Episode 21: Toxic Generation
Transcript:
Episode 21: Toxic Generation
Warren:
Oh, man, Dr. Pompa, this is one of those topics we’re going to dive into in the health hunter world. Thanks for joining us, by the way, here at Health Hunters. This one’s an emotional one for many of us, because there’s so much going on right now, because we’re, one, all very busy, so we tend to do things that may not be in the best interest of our children, but that’s not the biggest problem, is it, Dr. Pompa? It’s their health, this generation, the generation to come. We have something we need to discover here on Health Hunters today. Let’s dive into this topic, the toxic—both with immediate generation and then moving all the way into millennials and some of the challenges that we all face as parents in the workplace, how to deal with this.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, look, your daughter’s there with you today for this show.
Warren:
She’s crying out, and she’s saying, daddy, movie, daddy, movie. I try not to let my children be on devices, because they don’t know how to interact. Yeah, see, daddy, movie. Daddy screwed up, because I was so busy with work, I neglected to get a movie ready for her, so now she’s joining us on the show.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, so like I said, I think she might have some insight to the show. However, probably the movie is her biggest interest, not the status of her health or the next generation’s health, but we’ll see. We’ll wait. If there’s something very intelligent, by all means, put that mic up to her face and let her talk. Actually, let’s just see what comes out. I think it’s going to be fun anyway.
This topic, it really lays deep in my heart, because my kids are older than yours. I have two 21-year-olds, a 19, a 17, and about to be 14, so with the feedback—and we got into the conversation again yesterday about their friends, their health, and my son had a friend over, and they were just saying, you have no idea—he was saying, Dr. Pompa, you have no idea. All of our friends are on medications. All. I said, oh, come on, all of them? All of them. Not only that, that generation is taking Adderall as just—it’s commonplace. Now, again, okay, I live more on the West Coast, so it may be more of a West Coast thing. I don’t know. I haven’t been on the East Coast for five years. However, they take Adderall to stimulate, to study, to awaken, because none of them can sleep normal. They’re sleeping all the time. They’re not recovering. They’re not going into delta sleep, which we’ll talk about. Then, they use marijuana to bring it down, because of course you can’t just stay in that state, so they’re using marijuana to mask symptoms, to try to sleep, and other things. Okay, but these are the common—these are the ones that are considered normal and okay, and everybody’s doing it.
Oh, and that doesn’t include the list of psychotropic drugs that they’re all on, and by the way, here in Utah, last night, there was a shooting at the University of Utah, and this, again, more commonplace. When we look even at the shooter that did the shooting at Vegas, months before, he was put on psychotropic drugs. By the way, whether you understand it or not, it’s the common thread into all of the shootings, the psychotropic drugs, and yet we have a mass population taking these things. I think the question, then, is what happened, what’s going on, why the need for the drugs, the stimulants, the downers, the uppers, the meds. What the hell is happening?
I think if we start at your daughter’s age that’s somewhere on your lap or running around you right now, maybe we can tap in to some of the causes, because as we believe, if you eliminate the causes, then we can have a different effect down the road. However, all the medication is simply dealing with the effect of something upstream, deep rooted, so we’re medicating, using stimulants, downers, uppers, psychotropics, all the medications as a coverup of the effect, but what in the world is causing this to happen? We didn’t need that stuff as kids, Warren, when we were growing up. What changed? That’s what we have to get into.
Warren:
It’s unfortunate. I think so many things have changed, and I think our generation also passed on some things that we shouldn’t have as well. I think there’s also a double standard today almost for what parents to be, and I think the pressure we put on ourselves, I think, to be overachievers in America versus going to Europe. I could go on and on, so let’s just pick one of them to start out with. Let’s start out with the underlying health challenges that children have today and why. As a health hunter, we want to know the cause. We want to know so we can get to the true solution, so let’s start with children from womb, coming out of the womb. What’s going on with them that they’re so challenged so that, when they get diagnosed, maybe some of them rightfully so, with major health challenges, but then they’re medicating? It’s like putting a sticker over the—your engine light’s on, you have no oil, but you cover it up, yet the damage is still happening to that’s child brain, to that child’s digestion, to their cells, and that’s where the medication is not fixing the problem.
