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CTP (20260205 S3EFebSpecial2) Stan Kurtz Achieving Proper Brain Function BTS/SP Video
CTP (S3EFebSpecial2) From Trauma To Clarity: Natural Ways To Regulate The Mind And Body
Exploring more of the fascinating intersection of Activism, Community Engagement, Faith / Religion, Human Nature, Politics, Social Issues, and beyond
We trace how trauma, faith, and intuition shaped a search for root causes behind brain fog, anxiety, and attention issues, then show how blood health and missing metabolites can reset the frontal lobe to calm and clarity. Practical steps for discernment replace blind skepticism as we test natural tools and legacy tech that support better thinking and resilience.
• season update and February release plan
• Stan’s upbringing, early intuition, and loss
• heart-led insight versus a dysregulated mind
• autism framed as biology with root causes
• brain scans showing frontal slow-wave overload
• metabolites, nasal delivery, and rapid regulation
• gut dysbiosis blocking brain nutrients
• live de-stress example from a fire survivor
• blood charge, aggregation, and oxygen delivery
• reframing dementia and anxiety via cell function
• discernment over blanket skepticism with questions
• non-drug tools, Amazon-sourced solutions, older tech
• where to watch testimonies and learn more StansLinks.com
CTP (S3EFebSpecial2) From Trauma To Clarity: Natural Ways To Regulate The Mind And Body

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Transcript
00:00Hello, welcome to another episode of Perstitutionalist Podcast.
00:06I am your host, Joseph M. Leonard.
00:10That's L-E-N-A-R-D at the French.
00:13It's not, it's Leonard without an O.
00:17Thank you for tuning in, as Graham Norton used to say, on his show.
00:24Let's get on with the show!
00:26Hello, gang! Welcome to Season 3, February.
00:33The season will roll into Season 4, and June of 2026 will be rolling into Season 4.
00:42Ah, hard to keep it all straight. Where's the time gone?
00:46But this special segment intro is for February specials.
00:52I'll be running two a week, rather than one special a week on Wednesdays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays in February to get caught up on some of the interviews.
01:06And as Graham Norton currently says, he used to say, let's get on with the show!
01:12And I use that normally, but he uses now, and I'm going to borrow from him again.
01:18Let's get some guests on!
01:21Warning! This episode contains some audio and or video glitches.
01:29It is not your equipment.
01:31Joining me today is Stan Kurtz.
01:37Kind of rhymes with megahertz, but not spelled anything like it.
01:42It's K-U-R-T-Z, right?
01:46So I guess we're going to make you Stan K-T-Z for short.
01:50Sure.
01:51A new measurement, the Kurtz.
01:54What are we measuring? I don't know, but we'll figure out something.
01:58Wow. That's actually very creative. I've never heard that before.
02:02That has me thinking. That's amazing.
02:04That's just the way my weird OCD brain works.
02:08All right. Well, I'll take it.
02:10I'll take and leverage any cool style brain I can interact with. That's great.
02:16So, from your week connected via Podmatch, and on your bio, it talks about hidden patterns, disruptions, stressors, and interferences affecting everything from cognition to behavior to physical performance.
02:38I've had health weeks, February 20, 25, I've had on health professionals before that and after that.
02:49So I was eager to have another health-related episode to talk to you about this.
02:55But before we do that, let's do the usual, where were you born and raised? Where are you now? Any fun places or significant places you've been to in between?
03:11How much time did you spend in prison and for what?
03:14Yeah. Do you want me to start with that one? Which do you want me to answer first?
03:20Dealer's choice.
03:23All right. So, born in the East Coast, my parents came over from Eastern Europe, and what ultimately happened to me that was remarkable in the early parts of my life is that I spent a lot of time with my grandmother, and I was always, always interested in her every time I went over to my aunt's house.
03:46And, you know, she had leads that were plugged into her, and I didn't know, but she had cancer at the time.
03:51And I was six when she passed, and I remember it specifically that, you know, looking up on my aunt when I said, you know, can I go see Bubby?
03:59And she said, she looked at my dad and said, you didn't tell him.
04:03And that was, I knew the dynamics of everything going on, which was very interesting.
04:08My intuition was like, oh, she's embarrassed and hurt and mad, and he's done this before because, you know, brother and sister.
04:16And she had that brother and sister like, mm, and he didn't say anything.
04:20So, he kind of froze, and he was, I saw like guilt, shame in him, but I knew that I had seen my grandmother for the last time.
04:28That was all at like six.
04:30So, our intuition, this thing that comes in, is really powerful.
04:34And I've had a lot of moments like that where I observe something, but there's this big download that's in it that has nothing to do with my education.
04:42And later, when I was 10, the person who I'd say understood me the most was my mom.
04:50And that was like a safe place to feel normal because I definitely have a different brain, different approach, different thought process, I think, than many.
05:00And I didn't realize it, but I just, you know, because I just felt sort of alone in it.
05:04But looking back, it just makes tons of sense.
05:07But anyway, she was diagnosed with lung cancer, and I was home most of the time while watching her degrade across her traditional path that she went on.
05:18You know, she went to hospitals and got chemo and radiation, and I just watched her turn into something else and ultimately pass.
05:27And that was my first sort of real big trauma in my life was around that.
05:32But it was all these things were there in hindsight to wake me up and to not be in a box when it comes down to things, to really think for myself and use observations, to not necessarily do what others were doing because that didn't work out twice.
05:54In a society that is more about touchy-feely, right?
06:00Oh, you're, again, I say like we're back to pre-Jesus revolution.
06:07That's why I say, think now we've got Jesus revolution too going on.
06:12The hippies of that time, the, if it feels good, do it, emotion and fun and all about me.
06:19More people now, like then, are waking up, oh, wait a minute, you can't just stumble through life on emotions.
06:28The Bible itself says the fool who basically emotional at his left hand and the wise, more thoughtful person on the right hand, it foresaw all our times.
06:44I mean, the prophecy is there and finally, I think more are waking up like you did, thankfully, at a very early age.
06:53Some, you did it at six, some are finally at age 60 getting a realization.
07:01Well, I guess I was blessed with the gifts of losing people.
