mean, your subconscious literally is that strong and that powerful. I mean, it’s been said, for healing, if you just visualize yourself healed, healing, the energy coming from your brain, which has the ability to heal, folks, down in your body to that spot. Just regenerating that spot. Visualize yourself bouncing on the knee that you hurt, whatever it is, without migraine headaches, sleeping through the night. I mean, visualize what maybe right now your brain thinks is impossible because it’s tied somehow to your false identity. If you change the way your subconscious—you start visualizing that. You said it. Your brain doesn’t know any different. It becomes that reality. Isn’t that cool?

Sarah Anne:
Mm-hmm. It’s so great. So exciting the time—the research we have and what we know is—it’s so amazing to be alive now.

Dr. Pompa:
It is. It’s a good time for many, many reasons, and I choose to think it’s the best time to live ever.

Sarah Anne:
Mm-hmm.

Dr. Pompa:
Sarah, thank you so much for sharing your story, and it’s an amazing story. You know what? I know this, you empowered a lot of people today, including women that were on the fence about getting breast implants. I know you trained a lot of people how to think better, so thank you for being on CellTV.

Sarah Anne:
Thank you so much for having me.

Dr. Pompa:
Promote your gift that you said.

Sarah Anne:
Yeah, so I have a free—just a free giveaway. It’s called the Awesome Inside Out packet. You can just go to sarahannestewart.com/free and grab it there. It’s 21 days to help shift your mindset around dieting and let go of dieting, and included in that is a meditation. If you want to get started on the meditation journey, it’s an easy way to get started.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, take advantage of that gift because that’s awesome. You’re the poster child for it. You’ve done it, so if you did it, I want to know more about it. Thanks, Sarah.

Sarah Anne:
Thank you so much.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today’s episode. This episode was brought to you by CytoDetox. Please check it out at buycytonow.com. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 a.m. Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv, and please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, and sharing the show with anyone you think may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.

300: From Purpose to Promise: The Day Daniel Jumped

Episode 300: From Purpose to Promise: The Day Daniel Jumped

This episode tells the story of the most dramatic moment of my family's life. I could not think of anything more fitting to commemorate Episode 300 with than this true example of Pain to Purpose… to Promise!

For those of you who have followed along, you know my son Daniel broke his back jumping off a cliff in August 2019.

In just 3 short months, Daniel has not only come into his purpose in a big way, he has also experienced a remarkable recovery. It's unfathomable that he's even here today, let alone walking, traveling, and defining his bright future.

Please join us as we share this tale of letting god direct Daniel's story, me navigating the complicated healing of my own child, and Merily's effortless and unwavering strength, faith and love that held us all together.

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
Episode 300, obviously, you can tell it’s different already, as my wife and my son are sitting next to me. Look, you’re obviously not going to want to miss this episode. It was one of the most dramatic points of our life, and our life has been from pain to purpose. This one no doubt brings us into the promise. Some of you have heard about how my son broke his back, and he and we are actually writing that book, how he jumped into his purpose. On this episode, you’re going to hear that story and more of how this changed the Pompas' life. I’ll see you on the episode.

You see the title there, The Day Daniel Jumped. The name of his book is actually The Day I Jumped. There’s so much there that we don’t have time to get into, but Daniel’s life, like the Pompa life, has been very dramatic, honestly. Again, we understand it to be always that calling, that knowing. It’s so funny. We talk about physical, emotional, spiritual battles. Daniel went through a lot of emotional stuff when we took the twins on and brought them into our family. He was the oldest and then he wasn’t. It creates a lot of disruption in the family dynamic. You all won’t even understand that whole story completely until Merily and I get that book done.

It really disrupted Daniel. God gave Merily even a promise then. You can tell them what that was, or us a promise.

Merily:
Yeah, so I mean, as awful as this sounds, my mom begged me not to take the twins. I told my mom…

Dr. Pompa:
There was a reason for that.

Merily:
Right.

Dr. Pompa:
Because of the grandmother who ended up, true to form, creating a lot of problems.

Merily:
My mom knew best, obviously, in terms of the physical expectation or the way it could potentially work out. I mean, I never looked back. A lot of people go through life, and they wonder why they are who they are or maybe they don’t. I always wondered. Why did God give me this personality? Why am I this way and not that way? I knew in that moment that I was who I was because of what God was choosing for me to do.

I had resolve, and I remember saying to Danny when he was still vacillating on, oh, my gosh, we’re doing this? I said, “Yes, we’re doing this.” I don’t need swallowed by the whale. If this is what God chose for us, then I don’t want to not follow His—and honor Him in that.

Dr. Pompa:
Your only concern was Daniel.

Merily:
As we went through this process, I went back and forth with my mom. I finally said to God—because my mom pulled out her last stitch effort, which was what about Daniel? Honestly, I had never given consideration to what about Daniel? In that moment, like I did when Danny was sick and we had no answers is I stopped. I said, Lord, what about Daniel? God spoke to my heart for the second time in my life and said not only will I do great things for Daniel. I will do great things through Daniel.

We have been through—so that was it. Anyway, that was it. That was just done. I was good, and so in every challenge that we’ve had from that point on with him, I have just reminded God that you put a promise in me. I’ve accepted that, and I’m not looking back, and I never did, even to this day.

Dr. Pompa:
One of the things that—it makes me emotional. Merily’s gift is faith, and often times, her faith destroys us. Remember when I sick. Not only is God going to heal you, but He’s going to take a message through the world through you. I’m like you could’ve said the worse thing. I can’t get myself well. Go away. How are her words of prophecy in your life? How’d that work out? God’s going to do great things through you, right? It created some emotional stress in you, as you tell us.

Daniel:
Yeah, for sure.

Merily:
Yeah, he told me that he wishes I hadn’t told him that.

Dr. Pompa:
Merily’s faith just, pughhh, out of her. We’re like we’re not worthy.

Daniel:
They become these taglines. You just keep saying it over and over again.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, yeah, and we’re just like, oh, my God, anyways, but honestly, women in the room…

Merily:
They’re hard on me, right?

Dr. Pompa:
Women in the room—I mean, but we’ve now learned. I mean, she is—she’s the anchor in our family. She’s all that. She leads in the faith.

Audience:
[00:04:44].

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s right. She’s the one who is always behind me. Remember I said I struggled my—working out of a false identity like David. It’s like she’s the one that was anchoring me always to my true identity. My true identity was back in that promise that God gave her that I was going to take a message to the world through me, right? That’s why I know it’s not about me. It was that prophecy and that promise. I’ll say this, just like that promise that was given to Daniel, all of a sudden, the adversity. You all have a promise, but all this adversity comes in lieu of it.

