[00:01:21] Yeah, but I actually did I still do consultations all over the world, so I do consultations with the gut healthy effects on oral health. And now that I've had this new challenge with cancer, I've been consulting with a number of people that have malignancies. So I'm still working but not seeing patients clinically. [00:01:41][19.4] [00:05:04] What is going on? Because in an ecologist, they do a whole bunch of other tests, a lot of different chemistry, blood work for four malignancies....
Jan 13, 2021•31 min•Ep. 19
[00:04:32] And you know what that did? It got them alkaline. Yeah. So, you know, Bickett back in the day, I didn't know any of this stuff was it seemed like magic to me, but it really was. And it turned out to be a keep thing throughout. Everybody that was successful had an alkaline diet and are certain supplements you can throw in there to help that. I mean, baking soda and water is my favorite drink. Yeah, yeah, yeah. In this after every meal, forget about it. [00:04:58][25.5] [00:05:37] And t...
Jan 06, 2021•42 min•Ep. 18
[00:07:44] But some of those things do nothing to kill. The reason why you got the cancer in the same thing for chemo and radiation that can kill the cancer, but they can make it spread and it's not resolving the reason. So if they had to give anybody that one piece of advice, it would be to work with people and find out. And the really cool thing was, I told you, I worked with so many healers. They all told me the same thing and I told them nothing. [00:08:10][25.6] [00:11:37] So it's amazing t...
Dec 30, 2020•35 min•Ep. 17
[00:02:00] This is this is like as vanilla as you can get into other non of an evidence base of operation. So anyway, in doing that, it's customary to send the tissue out. And so the tissue came back and the numbers were very high and the amount of cancer that was actually on the tissue was know we had to do something about it. [00:03:17] So I caught it early enough that that I had that that it was still localized in one spot. And and I know and I've spoken to plenty of people about it that can ...
Dec 23, 2020•26 min•Ep. 16
[00:01:08] Sure. I was diagnosed with stage two prostate cancer in 2002, September of 02. My urologist said I asked him, do I have to do something? Immediately said, no, just let's just stay in touch. So about nine months later, in June of 2003, I went in for urology appointment and he said, you know, you really have to do something. Now, put it in context. Both of my grandfathers and my father died of prostate cancer. My mother, in fact, died of breast cancer, which I understand pathologically ...
Dec 16, 2020•44 min•Ep. 15
[00:02:52] So that's when I knew that if I survived. Actually, I believe that either way, I was going to survive because I was going to live forever with the God. So if I survived, I was going to do something to help others. [00:03:04][11.8] [00:03:26] Yes, we're all about education, so not just the physicians, but the public, especially the public, because they you just don't know. You only know what you hear, what you read on the Internet, what's what's your oncologist says. And so it's really...
Dec 09, 2020•35 min•Ep. 17
[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...
Dec 02, 2020•31 min•Ep. 14
[00:04:52] And cancer was always this enormous, mysterious sort of dark cloud. And these genetic mutations were just mysteriously appear out of this dark cloud. And this to me didn't make any sense, you know, and some people think that cancer is caused by sort of dark matter in the background of the cell and gives it this sort of mysterious complexity that seems to be unsolvable. And it's total nonsense because, you know, once you understand and it is understanding some key basics about the cell...
Nov 25, 2020•44 min•Ep. 13
[00:04:23] Yeah, because people when you're dealing with metastatic cancer patients say that they always feel that they have this, like you're saying, this cloud over your head all the time, that you you're never going to be able to get free from you can never really run away from because it can rear its ugly head at any time. I mean, what what are some of the what what would you tell people that are diagnosed with metastatic? I mean, how how can they get through that? [00:05:33] So the two thin...
Nov 18, 2020•28 min•Ep. 12
[00:03:00] I mean, what do you how do you feel when someone gives you a cancer diagnosis? It's shock. It's you know, it's devastating. There's fear coursing through your body. It's I had a baby. I had a brand new baby. I was still breast feeding at the time. It was it was is very difficult to comprehend. And in that same breath, at the same time, I also had this fire rise up in me where I was like, I'm going to take care of this. And it was a lot of it had to do with being a new mother and just ...
Nov 11, 2020•29 min•Ep. 11
[00:01:53] And I got back in the beginning of March and I noticed that my I had I had self diagnosed myself, but on my neck area, I had looked it up and it appeared that it looked like a goiter, which has to do with auto immune issues. And so I was like, I wasn't really feeling, you know, terrible or anything. I was having a little bit of shortness of breath, but nothing other than that. I thought that was a little weird, but it didn't really make me run to the doctor. So I went into a routine d...
