2020 Podcasts

351: How Unhealed Betrayal Impacts Your Health

Today I welcome Dr. Debi Silber; founder of the Post Betrayal Transformation Institute, holistic psychologist, and a health, mindset and personal development expert. She's here to talk about Betrayal and how an unhealed betrayal is impacting our health, work and relationships. This topic fascinates me deeply, and I can't wait to share this conversation with you.

More about Dr. Debi Silber:

Dr. Debi Silber is the founder of the Post Betrayal Transformation Institute and is a holistic psychologist, a health, mindset and personal development expert, the author of the #1 bestselling book: The Unshakable Woman: 4 Steps to Rebuilding Your Body, Mind and Life After a Life Crisis and her newest book: Trust Again. Her recent PhD study on how we experience betrayal made 3 groundbreaking discoveries that changes how long it takes to heal. In addition to being on FOX, CBS, The Dr. Oz Show, TEDx (twice) and more, she’s an award winning speaker, coach and author dedicated to helping people move past their betrayals as well as any other blocks preventing them from the health, work, finances, relationships, confidence and happiness they want most.

Show notes:

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Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
Betrayal, we’ve all heard the word, but could it be why you’re not healing? Could it be why you even got sick in the first place? I always talk about a perfect storm of how we got sick and really going upstream and looking at what these storms are in our life. Oh, man, this is a big one, betrayal. This isn’t, as you’ll find out, the average stressor, and this episode will give us clues if—is why betrayal could be a part of your story. I think one of the best parts about this episode is she really gives us the stages on how to get out, so stay tuned. This one will be one that you might want to share. When you go through it, you’re going to say, okay, this is partly me, but I also know somebody else. Check it out.

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith, and today we welcome Dr. Debi Silber who is founder of the Post Betrayal Transformation Institute. She’s a holistic psychologist and a health mindset and personal development expert. She’s here to talk about betrayal and how an unhealed betrayal is impacting our health, work, and our relationships. Wow! I cannot wait for this conversation, so let’s get started ad welcome Dr. Debi and, of course, Dr. Pompa to the show. Welcome, both of you.

Dr. Debi:
Thank you, looking forward to our conversation.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, me too. I said even before we got on air here that I’m just so intrigued. I look at my history, and I really wanted my wife to even be on here. I said that just because we have such a story and to impact or to unfold our story on how betrayal is a part of it. I can almost not do it justice. There might be a Part 2 to the show.

Dr. Debi:
I just need an invitation. That works.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. When we look at people that can’t get well, when we look at people how they get sick, I always see it as a perfect storm. Matter of fact, I train my doctors to unravel the perfect storm in someone’s life, meaning it’s never just physical. It’s physical, chemical, emotional, and there’s typically three stressors that come together. Bam! It happens. This is very specific, betrayal. I think, obviously, we’re going to unravel that today and its emotional impact, of course, but its impact on our physical body and how it could keep us from healing.

It starts with you story. I mean, obviously, you’ve been there. I mean, you’ve been on some major networks. You’ve done two TED Talks on this topic. It’s taken off, #1 best-selling book. Thank you for being here, but share your story.

Dr. Debi:
Of course, thank you, and thank you for just giving me an opportunity to shed light on the subject for those who aren’t—who don’t realize how big of an issue betrayal is. You don’t study something like betrayal because you want to. You study it because you have to, and I was no different. I’ve been in health, mindset, personal development since 1991, and it was my own betrayals. First it was my family, and I’m the most family-oriented person. I didn’t I guess quite learn all the lessons I was meant to learn from that experience, so I had another opportunity. This time it was my husband, blindsided, devastated, what anybody goes through, but I was desperate to understand this. For me, just when I want to learn something, I go to the experts. I go where the information is. How can I learn about this?

Got him out of the house and one of the lessons I learned that was consistent to both of my betrayals was I wasn’t even on my own to-do list. It was about everybody else. I had four kids and six dogs and this thriving practice, but I never took my own needs seriously. One of the first things I did—maybe not what everybody else would do but one of the first things I did was enroll in a PhD program in transpersonal psychology, the psychology of transformation and human potential. I was just obsessed with that. I was changing, and I didn’t quite understand what was happening.

Anyway, it was time to do a study, so I studied betrayal. What holds us back? What helps us heal, and what happens to us physically, mentally, and emotionally when the people closest to us lie, cheat, and deceive? That study led to three groundbreaking discoveries, and I’m happy to share the discoveries and everything that’s happened since.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and it led to—even to a study that I want you to share, which is part of that. I mean, let’s back up just a moment. We’re saying betrayal. What does that even mean? Why does it hurt? You know what I’m saying? Why is it more impactful than other things? What are we talking about?

Dr. Debi:
I defined it as the breaking of a spoken or unspoken rule. Every relationship has a set of rules. Think about it. I was going to be here today. We were going to meet and chat, and if I didn’t, well, I would’ve betrayed you. I mean, it wouldn’t have devastated you, but the way it works is the more we trust, the more we depend on someone, the bigger the betrayal. For example, a child who’s completely dependent on their parent and that parent does something awful, that’s going to have a different impact than let’s say your coworker taking credit for your idea, still hurts, but it won’t have the same physical, mental, emotional impact to it. It has lots of faces. It could be your best friend telling your secrets, your partner having an affair, your coworker taking credit, your partner taking the company funds. I mean, it’s endless.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, again, you just brought up things we can all go through. There’s some level of scale, meaning— you just said things. It’s like, yeah, happened to me. It happened to me. It happened to me. I mean, is there a building effect, meaning that everyone has betrayals? At what point does it start causing disease, sickness, and non-healing in the body?

Dr. Debi:
Yeah, sure, well, first I’ll tell you how you even know if someone hasn’t healed.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s good, good question.

Dr. Debi:
We see it in health-work relationships. I’ll see it in relationships. I thought about this when you said that. If you have repeat betrayals, it’s an unhealed betrayal. People say all the time, well, why is it that I keep going—I have the same boss, or the same friendships, or the same partner. Is it me? Yes, it is. You haven’t learned whatever it is you’re supposed to learn, so you keep getting opportunities to learn whatever that is. If it’s a repeat betrayal, it’s an unhealed betrayal.

Then there’s the other thing that I see all the time where someone puts that big wall up. They’re like, no, been there, done that. No one’s getting close to me again. They think that’s coming from a place of strength, but no, it’s not. It’s an unhealed betrayal. They’ve been so hurt that they’re just protecting themselves at all costs.

Dr. Pompa:
Does this tie in to some exact physical things? You know what I’m saying?

Dr. Debi:
Oh, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
In other words, if I was listening to this, I’d be like, well, are there physical symptoms that ties in specifically with this?

Dr. Debi:
Absolutely, out of the three discoveries, one of them was that there is this collection of symptoms so common to betrayal, physical, mental, and emotional. It’s known as post betrayal syndrome. We’ve had over 10,000 people in the last year and a half take the quiz, and I actually pulled some stats I want to share with you. What’s so interesting is we’ve all heard time heals all wounds. I have the proof. When it comes to betrayal, that’s not true. There’s a question on the quiz that reads is there anything else you’d like to share?

Dr. Pompa:
Do we have the—I should ask Ashley this. Do we have the quiz for our viewers to take? How can they access that?

Dr. Debi:
Oh, I could just give—yeah, so the link would be thepbt, as in Post Betrayal Transformation, thepbtinstitute.com/quiz.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, all right, yeah, I want everyone to talk it, obviously.

Dr. Debi:
There’s a question that reads is there anything else you’d like to share? People say things like my betrayal happened 40 years ago. I can feel the hate. My betrayal happened 35 years ago. I’m unwilling to trust again. My betrayal happened 10 years ago. It feels like it—it felt like it happened yesterday.

I did pull some stats, and I think you’re going to find these really interesting, just a few. Ninety-four percent deal with painful triggers. Now, with triggers, this could be full-blown PTSD symptoms where your body is responding as if it’s happening right there again. We think it’s just reserved for war vets. No, betrayal happens too. Physical, these are just the physical symptoms. Seventy-one percent have low energy. Sixty-eight percent have sleep issues, 63% extreme fatigue, 47% weight changes, and 45% digestive issues, and that’s anything. That’s constipation, diarrhea, IBS, Crohn’s. I mean, you name it, and it makes so much sense.

What I found so interesting about just the gut issues too, think about what the gut does: absorbs, digests, processes food. Isn’t a betrayal difficult to absorb, digest, and process? That’s just that. Then here’s some mental ones. Seventy-eight percent are overwhelmed, 70% disbelief. Sixty-four percent are in shock and 62% unable to concentrate. You just mix the physical with the mental, and you can see how challenging that is.

Now I’m going to throw in some emotional symptoms, the most common. Eighty-eight percent experience extreme sadness and 83% anger. You just mix sadness and anger together, and that could be a lethal combination. Eighty-two percent are hurt. Eighty percent experience anxiety and 79% are stressed. Now, here’s why I wrote the book Trust Again. Eighty-four percent have an inability to trust. Sixty-seven percent prevent themselves from forming deep relationships because they’re afraid of being hurt again. Eighty-two percent find it hard to move forward. Ninety percent want to move forward, and they don’t know how.

Dr. Pompa:
You got a lot of people’s attention I would argue here, okay, so the study revealed some breakthroughs, right?

Dr. Debi:
Mm-hmm.

Dr. Pompa:
My mind, again, I’m thinking as my viewer and listener. It’s like, okay, great, all right, this sounds like it might be me. I’ll take the quiz, but I already know it’s probably me. Okay, what the heck do I do about it? Talk about the study because it did lead to some big breakthroughs that people need to hear.

Dr. Debi:
Yeah, absolutely, so one of them was that there is this post betrayal syndrome. It’s real and it exists. That was one. These are the other two. At first I was studying posttraumatic growth, like the upside of trauma, how that trauma regardless of whatever it is leaves you with a new awareness, perspective, insight, that you didn’t have beforehand. I thought about it, and I said I’ve been through death of a loved one. I’ve been through disease. I had peritonitis. I was in the ICU for 11 days. I know other traumas, but this felt so different.

I didn’t want to assume, so I asked my study participants. I said, if you’ve been through other traumas, does betrayal feel different for you? Hands down unanimously they said, oh, my gosh, it’s a totally different animal. First of all, it needed a new name. The healing of betrayal is now called post betrayal transformation, but here’s why. When you lose, let’s take someone you love, you grieve. You’re sad. You mourn the loss. Life will never be the same, but you don’t necessarily take it personally. Betrayal is personal. You take it personal.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, that was part of my question. I’m like why is this different? A lot of people have abandonment issues or different—why is this different? I guess the answer is that. It’s so personal. Am I right?

Dr. Debi:
It feels so personal, so you take it so—it feels so intentional, so you take it so personally. Then the entire self has to be completely rebuilt. Rejection, abandonment, confidence, worthiness, belonging, trust, those are huge. They all get shattered. If I were to come up with an equation, it would be posttraumatic growth, like the upside of healing, plus rebuilding the self equals post betrayal transformation. That’s why someone who is completely healed from a betrayal is a worrier. Think about it. This is the person you felt the closest to. This is the person who said you’re safe. I got you. Your level of safety and security is assured, and that’s the very person who shatters it, so there’s a lot to heal from.

The other discovery was that, while we can stay stuck for years, decades, a lifetime and many of us do, if we’re going to heal, we’re going to move through five stages. We also know what happens physically, mentally, and emotionally at every stage, and we know what it takes to move from one to the next, which means now that healing from betrayal is predictable. I’m happy to go through the stages because everyone…

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I want you to go through the stages. That’s the key to breaking through here, obviously. Let’s do that because I want to give my viewers a vision of what this looks like.

Dr. Debi:
Now, there are so many people probably watching, listening who say, oh, no, mine happened 30, 40 years ago, and I’m telling you, they will be stuck in one particular stage. You’ll see exactly why. Stage 1, this is like a set up stage, and I just saw this with every single study participant. If you imagine four legs of a table, the four legs being physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual, what I saw with everybody was a real heavy lean on the physical and the mental and really neglecting the emotional and the spiritual. What does that look like (looks like we’re really good at thinking and doing and not really prioritizing the feeling and being)? The feeling and being, I mean, that’s where our intuition lies. We turn that down. Easy for that table to topple over if we’re only centered on two legs. That’s the same with us. That’s not to say, if you’re busy, it’s a set up for betrayal. It’s just what I consistently saw.

Stage 2, we’re blindsided. This is the shock, D-day, discovery day, and this is the breakdown of the body, the mind, the world view. One of my study participants said you know what it feels like? It feels like every negative emotion you can experience, getting punched in the gut, and losing a child in a crowd at the same time. It feels like that, shock, total shock. Think about it. When you’ve been shocked, you’ve ignited the stress response. Now you’re headed for every single stress-related symptom, illness, condition, disease.

Your mind is in a complete and total state of chaos and overwhelm. You cannot wrap your mind around what you just learned, and your world view is shattered. Your world view is your mental model. These are the rules. This is how it works. Don’t go there. This person’s safe. In a moment, it’s totally shattered. A new mental model hasn’t been constructed yet, so this is by far the scariest stage.

Think about it. If you were walking down the street and the bottom were to bottom out on you, what would you do? You’d grab hold of anything to stay safe and stay alive. That’s Stage 3. Survival instincts emerge. It’s the most practical stage. If you can’t help me, get out of my way. How will I survive this experience? What do I do? Who can I trust? Where do I go?

Here’s the trap. Once you figured out how to survive, because it feels so much better than the shock and trauma of where you’ve been, you’re like, whoo, okay, I’m good. You haven’t even transformed yet. It’s such a relief to just be alive based on that. Now what happens is you’re not meant to be here long, but because you’re here, you start getting these small self—these secondary gains, these small self-benefits from being here. You get to be right. You get your story. You get someone to blame. You get a target for your anger. You get sympathy from everybody you tell your story to.

Dr. Pompa:
I would argue most people function right here their whole life if they don’t break out of it. It’s safe.

Dr. Debi:
I’m going to get you in so deep so you see why you get—this is where people stay, exactly. You’re 100% right, and this is where they stay. They get so much benefit, and then the mind starts doing things like, well, you know what? Maybe you’re not all that great. Maybe you deserve it, and then it gets even worse. Now you start doing—you’re not happy with your body, with your health, with your relationships, with your finances, with your life. Here’s where you start using things like food, drugs, alcohol, work, TV, keeping busy. You’re not happy, but you don’t think it gets any better than this.

Here’s where you resign yourself to thinking this is good as it gets. I don’t know. I guess I’ll just be okay with it, and when you’re in this place, you could stay there for life. This is the group where there—they’ve gotten so used to being like this with this identity, being in this space. They have no idea there’s a Level 4 and Level—Stage 4 and Stage 5. The people who come to see you for their illness, the majority, they’re in that Stage 2, Stage 3.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, makes sense.

Dr. Debi:
Yeah, so anyway, if you’re willing to let go of some of those benefits and willingness is one of the biggest words here, you can move to Stage 4. Stage 4 is finding and adjusting to a new normal. Here’s acceptance. Here’s where you realize you know what? I cannot undo what happened, but I can control what I do with it. I always liken this to if you’ve ever moved to a new house, office, condo, apartment. You’re stuff isn’t there just yet. All your stuff isn’t there. It’s not quite cozy, but it’s going to be okay. When you’re in this space, you’re turning the stress response down a bit. You’re not physically healing just yet, but you’re not causing the massive damage you were causing in Stage 2 and Stage 3.

What’s so interesting about this stage also is—think about it. If you were moving, you don’t necessarily take everything with you. I saw friendships change here. If your friends weren’t there for you, you’ve outgrown them. If they’re just indulging in low-energy gossip, whatever it is, you don’t have the space for it. You’re on a different level. People say to me all the time, Dr. Debi, is it me? Yes, it is. You’re transforming, and you’ve just outgrown them.

Anyway, when you’re in that space, making it your own, accepting healing, you can move to Stage 5, and that’s healing, rebirth, and a new world view. The body starts to heal. You didn’t have the bandwidth for eating well and exercising, self-love, self-care. You were surviving. Now you do. Your mind, you’re making new rules, new boundaries, new everything, and you have a new world view based on your experience. The four legs of the table, remember in the beginning it was all about the physical and the mental. We’re solidly grounded because now we’re paying attention to the emotional and the spiritual too. Those are the five stages.

Dr. Pompa:
Right, yeah, and what do you see? I mean, how do we bring someone along now? I mean, if I was watching this again, it’s like, okay, great, maybe you’re stuck in 2. Maybe you’re stuck in 3. How do you advance? Can you do it yourself? Do you need help?

Dr. Debi:
I’ll tell you, the study proved—and I saw it just even with my own experience. We need support more than ever, but this is a time we’re the least likely to seek it because there’s so much judgement, so much shame, so much embarrassment. Honestly, that was one of the biggest reasons why I wrote the book. I said, okay, if they’re not going to seek support, let them just in the privacy of their own home at least get a sense of support, but that’s exactly why we created the community. Yeah, I mean, we need that. There are actually three groups in the study who didn’t heal also, and that was a really big factor. Support was key.

What was so interesting too—speaking of health, I know that’s your wheelhouse. There was one group, and this was the group where the betrayer had no consequences. Whether it was because of religious reasons, financial fears, not wanting to break up a family, or just fear period, they tried to overlook it. They tried to put it aside. The only thing I saw in that group was a further deterioration of the relationship, and by far, hands down, that group was the most physically ill.

Dr. Pompa:
Wait, you said the betrayer, I’m going back, had no consequences.

Dr. Debi:
Yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Therefore, if you are the person betrayed, it’s the person who you feel betrayed you didn’t have consequences? Is that what you’re saying?

Dr. Debi:
Yes.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, all right, I want to make sure.

Dr. Debi:
When they tried to put it behind them because they just wanted—they wanted to act like everything was okay or whatever. Now, the biggest challenge here and I see this, this is what happened in my own instance. There has got to be this complete and utter death and destruction of the old, of the old relationship, of the old you, and that’s the only way you can rebirth something new. If you’re unwilling to let go of that old, that can’t happen. Rebuilding is always a choice, whether you rebuild yourself and move on. That’s what I did with my family, or if the situation lends itself and you want to, you rebuild something entirely new with the person who hurt you, and my husband I married each other again not long ago.

Dr. Pompa:
Two things, okay, so the betrayer, I mean, wouldn’t most often they be clueless because of their own wounds that even betrayed this person? You know what I’m saying, meaning that so many people are running. They’re like, really? That’s Part 1.

Dr. Debi:
Two types of people. Sometimes a betrayal shocks the person who did the betraying enough to say what the heck was I doing? It wakes them up. Just as the person who’s betrayed is shocked, the person who was the betrayer is shocked, and then their transformation is underway as well. Then the other side of this is that discovery day shows you who you’re really with, so it reveals one of two things.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, right, I mean, evaluate that, especially if it’s a pattern. Okay, but can’t we just change our perception of the situation, the betrayer or the betrayal, meaning if we change our perception our world becomes how we view our world so meaning that I can’t change the way the betrayer looks at it. I can’t convince him or her that they’ve even betrayed me. If there’s no consequence, which I think most often there wouldn’t be for them because they go on with their life, then is it now, okay, I can’t let that affect my life? I have to change the way I view the betrayal and the person who betrayed me. Isn’t that the key?

Dr. Debi:
That’s really important, and what’s most important is—and that’s why anybody who comes into our community, it’s all about the betrayed person healing. They don’t want to do that necessarily because they’re afraid of what’s going to show up. What’s going to happen if they’re at their physical, mental, and emotional best? What usually happens is they’ve completely outgrown their betrayer, so they don’t want to risk that. It’s almost like here, if I do this thing here, when someone’s betrayed, here’s where they started. Our work is to get them to their physical, mental, emotional best, right? What they do is they keep doing this because they don’t want to outgrow that person, but our work is just getting them here. When they are so rock solid here, they’re not moving. Either this person says I better step up my game for real, or they just go their own way. The work is here, or when they’re just staying here, eventually you get this thing where this person’s like who are you? You’re like I’m not the least bit interested in you.

Dr. Pompa:
I guess my brain’s just stuck on this poor person whose betrayer is—because you said so many of them don’t heal. I don’t remember the percentage, but it was a high percent of who don’t heal because the betrayer didn’t have consequences. I’m thinking in my mind, well, crap, it’s like how can we just change the perception of that reality and flip it so it’s not the case? I hate the fact that somebody’s future happiness would be determined by whether there’s consequences from the betrayer or the hurter.

Dr. Debi:
Exactly, and what’s even crazier about it is this person—think about it. They could’ve done something 10, 20, 30, 40-plus years ago they don’t know, care, or even remember, and look at the life that this person is—look at the choices they’re making, the health they have, the things they’re not doing, the levels of intimacy they’re afraid to get to because of what someone did years ago. That’s the biggest crime right there.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly, I mean, I would argue that, most people’s betrayers, they probably moved on then clueless as they are, and you’ll never convince them, nor is it your job to. Again, I think the responsibility then is forget about them. You’ve got to perceive your betrayal is somehow a positive. Somehow it’s like, okay, all right, even if I brought it on, I kept choosing it. There’s a lesson there, but let me be better from it. Is there a process that you help people with that? If we can get them to perceive it differently, we can change their world.

Dr. Debi:
Yeah, oh, absolutely, but sometimes they feel they have too much to lose when they give up that story. That story has become their identity.

Dr. Pompa:
It becomes an identity. I agree. My gosh, what would I be without that story? Believe me; I face that all the time. What do you do with that?

Dr. Debi:
It’s like, for example, I remember I had a woman. She came in. She goes, arms folded, I don’t want to heal. No, you don’t. No, you don’t because you have to give that whole thing up and all the benefits you’re getting. What I try to do is tell them what’s waiting for them when they do.

First of all, think about it. They get a new story. They get a much better story. They get to be the hero or the heroine of their story. They get to stop this accelerated aging that’s going on. They get opportunities they never would’ve had access to because they were so busy focused on the past. They don’t trust, and that’s the biggest issue. They don’t trust themselves. Because they don’t know who they’d be healed, they stay with what’s familiar.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I mean, I agree. Let’s talk to the people in Stage 3. I think it’s the most dangerous place, right?

Dr. Debi:
It is.

Dr. Pompa:
It is in fact the most functional, if you will, right?

Dr. Debi:
Yes.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s like a functional alcoholic. It’s like they’re going about their life, but yet, they’re absolutely not happy. Here they are, and we want to show them that the future or their even existence could be even better. Talk to that person right now as if you would if they were sitting across from you. There the person is. They’re stuck in 3, and their life is like, well, I’m getting such benefit from all of this. My gosh, these people, I keep away. I mean, you know the stories, right?

Dr. Debi:
Oh, I hear it every single day.

Dr. Pompa:
That person is in front of you right now. What do you say?

