Inequality; The Key To Health And Happiness

Inequality; The Key To Health And Happiness

Introduction and Mom Update
(0:00 - 1:02)
Hi, this is Dr. Daniels, and you are listening to Jammin' with Jen. This is the Sunday, March 13th, 2022 edition. Yay! Today's title is Inequality: The Key to Health and Happiness.
As always, think happens. But first, an update on mom. Mom is doing great. She is settling into her new role in life, which is the person everyone cares for. Everyone's stepping up and giving mom lots of positive feedback, and she is gracefully accepting this feedback and working on improving herself and walking better with her walker. We hope pretty soon that she won't even need that. So, mom is just doing great.
Sponsor: Vitality Capsules
(1:03 - 1:21)
Next, our sponsor—yay! Vitality Capsules, regular and extra strength. Check out vitalitycycles.com to find out more about the internal cleanser that is gentle enough for everyday use. Yay!
Home Healers Course
(1:23 - 2:45)
Next, the Home Healers Course—oh my goodness, yay! The Home Healers Course is also available at vitalitycycles.com. This course was created to help people handle their health concerns in the privacy of their homes and manage emergency conditions in less time than it takes for an ambulance to arrive, without ever having to worry about a hospital, ambulance, doctor, clinic, or pharmacy.
The information in the first 10 units alone has saved me personally hundreds of thousands of dollars in health insurance premiums, co-pays, and deductibles. So, that is a major gift from me to you. Yes, it does cost money, but the profit margin for you is pretty steep.
We also have a live Q&A session in April, and everyone who has purchased a Home Healers Course between January 2021 and March 30th will be invited at no additional cost to the live Q&A, where, as always, I will answer every last question.
Personal Progress and Setbacks
(2:46 - 3:22)
My progress—that’s the topic of next week’s show. It’ll be about setbacks: how to know when you've had one and what to do. I’m still working on my center splits and my Taekwondo, but progress has had a little bit of a setback due to me overdoing it. So, I am fine, but I’ve had to take a break for a bit.
Turpentine Routine
(3:22 - 7:15)
Next is turpentine. I tell you, I cannot say enough good about turpentine. For that, go to vitalitycycles.com and download the free—no charge—Candida Cleaner report. Turpentine is the distilled oil from the sap of the pine tree, and once you experience the benefits of turpentine, you can understand why people a long time ago worshiped trees. It is just that amazing.
I had stopped taking turpentine for a while because I started taking ivermectin. I thought, "Okay, ivermectin will probably just do the job." Although ivermectin has its benefits—for example, no more chin hairs, and I have no idea where they went, but they're gone. I don’t have even one, not a one—smooth, smooth skin. Moles are shrinking and going away. It's amazing, but it did not help my joints. So, I had to go back to turpentine to have my easy, free-moving joints—no noise, no stiffness, nothing.
I now take turpentine about three times a week and ivermectin once a month. So, how do you take turpentine? Well, first of all, use a bottle that's labeled. So, label your bottle. Then, I use a pipette—know your dose. My dose is half a teaspoon, so I only go up to here, the neck of the pipette. We’ll do that right now. Just squeeze out and suck it up. See, there you go.
Then you need a spoonful of sugar. As they say in Mary Poppins, it helps the medicine go down in, well, we hope, a most delightful way. All right, so that’s about as much sugar as I use, which is a heaping teaspoon. You can see it can get a little bit sloppy. We squirt that turpentine right on it, and as you can see, the sugar changes color. You want to soak a fair amount of sugar, but you don’t want to soak all of it. Some of the sugar has to remain free of turpentine. As you can see, that is the case here.
I like to put some water in my mouth. You want to wash it down all the way down, at least to the bottom of your breastbone. After that, you’re good. You’re good to go. Now, I even go so far as to label it "sugar" because there are a lot of things in the kitchen that are white and powdery. So, you don’t want to get that mixed up.
Then, I always take shilajit. Well, I say always, but the truth of the matter is about five times a week. I’m going to use a different chopstick today because, well, I have a different chopstick. If it doesn’t work, I’ll use my old one. You want 200 milligrams, which is about a quarter of a quarter teaspoon. Otherwise, it’s not a lot. This is clearly too much. This amount right here is clearly too much. This chopstick is way too robust. So, I’m going to hit some of that off.
And that is about 200 milligrams. I put that in the water. As you can see, it does not readily dissolve, so we’re going to put it aside. We’re not going to stress ourselves.
Inequality: The Key to Health and Happiness
(7:15 - 19:02)
Now, onto today’s topic—Inequality: The Key to Health and Happiness. Yes, that's why you tune in—to get the shocking truth. We’ve heard a lot about equality, and every time I read anything and talk about equality, equality, equality, I’m like, "Are they crazy? Are they crazy?" The last thing anybody needs is equality. Inequality is necessary to life.
Let’s just talk about how inequality is necessary for you even being able to watch this show—even to breathe, for your eyeballs to move. In your body, you have serious inequality. Let’s talk about body pH. In your body, your pH varies from 7.4 to 5. If every place in your body had the same pH, you would die. That’s it. Done. Game over.
