PBD Podcast - "The REAL Reason You're Dying" – Gary Brecka SLAMS Corporate Scams, Genetic Tests & Health Myths | PBD Podcast | Ep. 557

Episode Date: March 5, 2025

Patrick Bet-David sits down with Gary Brecka to discuss the science behind predicting life expectancy, his journey from the life insurance industry to health optimization, and the groundbreaking metho...ds he uses to help people, including UFC's Dana White, extend their lifespan and performance.----👕 GET THE LATEST VT MERCH: ⁠https://bit.ly/3BZbD6l⁠📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": ⁠https://bit.ly/41rtEV4⁠📰 VTNEWS.AI: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/3OExClZ⁠🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g57zR2⁠🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g1bXAh⁠🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: ⁠https://bit.ly/4eXQl6A⁠📱 CONNECT ON MINNECT: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4ikyEkC⁠👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/3ZjWhB7⁠🎓 VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/3BfA5Qw/⁠📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g5C6Or⁠💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time!ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I've got this condition where I don't feel pain. You're a superhero. No, I'm not. This is how intense Nova Kane sounds. Oh, wow. Imagine how it looks. Say more? Yeah, big time.
Starting point is 00:00:14 Nova Kane, Bournemouth Theaters March 14th. At Desjardins, we speak business. We speak startup funding and comprehensive game plans. We've mastered made toasure growth and expansion advice. And we can talk your ear off about transferring your business when the time comes. Because at Desjardins Business, we speak the same language you do. Business. So join the more than 400,000 Canadian entrepreneurs who already count on us and contact Desjardins
Starting point is 00:00:40 today. We'd love to talk business. What you're about to see in the next five to 10 years, the artificial intelligence and big data are going to circumvent the entire system. You are succumbing to a disease because of a surgery that wasn't required, because of a medication that was unnecessary due to a diagnosis that was inaccurate. The experts are making the mistake on the reason why you're dying. No question. You see, we've mapped the entire human genome, but there's no gene that can be used to due to a diagnosis that was inaccurate. The experts are making the mistake on the reason why you're dying.
Starting point is 00:01:06 No question. You see, we've mapped the entire human genome, but there's no gene for a lot of these diseases. This study was registered at clinicaltrials.gov. Yes, you can go look this study up. We have this all wrong. The Maha movement is about making changes to the poison that's in our food supply not
Starting point is 00:01:26 eliminating people's choices. I don't see Cardone as a health guy seem as a real estate guy. What happened between the two of you? They're actually kind of professionals of business scamming. How much time does it take to look like that? Less than you think. It's not complicated. It's super not complicated. How long of doing that do you see the results? Immediately really if you took three, I don't know. Do I have some here is my team still here? I've never had I have it right now if you want to bring one year one. I literally have it right now Did you ever think you would make it
Starting point is 00:02:26 Okay, so today, Gary Brekka, the man who one day we all woke up and we're on TikTok or Instagram or X or Facebook or YouTube and you hear the face of UFC, Dana White saying this man helped me save 10, you got 10.4 years left to live and I did this and I lost weight and then we saw Dana's body and we're like, holy shit, who helped this guy, the guy that's our guest today. Gary, it's great to have you on. Great to be here, brother. I'm serious, man.
Starting point is 00:02:54 I'm excited to be here. Yeah, yeah. We met a year ago, I want to say, right? The UFC fight. Yeah, we actually met in one of Dana's little private rooms there before the fight. That's right. Right. I think it was at an event that President Trump showed up. Ivanka was there and we're sitting right there.
Starting point is 00:03:10 It was a great experience. Kid Rock. Dana may be one of the master connectors, introducing everybody to everybody. You're in the back, lawyers are there, Alex is there, Spiro, all these other guys, everyone's talking and you and I started talking about different things. The part that for me, we have in common is the fact that you came from the life insurance industry, the actuary, the life settlement, and that was your introduction to seeing. Because the idea with life settlement is you buy insurance policy and finding ways to see
Starting point is 00:03:44 how long is this person going to live. And maybe if you don't mind sharing with the audience, the industry, where you're supposed to calculate, because a lot of people say, how do you know 10.4 years? Well, actuaries and life settlement, actually that's their business model. Maybe talk about that a little bit. Of all the things that I talk about, I get the most flack for that because people say, well, if you could predict life expectancy to the month, you know, you'd be Jesus you would have won a Nobel Prize And I sure you I'm not Jesus and I've never not won a Nobel Prize
Starting point is 00:04:12 But it is some of the most accurate science in the world, you know If you think about life insurance companies annuities reverse mortgages There's so many financial services instruments that are based on mortality, right? And they don't care where you are on an actuarial curve, right? We're all on one. Everybody listening to this podcast right now is on an actuarial curve. If you're a 24 year old female, you have a life expectancy of X. If you're a 44 year old male, you have a life expectancy of Y. But when they're getting ready to take 25, 40, 50, $60 million worth of risk on your life, only one thing matters. How many more months do you have left on earth?
Starting point is 00:04:47 And about two and a half decades ago, there was a humongous push. I mean, not just because of the life settlement industry, which is the sale of policies in the secondary market, because a lot of people don't realize that your life insurance policy is a piece of personal property, like anything else, like your car, like your house,
Starting point is 00:05:03 like anything else that you own. It's important for the audience to realize, your house, like anything else that you own. It's important for the audience to realize this is I own a life insurance policy. I'm 78 years old. I got a $5 million insurance policy. I don't have a living spouse that needs it. I need cash right now. I go to a life settlement company and they pay me a percentage.
Starting point is 00:05:21 So if it's $5 million, maybe they'll pay me a million bucks upfront. They'll take the insurance over, so it means when I die, the five million goes to the person that bought it, I get one million and the difference is four million, and a new company pays the premium until I die. That's right. That's exactly it. That's a life settlement transaction. That's the calculation you make to see is this a risk of an investment, how long is
Starting point is 00:05:40 this guy going to die? It's the complete opposite of life insurance. Correct. Like when you're buying it. Yes, so you wanna know specific mortality. So these are called probabilistic models. And essentially it's not that if you have 220 months to live that you're gonna die in exactly 220 months.
Starting point is 00:05:55 What the model predicts is if your life expectancy is 220 months, for example, just to make one up, that means that you have the exact same chance of being alive as you do of being dead. That's your mean mortality, right? you have the exact same chance of being alive as you do of being dead. That's your mean mortality, right? So you have the same chance of being alive as being dead in 220 months. Now what they're gonna want to know is what are the chances that you are on the left side of the bell curve or the right side of the bell curve? And this is where this
Starting point is 00:06:18 system of credits and debits comes in, right? And we all know that, you know, mortality debits are things like type 2 diabetes, morbid obesity, hypertension, you know, history of smoking, fatty liver, the obvious things are mortality debits. We started to then import demographic data. So we would look at lifestyle data and demographic data, and we would predict the chances that somebody would actually adjust their lifestyle and potentially fix the problems that they had. And this is when the model became extraordinarily accurate because these databases, don't forget, will have 300, 370 million lives. And they have information that no other database has
Starting point is 00:06:58 because they know the day, the date, the time, the location, and the cause of death for 370 million lives. So they pull that back into these records and they say, what led to this person's early demise, their early mortality? And you can go into the actual record and you can build a case to say, they actually died at 77,
Starting point is 00:07:16 but they actually started to die at 41 when this happened. They started the corticosteroid. The corticosteroid actually initially reduced their inflammatory cascade, but then it ate their joint like a termite. but then it ate their joint like a termite. And as it ate their joint like a termite, it caused them to have bilateral knee replacements. Post bilateral knee replacement, this caused a reduction in their mobility, what we call the ambulatory profile.
Starting point is 00:07:36 As you reduce their mobility, you bring in all the diseases that exacerbate with reduced mobility. And as you bring those diseases from that person's future into their present, they now succumb to a disease that they likely never should have had, because very often they're on a medication that wasn't required, because of a surgery that was unnecessary because of a diagnosis that very often was incorrect. And it was this type of research that led to the 2016 study that Harvard did that determined that the third leading cause of death in America is modern medicine. It's medical error, right?
Starting point is 00:08:09 You have cardiovascular disease, cancer, and then modern medicine. And if... Modern medicine, number three. Number three is medical error. So the experts are making the mistake on the reason why you're dying? No question.
Starting point is 00:08:22 The experts are making the mistake on the reason why you're dying, because question. The experts are making the mistake on the reason why you're dying because, you know, our modern medical system and the good news is what you're about to see in the next five to ten years is you're going to see artificial intelligence and big data are going to circumvent the entire system. And what I mean by that is no longer will the randomized clinical trial that's conducted by a pharmaceutical company that was used to approve a drug by, through the FDA become the standard of care.
Starting point is 00:08:50 The standard of care will be the standard of care that has the best outcome. And large data is going to tell us what the best outcomes come from. So for example, just to go back to the case that I was just citing and finish up the first thought. So this practice of predicting death is this system of credits and debits.
Starting point is 00:09:08 And we realized that the reason why the majority of people are not living healthier, happier, longer, more fulfilling lives were because of what we called modifiable risk factors. So in other words, things that they could actually take control of or do that would permanently change the trajectory of their life and And for me that was for the positive or the negative for the positive or the negative, okay?
Starting point is 00:09:30 I mean lifestyle factors are the greatest impact on modifiable risk factor. Yeah modifiable risk factors This is fancy scientific name for saying things that are under your own control, right? and I mean trauma if you had you know major trauma car accident and now you have spinal injury Okay, that's not under your control but metabolic syndrome type 2 diabetes morbid obesity You know poor sleep or focus and concentration autoimmune conditions ADD ADHD OCD manic depression bipolar. These are all conditions that lifestyle changes modifying your lifestyle can dramatically
Starting point is 00:10:06 change not only the impact of, but permanently put these things in your rear view mirror. And we would try to predict the chance that somebodies would modify their lifestyle and change habits that would affect their mortality debits and the majority of cases they don't. And so it was very easy to predict their death. But what happened to me was I realized, and this isn't just data, you know, they're human beings on the other side of these spreadsheets. And I made a very conscious decision to leave that industry and say, I don't want to spend the balance of my lifetime predicting death.
Starting point is 00:10:41 I want to spend the balance of my lifetime, you know, trying to help people live healthier, happier, longer. And by the way, this is a very important transition from there to the business you ran because were you an actual actuary or you were not the actuary, you were selling? No, we owned the largest brokerage firm in the industry for policies in the secondary market.
Starting point is 00:11:01 It's called Life Asset Group. What was it called? Life Asset Group. So it wasn't Life Partners and Waco? No, no, no. It wasn't Life Partners and Waco. It was called Life Asset Group. I later sold that to a big insurance conglomerate. Here in South Florida?
Starting point is 00:11:12 No, in New York called Innscap. But the Life Settlement was out of Florida? Yes, my office was in Miami on Brickle Key. Did you ever know a guy named Jerry Voll? That name sounds familiar. Yeah, there was a lot of life settlement guys. I know Jerry from 20 years ago. But so to me, actually, the average person that's watching
Starting point is 00:11:31 is like, what is an actuary, right? So the actuary, their job is, or even the underwriter, you'll submit an insurance policy and you'll say, well, I think this guy's healthy. What does he do? You go through a list of questions that they look at. Maybe they'll do any KG blood, whatever they ask to do, depending on the age and the background it is.
Starting point is 00:11:49 And then from then they'll say, yeah, this guy's preferred elite. No, you're preferred. No, you're standard. Oh, you're smoker standard tobacco, prefer tobacco. So then you're getting rated. Yeah, you're getting rated. Yeah, that's right.
Starting point is 00:11:59 But on the opposite side of where you're at, this is how long I'm going to live when you're buying an insurance policy, what were some of the biggest credits and debits you guys saw to say, I don't know, because again, cost of insurance has gone down predominantly for many years because life expectancy has gone higher. So a lot of times people think life insurance
Starting point is 00:12:19 must be more expensive today than ever before. It's actually cheaper because we're living longer. We used to live a lot less 40 years ago, so now it's cheaper to buy actually cheaper because we're living longer. We used to live a lot less 40 years ago, so now it's cheaper to buy life insurance because we're living longer. But what were some of the, when you were in it and you're looking at all these things, it's like a investment banker looking at so many
Starting point is 00:12:35 different deals coming through, they eventually can just look at the deal and say no, yes, no, no, no, yes, maybe, I don't know, let me ask this question. What were some of the things you looked at to say, okay, these four behaviors, actuaries automatically are like, no, no, these are the ones we're most concerned about, but these three behaviors, okay, we're good with these, let's go here, what did you notice?
Starting point is 00:12:56 So three things became glaringly apparent. Number one, modifiable risk factors were things that people could change the trajectory of their life. The second thing that was glaringly apparent to us, and remember, we were not allowed to have any contact with the patient or any contact with the treating physician. Even though I could review your entire medical record, I could see, you know, life insurance is a very invasive process. They get your divorce decrees, your bank accounts, your marriage accounts, your trusts, your
Starting point is 00:13:19 wills. So... Especially the bigger it is. The bigger it is, the more invasive it is, right? And then they're going gonna take your medical records And then someone like myself or another actuary is gonna say these are the tests that I want to run on this person ekg EEG I'm gonna run these blood tests not just a standard blood panel. We can request specific labs on that panel and Essentially what you're doing is you're looking at where they are metabolically and then you're looking at the impact of their lifestyle to either accelerate this person toward the grave or decelerate
Starting point is 00:13:48 them towards the grave. And again, what became glaringly apparent to me was that the majority of people that are suffering from chronic conditions have not had a disease or a pathology happen to them. They are having that something is happening within them. And by that I mean that the majority of these people were nutrient deficient. So simple nutrients, if I put up a chart behind me
Starting point is 00:14:14 of your cellular biology, and you looked at the 300 billion transactions that are going on inside your cells every single day, what you would find is you would find a whole myriad of vitamins, minerals, amino acids, nutrients, and you wouldn't see any chemicals, you wouldn't see any synthetics, you wouldn't see any pharmaceuticals. And what modern medicine has applied is everything that man makes us and taken away everything that God gave us. And what we noticed was that the nutrient deficiencies were leading to the deceleration or the acceleration
Starting point is 00:14:46 of mortality. And what I mean by that, so just take the example that I just gave. Take vitamin D3, for example. This is, you know, when they talk about medical error, vitamin D3 is arguably, if you were to pick one compound in the human body, that may be the most important thing. When God made us, he made us with the ability to make one vitamin, right? So if I test your bloodstream, you'd have hundreds of vitamins in your bloodstream. You're only capable of making one. It's vitamin D3, cholecalciferol. You make it from sunlight
Starting point is 00:15:11 and cholesterol. About 50% of the world's population is clinically deficient in this nutrient. About 85% of the African American and dark-complected Latino populations are clinically deficient in this nutrient. So what happens when you're deficient in something simple like vitamin D3? Well, eventually, if it's low enough or long enough, you will present to your physician with rheumatoid arthritis-like symptoms. So you're gonna go to your doc and you say, hey, when I get out of bed in the morning, the soles of my feet, my ankles are really sore and achy when I walk to the bathroom to take my first pee.
Starting point is 00:15:42 It's, now my hips are a little sore, my low back, and you know lately it's hard for me to make a tight fist. And in very many cases, too often to mention that we saw in the record that doctor without doing any other testing, RA factors, no sed rates, is gonna go, you know what? Patrick, you've got rheumatoid arthritis. But don't worry, I'm gonna put you on something
Starting point is 00:16:02 called a corticosteroid, and this is going to knock the inflammation down and you'll be fine. So you start a corticosteroid. So there was a mistake in diagnosis. First of all, you're clinically deficient in a basic nutrient. So instead of raising your level of vitamin D3, they put you on something called methotrexate or another anti-inflammatory called a corticosteroid. And now this corticosteroid, which initially reduced inflammation, starts to erode your joints. It accelerates the erosion of your joints so quickly that it was so accurate that if you started a corticosteroid, we would artificially advance your age six years in one day and we would artificially schedule a joint replacement for you.
