Find out what's making you sick and how to heal. Anthony William is the Medical Medium. Hello, I'm Anthony William and you're listening to the Medical Medium radio show where each week I talk about the most advanced healing information and secrets. Can you believe that? About health, much of which is not found anywhere else and is decades ahead of what's out there now. Yes, that's what's happening. It's been happening since age four and I've been getting information from spirit. Not just information. Not just information. I hear a voice perfectly clear in the ear, just like your friends talking to you, in real time. I could take my hand, wave it across the ear and block it, but you still hear it because it's in real time and it's going around your hand a little bit. As if someone was talking to you and you put your hands through your ear and you go, "La, la, la, la, la, la, la. I don't want to hear you." Like that. And so I've had to spend the rest of my life, especially my childhood, trying to block it in any way I can, any way I could, trying to fight it, but it wasn't going to work. It wasn't going to work. And this information comes through from spirit, which I've been calling spirit since age four, and to help people recover and everything else around it. Because who has 10 or 20, 30 years to wait for answers on multiple sclerosis, which we're covering today. Today's show is about multiple sclerosis, MS. We're going to cover it. You know, it's funny. MS is something that has to be covered on its own. It just has to be. It's one of those where, you know, just in a way, kind of, you know, like ALS has to be covered on its own. Certain things have to be covered on their own. MS has such a history behind it. We're not joking around today. We're not joking around. So I would, you know, get your big boy shoes on. I would, I don't know, fasten your seatbelt, get a cup of tea, put extra honey and lemon in it. I don't know. I'm just saying, whatever we got to do, put your sneakers on. You know, whatever we got to do. Because this is no joke today. We're serious about it. So that's today. Check out, look, you know, look you guys, MS is important actually because I talk about MS in a way in Thyroid Healing Book. The Thyroid Healing Book. But I talk about 88 symptoms and conditions in the Thyroid Healing Book that really with the thyroid in some way. It's the most comprehensive thyroid book out there. Grab it if you can. You know, I mean, I don't want to sound like a broken record. I'm that charged about it though. That charged. You know, when I wrote that book, I was like, I'm not letting anybody down. I'm going to do everything I can. I'm going to fight for it. I said, Spirit, just download. Let me hear it. Let me hear it. So I agonized hearing spirits every single word. I had to write down word for word because those aren't my words in the books. Those aren't my words. Someone said to me one day, it was fairly recently, it was a couple months ago or something, they said to me, they said, you know, I like the way you write. I like the way you do. You do your stuff. I like the way you, you know, I like your information. I like your information. And I said, well, it's not my information. I said, what do you mean it's not your information? I go, did you read the first book? It's Spirit's information. It's the most advanced information. He said, you know, I read the first book. I just, I didn't really just, it didn't equate for some reason. I go, yeah, it's Spirit's words. So in the Thyroid book, you know, I just, I said to Spirit, don't hold back. We're not messing around. I don't care whose feelings I got to hurt, what I got to put in here, what secrets have to go in here. This has got to get done. This has got to get done because people need this. They need to become experts in their thyroid health and more than thyroid health. Because it's not just thyroid health. That's the whole point. It's more. It's comprehensive on thyroid, but it's much, much more. And it's got to be in people's hands. And Spirit said, okay, let's do it. Let's do it. That's what I'm here for, Spirit said. That's what I'm here for. And I said, yeah, well, that's what I'm here for too, obviously. So that's the whole thing. So check it out when you get a chance. You know, check it out when you get a chance. So today's about multiple sclerosis. So we may as well get started in. Let's get dialed in for this. Let's do it and get dialed in. Let's do it. I want to talk about the history a little bit. Is that okay? Can you guys handle the history a little bit? What I mean by that is some people hate history. They hate it. And they'll just be like, oh, I don't want a history class. No, no, it's not a history class where this is history. This is how it is. It's just this boring stuff. No, this is. I'm going to give you the classified stuff. Classified. I'm going to give you the non-disclosed stuff. You know, that kind of stuff. And that's what you need. That's what you need in the history. So to begin with, multiple sclerosis. OK, the first signs of it and the first symptoms of it. OK, all happened. All happened around the 19, late 1940s. This is when this is when the boom was happening. The hormonal boom where where all of a sudden women were they were just feeling like, you know, not good. Having symptoms. They were tired. They were not feeling good. They were going through depression, was