Fix your strategy, fix your health
Fix your strategy, fix your health
Introduction and Holiday Wishes
(0:02) Hi, this is Dr. Daniels, and you are listening to the Sunday, December 20th, 2020 edition. I’d like to, of course, wish everyone happy holidays because the holidays are upon us. Today’s topic is Strategy is Everything. I’m going to do a case study of a strategy based on a question that was mailed in, correct the strategy, and show how it can lead to healing. Hopefully, this will be information you can use to look at your life strategy and how you can adjust it to achieve better health. Yay!
Update on Mom
(0:57) And that brings us to an update on mom. As we speak, mom is in a semi-comatose state in a hospital, and we are attempting to get her home. We have enlisted the help of numerous experts within the profession, and we hope to have mom home in the next day or two so she can have her wish of dying at home. That is our update on mom.
Vitality Capsules Update
(1:34) Next is Vitality Capsules. We are working furiously to get all the ingredients passed at different levels of testing. We have the laboratory level of testing, and we actually have human beings who are sniffing, touching, and tasting the herbs to make sure they are exactly what they ought to be and securing them in sufficient quantity to make another batch. So that is moving along, not as fast as we hope, but fingers crossed, hopefully, we will have enough left or make the batch soon enough so that they’ll be available before this present batch is sold out. You can get Vitality Capsules at vitalitycapsules.com, and it is the internal cleanser that is gentle enough for everyday use. The amazing thing about Vitality Capsules is not only do they help you achieve the "yay healing" three poops a day, but they also help with your circulation and with the cleansing of your bile ducts. This triple action makes Vitality Capsules so unique and amazing.
Taking Turpentine
(2:56) And that brings us, of course, to taking our turpentine. Yay! Alrighty, what do we have here? First, we have sugar. White granulated sugar is what I recommend. When I first started, I recommended sugar cubes because I had a very highly educated practice, and my patients wanted something very precise and very exact, so it would be sugar cubes. But now I have a general population, which is more flexible, thank goodness, and we can use granulated sugar. Also, some people forget to chew their sugar cubes, and that’s really bad—not good at all.
(3:39) So as I’ll say, I’ve switched to a teaspoon from a dessert spoon, and you want to fill it, leaving the back half of the spoon empty, no sugar. That makes it infinitely easier to swallow. And we have our trusty pipette. It’s called a pipette. These are plastic. You can buy them on Amazon—that’s where I got mine. Mine is a 3 cc capacity pipette, and right here at the neck is 2.5 cc. Why they call it 3 cc, I don’t know. We’re going to give it a good squeeze and fill this pipette.
(4:11) As you can see, a huge squeeze gets that water level right to the neck where I like it. We’re just going to squirt this on here. Squirt, squirt, squirt, squirt—every last drop. And the turpentine is, of course, in a bottle that is labeled with enough letters so people can tell it’s turpentine and not some other beverage. Alright, and we have water. Yay, down the hatch.
(5:03) Now, a lot of people say, "Can’t we use something else? Why white sugar?" It turns out that the sugar cubes, the turpentine sticks to them, and they act like a slow-release mechanism. So when you mix the turpentine with a liquid and use it as a vehicle, it’s not the same effect. So it does actually make a difference—and a positive difference—to use white granulated sugar.
Introducing Shilajit
(5:29) Which brings us to Shilajit. So this is Shilajit. As you can see, I am not a neat freak. I do make my bed, but keeping my Shilajit clean is not my strong point. Let’s take the top off here, and as you can see, it is black tar. Let’s take this—a little soft here. Take a little spoon here. We only want 200 milligrams, which is more or less a quarter of a quarter teaspoon. There you go, that’s about a quarter of a quarter teaspoon. We’re going to take that and put it in here.
(6:17) Now, I live in the tropics, so it’s a little bit softer. If you live in a northern climate where it’s cooler, it’s going to be like resin. I hate the flavor of Shilajit. I think it’s pretty icky. So I’m upgrading it with... what’s that? That’s tamarind paste. We’re going to cut this open. This is very sour. It is also a tropical thing. As you can see, it is also black—black goo. We have our spoon. It’ll do double duty. There you go, black goo, black-brown goo, and we’re going to put it in a jar with our Shilajit. Hopefully, by the time we’re done today, this will be dissolved, and I’ll drink it for you.
