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Beauty From the Inside

The beauty industry is worth an estimated $445 billion, and it continues to grow. People are always searching for something that will make them look younger and healthier, but many products, even the expensive ones, fail to provide the results people want. Fortunately, there are some foods you can eat, and some supplements you can take that may help promote healthy hair, skin, and nails from the inside out.

Beauty Products

The health of our hair, skin, and nails largely depends on what we put on the inside. Most products cannot do much from the outside. Many beauty products can even make your hair and skin look worse over time, and they usually contain lots of nasty ingredients. Nearly every conventional beauty product, from makeup to serums and creams, contains at least one known or suspected carcinogen, along with many other chemicals. Many of these chemicals can dry out the skin, and some can even speed up your skin’s aging process. Companies are not legally required to list all of the ingredients they use, so what you see on the label may not be the worst of it. Many people believe that it does not matter what you put on your skin because it’s on the outside, but the skin absorbs whatever is put on it. This is why opting for all-natural products as much as possible is so important, because things like coconut oil, aloe vera, green tea, and certain essential oils have many more benefits and less side effects than the chemicals commonly used in conventional beauty products.

Diet

Your diet can have a big impact on the health of your hair, skin, and nails. A person that eats a diet high in organic fruits and vegetables usually has healthier, glowing skin than someone who eats a diet high in processed foods. Organic produce is high in antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals that all contribute to a healthy, glowing complexion, strong nails, and strong, healthy hair. For example, the beta-carotene found in carrots, sweet potatoes, cantaloupe, and spinach can help combat the signs of aging, and even give your skin a slight “glow”. Beta-carotene is also good for eye health and reproductive health. Considering the many benefits of all of the different vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants found in fruits and vegetables, eating lots of organic produce should be a priority.

You should also eat plenty of good-quality fats like those found in avocados, olive oil, coconut oil, and wild-caught fish because they promote skin elasticity, hair growth, heart health, and eye health. Good fats help keep your skin hydrated, and the anti-inflammatory properties may help hair grow, as well as reduce inflammation throughout the body. Drinking enough water is also essential for healthy hair and skin, as well as overall health. You should drink half an ounce to an ounce of water per pound of body weight, depending on how active you are. For example, if you weigh 160 pounds, you should be drinking between 80 and 160 ounces of water each day.

Supplements

There are some supplements you can take that may help improve the health of your hair, skin, and nails. These include:

CollaGEN – Powder collagen supplement designed to help promote hair, skin, and nail health, as well as joint health. Collagen is necessary for healthy skin, hair, nails, joints, tendons, etc.

Cosmedix – Supplement containing vitamin A, D, and B12, biotin, selenium, stinging nettle, and several other ingredients that may help promote healthy skin, nails, and hair.

Orthomega 820 – Pure and stable fish oil supplement that may help promote healthy hair and skin, as well as heart, eye, brain and joint health.

The next time you go to put on your face cream, wash your face, or apply makeup, take a look at the ingredient labels. You may be surprised to see what you’re putting on your skin, so opt for more natural products whenever possible. Also, try eating a few organic carrots every day, along with other organic produce, and see if you notice your skin looking healthier and more radiant. You should also try some of the supplements suggested above and let us know when you notice a difference, and remember to stay hydrated!

You can listen to our Beauty From the Inside podcast here.

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Fish Oil Fat or Fiction

Janet Lewis:                        Hello and welcome to this week’s edition of the Green Wisdom Health Show. I’m Janet Lewis.

Dr. Lewis:                            And I’m Dr. Lewis.

Janet Lewis:                        And we are bringing you an exciting show about fish oil, which I’m sure all of you know something about or at least have heard of so this is not a random vitamin that you’ve never heard of. This is actually something that’s very commonplace; however, the differences in them are vast. So, this show is titled, “Fish Oil – Fat or Fiction,” and that’s not misenunciated, that is Dr. Lewis’ title. So, with that, Dr. Lewis can you tell us what we’re talking about? What has fat got to do with fish oil?

Dr. Lewis:                            God, I don’t even want to go there yet. It’s kine of like fast food. It’s funny how they slipped the “s” in there instead of calling it what it is, fat food, but we’ll get to that and how that’s related to fish oil in a minute. Where do you want me to start, Janet?

Janet Lewis:                        I want you to educate people about what they’re buying over-the-counter and what fish oil does and is it all the same?

Dr. Lewis:                            Yeah, I’m going to talk about what fish oil does. Some people don’t believe me and they’ll go get the cheap stuff and we’ve literally seen labs go to heck in a bucket because a person would change and go to a different cheap fish oil that may be contaminated. It’s like I go back to the thing you’ve heard so many times. You know, all women are not the same, I guarantee you. I’ve had the best in the world in Janet and I’ve had … okay, let’s go to fish oil. There’s a lot of things that you need to know and it’s very, very, very important. Sometimes on the internet, you can read anything on the internet. Now they’re saying all fish oil is not helpful, it’s this, it’s that, it’s that they always come back and poo-poo something that’s good. I wouldn’t say be careful what you read, but I’d definitely say be really, really careful what you believe because there’s a lot of people that say things that aren’t true.

Dr. Lewis:                            They used to say smoking actually helped your digestion. They used to have cocaine in Coca-Cola and I’m not sure they shouldn’t bring that back, but you know, that’s another topic. They used to say sugar is good for you. They used to say butter is bad and now they’re saying, no, margarine is bad. They used to say eggs are bad and I don’t know how anybody could believe that, but okay.

Janet Lewis:                        Well, that’s the problem. You hear such positive and negative things from everything now. How do you know what to believe?

Dr. Lewis:                            Believe me.

Janet Lewis:                        I guess research.

Dr. Lewis:                            I do a lot of research and then on that subject, you can get on the internet and read anything you want, good, bad, ugly and in-between. You know, God gave us discerning spirit and I think … I may be wrong, but I think some people have forgotten they have a discerning spirit and they’ve gotten to where they don’t trust their intuition. Intuition, to a big degree comes out of the GI tract, your gut feeling and our guts are so messed up, which we’re going to get into because Eddie, from up there close to Chicago asked a question and we’ll get into that in a minute. But just a few facts on fish oil. You know me. I’m going to go down rabbit trails and I hope you can make sense because I write about two or three hours worth of stuff that we try to cram into a 30-minute show and that’s why I talk fast and that’s the only time I talk fast.