Dr. Debi:
I’m going to give you two visuals because it’s going to explain it so well, and this person will see this and feel this. One is I picture this trapeze. You’re holding on. Here’s your Stage 3, holding on for dear life. You even see Stage 4, and you could even grab onto that bar. Think about it. You’re not going anywhere unless you let go of that first hand. They’re determined to hold onto that Stage 3, but it’s only when they let that go can they move forward.

That visual sometimes helps, and I have another one too. This is going to explain it so clearly. I think we think resilience and transformation is the same thing. Bouncing back, restoring, bringing back what was lost, totally different thing. Let’s take this analogy of the house. Let’s say the house needs a boiler, and you get a boiler. That would be resilience, or it needs a roof. You get a roof. That would be resilience.

Here’s trauma and transformation. A tornado comes by, levels the house. New boiler’s not fixing it, and a new roof’s not fixing it. Now, here’s the challenge. You have every right to stand there at the lot where your house once stood and say this is the worst thing that’s ever happened, and you’d be right. You can call over everybody you know. Say isn’t this terrible? They’d all agree.

You actually can mourn your house for the rest of your life. However, if you choose to rebuild the house, why would you build the same one? There’s nothing there. You could build the most magnificent house you ever want. That’s what’s waiting for you when you’re willing to let that go, but they’d rather stare and cry at the house.

Dr. Pompa:
Maybe the danger, though, is rebuilding a new house with new features, but yet, it’s still new features, right?

Dr. Debi:
That’s it.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s not a different foundation, so you end up with a house with the same problems.

Dr. Debi:
That’s it. It’s the fear of the unknown. I always say, when the pain of where you are becomes greater than the fear of the unknown, that’s when you move. Until then, you’re staying in it not because it’s good, only because it’s so familiar. What I found is, as much as that Stage 2, those people find the healing because they’re desperate to feel better, the Stage 3 almost need it more.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I agree. It’s a more dangerous place because you’ve solved your problem. Okay, let’s say this because maybe people are out there. I think we kind of hit this, but it’s worth reviewing, I guess, so symptoms that you haven’t solved your problem and you’re in fact in Stage 3. Physical, emotional, symptoms, what does that person look like?

Dr. Debi:
Yeah, I’ll tell you exactly what that person—let’s call her Sue. This is the person I see every single day. She’s exhausted. She can’t sleep, so she’s taking something to help her sleep. She’s exhausted, so she’s using sugar and caffeine for energy. Now she’s gaining weight. She’s irritable. She can’t focus, so her doctor puts her on mood stabilizers or antianxiety meds. She’s lost her confidence. Now she may not be performing well at whatever work she is, but yet, she doesn’t have the confidence to speak up or to try to do anything differently.

She is just trying to stay alive. She is irritable. Her adrenals have tanked. Her immune system is shot. She’s gaining weight. She is just a shell of herself trying to stay alive.

Dr. Pompa:
Are there other stages of that, meaning that people that are functioning a little bit better but still in it? You know what I’m saying? I mean, do you see different levels of damage, I guess, and is it proportional to their level of betrayal?

Dr. Debi:
It is proportional to their level of betrayal and also their willingness to see things for what they really are. There are instances where they have what to work with if they’re trying to rebuild with that person, and in other cases, it’s a complete and total waste of time. Now, I always say you just need to work on you, period. What I see is the person who is just spending their energy trying to convince, or prove, or whatever it is don’t you see the harm you caused? Don’t you see the damage you caused? I mean, when we’re spending our time, our effort, our attention, it’s like best-case scenario you only have 100%. If you’re spending 40, 50, 60 of it on the other person, you only have what’s left to work on you. They’re spending time in an area that’s not serving them as well.

Dr. Pompa:
How often is it somebody that’s gone in somebody’s life or someone who’s still present in somebody’s life, and they’re still day in, day out functioning with that person? What do you see the most of?

Dr. Debi:
It’s really all different kinds of combinations. There’s no one over another. I mean, it’s very common. If there are no consequences, that person experiences repeat betrayal, repeat betrayal, repeat betrayal. They’re body is tanking. I mean, they are so unhealthy. They’re so spent. They’re so depleted, and they’re taking it personally. As if it weren’t bad enough, they think it’s them.

Dr. Pompa:
Do they have a lot of relationship debris around them?

Dr. Debi:
They do, yeah. Think about it. When it comes to betrayal, you also need to be really careful who you talk with. I know there are so many people who they say, oh, I’ll go see a therapist. Now, that could be great. Talk therapy is a piece of this, but this stuff gets lodged in the cells. I mean, you need to dive deep with healing here. Although that hits one level, if that therapist isn’t highly skilled when it comes to betrayal, it does more harm than good.

It’s also through the lens of the other person. For example, let’s take a husband and wife, and the husband is a typical narcissist. He goes from one affair to another, and the wife confides in her mother-in-law, typical scenario. That mother-in-law just wants to know everything’s okay and wants to know you’re not breaking up. She may say one thing that has—doesn’t even validate what the person who’s been betrayed goes through.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, yeah, totally.

Dr. Debi:
It’s awful.

Dr. Pompa:
You have to be careful. You answered one of my questions partly there. I was saying do people need a counselor for this? Can they just get your book? Is there a level that you could just get the book or it needs a counselor?

Dr. Debi:
Of course, the book is so helpful but not even necessarily a counselor. You can’t go through this alone. I mean, this is—it’s like, first of all, you’re in a club you never wanted to be in. You need to be with people who will not keep you stuck, who get it, who understand, and who don’t just try to minimize it. That’s not to say to have you drown in it, but it needs to be validated. It needs to be worked through. Think about it. Things like belonging and trust, I mean, those are huge.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, absolutely, so I mean, if you asked any counselor, phycologist, oh, do you deal with betrayal, 100% will say, yes, I deal with betrayal, I mean, the same with abandonment. I mean, is there specific questions to ask to make sure you have the right person and how you find the right person for that person looking for the person?

Dr. Debi:
It’s a great question. I mean, honestly, that’s why I certify our coaches and practitioners.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, right. Where do they get one of those, and how do they find? Give your website now. This should be appropriate.

Dr. Debi:
Yeah, I mean, it was just—it’s all on the site. What I do, though, in our community, we certify coaches and practitioners. Yes, there’s an element of you need to express your story for the sake of doing something with it, so all of our coaches and practitioners are certified in the five stages. They know exactly where someone’s stuck, and they also know how to keep moving them forward.

Dr. Pompa:
All right, so your website, they can find a list of people that would help them. How do they do that?

Dr. Debi:
Within the community so it’s thepbt, as in Post Betrayal Transformation, thepbtinstitute.com. It’s all there.

Dr. Pompa:
All right, and where do they find your book?

Dr. Debi:
The book, Trust Again, you just go right to Amazon. It’s finally back in stock. It was sold out twice before it was ever released. Now I’m hearing it’s back, so grab your copy.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I mean, honestly, it’s an amazing topic. It really is. What I’ve been called to is people that have unexplainable illnesses. I always say you have to go upstream and figure out what the causes are. Most often the cause is a perfect storm, which betrayal could be one of the storms, and if it is, it sounds like a nasty one.

Dr. Debi:
The good news is they can heal from all of it, all of it.

Dr. Pompa:
I agree. I agree 100%. If you remove the interference, man, the body heals, yeah, absolutely. Debi, thank you for being on. I think you’re going to get a lot of people really seeking out help, and that’s the purpose. That’s why you came on, so thank you for that.

Dr. Debi:
Thank you so much.

Dr. Pompa:
Mm-hmm, absolutely.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. I hope you enjoyed today’s episode, which was brought to you by 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.

350: Are You Drinking Too Much Water?

Water is one of the top keys to health, we know that. But are we drinking water correctly? Nicoya Hecht, who is the co-founder of Rising Springs water is joining me today. We are going to dig deep into how, perhaps, our recommended water requirements can be vastly over-exaggerated, and how we may be drinking too much water, and too much of the wrong water. Plus you will learn about the most special, naturally sourced pure mineral water in the world.

More about Nicoya Hecht:

Nicoya has committed her life to motherhood, the study of midwifery, philanthropy, and more recently, to developing sustainable brands. Nicoya’s journey as a mother gave her the patience and dedication needed to support other women during their own paths to motherhood. Nicoya help launch the Nicoya Peninsula Waterkeeper in Costa Rica and has served as board president for Sangham Foundation for 4 years, leading the organization to donate to charities supporting water conservation, children, and underserved communities.

Nicoya began in sustainable goods with Nectar Eco Boutique, sourcing natural fiber clothing for consumers in Ashland, Oregon. She has since spearheaded the brand development of Rising Springs, a packaged water company launched in 2015 that stewards a rare artesian spring source in Idaho.

Nicoya manages the brand aesthetic with a finely curated feel, from content creation to social media, influencer relationships, partnerships, public relations, and events. Born in Costa Rica, and living in Idaho, Hawaii, and Oregon throughout her life, Nicoya is dedicated to the mission of protecting the world’s water resources and improving water quality for all.

Show notes:

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Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
I think most of you know that water is one of the keys for health, but you know what? We’ve been lied to a lot. How much water should we drink, eight glasses of eight ounces a day? There’s all kinds of theories and equations and how much water should we drink. My attitude has always been innate intelligence: listen to your body. However, with that said, you find that some people are thirsty all the time and some people not as much. Let me say that’s a cellular issue.

Okay, this episode, we’re going to answer that question, the myths. Also, I believe this is a water source. I always say the best water in the world comes from the earth itself; however, so much of it is now contaminated. This is a source that you’re going to be shocked about, something that I have tried and I was absolutely blown away. It has one ingredient that’s natural from the earth and I think is critical for a really good source. I think you’re going to be blown away by some of the myths about water and what you learn in this episode of Cell TV.

Ashley Smith:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Today, we welcome Nicoya Hecht, who is the co-founder of Rising Springs water. Today, we are going to dig deep into how perhaps our recommended water requirements can be vastly over-exaggerated and how we may be drinking too much water and too much of the wrong water. I love this topic and I know Dr. Pompa does, too. Let’s welcome Nicoya Hecht, and of course, Dr. Pompa to the show. Welcome both of you.

Nicoya Hecht:
Thank you so much for having me.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, well, Nicoya, I can’t wait to start with your story. We might be able to just do a whole show just on your story. This water, you all sent me the water. I literally, I fell in love with it. I just couldn’t wait to get more.

Then I talked to a friend of mine who actually went up and visited the spring. I really am convinced. There’s not many; I think you say two really healthy springs in North America, maybe there’s a few hidden ones. Gosh, you tapped into one of them. We’ll get to that story in a moment, can’t wait.

This is one of my favorite topics. Ashley just hit on it. I did a Facebook Live laughing about just these water recommendations: this much water, based on body weight. I’m like, how do you know that? The bottom line is innate intelligence seems to know it.

You’re right; when you’re drinking the right water, just maybe you do in fact need less. We’re going to talk about that, too. Let’s just unleash this with your story. How in the heck did you get into this and maybe just even natural health in general?

Nicoya Hecht:
I started as a homebirth midwife in my 20s. That began my journey into health and wellness from that point of view. Also, having my own children and looking at their health and wellness lead me on a new view of what the human body needs to thrive. Then from there, I went into non-profit water advocacy. My husband as well, he just retired from the board of the Water Keeper Alliance, which is the largest grass-roots water advocacy program in the world.

We did a lot of work in water rights, water advocacy, and non-profit work. In that time, somebody that knew of what we had done also knew of this spring that was coming up for sale. They were very passionate that the spring was not purchased by a large corporation that would not steward the springs and have the spring’s best interest in mind.

They actually reached out to us and asked us if we were interested. It was nothing that we had ever considered doing previously. We fell in love with the spring. It was actually bottled under the name Trinity. It was a water that we had known in the past. We knew of its properties and knew how valuable it was, so we had that connection already. Then we stepped in and thought, okay, well, maybe we could be part owners in this and do something in that way.

A very long story short, we ended up purchasing, the family, the entire land and the spring source. Really didn’t know what we wanted to do with it besides just steward it and make sure that it was respected and honored for really being one of the—a very rare, unique source in the United States and really in the world these days sadly due to all of our environmental contamination. We immediately took out the plastic bottling line because we knew we would never do that. We sat with it for about a year.

We studied it and looked into all the what were its properties, what were its benefits, why was it so valuable? Then at the end of the day, realized that it was something that we thought that people needed access to. How was the best way to create a way to access? Yes, we always welcome people to come to the source to fill their personal containers for free, but how would we be able to package it and get it to people that weren’t able to come to the source in the most thoughtful way possible?

Then we spent a long time just thinking on the packaging options and ended up with this five-liter box. We send two five-liter boxes to your doorstep. That’s how it began. Then, of course, there’s lots more we can talk about in all of the different facets of that story. That’s how we meet the source. We just as a family feel so honored and blessed to get to steward this horse.

Dr. Pompa:
One of the things you say is, hey, if you just drink one eight-ounce glass of water, this water a day, it transforms you. It’s like, well, thank God because I just can’t drink eight, eight-ounce glasses of water a day. Who says that’s right?

Nicoya Hecht:
What I’ve found because now, of course, I have so many discussions with people about water everywhere I go, even when I’m just dropping off my car to get fixed, and what do you do, and then we go into this long discussion because people are really confused out there about what should their intake be. What source should be—they be drinking from? Time and time again, these people say, I drink so much water and I’m still thirsty. I’m like, internally, that’s because you’re probably not drinking the right kind of water, but of course, I’m not—I wait for people to ask me. That is one of the stories that I hear over and over again.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, there’s so many misconceptions about water. Let’s talk before we get in even to that. Let’s talk a little bit about because you opened that door up, this source. Obviously, you all know a lot about water. What’s going on at this source?

One of the things is it’s two miles from the depths of the earth this water comes from. Okay, that protects it from all the environmental toxins, but what else is it? You said you studied this water; you looked at this water. What is it about this water that made you so attracted to it?

Nicoya Hecht:
You’re speaking to the deepness of it, 2.2 miles deep. It also is in the largest contiguous wilderness in the lower 48, so it’s protected by this wilderness area. It’s the 2.2 miles below the ground. It’s also under a dense batholith granite rock formation so that it’s protected in that way, and also immense pressure, which it rises naturally under its own pressure; we don’t pump it in any way.

The water itself fell—geologists believe it fell as rain or snow 16,000 years ago. We have those studies. It fell before any of the modern-day environmental and modern-day contaminates were created. It’s just so pure, made its way down into the aquifer, and has been protected down there for the 16,000 years.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow.

Nicoya Hecht:
I know; it’s incredible. My husband likes to say it’s a chance to drink back time. You don’t get those chances anymore to come in contact with things that have been untouched for that long.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, totally, yeah. I say that about wines. You drink a 19, whatever, 80 wine; it’s like, brings you back to the 80s. You’re drinking something in history. This is 16,000 years. Go ahead; I interrupted you.

Nicoya Hecht:
No, that’s fine. Then as it makes its way to the service, it actually travels through two miles of quartz crystals. That’s where it picks up its silica. It’s got a high silica content. In three glasses, you can get your daily dose of silica, which is a—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, explain to people why that’s important because there’s so many benefits.

Nicoya Hecht:
Many benefits and I think it’s really changing. The benefits that I always associated with silica before I started studying more is just hair, skin, and nails. It was the beauty mineral. Then it helps with bone density; it helps with joints. It’s in all of our connective tissue. It’s incredibly important for all of our structure.

You probably know more than I do on this, but I’ve read a lot about it for the detoxing properties and helping through moving heavy metals and in the chelating process. It is just this —it’s an amazing mineral. It’s incredible to have it in water because so much of what we get in that way, I myself try and get it in food, of course, but then you take supplements to try and get all the things you think you need. In my mind, it’s so much more effective when it’s in its natural form like living in water or living in food.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I agree. Today, we’re hearing a lot about structure in water. People are doing different methods, electricity, etcetera, to water to structure it. This water in my mind would have to be naturally structured. Talk a little bit about that. What did you find? Did you look at the structure of it? Anything on that?

Nicoya Hecht:
The previous company looked at the structure. We’ve looked at some of that. We have yet to be—and especially given COVID this year, we were hoping to do a lot more testing and various testing, but a lot of the labs that we wanted to use are on pause right now. To speak to the structure, yes, when water rises in a vortex up a spring, it is naturally structured. That has a wealth of benefits from absorbing, the way our cells interact with it.

There’s Dr. Emoto’s photos. I don’t know if you’re familiar with them, but you can take the crystalline photos of the water, which is just amazing to me the way they look like snowflakes. You can see what a water that’s structured naturally and rises looks like compared to waters that are highly processed or filtered. Their beautiful structure starts breaking down and becoming distorted.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and that’s what I wanted you to say. If you look at [00:11:40], which is great, gets rid of the contaminates, but it loses some of this structure that we’re learning really plays into the absorption and even how it’s assimilated in the cell that you get from this natural source of water. Now, have you tested it? There’s been a lot of people like, hey, this is great amazing spring water, groundwater. Then they find that there’s high lead, or arsenic, or even aluminum because it comes through the ground. It depends on what parts of the ground. Have you looked at it from a contamination standpoint? I’m sure you have, but just to—

Nicoya Hecht:
We have. A few things, we have. We did tests with the University of Michigan. We took a lot of the—well, we took five top brands and some reverse osmosis sources and we tested them for modern-day contaminants down to parts per quadrillion. We didn’t need to test any of those down to parts per quadrillion because they were contaminated way before that with nitrosamines, with PFAS, with phthalates, just all of the things that are the result of us having non-stick pans, and using pesticides for agriculture, and having balloons, just all of this byproduct from our modern-day has made its way in.

Surprisingly and sadly, some of these sources that I actually didn’t think and that’s why I choose them to test alongside Rising Springs were—Embry Source besides Rising Springs was contaminated. We had nothing in the water down to parts per quadrillion. That’s the smallest particle that we’ve been able to test to with the mass spectrometer at University of Michigan. That’s just huge.

There was one other source that I’ve spoken to in the US that I thought was also the—also similarly free of those. Actually, Consumer Reports just came out tagging them for phthalates. I’m not sure if that is something to do with their spring source or the packaging. As far as I know, right now, we are the only source in the US that tests pure of modern-day contaminants down to parts per quadrillion.

Now, ours we have tested for. We have arsenic in the water. It’s below the FDA guidelines. Arsenic is in basically all of the water of the Pacific Northwest. It’s about not getting too much arsenic.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, if you eat broccoli, you’ve got arsenic; let’s be clear.

Nicoya Hecht:
Yeah, and so that’s one of the reasons why we suggest the three eight-ounce glasses a day as a guideline for that.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, yeah, let’s talk about that. I’m against telling people how much water to drink. I think that there is in our space, I think that I absolutely I don’t want to say stand alone in this, but I stand in the minority in that I’m not a believer in just—people are just chugging water all day. People die from drinking too much water, at least in frat houses. That’s was something that actually did happen. They were hazing people. They drank water to the point where obviously you throw off your electrolyte balance. You can throw off your chemicals—I’m making it very simple—in your blood that literally are responsible for your health and living healthy by drinking too much water. You can throw off that imbalance.

The point is—your point—is if you get water like this, your body tells you I’m not thirsty anymore. What are some of your feedback with people who have had to drink all this water, always thirsty all the time? What’s the feedback on this water?

Nicoya Hecht:
One of the main ones is I drink less, and I feel more hydrated. I feel more satisfied. That time and time again we get. The other one we get is I didn’t think I liked water until I started drinking this. Now I actually want to drink it. I think that’s what we’ve lost touch with.

I know I had really lost with was listening to my body and its signals. I’m thirsty. I want to drink some water. Instead I was one of those people that was like measure it out. Oh, my gosh; I still have this much left today, and I don’t want to drink it.

We shouldn’t feel like we’re forcing water on our bodies. We should be responding to our body’s signals of it’s time to drink some water. I wake up and drink a glass of water in the morning. That feels great to me. I have my water next to me when I’m working or if I go out in the car. I drink when I’m thirsty. I actually haven’t counted how much I drink, but I drink a lot less than I used to be thinking I should drink, and I feel way better.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s interesting. Dehydration is really a cellular issue. When we look at the cellular issue, electrolytes, minerals, so many things play into that, cellular inflammation, etc. That was curious to me with the feedback on people who are big water drinkers. I feel like I need to drink so much water and how this water would really affect them.
I would say you get a lot of feedback on the water. What is the number one, maybe number two feedback that you get? You kind of said one was I drink less water. Are there others beyond that?

Nicoya Hecht:
We get a lot of I feel better. I just generally feel better. I have more energy, a lot of talking to the appearance, the skin, hair, and nails. I can see a difference.

Dr. Pompa:
Silica I would think had to make a noticeable difference. How soon does that take, weeks, months?

Nicoya Hecht:
Speaking to the silica for just a minute, like we spoke earlier, I love to see that my hair is growing fast and is thicker. What I really love to know that is also what’s happening on the inside. If I can see it on the outside, I know that my cartilage, my connective tissue, all of that is also getting the benefits. That’s what I love. I think it’s different for everybody.

I think that some people can feel a detox happen when they first start drinking Rising Springs. We’ve talked to people through that and suggested why don’t you start with a little bit less and just increase quantity as it feels good. We’ve really gotten people through that period of having a headache or maybe just not feeling so great but still feeling like the water resonated with them. I think three to six months is a great timeline to reach that in.

You really do have to pay attention because it takes a little while. You have to be tuned into what was I experiencing? What am I experiencing now? What am I noticing now? I think that’s why a lot of the feedback we get from people saying I really love to drink water and I used to not, to me it’s like I always get so happy. I’m like that’s your body telling you that that’s what it needs.

I think on that topic a lot of people drink water cold out of the fridge, which masks the taste, especially of impurities. I don’t think this is the most beneficial way. I think water is best at room temperature and/or they add lemon to it, which also masks the impurities. Your body doesn’t get a great sense of what it’s taking in because it’s covered up. You can drink water out of the fridge and it tastes to me dull and bland. That same water at room temperature you can taste the chlorine in it. You can taste the contaminates in it.

Dr. Pompa:
What’s the most amazing story you ever heard when people switch to this water? There’s got to be one.

Nicoya Hecht:
There’s a review on our site that I love that talks about the fountain of youth and magical unicorns and it just goes on and on. This person just had felt such an incredible magical shift. They were so blown away just switching. It was actually a person with chatting back and forth, they’re pretty health-minded, but they hadn’t thought a lot about water, which I’m sure you find as well.

We spend so much time in our food and the quality of eating organic and eating local and GMO-free and all the things and what we eat and so very little thought and time for many Americans is spent on the water we drink. Time and time again I meet docs and health practitioners who are just recommending filtered water and not much more. A lot of people that are on a health journey, if they haven’t dove into water themselves, they’re just basically drinking filtered water. When they’re so in tune with their body and they’re really doing all the best things and then they just switch their water source, I think they can feel a really huge affect on how they feel.

