Participants: Rico Hill (Host), Jim Said, Lydia Calhoun
Series Code: FSH
Program Code: FSH000004
00:04 Are you tired of aching joints? Chronic migraines?
00:08 Those achy feelings that just don't go away? 00:11 Well don't give up. Whoa, whoa, whoa. 00:14 What are you doing? I'm introducing the program. 00:17 Ah, so you're telling people about lifestyle changes 00:20 that they can make and healthy things? 00:22 No, no, no... don't get carried away with yourself. 00:23 I've got a much quicker fix than that today. 00:26 OK, let me guess: surgery. 00:28 No, surgery is a lump sum. I'm talking about 00:31 more consistent like weekly and monthly installments. 00:35 Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. We don't talk about 00:37 drugs on this program. No we don't talk about drugs 00:40 on this program... but pharmaceuticals 00:42 are much better than drugs. 00:44 Look... this is a health show. 00:46 This is a health show where we share information 00:50 with the average, every-day person to help them 00:53 prevent disease and restore health. 00:55 We don't talk about drugs. You know that. 00:57 All right, look, I didn't want to have to do this in public 00:59 but let's just cut to the chase. 01:01 I'm making people sick. People NEED their drugs. 01:06 The pharmaceutical companies... they sponsor shows like this. 01:10 You hear what I'm saying? Run the numbers. 01:12 Numbers... what numbers are you talking about? 01:14 I'm talking about your buy out. It's time for you to go. 01:17 so you need to name your price. 01:19 All right, you continue to fantasize about that one. 01:21 I'm going to go ahead and roll the program and 01:23 we're going to tell the whole world today about how they can 01:26 receive health in something other than a pill bottle. 01:30 You stick around. Roll it. 01:32 We don't talk about drugs... 02:12 Well welcome and thank you for joining us here 02:15 in the studio of From Sickness To Health 02:17 where I'm your host and I'm going to stand between 02:21 sickness and health and help you along in understanding 02:25 these things. And today we have a lively program 02:28 for you. But I'd like to start out today with a word of prayer 02:31 and with some scripture because it will lead and guide 02:35 our discussion. So if you don't mind, 02:37 we're just going to have a quick word of prayer. 02:39 Father in heaven, we thank you for Your Word 02:41 and pray that You will bless it today. In Jesus' name, Amen. 02:45 So in the Bible it says... In Jeremiah chapter 46 and verse 11 02:51 it says: "In vain shall you use many medicines. " 02:56 And also in Jeremiah it says in Jeremiah chapter 30 03:00 and verse 13: "There is none to plead 03:04 thy cause that thou mayest be bound up. 03:09 Thou hast no healing medicines. " 03:12 Now that's from the King James version. 03:14 Today joining us here in the studio 03:17 is once again our good friend - a very good friend to this 03:21 program - Dr. Jim Said, who is a board-certified chiropractor 03:26 and a naturopathic doctor. 03:28 And he always comes and shares just wonderful information 03:32 about the physiology of this body and the physiology 03:35 of disease and gets into the understanding of these things. 03:38 And I know that you appreciate that. 03:39 But today also joining us is someone who has 03:43 a lot of insight in our topic today. 03:46 Our topic's going to be about pharmaceuticals 03:49 as you've already seen. But she has some insights 03:53 because she is a former pharmaceutical executive. 03:57 So she knows the ins and outs and all the things that happen 04:00 behind the scenes. 04:01 And with that, I welcome both of you to the program: 04:04 Dr. Jim Said and Lydia Calhoun. Thank you so much. 04:08 Thank you for being with us. 04:09 So today we're talking about medicines or in some... 04:14 some vernaculars... some terminologies 04:18 it's "Big Pharma. " Um-hmm. Yeah? 04:21 So we're going to talk about medicines and pharmaceuticals 04:23 and how this is affecting us. 04:26 As we saw in the opening there 04:28 in the segment we saw that people are taking medications 04:32 for so many different things, right? Yes. 04:35 They are looking for health in a pill or in a bottle. 04:40 Well, before we jump into the discussion - 04:43 I know you all are ready to go - um-hmm - 04:45 before we get started let's take a look at what 04:48 our friend Sickness has to say about this subject. 04:55 Well, what I've got here is a cocktail of medicine. 04:59 These pills here: they help you go to sleep. 05:02 These pills: they help you wake up. 05:03 These will help you go to the bathroom; 05:05 these will make sure you don't use the bathroom too much. 05:08 These over here: they're for depression 05:10 because imagine: after all that Americans are depressed. 