Dr. Lewis:                            This has nothing to do with fish oil, but I’ll lead up to it and this is from some really good sources that says Ritalin is essentially the same as cocaine. Then I’m going to go into why should you take fish oil. The anti-inflammatory properties of fish oil with antioxidants, that’s important. I take the big dog vitamin E, but the antioxidant vitamin E added to it, prevents or helps to prevent immune and autoimmune diseases. There is research out of Harvard that says omega-three fatty acids are vital for the treatment of depression and we’ll get into a lot of different disease processes or symptoms that fish oil could potentially help your body help itself. Of course, the FDA disclaimer, none of this affects your symptoms or disease. Not intended to cure diseases and all that kind of stuff. It’s like, well, of course not, but we have forgotten that our body can.

Dr. Lewis:                            Omega-three fatty acids, and they need to be a good one. The one we use is 393% more absorption than the regular fish oil because of the form and the purity. One thing, it does have antioxidants in it. One thing people don’t really know is some of these places say well it comes from Sweden and Norway and a lot of the good fish oil does, but they catch them little rascals down around, some of them, Central America and South America and by the time they ship it up to Sweden and Norway, all that’s rancid and then they have to use all kinds … you want to say a plethora, that’s a word … I don’t know if that’s correct, of chemicals to decrease the rancid part and then what are you really, really getting?

Dr. Lewis:                            So, there’s also a study that said omega-three fatty acids are a better option than the NSAIDS, that’s non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs which is aspirin, Advil, Tylenol, Naproxen Sodium. It’s a better option than NSAIDS because they have no side effects and they help prevent autoimmune diseases and they also have curative effects. This is also out of Harvard and I keep mentioning autoimmune because that’s going to go back to Eddie’s question on leaky gut.

Janet Lewis:                        Can I talk a little bit about what they’re looking for in a fish oil because I think people would be completely flabbergasted at what the ingredients are in the fish oil and then the next question is well, yours is expensive, but it’s not.

Dr. Lewis:                            No, it’s really not.

Janet Lewis:                        Not when you compare what you’re getting. One of our soft gels, what you want to look for is the ratio of the EPA and DHA ratio on fish oil and if it don’t break it down and it just says it’s combined and makes this amount, you don’t want that. You want it broke down. On our bottle it actually says, which I’m talking about the Orthomega, one soft gel is 950 milligrams. It is broke down by EPA of being 430 milligrams and DHA 390 milligrams and then the additional omega is 130 milligrams so it makes 950.

Dr. Lewis:                            But, keep in mind, that it’s also the ones that through research are 393% more absorbable. And we can get them stronger than that, but we always have a good blend of what you spend versus what you get. If you want it more powerful, we can get it, but this for the price is the best bet by far and that’s what Janet and I take, except I take the liquid.

Janet Lewis:                        The reason we recommend this is because you can see the breakdown on it. You can see that it’s extremely strong. I would ask that you go to your health food store and look and find one that’s equally as strong and I could almost bet you a $100 bill you will not.

Dr. Lewis:                            And then, is it the fake stuff coming from South and Central America.

Janet Lewis:                        And then what we’re wanting to use this for is actually to help move lab values because believe it or not when you’re running your cholesterol panel, which we run on our lab panel, if you’re HDLs on the cholesterol are lower, you’re lacking a good fish oil. A good fish oil will actually help bring that up higher and it’ll actually help put your triglycerides lower. So, you need diet changes as well, but a good fish oil on its own will help bring that down into a normal range, so it’s not about masking it with cholesterol medication. It’s actually about getting the different levels of the cholesterol correct and LDLs on there are more about hormonal imbalances and we’re educating them now a little bit about labs, so when somebody’s running cholesterol, you know, their whole deal is let’s just give you a pill and let’s just make it all right.

Dr. Lewis:                            We use lab because how do you know where you’re going if you don’t have a map or if you don’t have a destination and this will tell you where you are so you know where you want to go and where you need to go. And people say, “But I feel good.” I don’t care how you feel. You can drop dead tomorrow and not ever feel it.

Janet Lewis:                        But I can tell you on our lab and we give them this fish oil, the numbers start getting back right like they’re supposed to be, so that’s what you’re looking for when he’s talking to you about that.

Dr. Lewis:                            And we’ll talk about all kinds of different things, but there’s the differences in DHA. DHA is like, I think it’s a 22 carbon long essential fatty acid and it says essential because your body cannot produce it. And then I treat a lot of vegans and you know, if you want to eat that way that’s fine, but you can’t get this from flaxseed and flaxseed is probably your best plant source of omega threes.

Janet Lewis:                        And explain that a little bit, too, because people do come in here and say, “Well, how about I just take flaxseed?”

Dr. Lewis:                            Well, you better eat a bale of it every day and then you couldn’t digest it and assimilate it and flaxseed is not a bad thing. Well, it’s better if you get it organic and better if you grind it right before you consume it because it can go rancid and I don’t think taking flaxseed’s a bad thing, I take it, but it’s just not complete.

Janet Lewis:                        Well, we just use fish oil because the fish has already broken it down.

Dr. Lewis:                            Oh, good point and I was going to talk about that sometime, about cows. Why not let them use the energy to make the omega threes and that’s the difference between and I might get into it more later, but that’s the difference between grass fed versus grass finished or grain fed. The grass fed beef has extremely higher percentages of the omega threes and the problem in today’s society is we have about a 1:20 ratio of omega threes to the inflammatory omega sixes and nines. It needs to be about a 1:2 ratio to 2:1. We need more omega threes by a long-shot to offset the inflammatory oils and they come hidden in all kinds of things. So, DHA is the one that helps build the brain. If you want a healthier baby, you need to eat the holy heck out of it. Take digestive enzymes. Use probiotics, because you will develop a healthier baby that has a healthier, more well-developed brain and central nervous system, plus higher immune system.

Dr. Lewis:                            There’s a really good book called, “Smart Fats.” There’s another book called, “The Miracle Brain.” And then there’s one, “Eating Well For Optimal Health.” They’re all really, really good books and there’s just tons and tons of studies. I won’t take too much time. I won’t say too much about that, just because I have two or three hours of stuff to talk about and I’ll never get around to it. The linoleic acid which is something that most people say, “Oh, well that’ll turn into-” and the answer is, “No, it doesn’t.” That’s the stuff you get from corn oil, cottonseed oil, sunflower, safflower, peanut, soy and canola. I think you should avoid the holy heck out of all of them except, I’m not so sure about sunflower oil. I kind of like it, when you can get organic sources of it and since socialism works so well, that’s why we can’t get organic sunflower oil much because Venezuela and socialism’s working so good, so beware of what you ask for. You might become Venezuela. But, there’s a lot of chemical processes as it goes through this … some of it’s beyond me.