Dr. Pompa:
What’s your opinion on—there’s so much in our space, opinions about minerals in water. Some people add minerals. Some people say that most minerals, especially from a stream, pick up rock mineral, if you will, a non iodized mineral. When you eat plants it’s an ionized form that’s very absorbable [21:29]. Someone argued that even a rock mineral is absorbed if the body needs it. We shouldn’t necessarily get our minerals from water. You’ve obviously done a lot of homework here. What’s your opinion on this?

Nicoya Hecht:
I think there’s some minerals that are great to get from water. I don’t know the vast array of all minerals, but I think silica is a really good one to get.

Dr. Pompa:
I agree.

Nicoya Hecht:
I would think that many minerals would probably go along with that as being more beneficial if they’re naturally occurring than if they’re in a supplement form that you’re adding to your water, in which case I think a lot of times our body just doesn’t absorb that.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s true. People make the argument that a rock mineral versus an ionized mineral from a plant, your food, but I do agree with you. Some minerals are absolutely fine and perhaps the best source is water. I agree with you that silica is one of them for sure. What is the mineral content? I forget. I looked at it when I first got it. What are the highs and the lows of your water?

Nicoya Hecht:
The highest is actually the silica. I think it’s [22:50] milligrams per liter. Then there is some naturally occurring fluoride in there. There’s some calcium and potassium. It’s actually really high in silica is what it is.

There’s just a few trace minerals that really don’t add up to a whole lot. It’s not something that we really call out. Even if somebody was looking for that, we wouldn’t want them looking for that in our water because we just don’t have enough to make a difference.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, that’s what I love. I love that profile. It’s really heavy on the silica. That was one of the things that I was really taken by. I almost felt like it created a smoothness for sure in your water. The moment it goes in your mouth, you go there’s a taste. You start going what is that?

Nicoya Hecht:
I always feel like it’s absorbed right away in my mouth as well. I feel like a lot of water I drink and it just kind of goes to your stomach and sits. Rising Springs I feel like I can drink a full glass and there’s really very little in my stomach. I feel like it’s being absorbed. This is not scientific. This is only an observation. Sweet is the other thing that I get.

Dr. Pompa:
It tasted sweet. I tasted your water like a wine. I did. I tasted a little bit of sweet.

Nicoya Hecht:
It’s very interesting. We actually had a whiskey company reach out to us. We’re also partnering with a wine company because it is a great source to pair with spirits and with wines. It doesn’t take over the taste of either of those. It really compliments nicely.

Dr. Pompa:
I agree. Let’s deal with the obvious. If it was watching this, I’d be like okay, I want to try it. Your problem was you found this incredible source, but how do we get it to people. Then the other problem is how do we make that affordable?

Years ago people would be like who is going to pay money for water? Water is free. Then people were wrong about that. People are, in fact, paying money for water. People are buying a lot of bottled water.

I think we have people totally convinced this is far superior than the bottled water that you’re buying from the store. Let’s talk about the price. You all gave us an amazing deal for our viewers. Ashley is going to make sure the link is right here, that you can get it. Let’s talk about the price and let’s talk about how you made it affordable. Let’s just hit it.

Nicoya Hecht:
The hardest thing, which I’m sure everybody can imagine, is the weight of water. It’s the shipping. That’s another reason why we made the packaging so light. Initially we were really excited to go to glass. I think glass is what everybody thinks as being most environmental as well. It also is a great vessel just to have water in.
That was what we researched first. Then we really found out the carbon footprint for glass was so much heavier than it was for these other packaging alternatives. We went with a packaging alternative that would have a low carbon footprint, was safe for the consumer, and was lighter to ship. It was more cost effective for the consumer as well.

We wanted to just basically go source to door to cut out any of the distribution costs or the retail costs so the price wouldn’t jump up from there. What we provide is 10 liters at $30. Doing the math, that’s $3 a liter, which is total comparable pricing to the premium waters out there on the name brands.

Dr. Pompa:
How long does that last if you have two people in the home? What’s that [27:03]?

Nicoya Hecht:
I think two people in the home you could get two boxes every two weeks. That’s what we do. We either deliver once a month or we deliver every two weeks. We have people who really just use it. We have people who believe the best use is mix their green powder in or mix their tinctures in or use it as medicinal water. They will just get a couple boxes a month and that’s good for them. Then we have people who use it more and they need a little more.

Dr. Pompa:
You have different subscriptions, like you said. You have two weeks or a month. Then you can pick how much water you feel you need. I know a lot of people who have it.

Like you said, they incorporate it. If they’re doing this cooking, they still use their regular filtered water. They kind of incorporate it into their life that way. I know for my viewers you’re doing 20% off your first month, which is nice. People can actually try it. I appreciate that.

Nicoya Hecht:
We also do a cancel any time. I want people to like it. I want people to love it. I want it to resonate with them. There’s no point not giving that option.
We want people to be able to try the subscription. I think the subscription is so convenient because you really can depend on it arriving. I know everything is becoming auto shipped these days, but it’s like yes, let’s auto ship the essential things that we know we want.

Dr. Pompa:
If I was looking at the pitfalls of this, it’s added expense. I forget to ship it. Even though I love it and it’s making a difference, it’s one more thing I have to do. I think you solved that with the subscription. You’re right. I think you’ve got the price down to where you’re dealing with the shipping problem.

I guess you just have to sit back and say if I try this for a month, is it a value to me? I think when we look at why people get sick and how people get healthy, water is one of the big things, water, air. Every teacher out there talks about this. Do you believe it will make a big enough value for people in one month if they try it?

Nicoya Hecht:
I think if they’re listening to their bodies and they resonate with it in one month, yes. We meet people that know right away. They know right away from the first glass. The best thing to do, the fun thing I do sometimes is do the events, the three-day events. The first day people are running around trying to fill their swag bags of the supplements and the hats and the t-shirts and whatever they can get.

They’ll come by the water station and drink their water and we’ll have a short conversation. Then they’ll leave. By day three I have these people that feel like they found the Holy Grail. They’re like I have never felt so good at one of these events.

Can I buy boxes now? Can I leave with this? I can’t be without it. It’s always amazing because they’re in that kind of high stress environment at one of these huge indoor fluorescent light running around trying to gather all the information they feel that support of the water even more. I always just love those people at the end of three days who are just huge fans.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly. I’m committed to it. I’m going to get more. I’m going to get on the program and continue to get it. For me it’s a value. My job isn’t to convince anyone that it’s a value to them. I’ve done enough homework on water to know it’s transformative for people’s health.

Nicoya Hecht:
Right, yes. The other question you had, which I think it interesting, is the price. How many people are picking up that $3 bottle of water a few times a week or more?

Dr. Pompa:
They don’t realize.

Nicoya Hecht:
You don’t think of or paying for a very expensive filtration machine, which there’s a number of issues with. One is do you know what you’re actually filtering out? Have you tested your water after you filter the water? How often are you cleaning and changing and keeping all those filters clean? When you add up the price of somebody who is being conscious about their water to begin with and what they’re doing, I don’t think there is a difference. It might even be much more to do it some of the other ways.

Dr. Pompa:
I’ve interviewed a couple times a guy named Cameron. His story is amazing. He literally became allergic to every food. He was drinking one water, and then he became allergic to that. He actually went 12 days without food or water, which ended up saving his life; long story, amazing story.

However, Cam has become the water expert—so am I. Spring water, when you find the right source, is the best water in the world. I tell people filter your water. I’m not against filtration. I hope everyone hears that.

However, myself and Cam would agree and my son Daniel because he has a whole water story, finding the right spring, we can’t duplicate it. Filter your water, please. Get the chemicals out, please. The best water in the world comes from the earth. Rising Springs, a lot of the springs that I’m sure have really good water are very surface-oriented. This one is 2.2 miles deep from a 16,000-year-old source. I don’t know. You convinced me.

Nicoya Hecht:
Well, good. All you have to do is drink a glass and it speaks for itself. Really, it does.

Dr. Pompa:
Exactly. I have to experience it for sure. Nicoya, thank you. Thanks for investing into this, number one. You didn’t have to do that. You thought this is a great cause. You didn’t know what you were getting into.

Now you’re trying to bring water to the world not just this way. I think you and your husband have obviously tried to bring water to the world many ways. When I went to Africa, one of the shocking things to me was the fact that we could solve so many problems with just water, sources of water. They would dig in and find a water source. Then the animals would come and contaminate it.

There’s so many water issues. How many can be solved so easily? You and your husband have obviously dedicated a lot of your life to that. Thank you. I hope people give it a try. I do. Awesome for being on. I appreciate it.

Nicoya Hecht:
Thank you so much for having me.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. I hope you enjoyed today’s episode, which was brought to you by Fastonic Molecular Hydrogen. Please check it out at getfastonic.com. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10:00 a.m. Eastern. We truly appreciate your support.

 

349: How to Clear Your Lymph for Emotional Detox

Joining me today is Dr. Perry Nickelston, author of the upcoming book Stop Chasing Pain. Dr. Perry is here today to discuss pain, the lymphatic system, and how emotions can play a role in all of it! Watch as Perry walks me through a lymphatic clearing demo that I am so excited about that I just committed to 30 days of it. I hope you'll join me on this challenge!

More about Perry Nickelston:

Perry Nickelston, DC, NKT, FMS, SFMA, is a Chiropractic Physician with primary focus on Performance Enhancement, Corrective Exercise, and Metabolic Fitness Nutrition and trained fromThe American College of Addictionology and Compulsive Disorders. He is an expert in myofascial, orthopedic, medical and trigger point soft tissue therapy. A member of the Board of Directors and Medical Staff Advisor for AIMLA (American Institute of Medical Laser Application). Dr. Perry teaches healthcare professionals all over the world how to successfully use Class IV Deep Tissue Laser Therapy in alleviating pain. Director of clinical protocols and training for LiteCure Medical Lasers specializing in Myofascial Laser treatments.

Dr. Perry is an expert in movement assessment and diagnosis. Certified and trained as a Functional Movement Specialist (FMS) and Selective Functional Movement Assessment Specialist (SFMA). He uses programs designed to find your source of painful dysfunction and correct it the site of pain improves. A regular columnist for Dynamic Chiropractic, Practice Insights, Chiropractic Economics, To Your Health Magazine, Advance Physical Therapy, PT on the Net, LiveStrong, StrengthCoach, and other industry publications for health and fitness.

Show notes:

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Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
Pain, chronic pain, lymphatics, and emotions, okay, how does it all tie in? This episode of CellTV ties it all in. You get the best how-to ever. It got me up out of my chair doing all of this. I committed just like I did with the castor oil. I committed to 30 days because I got so darn excited about this and how simple it was, and I believe all of you are going to commit to 30 days of doing this too. I think we’re all going to go beyond. Oh, man, this how-to on how to clear your lymph, which is going to affect your emotions, affect chronic pain, it’s going to affect every aspect of health in your body. Stay tuned.

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith, and today we welcome Dr. Perry Nickelston, who is a chiropractic physician, speaker on the topics of movement and health, and the author of the upcoming book Stop Chasing Pain. Dr. Perry is here today to discuss pain, the lymphatic system, and how emotions can play a role in all of it. We always love these topics, so let’s welcome Dr. Perry and, of course, Dr. Pompa to the show. Welcome, both of you.

Dr. Pompa:
Thanks for being here Dr. Perry. I appreciate it, especially on this topic, pain. I mean, come on, I mean, this is a big one. Look, I’ve done a lot of shows about pain. You have a unique approach here. I’m a big, huge fan of the lymphatics and how it plays into so many different problems, autoimmune, etc. I always say when people have weird pain, unexplainable pain, think about infection. Something else I say is, if you have infection issues, oh, you probably have lymph challenges, so you can see how this is all going together. All right, we’re going to untangle all of that and even how emotions play into that, which I can’t wait to hear. I’m also big believer in how it all plays together.

I want to start by your story. Like me, I was a chiropractor, and now I’m functioning outside of chiropractor, still with the philosophy that the body has ability to heal itself if we remove the interference. My own challenge, my own sickness took me where I am today. That’s your story, Perry, so tell that story.

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, it sounds like I’m hearing my own story when you’re going over yours. What I’ve discovered is that most of our discoveries in life that take us where we need to be are usually—have some pain and suffering that go along with it, right?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.

Dr. Perry:
You start to have a new perspective on something, a different way of looking at something. Often times by not on your own choice, if that makes sense. About five years ago, I think, I just got blindsided with an autoimmune disease. They still don’t have a name for what I have. It was just a lot of inflammation in my body, and then I began to get infections all over the place. My immune system was going crazy. I’d get sinus infections, urinary tract infections, prostate infections, ear infections, all these itises. The traditional medical approach for those infections is usually pharmacology and medication, which sometimes you do need.

Then I just started to need more and more and more and then going on antibiotics and pain medications and eventually some surgical interventions that looking back may have been necessary, but there was several in a row. They just massacred my system even more, and then it got to a point where I could barely function. I actually had to quit practicing and traveling and teaching. The thing that got me the most was the pain, yes, but when my brain started to go, that was the scariest part. I couldn’t put sentences together. I was forgetting things. I had brain fog, fatigue. I was so tired no matter how much I slept, so I had no energy. My body just couldn’t get enough energy to sustain itself much less begin to heal itself.

I was heading fast into some serious neurodegenerative disorders. I mean, I was showing signs of Alzheimer’s, honestly, with how bad I was getting. I knew that I needed some help and focusing on the musculoskeletal system and even the nervous system, which is what I had training in from chiropractic but also studying over the years pain science and neuroscience and the power of the brain and the nervous system, but it wasn’t helping. If it did help, it didn’t stick. In my 27 years, I was always asking why stuff that would help didn’t last and why it didn’t stick. I’ve always been on a search for some kind of answer, and I think that my sickness was delivered to me to discover it, honestly.

Dr. Pompa:
I would agree, the same with mine as well. You know what? What you said there why things don’t stick, my short answer is, oh, you just didn’t get to the cause yet. I did a lot of things that helped me. Okay, I addressed my adrenals. Oh, it helped my energy a little bit temporarily. Addressed my thyroid, helped it temporarily. I did it all, but it was nothing lasting until I really truly got upstream to the cause. It sounds like your story.

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, I’ve always thought, listen, if you give the body what it wants, it’ll tell you quick, fast, in a hurry if you got it right. If you don’t give it what it wants, it’ll tell you that too, and so I don’t believe that it takes months and months and months for people to start to notice a change on what they should be getting. It’s telling me thanks for the attempt, but you’re not on the right track. That’s why with my journey I have a new definition of pain for me. Pain is a deep rabbit hole, right? We’re going to be unpacking that one for centuries, and everybody’s going to disagree on it for centuries. Pain is a request for change. That’s my definition. Pain is a request for change. To me, that means a change in your habits and your behaviors and a change from the standpoint of the clinician of how you’re looking at the body, the way you’re addressing it for the underlying “root cause” or things that added to what happened.

My thought processed with Stop Chasing Pain, the name, was quite educational because I have been teaching people for years that your site of pain is not telling you that’s where your problem is. When I would be looking for what might be causing the pain, I was still trapped in a musculoskeletal framework of the system. Let me give you an example. If you shoulder hurts on—your right shoulder hurts. I would say, well, maybe it’s coming from your left hip. That’s a huge thing for a lot of people to see that connection, but it was still musculoskeletal oriented. I knew that that wasn’t what I needed because I was still suffering, and that’s when I began to study energy systems and different systems of the body, particularly the immune system. My immune system was going—it was maladapted. It was just going crazy.

That’s what led me in to discovering the role of the lymphatic system, and once I came across that, I was really shocked because nobody had ever mentioned lymphatic system to me at all in any role whatsoever in contributing to what my problem was. Then when I thought about it, I’m like you know what? I’ve been in this profession—at the time, this is 22 years. That was few years ago, 22 years. I don’t think I maybe read a paragraph on the lymphatics. I graduated in 1997 from Palmer College of Chiropractic. I don’t remember ever going over the lymphatics because it was all about the spine and the nervous system.

Once I came across this stuff, I was blown away, but the reason I was blown away is because of this. Somebody actually saw me at a workshop. I was trying to study energy systems of the body, how cells heal themselves, and at the time, I was sniffing a lot. Every five seconds I was sniffing. Every two seconds I was clearing my throat, so I had a lot of mucous, a lot of phlegm. My immune system was going crazy. A lot of people were getting upset because it’s very annoying in the class, right?

The lead instructor said, “I want you to come on up because I think I know what your problem is.” I’m like, “Absolutely.” He said, “Come on over. I’m going to check a spot.” He put two fingers right behind the angle of my jaw, below my ear, at the top of my cervical spine right there, and he pressed on the left and on the right. We know that as C1, C2. I screamed. It was so painful. He said, “I think you got a lymphatic system problem.” I remember I went, “Lymph what?”

Here’s the thing. Out of all the years I’ve been pressing in there, I was visualizing C1, C2, and nerves. I wasn’t thinking the largest lymph node in the neck sits there. That’s not what I was thinking, even though it was there all along. He proceeded at that point to physically assess all of my major lymph nodes in the body. There are clusters of nodes that gather together, and there’s primary places that they sit. Atop of the neck is one. Bottom of the neck is another, right at the shoulder joint, in the abdomen, and then in the groin behind the knee. The big dogs we call it.

Every single one was just as excruciating as the other, and I thought he had hands from Satan. I swear it was the worse pain I ever felt. I kid you not. When I stood up, I actually could breathe better than I’ve been able to breathe in months just from the assessment. When you assess somebody, you actually start to move the lymph. You clear the blockages. That night I felt horrific because I started the detoxification process. The next day, I woke up. I still felt like I got hit by a truck. I felt a 25, 30% difference in my energy level, and I’m like, okay, this—there’s something to this thing.

From that point on, I was a man obsessed with learning about this system, and I never looked back. My journey was because of the changes that I had so quickly than I’ve ever had with anything else.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, so let’s talk about what you learned, I mean, movement being a part of it. One of the things that you talk about is the simplicity of this fluid system of the body and addressing it with great simplicity, and many times people complicate it. We’ve done several shows on lymph. I can’t wait to hear this and my viewers to hear it. What did you learn?

Dr. Perry:
Just the immense role it plays in your being alive. If that system stops working altogether, you’re dead in about 24 hours, which means it’s sort of important, right?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you have septic blood in 24 hours. I would agree.

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, it’s really important for people to realize what it does. It’s part of your immune system, a significant part of your immune system, and your immune system is designed to just kill things. That’s its job and to keep you alive. Most of that immune system strength is going to come from your gut. As you know, 70 to 80% depending on your resources come from your gut, and then it just so happens that the majority of your lymphatic system lives in your gut. It’s the first system to greet anything that crosses the gut that’s not supposed to be there, so the lymph kicks into gear.

The lymph is the sewage system of your body. It’s designed to remove everything you don’t want in there like viruses, bacteria, toxins, parasites, fungus, cancer cells, even your own cellular metabolic waste, so the cells that you have healthy just dying naturally every day and even from doing things like training, that metabolic waste has to get out. If it does not get out, it stays inside you, and then you become more toxic to yourself, basically. It ties into the immune system, but it’s a significant component, the second part that I call it of your cardiovascular system. Your heart and your veins are beholding to how well the lymphatic system works. The lymph dumps directly into the venous, vein system of the body, so your vascularization and your blood flow, the ability to deliver the actual nutrients and oxygen you need to tissue is going to be beholding to how well the lymphatic system itself works.

That’s why I came up with the analogy of body aquarium. When I started to explain this system, it’s very overwhelming, and people can just glaze over really fast. I just use the analogy of, if you have a clean fish tank, envision the water in the tank as the water in your body. In order to keep that tank nice and clean and pure and for the fish to thrive and survive, you need a filtration system, and that’s the lymphatic system. If that system works well, then the tank looks great, and fish can have the potential to thrive. If that system does not work well, then the water in the tank slowly begins to turn, and we know what it looks like. It’s green. It’s got algae. It’s got fungus. It’s got decreased oxygen. It’s gets biofilm.

The fish begin to die and get sick. You see them in the water like this (gasping). They can’t breathe. I’m like, well, the fish are your cells, and your cells can’t breathe if they’re living in that toxic water, and then what we do in medicine is we replace the fish. We replace the water. We try to do everything to the tank. I’m like why don’t you just look at the filter system? If you fix that, then all the other stuff, then you can take air. Maybe you need to care of those. If you don’t take care of the filter system, here’s the thing that I learned. You don’t stand a chance in hell of reaching your full potential.

That was the answer that I was looking for. You hear this phrase all the time that it’s epigenetics. It’s the environment that kicks off the genes whether you’re going to get sick or whether you’re going to get healthy. There’s a phrase that I came across once that was you cannot get well in the same environment you became ill within. You cannot get well within the same environment you became ill within. I’m like, well, you probably should make sure that the environment that your cells live in 24/7 works great, and the number one system that does that in my clinical opinion is the lymphatic system. Then people just don’t know anything about how to take care of it, or they don’t even know it exists in what I call the real world, but there’s people in medicine that don’t even know anything about it.

Dr. Pompa:
I agree. All right, so let’s talk about how we can clean our tanks. The system doesn’t have pumps. When you buy a fish tank and put a filter in, it has—you plug it in. It has an electric pump. These systems don’t, right? I mean, these systems are just these free-flowing systems. I know movement is really how our bodies are designed to actually move lymph. We know that, somebody laying in a hospital bed, we need to bring someone in and physically move them to, obviously, move the lymph and move the system. Tell us about your methods here.

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, I mean, what the beautiful thing is is that medicine and research is starting to come around. There’s more things being looked at with lymph now than ever before, which is encouraging, especially in relationship to the brain, the glymphatics, which we may get into later. We know that there’s two things that move the lymphatics primarily. One is movement, human movement, so the more you move of yourself, more often, more ways, more environments, the better. Probably the best movement you can do is actually physically walking.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I agree with that, yeah.

Dr. Perry:
Which humans don’t do a lot of, especially now even more so. You’re stuck inside. When you walk, you use your calves, and your calves are considered its own pump-like mechanism, aka a second heart, at least in Eastern medicine. That helps pump the venous blood up from the calves. The contraction of the muscles in the body moves the fluid. Jumping up and down does it great. Trampolining and stuff like that is very helpful for lymph. Just so happens that you have your own trampoline built into your body. It’s called your calf. You can jump up and down on the balls of your feet so movement, but not a lot of people do a lot of movement.