Starting point is 00:16:40 And from the point where we determined you would have a joint replacement, we would begin to reduce what's called your ambulatory profile, how well you ambulate, how well you move. And as we reduce your mobility, we could bring in all the diseases that exacerbated with reduced mobility. And as these diseases come into your present, now, all of a sudden, you are succumbing to a disease that you never should have had because of a surgery that wasn't required, because of a medication that was unnecessary due to a disease that you never should have had because of a surgery that wasn't required,
Starting point is 00:17:05 because of a medication that was unnecessary due to a diagnosis that was inaccurate because of a simple nutrient deficiency. And so, and I could give you hundreds of examples like this. You can just keep rewinding all of these consequences in someone's later age, and you can rewind it back to that tipping point where things went wrong. And once you've been diagnosed with a condition
Starting point is 00:17:24 and it makes it into the medical record, we would call these anchored diagnoses. So if you're diagnosed with hypertension, you're always a hypertensive patient. If your doctor diagnoses you with thyroid, you're always a hypothyroid patient. And so if you transfer care to another doctor, they look at the record and they go, oh, you know, Patrick's got hypothyroid. He's, you know, he's got elevated hematocrit. I'm going to continue the blood thinners, I'm going to continue the... Why is that? Synthroid?
Starting point is 00:17:48 Because nobody goes back to check and say, hey I wonder if Dr. XYZ actually properly diagnosed Patrick with this hypothyroid or if he actually, if maybe his hematocrit and his blood, his blood viscosity has changed, he doesn't need to be on the blood thinner anymore. Maybe his hypertension is actually normal because when he was diagnosed he was 80 pounds heavier, he's 80 pounds lighter right now and has adopted a healthy diet and he's on an exercise routine. We're just going to keep him on the hypertension medication.
Starting point is 00:18:13 And these had consequences. The more pharmaceuticals you were on, the more accurate your mortality. So the more pharmaceutical compounds we could stack up in a record, the more accurate we could determine your life expectancy. That is a strange thing to say. So the more pharmaceuticals I'm taking, the more you can accurately predict my life expectancy? The more accurately we can predict your life expectancy.
Starting point is 00:18:42 Why is that? So you take things, for example, like stat right? So statins lower LDL cholesterol. There was a prevailing, you know, theory in medicine which is vastly being disproven now, largely by artificial intelligence and big data, that LDL, when LDL cholesterol is up, there's an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. And so if we lower LDL cholesterol, we'll lower the risk of cardiovascular disease. The only problem is you're looking at that so myopically, right, you're just taking that one variable, LDL high, high risk of cardiovascular disease,
Starting point is 00:19:12 LDL low, low risk of cardiovascular disease. It's not that simple. In fact, there's no correlation between elevated LDL cholesterol on its own as an independent risk factor and cardiovascular disease, none. Cholesterol does not cause atherosclerotic placking or nearing of the arteries, as an independent risk factor and cardiovascular disease, none. Cholesterol does not cause atherosclerotic placking or nearing of the arteries, damage
Starting point is 00:19:28 to the arterial wall does, the inflammatory cascade does. And so what happens is, if you understand what cholesterol is, right, it's not a fuel source, cholesterol is a construction material. So the body makes it, the liver makes 85% of the cholesterol in your bloodstream and what is it used for? Well, we build every cell wall, every cell membrane, every hormone in the human body, and we use to make vitamin D3, cholecalciferol, the most important nutrient in the human body, in my opinion.
Starting point is 00:19:54 And so what happens when you push this nutrient low? Well, now you buy yourself consequences down the road. Now you're interrupting cell walls, cell membranes, hormones, vitamin D3, and now people get on statin, now their joints start aching, their memory starts to go, the increase of risk for Alzheimer's, early onset dementia, cognitive decline is one of the fastest accelerants of aging. People that are in steep cognitive decline are not compliant with their medications and protocols.
Starting point is 00:20:22 And so you've taken this one independent risk factor, and because you think you're lowering the risk of cardiovascular disease, you create this entire cascade of problems down the road. And we saw this over and over and over again. In fact, we did not process a death claim, not one, in my entire 22-year career, on a centenarian that did not have elevated levels of LDL cholesterol at the time of their death.
Starting point is 00:20:44 Wow. Not once. Interesting. But modern medicine would say LDL cholesterol is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease. No, it's actually a risk factor for longevity. High LDL and low triglyceride and high HDL cholesterol is a marker for longevity, not for cardiovascular disease. And so we believed a lot in what pharma and contrived medical trials were telling us was the standard of care. And the standard of care was killing people,
Starting point is 00:21:11 flatly, to be honest. Yeah, so you know what I'm doing right now. Here's what I'm searching. So when you sell life insurance, the biggest thing that increased the cost of insurance, and by the way, the audience watching this are like, I'm not interested in life insurance, but there's a point to it because just like California,
Starting point is 00:21:27 insurance companies have left. Why have they left? They wanna make money. Why are they leaving? The risk of protecting the home on the water would fire. They just like, listen, time out, we're out, right? They would state they're not leaving Idaho, they're not leaving other places.
Starting point is 00:21:43 Why are they leaving California and Florida? Florida they're leaving because worries of hurricane. Or the cost of insurance has gone up tremendously. I get it. So life insurance tells us the risk of what's going on. The biggest factor on why cost of insurance would go up was smoking. You remember this?
Starting point is 00:22:00 If somebody was a smoker, you could be paying $60 for cost of insurance. It goes 120. That was the biggest differentiator you could be paying $60 for cost of insurance, it goes 120. That was the biggest differentiator. Then when you would look at the next one, maybe it was the level of alcohol consumption, because you would be like, well, how often do you drink? Well, I drink once a month.
Starting point is 00:22:15 Okay, really, and then we would do the blood work. No, no, you drink. You've got fatty liver disease. Different test that comes up. And it was your occupation, or your weight. Weight would typically be number three on how much you weighed, it was always the warrior weight, but weight wasn't above smoking,
Starting point is 00:22:29 so it was smoking, alcohol, weight, and an occupation. If you had a job that was kinda risky, that would increase your cost of insurance. Why was smoking, then alcohol, then your weight, why was smoking above it all because few smokers ever quit Right. It wasn't the presence of the nicotine. It was all the carriers with the nicotine right the tar Smokers ever quit Wow way few smokers than you can ever imagine ever quit and if you think about what smoking is You know
Starting point is 00:23:04 nicotine addiction, these are, and you just convert it to human physiology. The absence of dopamine is the presence of addiction. So in other words, if you are deficient in dopamine, you will engage in dopamine seeking behavior. That's why if you've ever been an addict or you've ever known a true addict, their addiction has a tendency to shift. So alcoholics become drug addicts, drug addicts become work-alto-holics, work-alto-holics might become work-holics. They might shift into a healthier addiction, but the addiction never really goes away because
Starting point is 00:23:35 the dopamine deficiency is the main driver of behavior. Dopamine is the neurotransmitter of behavior, like serotonin is the neurotransmitter of mood. So we treat physical addiction. We try to treat the nicotine, the suboxone, the alcohol, the narcotic. We don't treat the dopamine addiction and this is why a true addict will go through life shifting their addictions. And so when we get back to human physiology we go well what causes deficiencies in dopamine? Right? This is this is what really led me to leave
Starting point is 00:24:05 and start a wellness franchise. Cause I'm like, we have this all wrong. You know, this, you know, this person doesn't have ADD or ADHD or OCD. This person actually isn't suffering from anxiety. There's no situation that causes their anxiety. This anxiety comes and goes seemingly without a trigger. So how could that actually be anxiety
Starting point is 00:24:23 if there's nothing in their external environment that's causing it? Right. Well, even you start to break down, well, what is anxiety? Anxiety is a rise in a category of neurotransmitters in the brain called catecholamines. So this person has a catecholamine regulation issue, not the mental disease or the mental disorder of anxiety. Well, how do we regulate catecholamines? We increase the complex of B vitamins,
Starting point is 00:24:48 we add something called methylcobalamin, we remove folic acid, which is a synthetic man-made chemical in our food supply, which is not found naturally in nature anywhere on the surface of the earth, and we exchange it for something called methylfolate. Bang. Now they regulate catecholamines. When they regulate catecholamines, When they regulate catecholamines, the anxiety goes away. You've actually been treating for a disease that was actually a nutrient deficiency, just like you were being treated for rheumatoid when you had a D3 deficiency. Just like we put people on thyroid medication when 80% of the thyroid hormone that we measure
Starting point is 00:25:19 in the blood, the T3 hormone, is not even made in the thyroid. It's made outside of the thyroid, in the liver, in the gut, in the periphery. Why are we not looking at whether or not the liver, the gut, and the periphery have adequate nutrients to make the thyroid hormone that is low that is causing us to medicate the thyroid? 85% of all hypertensive diagnosis when you go into your doctor and they say you have hypertension. And you say, well, why? Well, my EKG is normal. My EEG is normal my EEG is normal my heart sounds are normal my lung sounds are normal I had a cardiac catheterization it was normal I had a di-contrast study it was normal there's
Starting point is 00:25:51 nothing wrong with my heart yeah we know but we're still gonna medicate your heart anyway even though we can't figure out anything wrong with it we we don't know why you have high blood pressure oh what we looked and your uncle has it and your mother has it on you know your grandmother has it on your dad's side, so You have familial hypertension. Well, what's that? It's genetically inherited hypertension and then you just accept that you inherited a disease from your ancestor So you accept and subscribe to a lifetime of medication? But if you just took that one step further and said just out of curiosity
Starting point is 00:26:23 What gene did my ancestor pass on to me that's causing this condition to exist? Because you said I inherited it from my ancestor, right? So what gene did they pass on to me? Their face would go blank. You see, we've mapped the entire human genome. We know every gene in the human body. If there were a gene for these conditions, we would know what it is.
Starting point is 00:26:41 But there's no gene for a lot of these diseases. Because the disease runs in families, we assume it's a genetically inherited disease. We rarely pass disease from generation to generation. We pass the inability for the body to refine a raw material, which causes a deficiency, which leads to that disease. This deficiency can be fixed. So for example, take hypertension, just since we're on that subject. Let's take Dana White because he's been very public about his medical records. We've actually put his medical records on Instagram. So I
Starting point is 00:27:19 figure if you put your medical records up to 8.8 million people, you've lost your hip privilege. if you put your medical records up to 8.8 million people, you've lost your hip privilege. So Dana, I apologize, brother. We're going to lay it out. So when I met Dana, you know, he was, he was certainly overweight. He was, you know, by BMI charts, he would have been. That's the one he posted. Oh, yeah. Yeah, there he is. That's when we met. You met September, 2022. Yeah. Look at the difference though. That's unbelievable, Gary. It's crazy. So when you met with him, you said it's two years since I started my health journey with Gary Braca. Thanks for changing my life brother. I think I saw that. That's awesome. Thank you, Dan. Yeah. So what was going on up top that was going on at the bottom?
Starting point is 00:28:05 So first of all, he was on multiple medications for heart, for high blood pressure. Blood thinners, diuretics, ACE inhibitors, beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, all things to interrupt the function of the heart, holding the heart responsible for crime it's not committing. And so let's just talk about what happened with Dana White. And so when we looked at Dana's blood work, and for the record I am not a physician, I'm not licensed to practice medicine, so I'm not giving medical advice, and there was a clinical team that was involved in Dana's case that made the clinical decisions. I want to be
Starting point is 00:28:41 clear about that. But when we looked at Dana's blood work, and we looked at his genetics, he had a genetic variant that did not allow him to convert an amino acid in his blood called homocysteine. Okay, so he couldn't take homocysteine and turn it into a harmless amino acid called methionine. And this is my point. Yeah, can you just pull up, yeah,
Starting point is 00:29:04 an amino acid, homocysteine, perfect call. Look at hyperhomocystenemia. What is hyperhomocystenemia or symptoms of hyperhomocystenemia? Look, so hyperhomocystenemia can come out by deficiency in B6, B12, or folate. Genetic disorders. Okay, so let's just start at the top two. The leading two causes of high homocysteine are nutrient deficiencies.
Starting point is 00:29:32 Nobody checked to see if the nutrient deficiency might be what's causing as high blood pressure because what happens when your homocysteine rises? As homocysteine is cruising by the inside lining of your artery, okay, it irritates your artery. And if you irritate an artery, it will clamp down. And if you make the pipes smaller in a fixed system, the pressure goes up. So now I have 63,000 miles of blood vessel in my body.
Starting point is 00:29:58 I have this very high level of homocysteine, which is one of the most inflammatory factors in the human body circulating around in my blood, this inflammation circulating around in my blood this inflammation circulating around in my blood and because of that my arterial system constricts and it drives my pressure up you go to the cardiologist which he did cardiologist checks his heart says man everything's fine with your heart but you have high blood pressure so we're gonna start pounding on the heart for a crime it's not
Starting point is 00:30:18 committing to try to lower your blood pressure but since the since the hypertension wasn't coming from the heart it was coming from the constriction of blood vessels, because of a simple deficiency in those vitamins listed right there, then the hypertension continued to get worse. He had one of the highest levels of homocysteine that I'd ever seen, that my clinical team had ever seen. So we put him on an amino acid called trimethylglycine, TMG, which you could get at GNC. We put them on a B complex, a methylfolate, you know, a form of B12 called methylglobalamin, high doses of those things. And I remember talking to him about his medical records and saying, Dana, there's nothing wrong with your heart.
Starting point is 00:30:57 I mean, because I'm not in a position to tell you to stop taking cardiovascular medication. But you will know in due course over the next few weeks when it's actually time to titrate down on your on your medication will get your cardiologist involved and so essentially I gave him this amino acid that allowed his body to start metabolizing homocysteine as his homocysteine level dropped his Vascular system began to relax as his vascular system relaxed his pressure dropped as his pressure dropped It eventually returned to normal. And we were doing blood pressure three times a day, seven days a week.
Starting point is 00:31:28 And by week 21, he was completely off of all of his cardiovascular medication that he had been on for 15 years. Wow. And because of the inflammatory cascade, high C-reactive protein, high homocysteine, he had a lot of swelling in his nasal pharynx and the back of his pharynx behind his tongue. So he's also on a CPAP machine.
Starting point is 00:31:49 So as he brought that inflammatory cascade down, the adenoid area widened and the sleep apnea went away. So he got off the sleep apnea machine. And then as we started to manage what's called the hematogrit, the blood viscosity by simply doing, you know, blood dumps, therapeutic phlebotomy, his hematogrit returned to normal, meaning the blood viscosity returned to normal. He stopped having motor oil for blood and he began having water for blood viscosity
Starting point is 00:32:16 wise. And so now you're off the blood thinners. So he's off of blood thinners. He's off of hypertensive medication. He was off of the diuretics that were actually just stripping potassium out of his out of his tissues and he got off of all of his medication, his weight dropped, blood pressure returned to normal, sleep deepened, REM sleep extended, deep sleep extended, he was off
Starting point is 00:32:39 of the CPAP machine, cognitive function went back through the roof, you know his his Weight loss improved every other facet of his of his life. And now if you look at him now, he's two and a half years out He's on no pharmaceuticals. He doesn't take any prescription medication The tinnitus that he had and in the Virgo that he had is virtually gone He's incredibly good shape and he'll stay here for you know, the balance of his adult lifetime He looks just like that right now. How much time commitment does it take to look like that? Less than you think. 70% of that is diet. 70? Okay I agree but the 30% that is the red light the cold plunge how much time commitment does that require how many days a week?