Dr. Lewis:                            Some of these inflammatory acids, arachidonic acid, is actually inhibited by the EPA in the fish oil, so it stops a lot of the inflammation. Then, if it goes into too much arachidonic acid, then you get into the COX-1, COX-2, COX-3, which causes pain that’s activated by insulin. It just goes on and on and on and the end result is inflammation, immune system dysfunction, vascular disease, pain, degenerative joint disease, fibrosis, fibromyalgia and an increase in free radicals. Okay, enough chemistry, because frankly that’s all I know. You can go to alpha linoleic acid and that’s back into chemistry … that’s the one you get from flaxseed oil and it is converted to EPAs slightly, but it’s better if you get it from the cold water fatty fish because they’ve already used energy to create it through their livers, but it’s incredibly anti-inflammatory and then it’s converted into DHA which is incredible to build the brain, the synapsis, increases the production of serotonin and dopamine. If you’ve got enough serotonin and dopamine, hey you’re a happy camper. Give it to your spouse if they’re grumpy as heck.

Dr. Lewis:                            Okay, this is a Stevenism, so pay attention. Classic inflammation hurts. Silent inflammation kills slowly. Stevenism 101. And that’s the toxic fat. Waiting for Janet to jump in here. I think once she sees me on my soapbox, she doesn’t want me to step down from the pulpit.

Janet Lewis:                        I’m just looking for my opportunity.

Dr. Lewis:                            Go ahead.

Janet Lewis:                        I just wondered if you guys know about all the different things that fish oil does, actually, that’s very good. In fact, actually there’s 13 different things that we have listed here that it helps with and a couple of them I really didn’t know so it was kind of intriguing.

Dr. Lewis:                            It may be a little bit beyond what I just said. I think Janet has a very, very good list.

Janet Lewis:                        Yeah, there’s ADHD which I think you mentioned.

Dr. Lewis:                            And sometimes I have it.

Janet Lewis:                        Alzheimer’s disease.

Dr. Lewis:                            And Alzheimer’s, not just Alzheimer’s, but any neurodegenerative disease like Parkinson’s, dementia, brain fog, brain fart … oh, I didn’t say it … chronic headaches.

Janet Lewis:                        Anxiety.

Dr. Lewis:                            I’m anxious about it, baby.

Janet Lewis:                        Arthritis. I know it helps joints a lot.

Dr. Lewis:                            Big time.

Janet Lewis:                        Cancer, actually.

Dr. Lewis:                            And since it helps joints, it also helps rheumatoid arthritis because of the autoimmune connection.

Janet Lewis:                        The cancer, it’s been proven that it makes conventional cancer drugs more effective.

Dr. Lewis:                            Yeah, absolutely.

Janet Lewis:                        But it’s also an effective standalone therapy and natural cancer treatment, believe it or not.

Dr. Lewis:                            And there’s more and more doctors that are being very cooperative with me. I just got a referral from Shreveport from a gastroenterologist and it’s getting better. The MDs and DOs are good people. They do a lot of good things and they’re getting better and better about sending their patients to people like me, not as an alternative to medicine, but as an adjunct and complementary. I’m impressed with the medical profession for doing that.

Janet Lewis:                        It helps with cardiovascular disease which we kind of already knew that a little bit.

Dr. Lewis:                            Janet does like to keep my blood pressure down.

Janet Lewis:                        Diabetes.

Dr. Lewis:                            Say it like Wilfred Brimley. Diabetes.

Janet Lewis:                        Diabetes, or diabet-ees, that’s what they usually say. Eye disorders and I can tell you for a fact when I miss my Orthomega, I know my eyes are more dry. It really does help dry eyes.

Dr. Lewis:                            And after her LASIK surgery, which nobody knows she got, I started looking prettier, but she had dry eyes, so I told her to add borage oil with it and that did a really good job to enhance the EPAs and the DHAs from the fish oil.

Janet Lewis:                        It helps with immune system function because when the antioxidant astaxanthin is combined with fish oil, the immune boosting power is multiplied.

Dr. Lewis:                            Yeah, and we don’t sell a lot of it because some people they get to their limit before that, but Janet and I take it and she’s way prettier than me, so I think she takes more of it, but astaxanthin’s probably one of the best antioxidants you can take.

Janet Lewis:                        In women, fish oil helps skin and hair, which is the only thing we really care about.

Dr. Lewis:                            I don’t know about testosterone, that’s all men care about.

Janet Lewis:                        All they care about. Women don’t want to lose their hair and they want their skin to look good.

Dr. Lewis:                            But they don’t care if their man has testosterone. Go figure. They just want to look pretty and … never mind.

Janet Lewis:                        It helps with fertility and pregnancy, actually. DHA and EPA play key roles in sperm health and mobility, so somehow it makes them move faster.

Dr. Lewis:                            You make stronger swimmers.

Janet Lewis:                        I guess, along with increasing female fertility and also you need it when you’re pregnant because your baby is taking all of yours and that’s a lot of times what makes women go kind of nutty in the head afterwards.

Dr. Lewis:                            Yeah, but men, you’ll live longer if you don’t say anything about it.

Janet Lewis:                        Yeah, but give them fish oil because that’s what the baby just took from you and plus you need it when you feed the baby, when you’re breastfeeding because it’ll actually be smarter if it takes it. And the big one, which I think is pretty darned exciting, number 13, is weight loss which Dr. Lewis keeps alluding to in his-

Dr. Lewis:                            You ever seen a fat fish?

Janet Lewis:                        Well, that’s because they’re swimming. Is it not?

Dr. Lewis:                            I don’t know. Next time I catch a catfish I’ll ask him.

Janet Lewis:                        Well, I figured a fish was thin because it’s swimming all the time.

Dr. Lewis:                            Sorry, people. You know, this is the South and we have people that listen from all different kind of countries, so in the south, my friend from Michigan said, “I don’t understand how you catch and eat a catfish.” I said, “Well, you go bow hunting for carp and you eat that nasty thing,” so there are a lot of regional differences, so pardon me if I don’t eat a carp, but I will eat a catfish, the bottom feeder.

Janet Lewis:                        Well, it actually showed the effects of weight loss in fish oil and the combination with diet and exercise in the May 2000 issue of American Journal of Clinical Nutrition and the results showed that a combination of fish oil supplements and a regular exercise program can reduce body fat while also improving heart and metabolic health.

Dr. Lewis:                            Well, also, it’s because the higher fat content, the more your body feels full and happy and that’s why I’m a big fan of keto. Paleo is okay, but I like keto, because it’s higher fat. It has to be the good fats, though, and it keeps your brain happier and is very anti-inflammatory.

Janet Lewis:                        Yup, it actually helps stimulate the use of fatty acids for the production of energy in healthy adults.

