On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Dr. Zach Bush ON: Science Based Approach to Healing Your Gut Health & How to Prevent Disease with Nutrition
Episode Date: July 3, 2023Have you ever considered the profound connection between being human and the natural world? What if our true purpose is not just to exist as individuals but to embrace our role as part of a greater ...ecosystem? These are only a few of the questions related to our future and the thriving life that surrounds us. In this episode, I welcome Dr. Zach Bush, a medical doctor and holistic health practitioner known for his work in the fields of medicine, nutrition, and regenerative agriculture.  Zach shares his expertise on the vast field of nutrition science, we confront a perplexing question: Where did nutrition science go wrong in preventing diseases? Together, we unravel the complexities of this field and uncover the simple yet powerful approaches to replenishing our health. Let's also discover how the planet itself evolves and grows, reflecting the beauty and wonder of life. There is a miraculous diversity and symbiotic relationships that thrive in the soil. Gain a deeper appreciation for the interconnectedness of all life forms. In this interview with Zach Bush, you'll learn: - The complex connection between humanity and the natural world - How nutrition sciences can significantly help prevent diseases - The Earth's biodiversity and our role in the ecosystem - The wonders of organic farming and good quality soil - How our body stores water and function with it Join us on this enlightening journey as we deepen our connection to the natural world, embrace our role in the ecosystem, and unlock the wisdom that lies within us all. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:40 To be human is to be part of an ecosystem rather than a single species 04:50 If nutrition prevents diseases, where did nutrition science go? 11:30 The earth will get more diverse, it will get more intelligent, it will get better 17:53 What’s the simplest approach to begin again and replenish your health? 26:29 The science behind water in our body and how do we stay hydrated 39:28 Did you know that a teaspoon of soil has more organisms than the human body? 51:16 How do we eat in order to protect ourselves from chemically modified food? 01:01:46 The mechanism of breathing is the allowance to create a new life 01:12:07 Zach on Final Five Episode Resources: Zach Bush | Instagram Zach Bush | YouTube Zach Bush | Facebook https://zachbushmd.com/  https://journeyofintrinsichealth.com/ https://intelligenceofnature.com/ Want to be a Jay Shetty Certified Life Coach? Get the Digital Guide and Workbook from Jay Shetty https://jayshettypurpose.com/fb-getting-started-as-a-life-coach-podcast/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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We know people should exercise and yet when we tell people who are overweight and diabetic to go exercise,
they don't actually lose weight and they very rarely improve their diabetes.
Why is that?
The best selling author in the post.
The number one health and wellness podcast.
One purpose with Jay Shetty.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose, the number one health podcast in the world,
thanks to each and every one of you that come back every week
to listen, learn and grow. Now today's guest is someone that I'm really excited to dive in with
because he's an expert in his field and has incredible insights, practical steps, and habits
that we can all implement to feel better, do better, and do good in the world. Now I first came
across him when I was using one of his products, which we'll speak about
a bit later on.
And so when I had the opportunity to have him on the show, it was an immediate yes, because
I'd been taking this product, it worked wonders for me.
And that always is a good fit for someone that I want to sit down with and speak to.
I'm speaking about Zach Busch, MD, a physician specializing in internal medicine and hospice care.
He's an internationally recognized educator and thought leader on the microbiome as it relates
to health, disease and food systems.
Please welcome to on purpose, Zach Bush.
Zach, thank you for being here.
It's a pleasure to be with you, Jay and the whole audience.
Thank you.
Yeah, I'm so grateful, honestly, to talk to you today because one of the things I love
doing on the show is sitting down with people who've dedicated their life
To helping people feel better do better and do good and I feel that a lot of your work is entirely dedicated to that
And in order for me am I audience to get to know you a bit better? I'd love to start off by asking you
You know, what was your journey from conventional medicine to internal medicine and
You know, what was your journey from conventional medicine to internal medicine? And how did you even move in that direction?
Because I think that today we're seeing a lot more of that, but you've been doing this
for a long time, so I wonder what that transition was like.
It was a stepwise journey into a lot of left hand terms and pivots, I think.
But the journey began and the Philippines, I took a hard left turn in my career.
I was going into engineering, took a year off, and then had the opportunity to birth babies
in the Philippines with a group of international midwives, and that experience of being around
the birth of human life was so riveting and so engaging that the idea of returning to
a program in robotics and machines just couldn't capture my imagination anymore.
So that was my entry point into the health career and initially thinking maybe nursing,
nurse practitioner, and then eventually slippery slope took me into the idea of just going
down that medical doctor route.
And that journey came along in an interesting point in human history where I didn't realize
in the 1990s, none of us knew at the time that we were about to witness the most extraordinary explosion of chronic disease in human history. We were about to see the
complete collapse of the human immune system, the human neurologic system, and the debut of things
like attention deficit disorder, gluten sensitivity, Lyme disease, chronic fatigue, syndromes, chronic
pain syndromes, things that had simply not existed 10 years let alone in the in the previous thousand years. And so it was a very interesting
time to enter into this world of science and medicine at the point where we
would lose it all. And now we recognize, you know, 30 years later that we're
now in the midst of the sixth extinction event where we're losing biology. It's
such an extraordinary rate. And we see not only cancer epidemics and not
immune epidemics and arrests. We're seeing, we're seeing pandemics and the results of this real disruption of
neural anatomy and attention deficit to autism from Parkinson's to Alzheimer's and this breakdown
in our cell cell communication such that we would really lose our self identity in this milieu
of inflammation and destruction at the cellular level, which
of course is manifesting at the macro level as well.
So we see the dissolution of sociopolitical systems and polarization and the fear guilt
shame paradigm amplifying as our biology collapses.
So never before.
So interesting a moment to step into this space.
And it's been a real exciting journey into realizing that
the end is near of an old paradigm and the beginning is knife for everything that we perhaps have
not even yet imagined because we are starting to realize that to be human, to be human health
is to really a description of an ecosystem rather than a single species trying to met out
a survival paradigm within
a complex ecosystem of life.
You know, one of the reasons why I've been so interested in your work is because I found myself
going from being quite an healthy individual to then randomly having inflammation and having
gut issues and whatever it may have been and none of them were things I could even explain.
Like, I was living a generally healthy diet or I was pretty active
or whatever it may be, but still I'd started to see all these things. And so what started
it in the first place at such a global level, like what has been going on with our health,
the food system and everything else? What's been happening that has caused it today, where
I think the majority of us either are experiencing it or know someone who's experiencing it.
Yeah. I think I had to go into the problem before I found some of the answers to your questions
there. And diving deeper and deeper into the problem, I was trained in internal medicine, which
is general hospital care, kind of your adult medicine and conventional pharmaceutical model,
running ICUs and the like, running, how's the chief resident,
training residents and med students at the University of Virginia, and was finding that I wasn't finding
the answers to how do I make my patients healthier. I was chasing disease and it was getting more and
more difficult, seemed every year to actually have a positive outcome with my patients. And so I
felt like I needed more training. And I did endocrinology and metabolism for another three years. And
that training really took me into
what is the communication network of this exquisite symphony
that we would call a human body?
How does liver talk to the brain?
How does the brain talk back to the adrenal glands?
How the adrenal glands talk to those kidneys?
And so that was the fascination of that hormonal network
of communication.
And that drove me down deeper into the second half of that,
specialty, which is called metabolism.
How does energy get liberated within a human cell to manifest life?
And the answer was just becoming obvious was that it's actually not the human cell that's
creating the energy.
It's these tiny little microbes, these little bacteria that live inside of our cells that
was liberating energy for the human cell to thrive upon.
And those little bacteria, often called mitochondria,
are very susceptible to toxins. I was developing toxins to kill cancer cells and was watching those
toxins damage this ecosystem within and then make it very difficult for a cell to recover on a
cancer journey. And so it was a realization that this paradigm of poisoning for the effort of
health was just chasing for the win. So it's been 17 years of academia becoming an expert in
cellular biology, becoming an expert ultimately in this little niche of chemotherapy realizing
that at the end, oh my gosh, I'm chasing the win. No matter how good my chemotherapy gets,
it's never going to actually solve the problem that I face because actually in human history, not a single cause case of cancer has ever been caused by a lack of
chemotherapy.
And so it was that kind of slippery slope of root cause, root solution, root cause, root
solution to realize I'm not anywhere near the root of this thing.
But my chemotherapy was in vitamin A compounds, which are nutrients, obviously from food
systems. And so that was a backdoor into the question of what happened in nutrition that we would
suddenly have all this cancer.