Daniel went through a major emotional battle, and then he went through a major spiritual battle. If I told you the details of that, honestly, most of you wouldn’t believe it. Some of you in this room were in that prayer team, Lance. I mean, I could go through the room, and many of you know the details there. It’s unbelievable. I’m telling you, I saw things when I went to Africa spiritually that I wouldn’t have believed existed until I went there, and it opened my eyes. I’ll tell those stories one day. Same thing with Daniel, I’ll tell those stories one day of everything he dealt with, but it was unbelievable, the emotional, the spiritual. Which was left (the physical)?

The day that Daniel jumped, he literally jumped into his calling and his purpose. I believe that, as I stood—that picture was taken from me across—watching the kids. I was there to video the kids. I’m going to let Daniel tell the story here in a moment, but I was there for two reasons. As they were going out the door, Merily was lecturing them. “Don’t do something stupid.” “What do you mean?” She’s like, “Danny,” that’s what she calls me. “You need to go with them.” “Ah, man.” “No, you need to go with them to make sure they don’t do anything stupid.”

My son Isaac who’s in the back was, “Oh, gosh, mom,” giving her the hardest time. I’m like I don’t want to go.

Merily:
Overprotective was the word.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, overprotective. I went. There I am. I’m going to take the video. They’re going up and up and up that cliff, and I’m going whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Where are you going? You can’t even see the person in this video. Just to show, this is a 60 foot drop. That’s a human right here. They were up here and Daniel will show that.

I’m like no way, and so I’m looking at my phone trying to text one, call one. Not even remembering they swam across there. How could they even have a phone? Then I hear a splash. Now, there’s a blessing in that because I didn’t see what actually happened. Then I hear all this yelling from a boat. This boat’s going over there. I’m going something’s not good, but I didn’t know what. Thank God. I’d of probably jumped in and swam, or I’d of thought I just watched my son die. The boat rescues him, pulls him up, and then a story goes from there. Daniel, what happened that day?

Daniel:
I guess we can start with the cliff. We’re just looking to burn a few hours and go cliff jumping. We get up to the top, and we’re just looking at it and talking to my friend, Rod, or my brother’s friend and said, “Okay, so can I just jump anywhere?”

Dr. Pompa:
You can use this and go over there and show them.

Daniel:
All right, let’s see here.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m telling you, technology, it’s hilarious, but I use these things all the time.

Daniel:
Oop!

Dr. Pompa:
Aha! That’s the first technology thing that I was able to show my son, ever.

Merily:
It will be the last.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, the PowerPoints and the fast—yeah, this was him, four hours sitting on the couch. “Dad, oh, my gosh.” I end up just giving him the computer.

Daniel:
Anyway, so I’m up there, and I’m trying to just ask my friend. “Okay, can I jump anywhere? Is it good?” I climbed up from this side wall up there, and I end up coming up. We didn’t actually really scope out the cliff except from when we were looking at it from where he took the picture head on. You figure what the cliff looks like. The whole way up, my feet were getting torn up by these bristles and briars. My feet were already bleeding.

There was no way I was going back down there to check out the cliff. I just wanted to get down, and I was done. I was already annoyed with this cliff. I never wanted to jump it again. From the get-go, I literally just wanted to jump, leave, go home, and be done. I’m up there. It wasn’t huge, so I wasn’t up there…

Dr. Pompa:
Sixty foot.

Daniel:
…really scared or anything. I was like, okay, I’m just going to jump it. “Okay, [00:09:25], where do I jump?” “Okay, yeah, you want to jump more to the right. If you jump to the left, you’re going to have to clear a lot more.” I didn’t really understand how much more. You can see there. If I would’ve jumped to the left more, I would’ve came down here and landed here. This was out a lot further. I didn’t realize how far to the left or how far to the right. It was more subjective, so my left and his left were a little different because I had never jumped it before.

My friend, I guess he said he was going to go scope it out, but he was going to go to the bathroom. I didn’t hear that. He turned around to go to the bathroom, and I just took a few steps back and one, two, gave it a leap and came over this bluff. That’s all I could see from here. From here, all I could see was this. I couldn’t see any of this. I’d come over the bluff, and then right as I come over I realized, oh, crap, I might come up a little bit short.

Dr. Pompa:
Imagine that feeling.

Daniel:
It’s not a good feeling.

Dr. Pompa:
I kept saying to Daniel—I’m like what did you feel like? What were you thinking? I just couldn’t imagine. I was caught there.

Daniel:
Then, as I came to here, it was like I’m definitely going to come up short, and then, here, it was like I’m going to die. Then, as I got to here, it was like, okay, I got to just brace for impact. I remember thinking also in this moment in the air just got to make it to the water. I just knew, if I just made it to the water, somehow I’d be all right. I hit here, right, right there?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, right.

Daniel:
Yeah, here.

Dr. Pompa:
There’s an out cliff. You can’t see it great there, but it sticks out.

Daniel:
Is that it? That’s where I hit, right?

Dr. Pompa:
The guys that rescued him—because I’m like, “What happened?” They said, “Look up there. You can see the blood on that little out cliff.” That’s where he hit. I’m like, “You mean he hit like brushed off?” “Oh, no, he hit, stopped him, and he just fell in the water.” Fifty feet, you’re almost at terminal velocity. The people, the doctors in the hospital were like you might as well jumped out of an airplane. You basically survived an airplane jump because of how fast you were going at that point and how hard you hit.

Everyone said the same thing. He should’ve been dead. He definitely should’ve been paralyzed, but obviously, he was neither. The first miracle was done right there.

Daniel:
Definitely, I landed first on me feet, like this, like back a little bit on my heels, and I broke this heel. My feet flew out from under me, and then I went to put my hand down like this.

Dr. Pompa:
Broke his arm there, wrist.

Daniel:
I broke my forearm there. I think those two things I hit first and then hitting my butt saved me completely, or I would’ve snapped my back in half or my—I didn’t even break—where I hit on my butt, I…

Dr. Pompa:
Wait ‘til you see this picture. You are doctors. You can handle a picture of a butt, and Daniel can handle you seeing his butt. I’m telling you, if any of us hit from 50 foot drop on your ischial tubes, how did they not shatter?

Daniel:
Yeah, I don’t understand that.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s like the doctors are looking at that. No one could figure it out.

