18 Burst results for "Dr Nasha"

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"So I don't want them to get complacent. This is actually where we start the work. And I'm actually way more scared for those patients than I am for the patients who have perfect trifectas all well within those normal limits that have scans looking like everything's lit up like a Christmas tree and their tumor markers are in the hundreds or the thousands. I am way less afraid of those patients. I am way those patients. And that's a really weird thing for patients to hear. Your listeners are here because what I know then is if I'm seeing that trifecta in place, I know that the patient is still in the driver's seat, not the cancer. And I know we have something to do. We can do something about that. When all of them, like when everything's bad, the scans and the markers and the trifecta are bad. Those are a little bit more challenging. So I don't want patients to wait to come see somebody like me or one of my trained doctors at that point. And guess what? That's probably the lion's share of who comes to see us. That's the nature of the beast today, but we're working on trying to use that. But that's where when people just start to think about. So my whole goal now is to teach a methodology and a critical path forward for positions to guide their patients through the cancer wilderness and most of that involves changing the narrative. And changing our understanding about health and disease, changing our understanding about tumor versus terrain and changing our understanding about maximum clarity it is versus adaptive theory. Pretty simple. And I help these doctors know exactly what to test for, what to look for, how to respond. And then how to change course. And in the process, doing so, they're educating their patients. So now their patients are literally tracking themselves even as much as the doctors are and understanding, like, yep. Christmas. I always saw this three years. Everyone's what happens January we're a hot mess, right? It's like everyone's like, okay, I dealt with all my emotional wombs of going home. I was on an airplane germ thing, you know, my vitamin D levels are in the toilet I ate sugar from Thanksgiving to new year's. Because then you're just like, and there it is. They watch the bucket fall apart in a matter of days or weeks. So it's really great when you educate and empower the patient to know what they're looking for as much as the doctor, because then it's a conversation where all the table together. So good, this meant such a great interview. I mean, I could go on for hours with you.

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"Ketogenic diet even low carb eating or simple caloric restriction. Because this is a natural part of us, like I said, we are dual hybrid and we are hybrids. We are meant to be able to go in and out of this. So if you move into one area too much, too long, you click into another. That's this cool built in system. So it drives me nuts. People are either like, oh, ketones are really bad, and they're going to cause cancer, and then they are celebrating the impact of basting on cancer. I'm like, right. Where's the disconnect here? Because it's the strategy. And that when we, when people start to go, well, great when cancers get really, in my world, I don't see that shift into the other fuel burning areas as much. If at all, clinically, because I believe I'm dealing with supporting the whole terrain simultaneously. So I'm turning off other fuel sources. I'm turning off other mechanisms that dried like inflammation, hormone imbalance and stress response and mental emoji. I'm dealing with all of those things simultaneously, that I find that just doing the type of dietary interventions I'm doing just even low carb or intermittent fasting or therapeutic ketogenic diet. Work. There's plain and simple, right? Here are the stories. And I read the research and I see the chat rooms out there about people like, oh, he's learning, even doctors, like contributing. It's like, oh, it's glutamine. What I also, because I do employ so much intermittent fasting with people, I think it's in that moment. We're doing our own press polls then, because guess what? Glutamine out of the picture or methionine out of the picture, you will die. Right. Great. It works great. It's like chemotherapy. And then to what's left. So when we start to put these drugs out on the market, we're going to see the same type of side effects we're seeing with the other drugs.

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"And then we're going to let that therapy go and just kind of keep you more in a normal diet state or in a still low carb, maybe not therapeutic state of ketosis. Maybe your GKI doesn't have to be one. Maybe you just need to be around .5 or your ketones. And then you push it again in those moments. That's one strategy. There's a few others in the midst of this. But ultimately, that's what we're doing is we're like, we're just kind of putting all of our eggs and we're pushing really hard in this one piece and then backing off. And then kind of maintaining with a lower level of just light pressure in the interim. That is sort of this, you know, I don't even know if doctor C, I've never had this conversation. I need you the next time, but when I perceive that he's doing and creating is actually representing to us the model of the emerging field of adaptive theory. I think that's exactly what we're looking at here. And so there's this way that you can both be hitting it hard and then letting everything recover. Hitting it hard, letting things recover. When we do that, we turn cancer from a death sentence into a lifelong maintenance, right? Like any other chronic illness. And we'll get the added accidental side effect benefit of going completely intermission and staying there, right? That should not be our goal. That should not go. And that's still the goal. So when the talk about stress and inflammation, the scanxiety of patients who are so attached to what that scan is going to show is driving inflammation, which is driving recurrence, which is driving progression. Sure. We have to retrain our patient's brains to be like, this is information. That's all the labs are. It's all that tumor markers are. That's all the scan is. We'll address all those drops in the bucket. I am still working on changing out finding the source, the root of this,

