Podcast 483: Feral Cells

Life Enthusiast

Podcast 483: Feral Cells

In this episode, we examine the concept of feral tissue, exploring its fundamental triggers—Short Chain Fatty Acids, Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptors, and pH imbalance. We discuss Spencer Feldman’s innovative, research-oriented protocol aimed at addressing feral tissue growth through a comprehensive 6-step program. This protocol includes products designed to repair the microbiome with short chain fatty acids and lactic acid. As well as products to shift pH balance. It also employs a trophoblast program using pancreatic enzymes and electrons. While promising, these methods are currently unproven and intended solely for research purposes. They are not medical advice, nor have they been proven safe or effective.

Download our FREE Chronic Pain Manifesto.
Subscribe to our newsletter, so you are always up to date with new health information, product tips, podcasts, webinars, and much more.

Follow Life Enthusiast Podcast on Amazon Music and get new episodes when they become available!

Find us on Telegram and catch our live show every Sunday @ 9:00 am PST

MARTIN: Well, hello, it’s Martin Pytela. Life Enthusiast podcast. And with me Spencer Feldman Remedy Link Chief Formulator. Today we have a topic that is big. In the sense that a lot of people end up with very tragic health outcomes when they mismanage what we’re going to talk about today. Anyway, Spencer, let’s see how we can frame it without getting into trouble and stepping on toes of the people who are censoring us.

SPENCER: Right. Okay, so let’s start by saying that neither Martin nor I are physicians, and nothing we’re saying in this video should be construed as medical advice or for the treatment or diagnosis or therapy for any disease. Right. Now, having said that, we can also have intelligent conversations as free and sovereign human beings who are responsible for our own health.

MARTIN: Yeah, we can talk about physiology. We can educate about nutrition. We can educate about how things work in the body. We’re not promising that we are going to cure or remove or mitigate or whatever, any health condition. But we can talk to you about how health is built.

SPENCER: Having said that, as of pre-COVID days, one out of three people died of growths in their body.

MARTIN: Runaway cells.

SPENCER: Runaway cells. Tissue growing in ways we don’t want. Since vaccination, those numbers have increased. Some of them have. Sometimes people will go from diagnosis to death within one month. I suspect that in the decades to follow, it’ll be closer to 50, 60 or 70% of people will find that the end of their life is a result of growths in their body they don’t want. 

MARTIN: And post mRNA technology people now have this turbo version of this stuff going.

SPENCER: The term I’m going to use for this video is called Feral tissue. F-e-r -a-l. Now I’m using that word very specifically. And let me give you a way of, the reason is because the word that’s typically used has a lot of baggage associated with it. A lot of fear, a lot of scientific baggage. That word when someone hears it, they could feel that their body has betrayed them, is fighting them, is hurting them. It’s out to get them, that it’s an evil and malignant entity. And I think that’s the wrong way to think about our bodies. 

MARTIN: Yeah, let me just put it in my thoughts. The feral or feral or feral has to do with something that previously was civilized has gone wild. Think of it in that way.

SPENCER: So let’s say you have a family dog, a German shepherd, for instance. Ri

若要收聽兒少不宜的單集,請登入帳號。

隨時掌握此節目最新消息

登入或註冊後,即可追蹤節目、儲存單集和掌握最新資訊。

選取國家或地區

非洲、中東和印度

亞太地區

歐洲

拉丁美洲與加勒比海地區

美國與加拿大