Daniel:
Yeah, so I ended up smacking pretty hard, breaking quite a few things, but then I got in the water and just remember just treading water, going under, and being like, okay, I made it. I’m good. I’m good. I made it to the water. My head was intact. My feet were working. Everything was good. I was treading water, but I remember thinking just, oh, my back.

I remember the first thing I said when I came up out of the water was just—and I was out of—the wind was knocked out of me. I just said, “Ow! Ow! Ow! Help! Help! Help!” That was all I could—as loud as I could but it was not very loud. Then I was just treading water. I just remember my back hurt really bad.

I couldn’t really feel anything else. It was just my back was in so much pain. That’s when the boat came around. They said, “Can you swim to the boat?” They said, “Are you okay?” I said, “Yeah.” They’re like, “Can you swim to the boat?” “No.” Then at that point, I…

Dr. Pompa:
You start sinking.

Daniel:
I literally started sinking there. Then, when I started to sink, I realized that I was in worse shape than I had originally thought. The guy jumps in as I’m sinking. He gets me. Praise God. That could’ve been the end there too. He pulls me up on the boat.

Dr. Pompa:
Then they came to me.

Daniel:
Then they came, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
At that point, I didn’t know how bad things were, right? Those guys on the boat were yelling at the other kids on the top. I’m thinking something that bad couldn’t have happened. They would not be angry. They’d be more upset or concern in their voice. What I didn’t know is they were drunk so, yeah, didn’t matter, although Daniel got really mad at the one guy because he was drunk, but anyway, long story…

Daniel:
He was bothering me there.

Dr. Pompa:
He kept trying to talk to Daniel.

Merily:
He told him a similar thing happened to him.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and Daniel’s just like…

Daniel:
He said, “I did the same thing last year.”

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, he was absolutely annoying.

Merily:
He said, “Could you please be quiet?”

Dr. Pompa:
I’m going like this to the guy.

Daniel:
I’m sitting there literally giving it all my concentration. Just keep it together, laying there on the boat.

Dr. Pompa:
He was laying just like that on the back.

Daniel:
I just remember thinking the whole time I’m—get the morphine. In 15 minutes, I’ll have morphine. In 15 minutes, I’ll have morphine. I’ll be good. As soon as I get to the morphine, I’ll be good, and this guy is just bantering everybody.

Dr. Pompa:
When they came to me, I still didn’t know how bad it was, right? The first thing I said is the obvious. “Can you move your feet?” He didn’t answer me. He just did it. Then I got on the boat, and I said, “Where does it hurt?” He went like this. “Your back?” “Mm-hmm.”

I could tell there was major pain, and when I put my hand under, he just went “Waaa!” I knew. I said, “Daniel, you have compression fracture,” and I just gave him the good news. “Those heal,” da, da, da, da. I didn’t know how bad it was. Obviously, when we got to the hospital, they were like you have two floating vertebrae. This is as bad as it gets, two Chance fractures, fractured anterior, medial, and posterior. You should be paralyzed.

Right away, it was like, okay, we’re going to get surgery in two days. We’ll catch up to that story here in a moment, and all I asked was—Daniel was like, “No surgery. No surgery. I don’t want metal in my back.” He’s 21, so they were like, “Well, it is your choice, but you need surgery,” blah, blah, blah. I said, “Just give me 24 hours to research this so Daniel doesn’t make an emotional decision.” I wanted him to make a really logical decision. They said, “Okay.” That’s where we were at this point. Okay, Merily?

Merily:
I mean, I think it’s very noteworthy that you had prayed.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, yeah, so I don’t even know, oddest things, right? I said I was on my phone, and when I sensed that they were going to jump from there, most often, even if they did, they would be okay. I started praying. I prayed for something I typically don’t pray. I prayed for angels to be around them, and I don’t do that. It was the oddest thing. I know the first miracle happened in the air, and I know that there was angels that directed him in the exact possible way that he had to hit for him not to be dead. That’s all I can tell you. That was the first miracle right there.

Why would I even pray that? I didn’t think they were going to—I never thought that would happen. I was just trying to be the—she sent me there to do the right thing. I failed. That was another story I won’t even tell. Honestly, Merily, with our son Isaac—and I will say this, our son, Isaac, who’s right in the middle there, when he was 14 hit a tree skiing on ski team. He was life-flighted off the ski slope, and there’s a whole other miracle. Merily had tens of thousands of people praying, and I’ll just fast forward six months after that happened, again, could’ve died, ICU, the whole thing. His spleen was shattered in Grade 5, pieces everywhere. They don’t even remove it because it’s just gone.

We get the scan done in six months, and the doctor comes out with a look on his face. I go, “Is everything okay?” He says, “Yeah, he has a spleen.” I said, “Is it functioning fully?” I said, basically, “Is it the right scan?” “Checked it three times.” I said, “How did that happen?” He goes, “I have no idea,” and Merily said, “We had tens of thousands of people praying.”

We went into this with that faith, so we had a lot greater faith with Daniel. I’m like, okay, God did that for Isaac, made something out of nothing. He’s going to do the same with Daniel. We were standing hard, and I spoke that on Facebook. Anyways, go ahead. That day brought us…

Merily:
Yeah, we’ll tell you the other story about how he called me and what he said.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, yeah, I said I won’t even tell that story because—no, on the boat—I have to say it now.

Merily:
It’s a little funny, just a little.

Dr. Pompa:
I was literally on the boat with him. 911, they said, basically, we have to meet us over here, right? We’re going across this lake, and all I’m thinking about is how to present this to her. With Isaac, she got an ulcer. She took it hard physically. I’m like, oh, my God, I can’t—this is terrible, and I failed her, right? I’m there to protect.

Merily:
He was supposed to go and take pictures, and just make sure that they were following other people and going from a place they were supposed to jump from.

Dr. Pompa:
Fail, okay, fail.

Daniel:
Only took one picture.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m thinking , number one, I’m going to get an earful. Number two, I’m going to put her in this—she gets shaky. I mean, she visibly just starts shaking.

Merily:
I immediately have to poop. That’s what happens.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and she runs into—she has to poop.

Merily:
Every time I get stressed, I go straight to the bathroom and poop.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m thinking how am I going to frame this? How am I going to frame this? This is the truth. I have it crafted on the phone with her, and it goes like this. “Yeah, so Daniel has some scraps and wounds, but he’ll be all right.”

Merily:
He hit his heel. That’s what you said. He hit his heel.