05:13 Now these over here... these are my favorite pills. 05:16 They really don't do anything. 05:17 The detail is in the fine print. 05:20 It's kind of like a lie... but isn't. 05:23 Oh, and these pills over here: they cause side effects 05:25 but THESE pills, oh man, they treat those side effects. 05:29 And I think one of these pills will help you get back 05:31 to normal. And oh well, the blue pill... 05:34 that's a different episode. 05:36 You know, the great thing about it is: all these pills 05:39 will keep you forever addicted and sick. 05:41 I love the pharmaceutical industry. 05:44 Back to you, Rico. 05:47 Oh boy! Well that would be really funny if it weren't 05:50 true, right? Sadly. Very true! 05:52 Very true. As we get started talking about this subject 05:55 of pharmaceuticals and the rate at which people are 06:01 depending upon drugs for their health, 06:06 I think we should sort of get a sense of how 06:10 this industry works in relationship to the doctors 06:14 who are prescribing. And Lydia has a lot of information 06:17 about this because you've been in that world. 06:19 So how does it all work? What's the relationship between 06:21 the doctor and you know someone like yourself 06:24 who used to be a pharmaceutical executive. 06:27 You know, I think the #1 issue is gaining the trust 06:31 of the physician. And it really is a relationship-building 06:34 industry. And so that's actually paramount to anything: 06:38 winning their trust and letting them know that they can trust 06:42 you to give them accurate information. 06:44 And then from there... name your price. 06:47 So when you say gaining their trust, 06:50 so if they trust the pharmaceutical executive - 06:53 yes? Yes... then whatever the pharmaceutical 06:56 executive... whatever infor- mation is being fed to them... 06:59 then it is pretty much seen as the truth? It's the gospel. 07:03 That's true. And then they follow along those lines. 07:06 So what I'm trying... want to understand here 07:08 and I want for our audience to understand 07:10 is... So, is this a relationship that is built 07:15 on health? Is it built on or based on 07:20 the drugs being... or these medications being produced, 07:25 developed, so that you can absolutely have better health? 07:29 Cured of your diseases? Is that what's it's about? 07:32 No! That is not what it's about. What it is about 07:36 is increasing market share. And in many cases 07:40 it is about literally creating a need out of sometimes nothing 07:45 depending upon what drug it is that you're talking about. 07:48 So at the very crux of the pharmaceutical industry 07:53 is greed and money. Money's driving this? Yes. 07:58 So when the pharmaceutical exec would go in - 08:04 'cause I've seen this where sometimes I've been 08:07 at the doctor's office. And I would see someone come in 08:10 dressed very well, you know. And clearly they had 08:15 some things and they would go off with the doctor and they 08:17 share some things. The next thing I knew 08:19 they'd have some samples. Is that the relationship? 08:23 They would come and then sometimes... my sister-in-law 08:26 happens to be a doctor... and you know there are lunches 08:29 that take place. Tell me about the lunches 08:32 and the visits to the doctor's office. What is that all about? 08:34 So in some physician's cases it's just very difficult to get 08:38 any time, any concentrated time with them 08:41 and doing a luncheon is the best way of actually 08:43 being somewhat guaranteed of having a portion of 08:47 undivided attention. That's the purpose of doing 08:52 a luncheon. The purpose of the samples 08:55 is either to get a patient "kick started" 08:58 on medicine before they can get it filled at pharmacy 09:03 or some physicians would use pharmaceutical samples to 09:07 offset the cost of the prescription for the patient. 09:11 I see. OK... so I want to make sure that we understand also 09:16 that we're not bashing drugs. 09:19 Right? I mean, there are some drugs that are needed. 09:23 In a trauma situation they're needed, yes? 09:26 Pain killers when you have had some form of surgery... 09:29 surgery that was absolutely necessary it's needed. Um-hmm. 09:33 But we're talking about when drugs are used 09:37 for simple lifestyle issues. In other words, things that 09:42 you could change yourself just by changing your lifestyle: 09:46 what you eat, how you exercise, and so forth. 09:49 But yet instead of doing those things that are necessary 09:52 you go to a drug. And this is... this is something 09:58 that is very near and dear to my heart. 