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"The challenges from the environment. However, you must be an active participant and work to make your body stronger and more resilient to stress. And that is why I created our ten in one immuno charge formula because it's designed to help you do that. As I was studying the immune system, I found that there are critical nutrients that really support your body and give you more immune modulating power. These include things like quercetin, resveratrol, vitamin D, vitamin a, selenium, zinc, vitamin C, and acetylcysteine, vitamin K two, and magnesium. And I used to supplement with all of these. I was taking 14 different capsules to get all these critical nutrients. And that is why I designed a product called immuno charge. I actually put all of these nutrients in their clinical dosages that actually work in your body that are research based and all you have to do is take four capsules a day, so I take two capsules twice a day to help strengthen my immune function to help keep inflammation under control. And so this

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"Well, we definitely want some basics. You can just take a look at the sedimentation rate, ESR, that rate. That shows how quickly the blood is falling out of solution. The blood cells are calling out solution. They follows really fast. It's like good. We get nice lot of good, everything's moving around, slip and slide in there beautifully. If it takes a while, if that range is about ten on your labs, there's some little fighters, some gunk that your poor cells are trying to move through. All right? And that could show autoimmunity. That could show, you know, progressing cancer, that can show viscosity issues of cardiovascular issues. It can show a lot of things. You want to be very smooth and slippery. LDH LDH used to be part of our general CMP. 15, 18 years ago, they took it out of our CMP or our complete metabolic panel, which is ridiculous because it is the most underrated and most powerful lab we can run on everybody. And I've been running on everybody since the 90s, right? So I've been watching these trends that LDH my husband taught me being an expert biochemist and also kind of expert on the krebs cycle, everything. He's like basically, if you see an elevated LDH, that tells you immediately that your mitochondria are off. Right. Like plain and simple. And H is the average of 5 different enzymes. And those enzymes are related to different tissue types in the body. And so if you have an LDH that's elevated or weirdly low and you're like, that doesn't fit because your CRP is high. They're set rates high. Always. In fact, I prefer to bring the LDH ISO enzymes on board because it's very educational to the patient to go, oh yeah, yeah, it's definitely in my lab. We can go get this in your lungs and your kidneys. It's in your bones. It's in your blood cells.

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"We're highlighting one, but there's a whole bunch. It's kind of like taking BPA at a plastic. There's still a whole bunch of other chemicals, even though that's been the most well researched plastic still has a whole bunch of phthalates and things that are going to cause problems. It's kind of the same idea. The perfect idea is a great analogy for them because we have these other mutations, but again, we keep focusing on the tumor, the target or the mutation, and then we keep going at it in a single agent address addressing it with a single agent. Yeah. This model has been failing us for a good 75 years or more. And yet we keep funneling massive money into it. And now like all the rage is off label drugs. Guess what? It's so good that there's something different than chemo. But it isn't. It's targeting the tumor and the same target on the cell. It's not changing the train. In fact, it is still making the train sick. Do we still use those therapies very precise and very carefully and very effectively and very elegantly absolutely. Can we bring out other tools to make them work better and cause less harm to the healthy tissue? Absolutely. But do not get seduced that that somehow going to get you out of the hot water. You're sitting in right now. That's really key. So when we look at another interesting thing, is if you really put if you put them all together on a table and you go, okay, which one should I really be concerned with? We should be a lot more concerned about the pi K three CA for the NCHS R epigenetic hiccup. Ever. And yet, 80% of our population and 70% of cancers and guess what, specific with the pic three CA. That's all metabolic. And the MTHFR, that's just about how you process everything. This population of methylation pathways, your nourishment, so if you're malnourished in your folates and your mouth notion your B 12s and your malnourished and your selenium in your zinc in your vitamin D three, your vitamin K and your vitamin a, you are a hot mess waiting to happen for cancer. We see all those patients with cancer. Those tend to be the nutrients are deficient in. It was also happened to be a lot of the nutrient deficiencies of particular dietary choices out there in the world today. And so we don't, I don't get dogmatic about a diet. I say Tesla dress don't guess. So let's take a look at your labs. Let's take a look at your epigenetics. Let's see if that diet's working for you. And if not, let's change gears. Let's be flexible. Not just metabolically flexible, but intellectually, emotionally, spiritually flexible, to survive on this planet, we have to get out of our dogma and out of our polarization. We have to start becoming more holistic, more integrated and much more curious about what's going on in each of us as an individual that makes us tick. And so all of those things is how inflammation hits that is when you have acute inflammation prior people are already talking about this is fabulous. You need that. You cut yourself, you need a daily stub your toe, you need to deal with that. A couple of days, that should all quiet down all those little cytokine, all those little chemicals should like, thanks to dinner job, we're going back to the office.