kicking up. All these different things were starting to kick up. And that was brand new to the medical establishment. Brand new stuff. You know, the offices were getting filled up with women with the same complaints. Nobody knew what was going on. They didn't know what was going on. So back to what I've talked about before. That's when lazy, crazy, liar. OK, women were called liars. This is, I mean, really called liars. This is no joke. You know, looking for attention. Women were looking for attention. And, you know, they're lazy. They're crazy. They're looking for attention. They were bored. If you were wealthy, if you had money, you weren't called crazy at the doctor's office. There was a massive class difference at the doctor's office. You know, today, it's not like that. I mean, it could be to some degree for all I know there. But it's not normally like that today. It's not like that. But there was a class difference back then. That means if, you know, if Mrs. Ferguson had a mansion, and she had the same symptoms, you know, same symptoms as Mrs. O'Connell, all right, and Mrs. O'Connell just, you know, lived in a small dwelling somewhere in a neighborhood on the other side of the tracks, what would happen was, Mrs. Ferguson, she would get told that she's not crazy. She would get told that she was just kind of bored. Maybe she needs to take on a venture. Maybe she needs to do some charity work. That's what she was told. And Mrs. O'Connell, she was told she was nuts, plain old nuts looking for attention. She had a rubber stamp put on her document. That's how it was. If you came to the doctor with symptoms like weakened legs, feeling tired, feeling out of sorts, not feeling good in different ways, you know, not just a fatigue, a little bit of depression, a little too much anxiety, all of this, all of this, you got the rubber stamp treatment. And so women were filing in. Is this interesting or what? Is this interesting? Because I find it interesting. Maybe it's just me. Maybe it's just me when I find this stuff really interesting. Don't you guys? And so everybody's filing in. The hormonal movement was being, you know, was being built up right there because the medical world was working on hormones at the time. They were working on hormones at the time. They're playing around with all the horse's hormones, right? All the mare's urine and everything. And they were playing around and they were learning how to synthesize. They were learning how to process, how to synthesize, how to pharmaceutically synthesize in a way that they never did before. This is all after World War II. This is all after all the just terrible experiments they did medically on the Jews and everything else. This is when science was taking a turn, you know, all that stuff. The genome project was starting up. We were getting interested in that kind of thing. But the mare's urine was in the works because of all this. How to manipulate hormones in which way, which how, what way. And that was happening. Well, the perfect scenario kicked in. Perfect scenario. Menopause, perimenopause, postmenopause, which never existed prior to 1940. Meaning, meaning menstruation stopped, but that was about it. Menstruation stopped and that was about it. Women normally felt better, more energy, more sexually active. You know, libido went up, all these different things. Everything opposite that you hear today. OK. And so what was happening, though, is there were there were viral issues exploding on the scene. Starting up. That was the whole thing. Viral issues were exploding on the scene, just starting to rev up. Viruses that got into people when they were one years of age in 1901. When they were one years of age in 1891. When they were, you know, eight years old in 1899. When they were, I mean, what I mean started up, viruses started getting into people. You're probably getting to where I'm going. You know where I'm talking about now. And these viruses took time to do their thing because they were docile. They were rooting at the time and they were docile. And they amped up. But not only did they amp up, but radiation amped up because radiation, World War Two. World War Two is more responsible for menopause, perimenopause, postmenopause. And you're wondering now, like, what's he talking about? Why is he talking about hormonal stuff? I thought we were on multiple sclerosis. So just, you know, bear with me. Bear with me. So World War Two had a lot to do with it because when the bomb went off, it shot up a tremendous amount of radiation dust up in the air. Radioactive dust up in the air. That dust is still falling today. But what happened was that dust started to fall a little bit also by 1950, by 19, as that decade was moving on. Not only that, DDT was being sprayed everywhere in the parks, everywhere. People were bathing in it. You ate DDT purposely. There'd be a DDT. Say DDT like ten times in a row really fast. I don't think you could do it. There'd be a salesman selling DDT at every single housewife's doorstep. Every single one. Saying, "Well, if you don't have a garden, here's what you need it for. Put it on your flowers. You don't have a flower, you don't have flowers, here's what you need it. You need to put it on your, spray it on your food as a nutritional supplement. As a nutritional supplement." It was like this campaign of evil and darkness. This campaign of evil and darkness. Is this a campfire