If nutrition can kill cancer, where did that nutrient base go?
And that led us then to some pretty exciting answers.
And I had to leave the university setting at that point because the research that I next
wanted to do couldn't really fit into the paradigm of here's a drug,
here's the disease.
And I was trying to want to ask deeper questions
about how does life happen, how does biology happen.
So I left in 2010, started a clinic that was based
in nutrition, an idea that the nutrition could be the basis
for reversing chronic disease and perhaps ultimately
preventing it.
And that was a daunting and scary moment for me because I had been trained nothing at all
in nutrition.
And so I was desperately looking for everything I could put my hands on in the nutrition
sciences to try to find a path forward.
And I was finding that the nutrition sciences really disconnected from the deeper understanding
of how biology worked.
We were practicing on a 50 year old beliefs about nutrition with the food pyramid and all
this. When in fact, we kind of knew already at the biology level that that was a miss.
But we hadn't matured that science. And long-winding path that turns out that I found myself back to
not recent medicine, but ancient ancient medicine. And we find that long before
Hippocrates came along to say we are what we eat, kind of saying,
and we find that long before Hippocrates came along to say we are what we eat, kind of saying,
Chinese medicine had recognized that we must realize that we are a manifestation of the nutrient nutrition, the connection to nature, and maybe deeper than Chinese medicine, Ayurveda,
which was a deep, deep feel that you've studied extensively with your tea company and everything
else. The science of Ayurveda updates back 9,000 years and comparing that to like 50 years of
food science that we throw at the wall right now, it's been proven over and over and over
and over again, invests different people's groups and genetics and everything else.
And then that long whining path took me back into this indigenous realization of we are
of nature. We are of the earth this indigenous realization of we are of nature.
We are of the earth.
Each one of us is of the earth.
And this is why we call ourselves earthlings, I suppose, but this human condition identifies
that nature intended us into our existence and into our resilience and into our full potential.
And it's in this last hundred years where we've accelerated this march away from that
nature and the convenience lifestyles and the technology boom and everything else.
And this has been that pivot point of how did we lose health?
We simply distanced ourselves from nature further than we'd ever been and we did it at these
fundamentals as you point out of the food system.
And so that was my slippery slope into what's happened to the food, which took us into
what happened to the soil, which has us into what happened to the soil,
which has taken us into a realization of,
oh my gosh, we became chemically dependent
both in our farming practices and our pharmacy of the hospital.
And when we took both of those industries
and said we will technologically create a new chemical
that will allow us to grow food better and be healthier,
we lost our underpinnings, we lost the foundation
of nutritional health on the
planet and the vitality of humanity. It's incredible, isn't it, that it feels like such
small, simple changes, but then they achieve incredible scale, right? Like the idea of
if you could find that to be the root, but the rate at which we've all been negatively impacted by it has been
colossal. I guess right now the individuals that are listening and all of us it's kind of we're in a challenging place because
I think people want to be healthier, but they feel extremely conditioned by how they've been raised, how they grew up,
the kinds of foods that they've been exposed to, the types of convenience, as you said, that they have already.
And I find that that's probably one of the hardest things is habit change.
Because like you said, we've marched so far away from being at one with the environment
or being at one with the soil or being so close to our food.
And now we're being so far away that it almost feels more abnormal to go back to nature
because of the conditioning that exists.
And so how difficult have you found it to help people actually reconnect with that which we've forgotten
when that's actually who we were, if that makes sense?
I think it's almost impossible when you sit down with somebody in the construct of,
I'm going to prove to you that you're wrong.
But it's incredibly easy to get there
when you start in a state of compassion.
Compassion is a much different energy than empathy.
And I think we've lost compassion
for our belief in empathy.
Empathy is that effort to bring my energy,
my vibration to your vibration.
Let's you be the tuning fork because you might have been just been diagnosed with a condition.
If I sit down with a cancer patient, their vibration isn't fear and maybe guilt and shame,
because they're going to leave their children behind at a young age or whatever it is.
So if I dive into empathy and try to match that vibration, we get stuck there.
We get stuck in the fear guilt shame paradigm, and I'm suddenly steeped in fear of like, I don't think I'm equipped to help you
free yourself of this disease. I think you are going to die. I think that, you know, and so I have
these deep fears within me around the death of my patient, and they have that deep fear of death
within themselves. And so that's typically where we go as humans right now as we're taught that
this empathic state of
what is the vibration of the other person across from you? Can you match that? That or for your
in it together? Whereas compassion is a much different state of recognizing where they're at listening
to the song they're singing but not becoming part of that symphony and holding this other space,
this other potential reality of okay yes this has, this has happened, but what is the alternative
to it?
And I think you lose that when you slip into that fear state, when you lose your creativity
as soon as that fight or flight state kicks in on your sympathetic nervous system.
The creative part of your brain shuts down when we stimulate the adrenal glands, which
is of course what we're doing to our children with atherol and all this.
We stimulate with drugs, those adrenal glands and they lose their creativity. So we have a whole generation now that have been taught
to answer multiple choice tests at the cost of their own creativity and performance is linked
to their adrenaline levels. That is basically the same thing that's happening in every doctor's
office in the world as the physician is afraid that they're not going to prevent death in this
patient and the patient is afraid that they're dying going to prevent death in this patient and the patient is afraid that they are dying.
And for all that fear of an endpoint, we can't imagine life as a continuum, as a continuing
energetic event that's vital and constantly regenerating itself.
And so that's kind of the death spiral that we were in.
And finding our way out of that had to do with realizing that nature has never seen an end point, has never seen death of an individual or species
as an end point, always new potential energy.
And the beauty on this planet has continued to get more rich, more diverse, and ultimately
more intelligent with every single iteration.
We call it the sixth extinction that we're in because there's been five others
and yet life booms on this planet in ways that we couldn't have imagined before that last extinction.
60 million years ago, the dinosaurs were walking around on top soil levels that were 30 feet deep.
We're lucky to find three inches of good top soil on the earth right now. 30 feet deep
top soils root systems of ferns and palms
that allowed for those forms of vegetation
to fuel those dinosaurs into these massive bodies
because there was so much nutrition,
so much energy available.
And then the topsoiled died.
An asteroid hit, choked the topsoils out
and life on earth disappeared for a moment.
And then it came back, not with dinosaurs, but with birds, mammals, humans, not with
palms and ferns, but palms ferns and flowering trees, deciduous trees, flowering plants,
wild flowers. And so this has been a journey of iteration on this planet of life more
rich and more intelligent
at every single turn.
And this needs to be embraced as a society right now as we anticipate the death of many
things.
We need to get excited for what will come next.
More richness, more beauty is going to happen and that's programmed into the matrix of life.
It will get better, it will get more diverse, and it will get more intelligent.
If we imagine the earth leaping from dinosaurs to birds and mammals and humans, where do we
go from birds and mammals and humans to what?
What species has this Earth already imagined and already coded for in the Virome?
The Virome is a description of a library of genetic potential.
It's all of the viruses of the planet.
It's a database.
And those viruses are new potential genes waiting to be expressed by whatever life happens next.
Right now in my body, there's 10 to the 15 viruses coursing through my bloodstream. It's 10 billion viruses in my bloodstream right now. Not the same virus has repeated
different viruses. 10 billion new genes checking in with every cell in my body,
say, is this an opportunity? Is this an opportunity? Is this an opportunity? So, as I let go of my own
biology, if I let go of fear, guilt, and shame, is there a possibility for me to leap forward with
my own biology with the genes that are within me right now, coursing through my bloodstream,
because I'm a microcosm of extinction and rebirth. And this is where medicine has really failed us,
is it was a belief of scarcity rather than abundance,
death rather than rebirth, fear of being,
that everything was against us rather than perhaps everything is for us.
And this has been that slippery journey for me of realizing at each turn
I underestimated our potential.
And we are sitting here at the pinnacle of a great rebirth of humanity if we choose to
go that direction.
I guess if anyone's feeling that way on a personal level where they're living in that
scarcity, they're living in that fear, they're living in that insecurity of, and just
challenge of, I don't know what insecurity of, and just challenge of,
I don't know what to do, I don't know where to start.
There's so many things that I need to sort out with my health.
There's, you know, I'm worried about, I keep hearing about my nervous system and the
microbiome.
And it just feels like overwhelming because we've been so uneducated and untrained in our
bodies, right?