Starting point is 00:33:24 So if you want to get back to the basics and just look like that what he's what he's really focused on now is life Extension right so I always tell people look we you know in my previous company We sold a hundred and ten thousand dollar red lightbed And if you you know if you're getting ready to buy a Ferrari go buy a red light bed before you buy a Ferrari that Ferrari is gonna do nothing for your cell you your cellular biology, but red light can change your life. But what's really interesting is most of these modalities are just mimicking what we get from other nature.
Starting point is 00:33:52 So again, we're getting back to what God gave us, not what man makes us. So you can go out and spend $123,000 on a red light bed if you've got that money lying around or you could just take your shirt off and expose your skin to sunlight For 16 to 20 minutes every morning Face the Sun, you know, we've been taught to fear the Sun, you know, we get three things from Mother Nature We get the magnetism from the earth, which is a very real thing I get so much flack on this on on social media Which I can't understand why because it's a very valid concept taking your shoes off touching the surface of the earth
Starting point is 00:34:23 Earth and grounding is a very valid concept taking your shoes off touching the surface of the earth, earthing, grounding is a very real thing. The earth has a low Gauss current when we touch the surface of the earth we discharge into the earth. You can actually measure this in the blood. I've done it real time on stages before in front of tons of people where if we can't touch the surface of the earth I'll lay somebody on a PEMF mat, pulse electromagnetic field mat, and you just prick their finger you put on a slide and you show people in Pulse Electromagnetic Field, Matt, and you just prick their finger, you put it on a slide and you show people in real time what your red blood cells look like circulating around in your blood.
Starting point is 00:34:51 Well, you'll see that they're all kind of stuck together and clumped up. That's great, Matt, too. Stuck together and clumped up because when your cells have opposite charges, they attract. Soon as you touch the surface of the earth for a few minutes,
Starting point is 00:35:04 it repolarizes the surface of those cells and they actually start to free float around. They can't contact each other. Why is that? Because you change the... So if these are two cells and they have the same charge, they can't touch like two poles of a magnet. As soon as they get opposite charges, they attract.
Starting point is 00:35:24 So when your cells start sticking together, everywhere they touch, you lose surface area. What happens when you lose surface area on a cell that's round, that's meant to have all this surface area in contact with its environment? It can't eliminate waste. It can't repair. It can't detoxify. It can't regenerate. And now you start suffering all of these consequences for something simple like, I just don't walk on the surface of the earth on a regular basis. Now if you have the money and you want to save the time you can get a PEMF mat. You can drop five grand on a PEMF mat or 1,300 bucks on a PEMF mat but if you don't want to do that take your shoes off and touch the surface of the earth. You can spend $123,000 on a red
Starting point is 00:35:59 light bed or you can take your shirt off and expose your skin to sunlight in the first 45 to 60 minutes of the day. And that, we are very photovoltaic beings. All red light is doing is taking the beneficial wavelengths from the sun and mimicking those in an inside environment, right? You get real physiologic benefits from red light. So you could realistically do all of this naturally without even needing to buy all these equipment. Absolutely. I tell people all the time, if you can't afford a cold plunge, take Tupperware containers
Starting point is 00:36:30 full of water, put them in your freezer and put blocks of ice into your tub. And you'll do that twice a week because that cold plunge will last you three days. Right? If you don't have a tub, take a cold shower. One of the best things you can do if you're going to harness your morning routine is get up in the morning, get out in first light, the first 45 to 60 minutes of the day when there's no UVA, no UVB rays. Allow the natural sunlight to hit your skin. Start to generate vitamin D3. You are very photovoltaic. It is actually a material fact that your mitochondria are charged by light.
Starting point is 00:37:05 Let me ask this question. So you know, because the motive for doing it to get people to commit to health, right? Sometimes it's hard to get people to commit to it, right? You could say, well, listen, your kids are relying on you. Yeah, I'm going to live. You know, you're going to have a better lifestyle. Yeah, I'm going to live. You're going to be able to do this, but you're going to look live. You know, you're gonna have a better lifestyle, eh, I'm gonna live. You're gonna be able to do this,
Starting point is 00:37:27 but you're gonna look better, you're gonna do this. And everybody wants a shortcut, right? Whatever's gonna be the fastest way to do it. What can, if a person's running a business, or if a person's a salesperson, or if a person's an executive, if a person's a content creator, whatever you wanna call it, parents, spouse,
Starting point is 00:37:43 what can a person performs better the better the mood they're in? No doubt. You sell better, you father better, you husband better, you wife better, you mother better, you do everything better, right? So what are two, three things a person can do to improve their mood when they go throughout the day? First of all, when you say mood, what, and I convert that to physiology, so that's what I'm gonna do, and you say mood or emotional state,
Starting point is 00:38:10 what does that mean in the human body? If you said, Gary, what is a mood? What is an emotional state? I would tell you, it's a collection of neurotransmitters, right, bound to oxygen. So in other words, mood is a recipe. So if you said, I want to make happiness, okay, that's so much serotonin, so much dopamine,
Starting point is 00:38:29 so much norepinephrine, so much epinephrine, you mix that up, boom, you have the emotion of happiness. You know, I want elation, joy, passion, arousal. You change the level of serotonin, you change the level of dopamine. So you create mood. The ingredients for mood are neurotransmitters. So where do neurotransmitters come from? They're made in the gut.
Starting point is 00:38:50 90% of the serotonin in our body is right here. If you don't have it here, you can't have it here. And so like for example, you know, the serotonin hypothesis of depression says if you're low on serotonin, you're by definition depressed. So your mood is depressed. Do you actually have depression or do you have a deficiency in serotonin? So now if the serotonin hypothesis of depression is true, that means I have low serotonin. And so wouldn't you think that if I'm depressed because I have low serotonin that the fix
Starting point is 00:39:21 would be to raise serotonin? But that's not what we do. We take people that are low on serotonin and we put them on SSRIs, selective serotonin that the fix would be to raise serotonin. But that's not what we do. We take people that are low on serotonin and we put them on SSRIs, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. So what these do, they bind to little sites in your brain and they essentially slow the uptake of serotonin. And the idea is if we ration what little serotonin you have, then you won't go off a cliff. Well, if we know 90% of the serotonin is made right here in our gut, why don't we go to the factory that makes serotonin and increase its production? If I want to improve my mood, let's produce more of the ingredients that create mood.
Starting point is 00:39:55 And so how do we make serotonin? Well we take an amino acid called tryptophan and we methylate it into the neurotransmitter serotonin. What's needed to do that? Methylfolate B complexes, the methyl form of cobalamin, trimethylglycine. Basic nutrients can actually improve the methylation cycle and the utilization, transportation of serotonin. So I would, if you are an entrepreneur,
Starting point is 00:40:22 if you are a busy mother, busy father, if being mentally on your game is something that you need in order to succeed in your career, I would focus first on your gut. Because we make dopamine in our gut too. How do we make dopamine? We take tryptophan, fetal alanine, we convert it into a neurotransmitter called dopamine. Could serotonin deficiency be a deficiency in the amino acid tryptophan? Yes.
Starting point is 00:40:44 Could depression be an inability to methylate proper amounts of serotonin deficiency be a deficiency in the amino acid tryptophan? Yes. Could depression be an inability to methylate proper amounts of serotonin? Yes. And now we're up here messing with the mind. We're putting, you know, neuroplasticity-altering chemicals in the mind to fix a nutrient deficiency. Just like Dana White had a nutrient deficiency in trimethylglycine and he was on cardiovascular medication to fix a nutrient deficiency. Now he's on an amino acid. So his body can actually break these compounds down. You know, a lot of times people that have hypothyroid are deficient in selenium, thiamine, and often iodine.
Starting point is 00:41:17 And so, why are we not first testing for what's missing from what God gave us? That's my whole mantra, is that, you know, we're not as sick, we're not as diseased, we're not as pathological as we think we are. We are nutrient deficient. And if we would, you know, if you want to see magic happen in the human body, Pat, you give it the raw material it needs to do its job. And so what does it need to do its job? First of all, I would focus on your gut and we can talk about what you could do to do that. But our ultimate human superpower is sleep. If you're not sleeping, you're not performing full stop. So you're not performing at your best athletically, you are certainly not performing at your best cognitively.
Starting point is 00:41:55 So if you wanna get an edge on the rest of your competition, you have to develop a sleep hygiene or sleep routine. If you ask most of your listeners, what do you do to go to sleep? They'll just say, I don't know, I get in bed. Well, when do you go to bed? Whenever I finished doing my shit. Sometimes one o'clock in the morning,
Starting point is 00:42:13 sometimes 11 in the morning. I can think about an activity people do before they wanna go to sleep. That's a good reason to put it off. None of them are doing it seven nights a week. Come on, dude. Yeah, I mean, okay, I agree. So, and that's actually very good for your sleep.
Starting point is 00:42:30 That's good for your sleep. Oh, dude, that's the best way to reduce catacombs means it puts you right to sleep. And you tell your, you know. You can see a lot of husbands showing this clip to their wives. Yeah, yeah. Or vice versa. Wives, if you want to extend your life,
Starting point is 00:42:42 make love before you go to bed. That's a material fact. But if you want to extend your life, make love before you go to bed. That's a material fact. But if you ask most people about sleep, this is the most bullied thing in their schedule. Sleep is the bastard stepchild of your day. We push it around because it's the easiest thing for us to manipulate in our schedule. So you need to prioritize self-care
Starting point is 00:43:00 or else you will never be able to be selfless. And this is why 82% of all autoimmune diseases happen to women. If you take all autoimmune diseases category, about 80, 82% of autoimmune disease affect women. Why, is that because autoimmune is racist or sexist? No, it's because women have a tendency to be more selfless. They suffer from things like caregiver syndrome.
Starting point is 00:43:21 They put the needs of others before themselves. They're almost genetically programmed to do this. Very interesting. To bear children. So they lack more sleep because they're the ones that are taking care of the kids and all this other stuff. So that is why the, wow, okay, that makes sense. They will deprive themselves for sleep for the kids.
Starting point is 00:43:38 They will exhaust themselves for their spouse. And they will put the needs of others, you know, as a broad statement before the needs of themselves. So women have a tendency to put themselves in the backseat a lot more often than men do. And this constant lack of self-care, which they will very often look at as being selfish, they want to be selfless. So they wake up in the morning, gonna give all my time to my kids, then I'm gonna go and give my time to my career, and then I'm gonna give my time to my spouse, then I'm gonna give it to the kids, and then I'm gonna wake up in the morning, gonna give all my time to my kids. Then I'm gonna go and give my time to my career. And then I'm gonna give my time to my spouse. Then I'm gonna give it to the kids
Starting point is 00:44:06 and then I'm gonna go to bed. And so the first thing that I would say is develop a sleep routine, right? And sleep hygiene works like this. If you want to, I mean, you wanna be a super sleeper, you're gonna be a super performer because everyone knows sleep is good for you, but few people know why.
Starting point is 00:44:23 Like what's happening during deep sleep? The practice of good quality sleep. Yeah, that's number one right there, regular sleep wake cycle. That is an app. We're going somewhere. So what is the behavior you said, what do you do to go to sleep?
Starting point is 00:44:36 So what do you do to go to sleep? So let's just dive into sleep real quick. Because a lot of people struggle with sleep at night. They don't know how to go to sleep at night. I'll tell you why most people listening to this podcast are not sleeping They're not sleeping because they are body tired, but mind awake as Their environment quiets their mind wakes up and they will tell you I am not falling asleep
Starting point is 00:44:56 Because I am thinking of the most innocuous shit like I'm you know, should I have a dinner party? You know did it did my belt match my shoes today? Did I get everything on my grocery list? Did I return that Instagram post? Nothing that couldn't wait till the next day. This is called rumination. And we ruminate at night because of a category of neurotransmitters called catecholamines. As these neurotransmitters rise, it creates a waken state.
Starting point is 00:45:21 So your body tired, you're exhausted, but you're laying their mind awake. And I'm going to tell you how to solve that in a second. But first, you know, if we just isolate what's so important about sleep. Okay, well, specific things happen during sleep that don't happen during any other time of our cycle. So if you're going to push anything around in your schedule, put push meetings and travel around and prioritize sleep and exercise. So when you look at what happens during deep sleep, for example, this is the only time
Starting point is 00:45:50 that the brain is actually eliminating waste. So we have a lymphatic system, which everybody knows of, your lymphatics get swollen when you get a sore throat, we got lymph nodes under our armpits, we got them in our groins, we got them all over the body to get rid of waste. In the brain, it's called the glymphatic system. And this system is only active during deep sleep So if you don't get deep sleep your brain doesn't detoxify doesn't eliminate waste doesn't repair. It doesn't regenerate So you're actually building up
Starting point is 00:46:15 Toxicity in the brain by not cabbing deep sleep Nowadays more than ever the brand you wear reflects and represent who you are So for us if you wear a future looks Bright hat or a Valuetainment gear, you're telling the world, I'm optimistic, I'm excited about what's going to be happening, but you're a free thinker, you question things, you like debate. And by the way, last year, 120,000 people got a piece of Future Looks Bright gear with Valuetainment. We have so many new things.
Starting point is 00:46:44 The cufflinks are here. New looks bright this is my favorite the green one just yesterday somebody placed an order for a hundred of these if you watch the PBD podcast you got a bunch to choose from white ones black ones if you if you if you smoke cigars and you come to our cigar lounge we have this high quality lighter cutter and a holder for the cigars and you come to our cigar lounge, we have this high quality, lighter cutter and a whole lot of cigars. We got sweaters with the Valuetainment logo on it. We got mugs. We got a bunch of different things.
Starting point is 00:47:12 But if you believe the future looks bright, if you follow our content and what we represent with Valuetainment, with PVD Podcast, go to VTMerch.com. And by the way, if you order right now, there's going to be a special VT gift inside just for you. So again, go to VTmerch.com and by the way if you order right now there's going to be a special VT gift inside just for you so again go to VTmerch.com place your order tell the world that you believe the future looks bright. So let me ask so body tired mind awake. So body tired mind awake what can you do for your mind to be awake? Well there's nothing you can do about that. What can you do for your mind to be awake? Well, there's nothing you can do about that. What can you do for your mind to quiet is the question.
Starting point is 00:47:48 Right. So the way that you, yeah, so let's talk about quiet in mind. Because you just have to keep converting these things to physiology, right? People like, I can't fall asleep. It takes me two hours to fall asleep. Why can't you fall asleep?
Starting point is 00:47:58 Because I just, I'm thinking about all the stuff from the day and then you're like, well, you have OCD or ADD or ADHD. Hypomanic, hypodermic. You're hypomanic. You have all these categories for this. It's none of that. Your mind is awake and you are ruminating
Starting point is 00:48:14 unless something catastrophic happened, obviously, you know, divorce, bankruptcy. There are reasons why you wouldn't sleep. But aside from the obvious, most people have this chronically throughout their lifetime. They are chronic poor sleepers and again in bed, their body tired but their mind awake. So what is causing awakened state? It's a category of neurotransmitters called catecholamines. If you pull those up, catecholamines, catecholamines are fight or flight neurotransmitters. Okay. So if catecholamines are at like a two neurotransmitters and hormones
Starting point is 00:48:44 play a crucial role in body's response to stress, fear and excitement. Okay. So if catecholamines are at like a two neurotransmitters and hormones play a crucial role in body's response to stress, fear and excitement. Okay. So as these neurotransmitters rise, they create one of those things, stress, fear or excitement. They create a waken state at the more that they rise, the more impact they have on your physiology. So at low levels, your mind is awake and it's just kind of buzzing as it rises a a little further, you get anxious. As it keeps rising, you will have anxiety. If they continue to rise, you will have a full-blown panic attack. And if they rise even further, you'll have paranoias. And so this entire cascade of mental illnesses and issues,
Starting point is 00:49:20 sleep disturbances, sleep disruptions, insomnia related disorders is following this rise and fall of these neurotransmitters. There is a gene called COMT. If you wanna pull that, I love how you guys are pulling all this shit up in real time, this is amazing. Catacol-O-methyltransferase, okay? About 44% of the population has this gene mutation.