story? It's turning out to be like a campfire story. And this evil and darkness was that dangerous, lethal, ugly chemical getting into people. Getting into them fast. That's another reason right there between the radiation that plussed the viruses. It kicked off the hormonal push, meaning the hormones were already being developed. That was already happening. That manipulation was already in the works. But what a perfect chance because by 1958, 1957, so many women were complaining that the hormones were just about ready off the shelf. Meaning at the doctor's office for prescription and bam, hey, this is what you need for your symptoms. And really it didn't help. It didn't help a whole bunch. It made a lot of people sicker. We know that. We know the history. So the deal is though, all these symptoms were occurring. Women were either crazy and then they got the hormones. Because you know what? Why not blame it on their hormones? What a perfect doubt. It was so perfect. What a man thing to do. What a man thing to do. We still do it now. And we train also women doctors to do it too to women. Which we train them. But it's such, such, such a thing to do now. And then we try to prove it with all the best testing and everything. Oh no, no, we try to prove it now. But here's the deal. Here's the deal. All these different symptoms we're filing in. All these symptoms that were neurological. Weird tingles and numbness. Aches and pains. Empathy. Strange feelings in hands. Feet. Little touches of what feels like neuropathy. Blurry eyes when they shouldn't be blurry after the eye exam was fine and dandy. You know, constant mild headaches. All these different things. And women weren't taken serious. They weren't taken serious until enough men got some symptoms and went to the doctor's offices. It's the first time multiple sclerosis was taken serious. They only take it serious in the old days if a man complains. Because a man can't be telling a lie and being manipulated because women were just manipulating. That's all. Women were just the manipulators back then in the old days. They were the manipulators. Of course we know they weren't. But they were in the profession. That's why the profession barely let any women in. Any profession. Whether it be doctor, lawyer, whatever. Any profession. Women were barely let in the door. They had the receptionist job at best or secretary job at best. And they had to be quiet and not speak their opinion. We know this. But because women were so manipulated, because that's the man's work back then in that day. It took men getting sick with tingles and numbness. Some aches and pains. Some fatigue. It was a little bit more unexplained. Not a lot of men complained. Because they didn't complain. They had to stay stoic. Because if a man did complain, he lost his job. Bam. Job gone. Just like that. Bam. Job gone. Thrown in the trash. Some men had to be calm and cool about it. They couldn't really freak out about their symptoms. Meaning, not freak out. Let the world know. Which is so insane. Because thank God for women for letting the world know about their symptoms. And because they knew they had to protect their children. They knew they had to do things that are good in the world. And they knew they had to not only do it for themselves. Women always had an intuition that branched out much further for the wellness of humankind. But enough men complained about some tingles and numbness and aches and pains and some fatigue and some blurry eyes and stuff like that. And that's how multiple sclerosis was taken seriously. Is that unbelievable? But it took a long time. The only time a neurological disorder, and see there could be a psychiatrist listening now and be like, "That's not it." There could be a very seasoned psychiatrist right now who's 80 years old that's listening to this and thinking back to back in his day with his colleagues remembering a woman with a neurological condition and being treated medically. And he might be saying, "Oh, that's not how I remember it." Let me tell you something. The only time a neurological condition was taken seriously back in the old days was if it's seeable. Seen by the doctor's eyes. That means a tremor. Like a tremor. You know, like your arm shaking. Okay, so you can get that Parkinson's diagnosis. That means your arm, you're getting involuntary, autotonic spasms. Like bam, bam, your foot goes out there. Bam, bam, your foot goes out. Your leg goes out. Your neck's like twirling around a little bit and shaking. You know, something that they can see. And then yeah, they treat it medically and they knew it was a neurological condition in the old days. Of course, of course. Okay, I'm talking about what isn't seen by the eye. What isn't seen by the eye. Women could literally be going blind from signs of multiple sclerosis or neurological condition. Feeling so fatigued they can't get out of bed. But if it wasn't seeable by the doctor, it was horse crap. Horse crap. You see what I'm saying? So this is a little bit of history. You gotta go into the history. If you don't go into the history, you can't get the nuggets out. Because the nuggets are, you know, you can't get the nuts and bolts together. The nuts and bolts. Because one thing that Spirit likes to do is offer things, you know, chock full of nuts. Chock full of nuts. I talked to somebody a while back and they were like, "You know, your books are chock