Dr. Lewis:                            And I’ve heard this a couple of times once today and once I think yesterday. Well, I’m on keto and I’m tired. Listen, that’s normal. Your body has to do a lot of conversion to go from burning glucose to burning fat, so just hang with the lack of energy and that’s why we have sold out of Mitocore, which is energy producer, but we’ll get some more and if we don’t get to the questions, we won’t get to the questions, but-

Janet Lewis:                        Oh, no, we’re getting to questions.

Dr. Lewis:                            Oh, okay.

Janet Lewis:                        Because we had several of them and we always asked you guys which, if you’re not a fan on our Shoot’n Straight with Dr. Lewis on Facebook, just either send me an email to janet@greenwisdomhealth.com and we can include you that way or just go on Facebook and ask to be a friend of Shoot’n Straight and that has no “i” in it and no “g.” It’s S-H-O-O-T apostrophe “n.”

Dr. Lewis:                            There we go talking southern for you people that aren’t southerners.

Janet Lewis:                        Right, but we always ask the people in that group give us questions for the show so we can educate you on the things that you’re most interested in. And we have one from Carl, who happens to be a local client of ours and he wants to know how toxins affect vision?

Dr. Lewis:                            You know, there are a lot of toxins that affect vision and I still tell people go to a good optometrist or if that’s not appropriate, go to an ophthalmologist, but I’ve seen people that seem to have a lot of mold intoxication, you know, a dirty building or dirty house, something like that, that can work. Then I had a 94-year-old missionary in here this week. He got toxins from his drugs and woke up blind. Of course, that was just temporary, so worry about drug reactions. But I think seeing an eye specialist and my suggestion is take a lot of vitamin C. We like the liposomal kind because it’s greatly enhanced absorption and take NAC, acetylcysteine, because that helps the liver detoxify, helps create glutathione, helps create energy and with the glutathione it begins to take a lot of the toxins out. I’ve had several people say well, since you put me on this NAC, I see better. It’s like, “Go to your optometrist and measure it, but that’s very possible.”

Janet Lewis:                        And one way you can tell if you’re full of toxins which we always suggest people do lab work, when your liver enzymes are high, your eyes obviously won’t work as well because you’re toxic, but there’s no way for you to know that without seeing it on lab. That’s why we were talking about the cholesterol panel and liver enzymes now. One of the most easy ways is to do the low cost lab panel that we have. It’s 12 different panels, which you don’t ever see that happening at your doctor’s office because they are, by law, not allowed to do that because of insurance. We don’t do insurance and that’s why we run what we want to run because we want to see the body as a whole and not just one to three panels. So we run 12 and one of those 12 panels is a CMP which is a complete metabolic panel and it does have liver enzymes in it, so we’re able to tell if you’re toxic or not. And if the liver enzymes get right, then your eyes will feel much better as well.

Janet Lewis:                        If you’re thinking, hey y’all are in Texas and that’s a heck of a deal, we’re actually able to do that across the United States, so go to our website, greenwisdomhealth.com. You’ll see it on there. It says GWH3 because that includes Dr. Lewis’ consultation to go over the results so he can tell you if you’re toxic.

Dr. Lewis:                            Thirty minutes of lab explanations and Stevenisms.

Janet Lewis:                        That’s right. Also comes with a functional medicine report. It comes with a supplement recommendation sheet so we don’t just leave you in the closet and say, “Hey, good luck to you.” We actually tell you what to take and how to take it and for how long and actually show you on followup lab that it’s better. So, you can’t beat it. There’s usually a lab local to you because like I said, we can run it anywhere. You just have it drawn somewhere close to you and the results come back to us and Dr. Lewis takes it from there.

Dr. Lewis:                            Yeah, unless you live in someplace like Wyoming. I talked to a lady in Iowa. Sometimes the labs are little bit further, but they’re used to driving a hundred miles. She’s about to ask another question, but I’m going to throw this in. It’s off the subject. It’s the flu season. Everybody wants you to get a flu shot and you can or not, that’s up to you, but there are major studies that said over a 3 year period, so that’s a good study, three years, taking 800 IUs of vitamin D and that’s not much vitamin D, not enough, but 800 IUs of vitamin D reduce colds and flu by 70%, so why are they not screaming to high heaven about take vitamin D? And then people went from 800 to 2,000 IUs and that’s still not enough for 99% of the people, 2,000 IUs reduced the instance of colds and flu to nearly zero. There was only one case in 104 users. Vitamin D, folks. And that’s from Epidemiology and Infection. That’s not my opinion. This is from high class medical research.

Janet Lewis:                        Oh, not just the thing you find randomly on the internet?

Dr. Lewis:                            Nope.

Janet Lewis:                        Okay.

Dr. Lewis:                            I don’t listen to that.

Janet Lewis:                        We have just a few minutes left and this next question is from Eddie and he would like to know how to heal leaky gut and how long does it take to heal and how do you know you’re healed?

Dr. Lewis:                            Do you want to answer that?

Janet Lewis:                        Actually, leaky gut is a big problem for a lot of people.

Dr. Lewis:                            A lot of people. Anybody eating genetically-modified grains.

Janet Lewis:                        Yeah, it’s a modern day plague that’s killing us from the inside out. It’s actually caused by food, stress, environmental exposures and a combination of other factors. Basically the large molecules pass through the small intestine into the bloodstream and then the large molecules aren’t sufficiently broken down and are not meant to enter the bloodstream quite yet. They’re supposed to be broken down by the celia in the small intestine, so in essence, the large molecules have escaped the small intestine through leaks between the cells. That causes things like autoimmune problems, debilitating autoimmune problems which, over the last 30 years, have become increased exponentially.

Dr. Lewis:                            Obvious to us. We see more people have it. And Floyd kind of answered this. I answered Eddie with an article from his herbal studies and this is actually from a different study, but you know, Floyd gave a really, really good answer, so thank you for that.

Janet Lewis:                        But we actually have a product now that we are really excited about that goes in and helps to repair leaky gut. I know that it works because I take it myself. The problem is, it’s relatively new. I think we’ve only had it about six or eight months now, so to answer Eddie’s question, I don’t know how long you have to take it before you’re well. I just know when I don’t take it, I feel horrible, so.

Dr. Lewis:                            I’m not sure you’re ever really healed, but you can certainly be greatly, greatly … most of it can be healed and then you can maintain because we get people that have celiac and Crohn’s and they say, “Oh, my God, this better. Oh, my God, they noticed at Thanksgiving how much better I was.”