07:06And really, everything that happens, I really do see there is a message in it and there is a blessing.
07:13We don't notice it at the time.
07:15And that's why we call things trauma, because we fight it.
07:18And if you look at sort of even nature biology, the heart is incredibly developed.
07:23It gives incredible truths to you and it understands things at a level that the mind does not.
07:30And the mind itself, physiologically, seems to be under attack in so many ways today.
07:38There are biological things in the blood that are holding back from its full potential.
07:42There are missing nutrition and missing bacterias in the body that are holding it back from its full potential.
07:48So it's like the evolution of the brain is not going to be at the same level as the heart.
07:53And the heart is very powerful and sends incredible messages that are not understandable all the time in the head.
07:59And what I tell people is if you want to know if you're under the influence of your brain not being at the same level as your heart, you'll notice it in pain.
08:08Because pain is a signal that what you're thinking is not true, is not actually a full truth.
08:15Your heart knows the truth.
08:16Your brain hasn't figured it out yet.
08:18And it takes us longer.
08:19And sometimes over time, you can hate your ex or you can, in my case, you can grieve your mom for 40 years and suddenly you're okay living that way.
08:31And you realize that the things that you did after she passed, in my case, the things I did after I passed, made me a better person.
08:41And it made me have gifts of compassion and also the way I think is different.
08:46I wouldn't have had that if it wasn't for my mom.
08:48So to honor her journey, to honor her being in my life, the honor that I believe God's in all things, including that, I don't have to endorse the cancer, but I do see it as a pawn used in the game that God uses to educate me.
09:05And he's tricky, you know, because he's always doing it in a way that isn't obvious.
09:10And that's the way it's supposed to be.
09:11You're supposed to decipher these things.
09:13So I keep my mom, you know, a picture of my mom's on my desk.
09:16She's here all the time.
09:17I bring her up in discussion, you know, almost every day.
09:20So the love I have continues and you have an image of my mom in your mind.
09:25So I'm giving her life in a way in honoring.
09:29So if you stop believing your thought, mom's dead.
09:33And I have, because I have a lot of experiences of her still in my life.
09:38So that whole dead thing was a thought, you know, there's a transition.
09:43Don't get me wrong.
09:43But the idea of what we think about dead is what actually caused my heart to hurt.
09:47And I did it really, really strongly because I was against that process.
09:51If she didn't die when she did, I wouldn't have married when I did.
09:55I wouldn't have had my child that ended up having autism when he did.
10:01And I wouldn't have met a researcher that was profoundly important in my life in the work
10:06that I do today because she died a year after I met her.
10:10And she was also sick, just like my grandmother was sick and I didn't know it.
10:13I didn't know she was sick.
10:14I met her, you know, she spent her entire life from 1960 when she made a discovery until
10:182005 when she passed.
10:20She was constantly trying to educate people on what she found that saved her daughter in
10:25the 1960s.
10:26So autism, my son's diagnosis with seizures and other things, and somebody saying he's,
10:32you know, it's a lifelong thing.
10:35That made me, based on my past, say, I'm not ready to stand for this.
10:41And I want to see if there's something else besides the traditional.
10:45And the traditional was like, we don't know what causes it, but we know it's not treatable.
10:48That already logically can't be true.
10:51So in other words, you don't know what caused it, but you know that it's not treatable.
10:54That's impossible unless you can show me a gene set, but you can't.
10:59And, and the fastest growing genetic condition is 1% per hundred years.
11:02And there is a huge increase, no matter how you look at it, you can't deny there's an
11:07increase.
11:08You don't see a, right.
11:09The causes can still be debated and argued, but yeah, there's no denying that the rate
11:18is, it's huge, huge increase.
11:23And if you don't, and if you think that there can be a huge increase in genetic conditions,
11:26then where are all the down syndrome kids?
11:28You know, we see autism everywhere.
11:30Down syndrome is pretty much the same.
11:31So there is a genetic condition and then there's something else.
11:35So this is a something else category.
11:37And since it's a something else and we don't know what it is, how can you say we can't treat
11:40it?
11:40So a couple of things, what you said about the, the early loss, I spoke with Kathy Garland
11:48the other day and she's quote, a suffering coach.
11:52I also talked with someone else regarding purpose after loss.
11:57There you go.
11:58All, all the same theme here.
12:02And what you said about your mother in my, a short story, a lasting legacy book, I discussed
12:09that too, right?
12:11They're not really gone.
12:13If we keep their memory alive, their legacy alive helps drive us, give us purpose, bring
12:23meaning to other people's life.
12:26Their death isn't in vain then.
12:28It is in vain if we allow them to be forgotten.
12:32You know, it's also interesting too.
12:34I, I, I do look at the opposites a lot.
12:37And, and what I find is, is that our relationship with the loved ones, the past often can be better
12:44in some ways.
12:45Like I, I, I talk about her more today than I did when she was alive.
12:49And, uh, and I've, I, I get to reflect on things without, you know, discussion, argument,
12:54debate, you know, unfortunately we take them for granted when they're here.
12:59And when I go to funerals, you can see how, you know, you know, it's like, like I never
13:04heard that, or I never knew you felt that way.
13:06So we wait until someone passes before we start to really deeply evaluate.
13:12So there's lots of benefits that we get when somebody passes.
13:16That's a truth and we don't like to admit to it.
13:18And we don't, and we think that we need grief in order to love.
13:21And it's just not true.
13:22Grief is optional and, and we can spend time thinking about how can I love her more today?
13:27How can I have her in my life today more today?
13:29You know, and, and that's what I like to spend my time with.
13:32But what that did is it fueled me when it came down to taking a look at what was going
13:36on with my son.
13:37And I, it pushed me into doing research myself.
13:39And I found that there were 750 studies in the medical literature that showed these kids
13:46were sick.
13:47And with that, I was able to develop an approach that, that worked for him.
13:52So he came out of the condition, like completely, not only just off, off, off of a diagnosis,
13:58but he's an amazing human today.
14:00And he, and that wouldn't have happened had those things not happened to me in my childhood.
14:05And today I basically work with just about any quote unquote condition.
14:10I don't care.
14:11I don't diagnose anything, but, but if somebody comes in, I don't even care what they have.