full of nuts." And that made me really laugh. They said, "It's so packed it's chock full of nuts." Now I say that all the time. And you need those bits and pieces, those nuggets. You need that can that's rattling around those nuts and bolts or those pennies at the bottom and those paper clips. You need that. You need that hardware. And that's what the history really is important. That's what the history is about. That's why it's so critical. So as multiple sclerosis moved on down the line and got its first diagnosis as time went on and everything, treatment was completely, completely backwards and wrong. Terrifyingly wrong treatment. And it led a lot of people to suffer greatly. They didn't have to suffer. They did not have to suffer. And so many did over the decades. And so it's important to know, you know, in this time, in this day and age right now, it's important to know how to deal with it, how to watch for it. What is it? What's going on? What started it? What's causing it? So as I talk about in Book One and I talk about it much more in a much more deeper way in the Thyroid book, as far as the cause of so many different symptoms and conditions, it's a viral issue. So it's viral inflammation. And I know you've listened to my Epstein Barr shows, but the Thyroid book, I go beyond. I asked Spirit to give me information I've never provided both via radio show or in any book so far. So it's really, like I said, it's packed. And but Epstein Barr is one of the biggest responsible makers of multiple sclerosis. The other responsible maker is just negligence in our systems, you know, in our system negligence like the like, you know, heavy metals, toxic, toxic, heavy metals, like the mercury and, you know, the copper and the aluminum, the lead nickel, arsenic, cadmium. You know, and that right there is in the chromium and the alloys and the steels and everything else. So that negligence is there. And then, you know, the pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, rodenticides, all the different sprawlicides, all the sides. And and, you know, what's funny, you know, you know, I was in a restaurant one time, you know, a while back and my friend ordered something and and and and he asked the waitress, you know, what's the sides? What do we get for sides? And all I could think about was the pesticides, herbicides, fungicides. So I said that to my friend says, that's all you think about. That's all you think about. And and it is all I think about. I'm guilty of it. I'm guilty of providing answers, guilty of wanting to get you guys better anyway. So that was a that was a big deal with the with with that whole pesticide thing, the DDT starting it. The DDT didn't really start it, but the DDT was a mothership of all its cousins that came before that, before that, with that, after that. The war chemicals, chemicals that are supposed to kill people, they were designed to kill people. So the war chemicals of the day that were designed, that's what happened. See, no one purposely designed a bug killer to kill bugs. So just understand this. So the big chemical factories with their big vats of chemicals that they were producing. OK. And learning how to manipulate and learning how to, you know, put together. That was just nerve gases. That was nerve gases for World War One. That was nerve gases for World War One and on. So you have to understand something. So the pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, that word we know that we got everywhere, they're everywhere. You know, they're just not on just on food. They're on people's lawns. They're in people's houses. You could buy a can of spray and kill bugs. They're everywhere. And they just last forever, too. You know, they last forever. They just sit and last forever. I'm not talking about in the container. I'm talking about after they've been used. But all these chemicals were designed originally to kill people. That's all it was. Just to kill people. And then after, you know, we didn't need to kill people with chemicals anymore or worry about it in the moment. We switched them and said, what else can we do with them? You know, we got all these chemicals and we built these chemical factories. We don't want to close these chemical factories down. Lord knows we don't want to. God, no, we don't want to do that. God, no. And because it's all this investment, corporation investments and everything else and the chemical companies and shareholders and everything else. So instead of that, what can we do? And someone said, I know. Why don't we kill bugs with it? You know, I hear crops have hard times with some bugs and some beetles and things like that. Why don't we start killing beetles? It started with the Beatles and not the music band, the Beatles, not those guys. But it started with beetles. All beetles that eat the leaves of, you know, of collard greens. Little beetles that eat the leaves of kale. Leave little holes in the kale leaf. And they said, OK. And they literally took the nerve gas, the poison, and they just took it and they diluted it. You guys, it's the same, especially back in the old days. They just diluted it with more water, dropped the parts per million down, did the lab work to drop the parts per million down. And they used people to experiment the kill zone. What the kill zone was. And those people, they got multiple sclerosis and worse. The experimental people. And back then, when you