Nov 04, 2020•26 min•Ep. 10
[00:01:23] I've had issues with my prostate for quite some time. So elevated levels of PSA and. And then, you know, swollen. And so. Been looking at it in terms of, OK, well, is it is it. [00:02:49] Well, I think, you know, my other work at the sanctuary is in mental health and and depression, anxiety, addiction, post-traumatic stress disorder, which I've been, you know, exposed to the Western world of managing that for quite some time. [00:03:13] You know, I think for somebody that gets a diagn...
Oct 28, 2020•10 min•Ep. 9
[00:01:07] Thirty five years. Three decades and a half. Exactly. So I never said doc out. And it's actually part of my story that I was coined the hair doc about a decade ago. So I kind of go by the hair that. [00:02:14] So I will say I actually was volunteering as well. Iron ore, that's a big cancer facility in Arizona and I've been with them for 10 years. I also was a patient coordinator for the Look Good, Feel Good foundation. So when I was diagnosed with renal cell carcinoma, this isn't happ...
Oct 28, 2020•7 min•Ep. 8
[00:01:27] And, you know, this is cervical cancer is not just a cancer that you just cut out. It affects your fertility. It affects your hormones. Just everything was thrown into complete chaos [00:02:26] You found out that it had spread. It was metastatic was stage four. [00:03:24] So I was misdiagnosed for four years, actually. So by the time they found it and by the time they operate still on me to start with it, it already spread to my lymph nodes. [00:04:41] Yes. Well, do not rely on the me...
Oct 28, 2020•8 min•Ep. 7
[00:01:19] Yeah. So you were given three months left to live. And what when were you diagnosed with at that time? [00:01:25] It was in stage 4 adenocarcinoma in the breast. They found it also in my lymph. My brain and my lungs. [00:02:30] They said six months to a wheelchair and less than two years to live. And they were wrong both of those times. And so when they gave me the three months in 2001, I thought, well, OK, they've been wrong before. [00:03:28] There was like die a little bit of diet,...
Oct 28, 2020•9 min•Ep. 6
[00:01:20] When my urologist suggested that I need to have a biopsy, I said, well, you know, I've been doing PSA testing for six years, seven years, whatever. So I'm not too surprised at age forty nine that I would need to have a PSA just to make sure I stay ahead of things. [00:01:57] The reason was in two thousand, which is, you know, couple of years before I had met a woman who had been diagnosed with stage four breast cancer. And when I met her, she no longer had breast cancer. So I was so c...
Oct 28, 2020•7 min•Ep. 5
[00:00:58] Well, Erica, I'm so excited to have you on the show today. I know that you. You're such a health healthy individual. You've been teaching people about how to eat and what to do for many, many years. And you have to tell me a little bit about yourself and what what who who you are and what you stand for. [00:02:32] I've been life coaching quite a bit the whole time anyways. I just didn't have the title. So I had in February left to go get certified in Newport Beach and I was having a f...
Oct 28, 2020•10 min•Ep. 4
[00:01:14] What what what happened? Well, that was in two thousand eight, 2007, actually, when I discovered I had breast cancer and then I had some complications. And so fast forward, I lost a right breast and recovered from E.coli in the operating room. It was quite a saga. [00:02:20] Well, this is the modern library. This is my study. My husband has another study downstairs. He's an art appraiser and a bibliophile. He's a lover of books. [00:03:05] I think the most important thing is to streng...
Oct 28, 2020•8 min•Ep. 3
[00:01:15] I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. November 9th of 2019. It was a huge surprise. My son was just eight months old at the time. I had been watching a lump kind of grow on my neck for about six months. And I just thought it was something hormonal and I figured it would it would go away over time. [00:02:15] I've been deep in a healing journey and I've seen that it's a common scenario with breast cancer and other types of cancer where you have, in fact infected root canal or some other...
Oct 28, 2020•6 min•Ep. 2
Tune in as I get to know the struggles and victories of my guests while battling cancer. We will discuss natural medicine and how it can safely be integrated into traditional oncology care. You are not alone in your struggle. Cancer is probably one of the most dreadful words in the dictionary. Yet almost 50 % of us have been or will be faced with the diagnosis. Suddenly you are faced with sifting through a mountain of information to figure out how to survive this dreadful disease for the sake of...
Jul 14, 2020•1 min•Ep. 1