14:15If they want to enter into research, that is the mindset that we're talking about and
14:20apply this in their life, they can come in here and learn this.
14:23And we have tools that we've pulled from all over the world, tools that from, from Africa
14:28and from the Amazon and from the 1800s, you know, technologies that were, that were taken,
14:34you know, that we get to sort of bring back to life.
14:37And, and that's the mindset that I use in this research and helping to figure out what
14:42our real potential is.
14:43Because if you have attention processing issues, if you have a brain fog and things like that,
14:49there's usually a biological cause, an actual root cause to these things.
14:55And rather than name it, I'm interested in unraveling the underlying things that are holding people
15:01back from having their full potential.
15:02And if I show you, uh, let me see if I'm, if I can share, uh, I'm going to send you a
15:07request to share.
15:08I'm going to show you a couple of things and I'm going to relate it to what we just talked
15:11about.
15:12Okay.
15:13Uh, yeah.
15:13I, uh, all the more reasons for people to check out the episode, obviously at bit
15:19shoot, brighty on daily motion in France, rumble or YouTube, uh, because you're going
15:27to share, there will be a visual, this will be, uh, remember the visual, yeah, talking
15:33about, okay.
15:34I'm going to carry down 25 plus audio only channel.
15:39So, okay, good, good.
15:40Localize as much as you can.
15:43So what, what I'm going to show you, uh, in, and I'll show it to you in words as well,
15:48is that we did brain scans and, um, what we found in the brain scans of people that, that
15:55had attention issues, brain fog, uh, also, uh, uh, immune dysregulation.
16:01If you were to look at this, uh, imagine a visual in this case that they'll talk about,
16:05we're looking at a visual of the top down drawing of a brain.
16:09It's a circle.
16:10There's a nose in the front and there's green in the middle back quadrant, which is, this
16:15is theta activity, which is slow activity.
16:17You don't necessarily want a good amount, a high amount of slow activity, but the green
16:21shows normal amounts of slow activity in this person that was, had attention problems and
16:26brain fog and stomach pain.
16:28And the front, as you start to go in the front, there's a yellow color, which means double
16:32the slow wave.
16:33And there's a red in the middle of the yellow that is triple the slow wave.
16:37So more than half of his brain is running abnormally.
16:40And it's the frontal lobe of the brain.
16:43This is the part that is your executive function.
16:45This is the part that has you discern information at a deep level.
16:50And, and so the part of the back of the brain, when we seem to have issues, uh, the back of
16:55the brain seems to be more stable.
16:57And, and it makes sense because if you had to wedge your, you know, hedge your bets, you
17:02would wager to keep your eyes working and your heart working, you know, so that you could
17:07survive in fight or flight.
17:09But as far as you being able to create or connect to your spirituality, you know, you, you're
17:15not going to need to do that if you're fighting for your life.
17:18And that's why I think nature made the front of the lobe sort of adjustable and you can turn
17:23it into power conserve mode.
17:24And that's what this, this person looks like.
17:26And that's what I see ADHD as.
17:28If we did a brain scan of your brain, for example, I think you, you would have something like
17:33this, you know, cause you, you were describing yourself as OCD.
17:36I see sort of like, you know, and, uh, chronic fatigue, immune dysfunction.
17:42That's why I'm on disability.
17:46Fatigue, anxiety, IBSD.
17:50So stomach issues.
17:52I'm going to send you.
17:53You're talking about me here.
17:55All right.
17:55All right.
17:56Here we are.
17:56You know, gotten all things.
17:58Here we are.
17:58So I'm going to send you the same thing that we gave to the, to Mike.
18:01So the, the, the left is before the right is after.
18:04So in other words, we did, uh, some metabolites that helped the brain natural things that we
18:09sprayed in his nose and on the right that normalized.
18:13So you see 75% of his brain is green, which is normal slow wave activity.
18:18The back of the brain is less.
18:21So red is more, but blue is less.
18:23So he has less slow wave activity.
18:25This is usually in people that have meditation with their eyes closed, but Mike has his eyes
18:31open in this case.
18:32And it's talking and saying, I feel great with this.
18:35Basically, I think the brain is supposed to look like this all the time when it has metabolites
18:39it's supposed to have when it's not sitting in, in, uh, you know, believing, uh, trauma
18:45and all things, this is a brain of creativity of calmness.
18:50His stomach pain went away.
18:51His anxiety almost goes down to zero.
18:54So I'm going to show you a person that actually experienced this firsthand and you can hear,
18:59you can hear her, but basically she's a woman that, uh, lost her fire in the Palisades,
19:05lost her house in the power Palisades fire.
19:08So she was without a house.
19:09This is an event in, in, uh, that was for the fire victims.
19:13It was, um, in Venice and they had asked me to come and support these people.
19:17So we were doing a live blood analysis and we were offering these sprays and metabolites
19:22for people under stress.
19:24She particularly was a great example because she was waiting in line for like 45 minutes
19:29and then she had to go speak at, uh, the live broadcast.
19:32Well, it turns out that, uh, she was like next in line and she was afraid that she was
19:37going to lose, you know, uh, uh, her, her chair.
19:41I'm going to make sure I'm actually sharing with the audio on.
19:43I am.
19:44Okay, good.
19:44So I'll go back to that.
19:45This'll just take me a second to get to the right page, the right spot.
19:49So she, she, she was afraid she was going to lose her place in line.
19:52And I said, you know, she said, hold my chair and she leaves and somebody sat in that chair.
19:56And when she came back, she lost her mind on me.
19:59She pointed me in the face.
20:00You told me, and I didn't say anything by the way, when she said, hold my seat, but
20:04I was going to hold her place is how I heard it.
20:06And she's pointing at me and she's yelling at me and I'm looking at her face and I'm
20:09seeing the rage in her face.
20:11And I'm like, wow, it's interesting.
20:13And there was another chair right next to that.
20:15And I said, sit here, you can be next.
20:17She sits down and she goes, you know, fine, you know?
20:20And, and I go, you know what?
20:22Let me just give you the metabolite spray now that we have that is, is for this kind of thing.
20:26And I spray her and, and the, the, the image on the screen is a picture of her with a big
20:32smile on her face.