Why is this? The pH of 7.4 in your blood with a pH of 5 in your muscles and tissues allows nutrients to go one way and waste to go in the other direction. Without this gradient or difference in pH, there would not be the movement of waste in one direction and the movement of nutrition in the other direction. Your blood circulating throughout your body couldn’t do its job—it would be useless. So, this is why you need inequality in pH.
The pH varies throughout your body by location. For example, the normal pH of your tears is 5. The normal pH of your saliva is 5. The normal pH of your stomach is 1.7. So, each part of your body has a different pH that allows it to function and interact properly with the blood circulating to it and with the other organs adjacent to it that it has to coordinate with. Yay, pH inequality!
What other inequalities do you have in your body? You have sodium inequality. This is huge. The sodium outside your cells in your blood is 142 millimoles per liter (the unit’s not important), but inside the cells, the salt concentration is 10 millimoles per liter. What’s important is inequality—outside, sodium 142; inside, 10. There is a greater than tenfold difference. This difference in sodium creates the electrical charge in your cell membrane and allows messages to be sent from your brain to your finger, allowing your finger to move. If we had equality, the message would never get to your finger. And if it did, your finger would not move.
Potassium is another big inequality. Potassium inside the cell is 140, and outside, it’s 4.6. Again, a more than tenfold difference—in fact, twentyfold. This is really important to understand—you do not want equality. Once you have equality, that’s it. Done. Over. You’re dead.
So, equality is not something we strive for in health. Just keep it healthy—we want to maintain these inequalities. The way to maintain these inequalities is super simple—make sure you drink enough water and breathe deeply and frequently. Super, super simple. Also, salt your food to taste. It’s about that simple. But the point is, if you strive for equality, then you are actually destroying your health, destroying your energy, and destroying your quality of life. So, don’t do it.
What about diet? Well, we have eating, which is a good thing—we all enjoy that. But then there’s fasting. How does that work? Well, everyone fasts. I’ll call it an obligatory fast—at night when you’re sleeping. So, when you’re sleeping, you’re fasting. You’re not eating anything. That’s not equality. So, you’re not supposed to eat every day, all day long, throughout the day and night. No. You do not eat at night.
But also, there is something called fasting, where you simply stop eating solids for a day. Or for a day, maybe you’ll stop eating meats. Or maybe you’ll stop eating vegetables. Maybe you’ll stop eating anything but water. But what this fasting does is create an inequality and allow your body to cycle back and forth between doing and repairing. Doing and repairing.
So, no matter what you do in your life, you’re spending your time exerting energy, getting things done, and that’s fine. But you need a repair period. Sometimes, the eight hours at night or ten hours might not be enough. That’s when you take a day a week, two days a week, two days a month, whatever seems to work for you, and do a fast.
Lately, it’s become fashionable to do what’s called intermittent fasting, which basically comes down to eating once a day or eating within a narrow time spectrum of the day. You can read all over the internet where people have tried this. I’ll just summarize it for you—"Oh my god, major miracle. I felt so great." Oops. Until, sometimes it’s a month, sometimes it’s a year, sometimes it’s two years—"I said, I couldn’t do it. I wasted away. I was losing too much weight." Again, equality is a bad thing. So, even equality, although we worship it a lot of times as a habit, is not good.
So, this intermittent fasting might be good for a period of time, and then you have to take a break from that and do something that’s not intermittent fasting. That’s inequality.
To be even more clear about this, let’s talk about being vegan. For the sake of discussion, that would mean eating a diet of no dairy, no meat, and just eating vegetables. Nowadays, we’ll eat vegetable-derived foods, which is a whole other matter, but let’s not get into that. Let’s just call it vegetables. Most people, when they switch to a vegetable-only diet, feel awesome for a period of time and then start feeling worse. Why? Equality is not what’s needed—inequality. So, you’d be vegan for a while, then do carnivore for a while, then do some vegan for a while, or carnivore for a while.
What some people do is they’ll do omnivore five days a week, and then just take a break for one or two days and do vegetables only or water only, whatever works. The point is, inequality is where it’s at—inequality is where the health lies. You can pick any diet you want and follow that diet every single day, all day long. You will reach a point where the equality has created too much equality in your body, and your health will suffer. You’ll have to back it up and could do, a lot of times, the complement or the exact opposite of what you were doing.
So, what I tell people to do in order to prevent this situation is to do whatever diet you like best for five to six days a week. If you like being vegan, great. Be vegan six days a week, and then have a meat day. What if you’re carnivore? Great. Be carnivore for six days a week, then have a vegetable day. That way, you can have the greatest amount of what you want, but you can use inequality to your benefit and have excellent health and a wonderful life. Inequality is the key.
Oh, wait, we’ve got to talk about happiness. I’ve decided to use inequality in my life rather aggressively, so I’m going to tell you the story of my dogs. I’ll tell you what people—you might think, well, I’m a little insensitive. It’s not fun with dogs.
I have four dogs. They’re not my dogs—they’re just vicious dogs in the neighborhood who are mean, run around, and bite people. That’s the truth. But now they have decided that they’re going to be my friend and try to please me, keep me happy, and guard my house. How did this happen? I started giving them treats.