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"Now, these genes obviously we can have abnormalities in these genes, but also we turn on poor expression of them through stress and inflammation. How does that work? How do we turn those on? Oh, okay. Do you want me to give more of the label? Yeah, let's start with what they are. Because people have heard of like the bracket gene and a P 53 genes. What is that? I mean, I mentioned it was a cell guardian. What is its role? And then how does kind of being in this state of chronic inflammation? Sure. Perfect. Turn on a poor expression of those genes. That's perfect. So the beauty is a lot of people we think genes like braca or P 50. We think it's somehow in cement, non changeable, and we're just sort of a sitting duck, nothing we can do about it. But the cool thing about the vast majority of our genome is that we do have influences. And that we can change expression, turning things on and off at will, or even accidental your unbeknownst to us. Ultimately, things like the P 53 is a tumor re is a tissue repair gene repair system. Okay? P 53, about 50% of the population have a wounded P 53 on the planet right now. So it's like a flip of a coin. Some of us have when it works, some of us have one of them. So for those that have one that don't and you can't test for this, but they're extremely expensive and not very most of them are in research environments. But to assume it's best to assume that it's damaged, so you want to take care of it. You want to take care of that. And that is exactly by tending to those drops in the bucket we've talked about. But some of the most profound ways to make your P 53 behave the way it was designed to behave are things like sulforaphane, cruciferous vegetables, you know, whenever you wanted to throw your broccoli at your parents when they told you

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"Life before the age of 18. And what the literature and the studies have shown is that the more yeses or the more checks on the box of those ten questions that you have, the higher your risk for severe chronic illness in your young adulthood and adulthood. You are fully expected to have some type of an autoimmune disorder or chronic illness or cancer type, et cetera at a young age. In fact, today, another news story was that young 14 year old boy who won the chef he won this amazing chef deal. This master chef and he's 14 years old and he just died today of a very rare, rare tumor. And what compelled me about his story is a year before his diagnosis, both of his parents died. In a domestic violence issue. You can just look at this little boy and you can almost imagine the story that led up to that point of what he was you are positive. This was a ten out of ten for this kid. Right. And that type of grief and loss in a point where your whole world is your parents, even if they're the most functional beings on the planet, leave. Of course, these things happen. And this young man who also amazing resilience and what he did and what he created in that short time after, never complaining of what he experienced, never complaining of his treatments. You know, dying, the gushing of love and support for this young man just blow my mind. But that is so the story we see spoken again in a variety of ways. And that the research shows that the more yeses you have, the higher these incidents. And it changes. It changes a few things. It changes your stress response, which stress is one of the biggest drivers. So there's that. And when we are under high stress, we also, when we drive inflammation, we pick up IL 6 interleukin 6. We also kick up the mother of inflammation, which is enough capabilities. And enough capabilities is basically sits on your immune system, and it just keeps cultivating more and

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"It doesn't really understand the full picture and it's hoarding resources. Exactly. And we are living that experience around us in the world today, so we can see that happening in the loss of our resources. Even just the way we interact with another human being is interesting today. We've created a sort of us and then this very polarized and even the way we treat cancer and think about cancer, we treat it like it's an outside invader. Like it is an uninvited House guest that has come in and overstated welcome. And now it's knocking the crap out of everything in your house, right? It's like. We look, and so we've been thinking we've got to call the cops. We got to funds. We got to, you know, we got to go crazy and we've got to blow it up and get rid of it. It's this anti. It's this war. It's as battle mentality. And we relate to that because we've been a warring society. So we can easily fall into that understanding. But when I offer to my patients to doctors to colleagues, just to anybody who will listen, is that cancer is us, and it is the ultimate messenger, and it is the ultimate opportunity to find out where you have betrayed yourself. Where you have lost sight of yourself where you lost connection to self or other or spirit or whatever that may be. Right. Or you're not feeling well nourished, where you're not feeling in good communication heard scene understood. When I start to explore my patients, man, that's why the tenth chapter or the tenth drop in the bucket is mental emotional. And I've been doing this for a long time. Thousands and thousands of people. I had my doctor class last night and we presented four amazing cases. And even these 38 doctors that have gotten through the program so far with many more to come in the future, they're all in on, including conventional oncologists to say every single one of these cases we're seeing has an emotional root. Every single one of them has a loss of connection to the cell or other. They're in lies the issue. So we can get very myopic down to the mitochondrial metabolic targeted pathways, which is super and fascinating, and we can definitely do a lot with that. And I'm into that too. But we also need to remember that wrapped around those little mitochondria is this whole organism and this whole being this whole soul that is also needing is neglected. And disenfranchised and needs to be brought back into the fold. There was a cool study. This makes me think about this this morning, a news reading.