Today’s Topic: Strategy is Everything
(7:26) Alright, that is it. That brings us to today’s topic, which is strategy. Strategy is everything. Many times in life, whether you succeed or fail is often predicated on strategy. You have two people—it’s about the same goal, and one will make it, and the other one won’t. Why? Strategy.
(7:46) So I’ll give you a quick idea of a strategy I employed as a young person. Again, based on a question that was mailed to me, it really got me thinking. The wrong strategy will literally eat you alive and destroy you. It will not allow you to heal. In fact, it will make you sick. When I was a child, I thought reaching a goal was everything. That was it—reaching my goal was everything. I made it by golly, yeah. As I got a little older, as a woman, this goal is worth nothing if I can’t be alive when I reach it.
(8:22) So going to that goal involves destroying my health. I had to make adjustments. If anything along my chosen path would cause my death, then I had to find another way. I would envision how I wanted to feel when I arrived at my goal and be sure not to lose that feeling along the way. So whenever you want something in life, a lot of times you have to modify your strategy to make sure you arrive at your goal with your life, with your health, and with a positive attitude or whatever quality of life or emotional feeling you want to have.
(8:59) For example, I didn’t want to ever be bitter—no bitterness. I wanted to be alive. I wanted to be healthy at the point when I became, for example, a doctor. I wanted to always view the patient as my friend. I wanted me and the patient to be on the same side. By golly, I could just focus on helping the patient because we’re both on the same side.
(9:23) So this meant that anything that would cause me to harm my health or be bitter towards anyone or anything that led me to be hateful towards my patient was not acceptable. I had to question it, reject it, create a path of understanding that would allow me to be a healer and greet my patients and the world with happiness, love, compassion, good health, and cheerfulness. So that was it.
(9:48) There were a lot of adjustments along the way to becoming a doctor. Many times I said, "Well, you know what? If this is what it takes, I’m not going to be a doctor. That’s it. I’m done. Over." I even handed in my resignation because I said, "Hey, I am not going to harm or kill patients, even if that’s what I have to do to be a doctor, then I’m not going to do it." So I handed in my resignation. At that point, the department head of medicine—I handed in my resignation and said, "Well, we can renegotiate this so that you don’t have to harm anybody." I said, "Okay, fine, great," and I continued on to be a doctor. But if you don’t pay attention—if I hadn’t paid attention to that, then I would have violated one of my requirements, which was that me and the patient are on the same side.
(10:41) So this question was written by a grandmother. The person writing the question is a grandmother. We have a daughter, and then we have a grandchild. We’re going to look at the situation and try to help whoever we can help in this scenario. I just want to say upfront that the grandchild in this scenario is in grave danger. So we’re going to take a look and see what we can do to be of help here.
A Grandmother’s Concern
(11:04) The person says, "My daughter..." The person writing is the grandmother. The daughter is a nursing student working tirelessly as a single mom with a two-year-old to finish this course in 89 days before graduation. Okay, so we have a nursing student. She’s working tirelessly. She is a single mother, and we have a grandmother writing this thing. Notice the daughter is not writing this—the grandmother is writing this.
(11:47) The daughter got COVID in October, we believe from school. This is an individual entering nursing school, and as a result of being in nursing school, she became—or she got—COVID. This happened while attending clinicals that she could not opt out of. So now we have a sickness and a loss of choice. The grandmother says, "We were fine before then." Now, the daughter has dizziness, fainting spells, blurred vision, increased panic attacks, shallow breathing, hard to breathe at times, an increase in her gastroesophageal reflux, a tremendous increase, and migraine headaches. Parenthesis: she never had these before. Also, she has a very fast heartbeat, feeling weak, and iron levels of 10.6, and she’s having heavy periods.
(12:46) Now we have another emphasis here: she had a gastroesophageal reflux problem before when she was a little girl, but it was completely under control. So this person is embarking upon a course—nursing school—to become a healer. She was fine before the course, and now she has dizziness, fainting spells, blurred vision, increased panic attacks, and the list I read before.