Dr. Pompa:
His heel and his leg. “I’m going to take him to the hospital, and we’re going to get some X-rays.” “What?” “I just want to make sure nothing’s too bad,” da, da, da. “Take him to Harry,” our friend Harry Adelson. “He’ll X-ray him.” I’m like, “No. No. No.”

She wouldn’t give up on this take him to Harry thing. Finally, I was like, “Well, I want to take him”—and I said the stupidest thing. She was so persistent. I said, “Well, just in case he needs a body cast.” I could’ve said a brace. My brain was like something that Harry possibly couldn’t give him, body cast. They don’t even use body casts anymore. “Body cast? Why are you calling me?” That’s what she said. I said, “So you can meet me at the hospital?”

Merily:
I don’t want to meet you at the hospital.

Dr. Pompa:
“I don’t want to meet you.” “Okay, bye.” Oh, shit, that didn’t go well at all. Okay, anyways, go ahead. Talk about this day.

Merily:
Anyway, yeah. Oh, yeah, so this was the day before. Actually, we were at the gym. That’s how life can change in a moment.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, there’s exactly where he hit. See that? There’s little Daniel up there.

Merily:
Yes, Daniel did that graphic for me. You can see where he bounced and went face forward.

Dr. Pompa:
Merily loved that Scripture right there, right? Doesn’t it tell it all?

Merily:
I do. “We stand fearless at the cliff-edge of doom, courageous…the tremors that shift mountains. Jacob-wrestling God fights for us, God of angel armies protects us.”

Dr. Pompa:
There’s no doubt. I prayed for angels that day, and that was just so appropriate.

Merily:
I saw this. “When God leads you to the edge of a cliff, trust Him fully. Only two things can happen. Either He will catch you when you fall, or He will teach you how to fly.” There is always a lesson learned on the way down as well as the way up. In whatever form that comes, I think that’s the most important thing to remember. If your faith is where it needs to be for the one that created you and understands the path that’s best for you, then anchoring to something that is just very foundational to the experience is really what honestly gives you hope as you go through it.

That was me behind the ambulances. They were transporting him from Park City Hospital to Salt Lake, to the trauma center.

Dr. Pompa:
God laid that Scripture on her heart. By the way, when I was sick, that is the most profound Scripture for me that I always held onto in my darkest days, honestly. My brain would go that does God have it out for me? What’s going on, right? God would just always lay that on my heart, so that meant a lot for me. God gave Merily that Scripture behind the ambulance. That’s why she put it there.

Merily:
Yes, as I was driving. Of course, you’re processing. Oh, my gosh, what’s happening, and what’s this going to look like? Honestly, God just reminded me. I just knew. Anchor to His promise. I just knew that, if He has plans for him, then he has a future already planned, and it’s going to be okay. Then this was right before that, actually, when Danny was sitting there at the first…

Dr. Pompa:
I don’t look good, do I?

Merily:
At the Park City Hospital. That was him, us just—they were stabilizing him, and I think that’s really just something that, obviously, you’re processing. You’re surviving the moment. It’s intimidating. It’s overwhelming. It’s all of those things. What is your anchor in these times of pain? Is it the pain, or is it the purpose that you know will come from the pain if your faith is anchored there. For us, it is in the pain and the purpose and the promise that is produced from it all. I mean, I think that’s the thing that you know there is definitely a—there’s just an experience to be had that you might not want to take, but when you get through it, you realize how amazing it was for only what you could experience in such difficulty.

Dr. Pompa:
Someone said don’t take out the pain. People relate to the pain. The woman had said that to us. Yeah, you’re 100% so right. You can’t take out the pain. It’s what gives us hope, ultimately. However, we have to focus our consciousness on the purpose and the promise God has for us, right? I think if we focus on the next pain that’s going to come, then we could in fact bring more of it. I think that’s the shift we had to make as a family. We’ll never get rid of the pain part of the message in the sense that you can’t forget about where it comes from, but our focus has to be more—all of us, on the purpose.

Merily:
I think something worth reminding all of you—I know I need to remind myself of it is that we really feel overwhelmed in that. However we’ve been raised, whatever experiences we’ve had, whatever lies we’ve believed, whatever things that become attached to our identity is something that we really do need to work at. You can’t just do all these other things and neglect your emotional being. The emotional being is tied to the spiritual being. I mean, for years, I knew I wasn’t functioning as the best version of myself. I mean, I literally spent ten years in survival when we got the kids. I never looked back. I never told them I wish I hadn’t taken them or anything like that. I wasn’t able to be all that I knew God created me to be, and there were many days when I’m like I could’ve handled that better, or I just—I wish I hadn’t been so hard on a situation that really wasn’t significant. It was just a matter of me wanting to control an outcome, and it might’ve just had to do with a clean kitchen. It was the dumbest stuff that ended up just wrecking me.

Dr. Pompa:
Wrecking her but building her up.

Merily:
When we finally got to Park City after just other challenges on top of those challenges and not to mention his sickness—when he was sick, obviously, my emotional needs had no place, and that was totally fine. I mean, there was just—it was what it was. I realized there were things that were accumulating and experiences that were just—I was not able to even identify with my true self, and because of how I’ve been raised, I took a set of expectations into my life and into my relationships. When we got to Park City, I knew it was time to just start digging through some junk. I’d been through three or four different types of counseling, and every one had value. I’m now so grateful that I’ve pursued that. I’m finally getting to that place where feel like not only am I okay and have forgiven myself for the—who I am, or what I’m not, or whatever. We all go through these things. I’m also able to now have—they always say that if you don’t—how can you love fully, or how can you give grace, or how can you look at others with a heart of forgiveness or acceptance, or just not letting their way attach to what you think they should believe, or be, or whatever, but how can you understand that if you don’t have that within you to pour out of you? My bucket of baggage had to empty.

Dr. Pompa:
Again, these adversities in our life brought us—I said it in the beginning of this seminar. The key to success and happiness is functioning in the true identity of how God made us. Every one of us get away from that. All of us through our life work to be closer to that true identity. I always say it’s like a scale. If we had a meter to hook up, you could look at someone’s happiness and success. When I say success, I mean 12 pillars of success. Relationships, family, health, I mean, that’s—that is it. You can look at that meter, 80%, 85%. The more you’re functioning your identity, the greater of a reflection and success, and the adversities bring us there or not, or they break us. You always say it’s a choice.