Dr. Pompa:
I’ve been talking a lot, even more in the public, about this generational toxicity issue, right? I’m about to interview someone on Cell TV, so for the last couple weeks, I’ve been kind of reading his stuff, his book, his website, just educating myself on something called transgenerational epigenetics, and that’s his topic. I sought him out, because this is kind of like, oh, my gosh, this is what I’ve been talking about. Something I’ve learned from some of his work is that oftentimes the third generation actually gets hit the hardest, so if you look at what’s happening, and Warren, you’ve heard me speak about this, that the number one cause of high lead is our mothers and our mother’s mother. In other words, it’s physically inherited from grandma to mom to the baby, four generations, estimated, meaning if we got rid of all the lead exposures today, it would take four generations to basically breed it out.
By the way, I showed multiple studies on mercury as well, the Tagum study, the Drasch study. The number of fillings, ladies, in your mouth, the silver fillings, which leach mercury, because it’s 50 percent mercury, is proportional to how much mercury we’re finding in the babies’ brains in utero, so arguably then, we have the physical inheritance of lead and mercury in utero, starting life that way, not to mention the overvaccinations that contain aluminum and mercury and other toxins that we’re putting into our children later and all the other exposures. We’re starting life with this.
Now, there’s another thing that he talks about, generational epigenetics transferred from one generation to the next, meaning certain genes got turned on in our grandmother. Now, that may not have manifested much in our mother, but the next generation, it manifests bigtime, so whether it’s thyroid condition, whether it’s diabetes, obesity, psychological problems, bipolar, it oftentimes can skip a generation, and it’s inherited, then, down the road. It often takes that four generations, again, to change the epigenome, if at all. We know that we can turn them on. We know that we can turn the genes off.
Okay, the point is this, though. I think, with this generation, no doubt they’re getting hit the hardest with the transfer of toxins from mom to baby from grandma, because they grew up in the lead generation, the mercury generation, and they’re getting hit the hardest with this transfer of genes being turned on. Transgenerational epigenetics. Put it together. Things are happening today that we need to talk about on the next segment, because it’s the perfect storm.
Warren:
Absolutely.
We’re back, and I was just distracted with my daughter, but that doesn’t mean we’re not going to have a great show.
Dr. Pompa:
Put the mic in front of her. Let’s see what comes out.
Warren:
What do you want to say? Talk here. Say something. No, she doesn’t want to talk. We’ll come back to you.
Dr. Pompa:
She’ll have something to say in about five minutes.
Warren:
Yeah, as soon as I move my gaze away, because that’s what children want, see? They want attention.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly.
Warren:
They want your attention, and that’s one of the issues, though. I don’t know if we’re going to get into that, but even though it’s health hunter topics—yeah, so when you get motivated in America, and you want to achieve so much, but there’s always a cost to everything that you do. You’re almost cheating on your family, so when you work too much, you’re cheating on them. They psychologically feel cheated upon, no matter what you do, what you say, it’s your actions and time that matters. In their minds, they’re saying, oh, he likes work better than us, every single time you say, I’ve got to do this.
The balance is sometimes saying—and this is a good solution. I know we’re not into solutions. That’s usually the last segment, but the good solution is, when you have something to do, you go, you know what? I’m not going to do this, if it’s work, and I’m going to choose you. Watch your children light up, and you have to balance that out, so it should be one to one, because we all have to work. We all have to make a living, so that’s one of the things, but if that child doesn’t feel loved, they’re going to get love somewhere else. We have a love bucket that we all need to feel fulfilled and have purpose, so you’ve got to fill into your kids, because that, even though it’s not a health-related issue, it’s a psychological-related issue, and it’ll come back to bite you as well, because as we all teach, it’s not just toxicity, it’s emotional toxicity, and it’s physical toxicity, whatever it may be, so anyway.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. That’s right.
Warren:
I don’t want to jump topics. We were in—I thought you were going to say transgender toxicity, but that’s probably not—
Dr. Pompa:
Transgenerational.
Warren:
Transgenerational, but the transgender thing may be a genetic issue from toxicity as well. Isn’t that—
Dr. Pompa:
It absolutely is in a lot of papers and theories at this point that, no doubt, those genes could be turned on. The old dogma was, oh, it’s just genetic, meaning there’s nothing you can do about it. Your mom had it, your dad had it, you have it now. We know that’s very little of disease today. There’s certain things that are, something that messes up a chromosome, 21, for example. You have Down syndrome, so pure genetic turned on, more damage to the gene, etc., but that’s not the case with most conditions. Most conditions, there’s something called epigenetics, meaning it lies above the gene. It is really for—you have to understand.