Janet Lewis:                        Well, it used to be that we only had colostrum, which is an IgG. It protects the intestines by blocking and binding toxins in the gut. The problem with colostrum is that it’s from cows and some people are sensitive and they can’t tolerate even trace amounts of dairy, so we have the new product called SBI. It’s from bovine.

Dr. Lewis:                            Well, even though that is a cow, it seems to be a cleaner source. It seems to be better tolerated and we do have another one if you need to, that comes from eggs. So we use the cow first.

Janet Lewis:                        Yes, but basically it helps things like the leaky gut, colitis, ulcerative colitis, IBS, Crohn’s disease and diarrhea associated with celiac disease, so you have people that tell you they have irritable bowel, the SBI Protect really helps control that.

Dr. Lewis:                            With massive amounts of good probiotics and we have some pretty major probiotics. It works faster.

Janet Lewis:                        And it’s even being used with C-diff and HIV enteropathy infections.

Dr. Lewis:                            And you know one of the other things? We use a lot of Glutashield with great success. There’s another product called Inflammacore for those that want to make a drink in the morning. It’s one of the things I have and I don’t have enough time to read all of the ingredients here, but it has some great immune-boosting products here and we get super, super results. We kind of sell out from time to time. I guess we’re going to have to up the stock we keep.

Janet Lewis:                        The SBI Protect, though, is from a completely non-dairy source of immunoglobulin-G.

Dr. Lewis:                            So, I don’t really know, Eddie, when you know you’re healed, but Eddie also told me his mother-in-law is a whole new person. Because I was talking to Eddie as Janet and I were driving the new RV back from Colorado. This was what? Two or three months ago and I said, put your mother-in-law on this, this and this and he says she’s a whole different person. She can eat. She’s smiling and happy, where she wasn’t before and her personality shines for the better and it’s like, “Well, she’s your mother-in-law, she’s supposed to be lovely,” and he says, “Yes, and now she is.”

Janet Lewis:                        Well, one rule of thumb with healing? It takes a minimum of three months before you begin to heal and then it’s a month for every year you’ve had the problem, so that’s why I tell you, I don’t know how long because I’ve had this all my life and I’m only 29 now, I know, but for the last 20 years of it, I’ve had-

Dr. Lewis:                            There’s a time when I should always keep my mouth shut and I usually don’t.

Janet Lewis:                        So, I haven’t been on it long enough yet to get to that complete healing stage, so we’ll keep you posted on it. And with that being said, we have come to the conclusion of our show again. This goes by so fast. We really appreciate that you’re listening to us and we really appreciate you guys’ questions. Maggie, I know you had a question. I promise we’ll get to it next week. I’ll have Dr. Lewis all sharpened up and honed in.

Dr. Lewis:                            And Brian sent in a good question and that’s a good reason you need to join Shoot’n Straight with Dr. Lewis because you get a lot of information, a lot of experience for other people, so just sign up for Shoot’n Straight and you’ll learn a lot. It’ll be worth it.

Janet Lewis:                        You guys have a blessed week.

 

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Acne, Rashes and Wrinkles

Janet Lewis:                 Hello, and welcome to this week’s edition of The Green Wisdom Health Show. I’m Janet Lewis.

Dr. Lewis:                     And I’m Dr. Lewis.

Janet Lewis:                 And we are here to bring you exciting information about acne, wrinkles, and rashes. Doesn’t that sound fun? Last week was on skin and gut issues, and today, because of such a great feedback, we are going to talk about acne, and wrinkles, and where rashes come from, because so many people have skin issues. We had a lady that actually just broke out from taking some natural products, she just completely swole up and her whole skin was just a big inflammatory process. So Dr. Lewis is going to talk a little bit, or a lot today about the outside of the body and what’s really the most important culprit, which is the inside of the body. So if you could explain to us how acne and wrinkles and rashes on the outside have anything to do with what’s going on inside, we would appreciate your input.

Dr. Lewis:                     It has everything to do, and really the hardest thing about these podcasts are naming it, except for staying on the right rabbit trail, not jumping on another one, but it doesn’t really matter. If we talk about skin, we’re talking about the GI tract, we’re talking about the detoxification of your kidneys and liver. You got two choices; you can detox or intox. And most people say I want to be intoxed, but you want to give your body enough nutrients that it can detox. I’m just explaining skin because I just got off that rabbit trail and stayed on it a while, still have a lot of information on it, but everything I say about skin is equally applicable to everything in the body.

Dr. Lewis:                     One of the things that can make for good skin or bad skin is there’s an immune stimulation that goes on in response to stress, regardless of the cause, and stress can be mental. Most people create their own stress. You know, the old saying of most people create their own storms and then they complain when it rains. Most people that’s stressed, because you think about things incorrectly, and that’s why I tell you to read books, listen to tapes, talk to people that can help you think differently and be less stressful. But it can be chemical stress, financial stress, being married to the wrong person stress. Okay, enough about that.

Dr. Lewis:                     Chronic stress can actually cause the issues, as far as high cortisol, which blows your adrenals and goes to low cortisol, but actually increases your risk of infection, and that’s when it gets moderately prolonged type stress. So people that get infections a lot, it may be because of what would seem to be a totally unrelated stress, and them not dealing with it correctly. And we deal with it nutritionally, but we also try to pump people up and be positive, and give them a reason to live, and make that connection well, if you get healthy therefore your family can be more blessed.

Dr. Lewis:                     The immune system gets ramped up under chronic stress, and then the longer that goes on the more likely you are to have an autoimmune disease. You’ve heard us talk about the different autoimmune diseases and how it’s always partially a part of the answer, a part of the equation is the GI tract, and we talked about gluten, and that’s one of the chronic stresses. I’m not totally gluten free, but I’ve certainly cut it way, way, way back, and Janet just did our lab yesterday morning, and it’s coming in, it’s not final yet. Janet’s doing really, really good. We’ve made some incredible improvements with her immune system. I’m doing real good in some areas, but here’s something I want to talk about.

Dr. Lewis:                     Even if you’re taking the right stuff, you may not be absorbing it, because I take one K-Force, and one to three of our good Vitamin D. So I’m getting at least 10, if not 20 IUs a day of the good Vitamin D, and my Vitamin D tested at 40, and I know that’s in the range, but that’s woefully inadequate. So either I’m not absorbing correctly, and that’s why you have to go to the gut, even if it’s wrinkles in the skin, you’ve got to think gut. So I’m not absorbing, or I’m actually using a lot of my Vitamin D to let my body detox and fight off some kind of major chronic stress. So see, high or low doesn’t always mean, you still have to plug in other pieces of the equation.