(13:19) "I am scared as her mother and grandmother. During that time, I took off from work to nurture and care for her and her two-year-old son. He got a runny nose, and we think pneumonia. The baby is rarely sick, and if he gets cold, he heals in days." Okay, so the baby rarely gets sick because he’s a healthy person. As the mother decides to study how to heal better, she gets dramatically ill, and all of a sudden, he gets a runny nose. Luckily, the baby did not get COVID. This highly contagious disease affected the mother, not the son. Luckily, the baby did not get COVID.
(14:01) After 14 days, the nursing student, or daughter, tested negative for COVID four times. Four times she tested negative. Good. Her school tests her often. So just last week, we took the baby to the doctor, and he and my daughter both tested positive via the rapid test first, then the PCR test. So both tests agreed COVID is present. The doctors are baffled.
Analyzing the Situation
(14:24) Okay, so let’s review this. We have someone on a healing program who’s getting progressively sicker and sicker, and the people who are already certified are baffled. The healing program is allowing, permitting—not relieving—an incredible amount of disease here, and the experts who are already where she wants to be in the healing program (the doctor) are baffled. So they’re totally confused. They don’t know how she could test negative so soon and have it again. Well, we immediately took the baby home. He seems to be playing fine, but he doesn’t have an appetite.
(15:02) The nursing student is scheduled for an endoscopy next week to see what’s going on with the GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease), which, by the way, she had cured herself of as a child, and now came back since she’s in an approved healing program. We are waiting for approval for iron infusions. We’re going to a specialist every day as I (the grandmother writing this) am diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. It affects my vision in my right eye, and now my knees are dislocating. I have leg spasms, and my hip is aching and hurting when I walk. I’m doing my best to care for my little girl and grandbaby. This is not easy, but I love them both.
(15:58) My daughter and I ordered Vitality Capsules months prior to COVID. We think they are great. So they’re using Vitality Capsules, and it’s helping them feel better. However, unfortunately, my husband and I are struggling to keep a roof over our heads, and we are taking care of my daughter and grandbaby to help her get through school and succeed. She is very smart.
A Failing Strategy
(16:31) Now, I’m a parent. I have three kids. I would like to think all three of my kids are smart, but every now and then, they do something that just is not very bright. Embarking on a healing program that’s making you sicker and sicker by the day, and even making your child sick, and continuing with it—we have here a strategy that is clearly devastating, clearly failing. We have a grandmother watching this who is afraid for the health of her daughter and her grandson, and she’s wondering, "Is my daughter going to make it? She could die before the 89 days are up."
(17:10) So is this very intelligent or smart on her daughter’s part? I leave that to you to sort out. This daughter has a heart of gold. A heart of gold means, I’m going to tell you what I think—she’s filled with love and kindness and affection. She cares for people. Okay. So she’s planning to continue into being a nurse practitioner. So now she’s at the nursing education phase, and she is getting dreadfully sicker and sicker every day. Once she gets this goal, she wants to go to the next level and become a nurse practitioner, where she’ll now be on par with the doctor who is baffled and confused and providing all this care for her that is allowing her to get sicker and sicker by the day.
(18:02) So we can certainly question her intelligence. Let’s see how the heart of gold is turning out here. Although we take our temperatures every day and check our oxygen levels, it may have not fallen below 95. She still feels horrible every day. Grandma says, "If we can just heal the reflux disease, her weakness, and low iron issues, we’d be okay." She’s been taking liquid Floradix over the counter at Walgreens Pharmacy and knows that this is helping a bit, but not as much as we’d hoped.
(18:35) Now I have to ask you, did her doctor recommend this over-the-counter Floradix? Apparently not. He wants to do IV iron infusions, and they’re waiting for approval from where? I don’t know—maybe the insurance company or God, I’m not sure. We’re doing our best, but this doesn’t seem to be good enough.
Recognizing a Failed Strategy
(18:56) When you have a failed strategy, no amount of effort is going to improve things. With a failed strategy, the harder you try, the worse things get. So y’all listen out there: If you are trying something, and the more you try, the worse you get, you’ve got a failed strategy. You need to back off. We decided that when the baby is COVID-free, we are going to keep him home. And here’s where the heart of gold turns dark. My daughter thinks that children are asymptomatic carriers that infect whole families.