I’m not going to get into this whole epigenetic topic here. It’s not the point, but all humans, we have about 25 thousand gene. That’s it. We thought it was hundreds of thousands, and then the Genome Project showed otherwise. We have about the same amount as a rat or a mouse, so we thought we’d have all these genes compared to them. We didn’t. It’s the fact that we have an epigenetic thing, meaning what lies above our genes. It gives us all this further function and higher brain intellect and all this that makes us much better than a mouse, so we think. The point is that these genes turn on, so the reason humans—people don’t get this, but we have 99.8 percent the same genes, you and I, Warren, you and the listeners. What? Wait a minute. Warren, you look so different than me. Your nose, your eyes, your hair, all these things.
Warren:
Thank God, right, Dr. Pompa?
Dr. Pompa:
See? How do you say that? The point is it’s the epigenetics, meaning it’s what above the gene that makes us look so different, feel so different, act so different. That means that these genes are turned on and off, so environmental factors—you said it. Lack of love, emotional stuff, physical stuff, and chemical stuff can turn on these genes for better or for worse. This has been the science for the last 20, really ten years even, but this is what we know. These genes can be turned on. Yeah, obesity can be triggered two generations up. Now, all of a sudden, you’re a teenager going, I eat better than my friends, but I’m overweight. Gene turned on, right? What’s not being discussed is the fact that these genes can be turned off. The point is, we have to look at the factors, environmental, physical, chemical, emotional, that turn genes on and off, and then we have some explanation, some causative factors, as far as why we’re seeing so much happening in this generation.
We’re going to get to some solutions, because we can turn these things off that are triggered, so you’re not the destiny—your DNA is not your destiny. You’re not the destiny of your DNA. That’s the good news.
Warren:
I remember that Time.
Dr. Pompa:
That was Time Magazine, Warren. Exactly right. I don’t know. Was that five years ago?
Warren:
Still, that culture code—daddy, hold you? Okay. That belief system, that’s an old dogma, right? People are still living their lives today by that dogma.
Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely.
Warren:
That your genes are your destiny. It’s so replete in the culture, and there’s magazine—it’s still new news. It’s still being printed in Time Magazine. They come out with new articles on this stuff. It’s still in science, in this epigenetic research. Yeah, that’s a buggy bug. What do we—let me—I got distracted again. You’re so cute. She’s so cute, man, and I get—here’s the thing. Let me digress. The dopamine spike that I get from my daughter in the morning is much higher than any opioid or whatever is out there to do it, so if you can do that, guys, if you can find a way to get your dopamine spike from your children, and then, as they say, you turn into teenagers, and all the dopamine spikes are now [00:16:16], but I don’t know that to be true. I’m living in la-la-land. I visited a friend in Billings, Montana, the other day. He’s like, how old are your kids? Two and six. He’s like, ah, you haven’t started yet, have you? I’m like, I guess not.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that does go away, unfortunately, but ride it when you can. They become teenagers. They give you dopamine spikes every once in a while but not just that visual, like you see that cute, little girl with those pudgy, little arms and legs. It’s like, that’s a dopamine spike just looking at her. Your teenagers don’t do that for you anymore. Matter of fact, sometimes it’s the opposite. It’s like, oh, gosh.
Warren:
They become full-time teachers for you.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s different, but this topic—you were going somewhere. I don’t want to—
Warren:
What I wanted to kind of go into is—so there’s all these health issues, and what other things are affecting this generation? We’re health hunters. We usually discuss the health side, but what about the psychological side of how these children are raised? What about the lack of socialization and touch that’s happening inside their lives? They’re glued on their computers, phones. Let’s talk about their structural spine. As a previously licensed chiropractor, you treat people with these—I remember children, Dr. Pompa, in your office with testimonies of hormones coming into balance, thyroid turning back on, just from fixing the structure of their neck, and now that’s a big issue. There’s all these other causes. I would say—
Dr. Pompa:
There’s cause for that, too, by the way, why kids are so subluxated, as we call it. Misaligned spines causing nerve interference, and births have a lot to do with that.