Here’s the thing. If they do movement, they do the same kind of movement all the time. There’s a caveat. If you do the same movement all the time, your body adapts to that type of movement like a callous on a hand, so your tissues will begin to tighten and stiffen up based on your same movement. You can actually influence abnormal fluid flow because you do the same kind of movements too much.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, my principle of diet variation is based on the same adaptation principle. When you shift and change your diet, the body is forced to adapt, and the adaptation makes you better, your microbiome better. Exercise is always the example I give. Every exercise you start with seems to work, and then it plateaus. Then you start getting diminished results. Change exercise, the body has to adapt. Results go up. This applies to lymph is if you’re doing the same—I exercise all the time. I bet you a lot of my viewers are going I exercise all the time. I exercise all the time. You’re saying, yeah, but you’re doing the same exercises.

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, that’s a big piece of it. It’s just like your immune system. Your immune system becomes stronger and more resilient when you throw a lot of stuff at it.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right.

Dr. Perry:
That’s a very common thing that I get too. I have people that are in the fitness world, and they say I move all the time. Shouldn’t my lymph move? I’ll answer that question in a moment. Then breathing, breathing is one. What I mean by breathing is diaphragmatic breathing. I’m sure that you probably talked this with your people a lot of breathing through your diaphragm where it’s this dome shaped muscle that sits at the ribcage there. Then when you breathe in, particularly through your nose, the muscle pushes down, and then when you breathe out, then it comes back up.

It changes pressure. The reason that breathing works that way with the diaphragm is it changes pressure in the body. Pressure moves fluid, folks. Pressure moves fluid. That moves what they call your intra-abdominal pressure, your cylinder around your abdomen, your sides, and your back, like that. That’s only one pressure cylinder. You’ve got another in your pelvis, down in your pelvic floor. You got another one in your thoraxes, in your neck, and in your skull. You have different pressure zones that have to function independently, but they also have to function together as a piston. When you breathe in and out, you have a piston from your head to your tail that drives fluid flow or is supposed to. If you don’t breathe through the diaphragm, which most people don’t because they’ve lost the ability to do it, or they’re under so much stress, tension, and tightness that they breathe through the neck first, the shoulder second, chest third so everything is up here, and then you lose the power piston of the lymph flow.

The largest lymph node in your body and most of the lymph sits in your abdomen. That’s where most of it actually get congested and stuck. It gets stuck at what one call the cisterna chyli, which sits about two inches above your navel, more off to the right-hand side near your vena cava, and it takes all of the lymph from your organs and the lower part of the body. If that guy gets stuck, you get backflow pressure. If you’re not breathing through the diaphragm, you become stagnant in your abdominal region, and then that’s what happens. People don’t breathe through the diaphragm, and they don’t move. Now people always say but I breathe through the diaphragm all the time because I’ve taken all these diaphragm breath courses. I do all this different types of breathing, and I move all the time. I even jump up and down on a trampoline. Why is my lymph still messed up?

Two reasons; one, it’s probably so blocked or so stagnant that that’s not enough to move it anymore. You have to get in there and manually help it move. I’ve got to push it along through manual lymphatic release by hand because it’s too stuck, or you’ve still got an underlying inflammatory issue somewhere. Your lymph just keeps coming back because you haven’t gotten to the root cause of—the lymph issue that keeps coming back is not a lymph problem.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right.

Dr. Perry:
It’s still an immune system problem, and if it’s an immune system problem, it’s a nervous system problem. Sorry, that’s my dog. It’s what’s called a neuro-immune response, so your nervous system and your immune system work together. That’s the reason. I always tell people something. It’s a basic tenet from osteopathic medicine. Osteopathic medicine was pretty much the pioneer from Andrew Taylor Still and talking about fluid flow and lymphatics. They said this phrase, and it’s a central tenet of my work. Drainage precedes supply, that you have to drain the lymph and clear the lymph first before you can begin to supply the body with the nutrients and the oxygen that you need or whatever type of therapy that you’re doing.

What does that mean in my world? Lymphatic work always comes first, period. Then I move to everything else.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s so amazing. One of the things I see a lot of is people have major hidden infections and cavitations and root canals unknowingly, and then it just creates this cesspool of lymph. If you don’t clear that lymph, it’s—oh, man, even after you get the cavitations done, the lymph is still now—to your point, still blocked where you need literally some of these manual therapies to free it up.

Dr. Perry:
That’s big, Doc. When you look in here, every tooth has its own lymph channel. Then people have these underlying infections in through here, receding gums, periodontal disease. That’s an underlying cause that drives autoimmune disease or dysfunctional gut issues or if you’ve had a root canal, or a cavitation, or an abscess. Then you go to the dentist, and you think everything’s good. It’s gone, probably not so much. Then it feeds that system from here, and then that’s why a lot of people have this—when I see somebody, I always do a full lymphatic assessment on everyone. No matter what you come in with, if you say, Doc, I’ve got a hangnail that I can’t get rid of, you’re getting a lymph exam. If I’ve got a knee—I don’t care what it is. They get a lymph assessment.

It might not be a problem, but I need to rule it out. I need to check the box. It’s like flying on an airplane. I got to do my checklist to make sure I can take off, and if that doesn’t clear, I need to make sure I work that first. You’ll always usually see stuff around the—underneath the jaw, around the cheeks and nose, right at the side of the temple area there, really, really tender, painful, or the nerves in the face become inflamed because of the lymphatic system issue. Then you get irritation to the cranial nerves at the brainstem, and that feeds sympathetic fight, flight, freeze, freak-out just because your face can’t drain.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, my wife went through this. I wish she were listening, and it all stemmed from a cavitation. That was taken care of, but then she still had this lymph issue, right? It was through here, to your point. This was where you might see it, right?

I want to know a little bit more about your assessment. How do you assess for this? I think people listening would want to know that. Just because you see it here doesn’t mean the blockage is here. Obviously, it’s blocked there, but it could be the tonsils. It could be the—you know what I’m saying? Talk about your assessment and then how that plays into where you would think the problem would be.

Dr. Perry:
That’s a really great question. The lymph goes everywhere, right? I mean, it’s a massive system, and it works on pressure. I go back to the law of hydrodynamics from physics, which basically says this fundamental law: high pressure flows to low pressure, fluid dynamics. I tell people think about a dam of water where there’s a lake. You’ve got all the water on one side. That’s high pressure, and then you’ve got none on the other side. The water naturally wants to go there. I don’t have to teach it how to go there. All I got to do is remove what (the blockage)? Then the water knows where to go.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right.

Dr. Perry:
It’s the same thing with the lymph. When I clear the lymph, the body knows where it’s got to go. I don’t have to teach it to do anything. I just got to help it get out of its way. When we think about pressure with the lymph, the most important thing—because I tell people, once you understand this concept, you know how to treat the lymphatic system. It’s so easy. The lowest pressure of the lymphatics where they drain are at the collarbone, right above and into below. That’s the veins, the subclavian, sub, below clavicle, subclavian veins.

The lymph will go back to the venous system. The lowest pressure is at the bottom of the neck. If we know that’s the lowest pressure, now where’s the highest pressure? The highest pressure is at the distal parts, and the top of your head is the highest pressure. The lymph on the top of my head, ultimately, where does it want to drain to (the bottom of the neck, assuming that it can get there)? In order to get to the bottom of the neck, it has to clear all these individual clusters of nodes. It’s almost like little micro filters that look like kidneys that you’re—that come in and kill things that pass through it.

You’ve got one right at the top of the neck, right behind the angle of the jaw. That’s the largest one. You’ve got them underneath your jaw. I’ve got them running down the side of the throat, the deep cervical lymph nodes. They actually drain the ones from your brain. Then I got the ones on the jaw, right by nose, right by my temple, and in the back of my head. If I’ve got one at the—say I’m stuck, and I’m puffy in the cheek. The cheeks get really, really puffy and swollen when lymph is an issue or you have sinus issues. This has to clear the jaw, under the jaw, and the neck to get down, so if I’m blocked anywhere below the cheek, it can’t get there.

When you release the lymph, it’s a law of lymph. You always release it when you’re doing the head from the bottom of the neck up to the top. What that does is it clears pressure blockages from bottom up, so no matter where it is, it can flow past what you just released.

Dr. Pompa:
We had Kelly Kennedy teach my viewers how to pump the lymph and, of course, brush the lymph. Do you recommend those plus the movement, or is there something else that you want to share?

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, that’s a great one. Once you know where they are—I’ll be honest with you. It doesn’t really matter what the hell you do with it. As long as you know that you rub here first, that opens up the channel. What I do is that I don’t brush until I stimulate nodes first. I teach stimulate the node clusters. Then you brush down that way, so brushing to me is last.

Dr. Pompa:
She agreed with that. She said that you pump them first, and then brush them. Same thing, she said clear here first.

Dr. Perry:
Right, you always clear there, and then when you do the rest of the body, it’s the opposite. I’ve got high pressure in my hands, and I’ve got high pressure in my feet. The highest pressure is in your feet. That’s why you get swollen feet and ankles when you’re flying on a plane. Fluid has to fight gravity to get there, so it settles there. Then everything in my foot has to go up to the bottom—think about that distance. That’s a huge distance.

Now, when I talk about clusters, you’ve got—say I’ve got the neck here. Then I’ve got behind my sternum and along my spine. Then I go down to the abdomen where the largest lymph node in the body sits about two inches above the navel. Then I’ve got the ones that are in my lumbar lymph nodes that sit along the lumbar spine and go sideways down into the groin so your right groin and your left groin and then behind your right knee and your left knee. Those are the big clusters.

Let’s say, if I have a swollen ankle on the left-hand side, we know that you need to get rid of that swelling and inflammation, and the lymphatics get rid of swelling. Ice doesn’t get rid of swelling. Lymphatics get rid of swelling. Then you know, okay, where does that swelling got to go? It’s got to go out through the veins. It’s got to go out through the lymph.

What’s the target? It’s the neck, so I got to make sure that there’s nothing blocked behind the knee because that’s the first block it’s going to hit. Then the next block is the groin. Then the next block is the navel. The next block is the abdomen at the cisterna chyli. The next block is behind the sternum.

What I see all the time is that people are stuck at the sternum. They’re stuck in the abdomen. The swelling in the ankle even though it wants to get out can’t, so it resettles back down to the bottom. It gets up, and it says I can’t go any further. I got to go right back down where I was, so you have to clear. This time you go neck down so collarbone down. You never ever start from the foot up, never.

Dr. Pompa:
Here up. Here down.

Dr. Perry:
Correct. I don’t dry brush. Say, for instance, get on the foot and dry brush up. You can, but I’m going to be dry brushing you up into a possible block. The biggest blocks that people have that they don’t know that they have are in the abdomen and in the groin and in the sternum, so I have to clear those first. Then I brush after that. If I clear the blocks, then the lymph already knows where it needs to go.

Dr. Pompa:
Wait a minute. You’re saying, like we did here, you pump these areas, stimulate these on up. You’re saying, okay, now we do it the opposite. We go here. We go in this area, into the abdomen two inches up, all the points you’re saying. Is that correct?

Dr. Perry:
Right.

Dr. Pompa:
Then you brush in the same order?

Dr. Perry:
No, then you brush from bottom up.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, that’s what I thought. Then you brush from the feet up because you freed them.

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, we know where it needs to go. It’s a term for—I call these node roads. There’s roads of lymph, and they come together in these big clusters of nodes. You’ve got 6 to 700 lymph nodes in the body depending on the resource that you look at. Either way, it’s a big number. First of all, one-third of that number is from the neck up, so I want you to just think about that. One-third is from the neck up. Lymph is probably going to be a little bit of an important role for neck and brain health. Then the rest are going to develop in clusters.

Nature’s pretty smart. She puts most of the clusters around the big joints of the body that need to have a lot of mobility, shoulders, hips, knees, trunk, so if you move those, you pump those. For me, I’m going to check the sternum and the abdomen for sure because they’re the two biggest places where people get stuck, but nobody ever looks there. Here’s why. Nobody ever has pain there.

Dr. Pompa:
How do you pump the—when they’re behind the sternum? I mean, it’s easy to hit some of these abdomen spots, the navel. Two inches above, a little to the right is the cisterna, right? I mean, those are pretty easy to—just to mobilize in there. How do you do this area?

Dr. Perry:
It’s the very same premise. Just along the sternum itself is supposed to be hard because it’s a bone. You’ve got fascial attachments there that can be tight for people as well because it bridges right pec to left pec and then neck to pelvis. It gets very puffy and swollen in there when you’ve got congested lymph, and it gets very congested in between the ribs as they articulate to the sternum. You have to go in between the rib spaces next to the sternum as well as the sternum to free it up. Then depending on your skillset level, you can do, one, what they call thymus thumping, which is I’m just going to pound my sternum with my heel of my hand or my fist, so I’m giving myself pretty much like CPR. If you’re a clinician and you can do it and you’re experienced with movement, you can do mobility resets to the sternum that are based on osteopathic medicine. Just based on pressure, I can go here, and I can do what’s called a lung pump where I can actually pump the lungs at this place, right below the collarbone. I give CPR to below the collarbone. Then that’s going to free up that motion here because that’s where it gets stuck.

Then when I go down to the abdomen, then I’ll go and I’ll check around the navel is a huge one. Then about two inches up, I’ll go in there, and I’ll dig deep. I’ll press in several inches where I need to go. Then I’ll work that region as well, and most people are astounded at how painful those areas are. They’re not supposed to be painful.

Dr. Pompa:
Right, no, exactly. I would argue that that plays so much into a gut that won’t heal. Obviously, it’s tied directly into—yeah, those channels, lymphatic channels, are connected right into the gut in that area.

Dr. Perry:
This is what’s really important for people to understand is that, when you look at the lymphatics system—I’ve studied a lot, particularly in relationship to cancer. I had cancer 18 years ago. I had thyroid cancer, so they took out my thyroid gland and a significant amount of nodes in my neck at the time, which I really didn’t think about at the time. My body was sick when I had cancer. I had the procedure done, but I was still sick. You follow? Then I just manifested it years later with an autoimmune disease. This region in here, when they took those out, I was more vulnerable.

When you look at cancer, they’ll tell you that the entire lymphatic system is only as strong and resilient as its weakest and most vulnerable lymph node, which means that if I have one lymph node of the body—and they look at it more from the one that has the metastasis in it. That’s the one where say I have every lymph node feels good, but I got one swollen one. Let’s say behind my left knee. All the other ones are good. When you go through the lymphatic system, that lymph node makes the entire system vulnerable in its ability to flow. The lymph node behind your knee can be the contributing factor to the neck pain that won’t go away because everything is interconnected, and that fluid system is one. It’s not separate. Plus, I know that that lymph node will influence venous flow and arterial flow, so then that’s going to make a difference on the ability for me to get the nutrients and the oxygen that I need to whatever tissue that I have. That’s why you have to do a full body lymphatic system on everyone. You can do isolated treatments for a swollen left leg, for instance, but I want you to make sure that you look at them all.

The body is very interesting. First of all, it’s under no obligation whatsoever to make sense to you. It can do whatever the hell it wants to do. You may expect that if your left leg has pain that you would see the lymph on the left side to be the worst. No, it doesn’t have to. It could be on the right-hand side, so I usually will do the whole system reset on someone before I begin to go isolated in that region. It’s really important that we remember. There’s a phrase that I use all the time. It’s where no system in the body ever works alone. It never gets injured alone. It never heals alone.

When I’m pressing on the cisterna chyli two inches up from my navel, I have to tell—first of all, anybody who presses here probably doesn’t even think I’m pressing on a lymph node. They don’t even think that the system is there. If you could just know that it’s there, that’s a win. Then you got to remember, holy cow, it sits right next to the vena cava. It sits right next to the aorta. If that’s backed up, it’s going to influence blood flow, which if I’m backed up there, it’s going to change blood flow everywhere, even in my brain. Then I’ve got nerve clusters that sit there. Behind there, you’ve got these ganglion, these plexus of ganglion. You’ve got the celiac plexus, the superior and inferior mesenteric, and then the hypogastric below that, so I’ve got four big circles of nerves that are the waystation for everything coming in here. If you’ve got swelling, when I touch in your belly like that, I’m going to tell you right now those relay stations are not working as well as they should, and that can send you pain anywhere, particularly near the back.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, exactly. That’s the connection. Two questions, how do you—I asked the question earlier. We kind of answered it. To be more specific, assessing them, are we just looking for puffiness, pain on touch, or is there something else?

Dr. Perry:
There’s a couple of things. You’ll have a clinical presentation with lymphatic. I have this joke. How do you know you have a lymphatic system problem? You’re breathing. That’s how I know you got a lymphatic system problem. Another joke is that, if you’re standing in front of me asking me for help, it’s probably an issue there. The lymphatic system can have a couple different presentations. It can have one where you’re puffy and you’re swollen. That’s the one where somebody visibly looks puffy.

When you look back at old pictures of me, I looked heavy in the face. I had edema. I had inflammation. I looked puffy, and I had extra weight. When you become very toxic, you’ll put on body fat to try to—as a way to protect you from toxins. You’ll have weight. You’ll be puffy. You’ll be swollen.

When I touch around the lymph node clusters, it will be painful. It will feel puffy. I will actually see skin changes. It can be red. It can be blotchy. You can have petechia. I can have changes to the skin where you don’t get blood flow back, so capillary refill is compromised.

I’ll usually go by your reaction. I’ll know if you like it or you don’t like it. I know one thing. If you got pain somewhere, you got a lymph problem. If you got pain, you got inflammation. It may not be inflammation there. It’s probably inflammation in your brain, which is why you’re perceiving pain when I touch there.

You’ve got that presentation. Then I’m going to look at your history. I’m going to see the things that you’ve checked off, particularly maybe like digestive history, sinus history, people who have allergies a lot, prone to allergies and asthma, very big lymph problems. Those lay down antibodies. They lay down this puffiness type of thing to protect you. Fluids and mucous and stuff are protective. That’s what was happening to me, so I was a big giant puffball.

When I got my lymph under control, I lost 30 pounds of edema, inflammation, and swelling and body fat in a month like that, and I just leaned out. Then you have another presentation where the lymph is not puffy or swollen, but it’s breaking down because your system is catabolic. That’s a person who is not puffy or swollen. They’re more broken down. The lymph is an issue, but it’s not swollen per se. The supporting structure is called the anchor filaments there are beginning to breakdown. Then the body begins to eat the support structure away, and then it can’t control fluid dynamics. The body is eating away the tissue because you’re stuck in a catabolic sympathetic dominant mode.

You’ll have a lymph issue, but you’ll have two different presentations for it. You’ll treat the lymph the same way, but your ultimate thing that you’ll need to do will be slightly different because each one of those things is a catabolic response and an anabolic response. That means you’ve got a different immune system response that the lymph is reacting to, so you have to ultimately have a restoration program that is the same but different, if that makes sense.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, but you would clear the lymph the same, correct?

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, so you always want to clear the lymph, but you have to be careful here. I’ve learned a few valuable lessons is that just because you can clear all the lymph at one time doesn’t mean you should. There’s different ways of being aggressive with the lymph in relationship to pressure, time, depth, speed. There’s many variations. I learned a long time ago that, if you do too much to someone, the system can’t handle it. Most of the time it can’t because people may be poor detoxifiers to begin with. It could be a genetic issue. Probably a liver issue for sure. The system is so overloaded and so sensitive that, if you do too much, you’ll actually send them into what’s called a retoxification reaction where they become really sick for weeks, if not months, and their healing slows down.

When I have somebody that’s been sick for a while or I know they’ve got an acute exacerbation of an autoimmune disease, I work the lymph, but I do it in stages. I need to tiptoe into the system so that it can tolerate what I’m doing to it. The one thing that I learned is that, when you assess the primary lymph node regions of the body, which we teach—I’ve gone over a couple of them. There’s more. Just the very act of putting your finger there, applying pressure, and moving side to side, the assessment is the first treatment. Because it’s so light of just pressing there, it’s not an onslaught of a detox. The assessment usually will make somebody feel a lot better.

Here’s the cool thing, Doc. All of those lymph nodes live near major vascularization nerve points and pulse points. If you’re having tissue tightness and restriction, you’re going to reduce lymph flow because tight tissue does not allow optimal fluid to move. When I work these areas, I’m also increasing vascular flow, so you’re going to notice that your body feels really, really good. One, I freed up your ability to get blood and oxygen to capillaries, but I’ve also freed up the venous blood, the blue blood that’s taking out toxins, particularly carbon dioxide and metabolic waste. That’s the biggest system that does it. The lymph helps that, but that frees up.

I’m doing it over areas of the body that most people have never ever physically had touched before. Nobody ever thought to look there because it doesn’t have any relationship to their presenting complaint if you come at it from a musculoskeletal perspective. If you come at it from a systemic full-body fish tank perspective, you realize that you have to take care of the tank before you begin to take care of the stuff in the tank.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I couldn’t agree more. Then how long do you spend on these points? You said partly, in the first time, you’re just assessing them, and then you progress to the maximum. How long would you take to rub these points out?

Dr. Perry:
Yeah, for me, it’s really not about time per se. It’s about variation and variability of what you do to it. I change up. The techniques that I teach are a blend of Eastern medicine and Western medicine. I do a lot of shearing, which is tissue shearing back and forth. It’s one of the best ways to increase—influence nerves and vascular structures. I do slapping and tapping where you hit. That’s based in qigong and martial arts and stuff that’s been around for centuries and then pressure depths and speed. I’m actually tying into when I teach this work of affecting different nerves in your body and how you’re brain and your nervous system respond to pressure. I’m working the lymph, but I also want to work the nerves. I want to work your body’s perception of pressure and perception of pain based on stimulation, so I’m actually affecting your nervous system greatly.

It’s not so much about time and duration. Here’s the thing. People are so worried about doing something wrong that they get stressed about it. I’m like, first of all, that’s probably why you’re sick. You got too much stress. Just lighten up a little bit. Then the other one is they get so obsessive-compulsive disorder on which way they’re pulling lymph that they’re going to pull it in the wrong direction. Trust me; you ain’t going to pull it in the wrong direction. The lymph knows where it needs to go as long as you know the major block points.

If you pull it to the left, it’ll go to the right if you’ve cleared the node the right way. People don’t do something because it’s too complicated, so I had to go from there. The assessment first is the reset. Then I go by how did you feel? The answer determines what I do next. I felt really awesome. I had a lot of energy. I felt great. Then that means, one, you can repeat that if you would like to. Maybe you just spend a little bit more time on that point now and apply a little bit more pressure because that’s going to be a little more of an aggressive release. Then I might do that.

If somebody says, wow, I mean, I just—I really had a headache. It was a lot for me. It was tough. Then I don’t have you do it again until you begin to feel a little bit better. It might take a couple of days. Then you can do the same thing. I’ll say, okay, now you know what? Just go a little bit lighter, a little less time, and then see how you do that way.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, makes sense.