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"So there's that. There's the toxic accumulations and things we're being exposed to that no generations before us have ever seen. From the 80,000 plus chemicals that have been introduced since the 1960s that have less than 200 been properly tested. One study I know of only through the iarc has done a study on how those interact with each other, but really we haven't even looked at how it all comes together as a toxic stew. We've introduced hormones into our food supply and our human supply. We've introduced plastics. I mean, if you ever saw the graduate, you know, that's a new plastics are new. Hormones are new. Factory farming is new. Chemicals are new. These are things that were never exposed to EMFs are new. Blue light new. And you just start to feel the weight of it all over time. We also made a lot of changes in our diet in the 1850s. We went into the industrial food revolution. And we decided, wow, this is a really good time. We now have the cool technology to mill everything. We can make food available 24/7, wherever you live on the planet. And we started milling flower sugar salt in a very toxic process, unnatural form. And it has just picked up momentum worldwide to the point is that the food we have today, it's like frame compared to our ancestors, our recent ancestors would not recognize what we eat today. And density of those foods has dropped dramatically since World War II, thanks to the way we treat our soil, the way we treat our livestock. So all of these things have accumulated and made that bucket our mitochondria very, very vulnerable. And the big sort of stove, the big light of the match of that, literally, is the inflammation. All of those things we just described cause inflammation, but inflammation causes all of those things. They are not mutually individuated. They're not siloed off from one another. And so it's quite interesting to me that you're having a summit because which kind of inflamed I think everyone thinks about ruber, they think about red swelling. And you're like, oh, lord, it's so much more than that. It's about, you know, cortisol is about it's about insulin. It's about healing wound. It's about nutrient deficiencies. It's about poor fatty acid metabolism and taking us out of a one to one ratio of 6s to threes of your omega 6 to three ratio of fatty acids to closer to anywhere from studies saying 20 to 36 to one, depending on your diet and lifestyle.

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"Off today. So at the root, the main things you did were you fasted and you really worked on your mind and your emotions. You had great books. That helped challenge you to go deep in those areas and obviously you weren't eating and when you don't fast for a long period of time for anybody that's done that, you do realize the ketones start going up into your brain and it's this really unique experience where you feel weak and strong at the same time, right? There's kind of like this combination of your body feels somewhat weak because you haven't eaten in so long, but your mind and there's an element, it's hard to explain, but you kind of feel this inner strength. Totally. To become stronger and sharper. Yes. And you get clarity is unbelievable. Right. But even through spiritual clarity, I guess. Private in this distrust, the Spain that is blind. You don't have any metrics to be like, oh, and there it is. It's going to hang my ad on that. It's just this inner peace, this inner knowing. And for me, at that time in my life, I had never experienced that before. So it was sort of my gateway drug. Everything we do today. I mean, it really goes back to the Bible, it talks about prayer and fasting. That's basically what she did. And the craziest thing is every single culture. Has this who evolved with this process. And we then terrified in the west, we terrified people to do this. No, how dare the impact an interesting thing, 1909, it was a great research project more. I believe, did this great research about basically fasting people is what that was their treatment choice for cancer. Right. At the time. That was in Vogue until the 1970s.

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"Right. And so that sting literally helped to reset something in me. It reset my taste buds. It gave me some time to really get into a spiritual place because being in a fasted state really opens you up in a lot of different ways as well. It definitely allowed me to start to ask questions to get curious about why I was in the position that I was in. And it put me immediately into, and ironically, from age 16 until my diagnosis, I had put myself on a vegan diet. I grew up in Kansas, my grandmother worked for a meat packing company for 50 years. I became like the hardcore animal cruelty, but my diet was pretty much iceberg lettuce and Velveeta cheese because there was no confusion which is. And so I became just even more militant with my vegan diet in the beginning, but this time I started adding vegetables, of which I did not like at all. Because I was actually vegetables. It wasn't even about the vegan or not vegan or whatever. It was about bringing on some cofactors and some gentle antioxidants that were missing in my diet forehand. It started to stabilize some things for me. Oh, my gosh. The next 20 years has been 30 years has been an exploration of every diet you can imagine of what fits and didn't fit. It won't fit at certain times and didn't get in certain times, but what was certain is fasting was integral to me turning off the mechanism of information, which is the mechanism that drives metastasis, drives angiogenesis, which is the blood formation to the tumors, drives things like ascites, so ascites fluid is a form of metas of angiogenesis. Drives stress hormone, cortisol, drives estrogen, hormone, which in my cancer type was very estrogenic in nature because I was also put on very high potency estrogen birth control pills when I was 11 for that.