Merily:
Yes, it’s a choice. We can either become better, or we can become bitter, and it is a choice. I just have to pause for a moment and say how blessed I am that God gave me him. He is where my confidence in what God is doing through our family and through the challenges and all the things that we’ve both been through. It begins and ends. I mean, our relationship is the foundation. A cord of three strands cannot be broken. That was on our marriage program, and it has been a theme of our life. Take the kids away. Take the struggles away. He and I love each other.

Dr. Pompa:
No doubt, more every day.

Merily:
He’s my #1 fan and my greatest anchor to logic.

Dr. Pompa:
We got to speed up her cellular age. I don’t want to be dating a 20-year-old anymore.

Merily:
Yes, we got to get you guys—what did you say?

Dr. Pompa:
Nothing, nothing.

Merily:
Okay, I’ll watch that later.

Dr. Pompa:
Daniel was never down one moment.

Merily:
He was making the nurses laugh right from the start.

Dr. Pompa:
What was happening? What were you telling her?

Daniel:
I don’t remember anything, honestly

Merily:
Something about the vein, I think. I think she was trying to get in the vein. He wasn’t. He wasn’t down for a minute, and Isaac did—he just never left his side. I think that there was a lot of things that Isaac was only able to identify with from his experience six years before.

Dr. Pompa:
These two bones, excuse me, these were floating here, these two. They said 50%, in between 50 and 60. It’s hard to see on this CAT scan, but this was all broke. I guess I can speak to you all differently. All the pars, the facet joints, obviously, the transverse processes—matter of fact, the TPs were broke all the way down. How many levels, Daniel?

Daniel:
Six.

Dr. Pompa:
Six levels?

Daniel:
I think, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Anyways, but these two were floating. This was 30%. Oddly, there was angles that looked so much worse, and the reason why is the right side was okay on this vertebra. The left side was crushed. Remember it was like how come it looks better on this one? After we looked better at the A to P, we realized it was the left side of this one that was crushed. When he hit and went this way, it just crushed the left side. This one was completely crushed and, again, worse on the left. On the left, it was down all the way to here. Yeah, everything was broke.

Seventy-five percent of this type ends in paralysis, and that was the statistic. They said, when we see this fracture, that’s the statistics, and it ends there. That’s the sad part. There you go.

Merily:
This was the next morning after that X-ray and before the decision was made on what to do. We were laying in bed. We had just gotten up.

Dr. Pompa:
Remember I said I needed 24 hours, right? I didn’t sleep well that night. I went to bed researching, finding different research journals, articles. I woke up that morning, and she was sleeping. She woke up, and she saw me in that position. I had been up about since 4:30, and I had started probably about 5. I went right at it again.

I’ll say this, that this completes the circle there. They gave me the information, what they had. This is broke. This is broke. This is broke. I took all that information. All the ligaments were ruptured, etc. Then I found a study that was a really conservative study saying, basically, too many of these surgeries are done, but here is when the outcomes are actually better with the surgery and without. This was a good one. It took me a while to find it and probably through prayer.

The fact was is I—after reading it, I said to Daniel, “I think we need to get the surgery because the outcomes with what you have were better, and they were looking pretty good long term,” and I said, “but we can do it from the posterior and remove the metal.” I know that the metal in the body causes autoimmune. The doctor even said—and we have a video of him saying, “Oh, there’s no problem with the metal,” right? All the studies were done two years, three. Of course they think that, but they don’t see what happens 10, 20 years. I found studies showing that it causes autoimmune when you have metal in your body, and it causes leaching. They measure urine after ten years, and all the metals that are in there in the stainless are pouring out.

Daniel:
We had three options going into it. It was anterior, so they want to come through my rib cage in the front.

Dr. Pompa:
Right here, mm-hmm.

Daniel:
Which was their preferred option. They said that they’d be able to get a straighter spine like that.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, he said that kink won’t hold up otherwise, and this is the way to do it.

Daniel:
They’re going to take my bone fragments out. Put it in a little cage thing. Put it back in. Remake, I don’t know, my vertebrae.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, the vertebrae. They would’ve take these—oop, let me back up one. They would’ve taken these two vertebrae out and caged them. He said maybe not that one but maybe because it was worse on the other side, but for sure, they would take all this out. Then they would fuse it like this. Now, we wanted to come in from the posterior. The posterior, you can at least after a year or two take out the hardware. He said, “Mm-mm, don’t even bother with the posterior.” He said, “It’s too severe.” He said, “We have to go in from the anterior if we’re going to do it.”

Daniel:
They wanted to put in two 12 inch rods also.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, rods. You can’t take out the metal.

Daniel:
Twelve inches is a lot. Four inches, you might get some mobility, but 12 inches, that’s a foot, not being able to bend. What?

Dr. Pompa:
Not a good outcome. It led to the conversation that, after I did the research, I’m saying, well, the surgery does look like something that looks like a better outcome. I said something about with the posterior ligaments. Most of the studies were really focused on the posterior ligaments.

Daniel:
He told us all my ligaments were ruptured.

Dr. Pompa:
Were ruptured. This surgeon said, “Oh, well, we don’t know that for sure. It’s just when we see this injury, they’re always ruptured.” Daniel said from the bed…

Daniel:
Yeah, so going into this conversation, I was with the doctor. I had my dad on speaker phone, and we were pretty much—my dad said that the best option with all your ligaments being ruptured and everything, that you should get the surgery. I said, “Okay, that’s the best option. That’s what we should do.” Then the doctor came in. We we’re talking about it. We were telling him, the doctor, why we decided to do—we were going to move forward with doing the surgery not on the posterior but from the back. By the end of the conversation, we were telling him this, that. I said, “Yeah, because the ligaments are ruptured.”

He pretty much interrupted me and said, “Oh, well, we don’t know that they’re all ruptured.” I said, “Well, shouldn’t we know that before we decide we should do surgery?” He said, “Well, yeah, you could.” I said, “We should probably do—dad, what is that?” Dad’s like, “Oh, we should probably do an MRI.” The doctor’s like, “Okay.”

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s how it went.

Daniel:
“I could see if you could do an MRI.” I said, “Well, I’m not making a decision until I see that MRI because I’m not going to do surgery.”

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, he was hung on that. By the way, at this point, they said, “Listen, if you don’t do this surgery, it probably won’t hold at all, but you will be in bed for 12 to 15 weeks.” He was like, “That’s it? I can do that.”

Merily:
Oh, yeah, Daniel was resolved.