Janet Lewis:                 Well, and the other part of that, because people always say, “Can’t you overdose taking too many vitamins? Can’t your system not know what to do with that because you’ve thrown so many?” Honestly, we throw, you wouldn’t believe what I throw in. Like Dr. Lewis said, I’m taking 10,000 IUs of Vitamin D as well. My Vitamin D came back at a 56. It was like, okay, well it’s in the range but it isn’t like it’s high. But the issue is digestion. For both of us, even with us taking everything, it was a lack of an ability to actually break down what we’re putting in. So you can put the good things in, but if you don’t have great digestive enzymes, you may not be absorbing all of that.

Janet Lewis:                 So it actually takes more of it to get in before you absorb it, or in our case, we’re going to a little bit of betaine hydrochloric acid to help the chloride go up, because that actually helps burn up all the things that you’re putting in a little bit better, and help you utilize it, because you start losing your chloride levels the older you get, and we’re both so young, we want to make sure that we keep our chloride. But that’s the main thing, is that you really don’t know without lab, whether or not you’re taking the right products or you’re not, and people say, “Well, I’m taking this, I think it’s this.” I’m like, “You don’t know what it is unless you do lab.” Lab is a big eye opener, and it’s usually not anything you think it is that’s wrong.

Dr. Lewis:                     Yeah, you misdiagnose it on Google mostly.

Janet Lewis:                 Oh yeah, and you wouldn’t believe the people all day long that tell me, “Well, I’m really sure it’s my thyroid.” Everybody has a thyroid problem according to them, and we get thyroids back and they’re beautiful, there’s nothing wrong with it, but there’s other things wrong, like a lot of poor digestion. So that’s what Dr. Lewis is talking about, which leads to all these wrinkles.

Dr. Lewis:                     In order to get a good elimination or detox, you have to have good digestion to start with, because if it’s not really balanced what happens is you create something called free radical, and that causes inflammation, and a toxic accumulation in the matrix of the cells, and that’ll break down the cells. For example, the extra toxins, say of a smoker. A smoker’s almost always have many, many more wrinkles because it breaks down the matrix of the cell. It’s doing that on cells that you can’t see, also, and I talk about the inflammatory cytokines, there’s a lot of research on cytokines, but it’s not bad to have them, it’s just bad to have too many of them at once that the body’s not able to deal with. And when you decrease the matrix because you have too many of the pro-inflammatory cytokines, that alone means, okay, the cells are not detoxifying, and then you start breaking down the sponge like material in there, and we’ll get to more of that in a minute.

Dr. Lewis:                     But the cytokines, they have different messages that they steer the appropriate immune response. The two that I know of are Th1 or Th2, and the Th1 has to do with gamma tumor necrosis factors, and they kill, these types of invaders. When you have Th2, you have antibodies that are made, and people that have autoimmune diseases understand what I mean about antibodies, and it puts out things called interleukin 4, 5, 10, 13, and a lot of others, and that creates more of an allergic response, and we do have a supplement that’ll deal with that too. But they generally are only produced, the cytokines, are generally produced only under response to stress. So it can be anti-inflammatory or pro-inflammatory. So don’t think cytokines are bad, they’re just bad if you have one channel going one way, and the other channel doesn’t go the other way. You’ve got to get the health down to the cellular level, that’s why we’re talking about skin, but that counts for all the cells in your body.

Dr. Lewis:                     At one point, I tell people, “You can change the manifestation of your disease, until you get to a point where it’s past, well it’s passed the point of no return.” And I tell people, because people ask me, “Can you cure cancer?” And I say, “No. You’re past the point of no return. Please see an oncologist. Yes, the supplements can be complimentary, but not an alternative.” Always see a good specialist for whatever you have, and use the complimentary nutrients to help. So there is a point of no return, there is a limitation of matter, so to speak. You can’t do it all instantly like some people would like, it just does not happen that way.

Dr. Lewis:                     So when you talk about the stages of disease, or the stages of skin depredation, you have to think about, number one; detoxification and drainage, and these massage therapists that do lymphatic drainage, highly recommend them, go see them. Then you go into the second stage, which is immunomodulation actually, and that’s where you use the supplements, the Protomorphogens, and what they do they intervene in your, it’s called autoregulatory response, but the immunomodulation, I think the next seriously good step is when you use glandulars. And I had a lady this morning says, “I was doing this other doctor’s protocol and I just couldn’t stand it because it was a glandular and it tasted bad.” I said, “The one I recommended right there is a glandular.” She said, “But it’s in a capsule, it’s not a tablet.” Really and truly, if you can taste it first it stimulates the brain to actually get more out of it.

Dr. Lewis:                     I’ve had people that said, “I don’t want to get on this because it may affect my hormones. My body should be making it on its own.” And I told one sweet young lady, I said, “I know honey, but you’re 20, and it’s not working. And you know what? If you take these glandulars many, many, many times, it’s a wake up call to your glands and they begin to work again.” So glandulars, if a doctor gives you glandulars, it’s usually a really good thing, and it can help put off the three pillars of disease prevention, if you will allow me to say it that way. I love glandulars, personally, and we use a lot of them for thyroid, for adrenal, for thalamus, for spleen, pituitary, hypothalamus, etc.

Dr. Lewis:                     Here’s what I want you to know, this is kind of a Stephenism. Life’s going to take you down a path, but how much disease do you want to avoid? Because you do have some control. Yep, you’re not going to outrun your genetics, but you can sure greatly, greatly influence genetic expression, and that is written in all sorts of research, including cancer research, that you can alter genetic expression. There’s a lot of people that have not believed or agreed with this type of practice. Most of them are either dead, full of dementia, heart disease, and cancer, because they had the answer years ago and didn’t have the faith to put it into action.

Dr. Lewis:                     Folks, disease is going to reach up and slap you on the butt, but to have good health you have to work for it, and we’re all going to go down, but what kind of life did you have? What kind of energy did you have? How much fun did you have because you put the effort into being healthy? I’m glad I’ve done it, is all I can tell you, and it’s made a huge, huge difference. So remember, when a doctor wants to put you on a glandular, that you can hear me in the back of your mind, “And Dr. Lweis says that’s a kick in the butt for your body to stimulate proper glandular function.” It takes a minimum of two months, and so people say, “Oh, two months.” “No,” I said, “Minimum. That’s when it begins to start to work.” So don’t quit after two months.

Dr. Lewis:                     The lady I talked to this morning that didn’t like the glandular from another functional doctor, she gave it six months, and I said, “That’s fair. Fair shake.” And she said, “But I like your program better, that’s why I’m back.” And she said, “I feel better.” And I know the doctor she was going to, who is a very, very good functional doctor.