It's almost like we've been given these bodies since we've
been born, but we're so uneducated about how to use them and what they need and what's good for
them and what's bad for them. And so if someone's feeling in a state of overwhelm, where do you suggest
they begin? We've been working for the last 15 years in our laboratory and in our clinics to sort out what's the simplest
approach to beginning again because I think we really are at the end of physiology. When we see two
year olds with osteosarcoma, when we see 15 year olds with, you know, psychotic major depression,
and when we see a 20 year old with life-threatening autoimmune disease, all of these conditions are
saying that we need a radical revolution.
And so we've been working through all of the complexity
of the diseases and the root causes and everything else
to find that there's really eight very basic things
that start to build physiology from the ground up
at the cell level and therefore at the organism level
and from the organism to the species.
And those eight things really revolve around
some very basic lifestyle interventions,
the first of which is coming out of fear.
And so we spend the first segment of this process
of finding self within the context of all the anxiety
that you have that you might feel like you're dying,
that you feel like it's hopeless,
feel like all the cards are stacked against you.
How do we get out of that paradigm quickly?
And that's an effort of really bringing the arrow inwards.
Because right now, the medicine and the world at large are trying to point outside of you
to say, there's your problem, there's your problem, there's your problem, there's your problem,
there's your problem.
So turning that arrow inwards to say, where's my solution?
And you and I talked about this briefly before the podcast started.
I'm like, how did you know your journey?
How did you get from North London to Los Angeles and everything in between?
And you answered very beautifully.
You said, my edges listened to my intuition.
And I never tried to judge it for, did it make sense or not.
And that's basically what's happened at our clinic.
Because we had to go inward and ask, where does this health come from?
Because I wasn't trained into health.
I was trained into disease management. And so as myself and my colleague started to put that arrow in
where we found, wow, this is really exciting. It's super simple in the end. It's not a
thousand diseases against humans. It's one health waiting to merge. And so as you come
out of the fear paradigm and that external definition of self and you become you, then
your guide is your, your future self, your highest self, whatever it is, are being expressed out of the fear paradigm and that external definition of self and you become you. Then your
guide is your, your future self, your highest self, whatever it is, are being expressed to make
you alive today with a self identity, which is pretty bizarre. It's strange that you know you wake
up every morning and you know you're J. It's strange that I haven't woken up and at some point
thought, I'm J. Shetty because we're, we're really the same thing. Like we're same biology, same thing.
I'm in Los Angeles, I could have bumped into the J way very easily.
I'm like, I'm Jay Shetty.
And yet you keep being you, no matter how close and proximity others are around you,
no matter how much food you share the same beliefs, you share the same, you keep being you.
And the really trippy thing is I get to, and that ice you setting,
see people let go of the body and die heart stops
Brain waves come to a standstill. They leave that body and then they suddenly reanimate
We're doing chest compressions. We're shocking on whatever is going on or sometimes they just spontaneously come back into that body
and
They traveled after that body stopped after that heartbeat stopped
They traveled around sometimes in the room,
sometimes great distances around the planets, visit loved ones, etc. sometimes off the planet
into the cosmos. And at no point in that after death journey, did they lose track of their self-identity?
And so that is a very strange thing about near-death experiences that has, I think, has been under
strange thing about near-death experiences that has been under explored. Your identity preceded your biologic expression and will follow your biologic expression as your body, but you're you.
When we begin health at that point of realizing that's a permanent condition that can't be destroyed
by biologic processes, that's your original math. That's the vibration you're going to follow.
For me, that's the anatomy of the soul. A soul is something that has been captured by the
religious world to describe the thing that will supersede your life. But on the science side,
it is perhaps a great description of the energy field that allows you to organize in your mother's
womb. At the beginning of your one cell, it starts to divide just like a tumor divides.
And then suddenly around replication 260, you start to differentiate.
And suddenly a cell becomes a kidney cell or a neurologic cell or whatever it's going
to become.
And allowing does become a unique cell.
It knows where to migrate to and a three-dimensional map to become that organ
system.
And we cannot find that map inside the human cell or in biology.
That map seems to be in the physics field, which is to say in the electromagnetic field,
which is to say in the space between everything.
Your body is solid as it appears to me right now is 99.99% vacuum space filled with an electromagnetic field, which
is super dense that organizes the reality of tissue around it.
This solid is organized by the vacuum.
And so that thing, that thing that organizes J. Shetty every millionth of a second to reorganize
itself because you disappear and reappear constantly, approximately every millionth of a
second, and you keep being you. You keep coming back every millionth of a second. So one million times a second,
I'm remanifesting in front of you with a map from that electromagnetic field. So perhaps
that's the anatomy of the soul. Perhaps that's the thing that holds the original you.
And we have set this world up for dices by convincing you you're a whole bunch of identities
outside of yourself. You're a son, you're a father, you're a whole bunch of identities outside of yourself.
Your son, your father, your mother, your employer,
your employee, your boss, this year that
was hardly the more altruistic those titles get,
the more likely they are to diverge you from self.
For me, that was the title doctor.
The whole world wanted to make me feel like
that was the most important thing I had accomplished. and this is what gave me value in society.
I spent a long bumpy 30 years since getting that MD kind of in behind my name to realize it's not the thing it's not me, I'm something bigger than that I am something more true than a compilation of somebody else's curriculum and some doctor's title.
And when you find that original vibration of, this is me, you become very potent.
You start to tune to something bigger than the biology would have you believe in.
And in that, you start to do something different with your relationship to everything.
And that's the eight point journey that we've put together for the journey of intrinsic
health, which is our program that we've been helping answer that question. How do you get to health? These eight steps
are laid out in this this eight week journey and it's about that change of relationship to your
food, to actually water. Water is really kind of backwards as to our understanding of how we hydrate
and what water is. And then we also get confused about breath and our relationships,
so each little respiration we take.
We're confused about what happens when we fast and what is that positive stress on the
neurologic system look like.
Confused about exercise.
We do exercise coming backwards as well.
It's reforming the relationship to all of these lifestyle things that you've been told
are important, but when you go and do the thing that's important,
you don't get healthier.
And that was a big question mark for all of us
in the medical field of like,
we know people should exercise.
And yet when we tell people who are overweight
and diabetic to go exercise,
they don't actually consistently lose weight
and they very rarely improve their diabetes.
Why is that?
We know movement is important and yet it's not working. And I think it's because of this externalization of everything.
And so since you're not you and you're this external representation of yourself,
your relationship to all these things, food, movement, breath,
fasting, the rest are all backwards as well.
And so this is the eight-week journey into the obvious,
but in a completely new lens of everything that's going to go internal
instead of externally sought after.
And that's changed a lot of everything.
And it's allowed me to close my physical clinic where I see one in patient at a time and
go to a coaching model where we are witness to the healing process rather than mandating
the healing process.
Rather than the prescriptive process of an M.D. writing down eight prescriptions and saying this will make you better
Realizing that can never make anybody bigger better because those prescriptions are eight externals
You know stimuli that have absolutely nothing to do with the root cause of their disease
And so this has been an exciting journey of reversing out of my education and into the realization that there's nothing more beautiful and potent than a human being in their own field, in their own self, in their own original math.
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I'd love to dive into some of those eight if it's okay because I think identity is such
a cool one which you just touched on beautifully there.
You touched on water there. I'd love to understand a bit more about that because I think that is such a cool one, which you just touched on beautifully there. You touched on water there.
I'd love to understand a bit more about that because I think that's kind of like not even
talked about.
I've barely heard.
I know my wife's, I always call my wife a water snob because she's very, very careful
about the water we drink and the water we, you know, shower with and everything else.
But if you could guide us to understanding what you are
sharing in your eight week program around water,
at least as a high level, could you guide us through that?
Right now when we think about liquid water,
we tend to think of this stuff in this glass here
and it tastes good drink.
It feels good to drink when it's clean.
And it has this kind of refreshing quality to it
for a lot of us.
But my body is 70% water and not a single ounce of that is in this form.
The vast majority of the water within my body is actually in a crystalline structure.
If you've ever seen gelo, eat gelo, made gelo, you see liquid turn into a solid.
And that gel like structure within gelo is the result of complex crystal structures of the water organizing itself around proteins.
And that's how I hold water.
And it turns out that my biologic age and my likelihood of disease correlates perfectly with how much crystal water do I hold.
That crystal water is holding something within it and it's light. In a very amazing biologic phenomenon,
this planet is able to capture solar energy in chlorophyll, which are tiny little mitochondria that
live inside of plants, little bacteria. And these chlorophyll have been able to take CO2 and turn it
into batteries. And the battery is a long chain of carbon. Double carbon bond is the most efficient battery
ever invented by nature.