Dr. Pompa:
Anyways, we didn’t do the surgery because the MRI came back that his ligaments weren’t completely ruptured, and so there was some really stabilizing ligaments. Daniel can squat 500 pounds. Again, I respect the doctors in that. I mean, if they see a thousand people with these fractures, the surgery works out and gets them out of bed, and it works. We made the decision not after we got the ligament—I read the studies. The ligaments were the key part that this could actually work out better without having hardware in your spine for your whole life, which ends in horrific problems later.

Daniel:
It came down to such a small—down to the wire.

Dr. Pompa:
He looked at you and said, “Daniel, don’t—we’re going to do an X-ray in two or three weeks just to see if it’s even able to hold. Don’t get your hopes up,” he told you.

Merily:
He said that you would be in so much pain. He thought you’d be back sooner.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s true.

Daniel:
Yeah, he came in at five days or a week.

Dr. Pompa:
All of them kept coming in.

Daniel:
Yeah. “Well, you made it a week. I can’t believe you made it a week. I thought for sure by now you’d have the surgery.” I’m like, “I’m good.”

Dr. Pompa:
They kept coming in one after another and different ones. I think there was four or five surgeons on the team and trying to convince him of the surgery. Again, that’s not a negative to them. This is what they see, and they see the outcomes as being positive, right? They don’t see things the way we see them, but they never convinced him. He never swayed.

Daniel:
Yeah, they really wanted me to do the surgery.

Merily:
They were great. I actually thought they were amazing. I was so thankful.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I did too. By the way, we’re going to get to the biohacks that we did, right? Fact was is that they would let us bring the stuff into the hospital. Back in Pittsburgh where we used to live, they would’ve been like no way.

Daniel:
All the biohacking devices.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m dragging biohacking devices. They’re just like what’s that do? What’s that do? They just went with it. It was pretty amazing, actually.

Merily:
That’s Danny showing him the cliff that he took a picture of. He had one picture from that assignment.

Dr. Pompa:
I’m like, yeah, that’s—Daniel’s like, yeah, uh-huh, I know.

Daniel:
Terrible, terrible, one picture, not even a video.

Dr. Pompa:
Of course, the meds, man, they just stopped his gut.

Daniel:
This was the most brutal part. Compounding this on top of the back injury was like icing on the cake.

Dr. Pompa:
The gut was the worst part. It just stuck.

Merily:
It was the first meal of the day that stuck.

Dr. Pompa:
Right, he had one meal that day before he jumped. It was stuck, and it wasn’t going anywhere. I spent five hours a day…

Daniel:
Yeah, it was all the Dilaudid and the morphine. I did Dilaudid for the first day or two, and we realized that it was stopping the bowel. We had to come off Dilaudid the first day, I think. Yeah, it messed up everything and then went straight to oxy. Yeah, then I had to come way down on my pain meds because my gut stopped.

Dr. Pompa:
Man, if I heard pffft, a fart was like, yes, God. I’m wearing out. I mean, I’m just like—this is what I was doing.

Daniel:
We would work my stomach for what?

Merily:
Hours.

Daniel:
Hours.

Dr. Pompa:
Hours.

Daniel:
My stomach was raw, like red with him pushing on it.

Merily:
My husband’s a fixer. Say no more.

Daniel:
Someone had to do it. If he wasn’t doing it, she was doing it, well, Isaac probably first.

Dr. Pompa:
Which brought us, actually, to the first biohack. I already taught you this. What was the first thing that animals do when they’re injured?

Audience:
Fast.

Dr. Pompa:
Daniel, I didn’t even have to tell him. He just said I’m fasting, and he went into it, fasted about four and a half days. There was a reason why we actually started eating. It was like this cleared. I could tell that he was ready to eat. His hunger came back. You actually started getting a little hungry. He was not hungry, and they were trying to force food on him all the time, constantly. They just didn’t get it, right? Meanwhile, his stomach’s not even moving it, right?

Daniel:
No.

Dr. Pompa:
I mean, it’s like you’re going to put food in that? Does that even make sense? It’s no way. His GI system shut down. All the energy was going where?

Audience:
[00:39:30].

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. The moment you eat, where is it going?

Audience:
[00:39:32].

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, they don’t get that. Anyways, the fastest way to downregulate inflammation is in fact through a fast, so he fasted. Anyways, go ahead, Merily, on this.

Merily:
I just love that that picture ended up at the hospital. That’s Daniel and Isaac when they were little. I just love that Isaac and Daniel were so close. It just warms my heart. Daniel was hard on Isaac when he was little. I think I have another one next to it somewhere he’s like…

Dr. Pompa:
Daniel would take his stuff all the time. It’s amazing.

Merily:
Again, prayer, I can honestly say the one—I’ve done one thing right as a mom.

Dr. Pompa:
She’s done more than that.

Merily:
We have prayed. I mean, that I’m confident in is praying for your kids, protection, just God’s provision, His direction in it all. Just reminding Him of His promises that—and reminding Him that He loves them more than we do…

Dr. Pompa:
No doubt.

Merily:
…is very helpful as well.

Dr. Pompa:
There it is, folks.

Merily:
There’s some of the boo-boos.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. By the way, Daniel, how many—this was after a couple weeks.

Daniel:
That was after a couple days, I think, maybe a week after.

Dr. Pompa:
No, it was a week. Anyways, I mean, look at that. It looked like necrotic tissue. He hit.

Merily:
Yeah, that’s a bruise.

Dr. Pompa:
Of course, he fractured his heel. He tore his hamstring.

Daniel:
Yeah, so the heel is interesting too. It’s literally an imprint of where I hit a rock.

Merily:
It was concave in there.

Daniel:
Yeah, it was weird. It was like a cookie cutter.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I mean, imagine that.

Daniel:
Then you can see my hamstring’s torn, the bottom right.

Dr. Pompa:
I couldn’t show you this, but I have to tell you, though. His balls were black. Imagine that. Oh, my God, I get goosebumps thinking about that.

Daniel:
Yeah, that hurt.

Dr. Pompa:
A young lady was out there and said, “Daniel, I’ve seen your ass.”

Merily:
There are some things I don’t put on Facebook.

Daniel:
Not much.

Merily:
This is on our way home.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, on our way.

Daniel:
Two weeks out.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, two weeks out.

Daniel:
At that point, I was pretty much off all pain medication.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that soon. They were stunned.

Merily:
Daniel did it. I mean, he did it all for himself in terms of that.

Dr. Pompa:
I mean, he was like, “I don’t want anymore. I don’t want anymore.” I’m like, “Take it. Take it.” He was like, “No. No.”

Daniel:
I knew it slowed the healing process, and my body would have to detox from it. Also, there is a chance of addiction, obviously, but that was [00:41:59].