Warren:
Yeah, there’s so much going on, and I can’t wait to get into solutions, because there’s so much hope. There’s so many things that we can do for this generation, but what do parents do? We feel like we’re overwhelmed. It’s like, there’s so many problems. My kid shouldn’t wear a backpack, and he shouldn’t eat sugar. It’s like, how the frick am I going to get through the day? If I had to do everything right, it’s too overwhelming.
Dr. Pompa:
There’s simple solutions.
Warren:
Let’s talk about some of those, because I’m getting depressed. Just kidding.
All right, welcome back, health hunters. Thanks for the announcements from our sponsors. We love you. Health Hunters is a growing group and audience, and we couldn’t do it without you guys. Dan, we talk a lot about this on other shows, all the problems of toxicity. We’ve hit on epigenetics. I think you opened some new understanding into that, even on this show, because of some of the research you’ve been doing as you dig as a complete and total health hunter. What are some of the other things that are the big ones?
I really have to go with toxicity being a huge one, the abundance and overwhelming amount of vaccinations that aren’t giving these children a chance out the door, the 14 amalgam fillings that my mom had that went right into my brain that led to a litany of allergies and destroying my microbiome with antibiotics with no solution, with no buffer, or taking a certain probiotic. If it isn’t an emergency, what you—there’s so many things you can do today if you’re educated. That’s why everyone’s listening to this, but what are some of the other major ones as well?
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you hit on one that I really wanted to go into there and is another big, huge causative factor that this generation is really being affected by, and that’s a disruption of what we call the microbiome, meaning your gut bacteria, we’ve learned, plays a major role in how your actual brain works. There’s certain bacteria you have in your gut that need to be there in certain numbers to produce certain brain chemicals that you need just to feel normal, feel good, dopamine, serotonin. All of those are actually produced in the gut, so when the bacteria is disrupted, your brain doesn’t work.
What’s happening to this generation? A few things. You actually hit on one, right? The overuse of antibiotics. That came after World War II, the antibiotics generation. We literally thought we had done it. We thought we conquered all disease, if not most disease anyway, and we realize now that we’ve actually created more disease because of antibiotics. Of course, certain conditions, people would’ve died without antibiotics, but according to experts, we actually created more disease because of them. Wow, that’s a shocker, and then all these soaps, the antibacterial soaps, the hand sanitizers, every church, everything. Hand sanitizers. We are creating—we’ve just learned this, right? We’re creating a new problem of resistant bacteria, wiping out our own bacteria that we didn’t realize were needed for normal brain function, normal immune function. Now, we’re going, oh, my gosh, we really fouled this up.
It’s part of the reason why kids need Adderall, part of the reason why kids need psychotropic drugs, etcetera. Of course, the toxicity that’s entering their brain, and then there’s another problem, glyphosate being sprayed on our food since the late 80s, 90s, through today and increasing. This chemical is known to kill certain bacteria that we know are needed to make these brain chemicals. It’s known to cause something called leaky gut, which is driving autoimmune, and it’s another epidemic in this generation. It’s known to disrupt the mitochondria, where you make cellular energy, and in a 2012 study from senior scientist at MIT, Stephanie Senna, she showed this chemical is allowing the heavy metals like lead, mercury, aluminum that we’re being exposed to in utero and later in life through vaccines, etc., allowing it to cross deeper into our brain.
We look at this generation, the millennials, and we wonder how in the world are we looking at statistics—oh, by the way, out of the University of Virginia, they looked at kids, adults actually, over the age of 28 in this study. One hundred percent of them had signs of dementia. These are the numbers. It’s estimated, by 2032, if statistics stay the same, one in two kids on the autism spectrum. You look at all of these numbers. You say, man, the destiny of this country is what? I’m telling you, the answers are, number one, simple lifestyle changes that we all need to make, model for our children. Cellular detox, of course. That’s what we hang our hat on. That’s what saved your life and mine, that we teach to doctors. No doubt. Go and learn this stuff. Go to our website. My gosh, I’ve interviewed experts from all over the world. I’ve written articles about this, one after another. Educate yourself, because there’s a way to get this stuff out of our brains. We’re teaching doctors around the country. Warren markets to doctors to put people butts in seats so we can teach them what saved our life and what they need in their practice to make a difference in this epidemic. It’s not as simple as doing the colon cleanse and the detox that most of you are probably thinking of as detox. It’s not so simple. This stuff is in the brains of our children and us, and we have to go about it correctly. There’s a way, and I can’t discuss it all in one show. You’re going to have to take that step and educate yourselves, but it starts with a lot of avoidance, and we’re going to talk more about that in the segment.