signed on to an experiment back in the 30s, back in the 30s, back in the 40s, back in the 50s. When you signed on for an experiment, you couldn't leave. There was no little spot where you got an out. That didn't exist. You signed up and you stayed until you died or you stayed until you were maimed. And that's just the bottom line, whether you like it or not. They throw you 50 bucks. And 50 bucks is a lot of money back then. They just threw you 50 bucks. And then, you know, so that was how it was done. And they find out what your kill zone is. What finally would kill you where you're laying there lifeless on the ground? So they would have to dilute it parts per million, parts per million, parts per million. And then they would use that finally when they got out of the kill zone of the person. Nobody knows this information right here. Nobody does. You guys are getting, you know, you're getting it fresh, fresh, brand new. Nobody knows this. It's not out there. When they got past the kill zone, then they brought the bugs in. They brought the bugs in. They needed to know the people's kill zone before they brought the bugs in. They had to dilute the parts per million enough to actually then, you know, finally put it on bugs. And that was really the birth of the pesticide for crops. And on those pesticide containers, still till today, have all cross, the skull and crossbones. And they're mostly, they're mostly black barrels with skull and crossbones. Big, big skull and crossbones. And the skull and crossbones is red. It's always red. Blood red. Alright, so why are we focused on the pesticides and herbicides? Because it plays a role in MS in a lot of ways. One reason why it feeds the viral explosion, it feeds the Epstein bars and all the different varieties, and it feeds the varieties that cause multiple sclerosis. It feeds the varieties that cause multiple sclerosis. So this is all important information. Now, the problem with MS is, well, here's the thing. I like MS. I like multiple sclerosis. Doesn't that sound crazy? That probably sounds crazy to you, right? Hopefully you're not mad at me for saying that. But I like multiple sclerosis. I'll tell you why I like it. Because I'd rather somebody get an MS diagnosis than Lyme disease diagnosis now. Because not too many people are getting MS diagnosis anymore. Those diagnoses are switching over to Lyme. Everything's getting funneled to Lyme. Everything. Everything. You got a child that doesn't feel good? Maybe a little fever? Diagnose a Lyme disease instantly. And by the way, throw in the mom too. She's got Lyme disease now too. And that's, it's unbelievable to the degree of where it's being funneled. Pretty soon, it's everybody will have Lyme disease. What will be kind of old hat is multiple sclerosis. Meaning new diagnosis of multiple sclerosis will be outdated. Will be outdated. It's like getting a diagnosis of MS at a doctor's office is gonna be a surprise to the insurance company down the road. To be like, "Oh, you're a multiple sclerosis. Whoa, isn't that interesting. Wow." Because there's gonna be so, it's everything's gonna be funneled into Lyme down the road. Everything. Mistakenly funneled into Lyme. And anybody that's getting razzed up, that's brand new, you just gotta learn about Lyme. I say that and I know you probably think you're completely versed and you're an expert in Lyme. And you got the best Lyme doctor and everything else. But it's still all twisted up and it's still all contorted in the wrong area. You need to get the first book and you need to read the Lyme chapter. And you need to read it ten times before you start yelling about it. You have to read it ten times in a row. Ten times in a row. I'm saying this to help you and anybody else you know or your family and everything. And then maybe listen to the Lyme show and we're gonna do another Lyme show. I'm talking about Lyme because no one's really getting fresh diagnoses of MS right now. It's weaning down. It's backing down. They're just getting thrown instantly into Lyme. Everybody is. You don't even have to get blood work for Lyme anymore to get told you have Lyme by the way. Doctors are putting you, they're putting you right into the Lyme category. Right when you walk through the door. I know for a fact it's happening every day. And they're being shoved right into the Lyme category. They're just filed in there and they're not even getting blood work. And they're getting filed into that real quick. It's actually a smorgasbord. I mean it's unbelievable what's happening. I don't think I said that word right. So the deal is though the only people left with MS are the people that were originally diagnosed with MS. And even they're being filed in to the Lyme disease saga. And then ones that they're really, they're concrete into the whole MS thing. They're concrete into it. Where they've been so grandfathered into the MS of being diagnosed with it. They get diagnosed with Lyme disease and they have their MS. MS and Lyme. MS and Lyme. So then that's how it's going. But so why do I like MS? Because it's a better thing than to be thrown in the Lyme trap. Because the Lyme trap is really, really off right now. It's really off right now. You're going to have to do a book just on Lyme someday. So alright. So let's go back to this. Are you guys having fun or what? Come on, come on. Let's have some fun. So here's the deal with multiple sclerosis. Alright. And