20:32Now, this woman still didn't get her house back, but she's now regulated the same way
20:38I regulated that brain scan that I was describing.
20:40And she's going to talk about how different she felt immediately after she got some of these
20:47metabolites, which are blocked when you have a dysbiosis, you know, bacteria and fungus in
20:53the gut, it seems it's, uh, you can't get this stuff to the brain very easily.
20:57So she, her pattern was very much probably what we saw in Mike in the slide.
21:01So here, she's going to describe what happened after I sprayed her.
21:04And remember, she was yelling at me with, and she's, she's, she's Latin, I believe she
21:09with this Latin, you know what I mean?
21:11Like, you know, and, and, and then I spray her and this is her immediately after.
21:16And she describes that.
21:17I just put it, I just gave it to her 60 seconds before.
21:20So check this out.
21:21All right.
21:22So here we are.
21:23At the, the, the event to take care of, uh, people that have been infected by the fires.
21:28All right.
21:29What's your name?
21:30Gabby.
21:30Gabby.
21:31So Gabby, uh, two minutes ago, what was your stress level?
21:3512.
21:3512.
21:36And what is your stress level now?
21:38Minus 10.
21:39Yeah.
21:40Yes.
21:40I've been evacuated for 10 days.
21:42Wow.
21:43And I hadn't felt this sense of peace until now.
21:47Yeah.
21:49And we sprayed you literally.
21:50How long ago?
21:52A minute ago.
21:53A minute ago.
21:54So we sprayed her a minute ago and now she has a sense of peace.
21:57Even after everything that happened.
21:59Yeah.
21:59Yeah.
22:00Yeah.
22:01If you would have seen her before, you, you'd be, she's like, hey, hey, hey, hey, it's my
22:06turn.
22:06My turn.
22:07Right?
22:08Yeah.
22:08And now she's like, look at this.
22:12Blowing.
22:12Yeah.
22:13Yeah.
22:13Amazing.
22:13Amazing.
22:14Great work.
22:15All right.
22:15Here we go.
22:16So you can imagine how many of our, our brothers and sisters.
22:20And in my view that we have seven, seven billion brothers and sisters that are going around
22:25not realizing when they're dysregulated, how they're dysregulated, how bad they're dysregulated.
22:29And what we do all day long is just like that.
22:33People come in and they have all sorts of things going on.
22:35And I don't care about the, the, the conditions names.
22:38I don't care about that.
22:39But what I care about is we find very specific things that are in the blood that are blocking
22:43people, uh, from having their best selves and having their connection to source, you
22:50know, being, being able to discern information, to be able to dive deep into discussions and
22:55take new data.
22:56And that's what happens when the frontal lobe is down, that stuff is blocked.
23:00And if you're dealing with a major issue, let's say losing her house, we didn't give her
23:04her house back.
23:05But she said, this is the first time I've had a sense of peace since the incident.
23:10And all we did is help reset her brain with some metabolites that are natural, that weren't
23:16getting to her brain because of her blood.
23:18And we were able to do it through a little bit of a spray in the nose.
23:20This is one, this is something that I had made back in 2005, 2006, if I remember correctly,
23:28I think that maybe 2006.
23:30And, uh, uh, we put a patent application in, I think in 2008, because we just found so many
23:37conditions, so many things that were improving just because we put this in people.
23:41So that's one thing that we do.
23:43So it gives you an example of that.
23:46Interesting.
23:47I'm going to send you some, by the way, you're going to send me your address.
23:49I'm going to send it to you.
23:50Oh, I want to see what happens to you, my friend.
23:53I would be interested, uh, to, uh, yeah, to see, because I, I certainly don't feel, I, I
24:02try to force my brain to stay active.
24:05So I don't, I don't feel the cognitive decline as much yet.
24:12Although my mother passed from dementia a few years ago.
24:17So, so I'm concerned about the cognitive and even why I push even more.
24:24So I force my brain and the OCD.
24:28Yeah.
24:28The OCD part in a way forces that to whether I like my brain to constantly be going, it
24:38is like it or not.
24:41That's why I don't sleep well at night.
24:44Turning off the brain becomes a problem.
24:47What I find that's going on in this, this, um, you know, this, the, the brain that wants
24:53to stay active, even when you want to try to calm, the calm part is actually a very natural
24:58thing.
24:58Like we shouldn't, we shouldn't actually feel stress.
25:01Stress is supposed to be really temporary.
25:02And if we're feeling it all the time, there is something wrong in my view, because when
25:06the brain looks green, like we had it on the screen there, you know, she still lost
25:10her home and yet she was fine.
25:11And she even said she's glowing and she's grateful.
25:14Like that's, that's amazing.
25:15So, um, I guess I want to switch gears for a second because you mentioned dementia and
25:20I want to show you something that we found because the, the beliefs around this is to
25:26me is, is inaccurate.
25:28So, um, one of the people that we worked on, um, uh, was somebody that had very substantial,
25:37like she was, she was diagnosed with Alzheimer's and it's, which is very similar, by the way,
25:42it looks a little different in the blood, but this is what her blood looked like.
25:45These cells are supposed to be all separate, but they're stacked.
25:47So what you're looking at is a set of cells that look like P P's pushed together, uh, or
25:53held together like magnets, like metal P's held together with magnets.
25:57Well, they're all supposed to be out and open in order to, to, to, uh, move blood and, uh,
26:04sorry, to move oxygen, to be able to, to, to exchange what it needs to exchange.
26:09When they're stacked like this, it's, it, you can tell these things can't be working
26:13optimally.
26:14She described herself as, uh, being afraid to go outside.
26:18Uh, her, her daughter was telling me that she's agoraphobic basically.
26:21And, uh, and she's afraid like what you described that she was going to end up like her mother
26:26who died of it.
26:27So her daughter, uh, brought her and in order for her to come because she was agoraphobic,
26:32we had to clear everyone out of the space.
26:33But me, she only wanted to deal with one person and this is what her blood looked like.
26:38Well, four hours later, when we gave her some, some, uh, some, uh, essentially roots that
26:44helped to, uh, give energy to the cells.
26:47Well, that polarized the cells and this was afterwards.