I want to open the door to one more thing, because you started the show with it. You were concerned about the electromagnetic frequencies your daughter was going to get from the iPad, etcetera. You monitor that, because it’s another hidden exposure, toxic exposure, that this generation is having that we did not have, and that is the amount of EMFs, they’re called, electromagnetic frequencies that disrupt the cell, the cell function, the mitochondria, all of these things we’re talking about. It is a perfect storm, so Warren, how do you do it? My kids didn’t have those iPads. They now walk around with their stinking phones in front of their face 24/7, but when they were young—
Warren:
They’re so intrigued by them. They’re so intrigued by them, and I’m training—the parents are training the children, like me. I feel so bad. I’m so much on my phone, because I do a lot of business and life on my phone, and they want it. They want to look at pictures, and they’re so digitally dialed in. My 2-year-old’s working my phone. She knows how to plug into things that she wants. She knows how to—and it’s such a part of their culture, and a lot of parents, because we’re busy, and we’re tired, and we’re sick and toxic ourselves, so we just throw them on the iPad. We jjust need a break, right? We do that. On airplanes, for us.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, of course.
Warren:
On car trips. When life’s overwhelming, and we need to get some work done around the house, but that’s not that often, maybe once a month. When we’re not feeling—when we’re sick ourselves, we’ll throw them on an iPad, but what we do to protect them from EMF is we try to download the movies, of course, put it on airplane mode so that the movies are downloaded and/or we have little EMF Faraday cage blankets that we’ve trained them to use if they want to watch their iPad and we catch them. We have to remind them a lot, but that’s another trick, using a—we get organic ones, but there’s little Faraday cage EMF-blocking blankets that block that EMF from crushing your child’s organs and tissues.
Dr. Pompa:
There you go.
Warren:
Those are two of the things that we do, and if you can get in airplane mode, you’re in a good place, but if you can’t, use the Faraday cage.
Dr. Pompa:
[00:26:29] I was just going to give us—because you offered something out there. We should put this in the show notes, but it’s lessemf.com. It’s just a host of things that—simple solutions to mitigate some of these issues, and some of them are very, very simple that you can do for your kids.
Warren:
There you go. Yep. Get those resources, and my daughter’s very excited right now, because her thing did turn back on. Her iPad was dead, and now she’s been patiently waiting. I can’t get it to work, so I don’t know. The other big issue with the iPad, obviously, the neck—well, actually, there’s two big issues in my opinion. One, what it does to their neck, and two, what it does for the decrease in socialization. When we’re outside, and I think it adds into the microbiome issue—we ran around and played with dogs. We got out in the dirt. We were with animals. We were more of a farm generation, right? Many of us, especially our parents before us, a lot of them lived in areas where there was farms. You’re playing outside. You’re in the local park. You’re getting dirty. You’re eating dirt. Getting iPads is keeping kids inside and not outside where there’s sunshine, so you have the lack of good environmental exposures, and then you have what it does to their neck and their spine and how that affects the nervous system in so many different ways.
Dr. Pompa:
We better talk solutions.
Warren:
Let’s get into that when we get right back. Yeah.
Dr. Pompa:
We’ve got kids. We’ve got dogs. It’s a real show, folks.
Warren:
We got the iPad working, and it’s the last segment, so let’s take advantage of this.
Dr. Pompa:
Let’s do two extra now.
Warren:
Yeah, let’s do two extra segments, because now I put a distraction in place, and this is—I use iPads in case of emergency. This happens to be one. My wife had a doctor’s appointment. What are you going to do? She’s off.