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, that was the other thing. Daniel started detox the moment we got home too. He started a cycle. He was like I want these meds out of me. I want everything out of me, the X-rays, everything. He just started it. I mean, my kids all detox.

Daniel:
Yeah, all this stuff, I mean, chemically did take a toll on my body, for sure. My face broke out from all the radiation, getting X-rays and all the meds. Yeah, it took a month or two to clear.

Dr. Pompa:
He’s here.

Daniel:
Yeah, we’re here.

Merily:
We drug him out. That’s his hospital bed.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that was my favorite picture of all. I just happen upon on it. This is another biohack that we did. Every day I dragged him outside in the sun. Fortunately, it was the right time of year in July.

Daniel:
I’m so naked in this photo.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.

Merily:
I know. I sent it to my dad. I think a few others. My dad said, “Where’s the mailman? What about FedEx?”

Dr. Pompa:
Honestly, I would drag him out. People would deliver packages.

Daniel:
Yeah, and I was just sitting there naked.

Dr. Pompa:
He’s just laying out there naked. I would have to be, “Well, my son is”—I wanted those wounds, man—I wanted all that to get sun.

Daniel:
I don’t know.

Dr. Pompa:
Clothes weren’t an option. They just weren’t an option.

Merily:
They’re optional at our house anyway.

Dr. Pompa:
I mean, you can’t—I mean, come on. We know. What was that sun bringing to healing that? I mean, that was a basic, man, and I was pulling him out there. I went into nurse mode.

Merily:
You did.

Dr. Pompa:
I was changing diapers.

Merily:
He was so on point and so stressed.

Dr. Pompa:
I wouldn’t let anyone else change him because he had open wounds, and I’m like infection kills. I’m like, no way. I was literally the bedpan guy. No one else could touch it. Then finally I trusted our little…

Daniel:
Sasha:

Dr. Pompa:
…Sasha to help do that. It wasn’t until I saw the wounds heal to a certain point.

Merily:
We are firm believers in doing our best and trusting God with the rest. That’s just what we do. That’s another thing I always say, and it’s so true. I don’t believe in just praying and expecting. I believe that we have to step up and commit fully and show our resolve. When we do that, then He shows up and meets us and does what we could never do for ourselves.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you want your life to change, step forward.

Merily:
“Whatever you do, work it all—work at it with all your heart as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.” Truly, your testimony, your actions and your life are your testimony that draws people to what you’re offering. You are only offering, obviously, what others have suffered to learn and are committed to teaching and sharing. It’s the real deal at every level. There’s the distended belly.

Dr. Pompa:
There’s the distended belly. Look at that sucker. Yeah, anyway, you know what? I already told you that story, but that was, in fact, the first biohack right there. We’ll get into the biohacks here. Everyone wants to know.

Merily:
That’s when he was able to stand, but he also had the Joovv beside him when he would lay down.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, this was when he was laying, yeah.

Merily:
We would put it on him as well.

Dr. Pompa:
Joovv, they’re not here. You’ll see. All the stuff that we used, they’re mostly here. What we bring here is what we believe strongly in, so there’s a testimony to these vendors. Red light therapy goes in and starts the mitochondrial healing. You’ll see that even in today’s talk how we can use different red light wavelengths to actually get into the mitochondria and biohack into the cell, upregulate ATP, which downregulates inflammation.

Daniel:
There’s going to be a lot of devices.

Merily:
These are in no particular order.

Daniel:
If you’re interested in writing them down, you should probably start a list. You’re not going to remember them all.

Merily:
NanoVi and then the Bemer was—that’s what we took to the hospital.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, look, we’re in the hospital. The NanoVi actually creates the fourth phase of water, which you have to get enough of in the cell. That’s where you fold proteins. When you’re folding proteins, you’re basically making new bones. You’re basically making new hormones. You’re basically making new liver. When you’re injured—that’s why athletes use this NanoVi to actually recover faster. Your fourth phase of water is where you fold proteins to heal, so we wanted to increase that. Especially at this time, we wanted to increase that fourth phase of water.

Daniel:
We do that for an hour a day.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. NanoVi’s not here either.

Merily:
No.

Dr. Pompa:
They should’ve been.

Daniel:
The Bemer.

Dr. Pompa:
Too bad. The Bemer is one of my favorites because it increases capillary circulation. It’s a pulsed electromagnetic—well, it’s carried on a pulse electromagnetic frequency. It’s not really PMF, like the Pulse is, and it does a different thing. It opens up capillaries, and that brings in healing.
There’s the Pulse that’s right over here. The Pulse was developed to actually increase bone. I mean, NASA was using it in antigravity to increase bone. It also biohacks, as you’re going to learn this afternoon even more, but it does biohack literally into the mitochondrial. It fixes what is called the membrane potential, which is how your cells make energy. If you do that, you can downregulate inflammation.

Daniel:
I think Pulse was one of the most effective things I used. I did it for three and a half hours a day in the beginning.

Merily:
We lay on that every day at home. In fact, I put my cat on it. Sometimes she’s [00:46:58] or something.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, our animals go for it.

Merily:
Yeah, our animals often are drawn to it.

Dr. Pompa:
Especially the one cat.

Merily:
They actually have an equine division.

Dr. Pompa:
HBOT, where’s our—yeah, right, thank you. They donated this to us, and the Gentempos were part of that. That’s Daniel laying in the HBOT. He was doing it two, three hours a night. Melissa said to him—to me via him, “Hey, three hours is where you get your most benefit.” Daniel was falling asleep in it at night.

Daniel:
Yeah, I go in there.

Dr. Pompa:
Hyperbaric therapy with spinal injury is a very researched thing. Again, if we can get the oxygen into these areas that are very low oxygen, we can increase the healing, and of course, that’s the magic of hyperbaric. Massage therapy, obviously, even just keeping his lymph.

Daniel:
Yeah, the lymph was the biggest part of the massage therapy. This, I’m working out a little. It’s pretty painful, so it was good to get some movement in there. I don’t know if it necessarily contributed to lots of healing, but the lymph was important.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no doubt, his lymph was—you’ll see in a minute how blocked it was. Sue Brenchley, are you in the room?

Merily:
Yeah, there she is.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, there she is in the back. This woman is a—I could stand here and just raise accolades about that woman, right? I mean, we love her. She was donating—Daniel was drinking a bottle of this a day. Why? Redox is how ultimately the body does everything, heals and communicates. When you look at the research and there’s a growing amount of research, this is the only product—all my docs, all of us in Platinum use it. I mean, you want to talk about a mitochondrial biohack, a biohack to speed healing. When you’re injured or recovering— and this is why sport professional sport teams use this. You need these redox signals to heal faster, to driver recovery at every aspect.