10:00 I know that it's important to you all, too. 10:02 That this is coming and I believe it's hurting more 10:05 than it's helping. And now it is even going to a point 10:08 where we are seeing that there are drugs that are being 10:13 prescribed for children unnecessarily. 10:17 And I think we have a little video that really speaks to 10:21 this. So I want to turn to that and then let's come back 10:24 and talk about this because the drug is the statin drug. Um-hmm. 10:28 You know some things about that, right? 10:30 All right. Let's take a look and let's come back and talk 10:31 about that. 10:34 Heart disease is the #1 cause of death in this country and 10:37 experts say the battle against it cannot begin too early. 10:41 In fact, America's pediatricians came out today with a dramatic 10:45 recommendation: children as young as 2 should have their 10:48 cholesterol tested. And as needed, kids as young as 8 10:52 should start taking cholesterol lowering drugs. 10:55 We begin tonight with Nancy Cordis. 10:57 Cholesterol disease used to be associated with adults. 11:02 Not anymore. Eating healthy is important, right? 11:04 Pediatric cardiologist Craig Sable says he's seen 11:07 kids as young as 5 and 6 with cholesterol problems. 11:11 I thing the sheer number of children that are overweight, 11:14 are less active, and have significant elevations of 11:18 cholesterol has grown exponentially since I've started 11:21 practicing 13 years ago. 11:23 And with the evidence mounting that elevated cholesterol 11:26 at this age can lead to heart disease at this age 11:29 the American Academy of Pediatrics is issuing aggressive 11:32 new guidelines. They say children who are overweight, 11:36 obese, or have a family history of cholesterol disease 11:40 should have their cholesterol tested as early as age 2 11:44 and no later than age 10. 11:46 And for the first time they recommend treating some 11:49 children as young as 8 with cholesterol-lowering drugs 11:53 or statins. The old guidelines said statins should be used 11:56 only as a last resort and only in children 10 and up. 12:01 Can you believe that? 12:04 In a word, that's unconscionable. 12:07 Ummm... what do you mean? Because what you're looking at 12:13 is you're talking about a person that hasn't had... 12:17 hasn't even begun to live a life and actually create 12:20 a lifestyle. And they're test- ing... they're creating a need 12:24 for putting a child on a statin out of thin air. 12:29 I mean, one of the messages we actually talked about 12:32 which wasn't even an FDA- approved message was that 12:35 statins are safe enough to be put in the water. 12:38 Everybody should be on a statin. Whoa! Whoa! 12:41 Wait a minute. Let's understand. 12:43 Let's define this a little bit because I think 12:46 before we can really delve into that and how egregious 12:49 that is, what is a statin drug? 12:53 That's a general classification of a medication. 12:56 But what is it for, doctor? What is a statin drug for? 12:59 Let me give you the concept. 13:01 The statin drug is intended to reduce a particular form of 13:05 molecule that carries fats. 13:08 Let me describe what I mean by that. OK. 13:11 Is the "buzzword" cholesterol here? 13:13 The buzzword is cholesterol but it's a much bigger issue. 13:16 OK. And that's my frustration with the issue of statins and 13:19 cholesterol that people don't even understand the issue 13:21 behind it all. So let me give you the concept very simply. 13:25 When we eat fats - yep - cholesterol from animal fats, 13:29 triglycerides, fatty acids, 13:32 fat-soluble nutrients, they're all fat soluble 13:36 but they're not water soluble. 13:38 They don't dissolve in water. 13:40 Now the blood is a water medium. 13:42 It's water in the blood that carries all of this. 13:44 So the body has to have these fats put into something that can 13:48 be carried in the water. OK. So I call these boats. 13:51 OK. Very good. And there's five different sizes of these 13:54 fat carrying boats. LDL cholesterol - 13:59 LDL stands for lipoproteins - 14:02 so these low density lipoproteins - 14:05 a certain kind of boat in size - carries cholesterol and 14:08 triglycerides and these other fat-soluble nutrients. 14:11 Um-hmm. That's how the body delivers fat to the tissues. 14:15 Now here's what happens. Take cholesterol for an example. 14:20 When the Lord made cholesterol He made one of the most 14:22 exquisitely beautiful molecules you can imagine. 14:25 It's exquisite in it's structure, it's design, 14:29 it's complexity. You change one tiny part of that molecule 14:32 and it becomes, say, testosterone. 14:34 Umm. Another part of it it becomes estrogen. 14:37 Another part of it it becomes cortisol 14:40 regulating physiology. Doing different things. 