Starting point is 00:49:44 What percentage? 44%. Oh, wow. See how it plays a crucial role in the metabolism of neurotransmitters, particularly dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine. So what are those neurotransmitters? Those are your waking state neurotransmitters. They're also your fight or flight neurotransmitters.
Starting point is 00:50:03 You ask anybody that's ever suffered from anxiety, ask them these three questions. Have you had it on and off throughout your entire lifetime? Most of the time they'll say yes. Can you always point to the specific trigger that causes it? Most of the time they will say no. I can be on a podcast just like this with you right now and just kind of get overwhelmed with anxiety. I can be driving home from work on an otherwise innocuous day and I can be overwhelmed by
Starting point is 00:50:28 anxiety. Most people that have anxiety do not need a specific trigger. They don't need to walk to the edge of a 30th floor balcony and be afraid of heights or get on a crowded elevator and be afraid, you know, claustrophobic. What they need is for catecholamines to rise. So now the question is, how do we lower catecholamines to rise. So now the question is how do we lower catecholamines? Because there are so many quote unquote mental illnesses that are linked to this gene mutation, which is very easy to test for. And I'm going to tell you how to supplement for it, even if
Starting point is 00:50:53 you don't test for it. Because high levels of catecholamines, what does high catecholamines mean? Oh, it means anxiety. It means anxiousness. It means heightened state of fear. It means sweating. It means rapid heart rate. So all of these conditions get diagnosed as illnesses or they get diagnosed as mental conditions or mental disorders. When the truth is you have high catecholamines, why do you have these? Because you're deficient in the raw material that breaks down catecholamines.
Starting point is 00:51:24 Well what breaks those down? deficient in the raw material that breaks down catecholamines. Well, what breaks those down? Sam-E, which is an amino acid, S-adenosolmethionine, capital S-AM, lowercase E, which you can also get at GNC or you can get online. These people need extra significant dosages of B complex vitamins. They need a form of B12 called hydroxycobalamin. They need methylfolate. So they need the basic nutrients and raw materials that if our soil had the right level of nutrients and if our food was not highly processed and we ate a whole food diet and we took basic supplements, you would find that your body has the raw material it
Starting point is 00:52:05 needs to break these kinds of neurotransmitters down. What happens at night when you break down catecholamines? Your mind quiets. Another great way to do this is by taking magnesium. Magnesium 3 and 8 is actually very good for this. I actually take a magnesium complex that has all seven forms of magnesium in it. How many supplements you take throughout the day? I take about nine. That's it? Yeah, nine or ten in the morning and then I take a magnesium blend at night. But I also have a sleep routine.
Starting point is 00:52:39 You know, we're such creatures of the habit. We design our days from the moment we wake up to the moment we go to bed. And what we should really design is bookending our sleep. And then everything else will fall in line. Right. So if I asked you what's your workout routine, most people go, I do this, this, this, this, the bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, you know, do his cardio two days a week, I do weight training, do upper body, lower body, our alternate taste, they'll have a they'll have a workout routine. Most people have a routine to, you know, operate their business, regular business meetings, but they don't have a routine to go to sleep, and they don't have a routine to wake up. Timing the sleep and wake cycle of your body is your absolute human
Starting point is 00:53:15 superpower. So here's five things your audience could just do tonight if they're not already doing this. Just this week, just pick a consistent time. So say 10.30 at night, I'm gonna go to bed at 10.30, and then make that promise to yourself and keep the promise. Get into bed at 12.30, even if you don't go to sleep. If you're one of those people that ruminates at night, take magnesium, like a magnesium three and eight, or a magnesium breakthrough, bio-optimizers, magnesium breakthrough.
Starting point is 00:53:40 Take a magnesium at night. If you really have an active mind, before you go to bed, do a contrast shower, get in the shower, run the water as hot as you can stand it on the back of your spine. Step out of that stream of water, turn it as cold as it will go and step into that stream of water and just deal with it. Sudden, not gradual.
Starting point is 00:54:00 Bang, shock the body. Right. Like a cold shock protein. Right. So step into that stream of water for 30 seconds and just deal with it. And then get out of the shower and dry off. This will break the catecholamine cycle. When you get into your bedroom, drop the temperature down colder than you think, 65 to 69 degrees Fahrenheit. Surgically remove every ounce of light from the room. If you got an alarm clock on the nightstand, throw a towel over it. You know, if you have fissures in the in the curtains, try to try to close them up or get a cheap sleep mask. Get a full, you know, cotton sleep mask. It's hard to say don't use your phone in bed because everybody
Starting point is 00:54:37 does. So if you're going to use your phone in bed, and just make sure that you turn the red light filter on and when you're done, you throw it on airplane mode. And then do a breathwork and when you're done, you throw it on airplane mode. And then do a breathwork technique when you get into bed, which is just long, slow inhales through the nose. Take a four or five second pause, breathe out like you're breathing out through a straw. And just imagine yourself kind of pulling all the thoughts from your head down into your chest and breathing them out.
Starting point is 00:55:01 I know that sounds really hokey, but I promise you, you won't even make it to 10 breaths. And start to do this every single night, consistent bedtime, contrast shower, breath work in bed, night, sleep mask, cold environment. It's not complicated, that's simple to do. It's super not complicated, man. I mean, I wish I could sell it. So many people have a hard time with that,
Starting point is 00:55:23 going to sleep at night. If I put my head down, I'm gone. So for me, it's not, I don't want, Jennifer will always, my wife will always say, how do you do it? And by the way, I have a lot on my mind. But the moment I go horizontal and I commit to going to sleep, I'm gone.
Starting point is 00:55:38 Now don't get me wrong, about four or five times a year when I'm going to sleep with her, the stuff is heavy and I got a lot, I just can't, I won't be able to sleep throughout the night. But that's normal. But on a regular thing, it's not hard for me to just hit the sack and go to sleep. Let me ask another question about sex.
Starting point is 00:55:54 You talked about sex earlier. So one of the best things to go to sleep is sex, right? Studies, you hear and you study a lot of different things. How many times is too little, too few, and I'll tell you where I'm going with this because I'm trying to see what you're gonna say about this. I didn't know how many times people had sex until I started having people would come up to me,
Starting point is 00:56:16 my sales organization would say, hey, we have sex about once a month. And one of them was that we have sex about once every three months. I'm like, you guys been together 15 years, what's going on here? So we just don't have time, we don't do this, we don't do that. What is too little when you're a certain age
Starting point is 00:56:30 and your body needs to have a certain release? Is there a number to it? So the benefits of sex, believe it or not, are actually not from the intercourse themselves. They're from the rise on the impact on a pleasure hormone called oxytocin. It's also called the love hormone. They say that's what's in cupid's arrow. Because oxytocin is what creates the psychosomatic response. It's what allows you to create an image in your mind and have an erection or to see a man or see a woman and be aroused which can actually
Starting point is 00:57:06 cause physical changes right cause your heart rate to increase can cause your pupils to dilate cause command to have an erection cause a woman to have extra you know vaginal secretions your body is actually having a psycho somatic response psychological incidents that causes a response in the body and this oxytocin which dogs have about a. And this oxytocin, which dogs have about 100 times the oxytocin in their bloodstream that humans do, which is why they're so damn loyal, right? I mean, you can, you know, most people have pets know
Starting point is 00:57:33 that you can leave for five minutes or five days, you get the same response, right? You're like, come down, Fifi, I just went to the mailbox, right? Like, so the ox, it's so true, right? And this is why they're so loyal. little, a huge dog fan. Um, but, um, so cuddling kissing, um, skin to skin snuggling, these have really positive physiologic consequences in the human body.
Starting point is 00:57:59 They actually cause the secretion of the pleasure hormone, oxytocin and oxytocin has all kinds of positive effects. So spooning is good for you? To spooning, cuddling, skin to skin, long hugs, kisses over six seconds. I'm smiling right now, look at Robbie Sanderson. He's realizing. He's gonna go smooch his wife tonight.
Starting point is 00:58:17 He's gonna be like, babe, we gonna spoon tonight. Ah, ah, ah, ah. You know, this is, you know, part of the reason why, you know, we knew in the mortality space that broken heart syndrome is a very real thing. No shit. Oh, very real thing. I mean, they're the mortality. Like how do you see it on the test?
Starting point is 00:58:37 You look at the duration of a marriage and the loss of a single spouse and you dramatically reduce the life expectancy of the second spouse. Dramatically. It's almost as accurate as hip fractures. Because hip fractures were one of what we called the triad of death because they were actually poorly understood. Most people think that elderly people fall and break their hip. It's actually not what happens. Their hip breaks and then they fall. And so when... Break comes first before the fall instead of the fall then they fall. And so when... Break comes first before the fall, instead of the fall, then the break. The break causes the fall, the fall doesn't cause the fracture. That's correct. Wow.
Starting point is 00:59:11 So grandma's standing at the, you know, sink washing dishes and crack the femoral head, breaks off, and she falls. And then they say, what happened? She said, I fell and broke my hip. Now your hip broke and then you fell. The reason why, because there's nothing particular about a hip fracture that leads to early death. What in older people, the reason why the hip fracture is so significant is this is an indication that the skeletal system can no longer support its own weight. You're pretty far progressed in the osteoporotic, osteopenic category. You're way down the road on a brittle bone system. And so it's one of the, what weotic, osteopenic category. You're way down the road on a brittle
Starting point is 00:59:45 bone system. And so it's one of the, what we call the tryout of death. But we knew in the mortality space that if you wanted to cut someone's life expectancy in half at any age, put them in isolation. Isolation is the most dangerous and destructive thing that you can do to a human being. And I mean socially isolated, isolated from their relationship, you know, elderly people that have had marriages for 40, 50, 60 years and then lose a spouse and are suddenly alone. That is a dramatic accelerant for mortality. But isolation happens at very, very young ages too.
Starting point is 01:00:25 We are becoming increasingly more isolated. We are drastically out of touch with nature. We are drastically out of touch with other human beings. The worst thing we ever did during the pandemic, I don't care what anybody says, is social distancing, residential quarantining, masking. You know, this was horrible for humanity. It's skyrocketing rates of mortality related to loneliness. If you look at the Blue Zone studies, for
Starting point is 01:00:48 example, and you actually look at what, why are hypersentinarians concentrated in certain areas of the world? What were the things that were contiguous to all of the Blue Zones? Because it wasn't diet, right? It wasn't carnivore, keto, paleo, pescatarian, vegan, vegetarian, was none of those things. If you actually look at dieting and you went to Sardinia, you'd say, okay, well, it's the highest carbohydrate consumption in the world, one of the longest life expectancies. You go to Singapore, one of the highest meat consumptions in the world, one of the longest life expectancies.
Starting point is 01:01:13 You go to the Mediterranean, very high fatty fish and oils, very long life expectancy. Okay, well, everybody's living long and they're not a continuity between diet. So the only continuity with diets was that they were all whole foods. None of those people were living that long on a processed diet. The two things that were not exchangeable, that were non-negotiable, were mobility into later in life. In fact, in Sardinia, life expectancy,
Starting point is 01:01:39 the hypercentenarians, was directly related to the grade of the slope. The steeper the hill you walked up every day, the longer your life expectancy. Wow. Yeah. You have a 93 year old man walking up a 32 degree slope, 10 blocks to go to church and four blocks over to the market back home. Wow. Live for other. The second was sense of purpose and community. You can't exchange those. So that is the part the isolation or the death of the loved one or heartbreak leads to this is why they say my grandfather died three months later my grandmother died. That's exactly why it's called broken heart syndrome. I actually just got goosebumps when I
Starting point is 01:02:16 said that. It's so visceral and so real. You know in those areas of the world in the blue zones for example there's no such thing as a sister care living. Right? Sister care is mom and dad move back in with the kids until the day that they die. Why? Because their only purpose may be to go out to the garden and get vegetables for dinner that night, but they have a purpose, they have a role, they have a community around them. And we are surrounded by communities that are hyper isolating us. Technology is increasing the rate of isolation, the rates of depression in young children are skyrocketing, the rates of autism, attention deficit disorders, what we call behavioral
Starting point is 01:02:56 disorders, impulse control disorders. These are all skyrocketing. Why? Because there's no communal sense of no relationships, no sense of purpose, no sense of real community. Our communities are in these, you know, hyper electronic environments that actually do not, they're not chicken soup for our soul. And so when you look at these areas where life expectancy was the longest, they had strong senses of community.
Starting point is 01:03:26 And so... That makes sense. I mean, my dad had 13 heart attacks. And he had... 13? 13 heart attacks. He had three stents in his heart. He... 50% of his heart was black. And six angiograms, six angioplastics.
Starting point is 01:03:42 He's been on Blutheners since God knows when. And then he was smoking two packs of cigarettes a day, he drank every single day, like liquor, 60 proof, like this, every day for as long as I know, 15, 20 years. And then one day he decides to stop all of that. And, but he has always worked, I've never seen him not work. Every day he works, he's at 82, about to be 83, April 10th.
Starting point is 01:04:08 And the doctor said he got 10 years to live. When the doctor said that he was 44, 44, yeah. He's 83, he's 82, about to be 83. He's still here, yeah, God bless his soul. But he lives with us and he's got kids and grandkids. It's almost as if the grandkids gave him second. When Grace, my niece, was born, there was something he looked forward to. Then when our nephew, Sean, was born, and then our four kids,
Starting point is 01:04:31 that community and the fact that he kept pushing against whatever it was. When you're saying the 32 degrees of elevation and the way they're walking up at 92 years old, whatever, they're living longer than somebody else that had less, whatever you wanna call that, friction or challenges you gotta overcome. It's a direct correlation. Let me change it to a different age category. If you're a parent of a young athlete, okay? And when I say young athlete, I don't mean somebody
Starting point is 01:05:00 that's just kind of training an hour a day or an hour and a half a day or all this stuff, and hey, play sports, likes to have fun, all this stuff. I'm talking about a kid that's just kind of training an hour a day or an hour and a half a day or all this stuff You know, hey play sports likes to have fun all this stuff I'm talking about a kid that's training three four hours every day and Saturdays he's doing his two hours minus plus the games or whatever else he may have and traveling all this other stuff, right? Loves it. No pressure. It's his choice. No one's telling him you better do it He's choosing to do it and that's what he wants to do. Right? How do you in this age, he's going, he's playing sports,
Starting point is 01:05:28 whoever it could be, girl, she's going, she's doing this thing, how do you help this kid that is athletic, has a shot at next level? Nowadays, you know, they're starting to get eight years old, they're not, no longer it's like 14, 13 years old, used to be 10, 11, now it's down to eight years old that they're no longer like 14, 13 years old, used to be 10, 11, now it's down to eight years old that they're looking at it. What do you do to help his chances physically
Starting point is 01:05:50 to prevent injuries, okay, to help with speed, decision making process, lowering the temperature for pressure when there's there, you don't panic so you can kind of go through it. What are things you can do at that level? This level, testosterone level, energy, all this stuff, you know, you're super healthy. What can a parent do to an athlete
Starting point is 01:06:10 that they have as a child? So three things. You know, number one, I would immediately get all of the folic acid out of their diet. So folic acid is an entirely manmade chemical. We've been lied to and told that it's vitamin B9, it's not. We make folic acid in a laboratory. entirely manmade chemical. We've been lied to and told that it's vitamin B9, it's not. We make folic acid in a laboratory. Around 1993, Monsanto convinced the federal government
Starting point is 01:06:30 that we needed to spray folic acid on our entire grain supply. So all flour, all bread, all pasta, all cereals, grains of every kind are sprayed with a chemical called folic acid. Folic acid does not occur anywhere naturally in nature. You can't find folic acid anywhere on the surface of the earth. So these are in foods, we don't call it sprayed with folic acid, we call it fortified or enriched. So fortified or enriched food, enriched bleach white flour, fortified whole grains, fortified wheat. It's been around a box of Cheez-Its, It's going to say enriched wheat flour So fortified or enriched foods are sprayed with chemical folic acid
Starting point is 01:07:10 The reason why I say get folic acid out of their diet is because the majority of these kids Will have a very difficult time processing folic acid. So what does folic acid do? Folic acid when you don't convert it rises it actually causes hyperactivity in the brain It interferes with speed, timing, agility, hand-eye coordination. So the fine motor movements and the things that will take an athlete from being a good eight and a half to a ten. You know, look at Tom Brady, for example, you know, with arguably the greatest quarterback of all time.