That takes no energy to maintain the light within that.
So sunlight is captured between two CO2 molecules
and then eight and then 12 and these long carbon chains.
And then we digest those by consuming food.
And we liberate glucose, sugars, carbohydrates,
fatty acids and the oils in our foods.
And we package that up and our liver and send it out to every cell in the body.
And it turns out the human cells don't know how to use any of that glucose or fatty acids.
There's no mechanism for releasing the sunlight.
So it has to pass it down to the mitochondria living inside our cells.
So it's basically the mitochondria and plants, communicating potential energy to the mitochondria
within us. Those mitochondria and plants, communicating potential energy to the mitochondria within us.
Those mitochondria start breaking apart the CO2 and start releasing sunlight back into
the cellular matrix.
And that's what's being held within the crystal structure of water.
And it turns out that when I drink water like this, I'm doing very little to support the
crystalline structure within my cells.
For this to turn into a crystal,
it takes a complex relationship to a vast array of salts, mineral amino acid complexes,
and protein structures. And that's where we kind of lost the hydration story.
If I drink this water, it's going to feel good. It's if you can feel like I'm hydrating myself
for a few minutes, but I'm going to pee this out in the next 45 minutes. It'll, if I haven't emptied
my bladder, it will be sitting in my bladder. It's no longer in my body. It's outside of
my body again, because this pure water has no reservoir in my body. It has to pass quickly
through my bloodstream back to the kidneys and get out to my urine. And so the journey
into health is really a rediscovery of how do you get water into the crystal stage.
And it's a complex journey in some ways, but it is an exciting premise to begin with.
I need to be more full of light.
How do I become more full of light so that I'm more vital?
So I can repair at a faster rate than ever before because there's more poisons in my environment
than any other time in human history.
I need more crystalline structure. And so we reevaluate water at that journey from your gut into the crystal form inside
yourselves where it turns into that gel, battery storage place for that light liberation
from the sunlight for the animation of life to happen.
And so that's a little bit of a nutshell of a lot more content that can be drilled into.
But that's a little bit of that flip of a lot more content that can be drilled into, but that's a little
bit of that flip on the head of water.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, and you said you can actually test, you can actually see your age through the
quality of that crystalline structure.
You can test for that.
How do you test for that?
The easiest way to test for it is a relatively old technology.
It's called a phase angle calculation, but you use an impedance monitor, which is a description
of just measurement of resistance.
It looks like EKG leads, if you've ever seen an EKG, 12 leads around the heart and all
that stuff.
There's sticky little pads.
You'll put one on the wrist, one on the forefinger, one on the ankle, one on the toe, and
then you lay perfectly flat.
And you measure across that column of water that's now at an equal lateral level to the
earth and to gravity.
You measure the amount of electrical resistance across that column.
And from that, you can calculate based on body weight and your height and all this stuff,
how much water is inside every cell.
And when you calculate that,
then you get a very good biological cage
and biological estimate of your vitality.
An ideal phase angle is up around 10, 12.
I've never seen anybody at 10 or 12.
The healthiest patients walking my clinic
are typically around a seven or an eight on their phase angle.
Anybody coming in with disease,
let's go with cancer for the end point there is typically
around a four.
Death happens at 3.5.
And so what I just told you is ideal health is 10.
Death is 3.5, and cancer shows up at four.
And here we're telling everybody they're dying of cancer.
As it turns out, when you look at the simple reality of water inside a cell,
cancer is one of the last symptoms of a complete disconnect from the energetics of life.
Cancer happens when you no longer are connected to the energy of that plant, of that chlorophyll,
of that sunlight that charged life in the first place. And so that's where we go with this eight-week
journey, is where did it break down? How did you go from 10 to 3? How did you get from 10 to 4, whatever it is? And then how
do we start to back you up that track of crystalline water? How do we get your body to hold more
light energy so that you're more vital? So that you accelerate every enzyme process, detoxification,
repair, regeneration, protein structures throughout all majorcies. All of that happens automatically when the light goes up.
You mentioned a product earlier, the guts supplement you probably got put on by your nutritionist,
but the journey into that phenomenon was our understanding of soil and food and how did
it break down so quickly was the question we were trying to answer.
How did we go from 1992 to 2002?
That 10 years saw the complete dissolution of human health across all ages, across all
organ systems in a 10-year period, across all peoples, really, that were touching Western
civilization, Western food systems.
And in that journey, we discovered glyphosate.
And glyphosate is the primary herbicide or weed killer in the vast majority, 90 plus
percent of the weed killers on the planet.
We now spend billions of dollars a year spraying this thing into our environment.
We have an estimated four billion pounds of glyphosate being sprayed into our soil and
water systems worldwide.
And it turns out as our laboratory has been studying this compound for a decade now, every
time you touch human cell systems with glyphosate, it dissolves the communication between them.
It disconnects you from the boundary of being human, and it dissolves that to the point
where you don't know where your begin or end of human biology and your immune system
has to turn on to fight everything. So you were eating pretty healthy. You were exercising,
you were living a pretty affluent lifestyle compared to the rest of
the world perhaps and yet you weren't thriving because there was a chemical now in your
food that was dissolving the boundary event and your energy was now leaking out of your
body quite literally.
We've popularized the term leaky gut but it's much deeper than that that's happening at
the individual cell level that's leaking, light leaking water outside of itself.
And if you can't hold that crystalline water,
you can't hold the vitality, the energetics of the plants
you're eating, of the nutrition you're eating.
And so you start to fade with your energy levels
and with less energy, you are perilous well.
And you start into this chronic disease
that happened between 1992 and 2002,
chronic fatigue syndrome, chronic pain, everything mentioned.
And so that was your personal journey.
And then you got put on a supplement.
What is that supplement?
It's not actually a traditional supplement.
Most supplements are like pieces of the nutrition cascade of a vitamin or mineral or protein
or whatever it is.
This is way way upstream of that.
This is not a nutrient.
This is in fact the small carbon molecules that form a redox
singling system, which is a fancy word for a wireless communication network between
yourselves. There's two ways cells communicate. One is through hard fiber optic cables. They
can pass light energy back and forth for communication. And the other one is through this
more ethereal wireless communication, so similar to your cell phone. Your cell phone sits there all the time with a complex transmitter in
there, a transceiver really can receive and transmit tiny little signals, but it has
to be picked up by a cell phone tire that will propagate that information in that distance
so I can talk to my grandmother. For me to talk 3,000 miles away, I need lots and lots
of connections between all those cell towers to to cascade through to carry that message
If you lose one cell tower nearby you
Your cell phone cell thing doesn't work
Nothing broke in the cell phone is an important reality. It just can't reach the bigger system
And so the disease of today is not actually a disease of a single cell
It's a failure of that wireless communication network
And so when a single cell. It's a failure of that wireless communication network.
And so when a single cell gets injured now, it can't send out the signal of, hey, I'm
injured, I need repair.
And it sits there and accumulates injury.
And without accumulation of injury, we reach cancer.
Cancer is a single human cell that has 20,000 unrepair genetic injuries in it.
And so this journey towards cancer is not only a loss of electric light and light
potential, it's a loss of communication and a loss of that regenerative potential. And so we now
have a whole society of humans, eight billion of us that are losing our light, we are dimming
and we are losing our our cell cell communication. The cell phone towers are going down and we cannot
repair. But nature always prepares for the worst.
And the antidote, it turns out to the death of communication, which is happening at the
human level, is actually the microbiome, which is a term that's now thrown away on a lot.
And I think we all have a vague understanding.
I think that's like bacteria or something.
But really what it's describing is complex ecosystem.
It's thousands, if not tens, if not millions of different species
of bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and human cells alike, all getting into this coherent communication
network. And so the microbiome is a description of a complex landscape of biodiversity. And
each of those microbes, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and the like, are making another variant
of these small carbon snowflakes. And when those carbon snowflakes go into a liquid state into the aqueous state of your
bloodstream or into that semi-aquest state of the gel within your cells, they're able
to transmit information long distances.
And so we started extracting these from fossil soils before the last extinction.
60 million years ago, again, 30-foot top soil levels, the healthiest microbiome the planet
has ever seen.
And so we tap back into the fossil layer of soil and it started extracting that communication
network.
And the first time we put this on human cells was 2012.
And I got to see in my lab, which was rudimentary at the time.