14:43 Absolutely. But let me understand something. 14:45 For the audience's sake, HLD is the good cholesterol 14:50 and that's the one you're talking about in this instance, 14:53 yes? Here's my... 'Cause there's two different... 14:55 Let me just make sure that we understand. 14:56 There are two types of cholesterol. There is HDL 14:59 and usually, maybe you've heard from your doctor, that's 15:02 the good one. But then they'll tell you that the LDL, 15:05 that's the bad one. So when they look at your blood work 15:07 they're distinguishing between HDL and LDL. 15:11 So continue with that - OK - as a frame of reference. 15:15 Technically there's 4 kinds of particles that carry cholesterol 15:19 but let's limit it to the two most obvious. OK. 15:22 So-called "good" HDL - high density - and so called "bad" 15:27 LDL - low density. All right. 15:29 They're both good... we need them both. 15:32 But here's the problem: LDLs carry the cholesterol and fats 15:37 out to the tissues. From the liver? From the liver 15:40 and HDL brings it back to the liver for re-processing. 15:45 So if you carry more out than you bring back 15:47 then you're depositing much more than you should. 15:51 That's the problem. So here's what actually occurs: 15:55 The liver manufactures cholesterol. 15:57 Not just what you eat, it's also what you manufacture. 16:00 You carry that out. If you're eating a lot of fats, 16:03 you're carrying a lot of them through the bloodstream 16:05 to deal with these things. The problem is in a highly 16:09 oxygen-rich environment 16:11 and the most oxygen-rich blood goes to the heart 16:13 and to the brain. The blood is moving oxygen 16:16 through the body at all times. Yes. You're breathing, you're 16:19 oxygenating the blood, and the most oxygen-rich blood 16:22 goes to the heart first and then to the brain. 16:24 So it oxidizes whatever's in the blood rapidly. 16:28 When cholesterol is being carried through in an excess 16:31 it oxidizes and creates what's called a fatty streak 16:35 inside the artery. That then begins to oxidize further 16:39 and starts to damage the arterial wall. 16:42 Now that wall is one line thick. One layer thick of cells called 16:48 endothelial cells. 16:50 Those cells generate a gas called nitric oxide. 16:55 Nitric oxide coats the inside of the artery 16:59 and coats all the blood elements: red blood cells, 17:01 white blood cells, platelets so they move through like Teflon 17:04 so nothing sticks. Nothing sticks. That's it. 17:08 Now when we damage the artery with that fatty streak 17:11 or we damage with acid foods like sugars as an example - 17:14 white refined sugars - white refined sugars, processed sugars 17:18 then we start damaging the inside lining 17:21 we reduce that nitric oxide and the blood gets sticky. 17:24 Ah! Then what happens: you form this fatty streak. 17:28 White blood cells have to come in, eat that up. 17:31 They create what's called "the foamy pus. " 17:33 That's technically what it's called. 17:35 Will inflammation come as a result of that? 17:37 Now it inflames - uh-huh - so now scar tissue forms 17:40 platelets that cause blood to clot, stick. 17:43 You get salts of calcium and magnesium that stick further 17:46 and you form now a plaque - um-hmm - hardening of the 17:49 arteries. And as it grows it creates a thrombus 17:52 which can then break off or clot the area 17:56 and now you end up with a heart attack or a stroke. 17:58 That's the problem. Now, here's the issue. But what are statins? 18:01 OK... go ahead. Here's the issue with statins: 18:03 LDLs come in 5 sizes of boats: three big ones, two small ones. 18:08 The smallest ones can actually get into the artery wall. 18:13 Statins clear the big three that don't do the damage. 18:18 They're just carrying fats. Um-hmm. 18:21 The ones that are doing the damage aren't touched by the 18:23 statins. That's the big issue. 18:26 That's a very big issue. I want to talk about that one 18:29 on the other side of our "fair reporting" 18:33 because we like to go out and see what people are saying 18:36 on the streets. Do they understand this issue? 18:38 Do they get that using medication for lifestyle issues 18:44 is the way to go? Do they understand that this 18:46 is causing more of a problem than solving their problem? 18:49 So let's join Sickness out there. 18:52 I think he is somewhere out there talking to people... 18:55 talking to people and asking them what they think about 18:57 this issue. So let's go to Sickness. 19:02 All right. I'm here with my wonderful friend Monique. 19:06 I want to ask you about some- thing that everybody seems to 19:08 love these days... it's like candy: pharmaceutical drugs. 