Starting point is 01:07:43 You know, you can't really make an argument for his physicality, right? He wasn't the biggest quarterback. He wasn't the most athletic quarterback. He wasn't the strongest quarterback. What was it about him that, you know, very few of any quarterbacks had? It was his timing, right? His timing. You know, the ability to have a trajectory moving away from you, going, you know, increasing its distance and potentially its speed away from you and then moving laterally across a field and then having to throw an object not to where the runner is but to where the runner is going and then to put it on the left shoulder
Starting point is 01:08:11 depending on where the running back is versus the right shoulder, that kind of timing is amazing. So if he didn't cater to the small things, the timing would have, you know, eventually eroded. This happens in UFC fighters, it happens in boxers, it happens in athletes of all kinds. What happens in age is not the loss of physical capability first, it's the loss of hand-eye coordination, speed, timing and agility.
Starting point is 01:08:34 It's all the fine motor skills. So if you actually want to improve that athlete's chances and give them an edge, I would make certain that they are eating a diet that is free of folic acid. There are also a couple of supplements I would put them on. I would make sure that they're taking vitamin D3, about 5,000 I use of vitamin D3 daily. At 11 years old? At 11 years old, yeah. Assuming that they're a healthy full-bodied 11-year-old, you know, if they're above 60,
Starting point is 01:09:04 if they're in the 60-80 pound range, right? So if they're very frail and smaller, I would reduce that dosage. I would also make sure at their age that they're on a very good omega-3 fatty acid supplement, black seed oil, really good fish oil supplement. So omega-3 fatty acids are really necessary for brain development. They're excellent for their joints, for all forms of recovery from athletic performance. And then there are things you could do if you really wanted to really accelerate things. You could add red light therapy, you could add a hydrogen nano bath.
Starting point is 01:09:40 I would have them drinking hydrogen water even at that age. I personally think that hydrogenated water is arguably the most underutilized, scientifically valid biohack in the world. Why do you think so many people criticize that? I've seen reactions to all of us, like I have videos about me that's negative. Hey, Patrick Pitt, David, this, this, this, this, that. Okay, well, I'm the insurance network market. Okay, great. But why do you think people?
Starting point is 01:10:08 Try to like if there's things that I see what people try to break it down with you is hydrogen hydrogen water Why do you think that is to debate somebody on what you want? No one's ever willing to see anyone that wants to criticize me on hydrogen water I will invite them on to my podcast and I will I will invite them onto my podcast and I will openly allow them to express whatever trepidations they have about hydrogen water. It is, I would love to see this. I think I saw this on Twitter, one of them.
Starting point is 01:10:36 Anyways, if I don't find it. I'd love to see it. Anyone listening to this podcast, who wants to come on to the Ultimate Human Podcast, my guest, I will fly you in at my expense, you can actually stay at my biohacking studio. I love that. I'm very sincere about that. And we will have an open debate about the benefits and the side effects of hydrogen
Starting point is 01:10:57 water. Why don't we just, why don't we look at what the research says right here. And if you can find that there's a video of me, but I don't know if that's where I'm criticized. A lot of criticisms I deserve you know sometimes I put things out that I read in articles and I don't check the publications. Critics of the higher joint scientific evidence supporting the health benefits is weak with most studies being small and lacking rigorous methodology meaning there's not enough data definitively claimed scientific okay so we do me a favor you go to google will you search
Starting point is 01:11:28 journal of experimental gerontology hydrogen water it was published in november of 2021 november 2021 journal of experimental gerontology yeah pull that one up okay this was a anybody who wants to criticize double blind randomized peer-reviewed published clinical trials. This is the effects of six months of hydrogen rich water intake on what's called molecular and phenotypic biomarkers. These means they're looking at they're looking at inflammation. They actually used a marker called Tet2 to actually measure the methylation cycle in these adults of aging and older adults the reason why I'm bringing you to this study and not the 13 other studies that I would love to debate on
Starting point is 01:12:10 But this study in particular is because this was done in older ages, right? Most of the time when you see studies in young athletes and healthy young men and women It's not as applicable. So let's say let's go to older ages 70 and above. It is a randomized controlled pilot trial. Okay, so let's scroll down and see what some of these outcomes were. Hydrogen much water, blah, blah, blah, blah, favorably affected several age related features in the elderly. So let's go and increase their telomere lengths. Those are the lengths of the chromosomes.
Starting point is 01:12:43 Like one of the hallmarks of aging is the degradation of the distal ends of the chromosome called the telomere lengths. Those are the lengths of the chromosomes. Like one of the hallmarks of aging is the degradation of the distal ends of the chromosome called the telomere. So the longer the telomere, the younger the biological age of that host. So one of the measures that we use to check your biological age against your chronological age is we look at your telomeres. If we can lengthen your telomeres, we are extending your lifespan. So can we scroll down? Okay, so the molecular markers, DNA, chromosome, here's... look at all of the things that they measure and then we're going to see the outcomes. The biomarkers assessed at baseline in six month follow-up were molecular markers in the blood, DNA, and chromosomes, nutrient sensing, protein and lipid metabolism, oxidative stress, mitochondria, cellular senescence, meaning zombie cells, inflammation,
Starting point is 01:13:30 brain metabolism, cognitive functioning, physical function, and body composition, as well as resting blood pressure, facial skin features, sleep outcomes, and health-related quality of life. So now let's see what happened when they actually used hydrogen-rich water for six months. And this will be part of my debate with whoever wants to debate me. So a significant treatment time. So there was telomere lengthening with the length increased after hydrogen-rich water intervention over baseline versus the control water. There was significantly higher the, oh, methylcytosine deoxygenase. So tet methylcytosine deoxygenase is a marker for methylation. Methylation is the process that your cells are going through to take compounds that enter your body and convert them into the usable form. One of the hallmarks of a youthful biome is that your cellular biology converts things into the usable form very well.
Starting point is 01:14:26 It accelerated in the hydrogen-rich water group. Can you go down a little bit further? And they Hold on. It increased brain colding and NAA levels in the frontal gray matter. Brain creatine and the right parietal matter. Can we go down a little bit further? So there was no significant differences were found in other outcomes except for a significantly improved chair stand performance. This is where the sarcopenia, which is age-related muscle wasting, right, which happens the older we get the faster this occurs. So this is their ability to sit and stand, right, so the
Starting point is 01:15:08 number of times they can actually sit-stand, their sit-stand ratio. Significantly improved chair stand performance after HRV intervention compared to the controlled water. It can be recognized as a possible anti-aging agent that tackles several hallmarks of aging, including loss of function and telomere length studying, telomere length shortening. This study was registered at clinicaltrials.gov. Yes, you can go look this study up. In fact, if you go to, can you go to hydrogenstudies.com? It's not my website, by the way.
Starting point is 01:15:40 Okay, hydrogenstudies.com, and just go to view all studies. Okay, there are 1,335 studies on hydrogen water, hydrogen gas here. You can actually go and you can deselect the animals if you want to just see. So go to all test subjects, click that, just highlight the humans on the right. So get rid of the mice and the rats and the dogs. Boom. Now just select all, click select all. Boom, now you're just, oh sorry, deselect all,
Starting point is 01:16:09 collects humans and hit search, top right. So now it's just gonna be in human clinical trials. FKC and safety of hydrogen therapy in patients with early stage interstitial lungs disease. Successful treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis and chronic fatigue syndrome using hydrogen gas. I mean, it is mind-numbing. First of all, hydrogen is the most prevalent element in the universe. It's also the lightest
Starting point is 01:16:30 element that we know of. In fact, if you say that something is an antioxidant, what does that mean? Blueberries are antioxidants. Like what does that mean? It means that it's donating ions, donating electrons, right? So you can actually do a study for yourself at home. Just order something called an ORP meter, oxidative reduction potential meter. You can get it for 10 bucks on Amazon. What this will do is it'll take any compound like a liquid, you'll put it in this bottle,
Starting point is 01:16:56 and you can measure the ability of this water to either cause inflammation or reduce inflammation, okay? So the more positive the ORP, the more it causes inflammation. This Fiji bottle is gonna be about a plus 150. So even though this water will hydrate you, it will cause inflammation. If you drop the hydrogen tablet in there
Starting point is 01:17:15 and it effervesced into hydrogen gas and you drank that, it would drop the ORP to negative 400. So now you would take this glass of water, this bottle of water, and you would turn it into an antioxidant. And if you look at, I mean, study after study, I use one called, you can go to drinkh2tab.com. Go to drinkh2tab.com. This is the one I take. I'm actually a partner in this. That's my son. But go to www.drinkh2tab.com. This is the one I take. I'm actually a partner in this. That's my son. But go to Science. Okay. If you were to scroll down here, these are the clinical studies. Sorry, keep going. These are the clinical studies. Where's the scientific studies?
Starting point is 01:17:59 It should say on their benefits. If you go to the bottom under science should show you the studies. We linked them there somewhere. Okay, so resources, science. So we should be able to, there were 24 studies done on that elemental magnesium tablet alone. And you look at giving it to double blind studies like the full blown to full blown double blind studies And these are the highest level of research first of all it's safe across the board because hydrogen is the most Prevalent element in the universe. I mean, it's it's it's also the lightest element in the universe So what happens when you put excess hydrogen into the body? It becomes one of the most any inflammatory compounds we know of me because hydrogen you can also bathe in it. It will go right transdermal
Starting point is 01:18:52 So if you have knee hip shoulder rotator cuff literally bathe in it like oh you can bathtub Yeah, you know if if you go to John Jones page if you go to John Jones Instagram It's gonna be down there ways, but you know, I started working with John Jones before his last UFC fight. And one of the issues that he had, if you keep going back before his fight in November, he did a post with he and I and we were he talks about there is there I am sitting with him right there. Um, so I haven't get in a red light bed. I've got him getting in a, you know, I've got him doing oxygen therapy, what's called EWOD, exercise with oxygen therapy. I taught him a breathwork technique.
Starting point is 01:19:31 But John will tell you that when I, you know, parachuted into his camp, one of the issues that he had was, he, you know, just because of his career, he's waking up every day in excruciating pain. At the time he was only training five days a week and he was waking up and just pain every morning because of the jiu-jitsu and all the contact sports and this is right before his fight. So we went out there, I added two major things to his routine. He started drinking hydrogen-rich water which is NSF certified,
Starting point is 01:20:00 it's just hydrogen and water and he started bathing in it every night for 25 minutes. By the 21st day, he called me and he goes, man, I can't believe it. I am waking up. I am not in any pain. Wow. And that's good for him. I'm actually adding a sixth day of training to my training schedule. I'm taking zero credit for his competency in the ring, none, none whatsoever. But what I was able to do was get him out of pain by bathing and drinking hydrogen rich
Starting point is 01:20:29 water going into his fight. And I could give you athlete after athlete after athlete after athlete that this works in. I mean, the single best thing that you can it's about a dollar a day for those hydrogen tablets. I used to promote these hydrogen water bottles. But I'm finding is the longer you use that bottle, the less part per million hydrogen it makes. It's too expensive for people.
Starting point is 01:20:48 You know, I want my message to be for the masses. And so for less than a dollar a day, you drop an elemental magnesium tablet into that glass of water. Any water. Any water, and it will automatically turn it into an antioxidant bomb. You really think about like, what do do antioxidants do for us besides reduce oxidation? You know, about 70% of our circulatory system, our circulation is actually not done by our heart. People think the heart circulates all the blood in the body, it actually doesn't.
Starting point is 01:21:20 It circulates it through the major arteries and the major veins, but it doesn't do the microvascular circulation. That's done by an activity called vasomotor, kind of like a snake swallowing a mouse. And this is the most underserved. Vasomotor? Vasomotor or vasomotion. If you look up that activity, that's how capillaries will kind of move blood through a capillary, kind of like a vasomotor or vasomotion. So I love that you guys are doing this is so awesome. Regulation of blood flow in small vessels, right? So what happens is, you know, blood gets brought to the entrance of these vessels
Starting point is 01:21:58 and then this vasomotor activity continues the circulation. So if you want to improve the appearance of your skin, fine lines and wrinkles, the blood supply to the back of your eyes, fine lines and wrinkles, the blood supply to the back of your eyes, your liver, your lungs, your pancreas, your kidneys, your brain, if you want to improve your microvascular circulation, which is 70% of your circulatory system, you can do things like expose your skin to sunlight, get into red light therapy bed, exercising your vascular system
Starting point is 01:22:21 by cold water immersion and heat exposure to actually dilate and vasoconstrict. And you can take hydrogen you can drink hydrogen water how long of doing that really we'll see how long how long of doing that do you see the results immediately really if you took three I don't know do I have some here is my team still here never had I have it right now if you want to bring one year when I literally have it right now I'll bring you I bring him in here. We'll drop three of them in that bottle right there right now I'll whack it back somebody bring you right now. I'll drink it So for me every time my team to come in here and bring hydrogen tablets Tony will Tony if you can bring and so you're
Starting point is 01:22:55 Saying put how many of them in there? We're gonna put three of them in there called hydrogen bomb And does it taste like anything? There's am I gonna feel This one will taste like raspberry. It's flavored with raspberry, but they make an unflavored version. And what's the other thing that I saw was with the metal thing? What is the metal? Do you know what I'm talking about? The Easter stick.
Starting point is 01:23:15 Is that anything? That's nothing. Yeah, that won't do anything close to what hydrogen tablets will do. So if you, that's elemental magnesium, right? So if you- Which one you want me to do? This is this is fine yeah just do that one okay drop two or three of them in there it's gonna take about 50 seconds to dissolve you're gonna get to 12 parts per million amazing what this is blueberry or raspberry oh my god
Starting point is 01:23:35 it's actual raspberry so just hold that up you see the gas that's going in there so it's pure elemental magnesium all 24 of those studies are on that site, drinkh2tab.com. Go there and read the study. Do not take my word for it. Or go to hydrogenstudies.com. You know, my son and I just did the Great World Race, which was seven marathons on seven continents in seven days. Holy shit. Yeah. I only ran half marathons and I ran one full marathon, but my son ran all seven marathons on all seven continents in seven days.