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"dr nasha" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
"Knew if I sipped on very small amounts of warm liquid, that was helpful. But I high schooled liquid. So each time I would drink a sip of ice colder, but I would go to these colicky, unbelievable cramping. That actually was a really good thing for one of my homeopathic positions that I met early on. I was like, you need phosphorus. And that was so just like another side story. It was my desires and my symptoms were actually telling patterns about myself to people who were trained to look at me more as a pattern versus a disease, right? So I got inspired by these other people along the way, but in that two and a half months of giving myself complete digestive rest, something was happening inside of me. All of these other symptoms I'd had my whole life 'cause I had also at that time by that time I was diagnosed with Hashimoto's, rheumatoid arthritis, polycystic ovarian syndrome. And polycystic endometriosis, it was later to find out that I also had Hashimoto's and celiac disease. So it was just a collection of autoimmune dysfunction. Yeah, your body was just destroying itself. Exactly. And knowing now what I also know because what this triggered for me in 1991 was to do research on the psychosomatic piece. There was something very intuitive for me in this, even though I had no experience in this arena, but I stumbled upon the work of Candace pert. Later, Bruce Lipton basically, what was the burgeoning field of psychoneuroimmunology? That also had extreme resonance in me. I actually changed my major I'd take the rest out of semester off because I was going to be alive for the next semester. My mom just arrest and literally just deal. And that's where the fasting resting piece came in. Context, I was working 60 hours a week. I was taking 27 hours of pre med science courses, I was preparing for all my bills on my own. I was on student loans out there wazoo.

Ben Greenfield Fitness
"dr nasha" Discussed on Ben Greenfield Fitness
"Finished dot com slash magazine interview This guy's name was sired. G is not dead it is psychology and he wrote a really great book called regenerate. And you know this is just one example. The few share of kind of like my take on healing now. Regenerate is a book that kind of gets into the body's own capacity to be able to heal and recover when placed in the right healing environment both emotionally and physically So a few things that i that i really focus upon first of all there is an enormous enormous importance in terms of the gut the gut microbiome and the overall health of the gastrointestinal track when it comes to the gut brain axis and the immune system and the multitude of effects that a healthy orange unhealthy gut has the capacity of the human body to heal and recover. So you know. I've personally struggled gut issues nearly my entire life. And you know it's a pain in the ass literally and figuratively but as a result of kind of having to solve my own issues. I feel like i've really as a blessing. Become a real expert in digestive health and many of my clients and also for myself. we begin For to to a very great extent by looking at the gut. You know this this whole like microbiome. Air medicine is something that i think is really important when it comes to healing that's one component another component would be the idea that your genes are not your destiny ride there. There's this idea of epa genetics and our dna's response in the environment so when you're getting salivary tasks or you're finding out what your risks might be remember that your genes are simply indicating that you might be holding a stick of dynamite. That predisposes you to something like colon. Cancer or type two diabetes or something like that but that empowers you to be able to tweak and adjust everything from your nutrition to your supplementation to your exercise to be able to To to make customized changes to what you're doing based on your dna. So i take dna and the customization of someone's exercise plan and nutrition plan into account when it comes to to healing a the. The next thing that i think about quite a bit is a water. A lot of people really don't focus on the fact that roughly two thirds of the human body is made up of water and water has been thought of in the past as some type of mechanical interface. But we know you know primarily based on the research of fellows like dr gerald paula. Who's been previous podcast guest of mine that the capabilities of water in the consideration of water in terms of the importance of healing is profound. There's this idea of a fourth phase of water and so very into everything from harnessing bio photons of light To to drinking water that is clean and pure and mineral enhanced and structured and i would be another component that i that i really focus on. That might be a little bit unique. I am also very very much into marrying the neurobiology and intelligence of plants in two in the healing the body whether that would be plant based medicines or wide variety of plants and herbs and spices. I think that you know as as you probably know. If listening you know the majority of our pharmaceuticals a really derived from plant matter. And and i am convinced that we have barely been tapped into as a human species the enormous healing potential of the wide variety of created plant matter. That's around us. And i'm constantly looking into how plants show memory and learning and adaptation and a lot of other traits. That can be harnessed. Help to heal us very very similar to sunlight and photo bio modulation in the use of red light and then the fact that the human body is a battery as you can read about in books like you know. Jerry tenants Book think it's called healing voltage or robert bekker's booked body electric on constantly looking at the human body as a battery and how water and electrolyte and urging grounding and sunlight and heat and cold and the like helped to charge that battery. And i think that's a very very important off neglected component of recovery and healing that goes far beyond modern medicine fitness. And just eating a healthy diet. So that's another thing. That that i that i we've in is the importance of sunlight Another thing that sire g talks about in his book regenerate that. I'm also fully on board with. Is you know the the new quantum mechanics of biology. The idea that everything from you know photons that might not be able to be measured But yet have a profound impact on the human body are something that we really haven't learned about and there are books like the quantum doctor for example that just get into the power of things like emotions and thoughts and beliefs an electromagnetic fields and photons to be able to be something that affects the human body either for good or for ill so quantum biology is something that i also taking. Great date take take into account from from probably early early on in the days. When i began to follow the writings of guys like jack cruise you know and have just been steeped in in considering quantum biology as well when it comes to enhancing the body or enhancing the mind. So you know that that that book regenerate would-be one perfect example of you know my take on healing overall subtitle. That book is unlocking your body's radical resilience through the new biology. I'm also a big fan of stacking a lot of modalities when it comes to healing like i'm not. I'm not a physician. I don't want any of this to be misconstrued. His medical advice when people ask me for example about something like Like like cancer you know. And i'll of course get many resorts like Like the moss reports website which has a host of comprehensive downloadable reports on alternative remedies for a wide variety of cancers very helpful site Books written by by a doctor named dr nasha winters. And also dr thomas callan. I found both of those authors to be incredibly helpful when it comes to tackling cancer books like nasha winters the metabolic approach to cancer or the cancer revolution Both wonderful wonderful resources..