Dr. Perry:
Then I can move into other stimulation, and then I teach this thing. The first fundamental thing that I teach is called the big six. Everybody gets the assessment, and then I teach everyone the fundamental big six. Those are the big node roads that you absolutely have to clear. This comes before any other lymph recess, and it’s very simple. I’ll tell you what the big six are. The big six, number one is always at the collarbone, so you release there. Then I tell people—the way I have them do it is you just put your hand there, and you rub back and forth ten times over that region. They go how hard? I’m like, yes, that’s the answer. If it hurts, don’t do it, but see if it feels good.

Then depending on your sensitivity level, if you’ve got chronic fatigue syndrome, you’re hypersensitive, you might not be able to do the next step. Then I actually do a tapping technique. The tapping technique is actually very powerful because it stimulates what we call Pacinian corpuscles at the skin that attach into the brain. Then you’ll put your hand over there, and you’ll tap ten times right there. Then that’s the reset. Then you do the other side. You rub ten times, and then you tap five.

It’s okay if you do it five times. It doesn’t make you a bad person, and your lymph won’t explode. You’re good. They say, Doc, can I do it 15 times? I’m like what do you think my answer is (of course you can)? I just want you to know that’s a technique. I want you to understand the concept. The concept is clear this one first.

Now, the second one is right at the top behind the angle of the jaw, below here. Then what you’re going to do is take your fingers, and then you can rub up and down there like ten times. Now, this one you have to be careful because you can tap, but I want you to not tap too hard. You can just rub if you want to, but then you tap that region ten times as well.

Then you’re going to go into the shoulder joint. Where the pec joins the shoulder, right here, it’s called your pectoral axillary lymph nodes. This is the one that gets blocked up, especially with women who have breast issues. You take your hand and just spread your hand out, like a big giant brush on your hand. I want you to rub your pec and right into that armpit ten times, and then I want you to take your whole hand and slap that region ten times. The first thing they say to me is, Doc, this is so simple. This can’t do anything is what they say. I’m like that’s why it works.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s right. I love it. I think it’s great.

Dr. Perry:
Then you go to the other side. The one thing we need to know is that, in the drainage thing—you hit it ten times. When you look at how the lymph drains, it’s important to know that the—I’ll say this before we go to the other ones. The right side of the head front and back, the right neck, the right arm, the right torso, and the ribs to the back, that drains to the right side of the neck, here. The rest of the body drains to the left side of the neck. Both feet go to the left side of the neck, so the left side of the neck usually has the larger of the issues of the two so now that you know where fluids flow.

We’ve done one at the collarbone, two at the top of the neck, three at the shoulder. Then we go down into the abdomen, and the abdomen, I still keep it light in the beginning. Then, for this one, I’m going to stand up so people are watching. Then you’re going to place one hand on your navel, one hand above that, so I’m covering my abdominal region here. I’m going to do the same thing. Now, I don’t care which way you rub. You can do your hands up and down. You can do side to side individually. You can do circles. You just do ten times, and then you’re going to do your slaps.

Now, when you do your slaps, you’ve got two options. You can use both hands and go one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. Why is that helping? That’s vibration, or you can do this. Here comes some math. I can do one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. I can go to 20. That’s ten and ten, whatever one you want. Now, this is now going to flow towards what (what I just released up here)?

Then I’m going to the groin. Now I’ve got the crease of the groin right here. You can see me. There’s the crease. I’m just going to give everybody a warning. I really want you to be careful where you hit here. I’m going to go across the crease, and it doesn’t matter if you go up and down or with it. That’s the inguinal lymph nodes, and they’re going to take the drainage from the gluts. Then do your hits, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven eight, nine, ten. Now, this groin is one of the most important areas for vascular flow in the entire body, right here at the groin, and it’s usually restricted. Now, the groin is going to flow towards what (what I just cleared in the abdomen and what I just cleared in the neck)?

Then last one is going to be behind the knees. You’ll either need to sit or bend at the hips. Don’t bend at the back. Bend at the hips. Then I want you to get your hands behind the knees, and when you rub, I want you to go behind the knee, below the knee, and above the knee. Get the whole big space. Then I want you to do your ten slaps right behind both knees, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.

Then I want you to stay standing. I want you to put your feet about shoulder width apart. I want you to bounce up and down on the balls of your feet, but don’t let your feet leave the ground, just your heels. I want you to bounce up and down like on a trampoline for 20 seconds breathing in and out only through your nose. You can shake your fingers. You can raise your hands over your head if you want. You can do whatever you want, but only breathe in and out through the nose because breathing in and out through the nose moves your diaphragm better than going through your mouth. You just did the fundamental baseline reset that every human being should do every day. Then when you do those…

Dr. Pompa:
Dude, that was awesome.

Dr. Perry:
We move you to second, third, fourth, and fifth options, and then we move to organs.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, dude, that’s awesome. Listen, so where can people find you?

Dr. Perry:
Very simple, stopchasingpain.com has all of our information from the courses, to the videos, to the membership, to whatever. I probably spend an unhealthy amount of time on Instagram, so you can check me out on there on stopchasingpain.com as well.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s fantastic. There was one more question, and we’ll see if you can answer it in just two minutes. How does emotion tie into all of this because that’s a big part of what you do?

Dr. Perry:
Oh, that’s a big one, right? It’s interesting. When you look at Eastern medicine, the emotional center of the body sits right at the cisterna chyli, so two inches above the bellybutton is where you hold the emotional trauma and shock. Think about that. When you are under threat, you flex forward into a fetal position. That’s the fulcrum point, and it also sits right at the [plexi] of nerves that sit there. When you have an emotion in your body, it creates excess tension and stress, and then we know that the excess tension in the body decreases fluid flow, decreases blood flow, which leads to hypoxia, which is decreased oxygen delivery. Then you go then that spiral hole of inflammation.

We know that how you think changes your biology, and emotions are always, in my clinical opinion, involved with chronic pain. That’s what makes us unique as human beings. Pain is all perception and perception is based on emotion, so you have to take that in consideration when you’re working with everyone. When you work in that space between the navel and the bottom of the sternum, you very often will have emotional releases from your client that will happen that they can’t control. It just will happen because that’s where it resides.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s awesome, great stuff, man, and just the fact I got it. I’m going to do it every day. I always commit to things for 30 days and see how I feel, so I’m committing to it. I know Ashley’s committing to it too. I love it. I can’t wait to do it and learn more. Listen, I want to have you back on, and I want to so Step 2. Step 2, we’ll put this—we’ll link this one, and then we’re going to take them to Step 2. Ashley, make sure that happens. Dr. Perry, thank you for being on Cellular Healing TV.

Dr. Perry:
Thank you very much, Doc.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. I hope you enjoyed today’s episode, which was brought to you by 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.

348: Mold: An Epidemic in our Homes

Brain Fog? Weight Gain? Unexplained Illness? You've heard me say it, but It could very well be mold. Today I welcome Mike Adams, who has been involved in mold remediation for 15 plus years. During that time, he has patented a piece of equipment and a process to rid homes of mold, toxins, and bacteria.

He’s here to share with us today what is happening to our homes, how has mold become an epidemic, and what some of the factors are to look out for that make homes more hospitable to mold. This is a topic that I know many of you have asked about, and I cannot wait to share with you today.

More about Mike Adams:

Mike is the founder and Chief operating Officer of Pure Maintenance. He has been involved in mold remediation for 15 plus years. During that time, he has patented a piece of equipment and a process to rid homes of mold, toxins, and bacteria.

Show notes:

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Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
Health Hunters, this episode is for you. How many people have brain fog, anxiety, can’t sleep, sudden weight gain, just absolute chronic fatigue, weird muscle aches, problems, pains, right? All right. I talked a lot about mold but the problem is, is oftentimes, you’re in a home. You can’t afford to get it remediated. You definitely can’t afford to move. Oh, man. When I found this, I literally teared up. It worked. Wait until you hear the stories around this inexpensive mold remediation, so unexpensive that I can’t tell you how many people just have done this to their home just to make sure because they’re mold sensitive that they don’t have mold. This technology is going to change our industry. Wait until you see this episode. Oh, and by the way, they have these around the country now, and we have broken through with mold remediation. Oh, wait until you see this show. Check it out.

Ashley:
Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith and today we welcome Mike Adams who has been involved in mold remediation for 15 plus years. During that time, he has patented a piece of equipment and a process to rid homes of mold, toxins, and bacteria. He’s here to share with us today what is happening to our homes. How mold has become an epidemic and what some of the factors are to look out for that make homes more hospitable to mold. This is a topic that I know many of you have asked about and I cannot wait to get started. Let’s welcome Mike Adams and of course, Dr. Pompa to the show. Welcome both of you.

Mike Adams:
Thank you. Appreciate it.

Dr. Pompa:
Mike, gosh, you are such a godsend. Not just to me but to the doctors that I coach and train as well as the thousands and thousands of people who are going to watch this show because mold is one of the reasons, hidden reasons typically, why people still don’t feel well. Why they have unexplainable illnesses. Why they wake up in the middle of the night, can’t get back to sleep or if they do sleep through the night, have massive fatigue, massive brain fog, anxiety, digestive problems. I mean, the list goes on and on and on. One of the things that I have discovered over my years, 20 years of industry search of neurotoxic illness, is that mold is one of the three things that I say most people miss and also really detox incorrectly.

The reason I hate mold the most, I believe it’s evil. I mean, even biblically, it talks about mold in Leviticus 14. What to do? I’ve watched lives just be decimated by mold. It’s horrible. I really believe, out of all of the neurotoxins, it’s the most evil of all. I really despise it. One of the big challenges we always have with mold is—I have clients that they aren’t able to move and yet they’ve tried to get their home right because there’s hidden mold and yet they can’t get it right. Remediation they’re saying could be 30, 40, 50,000, who knows. Okay. When I heard all about Pure Maintenance, the technology, I was hopeful but skeptical.

Now I have not only used this in my home but I have used it now with many clients. Two of which that I’m thinking about right now were not able to go back in their home. After your treatment, they were able to successfully go back into the home and not spend the $50,000 in remediation. Those people are grateful. There’s thousands of others out there. With that as an introduction, thank you. Yes, I’m going to ask the obvious question. Tell us a little bit about this treatment. Why it’s so different. Why it works and why it can penetrate behind walls and every crevice, and that really is part of the solution.

Mike:
Yeah. Let me explain just the basics of the treatment. We recognize years and years ago, that when you got mold in the home, physical mold, then you’ve got mold everywhere in the home. For example, you have a flood in the basement, you see mold down on the basement wall, well, what you could see is a fraction of the overall—what I call mold load of the home. There are little areas in the home that just produce mold. It’s in the drainage of every sink. It’s in your clothes. It’s in every bathroom. Then when you couple that scenario—window sills. When you couple that scenario with a few floods here and there or a few disasters, homes just naturally climb the mold load overall.

We recognize that the entire home has to be treated. You can’t just spot treat this. That’s one of the complaints I have against traditional mold remediators is they want to go in and find out where the visible mold is. We’ll tear that out and call the house safe. That’s the farthest thing from the truth. It’s not safe at all. You’ve got mold everywhere in the home. What our process does is—the piece of equipment that we patented produces a dry fog and it’s hydrogen peroxide and acetic acid. Those two together—yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, I have to say this. This was a big deal because my people, if you will, are extremely chemically sensitive so oftentimes mold treatment goes from basically worse. It becomes much worse for them because of the chemicals. This is basically hydrogen peroxide and vinegar if you want to put it simple, right?

Mike:
Yeah. Chemically, after we’re done fogging, it takes just a few minutes—literally, it breaks down to oxygen or water when we’re done.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s awesome.

Mike:
What our equipment allows us to do is fill the entire space of the home up with a dry fog. The fog will, as you know, Dr. Pompa, get so thick it’s hard to see across the room. Actually, sometimes it’s hard to see your hand in front of your face but absolutely, nothing gets wet and it leaves no residue.

Dr. Pompa:
It didn’t. I mean, there was nothing. No residue anywhere in my house. I’ve had it done twice. There’s a reason for that. We’ll tell that story but go ahead.

Mike:
That we’re ablet to run it through the HVAC system. One of the magic parts of this process is that we put it in with a positive pressure. In other words, we have a lot of compressed air going into the house along with the fog. The fog itself actually goes through a vapor phase change and it increases the vapor pressure in the home as well. What this does is it pushes the fog into every crack and crevice where mold could possibly be hiding. When people say, will it get behind my wall? If the mold could get behind the wall, the fog will get behind the wall because we’re actually a smaller particle than mold spore and we’re being pushed in with pressure behind it.

That allows us to go ahead and sterilize the entire home. That process takes, depending on the size of the home, but a typical home, two to three hours. Then, after we’ve done the sterilization, we’re going to now—the whole idea of step two is to make the home inhospitable to mold in the future. Mold has an advantage over bacteria because it can come in and dance around for years until it finds moisture and food and then, it’s off and running again. We take that luxury away from mold. It doesn’t get to come in and dance around. The way we do that, we have a process where we fog another ingredient. Essentially, I would give you the name of the chemical—in fact, I’ll tell you. It’s trimethyl oxopropyl dimethyl ammonium fluoride.

Dr. Pompa:
Got it.

Mike:
Yeah, right. That sounds crazy and a little bit spooky but it’s not. It’s a nitrogen molecule with carbon atoms stacked on top of it. What this does is it forms spikes on every surface in your home covalently so you can’t wipe them off. They’re there. You can’t feel them. You can’t see them. They’re too small. The positive charged spikes—if you could picture in your mind’s eye the space that occupies the head of a pin, there’ll be about a million spikes in that space.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s crazy.

Mike:
It is. The beauty of that is mold has a negative charge. When mold does come in your home again, and it will, from the wind or whatever, just the outside air, as soon as it touches anything in the home, because it has a negative charge, it’s attracted to that positive nitrogen charge. It pulls itself into the spikes. The spikes pierce the outer membrane and it just cannot survive in there. It gives you really good long-term protection from mold ever being a problem again.

Dr. Pompa:
Gosh, I mean, I’m telling you, I think I teared up when I found this process, this product because I know the lives that are just ruined from this. I have to say, it’s inexpensive. I mean, you’re talking somewhere in the realms—you have places, and here’s the other good news. You have places that you’ve licensed around the country. We’re going to give you a number. We can call the number and speak to them directly and find a location. Anywhere around 70 cents a square foot is about right. Is that about a good average?

Mike:
Yeah. Some areas are maybe a little more. Maybe 80 or 90 cents a square foot but that’s the ballpark, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, okay. I think it’s extraordinarily—again, when you look at the expense of remediation and the ineffectiveness of the remediation, oftentimes using toxic chemicals and frankly, they don’t get where the problem is. They don’t get into the problem areas, behind the walls, [00:10:12]. This technology does. Then you put on top of that, where you’re literally mold proofing is fantastic. The people who watch this show, Mike, they’re extremely sensitive to mold and the biotoxins mold produces. I can’t tell you how many people already—that just said, look, I’m just going to do it in my home just to lower my load because they’re that sensitive.

They don’t need to waste money trying to find mold because as we know, mold’s very difficult to test for. I’ve had many people just treat their homes. It’s inexpensive and why not just treat it. I’ve had a lot of my sensitive clients do just that which I recommend, everyone. If you have any sensitivity to mold, find a Pure Maintenance licensee and do it in your home. I think there’s other benefits to that too. You might want to talk about them.

Mike:
Yeah. Along with mold or fungi, it’s effective against bacteria and it’s actually [00:11:20] is on the EPA N-list for COVID.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I know.

Mike:
For viruses. Yeah, it will make your home antimicrobial. We’ve seen some amazing things over the years. Just received amazing letters from people that thought that they were just going to have a life of living in a wheelchair and things had changed for them. They’ve gotten well. It’s really a cool thing to be part of.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. I told just a couple of stories that I had but off the top of your head, do you have any of those stories that you could share?

Mike:
Yeah. Actually, let me tell you how we got into the health side of this.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, because this wasn’t—tell that story because this wasn’t developed for that. You actually fell into this but tell that story.

Mike:
Absolutely, fell into this. Heaven sent fell into this but when we started this company, I owned a company and we were cleaning medical facilities and surgical centers. That’s how we got interested in dry fog because as you know, cleaning surgical centers should scare everybody to death. You’re squirting and wiping. Nothing’s really happening other than you’re scooting the germs around. Thus, they let it sit in an aqueous form on that surface for 10 minutes which I can tell you, nobody’s doing that or very few people are doing that. It’s just not an effective way to sterilize a facility.

Finding out about this technology, I invested some money and—we invested some money and some time and tried to market this idea to medical facilities and couldn’t get anyone to listen to us. We had a lot of meetings with a lot of hospitals, a lot of surgical centers, and they were all like, well, Mike, it’s a good idea but there’s no return on investment here for us. In fact, I had one guy say to me—he was a CFO of a hospital and he says, “Mike, what’s my return on investment?” I said, “Well, I guess, less dead people. That’s all I’ve got for you.” We just couldn’t get any traction. Couldn’t get off and going.

It just hit me one night lying in bed. Wait a minute, let’s do homes for mold because I knew mold was an issue. I didn’t know the health side of the mold. I just knew people don’t want mold in their homes. We started fogging with this other piece of equipment before we had received our patent and we were doing pretty well. We were doing mostly real estate transactions where the inspector [00:13:49] mold. We’d go up and treat the mold, take a test, it’s completely denatured. We’re good to go. I got a phone call from a lady and she said, “Mike, I’ve read your website. My daughter has a terrible rash. She can’t get rid of it. I need you to come fog the home.”

I was taken aback. You might have the wrong number here. I’m not a doctor. I don’t know anything about the health side of this. She said, “No, trust me.” She said, “I feel like I’ve been led to your company. I need you to come fog our home.” I went and fogged it and the tests came back. They were good. I didn’t think much of it. About three weeks later, she called and she said, “Mike, I told you so.” I was like, “You told me what?” She said, “My daughter is well. The rash is gone.” She said, “I need you to go see my doctor.” Again, I was taken aback. No, I don’t want to go see a doctor. She said, “No, this needs to be out there.” This customer actually paid for the doctor appointment down in Provo.

I met her down there and I introduced the—the healthcare practitioner came in and this customer said, “This is Mike Adams. He owns Pure Maintenance. I paid for a half-hour of your time, doctor. Mike, tell her what you do.” It was that simple and that weird. I started to explain what we do and the doctor actually started—like you mentioned, she started to tear up. She said, “This is unbelievable.” I said, “What? What’s unbelievable?” She said, “Mike, if this really works…” She said, “I can’t tell you how many people I’ve had to tell them to leave their home. Just leave. Leave everything behind. Start over.” She said I could have saved all of those a lot of heartache. That same practitioner and her partner have been sending us work for about 12 years now.

Dr. Pompa:
I had a gentleman who couldn’t bring his stuff into his home. He was that reactive. After Pure Maintenance did it, if you will, he was able to actually bring that stuff in his home. I mean, it is a godsend. How you ended up from that to this is I think absolutely remarkable. Changing lives now on a much bigger level honestly.

Mike:
The growth of it has just been a miracle as well. You say, what, 28 months ago, we had nine licensees. Just a little over two years ago, nine licensees and now we have 141 licensees throughout the country. It just grew.

Dr. Pompa:
I know some of your people even drove a few hours for people which was fantastic. You’re based right out of your good old Utah.

Mike:
The mold capital of the world, Utah.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, but Florida I would say is the mold capital.

Mike:
Actually, we have 17 licenses in Florida.

Dr. Pompa:
Thank God. Yeah, because when I go there, it’s just one bad mold situation after another. It’s a great story. It really is. How it came to be. I really believe it’s a godsend because the people that are so sensitive and I said this—let me tell my story. I believe in it so strong. I was like, look, I just want my house treated because I’m sensitive. I mean, certain strains of mold make me sick. My children as well. At least, two of my children. You treated my home. It was amazing. There was no residue like you said. I had one area of concern but it went into there. No problem at all. All perfect. I couldn’t believe how dense the fog was. It was pretty amazing watching the process. The simplicity of the process.

I do all that and I don’t know, is it a month later or two months later? Anyway, okay. I have a water burst. My basement floods. I mean, unbelievable. I literally called Mike and I said, “Do you have a remediation guy?” He said, “Well, use this guy.” Which I did, and then Mike is such a blessing, they came out and retreated after just to make sure that nothing—it was good. I just so appreciate that but it tells you how your heart is, so thank you.

Mike:
Maybe I should throw this in. We here in Utah do this and we encourage all of our licensees. As far as I know, they all do this but we carry a one-year guarantee on this. That we’ll come back anytime over the next year, retest to make sure you’re okay. If you have any questions. The way we teach our licensees is that, testing has its own inherent flaws to it. Our best judge of whether we did a successful treatment or not is, is the healthcare practitioner and the patient happy with it? Are they seeing good results? If not, we’re going to go retreat it until they do feel better.

Dr. Pompa:
I have to say, my son, Daniel who’s probably the most sensitive of all—there was always suspect of this one wall. I could smell something. We never found mold. It never tested for mold but you all did a before and after air sample anyway. Anyway, I never smelled that again, so whatever it was, the smell disappeared. My son said, “Dad, my deep sleep has changed dramatically.” I don’t know what it was. We never found out what it was but it changed that. I was going to pull up a picture of just how dense it was. Hang on, one second.

Mike:
Sometimes it’s the cumulative effect of a bunch of different areas in a home. Whether it be mold in the window sills or in the bathrooms or in the sink drains or wherever. Sometimes it’s just the—like I say, the cumulative effect.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. I think that your philosophy of, you treat the whole home. One of the things you did—again, you measured my mold levels and they’re within normal range. I mean, every house has a certain level of mold. Even still, it still dropped it dramatically before and after. I was looking for the picture of Jeremy who did our treatment. Amazing guy by the way. He sent me some pictures of just the density of the fog and how it was penetrating. Anyway, I was looking for it. I should have pulled it up ahead of time.

Mike:
Yeah. Like I say, it’s hard to see your hand in front of your face sometimes. It’s so thick.

Dr. Pompa:
Again, the amazing part about it is not one film, not one residue. You would never know. When I came back in the house, which was probably, I don’t know, maybe four or five hours later, it smelled like vinegar frankly. At least, that’s what I thought it smelled like. I opened up the windows, it dissipated. No problem at all. All of my very chemically-sensitive people did amazing with the treatment. Not one problem. I want to put out one of the things that’s important is that many people, like you said, will have a place treated. They forget the most important place of all that’s making them sick and that’s their HVAC system. The mold is throughout the ductwork.

Those companies come in and if they spray it, it doesn’t work, number one. Number two, it’s toxic as heck. That’s part of the treatment as well is you push this stuff through the HVAC. Again, oftentimes where mold is, is where they have gaps like where it’s running in the attic or behind the walls because condensation—cold air makes condensation and molds outside of those you’d never know it but your treatment is actually getting those areas behind where the HVAC ducts run.

Mike:
Right, yeah. We see that a lot in—we see it everywhere but particularly in high humidity areas where they’re running those air conditioners hard, sometimes 24 hours a day. Those air conditioning coils are soaking wet, just full of mold.