Some of the most ridiculous things happened in a petri dish that I just didn't even believe
possible. And it was a journey from Stuy from stopping asking questions about the cancer cells we were talking
and asking questions and studying to healthy biology.
Are we witnessing health in a petri dish?
Is that what's really happening?
Because so many things we're fixing and repairing at such a rate I never imagined before.
And so it's been a very exciting journey to realize that the earth has coded into her deep fossil soils, a communication network that can help
us out of our crisis, that can help us beyond this isolation of the single
human cell and ultimately the isolation of a single human species back into an
interpretive dance with life itself, this vast biology within us and around us is
ready to re-engage.
We just need those cell phone and phone towers up and running, but in our bodies.
And that's what happened to you when you started Ion.
Yeah, no, thank you very much for explaining that.
It's incredible how little we know.
I mean, when I'm listening to you, I'm just thinking to myself, I'm like, we just don't
know enough. And individually and collectively
as well. But one of the things you talked about, Walter, we talked about a bit about microbiome
which I want to get back into, but a big area that you're focusing on is soil regeneration.
I think that's been something that's been more recently talked about, as opposed to something that we've thrown around,
as you were saying about the microbiome, but talk us through that very key element of
the environment.
And again, if you can give us that sort of synopsis version as you did with water for
us to just understand the value of that, because I want people to go and follow you and figure
out through your work, the depths of everything we're discussing today, but I think at least for the benefit of this
conversation, if people can get a sense of just the breadth of areas that we may know of me considering
a negatively impacting our health, just as you said, I had no idea when I was taking eye on
you know, what was really going on behind the scenes. I want to step in that first point for you too. You made the statement that we don't know enough.
And that's how I felt most of my life as a doctor. That's what led to 17 years of higher education
chasing that proverbial knowledge that I'd feel less afraid. I feel like my whole world has just
flipped on its head in the last 15 years to the point where I now realize I know everything, but I don't know it up in my head. I have access to information
throughout the cosmos through something deeper than my mind, and that's again where you
are acting from in your career, and not just in your career with your interactions,
humans in general, your recent book on human relationships, not just relationship to human cells, to human beings.
How do we start to relate differently than we have in the past?
And that journey, I think, is really exciting to realize we actually know everything if
we listen inside.
And this is the experience I'm sure you had in those few years living as a monk and
everything else.
When you spend more time in silence
than you do talking, you find you know so much.
And it's not something up in your head,
it's not an intelligence, it's a connection.
The real truth within you will be remembered
rather than discovered.
And so that is an exciting journey into,
let's take a deep breath and realize
nobody knows about crystal and realize nobody knows about
crystal water, nobody knows about all this stuff and that doesn't matter because ultimately,
it shows the layers that I can show you in our laboratory will give you a glimpse of beauty that
you may not have been realizing in. But how you get to that beauty is something you all innately know.
Your relationship to your water, to your food, and ultimately to your soil, and ultimately to your planet is something that precedes human intellect, human consciousness.
And so we are now in a state of being where we can actually realize, okay, if everything
existed, our capacity to become human existed before the moment we were human, what does
that mean for our connection to the future? It's already here. It's already connected. It's already manifesting through
the genome of the viruses, through the genetic potential of the planet itself. It's already
here. So not only do I know myself right now, I have access to information of the future
because it's already coded for in biology that hasn't quite yet appeared, but the information
is already there. The same way I can remember past, because it's coded for in my genes, then all
the trauma, all the remembrances, all the experience of my ancestors, it coded for in my genetic
code.
It's not in my head.
It's within every single cell of my body resonating in a crystalline structure that we would
call the fourth phase of water.
And we read, read it, and that liquid crystal state to to know self and then to express self within that matrix.
So deep breath for all of us right now, this part of the podcast,
I'm like, you know what? We're connected to all of it. We don't need to know it in our heads because we already have access to it.
Beautiful, yeah.
Then the soil. So how does the soil come into importance?
A soil is a living life form, the most complex living life form on the planet and in life
itself as we understand it.
We've never measured a more beautiful system of than the soil.
A teaspoon of soil has more organisms than our humans on the entire planet, a teaspoon.
And so there's a complexity and a brilliance and a beauty of that living ecosystem of soil
that dwarfs our current understanding of cell biology.
We can't actually measure in a peatured dish
the behavior of 8 billion different species
in a teaspoon of soil because we haven't developed
good enough scientific measures and fast enough computers
to compute that much information so fast.
So we tend to study one species of bacteria
and make a whole bunch of conclusions
that maybe it's bad for us. Well, this whole concept of bad bacteria and good bacteria of the
probiotics is really dissolved. Now we realize there is no such thing as a good bacteria or
a bad bacteria. There's only a healthy ecosystem or a monoculture. Monoculture or the death
of biodiversity is the demise of life. A push towards biodiversity is the matrix of health.
And it is unfortunate that over the last 100 years we've developed a deep
economic and physical labor dependence on chemicals for our farming and agriculture.
These chemicals destroy the biodiversity of every ounce of soil.
We put these chemicals on. They function as antibiotics.
Life, say, that most common of herbicides has been patented as an antibiotic, antifungal
antiparasite.
It literally demolishes life within the soil that it touches.
And yet, this is what farmers are trained to use.
We genetically modified all of our seeds so that the food would be sprayed repeatedly through
its lifespan with that chemical.
And so round-up ready seeds means poison,
tolerant food system. But when as a microbiome you are not prepared for that
poison or as a consumer, as an animal upstream, you're not prepared for that
injury, you become poisoned in a way in which you are right not round-up ready.
Now there was your microbiome and your gut, which is your soil system. And so
all this focus on gut health of the last 10 years is simply a description of
soil is important. It's where life comes from. Life comes out of biodiversity and relationship,
cooperation of biodiversity inputs. Regen of agriculture is a description of this revolution that
is a foot that we are participating in our nonprofit farmers footprint has been part of this effort to increase awareness and
learning, impact and innovation around the opportunity for farmers to shift away from the
belief that they're there to grow bushels of corn and instead they're there to grow
life within their soil systems.
And when every day they wake up asking, how can I create more life and diversity within
my soils instead of what can I kill today, which is what chemical farming is, which invasive
weeds are now attacking.
What, you know, I see life support, do I need to put my farm on?
Oh gosh, I'm out of all these nutrients, so I need to intravenously inject all these
nutrients with all these chemical inputs.
It's an ICU condition in the farm, just as an ICU condition in my hospital.
And so this is a journey, really, into realizing that we are doing ICU care because we lost
the matrix of life, which is biodiversity, which is the soil within your gut, soil beneath
your feet.
And it's exciting to realize that we can participate this at every level.
If we walk out in your yard right now, you have an American lawn.
And an American lawn and an American
lawn is the third largest crop grown in the United States.
There are 40 million acres of lawn, Kentucky Blue Crask grown in this country.
There's only 120 million acres of farmland, 40 million acres of grass so that it looks
nice or whatever it is.
We have lots of reasons, convening and just mowing it, whatever.
If we were to take that 40 million acres of lawn and convert that to food forests in our
backyards, front yards, and the rest, we would never go hungry.
In the next 70 generations, there could not be hunger because we would have so much food
bursting from every yard.
In World War II, we came close.
We had lost the food system, we had lost supply chains, we lost economics, and so we were
growing our food in our backyards again.
By 1945, Americans and the British and London, and as we're growing, 45% of their food system in their backyard, victory gardens.
We called them victory gardens because the campaign was, if you don't grow your own food, we're all going to lose the war.
If you grow your own food, we'll be victorious. Russians long knew this. Russians had really built, really complex systems of what we call today peasant farming systems,
where there was a lot of redundancy and a lot of hyper-local marketplaces for food systems.
Russians survived some of the worst fast start starvation events in history during World War II,
and they won the war against the Third Reich for their resilience.
And a lot of that resilience was their connection and nature, their proximity to their food
system.
The Germans ultimately failed because they had a 3,000 mile supply chains and the food
couldn't get to them.
Today, the United States of America is failing because we have 3,000 mile supply changed.
The food that's not grown here in this country anymore because all of our soil is dead.