One Life Radio Podcast
"dr nasha" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Helped you the most nigga contract. I think people want me to say one thing when silver bullet treatment or drug. You know for me. It's still ongoing. And in fact. When you get your intro now i can actually say no. I'm heading into my thirtieth year in october. Twenty twenty one will be thirty years since my terminal diagnosis and so really crazy. How fast these things happen. But i'm still working on it. I'm still working on my terrain. The whole bit but i think for me in the beginning. The most crucial was the changing of my environment. And by that for me. At that time i was coming out of very toxic emotionally traumatic high stress environment and i needed to really extricate myself from that and do all i could to change my mindset my mental health and my ongoing structures. That was really key. If i had not started there. I don't think any therapy. I would have brought on board. What is their mark. Yeah that's interesting that you say that. So many people don't take distress in their lifestyle seriously. I know that it causes disease. I mean it just. Does it breaks down your body and body mind spirit. They're all You know Are there any other conditions that can be treated with mistletoe that we didn't talk about. Yeah yeah in fact. There's a paper Hopefully coming out any day now on the usa mistletoe in cohen Prevention and also kind of quilting the overreactive response in the body and it was sort of found accidentally among colleagues that we're using mistletoe in active cancer patients actively going conventional. Cancer therapy with mistletoe. Adament who were either knowingly living with somebody else in our household who was diagnosed with tobin who had severe enough to need to be hospitalized or even parish who themselves were tested positive who had little or no symptoms and never even needed hospitalization or any other interventions and. You're still adding to this database. The the the paper the initial peoper. I think had twenty eight. She studies but we are all kind of collectively all of us in the anthroposophic nature. Pathak integrative oncology world a big kind of collecting data in a rep In a repository to start view commonalities. And we all do a lot of lab testing. We can also see what sort of before and after what is landing on. But it's very interesting that it seems to have a very powerful Prevention as well as support for viral infections co infections immune dysregulation even standing. Autoimmune conditions seemed to be very responsive to therapy. And it's because it is and i'm you know modulator. So it helped balance things out when you have an overzealous immune system such as an autumn unity or an under active even off the grid immune system when it comes to things like cancer and so it's got an interesting place. I mean we need to do more. Studies obviously So i'm speaking more anecdotally at this point. But i've been using this therapy since two thousand and three thanks to a patient bring it into my clinic and saying i'm gonna take this with or without your blessing but i'd like you to learn about it. Come along for the ride. Amazing right and here. We are nearly twenty years later. And it's one of those profound therapies. I could possibly offer anybody So i'm incredibly grateful. Ya not you know it's like wow. I'm still learning. We're all still learning together of how this can be used in a lot of different partners including cancer. It's fascinating and it's so fantastic to have you on the air with us today. We've got more coming up. Dr nature natio- winters. You guys stay tuned. You're listening to radio. We'll be right back.