Starting point is 01:24:08 He's 24. Good for him. Yeah. Cole Brekka. I'm so proud of him. And he started at 210 pounds. He was like 189 when we got home, but he's a beast. There he is.
Starting point is 01:24:22 That's us in the great world race. That's us in Cape Town, South Africa. So at that time he had already run a marathon in Antarctica. I'd run 18 miles of the marathon. I couldn't make the rest of it. And he ran the full marathon in Antarctica. We flew five and a half hours to Cape Town and then he ran the marathon in Cape Town.
Starting point is 01:24:40 I mean, he looks like a, look at those quads. Was he an athlete or what? Oh yeah, he's a rugby player. And I mean, he's like a look at those quads. Was he an athlete or what? Yeah, he's a rugby player. And I mean, he's built more like a rugby player than a distance. I don't know what possessed him to run. When he signed up for this race, I was like, Cole, I hate to state the freaking obvious brother, but you've never run a marathon. But what were you going to say?
Starting point is 01:25:00 Did hydrogen water play a role? Hydrogen water is the only reason why he made it across all seven continents. So that is all gas in there. That density you see is all hydrogen gas. You're gonna drink that. It's gonna go right through your stomach wall, through your esophagus, through the intestinal wall.
Starting point is 01:25:16 I'm gonna wait for the whole thing because I still see three of them going through it. I'll wait. And it's going to massively reduce inflammation. That's him out on the run in Antarctica. That's the first marathon we did was 26.3 miles there. And then- Dude, that's gotta be sick.
Starting point is 01:25:31 That's where? Antarctica. Get out of here. It's the South Pole. Really? Yeah, he's actually set a record at the clinic where we went and did his VO2 max testing in a really crazy VO2 max.
Starting point is 01:25:41 So how many miles did he run in Antarctica? He ran 184 miles in seven days, but in Antarctica he ran 26.3 miles. That's Antarctica. I mean, we're all in. How freezing, how cold is it? It was minus 28 with a wind chill of minus 48. So.
Starting point is 01:25:58 So. So. So. So. And remember inauguration where DC Rob were freezing our tails off. We're like, dude, I was there too. That was crazy.
Starting point is 01:26:07 Oh my God. It was cold. So this is minus 48 minus 48. Then you get on a plane, you fly five and a half hours and land and got off the plane and ran a marathon in Cape Town, South Africa. And then we got back on the plane and flew 11 hours, 14 hours to Perth, Australia. What does he do for work? What's he do full time?
Starting point is 01:26:24 He works for me full time. And he is do for work? What's he do full time? He works for me full time and he is the co-founder of that H2 tabs. Oh, so this is a, he's a co-founder of this. Mm-hmm. Okay, so I think all of it is gone. So now do I mix it or just drink it? Well, I get right back.
Starting point is 01:26:36 Well, I get right back. If you do that in the morning, you won't even eat coffee. And I know it sounds weird to sell you a hydrogen tablet. I actually prefer that everybody you a hydrogen tablet. I actually prefer that everybody take the hydrogen tablet, but you can get hydrogen water generators for your house. You can get hydrogen tablets. You can get hydrogen bottles, but get hydrogen gas into your body. So it's not tough to drink just so you know how sometimes there's flavor. I don't drink coffee. I haven't had it since 25. For me, I'm naturally wired.
Starting point is 01:27:09 Seven years ago I stopped. The last time I had soda was July of 2019 because of my former CFO, Ian Benedict. Wow, you remember July 2019. Oh, because we were at Breaker's Hotel and I'm sitting there, I'm saying, hey Ian, how come, because I used to drink three Coke Zero's a day, I'm like,
Starting point is 01:27:24 how come you don't drink it? He says, I haven't had a soda for seven years. I'm like, well you know what, I'm gonna start today, see if I can go a week. I went a week, and I haven't had anything since July of 2019 because of it. So Paul Saladino was here what, six weeks ago, five weeks ago, I don't know when he was here.
Starting point is 01:27:38 He's a friend of yours? He stayed with me when he was here for the podcast. When he was here, oh really, yeah, so when he was here, I was asking him about Celsius and some of these other things, he says, listen, this is the worst, I was asking him about Celsius and some of these other things. He says, listen, this is the worst. I haven't had anything since the last time he was here. So every time it's one habit, one thing I try to adjust
Starting point is 01:27:54 to see what it does for me. I've never had hydrogen water. I'm curious how I'm gonna feel throughout the day with this. So this is everyday three tablets is what you're suggesting. And does it matter? You know how sometimes they say don't drink water from plastic, do you wanna drink water from this? I would prefer you don't drink it from plastic,
Starting point is 01:28:08 but whether you're drinking the filter water, bottle water, I don't think anybody should drink tap water, but whatever vessel you're drinking water out of, just drop a hydrogen tablet in it. It'll take 50 seconds for that to dissolve. You're saying three or just one? Three throughout the day. Three throughout the day.
Starting point is 01:28:24 But at least one in the morning. If you're tired or you lack sleep or you're exhausted and that drop in inflammation will wake you up, not because it's stimulating you. There's nothing, no stimulant in there, but you will notice that if you're dragging ass and you do one or two of those hydrogen tablets and you put a high dose of hydrogen gas into the body,
Starting point is 01:28:45 it will wake you up because it will reduce that fog and inflammation. I wrote another thing then that I'm curious about. Memory, okay? There's benefit to having memory. Now obviously moving forward, I don't think having a strong memory is as beneficial as it used to be
Starting point is 01:29:01 because nowadays you got Google, chat, GBT, GROK, there's so many easy things. Like people who used to be because nowadays you got Google, chat, GBT, Grok, there's so many easy things like people who used to be able to memorize things that's no longer as a, just like calculators came out and those who can do math in their mind, great you can do it, anybody else can do it. It's a great equalizer, right? But there's still benefits in having a good memory. No question. What helps, what can you do to strengthen? I have an exercise I do but I'm curious to know to the average person that's thinking how can I improve my memory? What can you do to strengthen? I have an exercise I do, but I'm curious to know to the average person that's thinking, how can I improve my memory?
Starting point is 01:29:26 What can you do? Well, there's three things you can do to improve your memory. I mean, first of all, I would lower your glycemic profile. I would dramatically reduce sugar and carbohydrate intake. Not go keto, not go Atkins, you know, or carnivore per se. But we know now that Alzheimer's is type three diabetes. if you put in type, just because I know he's going to Google it. So I might as well get ahead of a type three
Starting point is 01:29:52 diabetes, or a type three diabetes, Alzheimer's bum, the term type three diabetes is, they say that it's not recognized as a similarly sweetened type two diabetes and Alzheimer's. If you, if you keep scrolling down, interesting, they hypothesize that Alzheimer's disease may be a form of type 3 diabetes and specifically affects the brain because you know a lot of people don't realize this, it's not just the pancreas that makes insulin. The brain is so crack addicted to sugar that it can make its own insulin and so and what the brain wants the
Starting point is 01:30:25 brain gets when the brain craves sugar, it will activate dopamine receptors in the back of the tongue, I think they're the RF-1A2 receptors, so that it gives you a sort of a reward for giving it sugar. So we know that insulin resistance in the brain, there's evidence to support the connection between insulin resistance and Alzheimer's. So insulin resistance in the brain, you know, when you don't have places to store sugar in the body, we convert sugar into something like glycogen, we store it in the liver. In the brain, there's no place to store it.
Starting point is 01:30:56 There are neurosynaptic junctions, these little spaces between nerves. So insulin resistance has a massively negative impact on the brain. So before I tell you what to take to improve memory, it's what to not do to improve your memory. So you want to lower your glycemic profile, so lower your blood sugar, your what's called your hemoglobin A1c, the three-month average of your blood sugar, will do a lot for your cognitive function. That's why if you ever notice how sharp you are in awake and alert and aware when you're fasted, or when you're hungry, like when you're hungry, and you're going searching for food, you're actually on your game, you feel alert, you feel awake, you feel
Starting point is 01:31:35 focused, you feel cognizant, you feel clear. Why is that your blood sugar is low. And so on the low side, so the lower you can keep your hemoglobin A1c, you know, and a really good hemoglobin A1c is 5.2, 5.3 or less. And the more insulin sensitive you are, the sharper your memory is going to be. The second thing is that memory is directly related to circulation. The presence of oxygen is the absence of disease. And as you deprive the brain of oxygen, which is called hypoxia, which by the way, is the absence of disease and as you deprive the brain of oxygen Oxygen which is called hypoxia, which by the way is the definition of death hypoxia lack of oxygen to the brain
Starting point is 01:32:18 But as you just take marginal deficits in the amount of oxygen in the brain you take significant deficits in your cognitive function So mobility exercise breathing will do more for your cognitive function than any kind of normatropic because you will increase the circulation to the brain and a lot of people don't realize that you can also improve the capacity for your blood to carry oxygen by managing your levels of red blood cells and hemoglobin. So for example the reason why hormone therapy may improve or does improve cognitive function, like when men that are deficient begin in testosterone, for example, or women that are deficient in testosterone get on testosterone replacement therapy, or they fix the nutrient deficiencies like DHEA and D3 that cause hormone deficiency, their cognitive function returns, or their memory improves or their
Starting point is 01:33:05 short-term recall improves. And why is that? Because when you normalize the hormone level, you normalize or increase the level of red blood cells which carry oxygen and it brings more oxygen to the brain. This is why testosterone deficient men have memory issues. Men that are not deficient in testosterone have a tendency to have less memory issues. Testosterone, men that are not deficient in testosterone, that have a tendency to have less memory issues. So hormone therapy can play a big role in cognitive function. H-R-T or T-R-T?
Starting point is 01:33:36 Oh, no question. I know he's going to do it anyway, so we might as well just do it. But if you go to the Journal of American Urology, which is considered the Bible for male endocrine therapy, just go to Journal of American Urology, Testosterone, and then open that and scroll down to line 13, where it says, Counseling Regarding Testosterone Deficiency. Did you say Journal of American Urology? There you go, oh. That was it. So scroll down to line 13.
Starting point is 01:34:08 Number 13. Is that the actual? Wait, that's not the actual study. Journal of American Urology Testosterone. Go back Rob, if you can go back. Journal of American Urology Testosterone. Right there, on the bottom is the testosterone. Yeah, there you go.
Starting point is 01:34:24 Evaluation and management of testosterone deficiency. Okay, this is the, by the way, this is one of the better peer-reviewed published journals in the world on male endocrine therapy. So we're going to go to the Bible for a second. Keep scrolling down until you get to line 13, which will say counseling regarding the management of testosterone deficiency. 13, there we go. Counseling regarding the management of testosterone deficiency. 13, there we go. Counseling regarding the treatment of testosterone deficiency, sorry. So this is what a physician should say to a patient
Starting point is 01:34:55 that is deficient in testosterone if they're thinking of taking testosterone therapy. Clinicians should inform testosterone deficient patients that low testosterone is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, not the other way around. If you scroll down again, patients should be informed that testosterone therapy may result in improvements in erectile function,
Starting point is 01:35:15 low sex drive, anemia, bone mineral density, lean body mass, and or depressive symptoms. The reason why all of these are affected by all of these energy, fatigue, lipid profiles, quality of life, cognitive function right there is because, and if you go further into the studies, and I won't bore you with those, is because you are improving the presence of oxygen in the bloodstream. And so the more oxygen you have, the better your cognitive function.
Starting point is 01:35:42 So first I would lower my sugars. I would try to maintain low levels of high glycemic sugars in my blood. I would, if you are young, you shouldn't start hormone therapy, but you should have your hormone levels checked and see if you are deficient in the nutrients that your body needs to make hormones. About 70% of patients that qualify for hormone therapy
Starting point is 01:36:07 don't need hormones. They need the nutrients that the body needs to make hormones. So if you're clinically deficient, for example, in DHEA, or you have high levels of something called SHBG, sex hormone binding globulin, or you're clinically deficient in vitamin D3, these are nutrients that affect the production,
Starting point is 01:36:24 metabolism, and conversion of the hormone testosterone. And if we don't look at these things, we put people on hormone therapy too early, rather than putting them on the nutrients to make their own hormones. And so I just wanted to show you this because this is a... This reminds me the book I read many years ago, Ageless Man. I don't know if you've heard about the book Ageless Man. It's, they did the study on, was it rats? Or I don't know what you've heard about the book Ageless Man. They did the study on, was it rats? I don't know what they were testing on to see how your testosterone being lower
Starting point is 01:36:52 affects your heart attacks, your heart and how- It's 10,000 receptors for testosterone in the heart alone. Yeah, this is actually the book by the way. Yeah, that's the book. That's the book that it came out about eight years ago. It's very interesting when, it's not a popular book. It's not something that you know, it's got 72 reviews. I haven't read it, but.
Starting point is 01:37:09 It was actually a very interesting book to read, to understand a little bit more about, zooming a little bit on the cover of the book, Rob, how to cure prevented disease of aging, Alzheimer's, depression, Parkinson's, hypertension, coronary disease, heart and fract, slip disc, prostate impotence, knee, I mean, it's like all of it.
Starting point is 01:37:27 And it's a simple book. It's not a big book to read. You know, what's amazing about that is that this is exactly what we discovered in our research in mortality, is that so often, so many things go wrong. So if you just look at that myriad of symptoms, right? Hypertension, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's,
Starting point is 01:37:44 cholesterol, obesity, slipped disc, prostate impotence, hip, osteoarthritis, that seems like the entire world's going to hell in a handbasket, right? So if you treat these like spokes on a wheel, these look like independent variables all going wrong. There's a cardiac issue, there's a mental issue, there's a bone issue, there's a circulatory issue, there's a cognitive issue. There's a bone issue. There's a circulatory issue. There's a cognitive issue
Starting point is 01:38:06 There's one issue Causing everything and this is what happens and and I believe goes lost on modern medicine very often is usually one thing goes wrong That causes everything you don't have multiple systems going wrong, right? I mean I you know people that have an autoimmune disease tend to have multiple autoimmune diseases Why is that because it's a failure of the immune system or not a failure of the immune system You systems usually acting properly because we don't go and find out why the immune system is attacking our tissue Probably 40% of your audience listening to this podcast right now has some form of autoimmune condition autoimmune thyroid thyroid, Hashimoto's, Crohn's, chakrins, you know, a whole number of things.
Starting point is 01:38:50 And what modern medicine would have you believe is that, you know, you woke up one day and your immune system is attacking your tissues, right? So if you have Crohn's disease, you woke up one day and your immune system started manufacturing antibodies to your colon. Or if you have Hashimoto's, you woke up one day and the immune system started manufacturing antibodies to your colon. Or if you have Hashimoto's, you woke up one day and the immune system started to attack your thyroid. And we immediately assume that the immune system has gone wrong, that the immune system's made a mistake,
Starting point is 01:39:15 so we need to suppress the immune system and we need to put anti-inflammatories in the body. Instead of saying, let's just assume that God didn't make a mistake, let's just assume that the immune system is acting properly. We just need to find out why. So in other words, it's attacking the colon, yes, but it's doing it for a reason. Let's figure out why.