The cost of putting seed in the ground now exceeds the cost that it can be sold
for. And so we have all these governed subsidies to keep telling farmers to plan genetically
modified crops and put them under dollar expensive, you know, high intensity inputs, which
is bankrupt, which means basically every farm and they're all on life support economically
getting these subsidies that we call USDA crop insurance and all these fake things,
boosting up dead soil, dead dirt. And so if there is a belief of homeland security,
if there's really a belief of nations or, you know, capable of safety, you have to begin
at the soil. And President Sloan back, long back have recognized this Franklin Delano Roosevelt said the future of every country is in their soil
And he said that because we were in the dust bowl
Which was the devastation of our top soils due to poor farming practice and we were starving as a nation my grandfather worked in the White House with
The Roosevelt's and his he was the head of philanthropy and the new deal and getting this soup kitchens rebuilt and so traveling around with Illinois
Roosevelt serving suit lines that were miles long of people starving in this country in the New Deal and getting this soup kitchens rebuilt. And so traveling around with Illinois Roosevelt,
serving soup lines that were miles long
of people starving in this country
because their top soil had died.
So twice in a single century,
we've destroyed our top soils
through poor understanding of biology originally
and now a co-dependence on chemical farming
and anabotics as a mechanism for growing food.
And so for that, we have 3,000 miles supply chains,
and every city has now become a really vulnerable island.
And we saw that in the pandemic,
suddenly grocery store shelves were empty,
because the ships couldn't get into the ports,
the trucks stopped driving, and there was no food on shelves.
It is a very desperate situation we're in in the United States,
but unfortunately, we have exported that behavior of food systems to the entire developed world.
London is now as vulnerable as the United States and the rest, Paris as vulnerable.
Los Angeles where we sit today has a three-day food supply.
To millions and millions of people.
And so if an earthquake happens and disrupts the one highway system that comes into Los Angeles,
we will lose our food supply in three days and we will have a massive riot and humanitarian
crisis on our hands.
We are an island unto ourselves and our food is 3,000 miles away and we're not realizing
it.
Instead, we have 40 million acres of grass that we can't eat and we're spraying that with
roundup in our backyards to kill the few dandelions, which are the only edible in anti-cancer compound
that's in your backyard right now.
And so we need to start realizing we need to eat that
dandelion green, not the dandelion flower.
Before it flowers, you're eating that green,
and you're getting the nutrients,
and you're getting life back in,
and you go beyond that,
and you say, let's get some beats and turnips
and all the rest,
let's get some other root vegetables in there.
And suddenly your backyard could turn into
a bounty of safety for your family, for your community and the rest, let's get some other root vegetables in there. And suddenly your backyard could turn into a bounty of safety for your family, for your
community and the rest.
And so this is the paradigm shift that Farmer's footprint is really working on is, can
we realize how vulnerable we've made ourselves as individuals, not just at the biologic level
of all of our chronic disease, but also the societal level as we have divorced ourselves
from soil. Is there any way, I mean, hearing that, is there any way to have an optimal life still
eating from a supermarket?
Like the idea that, you know, I'm assuming that the majority of people listening are not
going to rush to start growing something in their backyard, not that they should not,
and not that we're not encouraging it. I think it's incredible when people can, but again, going back to
that conditioning, habit formation, all the challenges that come with that, what can we
eat? Or how do we eat in order to protect ourselves?
Well, we learned it in space during the pandemic. You might remember there was a moment where
we, every place in the country, sold might remember there was a moment where we every
place in the country sold out of seeds. So we started growing again. And we're seeing a very
exciting movement in young people right now. A lot of people are leaving the cities to go start
farming. They've never farmed before. They have absolutely no idea. But they have this deep
knowingness inside of them that I'm supposed to get not just to a farm, but I'm supposed to build
community around that farm. So I'm going to take, not just to a farm, but I'm supposed to build community around that farm.
So I'm going to take me and my best 10 friends and we're going to move out into the country
and we're going to start farming.
And the Regenerable Agricultural Movement has been led mostly by women and mostly by youth
in this country.
And so there is a real movement, not just here, but now as we've spawned farmers for
front in the UK, farmers for a prin Australia, the Western world is starting to reimagine
its relationship to food and soil.
It's really the women and the youth that are finding this path forward for us.
It's because I think deep inside of that feminine archetype that we all have access to,
male, female, or rest, that feminine archetype is about nurture and it is about connection.
That's ultimately what I believe the regenerative agriculture movement
is in one word. It is a reconnect. It is a reconnect to nature. And there's many ways to do it.
There's not a prescription for here's a regenerative farm. It's about listening into your nature,
listening into the reality that's trying to express itself on that piece of land and then
being in support of that rather than trying to micromanage that thing. And so that's very
much of a feminine archetype we can all connect to is how do we let life
start coming into our lives in a biodeverse fashion.
It doesn't necessarily have to happen just at the food and the soil can happen with your
community and the inputs you're taking on.
If your input every day is CNN or Fox News, you're going to become a monocrop, almost immediately.
You're going to lose all biodiversity of information.
You're going to become very monotonous in your belief systems.
You're going to be very easy to push into a small box of fear, guilt and shame.
If you go out in nature and spend hours a day hiking and walking through nature and smelling
real soil and touching ferns and being in awe of the wildflower and bathing in a
waterfall. You can't be put in the same box because you are seeing the
complexity and beauty of nature that predated our existence, let alone the
existence of a television or a news channel or whatever it is. And so the
excitement is for me as far as way as this might sound to you right now to be
growing your own food all this time, you're just a few seconds away from your introduction to that universe.
Get out to a park.
Forget a park even lay down in somebody's yard that has a tree.
If you lay down on your bag and look up to the branches of a tree at a blue sky that
has clouds passing over, your brain will start to rewire. Just with that light
pattern that's coming through that tree because in that it's like looking into a fire.
If you can't do the tree, stare into a fire at night. If you can't do a fire, stare into
a candle. Because in the frequencies of those inputs into our neurology, we put in information
in the form of storytelling. A recent study demonstrated that if we look down
at a fire, picture a fireplace between us here,
if we look down at a fire around a campfire,
the like, all of the stem cells in our bodies turn on.
They tried to figure out like,
how are stem cells being activated by the fire
and turned out that it had to do with not just the fire
and its presence, but our eye trajectory too. If I looked past
the fire and didn't look into the fire, my stem cells didn't turn on. But if I dropped
my gaze away from the horizon and looked down at the fire, my stem cells turned on. And
I believe it's a story of instead of chasing the future on the horizon, we need to look
down into the energy that is between us. This fire that sits between us,
we look down for a moment, become present
instead of future looking to that horizon.
We become present enough to sit in stillness
and watch that vibrational experience
of a red coal glowing and pulsing in the night.
There's something in that that remembers ourselves.
And it was around those fires that we sang our first songs, danced our first dances,
and told our first stories as humanity. And that runs all the way to dead it today.
The place I have felt as an earthling for the first time in my half a century,
it's in the African bush around fire listening to African drums, hearing the vibration of voices
and tongues that I have forgotten existed.
And remembering that, I find my humanity again.
I realize I am from here.
I do belong here and I am of this place.
That is remembered around a fire looking down.
And so gather around a candle or fire, whatever it is,
and start to tell stories again of things remembered
or of yesterday if you need to.
But start telling a story around flame,
and that is maybe your journey back into growing
a piece of food yourself in your backyard.
There's going to be a deeper remembrance of you
if this is what peace feels like.
This is what that pause does. Staring to the flame, you can find the silence necessary to find that guiding
sense within you that we call intuition, that guiding sense that you have followed in
your career, to bring you to the success you've had.
And so we all have that immediately available.
Before we've even grown our own food, before we've grown anything, all of that is intact. And I have, again and again, seen people on the deathbed as a hospice doctor.
I was admitting 80 patients a week to die. So I've seen a lot of things that we call death.
And even when biology is completely failing and they have a few heartbeats left, a few
breaths yet to take, they can get into that fire moment. And they
are crossing the veil and they're back again, they're crossing the veil and they're coming
back and then they open their eyes and it happens so, so often. Some of you who's been kind
of in this comatose, you know, milieu of barely here suddenly comes crystal clear, looks
you in the face and says a deep truth that may or may not make sense as either receiver,
but in saying it, you can see them reconnect to their original
self. And they are more true to themselves in that moment of death and they
were ever in their state of living in a state of disconnect. And so it doesn't
matter how close you are to death, that firelight is burning inside of you if not
in front of you. And in the silence in front of that firelight is burning inside of you, if not in front of you.
And in the silence in front of that fire, you can remember why you came here and why
you did what you did.
On purpose is your show.
And it turns out purpose is not outside of you.
It's not something to go find, it's not something to go discover.
That purpose is you being you.