26:51And what you're seeing is like little bubbles that look perfectly clear, perfectly round,
26:56and they're sitting inside.
26:57So this was before and, you know, which is stacked P's and this is after her symptoms
27:02that she described were gone.
27:04Her anxiety was gone.
27:05Her memory issues, her, her, the way she was speaking changed.
27:09We have a video on her on that's, uh, for on her YouTube channel too.
27:13You can actually look up, uh, her name's Karen and, and she can, she, you literally see her
27:18afterwards saying, I just feel great.
27:19And this has been an amazing thing.
27:21This was, this was two years ago.
27:23She's 78.
27:24Now we saw her when she was 76.
27:26Uh, I went to her Facebook page just, just to see how she was doing.
27:30Cause we just don't even see her anymore, but this is what she looks like on Facebook.
27:34She, she, this is a picture of her with her hands out and her legs out sitting, sitting
27:38on an alligator, having a, you know, uh, uh, an artistic alligator.
27:42Um, it's artistic, not autistic.
27:44That's a different kind of alligator.
27:45It's an antisocial alligator.
27:47So, uh, no, this one is, that's a terrible joke, but, um, I'm just, I'm just having, I'm
27:52just having fun.
27:52We've got to keep a sense of humor despite serious information or I have a very deep
28:00respect for, for, for the community and, and, and all of us with our versions of autism
28:05that we turn into superpowers if we can.
28:07Anyway, so she traveled, uh, uh, eight times or seven times that year when we popped her
28:13out and, uh, and she's been great ever since like, you know, I, I check in from time to
28:18time to see how she's doing.
28:18And she's just doing great and it only required four hours of work.
28:22So this whole concept of, uh, uh, you know, like plaques and things being behind it, there's
28:28a lot of evidence that shows that most people have plaques when they pass and they didn't
28:32even have the condition.
28:33So what we do see is if you look at, you know, under the microscope, what's going on with
28:38the cells, I think there's more origin information you're going to find and how the cells are doing
28:42than if you're going to look at the body.
28:44And we see that all the time.
28:46We look at everything with a blood drop, we start with a drop of blood and we finish
28:51with the drop of blood.
28:52And basically we always, we, our goal is to always get people to that level of where you
28:57see the cells totally open and you get to understand what good blood feels like.
29:01The health of the blood is so overlooked.
29:04People don't realize what's going on.
29:06They look at lab results and see how many red blood cells they have.
29:09Well, it doesn't matter how many you have.
29:10I mean, it does, but what matters more is, are they charged?
29:14Uh, you know, is there polarization?
29:16Are they functioning?
29:18Well, there's no functional test to show how it's doing, looking at it, seeing it, seeing
29:23the person, making sure that the plasma is clear, making sure that they have proper energy
29:28in the body will give them, in my view, that full, uh, that full head, the full brain activity.
29:35And it feels totally different.
29:37I'm telling you, I'm going to send this to you.
29:38You're going to try this.
29:39You're going to be like, I can't believe how great I feel.
29:41This is one of many, many, many things.
29:45Uh, well, I love doing this because it's a great way that we can say, okay, guys, come
29:49back at another episode when I'm going to try this live.
29:52And let me tell you what happens if people see people that they love and care about and
29:56have, they have a miraculous change.
29:58It, it, it creates a, a, a much better understanding and believability than hearing some guy talk
30:04about it.
30:04I know how hard it is to hear.
30:07Yeah.
30:07Word of mouth testimonial is always very important.
30:12Yes.
30:13That's why on our channel, all I have is testimonies on it.
30:15Like people say, what do you do?
30:16I go just watch what people say, because you can see, you know, people become suspicious
30:21of the, as you said, it can't be random strangers.
30:25Cause the conspiracy theory side of us always go to, well, those are paid testimonials.
30:32You paid them to say that, or they're getting something out of saying it, right?
30:37I'm going to, I'm going to show you, I'm going to show you the difference between the
30:41frontal lobe of the brain and the back of the brain.
30:43The back of the brain says, I don't want to believe, uh, if every, if, if, uh, if it
30:48were true, everyone would be doing it.
30:50They, it says things like that.
30:52That's very, that's very primal fight or flight.
30:55The frontal lobe.
30:56If the, if you're faced with information, let's say you, you, you, you had a family member
31:01that passed from it and somebody tells you, I have something that had worked.
31:05The frontal lobe does this.
31:06The frontal lobe goes, oh, well, how many people have you had that have had that condition?
31:10And then how many have not had it once they left?
31:14And then do you have phone numbers of people that I can call because I'd like to talk to
31:18some of those people or what other evidence do you have?
31:21Or is it possible that I could come to your location and just watch this a few times before
31:25I decide that's how the front of the lobe discerns.
31:29This is how I had to discern, uh, what to go after and what not to go after, or else you
31:34go down every rabbit hole in the planet.
31:35Like, for example, um, uh, somebody said to me at one point, oh, you need to try CoQ10
31:41and your kid, you know, it's very important.
31:43And this is at an autism conference and it's a woman that had a child with autism.
31:47So how do I discern if it's true or not?
31:50Now, if I just go fight or flight, I go, yeah, uh, you know, I don't know.
31:54I'll see.
31:55Or, uh, you know, I don't know.
31:56Maybe I'll, I'll wait till scientist says it on the screen.
31:59Like, but no, I have a woman in front of me that is giving me a piece of data.
32:04Now I'm going to qualify the data.
32:06I learned about qualification when I was a kid doing, doing, uh, telephone sales.
32:11And I had a boss that said, listen, if somebody says they want to buy something, ask them
32:14these, these four questions, how quick do you need it?
32:18You know, are you willing to pay more to get it fast?
32:20And, uh, if I, if I get it at a higher price, like, and you give them a price that's high.
32:26And you say, if I could find it today at this kind of price, would you buy it?
32:29I qualified his need rather than just saying, okay, I'm going to work for free and I'll bring
32:34the information back.
32:35And they go, well, can you get it less expensive?
32:37You qualify, you ask questions, you learn what people's decision-making is.
32:43Now, here's how I qualify someone telling me CoQ10 is great.
32:47I say, okay, well, what were you doing with the CoQ10?