Starting point is 01:39:35 And the big whys are mold, mycotoxins, metals, viruses, parasites, those five. Use tests for those five. You will get to the root of, in my opinion, the majority of all autoimmune conditions. But we believe that autoimmune conditions happen because the immune system is spontaneously dysfunctional. There are so many people with autoimmune Hashimoto's and what do they do? They just put them on medication and watch the immune system just slowly attack, you know, the thyroid. But the truth is when you have when you have pathogens in the body like mold, a mycotoxin,
Starting point is 01:40:10 a virus, a parasite, and you have a healthy cell, and if they're listening to this, they can't see this. But pathogens don't hide like this, right? They hide like this. So in other words, let's say that this is a virus, a mycotoxin or heavy metal, and it's floating around the bloodstream. It's not going to hide outside of the cell, it's gonna hide inside the cell. Now the immune system sees this invader. How does it get to that pathogen? It manufactures an antibody to your cell to get to this. It's not after this cell. It's not after your thyroid. But if you take heavy metals and you embed them in your thyroid tissue,
Starting point is 01:40:52 your immune system will manufacture auto to antibodies to the tissue to get to this. So it's just like if, if, you know, if crime is committed and, then the offender ran into your building and locked the door, the police would bust that door down to get to the offender. The immune system will do the same thing. It will bust through the wall of your cell by manufacturing an antibody to get to the invader. It's not after the cell.
Starting point is 01:41:15 It's not after the friendly tissue. It's after the invader. So why don't we support the immune system and say, hey, why did I wake up one day and I have autoimmune antibodies to my thyroid? Well, maybe you have heavy metals embedded in the thyroid, right? Maybe a mold, mycotoxin. So I always, you know, try to preach that there's so much hope for us, you know, by getting back to the basics, neutrifying the body, putting the raw materials in that God gave us to allow our bodies to function properly, and as soon as something goes wrong, not assuming
Starting point is 01:41:48 that you've had a disease or pathology happen to you, that something deficient has happened within you. Fixing that deficiency can fix that condition. By the way, I can listen to you for three more hours and we can go through a bunch of different things. When I was today, I saw some of of the stuff because the first time I heard About you was when you and car don't started doing stuff together then from there I saw the Dana stuff and then you and I Met at the UFC think and we started talking and then earlier today when the guys we were doing the final prep for the podcast We went on the 10x health whatever the website was and when I thought about
Starting point is 01:42:29 that the health I thought about you I don't think I don't see Cardona as a health guy seem as a real estate guy think of you as a health guy and and I saw what's going on recently with you what happens to the two of you it's so sad I mean my wife and I like so many other business owners, were just completely duped by Grant as partner, Brandon Dawson. You know, they built an industry on creating the hope that you can be successful in business by doing his real estate courses or by allowing Cardone Ventures, they have a an entity called Cardone Ventures and supposedly it's a business scaling, they're professionals at business scaling, they're actually kind of professionals at business scamming, you know, they when we got into business
Starting point is 01:43:16 with them, you know, my wife and I started a company called Streamline Medical Group and we started it because we wanted to make an impact on humanity. And we really wanted to shift what was going on in modern medicine. We treated Grant Cardone. He had a great experience with us. And then he said he was going to buy us. And he was going to just blow our business up.
Starting point is 01:43:38 And we were going to scale to the moon. And what we realized was that really what they wanted to do was take the they took over our business now look I take responsibility for this because I signed a really bad contract with some really bad people and I didn't know at the time because I was like this wide-eyed entrepreneur and I wanted to make this huge impact on humanity and you know and Brandon Dawson and Grant were talking about you're gonna build a billion dollar company we scaled all of these companies turned out to be complete nonsense. Essentially what they did was,
Starting point is 01:44:08 they paid us nothing for the company. They strung the payouts out over about three years. We got a quarter of a million dollars at the closing, which we were then forced to put into Cardone Capital. And we put it into Cardone Capital before Grant Cardone told me that he was under investigation by the feds, that a two-year investigation by criminal investigation was underway at Cardone Capital.
Starting point is 01:44:35 And we put the money in when Grant Cardone knew that he was under investigation. He didn't disclose that to us for another two and a half years. And we got into business with them and you go to these events and they're so intoxicating. There's like celebrities on the stage and there's fireworks and you know, Grant's showing you his planes and his oceanfront mansions and Brandon's talking about all these businesses that he's scaled and what you realize is happening is They are selling the dream of success
Starting point is 01:45:10 Not success and they built a company. That's a fee based company that is meant to strip fees from from these Young companies three to eight million dollar companies strip fees out of these companies Take equity in these companies promise them that you're going to scale Their company but not have any obligation to scale the company So the entrepreneur is obligated to pay fees Cardone Ventures is not obligated to scale their their business and they they put them in these bear-trap Contracts, I mean as soon as we announced the lawsuit against card-owned ventures My law firm got hundreds and hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of calls
Starting point is 01:45:52 From young entrepreneurs like my wife and I that had been scammed the same way that we had been Essentially, they build this massive dream but the contracts don't reflect what they're promising you and Because you're so intoxicated by this dream of a billion dollar company and changing thousands and thousands of lies You sign these agreements because they seem like great people and then all of a sudden you realize that you've actually not just sold your company you've sold your soul and They want to control every word that you say. I mean I went on on on the Joe Rogan podcast November of 2023. Coming out of that podcast, we did 20,000 genetic tests, did 17 million that month in revenue.
Starting point is 01:46:35 And Brandon Dawson and Cardone Ventures sent me a cease and desist because I wore the wrong t-shirt and didn't use an affiliate link that would drive all of those leads into the system that would turn them into other courses. But my objective when we started was not to pay your company fees to build your business. My objective was to get this information to the masses. And then what they did behind our back was the most sinister thing that happened. And this is all in our lawsuit So I'm not defaming them What they did behind our back was my wife sage and I were partners with grant and Brandon
Starting point is 01:47:14 We were killing it in the genetic testing market I believed in the gene test I believed in the supplements it took me two and a half years to formulate the supplement that we used to fix these genetic Breaks and tens of thousands. In fact hundreds of thousands of people were benefiting from it. We were really addressing the masses. We were killing it. We were doing $70 million a month in revenue. We were doing 20,000 new gene tests.
Starting point is 01:47:35 We couldn't even keep inventory on the shelves. Then what they did without telling us was they went out and they bought a company outside of our company. They bought a genetic testing lab in Austria. They bought a manufacturer of supplements in Austria. And without telling us, because Brandon Dawson was the CEO of both companies, the company he was partnered with, my wife and I, and Cardone Ventures, he forced 10X Health to do business with the company that he bought outside of our 10X Health company.
Starting point is 01:48:08 He forced us to do business with this company halfway around the world. We didn't realize when he was pitching it to us why he was so insistent that we start taking patients' DNA that we were testing in the United States and ship it halfway around the world. So now we do a cheek swab in the US. We ship your or they ship your DNA to Austria. It gets run in a lab in Austria. And then they make your supplements in Austria. And they ship your supplements back from Austria back to the United States. And so when he presented us with this new genetic test, I couldn't understand why is he pushing this so hard? I could Brandon this, this genetic test is terrible. First of all, the gene snips in the test we do in
Starting point is 01:48:49 the United States are not even matching the genetic results that you're getting overseas. We're shipping supplements from halfway around the world through customs. They're getting trapped in customs, they're getting sent back. We're not even telling the people here that we're sending their DNA outside of the country. They would put DNA swabs in refrigerators for weeks and weeks and weeks before they would even ship it overseas. The supplements were woefully underdosed for helping the patients that we were trying to sell this to.
Starting point is 01:49:20 My wife had panic attacks. I had massive headaches and got acid reflux on them. A lot of the compounds hadn't been tested on humans yet or not tested in human trials. And so we got to the point where we said, look, I'm not going to sell this test. You've taken the successful genetic test and supplements that's helping hundreds of thousands of people. And now you're doubling the price of the genetic test. You're taking it from $600 to $1200. You're quadrupling the price of these supplements. It's $300 a month and you have to buy three months.
Starting point is 01:49:56 So it's $900 out of pocket for the average family, which means a family of four is out of pocket $20,000 to do a simple genetic test, which you could take your gene results and run it through Chatchie BT and get the exact same results. So I'll tell you right now, if you have a genetic test you've done anywhere in the world, run it through Chatchie BT and it'll tell you what the supplement is. Get out of here. Absolutely, man. It's perfectly accurate.
Starting point is 01:50:17 I'll put a link to how to do it on Chatchie BT for free. So now we have a genetic test that's doubled in price, quadrupled in supplements, supplements that haven't been tested, you know, cheek swabs were sending halfway around the world and then bang the shoe dropped. We found out they went out and spent seven million dollars, which they took out of 10X Health in the form of a distribution, bought a company outside of it and shoved that company down our throats and I said I'm not selling this genetic test and they said if you don't sell this genetic test we'll
Starting point is 01:50:49 terminate you and they kept their word. They terminated me and they terminated my wife in a company that we sold our primary residence to start and we didn't do everything perfectly and you know they put $250,000 in our pocket to buy this company, which I immediately put into Cardone Capital. So we never took any money off the table. When the company started making money, they stripped $9 million out in distributions to themselves, hundreds and hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars in totally unnecessary fees because Cardone Ventures, which owned 82% of our company, has this thing called the Strategic Business Unit, which is a bunch of untrained young entrepreneurs with no specific
Starting point is 01:51:39 expertise in the area of business that they sell services in. And even though they owned 82% of our company, they still charged massive fees every month, which they paid to themselves to scale our business. Our business wasn't scaling because of the strategic business unit. Our business was scaling because the message was resonating. You don't think he, so when you're saying 17 million that one month is of that business that they owned 82% of, that business at 17 million in a
Starting point is 01:52:09 month, well that's pretty explosive. So you don't think the 10X brand and Cardone promoting and talking about it helped get it off the ground? It helped me a lot. I mean I never, first of all I owe a debt of gratitude to Grant Cardone for even taking the risk of saying that he wanted to partner with our company I I don't take that away from him at all I you know in fact a lot of my issues are not with Grant I mean, I think I think Brandon Dawson is his partner is gonna be the downfall the entire organization I think you know you and Grant are good. You don't have issues with Grant I don't have I don't have real issues with Grant
Starting point is 01:52:41 I mean he's got a few issues with me because I left. I mean, basically they said either sell this test or we terminate you. And I said, I'm not selling the test. I am not gonna use my reputation to shove this thing down the throat of patients that I care about. The, you know, some of the clinicians that have been in my business since we started that business, some of the employees that are there,
Starting point is 01:53:01 some of the practicing clinicians are some of the best people in the entire world. You're gonna hear something amazing. So they- What is that Rob? They're now launching the, so on January 4th, I have the ultimate human, it's my podcast.
Starting point is 01:53:21 They went out on January 4th and bought ultimatehuman.com. I have the ultimate human. They bought ultimatehuman.com. And now they're launching ultimate human analysis. The 10X brand has been so damaged and so destroyed. And it had, look at that. See any similarity between that logo and this logo? That's Cardone Ventures. What's going on? Are you logo? That's Cardone Ventures.
Starting point is 01:53:45 Are you serious? Cardone Ventures. Are you joking or are you serious? I wish I was joking. They just started this. Yeah, so Brandon Dawson went out, while I was his business partner, in March of 2024, while we were still business partners,
Starting point is 01:54:00 while Sage and I were running our podcast and feeding leads to 10X Health and boosting 10X Health, Brandon Dawson went out and bought a trademark from a doctor, a trademark called Ultimate Human Analysis. Never even told us. We found out he bought the trademark a few months later and he goes, oh, I bought this trademark to protect you guys. And we're like, well, why would you buy
Starting point is 01:54:23 an Ultimate Human trademark? I've got the Ultimate Human podcast. He goes, yeah, I brought it to protect you guys. So we're like, well, why would you buy an Ultimate Human trademark? I've got the Ultimate Human pockets. He goes, yeah, I brought it to protect you guys. So he went out and bought this trademark, sat on it. I sued him on the 26th of December. On the 28th of December, he went out and bought, in the name of that trademark, he bought the social media domains, Ultimate Human Analysis. Domains ultimate human analysis then on January 4th a few weeks into our lawsuit He bought ultimate human comm and now he's starting ultimate human community the ultimate human
Starting point is 01:54:53 Look at the font look at the coloring look at the letters The brand has been so tarnished that the grant and Brandon just dropped the 10x brand like a stone and now they're chasing the You know obviously the ultimatex brand like a stone and now they're chasing the you know Obviously the ultimate human brand see how it goes But it's just a sad story man because I really believe what those guys said I believe what I heard from the stage It was it was a horrible experience, you know, I I At the time where we knew we could no longer do business with him I told Grant we wanted out and he said I don't even like the space anyway why don't you guys make me an
Starting point is 01:55:28 offer to buy my shares and so my wife and I ran around Wall Street you know trying to raise money. We raised about 75 million dollars and I asked Grant to play backgammon one night and I went up there and I said you know look we we need to have a divorce. I don't want it to be a public divorce. I don't want to hurt the patients. I don't want to hurt the clients. I certainly don't want to hurt the employees that were with me from the beginning, these
Starting point is 01:55:53 clinicians that have been with me from the beginning. Some of the most intentional good people, really good practitioners are still on the deck of that ship. And I made him an offer. He seemed excited about the offer. He went to his partner Brandon Dawson. Brandon was like, absolutely not. It's scary trying to steal the business. And I said, look, just so that you know that this is an honest offer, I will not only pay this valuation for your shares, but you can also buy my wife and I out at the same valuation.
Starting point is 01:56:29 Oh, it's either we do to you or you do to us. I'll either buy your 82% out at this valuation, and at the time I offered them $65 million. Your 18%, they could buy at the $75 million valuation. Yeah, $65 million valuation. So they could buy me, our 18%, and have the entire company, or we would buy their majority interest. They said, it's too little for you to buy our shares, and it's too much for us to buy
Starting point is 01:56:52 your shares. So in other words, we don't think you're giving us enough money, but it would be too much. That valuation would be too much for your shares. So they forced us to stay in a loveless marriage and then they wanted us to sell this abject failure of a gene test which they know does not work. They try to hire celebrities and influencers to shove this test down people's throats. The market is picking up on the inauthenticity of the messaging. Because the intention when it becomes solely to make money and not the intention is not to help people with their well-being, the rate of collapse was just cataclysmic. And so I mean sad but you know.
Starting point is 01:57:40 I thought you guys were, because this business is, it's not a business I'm interested in getting into, because there's too many technicalities to it. And I leave it to the experts to do what they wanna do with this. Trust me, like we have a lot, right now we have a guy that wants to do a big sponsorship for one of our events,
Starting point is 01:57:58 and I cannot tell you how many questions we're asking before we take sponsorship money. We don't even take sponsorship money the last 18 months. We gave away $6 million, because we're just not doing it on the podcast because of that specific reason. But I thought for sure you guys were gonna work together for many years. I thought so too.
Starting point is 01:58:12 And do great things and it's unfortunate to hear because I think his strength of marketing and just driving and your ability to go out there and present and you come across very likable, trusting. You just said, sometimes I've made mistakes when I said this. So it gains. Oh, I've definitely made mistakes tonight. No, no, but what I'm saying is,
Starting point is 01:58:33 all I'm saying is your approach gets me and others to say, okay, I'm willing to give this guy a shot and listen to him, especially if somebody doesn't know who you are, they haven't spent time with you. But I thought you guys were gonna do big things together. It's unfortunate that that happened. Here's thought you guys were gonna do big things together. It's unfortunate that that happened. Here's the thing, we were doing big things together. What we were doing was working.