That original math that vibrates to animate your biology into a living life form for a moment
that we would call a human lifespan. You're vibrating there and the purpose is to be you
in this form to take in the light energy of the cosmos of the food you eat and express it in
vitality within that liquid crystal of your body to vibrate. It's the vibration that makes you alive.
And that vibration can be shaped by your thoughts, your beliefs, the words you carry,
and the feelings that you have towards one another. And so this is our moment right now,
as we can burn right at our death moment, on our deathbed, 60 years, 80 years left, however long
as there on our margin of that. We can rebirth now to come off of
hospice and become a new species, become a new humanity, become a new expression as we lose
fear, guilt and shame because we look past the death that we all fear and realize that life is
abundant and it's infinite and it's always in its next transformation, next expression,
which is always chasing more beauty and more intelligence in the rest. And so we sit here
around a fire now talking about the demise of all things
to realize the birth of everything.
I find your response is so refreshing.
There is such a rejuvenation and rebirth hearing the ideas that you're sharing with the world,
because I can definitely, personally, attest to so many of the things that you're mentioning,
whether it's lying down under the tree,
looking through the branches, whether it's deeply excavating
and looking at the roots of a plant,
whether it's looking out into the sky or cloud gazing,
which is probably one of my favorite things to do,
which is why I live where I live,
or whether it may be just feeling reconnected.
One of my favorite things was when my wife and I went to Hawaii a few years ago, and we
fell in love with it because we felt the people there had their own language for a culture
that we've learned differently. So having studied the Vedas, the worship of
the sun and the moon are such big parts of the Vedas. And when we were in Hawaii, we would go out on a
kayak every morning and pay our respects to the sun. And it always felt beautiful to do it in the
Hawaiian culture and through their traditions. And I remembered we walked around where they
were showing us the paragraphs and the writings and the stories on their rock. And there was
this one particular one which repeated itself, which was a expanding circle. And it was
said that whenever a child is born in Hawaii, its umbilical cord is placed on the earth.
And a circle is drawn around
it in that very spot so they can always come back to that and remember that they're always
connected to the earth and that's what they belong. It's incredible how these very simple ideas
can be so sacred and so powerful as you said internally. You feel these things don't necessarily make
sense in your head or you can't compute them
in a logical, reasoning point of view, but you can feel them even when we were there, you
could see it and you could feel it.
You mentioned, twice there, you mentioned at the beginning, breath as one of the elements,
you then mentioned it again when people learned their last breath.
Could you walk us through the same kind of refreshing insight on breath?
The mechanism of breathing is the allowance to create new life.
And we exhale so that we can breathe back in.
And if you've ever been told suddenly in an audience, like, okay, everybody inhale, it's
very hard to inhale because they didn't tell you to exhale.
And so to really take a good inhalation, you got to tell the whole audience, all right, everybody exhale, blow it all out, blow it all out, blow it out. tell you to exhale. And so to really take a good inhalation, you gotta tell the whole audience, all right,
everybody exhale, blow it all out, blow it all out,
blow it out now you can inhale.
And in that exhalation, you're basically exchanging
the life force with the environment around you.
When I exhale, I push out millions of different little
tiny variants of my genetics through some
they call microRNA, it's basically my version of expressing
a viral message to the world of here,
here's who I am right now,
here's what I'm expressing genetically, here's what's happening.
So I have a genetic signal that I breathe out.
And I have a new potential for life that I breathe out
in the form of carbon dioxide that I just derived
from all the glucose and fatty acids
that I'm deriving all of that sunlight from.
So I'm releasing sunlight and then I give back the CO2 to the atmosphere so I can breathe
it back in.
And turns out I need CO2 exchange.
I need to breathe it as much as I need to exhale in because it's really the pulse of
life and it's the way in which I use oxygen at the cellular level.
So I can't use oxygen unless I've got CO2.
So I breathe out a big gift of CO2
and the atmospheric gives me back CO2 in a ratio
that allows me to use oxygen more effectively.
And so CO2 is really the coursing bloodstream of life itself.
It's the currency of life.
And so that currency of energy is pulsing with every breath
and when I start to develop an addiction to breathing, I don't take that deep breath.
And I instead of have all these short little breaths that I take all the time because I'm
in a fight or flight state.
And I don't slow that respiration down.
My neurology is reading all the time panic.
And so in the same way that we're addicted to water that can never turn into a liquid crystal
and therefore we're always thirsty.
In the same way, I always taking all, you take all 16 to 20 breaths a minute because I'm afraid I'm going
to run out of air because I haven't been taught to actually breathe.
And so the planet is now doing this as well as humans.
The planet can't take a deep breath right now because its lungs are the soil system.
We've now killed 97% of the soil systems.
The planet, 97% of arable systems, the planet, 97% of
arable soils on the planet are now depleted or severely depleted of their
metabolism, their ability to breathe. And I ideal state this planet breathes in a
deep breath at night and then exhales in the morning. And you can watch this
happen, especially in humid areas, I live in Virginia and along the Blue Ridge
Mountains at night, if you stand up high on the mountains, you get to see that the And watch this happen, especially in humid areas, I live in Virginia, and along the blu-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r the breath to the soil and with it all the water. In the morning it excels and all
that water appears on the surfaces due on the grass and in the canopy and
everywhere. Well that due is now very cold because it was breathed out by a
deep geothermal cooling thing that we call the planet. The warming of the
planet is not being caused by CO2 or greenhouse gases. We've been given a very half-truth
by our political systems that, with Al Gore and the rest of said, with CO2s our crisis,
we've now pledged $40 trillion by 2050 to suck CO2 out of the atmosphere and all that
because we've been told it's the problem. But in fact, whether it's a dying patient
on the bedside, you can no longer breathe, or me addicted to my short breathing or the planet that's lost its lungs, and now as emphysema,
CO2 starts rising in the atmosphere and the heat goes up because we're not bringing that into
the earth and out of the earth, into the earth, out of the earth, on a daily basis to cool the planet.
We lost the lungs, therefore we lost the exchange of life through CO2, and we lost the geothermal
cooling that comes with breath. And so the planet has a fever, not through CO2 and we lost the geothermal cooling that comes with breath.
And so the planet has a fever, not for CO2, but for a lack of breath.
And so this is the transit that we need to do as a planetary participant, as we need to be part
of the solution, we need to allow the earth to breathe again. I find it interesting that you
always find the micro story and the macrocosm, and you find it interesting that you know, you always find the micro
story and the macrocosm, and you find it fructally, which means at every single level of expression
of nature, you'll find the same truth. And here we were in the middle of the pandemic,
where people were going blue because the oxygen could not exchange from their blood cells
into their cells. Perhaps in part due to a virus, but deeper than that, we had covered our
planet in the highest levels of carbon contamination and history because of the largest fires that
had raged for the year and a half before the pandemic, and then all the way through
the pandemic, we had the largest fires all over the world that ever happened.
So for all the poisoning in the atmosphere, we had cyanide in the air, levels unprecedented,
we were breathing in cyanide, which causes this respiratory failure. We were
describing it again just to the virus, but I think it was a lot of different factors happening
at that time. We were losing our ability to breathe. Meanwhile, the planet's warming up,
warming up, warming up, and CO2 is going up in the atmosphere. We can't breathe. The planet can't
breathe. We couldn't breathe those species. And then we get this extraordinarily tragic moment where
we watch a police officer with his knee on the neck of an African American man
he dies in the streets screaming I cannot breathe. At every one of those fractal levels we got to witness the suffocation of life.
And it was suffocating in that moment with the police officers to afraid to move and maybe angry, maybe lots of other negative emotions in there, but ultimately it's fear, fear of death,
fear of different, being different,
fear of everything other than self.
So that knee stays on.
And right now we have our proverbial knee
on the neck of this planet.
We are not letting this planet breathe
because we're afraid we might go hungry.
So we're waiting for technology to save us.
We have more and more genetic technologies.
We now have robots trying to mind food out of the earth. We're waiting for more and more technology. We just will not
let the knee off the neck of the planet because we're afraid she won't provide for us.
We need to let the knee up. We need to be confident that we are one species that is the compilation
of hundreds of thousands of species that has made life possible. We need to start to
breathe together. We need to move to a point where there is grace rather than fear, where there is joy rather
than guilt, there is love rather than shame.
And to get there, we're going to have to trust that we are supposed to be here.
We are not the cancer of the planet.
We are the potential energy of the planet.
We are the highest expression that the planet has made so far, and we can stay to play
if we choose.
And so we need to take the neck off the planet.