19:11 Umm. Umm. You love them too, don't you? 19:13 Love 'em. I knew it! 19:15 Are you addicted to them? Yeah. What's your favorite one? 19:17 Ubiquinol is what I need. 19:20 Do you take any drugs... like, legal drugs? 19:22 I'm asthmatic so therefore - asthma - sometimes I take my 19:26 Albuterol inhaler. 19:27 I have to be honest with you: I love pharmaceuticals. Umm? 19:29 I think it's the most amazing business model ever invented. 19:33 What do you think of pharmaceuticals? 19:35 You know, there's a time and a place for those. 19:37 Time and a place. Face it: Americans love their pills. 19:42 Who are we to tell them no? You? 19:45 Not me... ha, ha, ha, ha... definitely not me. 19:53 Back to you, Rico. 19:56 Ah, ha, ha, ha... whoo! 20:01 Well, people do love their drugs, don't they? 20:03 Yes. Whether they are prescribed from a doctor 20:06 or whether they're getting some- thing that's over-the-counter 20:08 they enjoy their drugs. 20:12 So we were talking about statin drugs and HDL 20:16 cholesterol and LDL cholesterol 20:19 and how the body basically needs both 20:23 but what's happening is the fat in the diet... 20:28 So this is not something that is just naturally occurring, 20:32 correct? Correct. This is be- cause of what we're putting in, 20:35 what it's causing. And it is then damaging 20:39 the arterial walls - the endothelial walls as you 20:42 describe them - that's causing plaque, 20:45 that breaks off, and then we either suffer some stroke 20:49 or heart attack, right? Exactly. And so I would imagine 20:53 that most times people are just walking around 20:55 with an inflamed situation. 20:58 And the common result of inflammation is some type of 21:03 scar tissue, yes? Yes. So statin drugs, this cholesterol 21:08 lowering drug is designed to remove 21:13 that cholesterol? Lower the LDL cholesterol? 21:15 Correct. But it's not really taking care of the problem 21:18 as long as you're actually putting the fats and so forth 21:22 in the body. That's exactly it. In fact, 21:24 that's the bottom line. As long as we keep putting in 21:27 high density fats or high amounts of fats in our diet - 21:31 oils, fats of all kinds, French fries... Fried foods, 21:34 French fries? You got it. Yeah. 21:37 Now you've forced the body to have to carry that 21:39 and now you're going to increase LDLs just from what you ate. 21:43 OK, we have a short amount of time so I need to... 21:45 we need to kind of bring this together because this is 21:47 fascinating. So there are other things... 21:49 So statin drugs to lower cholesterol... that's not just 21:52 it... there are other drugs. 21:53 What other things are we talking about here? 21:55 Well, one of the top selling drugs right now is an 21:58 anti-depressant. An anti-depressant? 22:00 So for people who are depressed. People who are taking 22:01 drugs instead of doing what? What's the? You know, because 22:04 we have to understand, people need to understand 22:06 what SHOULD we be doing instead of taking drugs. 22:09 Well, we should be exercising. 22:13 'Cause a lot of times people just want to take some type of 22:15 weight loss drug - right? - instead of just walking 22:19 every day. Exactly. We could be walking, we could be 22:21 exercising, right? Umm... what else are we talking about? 22:25 We're talking about "Well, I eat a lot of food 22:28 and then I get heartburn, I get indigestion. 22:30 I'm going to get some... some type of? " 22:32 Nexium or some kind of a heartburn regulator if you will. 22:37 OK. So we're going to take some type of drug that's going 22:40 to actually deal with that when really we caused 22:42 the problem in the first place. Exactly. 22:44 You're talking about a need of addressing lifestyle 22:47 at its core. And really, what I saw in the pharmaceutical 22:52 industry was greatly lacking in that area. 22:55 That physicians have such a patient load to see 22:58 that they don't spend the time. They can't if they're going to 23:01 make any money. They don't spend the time educating patients 23:04 on lifestyle and what's actually causing the disease. 23:07 Whoa! Now Lydia, you just said something really important 23:11 to this program: educating people. 23:13 I always refer to Dr. Jim as the doctor who 23:17 educates his patients. He shares, spends time with them. 23:20 This is very important to our health that we become 23:24 educated about our health and what is best for us. 23:29 For example, most people don't know 23:31 that diabetes in most instances - 23:36 most instances - type II dia- betes is completely reversible. 23:40 That's right. Is that right? In thirty days. 23:43 In thirty days! Now how would you reverse diabetes 23:46 instead of taking the common solution? 