32:51In other words, what were you trying to change?
32:52And, and it, well, well, I, I, you know, and maybe they don't even know, which tells
32:57me that's, that's not good information, but if they say, well, CoQ10 helps to open up the
33:03cells and we understand that the cells have problems in our kids because of auto, auto
33:07immunity.
33:08And I was looking for symptoms of him having more energy, uh, and possibly more clarity.
33:14And I got it.
33:16You know, if I would have heard something like that, it would have been like, I'm going
33:18to go now to the science.
33:19When I get back home, I'm going to see if it's possible.
33:21I want to take a look at the possible risks.
33:23I want to take a look at the possible rewards, but that's worth looking at.
33:26So here's, here was my trick question.
33:28It wasn't a trick question.
33:29It was like, I'm like a detective in a way.
33:31I got, I just said, okay, well, great.
33:33Oh, by the way, how's your kid doing?
33:35And she goes, well, it's been really hard and, you know, we're making some progress,
33:39but we, you know, so, and I immediately go, that's not for me because I'm interested in
33:45a result of where my child got better.
33:47And I'm willing to turn any stone over.
33:49If someone has a result that I got, I don't think a mom's going to lie to me and say, oh,
33:56my kid's perfect.
33:57And you should try the same thing.
33:59I'm going to, I'm going to hedge my bets.
34:01It's like risk versus reward.
34:03It's, it's like risk analysis and business.
34:05Do it logically.
34:06Learn how to ask questions, see answers and think.
34:10So if I don't know how to determine truth when it's in front of me, like if you say something
34:14and I can't qualify it as being true, it's my fault.
34:17It's because I don't have the capacity or the programming in the frontal lobe of my brain
34:22to discern truth.
34:23And that is, is present all over the place in the world.
34:26I was able to discern truth.
34:29I was able to read patterns because I was looking for something that no one else had.
34:35I wanted a fully recovered child and the evidence was sort of there that people can get better.
34:41Well, good.
34:41I'm going to go after it, but I only want a recovered child.
34:44So in other words, I'm only going to receive information from a doctor, a researcher, or a
34:48parent that had something similar.
34:50And if they had, I'm going to listen.
34:52I'm going to interview them.
34:53I'm going to get into the details.
34:54What brand was it?
34:55What time of day did you do it?
34:57What kind of dosing was it?
34:58When did you see an effect?
34:59Did you see any negativity?
35:01Did you, you know, at any point, you know, when, what was too much?
35:04I'm going to dig into that detail to find out exactly what they did.
35:08If the signs are there and I could discern it was worthwhile.
35:13So most people just go, when they hear something like this to say, well, I don't know.
35:18And I, and I look at them and I go, that's a frontal lobe.
35:20That's not activated or, or, or they haven't learned the process of discernment because what
35:25I would do in that situation, if someone said, you know, my mom died of Alzheimer's,
35:29I'm a little concerned about it.
35:31I'm a little off and I have some stuff, uh, I would be saying, how many, how often are
35:37you nailing it?
35:38Um, how can I, how would you like to prove to me that it's real?
35:42Okay.
35:42So you got some testimonials.
35:43Can I get some phone numbers?
35:45Can I get one person I can talk to?
35:46Can we do a group zoom where I can see with my own eyes?
35:50I can see the, the diagnosis on a piece of paper.
35:53I can look at the person and say, they don't have it.
35:55If you have that, then you go, this is worth looking for, you know, worth going to standing
36:02next to them and watching them do it to somebody like you can take it level by level to discern
36:06truth.
36:07But in, in our society today, what we end up doing is because we've had trauma, because
36:12we've had letdowns, we decide to, to shut everything down.
36:16And that's what we do with our hearts.
36:17If we have a pain in our heart, we, we shut our heart down.
36:20No, the heart's an incredible tool.
36:21It's just our brain didn't know how to process it.
36:24So learning how to dig into information, discern, figure out what's true through signs and through
36:31patterns and through proof that you can validate in other places, not that, you know, you can
36:36even have a scientist that says, I have a peer reviewed, you know, a double blind placebo
36:40study that was, that was put into six journals.
36:42But if his motive was not right, in other words, if he's looking to prove a medicine for the sake
36:49of money, then, then you can ask science any question, you could determine how you're going
36:54to evaluate science.
36:55And you can also get science published in, in, in places that have motives different than
37:02what I want for my kid.
37:04Learning how to discern was absolutely life and death important when it came down to understanding
37:09how to approach my child.
37:10And I don't discount that because if I would have looked at the entire set of medical literature
37:16about the condition, there's, you know, there, there were, there were tens of thousands of
37:22studies that said all sorts of things.
37:24But because I could click on the author's name and see, were they just looking at vitamins?
37:28Were they just chasing after the, the, the root causes of the condition?
37:32Did they get, you know, where they, did they find biology behind the, the, the condition that
37:36could be changed?
37:37If I just looked at those things and avoided anyone, oh, this is all about, you know, drugs
37:41and trying to promote.
37:43Okay.
37:43So let's move that out because I was able to discern it.
37:45I knew what rabbit holes to invest in.
37:47And that process led me to a result that most people didn't have.
37:51I didn't think it was a big deal.
37:52It felt very natural to me, but looking back, many people didn't make it.
37:57And, and the mistakes they made mostly were the fact that they did not have a rel, a relatively
38:02regulated brain and they didn't know how to ask the questions to discern, to determine
38:06what's true or not.
38:07A detective can figure out a lot when he goes to a place and he's even being lied to, or
38:12he has a lack of evidence.
38:13How?
38:13He asks questions.
38:15He watches behaviors.
38:16He uses his experience.
38:18He asks again.
38:19He sees if things are consistent.
38:21He, you know, communicates with other people that have been through the same situation.
38:24And from that, they determine the details of truth.
38:26We have to do that.
38:28If we want to expand our reality beyond headlines and narratives, we need to be able to do that
38:34in our own life and our own world.
38:35And it's a little hard when you're dysregulated.
38:38So I'm going to send you some spray and then, and then see how you feel.
38:41See how I brought it back to the, I'm going to spray thing.
38:44Yeah.
38:45Yeah.