(19:32) Now, she’s turned a dark heart towards her child. He is no longer the love of her life—he is a biohazard. When I was going to medical school, I made up my mind that me and the patient were on the same side. So if I was asked to do something harmful to patients or to regard patients as anything other than my best friend, I was not okay with that. Similarly, this individual, who has a heart of gold, is embarking on this program as a struggling single mother, obviously, clearly to feed her child. Her child, who she’s now basically thrown overboard because now he’s become a biohazard. He’s not no longer the love of her life—he’s become a biohazard.
(20:28) Can you please help us? We are desperate at this point for healing and restoring health. Thank you. Now, she wants to become a nurse practitioner to help people who suffer with what she has one day. Meanwhile, she’s on a program that’s not even teaching her how to heal what she has. This is leading her to hate her child and causing her health to deteriorate literally by the day. This mother is desperate. This mother is not even sure her daughter can remain alive 86 days to get her nursing license, let alone long enough to become a nurse practitioner, which is another 6 to 18 months, depending on what part of the country you’re in.
(21:08) So what’s the answer here? First, let’s take a look at the big picture here. We’ve got a grandmother who’s totally supportive of her daughter. The daughter has picked a strategy that is clearly not working. The mother says, "Okay, you’re pretty bright. I’m just going to follow you. Any strategy you pick, I’m going to help you do it better." Now the mother is having second thoughts. She’s like, "Wait a minute, this is not going well." The daughter is not paying attention. She’s not measuring her strategy according to its outcome in terms of her initial goal—to support her son and to heal the world. Clearly, who wants to support a biohazard, right? So if you’re really about healing or taking care of your only child, your dedicated love of your life, it doesn’t make sense to declare that individual a biohazard.
(22:02) She’s already abandoned her goal of caring for this life she brought into the world because he’s a biohazard. I’m sure he has to be treated as such. I shudder to think what that might involve. But her goal to heal the world—clearly, if that was her priority, she’s on the wrong track because she’s on a track learning information. The more she learns, the sicker she gets. So if she maintained her focus on wanting to heal the world, then she would realize she’s on the wrong track because it’s even making her sick.
Recommended Actions
(22:43) So this person is a Vitality Capsules customer. Great, thank you. But the grandmother says, "We’re not sure we can afford a consultation." It probably would not be money well spent if we’re talking about your daughter because your daughter’s problem—her answer—is very simple: Drop out of her program right now. Right now. Stop it. Stop it. Because she had already cured her GERD and was feeling just fine before she got into the program. If she drops out right now, chances are all of these symptoms will go away. Yes. So that is her cure—simple, super simple.
(23:24) But there’s a bigger problem here—the son. He’s in grave danger because mom has declared him and believes him to be a biohazard. So, Grandma, the best thing you can do for this kid is let your daughter know that you’ll take care of him. Don’t worry about it. Let your daughter go on her path, whatever she’s doing, wish her luck—that’s what you do for that. And for the son or the grandson, you take care of him. I would not send him back to daycare.
(23:55) But now we’ve got the problem with your multiple sclerosis. We really don’t have a problem with multiple sclerosis. The real problem is your knees are falling apart, and you can’t keep up with this kid to take care of him the way you want to. I suggest—I'm not sure where you live, I’m guessing it’s the United States somewhere—let me recommend some cow leg, C-O-W leg, cow leg or cow foot. You can buy it. It’s a piece of meat that’s 17 inches long. Usually, the butcher will chop it every two inches so then you can bend it and fit it in your pot to boil it. That’s what you need to do. Eat that, and that will fix your knee, and then you’ll be able to take care of your grandchild.
Reassess the Strategy
(24:43) But I think what you need to do is realistically understand that your daughter has adopted a failed strategy, which is destroying her health, destroying her son’s health, and financially devastating the family. She may be intelligent. That’s okay. We don’t need to make an assessment about that—no name-calling, no judgment—but you’ve got to jump off this sinking ship here, and maybe take your grandson with you. That would be the answer.