I mentioned some big issues there, right, Dr. Pompa? What are some of the solutions? We’re talking microbiome. How can we fix the microbiome? How can we get their necks and spines in a good place to where they’re not under so much nerve interference or nerve stress? I remember when you used to adjust me back in the day. I would be in this hypercortisol state. I would be in a—I don’t know if it’s—you’re the doctor here, so autonomic—or I was in sympathetic or parasympathetic. You would adjust me. I would calm down and get into parasympathetic. It was such a game-changer for me, and I always love talking about chiropractic. Of course, it’s part of the core beliefs of what we found as health hunters to be true and to make a difference.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, most people think of chiropractors as pain, so why would a child need a chiropractor? It’s the structure. The misalignments happen far before pain. You see kids walking around with backpacks, as you mentioned. It forces the head forward. It’s called anterior head positioning. That stretches the spinal cord, which causes all types of neurological issues. It’s straining the nerve system, which strains the immune system. Find a chiropractor. There’s a simple solution. Not for pain but to keep these misalignments out of your children. My gosh, getting them adjusted once a week, twice a month, once a month. Any of that, depending on your child, could be transformative for their health, not their pain, their health. The birth process, 27 percent, I think, are C-sections now. They’re pulling from the child’s head. Guaranteed misalignment. You lose the cervical curve. It creates massive—excuse me—subluxations in their spine. It sets them up for failure later. Bad stuff, so chiropractor, simple solution.
For EMFs, the safer cases, the little Faraday blankets. These things can be huge. Limit their time on the EMFs, because it does cause cellular damage, inflammation, function, oxidative stress, all of it. Bad stuff.
Warren:
In your mind, when you know, my children need to spend more time outside, you need to spend more time outside, too. Go outside. Run around.
Dr. Pompa:
Get in the sun. It offsets a lot—yeah, the dirt you mentioned, right? It’s like, without even knowing it, you’re setting out solutions, because the dirt carries bacteria. We realize now, running from dirt was a bad thing. Just make sure it doesn’t have glyphosate sprayed on it. Yeah, so playing in dirt makes a healthier microbiome, being exposed to pets, cats, animals. Get a dog. Get a cat. Get some animals in the house. No doubt, that’s probably the number one thing you can do for your microbiome.
Warren:
They’re going outside.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.
Warren:
They’re going outside. They’re getting dirty. They’re getting bacteria from other dogs, and they’re—
Dr. Pompa:
The diversity of your bacteria is really what dominates your health and no allergies later, better immune system, warding off autoimmune conditions. Pets carry so many different bacteria than humans, so it creates diversity. Arguably, they’re actually cleaner than humans, but the point is that you need that. You need to be exposed to that, and that’s what it offers as well. Okay.
Warren:
Get your kids on—take a vacation, because that’s good for you, too. Even if you don’t have a lot of extra cash, you can go on vacations really inexpensive today, things that—
Dr. Pompa:
They’re called staycations.
Warren:
Yeah, staycations. There’s so many ways. You can turn a business trip into it, if you’re an entrepreneur. You can obviously find really inexpensive trips to places like Orlando.
Dr. Pompa:
Simon and I go camping. We go camping in the summer. We love it. It’s fun.
Warren:
You’ve got to do those things. Yeah.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, go camping in the woods. Get in the sun. Get in the water. There’s something in water actually, swimming in lakes, that’s—
Warren:
More microbriome.
Dr. Pompa:
It’s called bacteriophage, and these bacteriophage, we’ve now learned, ward off bad guys in your gut, and when you’re swimming in these things, you’re getting a lot of these bacteriophage. Again, you have to choose your life. There could be a lot of runoff in a certain lake. You’ve got to watch. If there’s farms upstream, I wouldn’t do it, so be a little choosy. Okay, so this is [00:32:42].
Warren:
I want to talk—I want to say one—I’m going to tell you one quick story, because I don’t want to interrupt, and it’s really funny.
Dr. Pompa:
Fire away.
Warren:
My dad. You know my dad, right? He’s part of the antimicrobial generation.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly.
Warren:
They were using microbiome soap. They were slathering us, even with cuts and stuff, with mercurochrome, whatever, iodine stuff, and everything was antiseptic this, antiseptic this, and Clorox was the magic healer of all, right? Clorox into our water well when we thought there might’ve been an animal that fell into it, because we lived in the country, so Clorox for everything. Clorox was the solution for poison ivy. Clorox was the solution for cuts and scrapes, and then Clorox was the solution to put in your bathtub just to be good for the water. You put it in there. That’s good for your body. You’re killing off your bugs on your body from being outside in the dirt. We want to kill those all off.