38:45Well, what you were saying, again, we've been, a lot of times we try different things.
38:51And as you said, we come pre, we become conditioned to be disappointed and therefore skeptical of
39:00everything else.
39:01And as you said, underlying motives, one never knows.
39:06Remember that story.
39:07If we're going to, I can't believe I'm actually able to pull like, like biblical stories.
39:11Cause it's, I don't study it.
39:13Right.
39:13And it's not my thing per se.
39:14I have a very strong faith, but I don't, I don't study, but you know, that story that
39:19says, God, please send me, you know, it's the person in the water, you know, please send
39:23me help.
39:23And a boat goes by and this goes by.
39:25But it's a, that's that because in the midst of static, the things that didn't happen.
39:30And I get people here that have spent a million dollars, $2 million travel in the world, trying
39:34to find something.
39:35And they lived two towns over, you know, and, and, and they end up coming and we nail it.
39:40This happens very frequently.
39:41And they're like, I cannot believe, you know, that, that I did all that.
39:45And all I needed to do is this.
39:47We need to know in the midst of static, what is true.
39:52And if we cancel everything out, in other words, if everyone says, well, I'm a skeptic,
39:57you're, you're, you're essentially cursing yourself to not learn new information.
40:00So rather than that, and having me be responsible for all your trauma of skepticism, you being
40:06responsible to listen to the tone, listen to the truth that you feel inside your heart,
40:10being able to ask me questions to qualify is the difference between you having the boat
40:15pick you up and you watching the one go by.
40:18So that, that's all I want to say.
40:20Everyone should be rather than being skeptical, like, you know, yes, you've had failures,
40:25use those failures to your advantage.
40:27What questions didn't you ask?
40:28How could you have figured it out beforehand?
40:30You need to build your skills, like an art of learning truth more so than just saying
40:35I'm a skeptic because that's just a lazy man's way of saying, I'm just going to wait 20 years
40:40until somebody proves it enough.
40:42But believe me, even if the, you know.
40:44And then that's a lost 20 years if you live those 20 years.
40:49Yeah.
40:49And plus, if even if, imagine this, imagine the president of the United States coming out
40:54today and saying, we have solved this thing if you just take this thing, or you should
40:59not do this thing.
41:00There's already controversy of them trying to do that in some way.
41:03And there's an equal war against and for and a lot of is just, it's all, it's all, it's
41:09all like emotion and hate and I've been hurt before.
41:12It's all this, you know, fight or flight reaction back of the brain stuff.
41:17We need to move our decision making forward.
41:20We need to be responsible for everything that happens in our lives and know that truth is
41:24in truth is in the room at all times.
41:26This is my connection to God.
41:27There is a truth in this room that's available to me at all times if I'm willing to see it.
41:31And, and there's also distruths in the room.
41:35If I'm willing to discern, I'll be able to figure out the signal that's coming.
41:39And that's how, that's how I see God in all things is that truth is available.
41:42And if it's not easy, it's not true.
41:44If it's not simple, it's not true.
41:45If I complicate things, I will miss it.
41:48But if I want my connection to God, or if I want my connection to truth, I'm the one responsible
41:55for seeing it.
41:55That's my free will.
41:57And I, and if I go by, well, I've been hurt.
41:59I don't want to try again.
42:00I don't want to try love again.
42:02If I've been hurt, it's like, no, you missed the message about what happened last time.
42:07And you're not able to see something when it's in your face.
42:10I see it all the time.
42:12And all I can tell you is, you know, a combination of some desperation and, and almost giving up
42:17and realizing that people are in such a bad place.
42:20They're willing to give it a shot or give something a try.
42:22That's usually how people come in the door or they said, oh my God, I just heard my, my,
42:27my aunt had this and she doesn't have it anymore.
42:30Like I had an 89 year old woman from the native community come in and she was taking four insulin
42:36injections a day.
42:37She hasn't taken one since.
42:39And, and so she's going to tell that story.
42:41And I'm not saying I cured anything.
42:43I can tell you that what I did is I, I helped her have her best health.
42:46And in that she no longer has the same types of sugar issues she had in the past.
42:51So I could say that all day long, but unless you can follow up with some questions or trust
42:58your instinct, the thing in you that says he just might have something.
43:01He doesn't seem to be motivated to, you know, to, to, uh, cause harm or motivated, you know,
43:07for ego or money, you know, and you feel something, you know, there, there's the heart that'll
43:11give you an intuition, but there's also the, the frontal lobe of the brain.
43:14And they can say, how many times that happened?
43:16How often do you see it happen?
43:18Is that replicatable?
43:19Can I come to your place and watch you do it one time?
43:21And all those answers are yes.
43:23And if that's the case, honestly, people should just hit, hit stop on their other, their computer
43:28right now, close the door and, and go, go get a plane ticket.
43:32That's how it should be.
43:33But we were limited.
43:35We only see 0.3% of reality.
43:37That's what science says.
43:38We're very limited.
43:39And plus that you can't remember the sentence I said three sentences ago, word for word.
43:43So we're limited in memory.
43:44So our perception of reality is what we rely on for our comfort.
43:49And we've created a perception of, of I've been hurt.
43:53I don't know how to make a good decision.
43:55And, and I just don't know truth and people stay in that space.
43:59And eventually you just, you know, fall off the planet because of that.
44:02But if you say to yourself, I want to learn 0.31%, you know, and I'm going to, I'm going
44:08to, I'm going to, I'm going to take initiative to ask questions and to qualify information,
44:13just like I did when I was on the phones.
44:15I was the top performing person on the phones.
44:17I learned how to ask questions.
44:18I learned how to put in work to get my rejections, to get to one person that says, yes, I'm willing
44:24to put in my work to search a thousand things.
44:27I spend every month, thousands of dollars on something I'll never use because when
44:31I test it, I see it doesn't work because I'm discerning and I'm not going to use something
44:36on that.
44:36Isn't the best in the, in the world, uh, from everything that I do.
44:40But I keep looking for something that I have not found because I really love the exploration
44:45of finding something that other people are too lazy to even find.
44:49So anyway, that's, that's my little take on skepticism.
44:52Skepticism should mean I, I want to know more.