Dr. Pompa:
One of the things I always tell people is, always keep your fan always on especially in this humid condition because it keeps it dry. If it stops, mold forms. Yeah, just like that. No, I mean, you have to treat everything. Every crack, every cranny, everything, everything in the house. The other thing too is that, oftentimes, the thing that makes people sick is the soft surfaces because of the biotoxin. Not the mold spore. It will penetrate into couches, et cetera. Your product gets in there, correct?

Mike:
Yeah, yeah. Absolutely. We’ve done some crazy—we’ve tested where we put the indicator strip in an envelope, put the envelope in a file cabinet, close the file cabinet drawer, fog that room, and then, two hours later, we take the indicator strip out which turns black if it has the right concentration of [00:23:02] on it. Sure enough, that indicator strip in the envelope, in the file cabinet, had turned black.

Dr. Pompa:
Wow.

Mike:
It’s extremely penetrating. The real secret is two things. One, with our equipment, we can break it down to tiny, tiny particles. Somewhere in the range of 7.5-micron particles.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s described as a nano particle at that point.

Mike:
Yeah, absolutely. Couple that with the knowledge that it’s the vapor coming off of that particle that’s actually doing the work. Between that vapor off of the particle and then that, like I say, the positive pressure in that room or in that environment, we can get just about—we can get anywhere a mold or spore can get, we could get.

Dr. Pompa:
If you’re someone who has brain fog, weird anxiety, weird symptoms, gained weight suddenly, can’t lose weight, can’t sleep, depression. I mean, you’re not hormonally right, mold could be your problem. Obviously, my detox, I’ve been doing this detox, Mike, for many years. However, the problem with mold is this remediation side. It’s one of the reasons myself and my doctors hate and despise mold because either people financially can’t move, they can’t do the remediation, and we won’t get them well until we solve the upstream problem. I have something I teach called my 5 R’s. R number one is removing the source and we despise mold because the source is so hard to remove.

I’ll tell you this is a godsend because we’re able to finally inexpensively deal with an upstream root. Now, granted, after we get—when the home becomes safe then we have to get it out of your cells. It’s funny because the process is very similar. How it works and how we pull it away from the body and the bowel complex. The positive, negative reaction pulls it in. We’re doing the same thing in the body that you’re doing in the house.

Mike:
Yeah. I’ve had a number of doctors tell me that, make that exact same analogy, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. We’re basically taking advantage of yeah, the negative charge and utilizing the positive charge. Anyway, again, there’s a number here. You can contact that number and they will direct you to the closest licensee of Pure Maintenance in the country. Tell them you saw it on Cell TV and they’re going to take extremely good care of you and you’ll see that. Mike, thank you so much for coming on our show.

Mike:
Thank you. I appreciate it.

Dr. Pompa:
Thank you for discovering this, honestly. You have been a blessing to so many of us already so after this show it’s going to be thousands more. Thanks for coming on.

Mike:
Okay. Thank you, Dr. Pompa.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re welcome, Mike.

Ashley:
Well, that’s it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today's episode. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10:00 AM 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.

347: Electron Deficiency Syndrome: How to Charge the Human Battery

Today we're talking about Electron Deficiency and how it may be contributing to not functioning optimally. Our guest today is Spencer Feldman, who you may remember from Episode 269 where he talked about outsmarting our cells. Today he is here to discuss the science behind grounding , how we can bring the benefits of it right into the cell with a device that I've tested myself. This could be a game changer in your health. We always expect some “mad scientist” health breakthroughs when Spencer joins me on the show, and today is no different.

More about Spencer Feldman:

Spencer Feldman has been formulating and manufacturing detoxification products for two decades. Awarded two US patents, his suppository versions of chelation therapy, liver/gallbladder flushes, and coffee enemas have helped tens of thousands of people improve their health.

Show notes:
**The electron machine discussed in this episode is contraindicated for medical implants, stents, kidney disease, pregnancy or history of stroke. In some houses (typically older ones) the ground may be insufficient, and this device may interfere or damage electronics on same outlet ,breaker line or room**

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Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, wow! Wait ‘til you see this episode. Okay, the science might blow you away. Hang on to it because this is a topic—I know most of you watching and listening to this have heard of it, grounding, right? We bring up some really critical truths you have to know about grounding. We bring it into the cell. That’s why it’s Cellular Healing TV, but this is about a device that I decided to test. If this actually works, this could be a game changer in everybody listening and watching, yes, our health.

Stay tuned for an episode I think is going to blow you away. Get a notebook and pen ready. There’s so many gems in here about oxalates, lectins, all these topics that you’ve heard a lot about and how electrons—and how we can increase our electrons, and electron deficiency could be why we are not functioning the way God intended. Grounding, I’ll just say this right now. It’s not the answer that we think. You need something more than that if you truly have an electron deficiency. Stay tuned for this episode on CellTV.

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith, and today we welcome a repeat guest. His name is Spencer Feldman, and he has been formulating and manufacturing detoxification products for two decades, awarded two US patents. Some of his products that we love, his suppository versions of chelation therapy, liver-gall bladder flushes, and coffee enemas have helped tens of thousands of people improve their health. You can check out Episode 269 to learn more about Spencer’s amazing research and the really helpful products that we all love, but today he is here to share some of his latest research. I will let you two take it from here as this is going to be a really interesting episode. I cannot wait to hear all about this, so welcome Dr. Pompa and Spencer Feldman.

Dr. Pompa:
Awesome! Yeah, thanks for being back, Spence. You’re a wealth of knowledge, man. You and I resonate. We come from the same place; get upstream to the cause. We also agree. Functional medicine, if you will—I don’t even know what they call it anymore. Alternative medicine has really turned into a lot of expensive testing and pill pushing. Are we really getting to the cause? I’m blessed to train doctors from around the world, and my message is always, look, let’s get back to causative factors, and man, that’s where your nose always is. You were sick like me, and we just resonate on that same point.

Now, today’s topic is a causative factor that I think goes unnoticed. I think it can be shoved in the corner of woo-woo. I think it’s not understood by most. Therefore, not many people really pay attention to it. I think there’s a group over here that does pay attention to this, but there’s a lot of crap out there. I’m just being honest, right? My job is to decipher between the crap and the real thing, but the science around this topic is where I want to start because it’s not crap at all. When we look at why people are sick or why they can’t their health back, this is a big player. Right now, I think, when we mention the word grounding, everybody listening, watching probably has heard that. Okay, now, their understanding of it, their belief of it is probably across the board.

Spencer, welcome, and let’s start right there. What the heck is grounding, man? Let’s bring some sense to this. Then, like always, I want to bring solutions. I’m going to say this. You have a very, very unique solution, folks, that we’re going to get to that I’m presently testing. If it’s what Spencer thinks it is and maybe others, I think this is a really, really cool breakthrough, but we’re going to talk about that. I just baited them, Spence.

All right, man, let’s start with the obvious. What the heck is grounding? Why is this a player? What’s the science?

Spencer:
Got it. Hey, well, first, thanks for having me on. Just to let you know, I’m going to be looking up every once in a while because I’ve got a whole chalkboard full of notes behind me because I couldn’t do all this extemporaneously. Okay, so grounding, yes, you and I are both looking for causal issues. The way I explain this to clients is I would say, if you were dehydrated, kidney problems, lack of exercise, osteoporosis, lack of sunlight, depression, lack of sleep, inflammation and mood stuff, the right answer for this is not drugs or even supplements. The right answer is water and exercise and sunshine and good sleep. All right, we get that.

A lot of people want to sell those things to us in a pill, but as practitioners, the best we can do is to try to figure out from a lifestyle perspective where they might have gone wrong. There’s a lifestyle issue we’ve all got wrong, and it happened very subtly. I’ll tell you what it is. It’s electrons. Now, electrons come off the sun. They travel to earth on the solar wind. They hit the atmosphere, and then they come down to the earth via lightening. The entire earth has a reservoir of electrons. For as many years or eons as life has been on this planet, just by touching the ground or living in a tree that touches the ground or wherever you are, as long as you’re not in mid-air, you are continually getting this source of electrons, and so our biology evolved assuming a continual free source of plentiful electrons to do what it needed to do.

Then comes an interesting invention. It’s rubber and we get shoes. Now, this is good because hookworm and soil-based worms affect some 800 million people on the planet, a lot of kids. It was huge in the South for a long time. Having something that protects your feet from these parasites was great, but we paid a price for it. We electrically insulated ourselves from the ground. Now, we also wear synthetic clothes, and we walk around on carpets.

Every substance has an ability to hold or let go of electrons. Two different substances, you rub them together. The electrons will go from one to the other. One will have a stronger affinity for it. Human skin has a very low affinity for electrons. You rub almost anything against skin, and it’ll lose electrons. Now, that’s I’m sure a benefit evolutionarily—in an evolutionary way. In a free electron system, it means we can flow very easily. In an electron deficient system, it means that the moment someone starts wearing shoes and moves around in their nylon clothing and they’re rubbing—their clothes are rubbing against them, and they’re walking on their carpet. They’re continually bleeding electrons out.

Now, we’re supposed to get electrons in our body in three main ways: through our skin, mostly our feet, through the air we breathe, and the food we eat, and we’ll talk about those last two later. Let’s talk about through the skin. What I believe happens is the electrons go through the feet and enter the meridians and then go to the internal organs. I believe the meridians are a transport network for electrons, that the Chi in many ways is electrons. When we’re walking barefoot on the ground, the electrons go through our feet. They feed our meridians. They feed our organ. The body’s happy. When we don’t make contact with the earth, then our electrons are bled out of our organs through the same channels, the same meridians that are meant to feed them.

The other issue is, the higher you are away from the earth, the lower the voltage. This is why I think people on the second floor in two-story homes have a much higher risk of heart attack and strokes. As an example, for every 100 feet, you are above the surface of the earth. Now that doesn’t mean on a mountain 100 feet high. You’re still on the earth. For every 100 feet separated from the earth or insulated from the earth—sorry, for every foot above the earth, it’s 100 volt drop. One foot above the earth, it’s 100 volts. Now, I grew up in New York City in the 8th Floor, and each floor is 10 feet so 8 feet—8 floors, 10 feet, that’s 80 feet times 100 volt per foot. I was living at 8,000 volts positive. That meant that just in my apartment growing up there was a force because voltage is force of 8,000 volts leaving my body at all times as opposed to the…

Dr. Pompa:
Technically, if you live—most homes, most, not all, have a basement, so you’re one floor. You’re ten feet above, even in a regular home just because you’re…

Spencer:
There you go. Right off the bat, if you’re 10 feet, now that’s 10 times 100. There you go. You’re 1,000 volts positive. Now, I had a carpet on my floor, and every once in a while when I’d walk across the carpet, if I touched the doorknob, if it was a dry enough day, I’d get a shock. A shock from a doorknob is a minimum of 7,000 volts relative. That meant I grew up in approximately a 15,000 volts positive field. That meant that there was 8,000 volts positive from being up high and 7,000 volts positive from walking on a carpet. Just keep in mind positive means the absence of. It’s a little tricky in electronics.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, electron’s a negative so yeah.

Spencer:
Right, so there was a 15,000 volt deficit at minimum for me growing up, and I was a sickly kid. Then I find out about grounding or earthing. Wow! This is great. This is smart. I run grounding rods through my house and over my bed and at my workspace, and it’s subtle. It’s nice. It’s okay. I didn’t get any of the really amazing results I heard in the book, but maybe I didn’t have a huge issue anymore. I don’t know.

I thought, if some is good, well, what would happen if I got more? I’m thinking, if I grew up at 15,000 volts positive, touching the earth takes me to neutral. That takes me to zero. I might need 15,000 negative to replenish myself. I built a machine that would generate 15, 20—I actually got it up to 30,000, 35,000 volts negative, 35,000 volts of electrons being pushed into my body, and all of these interesting things happened. What I’d like to talk about first would be four symptoms.

What I started doing is—all these things happen, and I’ll tell you what they were. I went into the literature. Do electrons affect antioxidants? How do they affect cell signaling in bacteria models? What happens with cell growth? I’m going to talk about four ways and I’m sure there’s more that electron deficiency syndrome, as I would call it—I think other people have used that phrase, four things that it can cause. That would be crystallizations in the body, free radical activity out of control, opportunistic infections, and unregulated cell growth.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, okay, so this is a great place to start, and you set it up perfectly, by the way. Again, I think that we all recognize the effects of grounding and the need for it because of modern living. Wearing rubber shoes, living in the homes, as you just pointed out, that all keeps us from this thing that the earth gives us, and making it very simple, it’s this electron thing that, when we lack electrons, it starts to affect how our cells communicate. It affects, obviously, these four things that we’re going to dissect here. Then I think you’re going to answer the question that all of us watching and listening to this would have. How do I know that this is affecting me, meaning I don’t have an electron microscope? I don’t have a way of looking necessarily at my electron status. What are some of these things that we can look at and say, okay, this, I have that. I’m being affected that way and then being able to increase our own grounding.

I mean, after the show, hopefully, everyone starts walking around and grounding more. That’s the next question that we’re going to get into, those things that people can look at.

Can’t we just start walking around outside in our bare feet more? Can’t we just go online? They sell the grounding plates. Would that help or even the grounding that we plug our beds in? They have grounding mats. They have grounding sheets. Before we get to those things, are those things even effective enough, Spencer, (obviously, no, because you did all that), but why?

Spencer:
Let’s say a man is going through the desert, and he’s really dehydrated. The rescue team grabs him. Are they going to give him a glass of water? They’re going to give him an IV. They’re going to hydrate this guy right now aggressively to try to save his life.

Dr. Pompa:
He could die, yeah, exactly.

Spencer:
Exactly, so sometimes you need something a little bit more aggressive if the damage has been known. If somebody had spent their life bare foot on the ground their whole life, no, they would never need this thing. Although it does have some interesting effects for other purposes, they wouldn’t “need” it. Imagine you’ve got a sponge, and it’s been left out in the sun or somebody baked it in an oven. You take the sponge out, and you wipe it over a wet surface. It’s not going to absorb any water. It’s been so changed that water alone will not rehydrate it. It’s probably going to have to go in a pressure vessel and push water into it, something to overcome the effect that’s happened. The lack of electrons at such a great level, at thousands of volts in human tissue changes our tissue in a way that I don’t believe grounding can reverse. I think you need to go in—and I think the first thing we could talk about, crystals, will give a perfect explanation as to why that’s the case.

Dr. Pompa:
You experience that. I mean, you tried all those things. You’ve said you were the master of those things, and it wasn’t working. Okay, I think your analogy was really good. Okay, so go to the crystals. This is one of the effects that the lack of electrons will have on our body, and then you’ll show us what some of those outward effects would be.

Spencer:
Okay, so if you have a cellphone, you know that you shouldn’t—let’s talk about a car battery. Car batteries are designed to be dropped down a little bit when the car starts and then recharge by the alternator, and if you only let it go down a little bit and then fully recharge it, that battery will last its full lifetime. The worst thing you can do for the car battery is to let it drain down too low and stay there for a while. The reason is because all batteries are on a constant state of crystalizing. In the case of a car battery, it’s lead sulfate crystalizing. The sulfur and the sulfuric acid bonds with the lead plate making lead sulfate. As long as the battery doesn’t get too low, meaning it will only have soft, mild crystals, and the charge goes back up fully, those crystals dissolve as much as they’re going to. The battery last a long time.

However, if you let the charge get low enough and stay low enough long enough, it will no longer recharge back to 100%. There are crystals in there that have become permanent. Now, you can do something. You can actually take a device on it that will pulse electricity into the lead acid battery to shatter the crystals. Then you can on some cases, in many cases if it’s not completely gone, recover a degree of that battery, and the same thing happens for us.

Dr. Pompa:
You mean you’re giving it the shock. They put those generators on and refurbish them. Is that what that does, meaning it’s putting in a [00:16:50] of electricity?

Spencer:
Right, if you take your battery and just recharge it—let’s say you take a battery, and you put it on a charger. That will bring it up, but it won’t break up the crystals. If you want to break the crystals, you have to do something different, and I’ll explain what that does in a minute. Now, humans, every cell in our body is like a little battery, and there are a couple of other things that will cause us to crystalize. One is lack of electricity. We walk around ungrounded for years and years, insulated in high-rise buildings, whatever you’re doing. Crystals form that, even if you go and say, well, I went to the park—I walked barefoot. I went for a swim in the ocean. It’s not enough. The crystals are there now. We have the same issue in terms of how we generate crystals which is, if we don’t get enough electrons, additionally, if we rehydrate, the crystal forming elements in the body become more saturated and come out [00:17:51] solution.

Then there’s also dietary precursors that will do it. There are at least 17 crystal—types of crystals that can form in the human body. I want to talk about one of the nastier ones, oxalates. Now, oxalates are formed in plants to stiffen the tissue of the plants, to sequester or store minerals, and also to defend against the grazing. It makes the animal that eats them get sick. They put oxalates into their tissue, so animals won’t them as much. We are exposed to oxalates from several sources. This is one of the crystals that form in the human body, and there’s many. We make a small amount in the Krebs cycle, so there’s no getting around some will be there. Also, there are some foods that we think are healthy: spinach, almonds, soy, chocolate, chia seeds, very high in oxalates, and certain types of kale, actually, most kales.

We think that we’re—spinach is an interesting one, Dr. Pompa. Back in the turn of the last century, there’s a lot of malnutrition, so they came up with a cartoon to get kids to eat spinach, Popeye. Spinach has a lot of nutrients, but the nutrients are unavailable because they’re locked up in oxalates. It’s incredibly high in oxalates, so eating spinach is actually a very—for all the good it has, it’s so high in oxalates. I don’t think it’s personally worth it. The old school way—so in the old days you would boil spinach and toss the water because the oxalates—about a third of them will come out in the water. They’re soluble. Now we put raw spinach in our salad and think we’re being healthy. In India, they intuitively grasped to cook spinach with cheese because the calcium would bind to the free oxalate and make it less absorbable, but when we toss away the ancient knowledge of how to cook, meaning, hey, put these things together, cook this way, pour out the water, we get issues.

Then the last way, the two other ways we get oxalates, they’re now sprayed with the glyphosates. There’s a patent that says, hey, add oxalates to glyphosate. It becomes more effective, so they’re sprayed directly on our crops and then chemtrails and hat tip to Dr. Klinghardt for figuring this out. The barium and aluminum that’s coming down for the geoengineering they’re doing is landing on our crops, and the crops are responding to these toxic metals by upgrading, upregulating their oxalate production so they can sequester it, which we then eat. Okay, oxalate is basically two carbon dioxide molecules stuck together, and they can take a couple of forms. They can take raphides, which are these very thin needle shapes, and that causes a lot of pain in the tissue, or they can get these big, clumpy rocks, which are what cause kidney stones and such. Oxalates have been associated with autism, fibromyalgia, neurologic conditions, leaky gut, skin problems. It makes candida more aggressive and kidney stones. It’s one of the many crystals that form in the body. I’m picking this one because I think oxalates could use some more air time in our world.

Historically, the way stones were treated was with lime, potash, and soda. These were three alkalizing agents. Lime was created. Lime is burnt seashells, calcium carbonate, seashells or eggshells. Potash, pot-ash, potassium is the ash from burnt plant matter, so that’s potassium carbonate. Then the soda is potash made from sodium rich plants. Not all crystalizing forms in the body will breakdown with alkaline agents like this, and oxalates are among them.

Okay, that’s just the beginning of the whole world of crystallization disorders that happen in humans. I thought, all right, I’m exposed to these oxalates. Even if I cut them out of my diet, I’m still making them, and then there’s all these other crystals. I know that I’ve got them or I suspect that I’ve got them because I have not been barefoot on the ground my whole life. I had let my charged—my battery charge drop, and so I started crystalizing. I said, okay, I don’t think it’s enough to just go and ground or to charge myself. In the same way, a damaged car battery, it’s not enough to recharge it. It won’t hold the charge.

Okay, so the first thing that happened for me is I started—I made this machine, and I put in what eventually became about 20,000 volts negative through my body or into my body. All these things started changing for me. A lot of people think that if you’re in alternative medicine you’re in perfect health. Certainly, you should be in better health, but a lot of people who are in alternative medicine are there because they were failed by the traditional medical model and decided to figure it out for themselves. I had a couple of things that I had had for 15, 20 years, and I’d gotten used to it. I had done something foolish in my 20s. I had eaten a fruitarian diet thinking I’m not harming anybody this way. It’s karma free.

All that fructose created a lot of AGEs, a lot of glycation in products, and I ended up with peripheral neuropathy and peripheral artery disease in my feet. What that meant was my feet were always cold. Even in summer I had to have thick wool socks on, and they were numb or tingling. I couldn’t have anybody touch my feet. It would hurt. Another thing is I always had this little dot on my nose. It wasn’t cancer, but it wasn’t normal, had a lot more vascularization than I would like. It was stable. I’m like, okay, I’ll leave it there.

I started using the machine. I started putting electrons in me at high levels. Within a few nights, I’m like my feet are—no, my feet are getting hot, and so I said, all right, I’m not going to bed with socks on tonight. I’m going to put them by the bedside. If I wake up at 3 in the morning with freezing feet, I’ll put them on, and that was the last time I ever wore socks to bed. I’d been doing it for 20 years.

Dr. Pompa:
How many days bringing all these electrons in via the machine?

Spencer:
It started after about three or four days. Mind you, I was doing a prodigious amount. Because my body was craving it so much, I was doing it six hours a day. Now, when I’m at home, I walk around barefoot, which feels wonderful. Then I got my first foot rub in 20 years because it didn’t hurt. Then my balance got better because I could feel the ground again. The heat came in. The circulation came in about three days with the electrons. The numbness cleared up 95% in about 2 weeks. Then all that was left was just two spots on my big toes that were numb, and that cleared up about a week later.

Then I looked in the mirror. I’m like what’s that little dry spot on my nose? That’s weird. It doesn’t look like a scab, and I don’t remember poking myself in the garden. Anyway, a couple of days later, it dries off, and it comes off. I realize that that’s where that little precancerous growth was. It had dried up, fallen off. My body had ejected it out. I thought, wow, if I was able to do that with one that I can see, is this doing just the same thing in places I can’t see?

Okay, so that was the first thing, and then something very crazy happened to me. I started eating a different kind of—a friend introduced me to chia seeds. I said, oh, wow, these are tasty. Okay, they’ve got this great nutritional profile, so I started making a breakfast with chia seeds, almonds, cardamom, dates, and soaked sesame seeds.

Dr. Pompa:
Sounds good.

