[00:01:06] And what you found out through your journey has enabled people to really open their eyes and find that that route. Cos, I mean, we we gave the one tip in a short interview and I would suggest that we want to go and listen to that. We just spoke about the one thing. So if you're interested in hearing that, go go to our previous interview talk. Tell me, I mean, you're I know we introduced you a little bit in the short interview, but you've been doing hair extensions. You've been helping people, people dealing with cancer for a long time, making sure that they look as good as possible because obviously your your mental health is crucial and your hair is such a huge part of that. 

 

[00:05:09] And part of the statistics of kidney cancer is drinking. Smoking. That's kind of the thing. So when that diagnosis was I didn't for about six months, I didn't even I just couldn't even focus on anything. I did nothing because I was devastated. And I even told my spouse at the time, I said, there's no way I have cancer. Like everything that I do, the way I eat, the way I live, the way I think, the way I was raised. And I'm not saying that cancer is just goes to certain people. But now here we are seven years later. It kind of is to certain people, depending on what they're doing. That's what we're going to talk about in the next couple of minutes. 

[00:06:32] And the really important thing about when you talk about that, I was I was raised in Amish country. So if you take Phenix, Arizona, where you live and you go to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and you have kombucha. Right. Because I talk a lot about this, which is not the same in Phenix as it is in Pennsylvania. Right. So where I live completely organic, I'm talking Amish country parents didn't use sugar red dye for the hummingbirds. I mean, we grew everything. So there was no way of knowing that. I know growing up from my parents that that could have happened to me unless there was something else that I was missing. That makes sense. 

[00:09:55] So I go, I can't do any of that. Right. So at that time, I went out of the country. I did. And I. Found this guy online on this cancer group and I decided to I.B. therapy, so I took it upon myself and I went out of the country to Costa Rica. I did I.B. therapy for three weeks. I came back to see the nephrologist. He said, this is interesting. Your tumor is shrinking. I said, well, imagine that I've been doing glutathione, zinc, vitamin D, vitamin C, right. 

[00:13:44] Yes. And I have these to show because I want to show everybody and I keep these for a long campaign, all this around. But if you guys see I say these since two thousand and sixteen in that time, everything's kind of evaporated. This should still be intact because we store these in a like a cooler. Right. So the stuff should be intact to still be fully intact with fluid. And there's nothing in here. And I save this for people because that is exactly why I have cancer. 

[00:15:27] No, it has to come out. And that's when I started a group myself. So I have a support group myself because I was kind of blocked from a bunch of other groups and I was trying to ask questions. Right. So when we talk about this, the first thing I even ask a cancer person and I don't try and assume anything, but if it's a female age 20 to say thirty six, they say they had cancer. I'm like, get implants, whether it's breast implants, hearing a knee replacement mesh lining because I spoke about this before I was in a clip on the bleeding edge. I also had a mesh. I had mesh inside that they removed. So it's any type of medical implant, a device that's causing all this inflammation. So if that implant, which is we talk about this, this isn't remote, there's no way they're going to heal because the cancer is living and thriving off of those. And then you add in the co infections, which we talk about biofilm. 

[00:23:12] And I was like, OK, she goes, we're going to do the X plan. I'm going to scrape everything out. She goes, I see some issues with your chest. I got to get everything out of there. And I said, OK, do whatever you need to do. And she says, we'll need to die in the operating room. And I'm like, OK. She goes, What if I don't get all of that stuff off your ribcage because you're never going to heal? And this was somebody that didn't even know what breast implant illness was. No, at my surgery. Twenty sixteen. I had my my excellent December twenty third, January 1st. I was already out hiking and riding my bike. I felt incredible, like literally four days later. I mean, granted I'm different brain than a lot of people and I'm very tenacious and I don't complain. I felt fantastic. I go, oh my God, it was the breast implants this whole time. Yeah, I literally fantastic. 

[00:28:04] I mean, for a lot of our listeners, they've just been diagnosed. Any other advice that you've you feel that they should that they need? I mean, because you've had such a long journey and have done so much research. And what is something that you wish you would have known when you were diagnosed?