My dad stayed with us recently, and he’s just like, Warren, Warren, I have the magic thing. This is what you need to do. Your water’s a little too soft, so what you need to do is you need to take a little bit of Epsom salt, just a little bit, and put it in there and then just a small amount, just a couple capfuls of Clorox. That’s the secret trick. You need to do that every day, because that’s good, and it just takes that itch away. I have that itch all over my skin, and I’ve got to put that Clorox in there, so he’s asking us for Clorox. I’m like, we don’t have Clorox. The better solution was vinegar, so we used vinegar, so now he’s like, that’s the magic potion. If you’ve got itchy skin, use a little vinegar in your bath water. I don’t know. It’s not part of mine, but that’s the generation, man. They thought the Clorox and killing off every bacteria on your skin, which is the very reason kids have so many skin conditions.
Dr. Pompa:
Exactly right.
Warren:
Acne, and what’s the one that’s scabbing and all that. Starts with an S, right?
Dr. Pompa:
Scabies?
Warren:
Not scabies.
Dr. Pompa:
That just popped into my mind. I had to say it, even though I knew it was wrong. Yeah, you have eczema. You have—
Warren:
Eczema, that’s the one. Why did I think it started with an S?
Dr. Pompa:
I don’t know. Scabies was more funny. Anyway, look, I also—I want to throw a few products out there, because I know everyone likes that. There’s one that really can offset some of this glyphosate, that chemical that’s being sprayed on all our foods. It’s a product called Restore, and episode 110 on Cell TV, if you want to know more about it, but it closes the tight junctions, even in the presence of glyphosate. It helps your good bacteria communicate with one another. Very, very good product. I’m not a fan of just throwing—most people that come to us and our doctors, they’ve been on the same probiotic. If you’re on a probiotic, switch it around. Move it around. Those bacteria are good, but people stay on them, and they create monocultures, it’s called, so change your probiotics up. Again, it’s not as simple as just taking a probiotic. You’re talking about ten, 20 bacteria, when it’s thousands and thousands, so mix it up. Eat fermented foods. Try some different bacteria that way. Fermented products are great.
Warren:
Don’t wash your organic vegetables, most of them, right?
Dr. Pompa:
Yep, absolutely.
Warren:
Would you want to wash at all, organic vegetables?
Dr. Pompa:
No, you can just rinse the dirt off if you don’t want to. Obviously, you don’t want to crunch dirt, but there’s still enough left there if you just use water. The bacteria would still be left there.
Warren:
I’d like crunching the dirt, so is that okay?
Dr. Pompa:
It is, yeah. It’s fine, if it’s organic, so crunch the dirt. No doubt about it. You get some of that, especially in spinach, and you should only be ever eating organic spinach. It’s one of the most toxic—spinach should always be organic. It’s highly sprayed, highly. Same with strawberries. They absorb it.
Warren:
I remember another subject, my mom. She washed all your vegetables, soaped the vegetables. Did your parents do that?
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.
Warren:
Just like, you’ve got to get every bit of dirt and bacteria.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, because again, that was the antibacterial generation, right? They grew up with antibiotics saving lives. Let’s take it to the next level. Let’s take it to our hands, our food, our everything. That’s an antibacterial world.
Warren:
Break that bad belief system is what we’re trying to tell you.
Dr. Pompa:
Okay, so there’s some bacteria products. Another one called MBC is a really good one, but again, rotate those things, so tip there. All right, that’s the bacteria. Epigenetics I brought up in the beginning. I talked about turning off genes. We know more about that now than ever. Throw out a few products. Mors, M-O-R-S, it’s a methylation product that’s built around these methyl groups that we know can turn off these bad genes. Really, really important product. Very, very helpful. Part of our tools. The cell membrane is critical for turning off bad genes, so two products. One’s called Vista, and another one’s called Pureform. Love those products for the membrane. Critical for hormones and turning off bad genes.
I brought up these problems. We’re trying to throw some solutions out here for your kids. What other problems did we bring up, Warren, because I don’t want to—oh, we talked about the cellular detox. Cytodetox is an amazing product that’s able to get into those membranes and pull some of these toxins out. Yeah, so all right, I wish I had time to give more, but those are—at least we hit the main solutions for the main problems we brought up.
Warren:
Change their diet. Change their life. Get them outside. A little bit of detox, a little bit of chiropractic, some fermented foods, and you’re going to have a different kid. Get rid of those sugars. Love you guys. Health hunters, unite. Get out there and make it happen, guys. Thanks so much for being on the show.
Dr. Pompa:
Woohoo.