44:56I want to see if it's true.
44:58I'm not going to believe something from the start, but I'm very interested in hearing more
45:03that's healthy.
45:04But if you say I'm a skeptic, therefore I'm not going to believe anything new.
45:07And, and that's really what people are saying most of the time.
45:10That's like, well, there, you know, let me know how it works out for you because I, you
45:15know, there's no reason for me to speak because you're not asking me questions to figure out
45:18what I am.
45:19So that means you're, you're, you know, you're, you have free will to decide who I am.
45:24I'm not going to change that.
45:25I don't want to.
45:26I've learned that I'm responsible for me only.
45:28But if you ask me some questions and you ask me questions that are there to determine truth,
45:33I'll sit with you all day long and tell you everything I can to help you determine how
45:38to do the best things for you in your life.
45:40Well, time has flown and there's not enough time in a day to ask all the questions that
45:47need to be asked.
45:49And we already established you do have a web, a YouTube channel.
45:55Do you have a website for indeed people seeking answers to questions?
46:01No, I'll tell you what I, I'll tell you what I do.
46:04Cause I don't try to convince and I don't try to market, but I, I definitely give enough
46:08breadcrumbs for people to determine truth if they want the one place to go where I have
46:12maybe 250 videos of people talking about their experience.
46:19That is stands recoveries.com stands recoveries.com.
46:23You can go there.
46:24If you want to know more and hear more things from me, if you want to learn about the process
46:28more, you can go to my link tree, which is stands links.com.
46:32So it's stands recoveries.com and stands links.com.
46:36And, uh, I enjoyed this by the way.
46:38I mean, you, you know, you push a few buttons on me and I've got lots of energy to be able
46:41to, you know, and I don't mean to offend anybody.
46:44I know it's very hard.
46:46You know, uh, we don't know how unwell we are until we feel well sometimes.
46:51And our spirit kind of does tell us like, I wish there was more.
46:54I feel like there's more what's going on.
46:56Those things can help guide you to getting your best health.
46:59I want all of our brothers and sisters, our 7 billion brothers and sisters out there to
47:04have their full brain, to have their compassion, to have their, their access to source easier,
47:09to be able to discern better and make the best decisions they can for them, for their family.
47:13Because if we all had it, honestly, I think a majority of the issues we have, the war, the
47:17fighting, the anger, the rage towards each other, a lot of that stuff is unnatural.
47:22It's not a normal thing.
47:23And I think humans are supposed to be compassionate and patient and, and, and calm all the time.
47:28Logical, problem solvers, puzzle masters.
47:31One question I do want to ask before we go is you've hinted at it.
47:37It sounds like you're talking organics and natural substances.
47:42Yes.
47:42Yeah.
47:43Yeah.
47:43And that's technology and sometimes technology.
47:45Like I have some technology from the 1800s.
47:48I have God gave us all these things and we're not using them.
47:54I have some lasers that we invented ourselves.
47:56So every, there's no drugs here.
47:58That's the answer.
47:59There's no drugs.
48:00There's no, that's the other thing I was going to bring up.
48:03The big pharma, everything synthetic based on things out of nature.
48:10Well, if this is derived from honey or derived, well, then the original thing is obviously better.
48:20The natural organic thing is obviously better if you're trying to copy it synthetically.
48:26And so there's always the big pharma trying to hoopoo the homeopathic, let's call it, methods.
48:36Yeah.
48:36And the real truth behind the scenes is that the study shows 70% of medicine today is based
48:43on things that came from the Amazon originally.
48:46But part of the issue is the motives too, because the motive, like a friend of mine from Yale,
48:52a doctor said, you know, what they taught us in med school is to name things, blame them and tame them.
48:57That's pretty much what they taught us.
48:59And so if the motive is to not necessarily take care of root causes, but to make people feel a little better,
49:05that's a motive that you can get from a place.
49:08Treat the symptoms.
49:10Yeah.
49:10Rather than, yes.
49:12So some things we've gone back to the Amazon and said, well, what experience do you guys have
49:16in taking care of the actual root causes?
49:18Because the Amazon has places for that too.
49:21That stuff just didn't get pulled.
49:22So some things we literally pull from the Amazon that have root cause effects and holistic effects
49:30to help people actually be better.
49:33And that is part of our approach is that we're literally just trying to restore the body to
49:38the way that God meant it to be without the interference of things.
49:42That are, that may be not as heart-filled as we are for our children or for ourselves.
49:47Yep.
49:48Well, thank you, Stan Kurtz.
49:50It was a wonderful discussion.
49:52I like with all my guests, we could go for three days and then it'd be way too long.
49:58No one will watch or listen.
50:00Right?
50:02Today's Twitter attention span, I call it.
50:05Everybody wants the headline, even though the headline might be deceiving.
50:10Give me the soundbite, even though the soundbite might be out of context.
50:15Details matter.
50:18So I will again refer people to stansrecoveries.com and stanslinks.com to indeed do some of your own,
50:31as Stan said, skeptical, but not cower in the corner, kind of, giving up, kind of skeptical,
50:46an inquisitive skepticality.
50:50I love, I love, I love curiosity.
50:53I love, uh, questions.
50:56Um, and I do, I, you know, I feel bad when people are in that place where they've given
51:00up and, uh, cause I, I, people, um, you don't deserve it.
51:05You deserve more and you deserve your full self.
51:07And if you feel that inside and you, you want to, you want to find out more, you know, come
51:13study, you know, come take a look at what's what we have on online.
51:17And if you, if that, if that makes a difference for you, if you feel it, then reach out and
51:22do the rest.
51:23Okay.
51:23I'm going to hit stop on the record now, or again, we'll keep going and going and going
51:30like an energizer bunny.
51:31Right.
51:32Thanks for having me on.
51:34Thanks for having me on like, and subscribe to Christitutionalist politics podcast and
51:41share episodes.
51:42We need your help.
51:44Thank you for having tuned into another Christitutionalist podcast show.
51:51I really appreciate that you stopped by again, please like, share, subscribe.
51:59We need you to help spread the Christitutionalist movement.
52:04Thank you again.
52:05Take care.
52:07God bless.
52:08Love you all.
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