Starting point is 01:58:50 It was the incessant level of greed that they said, we're gonna take what's actually really working, what's scaling and what is helping the masses, and we're gonna go, we're gonna buy a new company for ourselves, we're gonna hold it for ourselves, and we're gonna force buy a new company for ourselves, we're going to hold it for ourselves, and we're going to force all of this, this, this deal flow, that all these people that are coming into the funnel, that were largely coming from like the podcast and stage talks and everything else, you know, and, and yes, I will say Grant Cardone did a lot to elevate
Starting point is 01:59:19 my awareness and I owe him debt of gratitude for that. But then greed just takes over and you say, well, we're making 17 million a month. We could make 50 million a month if we double the price of the test, if we own the genetics company, if we own the supplements, if we quadruple the price of the monthly supplements and people and Gary will just shove it down their throat. And then they ran into a brick wall. I said, listen, man, you bought our company, you didn't buy our soul. And it's sad because I wanna go back out in the market
Starting point is 01:59:52 and help people. I've got 21 more months on my non-compete, so I gotta sit quiet in the United States and before I can really get back to what I love to do. So I have to go outside of the United States to do it while we see how the lawsuit plays out. But it is what it is. All the best to both of you guys.
Starting point is 02:00:07 I'm sure Grant's gonna do well. I always say, Grant and I, we had a friendship many, many years ago and we, they had a fallen out after I did an interview with somebody who wasn't too happy about, and we didn't keep in contact. I think we spoke, we spoke one time, I visited one time in the last six years, seven years,
Starting point is 02:00:23 and it was a great conversation to see what he wants to do next. But when I watch him, his wife and his daughters, you can say whatever you wanna say. They love their father and husband. You gotta respect that. It's not anything he's thinking. He is a great dad.
Starting point is 02:00:38 I actually spent a lot of time around him and ironically even Elena that I'm suing right now. And they're great parents you know behind the behind closed doors you know when I would spend time at their house I mean they're very intentional with their kids and you know you see a lot of things on social media but behind the scenes he actually is very good at it and Elena's a good mother too I mean they really care about their daughters and they're intentional about the way they're raising them. They spend a lot of time with them.
Starting point is 02:01:07 You know, you go over to a lot of wealthy people's houses and the kids are always tucked over somewhere with the nanny. You know, it's not like that. You know, I just unfortunately think that there's an incessant level of greed. You know, I think there's good and evil in every person, right? Unfortunately, that happens in families,, right? Unfortunately, that happens in families, that happens in businesses, that happens in siblings, that happens that you try to do every, and a lot of times, you know what I've learned, here's what I've learned.
Starting point is 02:01:33 I'm a big fan of prenuptial agreements. And a lot of people are like, why would you want to do that? I'm eliminating future arguments, where if we can put it on paper, and at first you're kind of like, but we love each other, we don't need to do this, we don't need to do this, can put it on paper and at first you're kind of like, but we love each other, we don't need to do this, we don't need to do this, just put it on paper. What if this happens? You do this. What if that happens? We do this. What if this happens? You do this. Okay. Any relationships that were business or family, whatever, the more things were documented
Starting point is 02:02:02 on a piece of paper to agree on, my wife and I, second date, I bought her a book, 101 Questions to Ask Before You Get Engaged. Why? We talk about so many different things, how we raise our kids, how many kids I wanna have financially, who manages the finances,
Starting point is 02:02:17 how many days can you go without me being on the road and da-da-da-da-da-da, ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba, the faith, the politics, it was such a great exercise. Just spoke right, yeah, I bought a few thousand copies and gave it away to all my single guys on my team. My guys, read this, I cannot tell you how many. Eventually I did a-
Starting point is 02:02:30 I'm gonna read it even though I'm married. I have a great marriage. It's an unbelievable book that every young man and woman, by the way, the whole book is literally just 101 questions. There's nothing in a book. It's a question, page, question, page, question, page. I wish I had one for business and I could have read it before I got into business with Cargo Ventures.
Starting point is 02:02:48 By the way, you know what? Rob, can you text me that idea? It's actually very good to say 101 questions to ask before you get into business with someone. I would actually entertain writing a book like that. I would read it. Rob, can you text me for that? I think that would be something that we ought to consider because a lot of people think about it that way. But if you go through, a guy messaged me and says, hey, I'm thinking about going through with this partnership and we're going to do it this way.
Starting point is 02:03:12 And if after a year we do this, we're going to merge the two companies together, I'm like, dude, I got 20 questions for you. What's going to happen with this? What if the other person stops working? What's the arrangement to buy back? How are you going to evaluate the company to buy it back? If the person says no, they don't want to buy it back. Does it trigger something for you to be able to sell it to this? Do they have to go back? How are you gonna evaluate the company to buy it back? If the person says no they don't want to buy it back, does it trigger something for you to be
Starting point is 02:03:26 able to sell it to this? Do they have to go out? Every one of these things, if I don't do it upfront, if you don't do it upfront, we're a little bit guilty in you know, the role, you know what, my wife took everything I had. Really? Yeah. And you were worth 50 million before you got married? Yes. And you didn't put an upshot agreement? No, you deserve it. Yeah. I, you know, I do bear a lot of that responsibility myself. You know, looking back, I was so caught up in like,
Starting point is 02:03:53 in the dream and, and there was a fear that we didn't know how to scale the business. There was the hope that we could build this into something massive. But you were the brand. Really. I thought of you as the brand.
Starting point is 02:04:05 So for me, you're the Wozniak. You're the product. I have absolutely nothing to do with that. Jobs without Wozniak doesn't have Macintosh, doesn't have Apple, doesn't have the product. We, the consumers, watched you for, here's what he's talking about. Very interesting guy, I'm gonna try that.
Starting point is 02:04:24 Very interesting, I'm gonna try this. Wow. Very interesting guy, I'm gonna try that. Very interesting, I'm gonna try this. Wow, really, Dana, I'm gonna try this. Wow, I never thought about it, I'm gonna try this, right? So that's the part when a businessman, the saying goes, when a man with experience meets a man with money, the man with the money, let's just say the man with experience meets a man with money slash idea, okay?
Starting point is 02:04:45 The man with the money idea leaves with the experience, the man with the experience leaves with the money and the idea, did you get it? So that's kind of how this works out. The guy with experience knows because he's been through this a million times, the guy with experience, the idea or the money is like, I'm just so excited to do something like this. Purely coming from an enthusiasm place, it's because he's been through this a million times. The guy would experience the idea or the money is like, I'm just so excited to do something like this.
Starting point is 02:05:06 Purely coming from an enthusiasm place. It's innocent, it's beautiful. It's a, you know, so, but if those two can find a way to make it work. Yeah, no, when we worked together, it was amazing. And, you know, we both had the same mission. We wanted to help the masses. We wanted it to be affordable.
Starting point is 02:05:23 We wanted it to be scalable and it was scaling. And it was, but then the podcast, you know, the Ultimate Human podcast became so popular, they just constantly cease and desist, and you know, they were upset. I was talking about hydrogen water, talking about amino acids, and I was like, guys, the only way to get to optimal health is not just our supplements, or just our redbed, or just our gene test. We have to be authentic when we deliver this information to people. I mean, if you go supplements or just our redbed or just our gene test. We have to be authentic when we deliver this information to people. I mean if you go back and listen
Starting point is 02:05:48 to this podcast probably 85% of what I said it's not gonna cost people much of anything and if it does you're not even buying it from me. And I believe that that's the way the authenticity of the message makes an impact because you can educate people but if you don't inspire them to make some kind of change, you really haven't done much of anything. And it's really sad because it was working and I think just the incessant level of greed. And then once this lawsuit became public,
Starting point is 02:06:18 we opened this hotline for people to call and it's just absolutely ringing off the hook. I mean, our lawyers deluged with people that have the exact same Experience as my wife and I I mean dozens and dozens and dozens of businesses families Relationships ruined because they believed it was being told them from the stage Cardinal Ventures in these intoxicating environments they signed these agreements, and then they got absolutely crushed. It's a shame. Well, something tells me you're gonna do fine,
Starting point is 02:06:50 and something tells me they're gonna do fine. I think sometimes- I hope so. I mean, I really hope that the company succeeds. I think you're gonna do fine. I think for you to be out there talking, there's a market that wants to hear what you have to say. There's a big market for like,
Starting point is 02:07:07 you know, there's a guy named Dr. Mike. I don't know if you know who this guy is on YouTube. There's a Dr. Mike guy that has, you know, 30 million subscribers and during COVID, this guy was the only guy that would interview Fauci. Fauci wouldn't go on any YouTube channel except for this guy, Dr. Mike. One day, eventually he agrees to do a interview with me and another lady that I'm having on. He says, yeah, for sure, Dr. Mike. One day, eventually, he agrees to do a interview with me
Starting point is 02:07:26 and another lady that I'm having on. He says, yeah, for sure, absolutely, let's do it. I'll debate anybody. And then he avoids it. I'm a good-looking young guy. YouTube's putting them all over the place. Very good communicator. He made a video about, he reacts to everybody.
Starting point is 02:07:42 He's got a lot, He gets eyeballs, right? But you know what happens? The moment he thought of himself above and beyond everyone and he no longer wanted to sit down across the table from others, and the only place Fauci trusted to go to was Sue, and we were supposed to trust the science, and God knows how many other things that Fauci said
Starting point is 02:08:00 ended up being inaccurate, that they had to put a pardon on the guy, and to go through it, the American people lost a lot of credibility for guys like this, and some of the credibility came for the guys like you that's just questioning things. You're not a doctor, you're not,
Starting point is 02:08:14 you're just like, look, I'm not at this, I'm not at that, talk to your doctor, talk to your cardiologist, we went through Dana White, and Dana White had to do this, and you know the regulations and things you have to deal with, but I think the market is kind of going through this pendulum back and forth. Dude, who do I go through?
Starting point is 02:08:32 What do I do? These guys are asking some interesting questions that's making me think about but this guy's got the PhD and the degrees, do I go through? These guys lost a lot of credibility. Oh my God, they lost a lot of credibility. I mean this is what the whole Maha movement is about. These guys lost a lot of credibility. Oh my god, they lost a lot of credibility. This is what the whole MAHA movement is about. It's about getting the corruption out of our nutritional research and our food supply and
Starting point is 02:08:51 our medical system. When you start to look at the statistics going on in the United States, being the biggest spender in healthcare worldwide, we spend four and a half trillion dollars a year on healthcare. We only lead the world in six things, infant mortality, maternal mortality, morbid obesity, type 2 diabetes, multiple chronic disease, and a single biome. And you think, well we spend four and a half trillion dollars a year and we lead the world in all those things. 77% of our military-aged men and women cannot enter military service because of poor
Starting point is 02:09:24 health. As Department of Defense statistics, you know, 13% of teens are suffering from fatty liver disease. 30% of them are morbidly obese. You know, the question is, what is causing all this parabolic rise in autism, parabolic rises in attention deficit disorder, parabolic rise in rates of depression, polycystic variant syndrome, all of these mental illnesses and chronic diseases on the skyrocketing and you look at the corruption in our food supply and our nutritional research, you know, the majority of our public
Starting point is 02:09:57 policy research being funded by private enterprise, which is why you get a food pyramid that says that Lucky Charms is more nutritious than grass-fed steak. That's how you get a food pyramid like that. And I think the Maha movement is about making changes to the poison that's in our food supply, not eliminating people's choices. I don't think anybody wants to talk about, well you can't smoke, can't drink, can't vape, can't drink soda. You know, we're going to close down McDonald's. That's not what it's about. It's about saying, why are we subsidizing the industries that are poisoning us the most?
Starting point is 02:10:35 You know, why do we actually subsidize grain, wheat, soy, corn, that are genetically modified crops that are sprayed with forever chemicals like glyphosate that enter our bodies and show up in our bloodstreams and wreak havoc on our cellular biology. And you know, our food stores make it so expensive to have organic or locally grown foods and so inexpensive for the average person to get to these highly processed poisonous grains and other foods the majority are our diet especially in teenagers is highly processed foods and it's just wrecking our metabolism and you know I'm really excited you know I'm not an official I have no government of role I'm not officially on the MAHA committee I don't have a position in the government but with everything that I can do with the entire
Starting point is 02:11:28 power of my platform and all of my peers, we are standing behind Bobby Kennedy and this movement in such a unified way because the possibility that we could affect public policy and make real change. I mean I'll go on as many podcasts and stage talks and whatnot as I can try to get the information out because I truly believe it doesn't belong to me. I believe it belongs to humanity. I just sort of, you know, God lets it flow through me. But if the possibility to affect public policy and get some of these poisons out of our food supply and actually put vaccines through rigorous clinical trials like we do other pharmaceuticals and other forms of FDA approved devices and compounds and address just the straight corruption
Starting point is 02:12:14 in our nutritional research and in our food and drug administration and our centers for disease controls so that we have real transparent data coming from real research that's in the best interest of true public policy, not the best interest of private enterprise, because we seem to have privatized the profits and socialized the expense. And I don't think any American is on board for the, you know, the highest rates of childhood cancer in recorded history and and, you know, the rapidly declining rates of, you know, sperm counts and infertility and miscarriages. I mean almost makes you feel like it's done on purpose if you're not, you know No, trust me. That's what a lot of people think so that that's why sound like a conspiracy theorist
Starting point is 02:12:52 But but again, why why did Bobby gain enough credibility? As a Democrat independent then then for Trump to bring him in and he's not even a doc Why are some of these guys that are not, why did doctors like Fauci lose credibility yet people like Bobby Kennedy who are not doctors gain credibility? We, you know, people feel like they were manipulated and I'm just excited to see what's going on next
Starting point is 02:13:18 and I'm happy for what you're doing. Thanks, Ben. Gary, I appreciate you for coming out. I will tell you for me, I'm gonna go 30 days. So whatever this is, you know, whatever you got here, I'm gonna send you for me, I'm gonna go 30 days. So whatever this is, whatever you got here, I'm gonna. I'm gonna send you a bunch so you can go full 30 days. I'm gonna go full 30 days and experience it for myself and see where that goes.
Starting point is 02:13:32 And at the same time, excited to see what you do next. And I do know a lot of guys like Paul Saladino, one of the things that worked out very good for Paul, a lot of people have questions. Paul's on Manect, I know Tony spoke to you about that as well on the Manect site. Yeah, I'd love to be on there. I think a lot of people have questions. Paul's on Manect, I know Tony spoke to you about that as well on the Manect side. I'd love to be on there. I think a lot of people got questions for you.
Starting point is 02:13:48 A lot of people got questions, especially the topics that we talked about here. Just texted my wife, I said, I don't normally say this because my wife's got a million and one things to do. I said, you have to watch this podcast. I literally just texted her and she says, what did you guys talk about? I said, that, that, that, that, that.
Starting point is 02:14:02 She said, I'm gonna watch this podcast. So anyways, brother, appreciate you coming out. Really, really enjoyed it. Thank you. I appreciate you so much. Take she said I'm gonna watch this podcast so anyways brother I appreciate you for coming out really really enjoyed it thank you I appreciate you so much. Take care everybody God bless bye bye bye bye Nowadays more than ever the brand you wear reflects and represent who you are so for us if you wear a future looks bright hat or a value-taming gear you're telling the world I'm optimistic I'm excited about what's gonna be happening but you're a free thinker you you question things, you like debate and by the way last year a hundred and twenty thousand people got a piece of Future Looks
Starting point is 02:14:32 Bright, Gatorwood Valuetainment. We have so many new things, the cufflinks are here, new Future Looks Bright, this is my favorite, the green one. Just yesterday somebody placed an order for a hundred of these if you watch the PBD podcast You got a bunch to choose from white ones black ones If you if you if you smoke cigars and you come to our cigar lounge We have this high quality lighter cutter and a holder for the cigars We got sweaters with the value team and logo on it. We got mugs We got a bunch of different things
Starting point is 02:15:03 but if you believe the future looks bright if you follow our content and what we represent with Valuetainment, with PVD Podcasts, go to VTMerch.com. And by the way, if you order right now, there's going to be a special VT gift inside just for you. So again, go to VTMerch.com, place your order, tell the world that you believe the future looks bright.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.