Spencer:
Yeah, it does, and they’re all way at the top level of oxalates. I had created a toxic oxalate perfect storm for myself. About a week or two later—and mind you, I’m also paleo, so I don’t do any grains. I wasn’t getting phytic acid, which is another thing that can help deal with stones. A week later, my machine malfunctions. It was a prototype, and I had it on for six hours straight. It started to go into an auto protect mode where it would turn off and on and off and on and pulse. I said, okay, I’m going to have to fix that because I want people to be able use it 24/7 if they want.

The next morning, there was incredible amounts of debris in my urine. It was a mess. It looked like a little bit of blood. I’m like, wow, that’s—I don’t feel pain from anywhere. Nothing hurts, but that’s probably not good. Let’s stop everything I’m doing and see what that was, okay, but no symptoms. I stopped everything including the machine. The next day, I’m walking somewhere. I’m in the kitchen. All of sudden, I’m like, oh, oh, my God, what—and I hit the ground. I am in crazy pain.

I’m like, oh, my God. I talked to my partner. I’m like, “I need to go to the hospital.” It’s 11 o’clock at night. I’m like, “Get me to the hospital. This isn’t right.” We get there. They rush me right in because I’m moaning in agony. I’m like, “Is this the kidney stone?” They’re like, “Yeah, this looks like a kidney stone.”

I don’t like taking drugs. They’re like, “Well, we have to give you an IV to hydrate you.” I’m like, “Fine.” They’re like, “Do you want pain killers?” I’m like, “No, it’ll pass, right?” They’re like, “Yeah.” I’m like, “Okay.” They’re like, “What’s your pain level at?” I’m like, “Nine.” Never been in that much pain.

Then I start puking. I’m like, “I don’t feel nauseous. Why am I puking?” They’re like, “Well, extreme pain can make you vomit.” I’m like, “Oh, okay.” Anyway, I’m there. I’m there, and then, all of a sudden, ten, it hits me. I’m just like, “Okay, pain killers, give me them. I’ll take the narcotic right now. Go for it. That’s too much.”

I take that. Then, finally, the stone moves a little bit, and I’m like, “Okay, I think I can go home.” They want to do a CAT scan. I’m like, “Don’t do a CAT scan. I don’t want X-rays. Give me an ultrasound.” They’re looking. “Okay, that was the last stone. You’re done.”

I go home. Next day, stone, I get another stone. I’m like, oh, God, all right, it’s not as bad as the first one, so I’m not going to go the hospital yet. I still have some painkillers. Let me see if I can wait this out. Twenty hours on my hands and knees. After the 20th hour, I’m like, okay, that’s it. I’m out of reserve. I’m not that much of a badass. I can’t take anymore.

What about the machine? I said you know what? That stuff that came out of me, that was from the—that was a kidney stone. The electrons blew up a kidney stone. The only reason I got the second and third is because I stopped the electrons. You know what? I’m going to take a gamble here. I’m going to put it on the line. I’m going to put it right over where the pain is. I’m going to see what happens.

I put over where the pain is. Boom! I’m out, and I’m asleep in a few minutes. It’s the first sleep I’ve had in all these hours. I wake up in 20 minutes, and I’m like, oh, my God, the pain’s gone. It was gone, so now I’m in love with this machine. It saved me from—from your phrase, I’m in love with electrons because electrons saved me from the most horrific pain I’ve ever been in. When you’re in that kind of pain, Dr. Pompa, the only thing that I was able to hang on to my sanity with was, at least when this is done, I’m going to figure it out so other people can avoid this.

The way it happened is perfect storm of oxalates in my breakfast, the first stone that I blew up without knowing it, the second one that I experienced. It was basically a control of [N-of-1], right? I got to go through three stones. One I knocked out. One I went to the hospital for. Then third I knocked out. I have a great love of this thing. I got it to a couple of other people.

I got one person with Lyme disease to get voltage. He called me up the next day, and he’s taking off his jacket in the supermarket. People with Lyme, they’re freezing cold all the time. He’s like, “I’m sweating.” I’m like, “Oh, your body temperature came back.” I’m like, “Look at your fingertips. Are they still white?” He’s like, “No, they’re bright red.” I’m like, “Thumbs up,” right?

Then I had a woman with a very serious disease, and she started using it. All of a sudden, she’s sending me pictures and emails of things coming out of her in the toilet. At first it was like mucous sheets, and then it was what looked like liver flukes. Then there were some things she said that, when they came out of the toilet, they were still alive. She fished one out with her—it had wrapped around a thing or whatever she got it with.

I invite you to go to YouTube and type in the words electricity and worms. What you’re going to find are videos of people who go fishing and want fresh worms, so they bring a car battery. They drive probes into the ground from the battery, and the electricity drives the worms out. It turns out worms hate electricity. Some people would say, “Oh, I don’t want to see these things coming out alive. That’s horrible.” I’m like, “Yeah, but you have to understand. When you’ve got something that’s dug way up into the tissue, if you kill it, it’ll just stay there and rot and have to be encased, or encysted, or digested. It’s much better if on its own it crawls out and leaves.”

Dr. Pompa:
It’s true. When you kill them too, you make a lot of waste that people’s detox pathway, lymph is already challenged, and often times, you make it more challenging. Okay, so just in review, one way is, with this lack of electrons, it affects our increase in these crystals, right? Of course, you add that to the oxalates that we’re already exposed to in higher amounts. It makes even more crystals, right? Your story actually proved that. Arguably, you’d be able to deal with the oxalates even in the diet if you had enough electrons. Am I making the right assessment?

Spencer:
There may be outliers of people who produce a lot of oxalates internally, have a huge amount in the diet, and don’t make a lot of the elements that the body makes to naturally break down oxalates, but I think for most of us that wouldn’t be the case.

Dr. Pompa:
The American Indians walking around always grounding, etc., I mean, they could obviously go high – way higher oxalates without an issue than we would today.

Spencer:
Yes.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, okay, so that’s a factor. I know that electrons affect our cell membrane potentials, the mitochondrial membrane, the outer membrane which, therefore, is going to create a lot of different problems, even an increase of pathogens in the cell, intracellular, which is a whole ‘nother—especially when you’re dealing with viruses. There’s a protection with the cell membrane. It’s a part of what I teach. That has to be part of this.

Spencer:
Yeah, let me just finish off this one thought, and we can jump into cell membranes. The other issue with not killing the parasites is every parasite within in it has littler parasites, right?

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, right, yeah.

Spencer:
A tick has Bartonella, so if you keep it intact, you may avoid that. A couple of dietary things, obviously, avoid the oxalates. You can also use Epsom salts in a bath, potassium citrate. Now the reason I would use Epsom salts in a bath is because magnesium makes oxalates 567 times—magnesium oxalate is 567 times more soluble than calcium oxalate. If there is calcium oxalate stones and magnesium gets to them, it can dissolve, make them dissolve.

Dr. Pompa:
You’re saying there’s different types of Epsom salt?

Spencer:
What I’m saying is don’t take—all right, there’s a thing called an oxalate dump. If somebody stops taking oxalates cold turkey, then the body can suddenly push a lot of oxalates out, and they can actually create temporary symptoms. They could even give themselves a kidney stone from doing this, so you have to be mindful. If you just go cold turkey off the oxalates—let me tell you how to do it safely. Don’t take magnesium orally because that’ll make the oxalates more absorbable through the gut, but take it through the skin as magnesium sulfate, as Epsom salt baths. The magnesium will get to the already made oxalates in the tissue rather than bring it across the intestinal wall. It can help break that down and potassium citrate because the citrate and the sulfate or the magnesium sulfate both compete with the receptors and transporters for the oxalates, so we can outcompete them. The other thing is if you are using electrons to blast them up, and then, as they break into smaller pieces, the things you’re taking to dissolve them have an exponentially larger surface area.

There’s one last thing I want to talk about crystals before we finish. If you look at oxalates, there are two carbon dioxide molecules stuck together. We know from science that, if you put voltage at oxalate crystals, it’ll actually divide back into carbon dioxide, so there’s two ways that voltage can help with crystals and oxalate in particular. One is it can split the carbon-carbon bond to render it back into carbon dioxide and exhale it. The second is something—did we mention the piezoelectric effect yet?

Dr. Pompa:
No.

Spencer:
Okay, there’s something in physics called the piezoelectric effect. It says that, if you squeeze a crystal, if you stress a crystal, electricity comes out, but that can go in reverse. If you put electricity into a crystal, it becomes stressed. The way in which the voltage spikes of the machines that recover the car batteries, that my machine inadvertently did works is the voltage spikes are creating a reverse piezoelectric effect to shatter crystals. What I did with the unit is I said, okay, not only do I want to be able to run this 24/7, but I also want to intentionally pulse it. I put a spark gap pulsing unit in there. You have the option to pulse it to give that reverse piezoelectric effect to crystals that are there. Okay, let’s go to cell membranes.

Dr. Pompa:
Real fast, so the Epsom salt bath you’re saying even with the machine will help. Instead of taking magnesium orally, which could make us absorb more oxalates, by doing Epsom salt baths, as we lower our oxalates, it’s a help with the machine, with the dietary lowering. That’s the point, though, correct?

Spencer:
With or without the machine, if you’re doing an oxalate dump, Epsom salt and potassium citrate.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, got it.

Spencer:
If you had the ability to add electrons to that at the same time and stay very well hydrated, more power to you.

Dr. Pompa:
Where do we get the potassium citrate? Everyone can get Epsom salts anywhere.

Spencer:
Oh, you can get that in bulk. It’s so cheap. I get mine from…

Dr. Pompa:
All right, just Epsom salt, you can find it in most stores.

Spencer:
Yeah, you can get it from Bulk Supplements on Amazon by the kilo. At the end, you just do—I use a quarter a teaspoon. I’m not concerned. I know there’s some spooky—some concerns about too much potassium. That’s because one woman died from potassium years ago who was already—had terrible kidneys. The idea that 100 mg—that supplements can only be 99 mg of potassium basically makes a banana illegal. It’s absurd.

Dr. Pompa:
The Epsom salt bath with just some oral potassium citrate, very simple, nothing magical, quarter teaspoon if you get a powder on average, okay, got it. All right, clarify, now let’s talk about membrane.

Spencer:
Okay, membrane, so we know from the great work of Dr. Tennant that there is a voltage of differential required at cells. When the cell voltage drops, I think it’s typically below 30 for most—prostate cells tend to have low voltage, but for most cells, when it drops below 30, a normal cell that can—a normal cell can be made cancerous by dropping its voltage below 30. Cancer cells have low voltage. You can take a normal cell. Turn it cancerous with low voltage. That’s actually the on switch for replication is low voltage, but you could take a cancer cell and make it stop dividing, stop replicating by raising its voltage.

That’s what I think was going on with this little growth I had on my nose is I raised my voltage enough that the unregulated cell growth parts in me just got ejected. The average person at 50 is walking around with micro tumors in their prostate and colon and lungs and breasts, and as long as these things don’t get the growth signal, they don’t cause any problems. Voltage plays an enormous role in cell differentiation and healing and repair but also unwanted cell growth.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, yeah, so by raising the electrons, we’re raising the membrane potentials, therefore protecting the cell from being a bad cell under 30, to your point, which can lead to cancer and other problems, and even increases your chances of pathogens affecting the cell. Let me ask you this. With the device, how can we test what’s happening to our membrane potentials and, therefore, our general health, I mean, because this is a big deal? Membrane potentials is how our cells even generate ATP cell energy and how good we feel, all that is membrane potential.

Spencer:
Yeah, and the other thing is in order to—it’s not enough just to raise the cell membrane potential. We have to de-crystalize the cell so it can keep it. If there’s crystals, not only can’t we get the voltage up in a cell, but whatever voltage we do go up, it won’t stay there as long. It’s just like a car battery.

Dr. Pompa:
The crystals form in the membrane. Now we’re back to the battery conversation as the example. The battery dies. You have all these crystals. You can charge it up, but it won’t stay charged until we break down the crystals. These crystals form in the membranes, and that’s what you’re saying. Am I right?

Spencer:
I don’t know if they’re in the membranes, but they’re in the tissue. I think one way that we could test would be an oxalate dump. We could take someone’s urine afterwards, spin it in a centrifuge and look at under a microscope, and see what comes out of them.

Dr. Pompa:
If they’re in the tissues, these crystals, then how are they affecting the cells so dramatically if they’re not in the cell and in the membrane?

Spencer:
I can’t prove it. We know that they’re in the tissues because we can see that on my microscopic tissue analysis. We can see the raphides in the tissue itself. I believe that they’re in the cell membrane and damaging the cell membrane’s capacity to charge. I can’t prove it. It’s just what I think is happening.

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, all right, so by utilizing the electrons, increasing the electrons via the machine, what’s happening when we do that in the membrane?

Spencer:
If I understand correctly, the reverse piezoelectric effect will take a crystal and stretch it to the point where it breaks into pieces. Now, if you break oxalate into pieces, it’s carbon dioxide in exhale, but there’s also urates and calcium phosphates. I mean, there’s a jillion types of stones that human beings can get. If we harness that effect, then we should be de-crystalizing the tissue.

Not all crystals are bad. Bones are crystals of apatite, hydroxyapatite and others, [00:43:09]. Also, DNA and cell membranes and connective tissue are liquid crystals, so these are crystals that aren’t solid per se. Liquid crystals are what everyone’s watching this video on right now. Their screen is an LCD display. We know that the liquid crystal aspect of us is highly responsive to electric fields because that’s what’s allowing the colors and the shapes to form on a screen we’re watching this on. I think that the electrons are having a very powerful effect at a number of different levels. We have the breaking of large crystals. We have the inhibition of new crystals forming.

Let’s think of it this way. If I take a balloon and rub it on my arm, it’ll stick to the wall. The reason it does is because the balloon and the wall are arguing over who gets to hang onto the electrons, and it falls down. Now, if you were to take that balloon and instead of a wall you put it in the tube, there’s more surface area. It’s going to get stuck more. Now, you shrink that balloon and that tube down to capillary size. Capillaries are 85% of our blood flow. It’s mostly capillary and only 15% artery and vein. As you shrink down in size microscopically, the smaller you go the more exponentially powerful electrostatic effects become.

Now, if you look at blood inside of a capillary, you won’t see it move sometimes. You’ll see it gets stuck, or wiggle, or vibrate, and it finally goes through. I believe part of what’s going on is the lack of electrons are causing the red blood cells to stick at the capillary level. They don’t have enough electrical force to move through.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, this is an interesting thought. There’s a device called BEMER. I have one. I love it. It’s German technology. They use a sine wave. It’s an electromagnetic field is what it is, to your point, and it does work. It increases capillary circulation. I mean, it really does. They’re using a sine wave, again, which is electromagnetic field to do so.

You can see before and after ultrasounds on capillaries and watch the blood just speed right up through a capillary. Clinically, we can see a difference in people in this capillary circulation bringing in nutrients, bringing out toxins. That’s the point you’re making is these fields, electromagnetic fields, increase this flow, the circulation.

Spencer:
Right, and let me get—let me talk about the BEMER and devices like that and talk about the difference between voltage and current. If you have two—if you have a water tank and 20 feet high full of water and you drill a small hole through it, the amount of water that comes through is the current. The force with which it comes through is the voltage, right? There are you could roughly say three types of machines that are out there electrically. There are things that have currents. This would be your TENS unit, or the SCENAR device, or anything that passes electricity from Point A to Point B. It doesn’t raise the amount of electrons in your body. It passes them…

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it works for what’s it doing, but it’s not raising electrons. I get that.

Spencer:
Right, it’s passing them through, and every one that goes in goes out the other way. Then there’s radiating devices like the BEMER or a PEMF, and I love PEMF. I’ve got a PEMF.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, me too, I love it too.

Spencer:
We don’t have a PEMF deficiency, right? I don’t have a pulse magnetic field deficiency. To me, a pulse magnetic field, the BEMER, all of these devices, they’re in the drug model because they have an effect, and it’s a great effect. We don’t have a deficiency of—I don’t have a deficiency of electrons going through me as a current, nor do I have a deficiency of pulse magnetic fields. They work. They’re great tools, but they’re not my deficiency. My deficiency is electrons.

Dr. Pompa:
Maybe they would argue that you do have a deficiency of electricity and the energy that it creates, right? Your point I think is that, by offering the actual electron, we’re offering a more lasting energy.

Spencer:
There’s no natural source of pulse electromagnetic fields in the environment. There is the natural source of electrons. What I would say is just understand what each of these is. The BEMER is a supplement. The electrons are food. You have to have food. You may also want a supplement. Before you go and try to figure out what supplement you need, ask yourself are you eating? If you’re eating, you might not need the supplement. Even though the supplement has amazing applications, it’s just where does it come out?

Dr. Pompa:
Okay, good analogy. We’re offering the body these electrons. Okay, how do we utilize a device like this in prove that we increased electrons? If you’re analogy is, okay, great, we both love those devices but they’re not offering electrons, my brain goes, okay, I want to know that I’m offering my body these electrons. How do I know?

Spencer:
Okay, one last thing and we’ll get to that. One of the many things that happened to the body—so remember we talked about the balloon. The essence of all glue, the essence of all adhesives is lack of electrons, so there’s lots of things that don’t have enough electrons that are glue. Lectins, which are another issue, are very positively charged. They glue to us. The crystallization phenomena, you could even call it part of a greater phenomenon, which we call adhesives. There are many adhesives that we create and take in that, if we don’t have the electrons to neutralize them, they’re going to be a challenge.

How do we know that we’re getting electrons? If you have the equipment—I can lend you some of it, and you can see for yourself. You can actually measure the charge on the body. I got a bunch of machines that said they were increasing electrons. No, they weren’t. I was looking at the machine. There was no deflection of the needle. It didn’t do anything. It didn’t add electrons.

Then I’m looking at how the machine works. I’m like, oh, this is current, not voltage. I want voltage. I want more electrons in me, not necessarily a flow of them. I want more of them. You can if you have the right equipment measure the deflection of the electrons building up on your skin. You can see your hair start to stand straight up where the electrons actually trying to leave your body. Because you’ve got so many in there, you’ll actually see it cause that effect. You could look at the zeta potential of the blood under a microscope. You could look at oxalate dumping in the urine. The easiest thing to do is just see how you feel.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, okay, but you can actually—I’m testing the device, folks, just so you know. I said this in the beginning that I’m going to test the device, right? I’m so fascinated by this subject that I wanted to do this show. What you’ll see when you hang at the end of the show is some of my personal experiences and my family’s with the device. Also, Spence, I would love to test if you could give me a device to actually test too. I’m that guy. I love subjective stuff. I’m N1. My children are always N2, 3, 4.

I would like objective findings as well just to see an electron change before and after. How long does it last? I like to run through all of that.

Spencer:
Yeah, I think it’ll be great, and eventually, I’m sure I’ll do it, to do a bunch of pre- and post-[urine A] markers. Go to Great Smokies or go to some of the labs and check my antioxidant levels. Actually, speaking of antioxidants, let’s talk about antioxidants.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you said there was four. I think we got two, but anyways, go ahead.

Spencer:
Yeah, I think we got two more. Where we breathe, we are exposed to free radicals, which mostly are chemicals or compounds missing an electron, and we have antioxidants that will donate an electron to them. What’s not talked about is that, once the antioxidant donates the electron, the Vitamin C, whatever, it itself becomes another free radical. Now, it’s a lesser free radical, but it’s still a free radical. What’s supposed to happen is the antioxidant is supposed to be recharged. It’s supposed to get another electron again and go back into the game. NADPH, for instance, will recycle antioxidants. If we don’t have enough free electrons in our body, then when the antioxidant we eat or make internally interacts with the free radical and neutralizes it and then goes back and says, okay, charge me up again; I’m ready to get back in the fight, and it’s no.

I think it’s much better to have a normal amount of antioxidants in your body and a surplus of electrons so they can keep recycling and going—an antioxidant can operate a million to a billion reactions per second. I’d rather have a normal amount of antioxidants with a huge surplus of electrons to keep them going than constantly taking pills and pills of antioxidants. Have them do their job once and stop.

Dr. Pompa:
On this end, this is a big topic, the antioxidants. We know by taking even too much—too many antioxidants isn’t good. We need reduction. That’s taking antioxidants. We need oxidation for driving immunity and other cellular energy processes. Where does redox molecules fit into this, meaning that your cells use reduction-oxidative molecules that our cells and our mitochondria make for this communication of balancing redox, reduction and oxidation? The old school of taking all these antioxidants, that’s gone. Where does this fit in?

Spencer:
That’s a great question. What I would say is, by and large, people are on the oxidize side of the equation, but indeed, there are studies where you can see people getting sick from antioxidants. What I would say is give the body what it needs, and let it sort it out. It’s smarter than we are.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s what redox people say, right? There’s a product, ASEA. We’ve had people on talk about it, which people—it’s an incredible product for people, and there’s other ones, hydrogen molecule. You’re just throwing in a redox and saying the body decides whether it needs oxidation or reduction, and it can have different needs at different times of the day, for goodness sakes.

Spencer:
Give the body all the electrons it wants, and it’ll be smart enough to know what to do. By the way, I love breathing in Brown’s gas. I’m a big fan of hydrogen.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, hydrogen is basically what you’re saying. I mean, it’s offering the electron. I mean, it’s part of this equation here.

Spencer:
We thought that the hydrogen ion was the world’s smallest antioxidant. It’s the world’s second smallest antioxidant. It’s the electron is the smallest one. For everything that we way about—for a hydrogen’s ability to go everywhere, it’s true, but it’s only doing so my virtue of the electron that it’s hitting. That’s the whole antioxidant thing.

There’s also what I would call opportunistic infections. Most infections, 95% of the infections plus that people get are opportunistic. These are composters that are creating biofilms. It’s a reasonable question to ask. We are not in a sterile environment. No food you eat is sterile. No water you drink is sterile. No air you breathe is sterile. Your blood itself isn’t sterile.

We are living in a soup of microorganisms. Why is it that these opportunistic infections can get into some people and be so hard to kick? We can try to fight them. What makes them think that we’re dinner? I mean, why does candida think that we are something to eat? It should be growing on a landfill. It should be growing in your compost pile, not inside your body.

Dr. Pompa:
When our force fields are down, they will think we’re dead and try to take us over.

Spencer:
Right, so there’s got to be some signal, right? There’s something that they are checking with. They’ve got to have their checklist. They go in. You’re ubiquitous in the environment, and they’re the trigger that says, okay, start eating; start growing. I think that the—what they’re looking for is dead, or diseased, or damaged tissue, right? That’s what infections like. Now, obviously, when any tissue is damaged, broken, there are all sorts of elements that come out.