(25:17) And of course, if you do manage to scrape together enough funds, appointments are always available at Vitality Capsules.com, and we can go into more detailed things to do. But right now, that’s what you need to do. You need to re-examine your strategy. This is a failed strategy—you’ve got to reassess it. At least you have to reassess it. Now, she may or may not want to reassess her strategy, but what’s happened is she’s allowed herself to be turned around by the medical complex into a hating mother. She’s allowed them to steal her heart of gold. She’s allowed them to cause her to suspend her superior reasoning faculties and blindly follow.
(26:08) She’s going to have to reach her own bottom, or maybe if you talk to her and say, "I think Dr. Daniels was talking about us on that radio show. How about you just drop out?" Maybe she’ll go for it. But I can sit here and talk to you about, "Oh, have her drink this, eat that." No, no, no, no. She was in perfect health before she started this nursing program. Super simple—drop out, quit it right now. Her perfect health will come right back, right back. Then she can find another strategy for economic freedom and independence. There’s a lot out there as far as nursing goes, even nurse practitioner. Let her know by the time she gets to be a nurse practitioner, there won’t be a job because artificial intelligence, aka AI, will replace all of those. People will simply be able to go online, talk to a computer, and get whatever script they need.
Conclusion and Final Thoughts
(27:20) So when you’re on the wrong track, when you have a failed strategy, there are just so many signs along the way. You should not ignore them. It’s critical to pay attention. All right.
(27:27) That brings us to questions, but wait, let’s see how our Shilajit did. All right. We have our little chopstick here. As you can see, it is totally clean. Let’s see how our tamarind is doing. It looks pretty good. Now, tamarind, even though they tell you it’s tamarind paste, there are always lumps in it. I think it’s a seed. Oh, it’s a seed. Alright, down the hatch. Another seed. Seed’s gone. Shilajit—done. Couple more. I don’t know if you can see it—yeah, that’s the tamarind seed residue. Yay!
(29:02) A lot of people ask, "Can I take Shilajit with something, like fruit juice?" I’m not a fan of fruit juice because of the sugar and stuff, but it turns out that the Shilajit works pretty well. Now, as you notice, Shilajit was like really dark in here, but if you mix juice with the Shilajit and the color does not change, you’re good. This tamarind paste—this stuff is so tasty—does not have any sugar in it, but it has a strong kind of sour fruity flavor, so it works very nicely. Trying to think what this tastes like... it tastes like some kind of sauce my mother used to make in desserts.
(30:10) Okay, so this person says, "My question is, two years ago, I was diagnosed with an enlarged heart and liver. After about two weeks of taking diuretics and beta-blockers, I lost nearly 20 pounds. That’s nice. Became skinny, flabby, wrinkled with bulging veins, but all four quadrants of my abdomen became extremely distended. Hence, I stopped the medication." So what happened was this person was filled with fluid. They took the medications. The fluid seemed to leave, but their belly remained large. "Okay, so I stopped the medication also because I ran out of money and no insurance. So now at 68 years old, I look as if I’m nine months pregnant, and this is not fat. Would turpentine help with this condition? I also should add I have no health insurance. Turpentine would be a cheap and blessed alternative. I do take your Vitality Capsules."
(31:03) Okay, fine. So if you take Vitality Capsules, check your dose. Sounds like you could use a few more. Make sure you really are pooping three times a day. If that stuff in your belly—you’ve pressed on it—is not air because it’s a little firm, then it’s poop. So increase your Vitality Capsules, and that will leave. Now, turpentine, it won’t hurt, but the real answer here is the Vitality Capsules. Since we know you have a heart problem, your extra strength Vitality Capsules are going to be your better bet. What I would do is get the Candida Cleaner Report. Go to vitalitycapsules.com, get the Candida Cleaner Report, and follow the diet in the Candida Cleaner Report. The diet in the Candida Cleaner Report plus the Vitality Capsules will solve your problem. That would be the better way for you to go.
(32:04) That is it for our questions today. I hope that was informative and helps people kind of take a look at their life and their strategies. Remember, if your outcome is not fitting your goals, check your strategy. As always, think happens, and we’ll see you next week.