23:50 What would you do? It's a lifestyle thing. 23:52 What are the things that you could do to reverse diabetes? 23:54 Here's what we've seen clinically. 23:56 Plant based diet. A plant based diet! 23:58 What does that mean exactly? 24:00 Eating that which comes from the ground that's edible: 24:02 fruits, vegetables, leafy greens. 24:05 Would that include nuts and seeds? 24:06 Nuts and seeds in moderation. In moderation? OK. 24:10 Root foods... vegetables of all kinds. 24:13 All of your produce. Yes! In fact, research has come out 24:16 proving that the most efficient way to reverse hardening of the 24:19 arteries: eat your greens. Eat your greens! 24:23 OK. What else could you do to reverse diabetes? 24:27 Exercise is crucial. Exercise. Daily? 24:31 Daily exercise... Weekly? No, daily exercise 24:34 and deep breathing and stretch- ing, maintaining flexibility. 24:38 In fact, exercise increases HDL cholesterol. 24:42 Wait. I think we need to slow down on that one right there. 24:45 Did you hear that? Exercising increases the good 24:49 cholesterol. Yes! That's a good one. 24:53 That's a good one. What else? What else? 24:54 Getting sunlight. Converting vitamin D in the body 24:57 to move calcium more efficiently and also support 25:00 the immune system. These are essentials. 25:02 We take diabetics. We get them exercising regularly, 25:06 walking, eating properly, and they start to reverse 25:10 their pathology. So what I just heard was 25:12 a plant based diet. So that means taking out the fats 25:15 out of your food. Basically, whenever you're eating anything 25:18 that comes from a meat source you are taking in saturated fat. 25:22 This is going to increase your bad cholesterol 25:26 and cause problems in your arterial walls. 25:28 Then you mentioned sunshine. You mentioned... 25:31 What about water? What part does water play? 25:33 We only have a couple seconds left, but... Water is ESSENTIAL. 25:34 It's a cleansing system to the body. Water is essential. 25:37 Rest? The body is primarily water. Rest is essential 25:40 to recover. So good sleep for recovery. Exactly. 25:43 Sleep between 10 and 2 cleanses the brain; 25:45 between 2 and 6 reduces inflammation from the body 25:48 from the previous day's stress. 25:50 We need that 10 to 6 hours, 10 PM to 6 AM, 25:54 to be able to properly heal. 25:57 You know? I tell you what: it just seems to me 25:59 Dr. Said and Lydia, we are going to have to pick this up 26:05 in another program because we have so much more to talk about, 26:07 don't we? True. There's so much more to talk about 26:10 on this subject and this issue. 26:12 Now, to just bring into summary: we are realizing 26:16 that it is entirely possible for us to restore and recover 26:20 our health by not drug medication 26:23 but through lifestyle changes: water, sunshine, rest. 26:28 You've in tune to From Sickness To Health. 26:31 See you next time. 26:35 You know, I was in an accident some time ago 26:38 and the pain was so severe I tell you 26:40 you could not have pried those pain killers out of my mouth. 26:44 Make no mistake about it: there are times 26:47 when someone is going to have to take a prescription drug 26:50 for some pain relief or some other health issue. 26:54 But to take medication unnecessarily for simple 26:58 lifestyle practices oftentimes will lead to dependency 27:02 and unnecessary side effects. 27:05 You know, to take a pill for something as simple as 27:07 weight loss when you can do something as simple as 27:10 change dietary habits or drink more water 27:14 and exercise. Change is hard, I know. 27:18 In fact, I would even say it's a little pricey... 27:21 but the results are priceless and you'll feel great. 27:27 Rico, I agree with you: change is hard. 27:30 Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa... did I just hear you correctly? 27:32 Are you agreeing with me? Now don't get too excited. 27:34 Change is so hard that people aren't going to do it. 27:37 That is extremely pessimistic! 27:40 Oh, please... old people without pills 27:43 is like kids without candy... they love 'em! 27:45 Until the side effects come along. And they make pills 27:48 for side effects. There you have it. 27:51 This has been our show today. I'm going to end this show 27:53 with what I always do, and that's with III John 1:2. 27:58 "Beloved, I wish above all things that thou mayest prosper 28:02 and be in health even as thy soul prospers. " 28:05 You have heard the word of the Lord today 28:08 and you've gotten some strong information. 28:10 Now go be healthy. I'm Rico Hill 28:13 and I'm the pill-popping blue guy saying 28:16 Maranatha and goodbye. |
Revised 2016-03-02