What’s the difference between a cell that’s operating at 100% and a cell that’s operating at 70%? How do the composting organisms know that that cell is weak and susceptible? I think what it’s doing is it’s sensing the electrical charge. It’s sensing the voltage potential, and when it says, oh, this cell is dropping—because the main difference between a living and a dead cell is the dead cell has no cell membrane, no electrical potential. When we have a low—when our cell membranes are low in terms of voltage from a lack of electrons, I think we’re giving the go signal to all these composters.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I get that. It makes the cell more vulnerable without the—electrons work within the membranes. I mean, electrons are what gives it that voltage potential, if you will, so, therefore, would definitely make it more opportunistic for the pathogen, if you will. Listen, Spencer, you have a board of information, but unfortunately, we’re out of time. I mean, I love this topic. Listen, I’m willing to do even a Part 2, but folks, stay tuned. Even on here, you’re going to get at least a few minutes of my experience with Spencer’s machine here. You’re onto something, Spencer. You really are. You know me. I have to check things out fully.

Spencer:
That’s why I love you.

Dr. Pompa:
This is a big topic, and there’s obviously scientific data all around this topic. My thing is, hey, if the machine works, you’re really on to something here, but I’m going to test it. Stay tuned folks for that, but also, perhaps stay tuned for Part 2. I think what it will do too is it will get my brain going just because I’ll take it from me even into my doctor group and clinically start trying some things with it as well, which will set up a Part 2. Spencer, we could go on, but we will on another show.

Thank you for being on Cellular Healing TV. Fix the cell, get well is my saying. Electrons, it’s a big deal. Thank you for being on the show.

Spencer:
Thanks for having me. Nice seeing you again.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, likewise.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. I hope you enjoyed today’s episode, which was brought to you by 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.

346: Is Your Bed Making You Sick?

Is your mattress making you sick? Leading mattress expert Jason Payne is joining us today to discuss mattresses, and why what you’re sleeping ON can be as important as what you’re eating, what supplements you are taking, and how healthy your lifestyle is. Quality of sleep is an important factor we sometimes overlook when we are trying to get well, and it all starts with the quality of your mattress. I will also share which mattress I sleep on, and why I thinks it’s the best.

More about Jason Payne:

Jason Payne finished his Masters degree in 2004. Shortly after he entered into the bedding industry. He has been a leading expert on mattresses for over a decade. 5 years ago Jason started working exclusively with health and wellness professionals. Jason decided to start his own business and make a mattress just for health professionals. He is the co-founder of Organix Bed.

Show notes:
  • Get your own Organix mattress here!
    When you use the coupon code: POMPA
    you get:
    10% off the mattress
    • Free shipping
    • Free sheets
    • Free mattress protector
  • CytoDetox: total detoxification support where it matters most – at the cellular level.
  • Dr. Pompa's Beyond Fasting – now released!

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Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
This is going to be a great episode if you’re interested in sleep. A year ago, maybe a little more, I did an episode about I think the most unique scientific mattress on the planet, and I said I’m going to do a second show if in fact it works for me. It was really hard for my wife and I to come off the mattress we were on. We paid a lot of money for it, and I thought it was the best in the time. There was a couple things about this technology that swayed me to try it. As promised, it was amazing, and you have to hear about this technology. If you’re concerned about toxins, if you’re concerned about deep sleep, REM sleep, recovery, your health in general, pain, any of those things, stay tuned for a great show. I’m telling you, you’re going to learn something about sleep. You’re going to learn something that most people don’t know. Check it out.

Ashley:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith, and today’s episode is devoted to an important factor we sometimes overlook when we are trying to get well, and that is our quality of our mattress. Is your mattress making you sick? Leading mattress expert, Jason Payne, is joining us today to discuss mattresses and why what you’re sleeping on can be just as important as what you’re eating, what supplements you’re taking, and how healthy your lifestyle is. You will also learn what mattress Dr. Pompa sleeps on and why he thinks it’s the best. Let’s get started and welcome Jason Payne and, of course, Dr. Pompa to the show. Welcome, both of you.

Jason:
Thanks, Ashley.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, thank you, Ashley, and welcome, Jason. You and I did a webinar together on this topic. I loved it so much that I had to bring it on CellTV. It’s kind of a Part 2 because we did—a year ago, we put me on one of your mattresses, and I said, hey, if it’s a hit, we’ll do a Part 2. It was an amazing hit. My wife and I love and adore your bed. It makes traveling a little bit harder, but absolutely, the best bed I’ve ever slept on. I came from a mattress called Royal-Pedic. They literally made these mattresses for kings and queens, hence the name Royal-Pedic. I came off of one of the best mattresses in the world, and I love this one far more. It’s the technology around it that you’re going to learn about today that I believe in.

Look, I don’t promote products on this show. You all know that. I mean, I promote a product or I’ll talk about a product if I think it’s going to make a difference in someone’s life and if it made a difference in mine, but that’s it. The topics really are about health, people searching for their health, to get their health back, and of course, sleep is at the top of this. If you can’t sleep, oh, that was me at one point in my life. Then forget it. Recovery becomes even harder because that’s where it happens when you sleep. You recover and you heal. We know more about REM sleep and deep sleep and the different phases of sleep and how important they are for recovery and your brain recovery than ever before. We know now that, if we can prove those things, then we can transform our health, and that’s the topic of today.

Jason, talk a little bit about—you were nice enough from our webinar to bring the PowerPoint. I thought it would really help people as far as understanding a little bit more about sleep. I don’t want this to be about sleep. This mattress can transform people’s sleep two ways. Number one, people have no clue of how toxic their mattress is. Eight hours with your face right against something extremely toxic is obviously a major issue, and I’ve talked about that for years. Number two, I was a structural correction chiropractor in my day before I was ever doing this, and I could tell you a mattress can make or break your sleep just from a pain standpoint. That happened to me too. With that said, Jason, you can talk a little bit about what you do, how you got into it yourself, and then we’ll go into sleep.

Jason:
Yeah, so it’s funny that you mentioned the vacationing. I used to do shows. Every single show someone would come up and say, “I love this bed, but you’ve ruined my vacations. I can’t sleep while I’m on vacation.” Everybody in the booth would always say, “You paid that person to say that, right?” I’m like, “No.”

Dr. Pompa:
No.

Jason:
No, I’ve been in the sleep industry for a long time. The last five years I’ve worked directly with a lot of health and wellness professionals, and the goal is to just deliver the best sleep. There’s diet, exercise, and sleep. Let me share my screen here.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, Jason, I’ll tell you—I have to say that, when I first started sleeping on your bed, it was a risk for Merilee and I because we were so—we loved our other bed, honestly, but I was so convinced from the toxic standpoint and the technology, how it worked for burn victims, why, and also temperature, which you’re going to talk a little bit about. That really convinced me because I know that I do get better sleep when I can keep my body temperature down. All of that to say what you’re going to share is what convinced us to make the jump. Go head. Jump in.

Jason:
Awesome! Okay, do you want to take this part?

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I mean, this is just a review. I had mentioned a little bit about deep sleep and REM sleep. During deep sleep, obviously, your blood supply to your muscles increases dramatically, which obviously is why you start to build muscle, repair muscle, tissues repair. All of that happens in deep sleep. Energy is replenished in deep sleep. Unfortunately, Jason, the older we get, the less deep sleep people get. Now, with that said, I get on average an hour and a half of deep sleep, and I measure it with a ring, the Oura ring, some nights more. I think for my age that’s pretty extraordinary, and obviously, the topic here is bed and toxins all really have an effect on that.

Hormones are released in deep sleep, growth hormone. All of the things that we need to really heal, those hormones are released during sleep. Your body detoxifies during deep sleep. Your sympathetic nerve system relaxes and puts you more in a parasympathetic, so obviously, it has an effect on your GI. REM sleep, we know that your body actually detoxifies the brain via lymph, so we know that lymphatic flow has a big impact, or I say REM sleep has a big impact on the lymphatic flow out of the brain. We know that our brain actually detoxifies during REM sleep. If you use your brain a lot during the day, I notice because of my Oura ring that I’ll get two, two and half hours in REM sleep, so therefore, deep and REM sleep are important for your brain and your body recovery. We need them, and obviously, a good mattress affects it.

Jason:
Awesome! I want to tell you a little bit about a study that was done on these mattresses. There’s a doctor, Dr. Robert Troell. He’s a Stanford certified sleep doctor. He did a two-year study on these beds, and what he did is he monitored people’s sleep with an EEG machine. It’s not just how did you sleep on a scale of one to ten? He actually monitored the stages of sleep they were in.

Now, the two big takeaways from this study is, one, if you move while you’re sleeping, like your mattress has you move because of pressure points, you go from whatever stage sleep you’re in to Stage 1. You have Stage 1, 2, 3, 4 and then REM sleep. Stage 3 and 4 is where your body repairs and heals itself. If you’re constantly moving, you’re constantly going back to Stage 1 sleep. Even if you get the eight hours you’re supposed to, you’re fragmenting your sleep patterns. That’s one.

The second thing is he had people without changing their diet, exercise, or anything in their lives. He changed the mattress. That’s the only thing he changed, and he had people sleeping on memory foam, air beds, pillow tops, and this Gel Matrix bed. People got 80% deeper sleep, Stage 3 and 4, just by sleeping on this bed. I mean, you don’t have to do anything except for change your sleep surface.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I mean, it sounds the obvious, but yet, people’s beds, especially if you have a mattress over five years old, you’re sleeping in typically a hole, which requires you to move all night. Reason: because your back starts to hurt. Your neck starts to hurt. Your shoulder starts to hurt, your hips. I mean, all of which you’ll see why this bed keeps you from having to do that, right? One of the things that I was starting to run into is just that. I looked at my mattress, and I saw this. You could see exactly where my hips were and my shoulders were, and you’ll talk a little bit about that.

Mattress fatigue is a big issue. Some mattresses fatigue after, literally, one year. You could start to see that in your bed, so check it out. Take your sheets off. Look for youselves.

Jason:
Yeah, when you’re looking for a mattress, you really need three things. This seems so simple and common sense, but you need a bed that isn’t hurting you, one that is not allowing you to wake up with back pain. It’s not a torture device. You need a bed that allows you to stay in deep sleep so you get the benefits of that, and then you need a bed that’s not releasing toxic chemicals.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s a big deal. I can tell you this right now, people looking at the PowerPoint, I mean, look at all of those chemicals. We call them VOCs, volatile organic compounds, which you could do your own Google search and realize that most of those are linked to cancer. Most of those are linked to hormone, endocrine problems. Most of those are linked to why people can’t lose weight. Most of those are linked to brain fog, low energy. I mean, you do the list, and put your face in that for eight hours. I mean, we move in and out of different chemical sources during our day. We can drink a glass of toxic water a couple times a day, but eight hours of breathing, that’s what in front of you. Not a good idea.

Jason:
Not only that, but it’s eight hours while your body is in its most vulnerable state, sleeping and trying to heal and repair itself. You take probably the biggest piece of furniture you have in your house and then you take a third of your day and then you take your body when it’s most vulnerable, the last thing you want is any chemicals.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and your body’s supposed to be detoxifying. You’re re-toxing for eight hours. Your brain’s supposed to be detoxing, and you’re re-toxing it right into your brain. Oh, and if you had a nonorganic meal, glyphosate, glyphosate opens up your blood-brain barrier for hours, and then you put your face in that. That’s not working out too well.

Jason:
Right, yeah, I mean, there’s this website. If you go to chemtalks.com and just looked up mattresses, there’s hundreds and hundreds of people saying my mattress made me sick. It made me throw up. It gave me nausea. I mean, if you look at this slide, you can see short-term effects: headache, dizziness, eye-nose-throat irritation, vomiting; long-term: central nervous system damage, cancer, like you just said, kidney and liver damage. I mean, this stuff is harmful, very harmful.

Dr. Pompa:
When we did the webinar together, I had told you a story that just happened with the mattress. I assure you this wasn’t a plan. It happened again. I actually had a client who all of a sudden wasn’t sleeping, and they were waking up just anxious and dizzy the next day. I was tweaking the protocol. I was doing different things. Could it be this? Could it be that?

In the conversation, they mentioned they got a new mattress. I was like, “Oh, well, that’s probably it. Could you do this experiment for me? Do you have another bed in the house?” She goes, “Yeah.” “Could you do that?” Email went, well, that worked, slept through the night. No problem. Feel normal in the morning. Yeah, get rid of the new mattress, so it was a toxic mattress situation so anyways.

Jason:
I had a health and wellness influencer that I worked with that has an autoimmune disease. After talking to her, she said, “You know what, Jason? When I found out I had the autoimmune disease, I got a brand new memory foam mattress.” She goes, “For the next two years I had the worse flare ups I’ve ever had.” She goes, “I never ever ever thought, oh, it could be my mattress,” and she’s all, “but after learning and researching and listening to you, it absolutely was my mattress. It made me sicker. It made my autoimmune disease…”

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely.

Jason:
The question is what do you want to—what should you look for in a mattress? One that’s nontoxic. It doesn’t off-gas, supports the hips and shoulders, temperature control. You talked a little bit about that. Durability and warranty, you don’t want a bed that’s going to break down, and you’re going to have to replace every five to seven years like consumer review says. You want a company that has customer support. In fact, mattress companies are considered as high risk for merchant accountants as online gambling because so many of them open up and then go out of business. You need a founder’s commitment, a company with someone that’s going to be there for the warranty and then, obviously, price and value.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, we can add the original link in for the original show I did, but Intellibed was the name. This is the organic line of that company, which now you’ve really—it’s taken off so much. Organix is in fact the line and the only line that I represent for these reasons we’re talking about. Organix is the key, but go ahead.

Jason:
Yeah, so we’ve talked about how you need your mattress safe, non-off-gassing. Sleeping cool, that’s a big thing. Now, this gel technology has been used in hospitals for years, and they use it for pressure sores, people that are going to develop a pressure sore. They also use it in the burn units because it sleeps cool. The gel does not retain heat. You get these memory foam beds, and they’re temperature sensitive, meaning the warmer that the foam gets, the softer that it gets. That does a few things. One, as you sleep on it, it’s an inconsistent sleep surface because it changes throughout the night depending on how hot it is, but it retains that heat and reflects that heat back up against you.

Dr. Pompa:
I had mentioned that that’s a big deal for me as far as my deep sleep goes, so it was one of the key factors for me, honestly.

Jason:
You need a bed that’s durable. Now, in the mattress industry, they do two types of tests on mattresses. One is they take 250 pounds, and they smash the middle of the bed 100,000 times to see how much the bed’s going to sag. Two, they take a 250 pound rollator, and they roll it up and down the bed 200,000 passes to see how much the material’s going to break down. Now, because this gel and this mattress does not break down by heat, moisture, pressure, oxygen, I did both of these tests on my bed, and the bed soften just over 4%. That means not only are you getting a mattress that allows you to sleep deeper or better. You’re getting a bed that’s going to sleep like a brand new bed for the entire 20-year warranty.

You need a bed that’s soft, comfortable. You need a bed that’s firm and supportive, right? If you think about it, your hips are the heaviest part of your body, and so the softer the bed, the more your hips sink into the mattress, right? You lay on your back. The softer the bed, your hips sink in and puts pressure at the lower curve on your back. You lay on your…

Dr. Pompa:
Jason, people with neck problems often times like the softer bed because it absorbs their shoulder. There’s that do I go hard, soft? It depends on if you’re a side sleeper, a back sleeper. That’s one of the magic parts about the bed is it accommodates all of it.

Jason:
That’s the amazing thing, right? You roll on your side. The softer the bed, it puts a natural kink in the base of your spine, so you want a firm bed that pushes your hips up. Chiropractors, spinal specialists for years and years have been telling their patients with back pain get a firm bed. What’s the firmest surface? It’s the ground. Why do people not sleep on the cement ground or the floor? It’s because it’s uncomfortable.

What’s the softest surface? It’s a waterbed. Why do people not sleep on a waterbed? It’s been proven to create long-term back problems. In a mattress industry, you’re forced between all these products to find something in the middle. What’s firm enough that it’s supportive for my back? What’s soft enough that it’s comfortable that I can sleep on? That’s where the gel comes into play is it’s the only product that is firm and soft at the same time. It’s firm, pushing your hips up into alignment with your shoulders. It’s soft so that you can be comfortable without jeopardizing the alignment in your spine.

Let’s get into the gel. This is what the Gel Matrix looks like. If you’re not watching the slide show, it’s a grid shaped material with squares with hollow centers.

Dr. Pompa:
I sit on it. I was so impressed with it. I sit on my chair on it, so this is what it looks like. See, you can actually see through it. You can see how the air passes through it. What’s really cool is, in the first show—you have a picture of this, but really, I think you give the best explanation, honestly, even better than the first show of how it can be supportive and yet soft at the same time. Jason, you know what? I’m not even going to demonstrate. Show that picture and do it.

Jason:
How it works is everywhere one of these squares comes together it creates what’s called a support column. Think of it this way. Say there’s a huge room, and in the middle of the room, there’s a pillar or a column holding up the ceiling. It holds up the ceiling. If you were to add pressure on top of the ceiling more and more and more, at some point that column is going to just break and fail and not hold up the ceiling at all. How the gel works is it holds a certain amount of pressure. After that pressure exceeds a certain amount, those columns will just fold in half taking pressure off your body. It doesn’t matter what size you are, how much you weigh, the gel will distribute your weight evenly across the surface of the gel, but underneath your hips and your shoulders or wherever there’s uncomfortable pressure that causes you to toss and turn, it causes you to wake up, the gel buckles.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, this is the example. We actually did that on the show.

Jason:
Yeah, so in this example, what we do is we have a one foot by one foot Plexiglas piece. If you put a 15 pound weight on that, on a memory foam mattress, that Plexiglas will sink in a full inch of how thick it is. Now, you can go to the gel and put a 50 pound weight, so this is over 3 times the amount of weight. It doesn’t sink in. It’s showing in this image with this Plexiglas that this gel is extremely firm. It doesn’t buckle under pressure, right?

Dr. Pompa:
Like you said, if you took that 50 pound or took it off of that spread, boom, it goes in like your shoulder would go in, but when you’re on the back, it actually supports you because it’s like the Plexiglas.

Jason:
Yeah, over the broader areas, it holds you up. Even on your back, in your lower back, a foam will just contour to your body. This gel actually pushes up and supports that natural curve. Now, if you look in this slide, what this is is you can take a pressure mat, and you can put it on the mattress. You can have someone lay on it and measure in PSI how much pressure is in between that person and the mattress, right? Everyone wants to say their beds are the most comfortable. You can actually quantify that.

I’ve pressured mapped tens of thousands of people, air chamber beds, innerspring memory foam, Gel Matrix. If you’re looking at this image, you can see that the Gel Matrix is the only one that actually takes pressure off of the body, right? Your hips weigh the same amount no matter what surface you’re on, so you have to have equal pressure pushing back up against them. It doesn’t matter the bed’s feel different and there’s different technologies, but the gel’s the only thing that, when that pressure becomes excessive, the gel just buckles. It holds the whole of your body. You don’t sink in.

Dr. Pompa:
Jason, you sell beds with different amounts of pillow tops. People have different preferences. The technology works so well. I literally got the—not the top of the line because I wanted to be more near the gel. I just tested both, and I liked the technology so much that I actually wanted the technology closer to me without as much padding on top. I felt it worked better, but you have to have a choice when you look at the mattresses.

Jason:
Yeah, and that’s a perfect point is there is two different beds. One has one layer of gel. One has one and a half layers of gel. It’s not a good, better, best type deal or better, best, right? Both beds take as much pressure off of your body, and they both have the same quality materials in them. Some people like that more plush feel, which this half layer of junk is, but I personally like the bed that you got. I chose it for the same reasons you did.

It’s durable. The other thing is it’s low motion. This has a coil system in it. Now, these are pocketed coils, meaning it’s individual coils wrapped in fabric. One, anyone that’s concerned about EMS, there’s no big coil system that could generate any electricity. Two, if you have a partner in the mattress with you, if they move, you’re not going to fill it because the coils aren’t intertwined with each other. They’re individually linked so sleeps cool. It’s truly safe.

Now, as far as the truly safe, I want to go back to people started to find out all these chemicals that were in beds. What did they do? They said I want to go to an organic bed because an organic feels super safe, right? Mattress companies don’t have to tell you what’s in their mattress or any other chemicals. Everyone said, well, if it’s organic, I know that it’s safe. The problem with organic is it doesn’t support your body properly. It’s super expensive, and it breaks down quickly. There’s a reason people went from sleeping on hay and feathers to innersprings. You need something to support your body.

This slide shows the value of the mattress. If you buy an Organix bed, they’re a little bit on the higher end. They’re not inexpensive, but if you take the cost of ownership over time, this bed will last you 20 years and sleep like a brand new bed. You take some of these foam beds, and they will break down within two, three, four years. Consumer reviews says you should replace them between five and seven years, which means, at that point, they’re a torture device. They’re not comfortable at all.

That’s another picture of Gel Matrix. Here’s the buildup of the bed. Essentially, you have an organic cotton cover. You’ve got the gel, which takes pressure off your body so that you don’t toss and turn. You get those deep levels of sleep. You’ve got a little bit of foam underneath that so the gel can behave properly, and then you’ve got an innerspring.

Mattresses are made in America. When you’re looking at beds, you want firm, soft, durable, safe, cool, and something that doesn’t transfer motion. This has a ten on everything. It’s got a little bit of motion transfer but not much. Other than that, it’s got a ten on everything. It’s got everything that you could ever want in a bed. You don’t have to compromise for any key criteria.

There’s 1400 doctors, medical professionals, spinal specialists, chiropractors that recommend this mattress. Health and wellness influencers all over the US, some of the biggest names in the industry, they all stand behind this bed because there’s nothing out there like it.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s great, yeah, and you helped my viewers out, which I appreciate, Jason. Obviously, I want people if they’re getting a new mattress not to live out that story I told. There’s a nontoxic, good mattress that will improve your deep and REM sleep, so thank you for giving a discount there.

Jason:
Yeah, so what we’ve done for anybody listening to this is—Dr. Pompa loves the product. He stands behind it, so we wanted to give everyone the absolute best deal on the market, and that’s 10% off the bed, free delivery, free mattress protector, free sheets. You just mention cellular technology. You mention Dr. Pompa, and you will get this deal.

Dr. Pompa:
Awesome! Appreciate it. Awesome! Jason, I’ll tell you, it’s—obviously, you live here where I live in Park City or not in Park City but Utah, Salt Lake, actually. It’s funny because we were just discussing the wind. We literally had a windstorm, and you all down in Salt Lake actually got it worse than us, hurricane winds. Here we are in September, and we actually had some snow in the mountain but showing that we live in the same place.

Jason, thank you. I trust and love your company and the mattresses you do so much that I wanted to bring you again on the show for a second time, although it wasn’t you the first time. It was another gentleman. At least I tell how I would do on the mattress as it was a promise saying, hey, if I love it, I’ll bring you on again and talk about it, so here you are. I do in fact love it, so thank you.

Jason:
That’s awesome. Thank you so much.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, appreciate it.

Jason:
Uh-huh.

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 buyctyonow.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.