Daniel:
There’s people that heal from crazy things with just drinking ASEA.

Merily:
I drink 10 ounces a day at least.

Dr. Pompa:
This RENU, we were just rubbing on—I was rubbing on his injuries and his spine three times a day, and I would get pissed when they would forget to do it.

Daniel:
There were so many things we were doing. It was just like…

Dr. Pompa:
This is over here in the room. This is the TRT machine. You all see it over here.

Merily:
Is Matt here?

Dr. Pompa:
Is Matt here?

Merily:
You know what? I think he had a full day booked.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, so he’s TRT people. Again, professional sport teams are using this. Actually, in Germany and Switzerland, they actually use this. Anything that won’t heal, this is what they do first. This is brand new. We’re the first group to bring this technology into our space because it’s used in hospitals to get things to heal.

Daniel:
It’s a stem cell device.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s a stem cell machine, basically. What it does is it gets your own stem cells activated into healing. It activates your own stem cells. They’re just sleeping dormant, and it activates them into healing. They’re using this for erectile dysfunction. They’re using it for increasing hormone optimization. I’ll tell you, one treatment—so many of our Platinums have just got one of these machines immediately. We were using it at one of our events, and all of us got to use it. I mean, one treatment, you walk away going, oh, my gosh. It typically only takes about five or six treatments to activate the healing into that joint.

Daniel:
Yeah, this was one of the most effective things I did as well. I mean, I was up—my hamstring was working after being torn after three weeks, four weeks.

Dr. Pompa:
The calcaneus fractures are devastating, and it healed it.

Daniel:
Yeah, it healed those, my wrist, my ankle, and my hamstring really quickly.

Dr. Pompa:
You know what’s really cool about it is, when you do it on non-damaged tissue, you feel nothing. All of a sudden, it hits that damaged spot, and it’s like, oh, my God. After a while, then you don’t feel it anymore. That’s really cool. Professional sport teams use it at even prevention. They’ll do their pitcher’s shoulders on their knees. They’re doing it, doing it, doing it, and when they hit a hotspot, that’s what would’ve been injured. Of course, they’re using it for injury as well, amazing device.

Merily:
Daniel’s first day on his feet was when we had to take him to get an X-ray. That was them doing the X-ray.

Daniel:
The hamstring was still torn there. You can see my leg. I couldn’t put it down. It was locked up, both pictures.

Dr. Pompa:
This is a huge thing here. See the amount of inflammation there? Do you see that? I mean, it was all the way up his spine. It’s like he had a backpack on. Okay, this was the day before we did exosomes. Rafael Gonzalez we have to give great—you know Rafael now from yesterday. He donated the exosomes. The first thing we did was actually just an IV of exosomes and downregulated—thanks for Harry Adelson who delivered these exosomes into Daniel, by the way. Twenty four hours later, I mean, not even…

Daniel:
It was next morning.

Dr. Pompa:
You could see his spine.

Merily:
It was amazing.

Dr. Pompa:
I mean, that’s how fast. I mean, we were like—Merily’s the one that spotted it. She’s like, “Oh, my gosh, you can see his spine.” I’m like, “Oh, that’s right. He had the exosomes put in.” Then this is Harry Adelson who injected him. Thank you, Harry. He’s not here. We also later injected him.

Daniel:
We did stem cells three different times. We did IV twice.

Dr. Pompa:
IV twice and then we later…

Daniel:
We did 2½ cc twice, and then we did the full—every facet, and then we injected the vertebral bodies.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, so we actually injected those crushed vertebral bodies with Daniel’s stem cells, and I think there’s a picture. Oh, no, that’s a video, never mind, anyways, and with the exosomes. We did both down his spine. These are the best exosomes in the world. He’s still young, so he has his own. We combined them just to get that affect. Again, this stuff is all put together is why we got the response that we did. Whoops! Go ahead.

Merily:
Obviously, you’re all familiar with Rak Chazak Amats now. This day, actually, Patrick Gentempo was speaking at your Platinum Mastermind in Park City, and I was taking Daniel. He wanted to go. This is when I—it just hit me. Obviously, he was smiling most of the time, but he was sitting up. He was ready to go. He couldn’t wait to get in the car. He couldn’t wait to go somewhere and go. Just get back to who he knows himself to be, right? Isn’t that what we all want for ourselves?

This we watched a few weeks ago, which was very—definitely affected us. There are 288,000 people in the United States living with spinal cord injury. That is so many people. By the way, the things they were doing in this film are not the things that we did.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s a shame.

Merily:
I really wanted to reach out.

Dr. Pompa:
All of us, yeah, wanted to reach out to these people. It says Any One of Us is the name of the documentary. Watch it. It’ll affect you. This could’ve been any one of us. Your life changes in a moment. I said in that first quote just a couple days ago that God put on my heart, most often it’s the things we don’t see in life, that we don’t see, that affect our life the most, and Daniel didn’t see that out cliff down there. That can work to the positive too. When we’re looking at our own identity and functioning in our identity, it’s the things we don’t see that will have the most dramatic outcome on who God wants you to be. Just look for that. Watch that documentary.

Merily:
There’s my license plate. I’ve had that on there for a few a years, pain to purpose.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s pain to purpose, yeah, and now we know it’s to promise.

Merily:
Our family’s mantra, obviously, has always been since we started experiencing different things “from pain to purpose.” It’s recently been enhanced, I like to say, after much adversity to include to promise. That came when we moved to Park City, to our promise land. After Daniel’s accident, the focus and modified mantra is “from pain”—is “purpose to promise.” Never forget and we will never forget and we will never stop speaking of the fact that the purpose and the hope that comes when you’re waiting for the purpose to unfold that the pain has brought—and obviously, it hasn’t just brought that for our family and our life, but we feel obligated to share what we learn. I always say our pain is never just for us. This is Daniel, actually, in Park City just last week, back up one.

“Have I not commanded you? Rak Chazak Amats. Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go,” Joshua 1:9. Learn that. This is our family’s verse for many, many year. “And we know that in all things…”

Dr. Pompa:
That’s why, when I sign your books, I often times write 8:28.

Merily:
“God works for those—the good of those who love Him and who have been called according to His purpose.”

Dr. Pompa:
There you go, [00:56:13]. Thank you, by the way.