One Life Radio Podcast
"dr nasha" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"On listening to one life radio. Make sure you check out our podcast and get to know the show at one life. Radio dot com. Just want to let this song play. I need a little more. What's it called my. Gosh music is so incredible. I i. I've said this before. If i had to put an island for the rest of my life it was between food and music. I would choose music. I would follow starve to death dancing. What a great way to go right. No better way actually. We'll maybe one having a heart attack during sex. Maybe my gosh that makes me think of that movie. Private benjamin really old movie but you remember that movie where golding on and her jewish husband after the after the you look a little bit like him to junior the actor he has a heart attack on their honeymoon right on top of her. A larry and that is hilarious. Oh my gosh. Leave it to me to bring that up. But it's so great. It is so i love your laughter. I just love this woman. You guys dr winters. Let me reintroduce her if you didn't hear the opening as she is a natural pathak integrative oncologists and a fellow of the american board of naturopathic oncology. She has been on a personal journey with cancer for almost twenty nine years and her quest to save her own life transformed are transformed into a lifelong mission to support others on a similar journey. Dr nation travels the world helping colleagues master the metabolic approach to cancer so that their patients can achieve better treatment outcomes. She is the author of the metabolic approach to cancer integrating deep nutrition the kita genyk diet and nontoxic bio individualized therapies. Her website is simply. Dr natio- dot com. We started out talking about mistletoe. Therapy but i'm going to go into cannabis and the ketogenic diet here in the upcoming minutes but let's finish up with the mistletoe. Therapy were is is it. Is it used in combination with other treatments. I love the that comes up because a lot of folks want you know one thing to one treatment and yes though. I've personally seen as have my colleagues that it does definitely has some efficacy on its own. It is always been best paired with other treatments and it's been most notably paired with standard of care treatment. We all know contraindications. I know interesting. Right so with chemo. With radiation with surgery with targeted therapies with hormone blocking therapies. And so if you're getting on the therapy for instance like that upwards of eighty five percent of european taking this medication you know this injection some point along the way they're doing it typically with standard of care and their outcome and there are better. Their side effects are less their bone marrow. Count stay up. They don't have to skip treatment. You know they really are a different place. So i don't understand. It's not an author them. This really isn't that could enhance your standard of care much. Also really pairs beautifully with therapies. Like hyperthermia with therapies like iv vitamin c. Done on different days you know separated out with You know other fasted dates with other things that worked really nicely likes to play well with others. A lot of different ways Vitamin c is so important for everything. The other day. I hadn't taken it for a couple of days. I kind of forgot. Just get get sideways doing this doing that. And i started to not feel good. I'm serious and And anyway i took a couple thousand a and about a couple of hours later a couple more and it just went away. it just went away. You guys like seriously. I felt better within like six to eight hours. And it's amazing. How fast it works. It's so important for our immune system right absolute absolutely and so the you know the oral of it when you're taking it on a day-to-day basis preferably in a whole food form not in a scorebig acid form to like calm you were life is normal wholefood see. It really does acts of beautiful antioxidant immune system tonic. When we're using it as a chemo type of treatment in high doses intravenously. It has a very different mechanism of action. It's actually very cytotoxic. Drives extreme oxidative stress. Just like a chemo or radiation does. So you know you can use it as therapeutic and it's been under lots of studies places like cavemen and indiana university and other places for decades are well over a decade at least in this country As as a therapeutic intervention that has cancer just like timeout with mistletoe. You can take the whole extract or get kinda some general terrain support. But you don't get the anticancer support until you take it in that forum. Same thing vitamin c at low levels early it has one approach in the body but it high level intravenously it impacts us very differently. Well the vitamin c. That i took the name of the brand. It's in a little box in. Its suspended in its and it suspended in its in a packet. And it's it's i think it's fat like some sort of fatty stuff. Yeah yeah well. And it's like a gel and you i. Do i do a couple of packets at a time. You swish it down with water. But it's an incredible product. I used it all during covid I think i bought everyone they had on the shelf. I'm just but amazon. But but so mistletoe. Therapy so if If you choose to modify many aspects of your life when you received your cancer diagnosis. What lifestyle changes. Do you feel.