Dr. Lewis:                     When you use these glandulars it’s really good for the long term repair for chronic conditions. If it took you many months or years to get in that condition, please allow your body many, many months to get back on track, and when you do the glandulars, it’s best if you do the adipogenic herbs, also. I talked last week about estrogens, like the pig in the parking lot, takes up the space and doesn’t give you a parking space. All different hormones have different parking spaces, for example, cortisol and progesterone, they have two separate parking lots, and the higher your cortisol, meaning high stress, the less your bodies going to create progesterone. I see progesterone inadequacy, it’s rampant, and you need progesterone not just to carry a baby, to keep you pregnant til you have it, but it also helps detoxify those estrogens that are mimicked by plastics and pesticides, etc. etc. They’re interrelated but they have different parking lots.

Dr. Lewis:                     Skin regeneration is, I think, if you work on the skin you’re really working on the inside too, but the skin is probably more important than we give it credit for, it’s really the largest organ of the body. It takes up, I think the number is 16% of your total body weight, and if you were to stretch it out, they say it’d be 16 to 20 square feet. Well, some of us have more than others, that’s for sure. Sometimes the skin regenerates too fast, and it’s response to an autoimmune problem, and those are the ones that have eczema or psoriasis, the dry ones especially. One of the best things you can do is go to the far-infrared sauna and sit in that, because it helps the body sweat out some of the toxins.

Dr. Lewis:                     You kind of have to watch sunlight for the skin, and that’s kind of a confusing thing, because you need sunlight to help your body produce Vitamin D, which actually is a hormone, but it’s the UVA that goes deep, UVB just kind of bounces off, but they create free radicals. And free radicals, people ask me what that is. I said, “It’s like a bumblebee in a jar. It has to come up and out in order for your stress to decrease.” And once they get that bumblebee analogy, they kind of understand a free radical.

Dr. Lewis:                     The regeneration though, it’s a long term thing, and some of us are blessed with prettier skin than others. Janet has genetically much prettier skin. Mine, I didn’t get that good of genetics, but the skin went downhill after I had two spider bites on my leg, it grew together, rotted, and all that. Most of my skin aging came after the trauma, keep in mind free radicals, from the spider bite poison, from the antibiotics that I got, from the candida overgrowth after all those antibiotics, that really hurt me for at least six years. And that’s where most of the aging took place. So see, folks, even though it’s going on internally, it shows on my skin. And it’s getting better with time, but you have to put a little bit of work into it.

Dr. Lewis:                     How many of you have heard of the word histamine? The histamine response, most of it’s made in the liver, but the histamine response, there’s some foods that are high in histamines and those are the ones that create the allergy type factors. The snorting, and snotting, as I would like to say. We do have things that will help with that, called Natural D-Hist, it’s one of the most effective. Then there’s this thing called quercetin, some people pronounce is quercetin, that is one of the best things you can do to reduce some of the histamine reactions, and you get a lot of those from the foods. Even the fermented foods that are super high in probiotics, that’s a good thing and I highly recommend you learn to do that, but they’re also high in histamines, so think about the term quercetin, of quercetin.

Dr. Lewis:                     These cells have a memory of reactions, and it doesn’t take much [inaudible 00:19:07] later to recreate allergies, and the reactions to the toxins, it takes much less of a toxins once those cells have those memories and the hormone imbalances. So barrier, skin’s always a barrier, and people say, “I have acne, eczema,” etc. etc. “Oh, I have wrinkles.” I say, “Well, when you have toxins coming out of the skin, that’s just a very clear sign that you don’t have proper bowel movements, and you’re not drinking enough water to flush the toxins out through the urinary tract.” The skin has a lot of jobs, like regulating body temperature, and it has a lot to do with absorption. Some people try to get their magnesium through skin absorption, that’s not bad, I don’t think that’s the best way to get it, but it certainly can work that way. That’s why the Epsom salts bath will take out some toxins, and you’ll absorb enough of the magnesium to relax the muscles. That’s a really good thing.

Dr. Lewis:                     Some of the worst things you can do for skin is sugar, refined carbohydrates, anything in a box or a bag, anything that’s made from flour. Yeah I know, I hate to say that. Chocolate, that hurts because I love chocolate. Tea, coffee, I love coffee. Alcohol, and when you’re constipated. Lack of exercise. If you have a doctor who doesn’t stay active or exercise mildly, he or she may not be the best guy for you, but there’s certain things you can put in your system that can help with all that, and believe it or not, by putting it in your GI tract then it’s very likely to help clear the skin. We’ve seen many, many examples of that. We see it every day.

Janet Lewis:                 So you mean if you’re going to do bad things like coffee and things like that, you can replace it something that might be less inflammatory, or add to it so you’re not cheating so bad, or aging so fast?

Dr. Lewis:                     She’s looking at me when she’s saying that, cheating so bad.

Janet Lewis:                 Well, the one thing I’m really excited about, I’m actually excited about two things. One of them is InflammaCore. We just got this in, it tastes fantastic, and it is a vanilla chai flavor, and I think it’s because it reminds me of the lattes up at Starbucks, not that I drink those, but it just seems to have some sort of correlation for me when you taste it.

Dr. Lewis:                     That’s also young child approved by the taste.

Janet Lewis:                 Oh yeah, they’re some kind of fantastic. But it has tons of things that help cool and calm your gut, like glutamine, and it has the medium change triglycerides, and arabinogalactan for your immune system. Lycine, glycine, quercetin, huge anti-inflammatory properties like tumeric, green tea, ginger, and the best thing about this is that it has rice protein. So if you’re gluten intolerant, you could actually eat this, have this for a meal.

Dr. Lewis:                     It’s been very popular, I promise.

Janet Lewis:                 And it has flax seed flour in it.

Dr. Lewis:                     Flax seed has omega-3, the anti-inflammatory omega-3.

Janet Lewis:                 So it’s going to be great as a meal replacement, not that you’re going to replace every meal with it, but you could replace one meal with it, and have something that was very inflammatory. The other one that we have that is actually coming, it should be here within the next couple of days, is our new one for energy, which I think Dr. Lewis needs to do a show about energy, because so many people don’t have it, and I know we’ve done a few shows. But we have a new product coming called Mitocore, and it is in a powder form, and it’s something you can drink as a meal replacement as well. We have the Mitocore capsules right now for energy, but it’s coming as a strawberry protein powder.

Dr. Lewis:                     But you need your spouse to mix it up if you don’t have enough energy. So Janet, would you make it for me?

Janet Lewis:                 Sure. I’m excited. It’s like that’s another meal replacement, so you could vanilla chai for one, you could have strawberry for another. And are you going to talk to us at all about how to not age so quickly, as far as things that we might be able to do to learn how to not age as fast? Because I think everybody wants to not age. Or may I talk about it, because it’s important to women.