We need to take the knee off the neck of the planet, take the knee off the neck of one
another and start to move in a state of abundance.
And we will do this as we find those quiet spites around the flame.
Breathe slower, breathe deeper as individuals as a planet. And in so doing,
start to feel the future. And this is the mystery that we see baking all over the
world. I'm very gifted in my career right now that I get to travel all over the
place all the time. And so the more than one and a half million miles I've flown
over the last 10 years, I've gotten to meet nearly every people group on the planet.
And I've spent time in so many continents over the last couple of years.
And for all of the fear and guilt and shame that we just exercise as a planet, I have
never seen more optimism, more excitement, more of that bubbling energy of, oh my gosh,
it's about to arrive.
We are about to arrive.
Something is about to happen.
This is so exciting to be alive right now.
I hear that all the time.
It's so exciting to be alive right now.
So what is the light that's shining so bright
in humanity as our biologic light dims?
I think it's the original math.
I think it's the soul.
The energy that animates life is burning bright right now
because it is not diminished
by the energies that it was putting into the biologic expression of humanity. It is burning
brighter because it says, look beyond the flesh to find the truth. And in that energy field,
you will find the new life that will code for your new future. And so we have to get to that hospice
moment. We have to let the lights almost die out so we can cross the veil and see the truth
and then come back and change everything.
Incredible, Dr. Zach Bush,
if anyone's listening right now
and they wanna find that optimism,
maybe join your eight day program,
like to learn more about the solution aspect
of everything you've been sharing today,
where should they go?
How can they connect with you and connect with your work?
The easiest place for all the work is at bushmd.com. The journey of intrinsic health.com is the eight-week
program. The intelligence of nature.com is all of the deep soil science and the supplements and
everything else that have come out of that soil science and the study of glyphosate and the solutions
to it. There's an opportunity for you guys to engage also just
in community with us because it's one thing
to take a supplement or take a class.
But ultimately, if we don't come into connected community,
we're not going to create that future that we have.
And so there's an opportunity for you
to engage in the community platforms
that we've been creating across many of these products,
going deeper than the product, to really start
to create the solutions for the future that
we can all feel is already here. And that's my greatest excitement is watching people come together.
There's something called the quorum sensing that I find really beautiful. When you get enough
biodiversity into a living environment, suddenly the whole thing does something more intelligent than
any constituent can do. And so we need to do a quorum sensing moment as not just humanity, but as a
planet. And so we need to connect to our ecosystems and diversity and cultures and for their
diversity, the arts and their diversity, the dance and the storytelling and the flames.
And a million different iterations. Then we need to bring that in together for a very bright
flame to burn. And for us to connect to that quorum sensing moment where we do quantum intelligence,
not from the mind, but from that knowingness within you.
And it's in that community connect that we hope to meet you.
It's beautiful, thank you so much.
I hope that everyone has been listening and watching.
I hope you go and check it out.
And Zach, we end every episode of on purpose
with a final five or a fast five.
And these questions have to be answered in one word
to one sentence maximum.
And Zach, these are your final five.
So the first is, what is the best advice
you've ever heard given or received?
Slow down.
What is the worst advice you've ever heard or received?
Stop moving.
Stop moving.
Question number three, what's something
that you used to value value that you no longer value
anymore? Marriage. Interesting. In what sense? You said one word. Yeah, now I'm digressing.
It was my most important value system through most of my life. And it's not to say that marriage is not important on our human journey.
But it was the course of miracles that really unveiled what was happening in my effort
towards marriage. And I enjoyed my marriage at 20-year marriage with my wife and two amazing kids.
And then she found a new path. And there was a decision whether to see that as failure or
path and there was a decision whether to see that as failure or to actually for the first time in our 20 years together practice the unpart of unconditional love. And I realized
during our journey towards divorce when I realized that she was definitely going to take
this other path, it was a realization of, I really do love this person. And I'm sitting
here telling her how much I love her and therefore she shouldn't leave me.
Oh my gosh.
What is that?
That is the deepest condition I could possibly.
I love you, but only if you stay right next to me and I own this thing.
And so that was my journey personally and to deep heartbreak that led to the deepest
joy that a person can have is the exercise of unconditional love.
And I certainly didn't do it perfectly. I didn't do it well. My gosh, did I live differently
after that moment where I realized I can love her on this path that she knows she's chosen. And
we've gotten to watch both of us bloom into people we could have never become in that marriage
because it was a box that was an agreement of no change. And as we back up,
I think we're going to realize that we put love and relationship into a box of ownership.
Just in the last couple hundred years, it never existed before. We developed this ownership model
so we could pass wealth from generation to generation, not realizing when we built the box,
we would crush love, which is ultimately the capacity to see beauty in another.
And if for a moment you think you can own another's beauty, you have stolen it from them ultimately, and they will become miserable,
and you will forget why you fell in love with them because you can't see their beauty anymore.
And so in a radical way, we're going to have to release each other from the box as we put each other in.
It doesn't mean that a relationship is probably the birth of human relationship.
Maybe for the first time, but certainly in recent modern times, we're going to have to release
ourselves from the box and we have to do partnership relationships in much, much radically different
ways.
And they're going to have to come out of the fear of not having enough love and start to
come from an abundance model where everything is love.
Beautiful.
Thank you for sharing that. Thank you for sharing that.
Thank you for opening up.
That's really, really beautiful to hear.
I'm glad I asked us to go off-piste.
All right, question number four.
What's something you're trying to learn right now?
Or skill you're trying to learn?
Beauty.
The witness of beauty.
And the fifth and final question is, if you could create one law that everyone in the
world had to follow, what would it be biodiversity?
Could you expand so that we can contextualize it?
There's a known phenomenon of blue zones around the planet where people tend to live a past 100 years.
And so here we are on the number one health podcast in the world.
What makes people live longer than 100 years?
And we've tried to boil it down to nutrition.
We found that almost everyone would make completely differently. And some of them made only cooked food,
only meat, only veggies, the whole thing, only raw. We saw it all. In the end, what we have found is
that those that will live under her in her years live in a culture and communities that hold
at their highest value, the opportunity for new connection to bioteverse ideas and peoples.
And this was taught to me by a couple of Icaria Greece, Greece and Ireland.
That is an incredible blue zone there.
They came and prepared a traditional five-course Greek meal for a group of us.
I gave this toast to the end that said, this is the microbiome being nourished and will
live forever.
It will be like a blue zone because the nourishment is so deep, the nutrients are so rich.
It was often... This beautiful thing I was was crying. Everybody's crying because it's beautiful
toast and then a guy from a career stands up and says, doctor, that was very interesting,
but you're completely wrong. And he said that the only reason we live past 100 years is not for what
we eat, but it's because every night there's a chair set at our table hoping that somebody we don't
know shows up and shares that meal with us in In Ikaria, we never ask each other,
what did you eat last night?
But we always ask, who did you eat with last night?
And that's what we're missing from society today.
And so when we talk about biodiversity,
it's certainly true at the soil level.
If we don't start living for the soil beneath our feet and enriching that with every action we take,
whether it be a political move, a social move, an industrial move, economic
move. If it's not supporting the soil, we would destroy ourselves in the same way if we
continue to listen in the echo chamber of our minds and those people we are married to
and we create these nuclear families and we listen to the same box every day, whether
it be a TV or our own brain, we will diminish our biodiversity ideas
and our biodiversity for creativity
and therefore we will lose the opportunity to stay in play.
Dr. Zach Busch, thank you for such a fascinating
and unique conversation one that was full of
refreshing insights and ideas.
And I'm hoping that everyone who's listening
and watching wherever you are in the world,
I hope that you'll go and follow Dr. Zach Busch,
learn more about his incredible work.
And I want you to tag us both and share your insights,
your takeaways, the nuggets that stood out to you.
Maybe there were messages or words that are,
ones that you're gonna hold onto
and it's gonna shift the way that you practice
your health and wellness routines and regimes.
And so if you've been listening and watching,
make sure you tag us and share what you learned
and what you gained from this episode.
And Dr. Zach Bush, thank you so much for your time,
your energy, your presence,
and everything that you've shared with us today.
Thank you so much.
I don't be heard and seen by you.
Very grateful, thank you.
If you love this episode, you'll enjoy my interview
with Dr. Daniel Aiman on how to change your life by
changing your brain.
If we want a healthy mind, it actually starts with a healthy brain.
You know, I've had the blessing or the curse to scan over a thousand convicted felons
and over a hundred murders, and their brains are very damaged.
100 murders and their reigns are very damaged.