One Life Radio Podcast
"dr nasha" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"It's thursday. It's almost friday fact easy. Anything interesting happened to you on the way into work this morning junior. I went to before i came in. I went to the airport to pick up my mother-in-law she's in town for the week and Yeah so picked. Her up brought her back to the house. And yes she. Just wait for the girls to get home from school and They have spring break next week. So they're going to get spent an entire week with with their grandma. How nice where does she live. He lives in florida and florida. tampa areas. right. That's where you garage. Yeah well you started in new jersey. Right was born in new jersey and then moved florida and then back to new jersey and back florida. Yeah the people on the east coast. They really like florida. They go back and forth. There's there's a big influx from northeast. Moving down in florida now. So yeah. I believe i tell you what the last the last month that i lived in. upstate new york. Which was my decision for saying. I can't do this anymore. I i've told the story on the air many many times but it was in january and it was Hundred eight inches of snow in one month. And you had to shovel your way out the front door literally and so And then to make matters worse so one hundred eight inches of snow of you can imagine what was on top of everybody's roofs and it was even difficult to get out and shovel your roof and so people who thinking what shovel your roof. That maybe didn't grow up Back east or anywhere where. There's a lot of snow. Yeah people have to shovel their roots. And so i rented at the time anyway. A big is. It came off the second floor and absolutely destroyed. My car died on the total that completely totaled at an icicle to get out. And that's and that's when. I said you know what i think. I'm gonna move where my parents were which was in texas so yeah. My parents moved to texas. While i was living in europe for almost two years and then i was so dumb god i just went to two to europe with no money really and just a boyfriend. That was living there at the time. And oh my gosh. The things we do when we're young right without thinking no regrets venture. Oh my gosh. What an education i got i really did And learn to speak german and so yeah so there's no better way to learn a language. Then you just you know dump yourself in the middle of that country get thrown in the pool and figure out how to swim high. Now i know oh my gosh. Well always great to open the show with junior. I love what we do here on one life radio and i think everyone out there listening is going to really like today's show. We have one of my favorite people coming up here in just a second dr natio- winners at the half. We have greg a glazer back. He is the general counsel for physicians for informed consent or pick a nonprofit organization opposed to maxine. Van dates are van dates mandates. The things that come out of your mouth on the radio right. Oh my gosh. By dr nathan winters. You're gonna love her. She's been on the show many many times. If it's your first now your first time listening doctor. Asia is a naturopathic. Integrative oncologists and a fellow of the american board of naturopathic oncology. She has been on a personal journey with cancer for almost twenty nine years and her quest to save her own life has transformed into a lifelong mission to support others on a similar journey. Dr travels the world helping colleagues master the metabolic approach to cancer so their patients can achieve better treatment outcomes. She is the co author of the book. The metabolic approach to cancer integrating deep nutrition. The ketogenic diet and nontoxic bio individualized therapies. she's a rockstar in this world. You guys you can find her at. Dr nation dot com. That's nasa a doctor. Dr show. Welcome back hello to drop a no or call right back okay. Caller right back. I you know i always have stuff ready. So you let me know when she's back and i'll stop. I might not even be able to get to it but you know i was. i've got two things one of my left hand one of my right. Which one should i do. My left or my right Let's go with my right hand. Okay so this is an from a from a blog. Called mama mia. And it's the seven things that people with healthy guts do every day and i think it's important to always remind myself the things that maybe i missing or you forget you know. Life is so busy at times but on the top of the list says take time with your food so it goes on to write that probably the most simple change was remembering to just slow down when it came to meal or even snacktime and so it's important that she there. Yes she's on. Okay all right thank you. I was butchering that today. I wasn't ready. But i'm kind of always ready but you know what i mean. I wanted to talk to dr nature. How you doing today. Dr nisha winters. Sorry about this. I don't know what happened was not a big deal it happens. It happens all the time and we are live so that makes it even more interesting people. People loving people love it. When you screw up. It makes them laugh so so everybody out there laughing. I hope you enjoyed it anyway. Go when're is real there. You go keeping it real here on the radio. Well you know you are one of the most real people i know and your experience of what you went through And transformed your own life and this lifelong mission after fighting cancer for almost twenty nine years are not fighting well keeping it at bay right and getting rid of get yes yes yes yes Okay so what we're talking about. Today is actually fascinating. I don't i know very little about this subject. And i kinda like that. I'm going into this pretty blind. So let's talk about this mistletoe. Therapy so many of us here. The word mistletoe. You know doctor and they have christmas. So one of the medical uses for mistletoe. I love questioning. And of course it's near dear to my heart This medicine has been around since ancient times Had been used at you as a whole plant extract for everything from cardiovascular disease to headaches to arthritis that in modern times since nineteen twenty if you can believe it it has been used as an adjutant cancer therapy in an injectable form of a very specifically harvested processed and formulated plant extract in the treatment of cancer. So we'd had it for just just celebrated hundred birthday as a cancer treatment. Really okay so we. We clearly don't do this in the us where what are some of the countries that they do this. And i'm thinking europe or china maybe right pretty much everywhere but us although led a little shoutout to the us The john hopkins just completed a phase one clinical trial. Which is the first done on soil in the united states on an is the application of the therapy for stage for solid tumor. Cancers dot should be published Soon so that's a big step forward. But if you're a patient with cancer living in europe depending on which country you're in between sixty upwards of eighty five percent of a patient with cancer will use this therapy at some time the apple how far behind we are over here in the us. Well we're not really far behind. We're just bought me for by the pharmaceutical copies. They own they own country All street got the trial donors. It was paid for by profit It was not funded by governments sanctions. So your point exactly. It wouldn't happen if People hadn't raised the funds to trial. Wow well i was gonna ask you how long doctors been using it but you already said this is a hundred years old okay so mistletoe you know everybody kind of knows or at least. I always put mistletoe in my house. At christmas i love it. I love hanging it over the door. I love you know catching my man and kissing up. Mistletoe.

Steve Cochran
12th US case of coronavirus reported in Wisconsin
"News some news about corona virus in Wisconsin earlier today we were informed of a positive test results of the novel coronavirus and a UW health patient that university Wisconsin health director of infection control Dr nasha soft are a Wisconsin resident who returned from a trip to China last week has been sickened with the virus that originated there that is the first case confirmed case in Wisconsin and the twelfth case in the U. S. gnashing global globally there are about twenty eight thousand of those cases most of them in mainland China the death toll again nearly five hundred and sixty eight in