Dr. Lewis:                     Let me say this one thing, and this is not all inclusive, but for skin integrity and wrinkles, it’s caused usually by lack of Vitamin A, C, E, selenium, and zinc, but they also boost your immune system. So you have the collagen, different collagens and hyaluronic acid. But I think, Janet, you’d be better about talking about that, because you look, she literally looks 10, maybe 15 years younger than she is, so.

Janet Lewis:                 I do have good skin. But the InflammaCore is huge for wrinkles and taking out the inflammation in your skin. But then there’s other things that you should do, like learn how, like Dr. Lewis said, effectively cope with stress.

Dr. Lewis:                     Be grateful. Grateful people have the least wrinkly skin. The ones that always see something good and smile, they’re easiest, they’re always giving compliments, giving money, giving thank you cards. I think one of the healthiest ways you can, or maintain health, is just spiritually.

Janet Lewis:                 Yeah, and like you said, take the animal based omega-3 fats, the antioxidants from your foods, or from our new Mitocore powder, or from our new InflammaCore. We have all these new powders, so you don’t have to swallow pills.

Dr. Lewis:                     That would be me she’s looking at.

Janet Lewis:                 Use coconut oil, like MCT oil, or ours is called, we have one, we actually have two. We have one that’s for cooking, the straight MCT oil that you’ve heard of, and then we have another one that has actually got some coconut flavors to it, and it’s really good. Get your resveratrol naturally.

Dr. Lewis:                     You know, I had a patient the other day, and this is not the only time this happened, says, “Well, I drink for resveratrol.” And I said, “Well, the sulfites in it kill all the resveratrol.” I said this to a priest last week. He said, “Yeah, I drink wine for resveratrol.” And I said, “I drink screwdrivers for Vitamin C too.” And his wife just laughed. The new research on Vitamin D though says you should get your Vitamin D to 80 to 100. That’s the new research, and that’s good for the skin, good for detox. It’s hard to get Vitamin D up that high, so you have to kind of crank it up carefully, and check it on lab. Don’t just take it.

Janet Lewis:                 Exactly. The other thing is you want to try avoid as many chemicals, and toxins, and pollutants as possible, like-

Dr. Lewis:                     Toxic people?

Janet Lewis:                 And household cleaners. So many of those smell so great, and they are so toxic. The other thing is they’re always trying to put that stuff on their hands to get rid of bacteria. I can’t tell you how many people come in here and do that. You know, the natural form, or they sell some things, like Myers sells some things that’s pretty good for that, but the one-

Dr. Lewis:                     The hand sanitizer. I’ve always said the biggest ingredient in hand sanitizer is called paranoia. Quit it, it’s not good for you.

Janet Lewis:                 Yeah, I mean because you’re just putting chemicals in your body.

Dr. Lewis:                     Yeah, alcohol should go on the inside, not on your hands. Oh, I’m sorry.

Janet Lewis:                 Soaps, you have to watch the soaps. And I have a lot of women tell me, I have urinary tract infections all the time. Well, most of them are using perfumed soaps. So you need to watch that, taking sit down baths and using the perfumed soaps will pretty much guarantee you, you’re going to keep a urinary tract infection.

Dr. Lewis:                     Or chemical sensitivity, it’s hard to tell the difference.

Janet Lewis:                 Okay. Air fresheners, how many of us are doing that and hanging them in our cars?

Dr. Lewis:                     That’s an invitation to cancer according to some research scientists.

Janet Lewis:                 Mm-hmm (affirmative). Bug sprays. Now we can mist our yards with them.

Dr. Lewis:                     Yeah, I do diatomaceous earth, throw it out in front of my, you know, electric blow thing that blows, a leaf blower, and diatomaceous earth is not harmful. It’s not harmful to my worms. I have such a beautiful, rich, fertile yard that the armadillo’s tearing up.

Janet Lewis:                 Armadillo loves our yard. He comes and digs every night and he helps us aureate. So he’s trying to help us with-

Dr. Lewis:                     I chased him with a spear the other night, but I didn’t want to go in the neighbor’s yard and get arrested.

Janet Lewis:                 We’ve not caught him yet, as you can tell.

Dr. Lewis:                     Because you can’t shoot where we live, but I think I’m fixing to anyway.

Janet Lewis:                 However, Dr. Lewis is a great hunter. He caught a raccoon in his trap, which we let go. And he caught a possum in his trap, which he felt so sorry for he fed it a can of sardines.

Dr. Lewis:                     And fed it water, because I think he’d been there a little while. He was happy when he left.

Janet Lewis:                 But we still have no armadillo, he’s gotten away.

Dr. Lewis:                     Armadillo’s not going to be so lucky.

Janet Lewis:                 But see, they like our yard because it’s chemical free.

Dr. Lewis:                     Yeah.

Janet Lewis:                 And that’s the point, you want to make sure that you’re getting rid of as many of these chemicals, because they’re not good for you either.

Dr. Lewis:                     Healthy soil produces healthier food too. So be careful where you buy your food. If you can get it from the local farmer, and you know they’re not using all the chemicals, and herbicides, and pesticides, you would be much, much better off, and that does show in your skin.

Janet Lewis:                 Yeah. And the big one is pharmaceutical drugs. It is so rare for somebody that’s over 40 years old at this point to not be on a pharmaceutical drug. Not that they are not needed for some things sometimes, but they are very overdone in a whole lot of circumstances, and those will age you quickly.

Dr. Lewis:                     My cardiologist says, “Why are you not on a drug?” I said, “Have you not looked out in your waiting room?”

Janet Lewis:                 I mean literally, you can see when someone’s gone from doing natural health to they’ve got put on pharmaceutical drugs.

Dr. Lewis:                     I’ve seen friends die much quicker because there was a cascade of this drug caused this system.

Janet Lewis:                 Yes.

Dr. Lewis:                     Well, then you get on another one, and on, and on, and on. So think about your hormone level, because that has everything to do with skin too. Alright folks, I hope this is kinda sorta entertaining and enlightening to some degree, but one thing leads to the other, so it’s all connected.

Janet Lewis:                 So rashes, wrinkles, aging.

Dr. Lewis:                     Acne.

Janet Lewis:                 And gut health, all from the gut, fellas. Folks, women, children, whoever’s listening. So make sure we address the gut, and then we’ll be here next time with another show. Hopefully about energy, because we’ll be having a whole bunch of it by then, and we’ll be able to share with you our results of our new Mitocore. So hope you guys have a very blessed week.