Fear thrives on vague labels; clarity starts with biology. We open by replacing the word “cancer” with “chronically fermenting cells,” so the focus shifts from doom to mechanism: cells favoring fermentation rather than oxidative phosphorylation. That reframe lets us explain PET scans and SUVs in plain language, showing how to distinguish metabolic activity from leftover anatomy, and why a smaller, quiet lesion can mean success even if it’s still visible. From there, we build a full map of he...
All content for The Dr. Lodi Podcast is the property of Dr. Thomas Lodi and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Fear thrives on vague labels; clarity starts with biology. We open by replacing the word “cancer” with “chronically fermenting cells,” so the focus shifts from doom to mechanism: cells favoring fermentation rather than oxidative phosphorylation. That reframe lets us explain PET scans and SUVs in plain language, showing how to distinguish metabolic activity from leftover anatomy, and why a smaller, quiet lesion can mean success even if it’s still visible. From there, we build a full map of he...
Episode 168 - 10.12.25 From Myths to Meaning: Real Healing Without the Hype
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
1 hour 23 minutes
1 month ago
Episode 168 - 10.12.25 From Myths to Meaning: Real Healing Without the Hype
Stop chasing labels and start changing the soil. We get honest about what creates real health—optimal function when needs are met and impediments are removed—and we map a practical path you can follow. Instead of arguing over oxalates, seed oils, or soy, we dismantle diet dogmas and return to physiology: amino acids over “protein,” plants as the mineral gateway, carbs as both fuel and structure, and why taste matters for adherence during a cleanse. We walk through a structured terrain reset:...
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
Fear thrives on vague labels; clarity starts with biology. We open by replacing the word “cancer” with “chronically fermenting cells,” so the focus shifts from doom to mechanism: cells favoring fermentation rather than oxidative phosphorylation. That reframe lets us explain PET scans and SUVs in plain language, showing how to distinguish metabolic activity from leftover anatomy, and why a smaller, quiet lesion can mean success even if it’s still visible. From there, we build a full map of he...