There are four dogs. One dog—never give treats to. None. The other dog—very small treats. I get a hot dog, and I cut this hot dog into ten unequal pieces. Six of the pieces are small, and four of the pieces are big. That’s it. Initially, I gave big pieces only to one dog. One dog got big pieces, two dogs got small pieces, and one dog got no pieces.
What happened? Well, the dog that got big pieces was very happy, and I even scratched him behind his ears as well. The other dogs went over to check him out and said, "Hey, you getting big pieces?" They chatted and sorted it out, and everyone realized this dog was getting big pieces. Then they decided, "Hmm, what do they have to do to get big pieces?" They are working very, very hard to please me—whether it’s walking with me on my walks, wagging their tails, being nice, not barking at me.
What has happened is a whole dynamic here. Even the big dog—I even give him ivermectin once a month to make sure he stays in tip-top condition. The other ones? Nope, nothing for them. What has happened then is the dogs who get the smaller treats are working very hard to see what they have to do to get those big treats. The ones that get no treats—they just decide, "Okay, we’re just going to guard our house, hang out with the other dogs, the in-crowd."
I even have four other dogs who are trying to join the in-crowd, but I’ve told them, "No, not for you." By having the difference in the size of treats, the dogs who are getting the smaller treats are basically thinking, "Hmm, how can I get the better treats?" Everyone is behaving well. Why? The big dog who’s getting the big treats doesn’t want to fall out of favor and not get treats.
Even the dogs getting the small treats—one dog gets treats more frequently, and the other dog less frequently. What this has done—the inequality—has created some very well-behaved dogs.
Another example of inequality—this is a human example. I go to Taekwondo. In Taekwondo, there are two instructors, and there’s a bunch of other students, all of whom are much younger than me. I’m 65, and the other students are generally 20 years old or less. That’s just the way it is.
At the end of class, I gave the mother of one of the kids a candy, thanking her for helping me with some information I needed. She says, "Oh, thank you very much." Then I gave one candy to another girl in class who had helped me during class. Then there was a 13-year-old boy who was really helpful, and I called him over at the end of class and gave him two chocolates.
Now, everyone saw that he got two chocolates and they only got one, those two, and everyone else got no chocolates. He says, "Oh, thank you for the chocolates." These are not just any old chocolates—these are cookies and cream Hershey’s Kisses. When he got these chocolates, his mother looked at him and said, "You got two chocolates?" He said, "Oh, really? I got two chocolates?" I said, "Yes. He is special."
The whole class, even the instructor, they just fell out laughing. Had I given everyone two chocolates or given everyone one chocolate, it would not have been nearly as much fun. We all had a lot of fun and a very good laugh.
So, try that. Try some inequality in your life. Let people know, "Hey, you, two for you. You, one. You, none." It’ll work out great. People will like it.
Now, you’ll say, "Well, Jennifer, that’s really cold, and we have to be equal." Okay, so, you have a lady. There are two guys—one is her husband, one’s not. Should she treat them equally? No. Otherwise, what would it mean to be a husband?
So, what we have to do is extend this inequality to more areas of our life and clearly give people positive feedback when they do something that adds to your happiness or increases your quality of life. Inequality is very important.
Q&A
(24:36 - 27:23)
And that brings us to questions. Yay, questions!
Question 1: I’m getting ready to do the turpentine with sugar for parasites. If I get Vitality Capsules, is it safe to take after I do the turpentine, or should I be taking it before the turpentine?
Answer: You should take it before, in terms of taking it to get three poops in order to get ready for the turpentine, and continue taking it while you’re doing the turpentine, or whatever you need in order to maintain bowel movements.
Question 2: I absolutely love your program every week. Thank you for your show. My question is, my son has a calcium deposit in his saliva gland under his tongue. The doctor wants to put him under anesthesia and remove it. Can we have your advice?
Answer: If the deposit is small and not painful, ignore it—that’s number one. If it is painful or you somehow don’t want to ignore it because maybe it’s too big, then what causes this calcium deposit is equality of pH. The pH in the mouth should be 5. You can buy a pH strip, put it in his mouth, and you’ll see that his mouth pH is either much lower than 5, like say 2 or 3, or it’s much higher than 5, like say 6 or 7. Whatever direction it is, you need to correct his diet by going in the opposite direction.
If his pH is too low, like acid, he needs to eat more alkaline foods or less acidic foods. If his pH is too high, he needs to eat more acidic foods. You can solve this very easily by just changing all of his liquids to water because water is very balancing for pH. So, it’ll balance his pH out to what he really needs. Give him water—I recommend distilled water. Distilled water has a pH of 5, which just so happens to be the optimal pH for the mouth. Put him on water as his only beverage, and then you can give him regular food.
Once you check the pH strip, you will see what the problem is. You can look at the food that he’s eating and see which food is too acidic. Maybe he has a high sugar or a high candy diet—there you go.
Closing:
Okay, I believe that’s it for today. So, today’s topic—inequality—definitely can save your life. And as always, think happens!