look I know there's a lot of people listening that have MS diagnoses right now. You guys are sitting there listening. A lot of you people have suffered for a long time. I want you to keep a light heart. We're going to get down to the bottom of things. Keep a light heart and we're going to take one day at a time. Now there is something that happens with multiple sclerosis that people get diagnosed with MS. Is there'll be a lesion, okay, in the brain. And they'll be able to see it on a scan sometimes. Be able to see it on an MRI. MRI with contrast. And by the way if you do an MRI with contrast regardless of what kind of, you know, if you're doing an MRI or a CAT scan with contrast or anything, make sure you just, you know, drink a little bit more water when you can. Get a little bit more hydrated so you flush out. Flush out the contrast. Don't let it just, don't go so dry where you're not drinking anything at all. That's not good. You don't want it dissipating into the body. There's heavy metals in the contrast that you want them to flush out out of the bloodstream, out of the kidneys. And you don't have to overdo it but you just want to have just a little bit more to drink than you normally do. So these lesions that are in the brain can be caused by a whole bunch of different things. There's white spots, there's crystallizations, there's calcifications, there's scar tissue in the brain. So white spots, black spots, gray spots, calcifications, all these different things. You know, if I'm ever in a crowded place, Spirit will tell me who's got what in their brain. You know, this person will have a tumor, this person will have a cyst, this person will have lesions. I'll ask Spirit, did they get diagnosed with MS or something? Spirit will say, yeah, they did. That person will have a gray spot. I'll ask Spirit, did they get diagnosed with MS? Spirit says, no, they never saw it, they don't know about it. And what I found though, when I asked Spirit, you know, I would ask Spirit and say, okay, well, that person's got a gray spot, that person's got a black spot, that person's got a white spot, that person has a trail, that person has a scar tissue, and how many people are diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, or how many people are aware of what's in their brain. And the percentage is very little, very little. People walk around with more markings inside the brain than anybody knows. You just walk around with it. It's not a bad thing. It's not a bad thing, let me tell you. It isn't a bad thing at all. And so what happens is that you can have symptoms of multiple sclerosis, okay? You could have symptoms of multiple sclerosis. You could have some different things. You could have some stiffness in the legs, stiffness on one side, stiffness in the shoulder and the right leg, right shoulder, weakness in the left arm, numbness on your toes, numbness in your hands, numbness on your face, numbness on the tip of your tongue. Whatever's going on, feeling blurry eye, the left eye, whatever's going on, literally, if you happen to have a deposit in the brain that's seeable, you're instantly diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, instantly. But that deposit and that marking in the brain most likely won't have anything to do with your symptoms at all, most likely won't. It's just a rare few that have enough damage in there, that have enough lesions that have gone a little bit awry. And even that may not be enough. Epstein-Barr is a funny thing. If you have a Epstein-Barr, certain varieties, they can release a lot of neurotoxins right out of the liver. The neurotoxins float around in the body and they jack up somebody's nervous system. They float around in the body and they jack up somebody's nervous system. They give the symptoms, all the symptoms I talked about. And whether you have a lesion or not, they give you those symptoms. If you have something that came from birth or heavy metals that made a deposit or MSG that actually made a cytokine storm between excitotoxins and MSG, and you had a pocket of that in the brain, whatever it is, and you had it from birth or you had it in childhood or whatever it is, and that gets seen on the MRI, you'll be diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Whether you have symptoms or not, but most every time, the symptoms are not from that trail, that pathway that happened. Viral inflammation can cause some lesions, but that doesn't mean that's your symptoms either. That doesn't mean that's your symptoms either. If the lesions are so bad and there's a lot of pockets and there's some damage in the nerve sheets and so forth and some of the nerve endings and things like that that are in the brain, yeah, you can get symptoms from it. Don't get me wrong. There are that cases, but the majority isn't there. The majority isn't there. The majority with MS diagnosed with MS with somebody with a neurologist seeing something in somebody's brain is not why they're feeling what they're feeling. A lot of times they're feeling what they're feeling because they've got a severe B12 deficiency, the right kind. Severe B12 deficiency. They're not methylating. They've got the severe B12 deficiency. They've got the viral issue that's built up in their liver, releasing tremendous amount of neurotoxin. They've got two viruses. They've got a shingles virus and an Epstein-Barr. They've got a shingles virus, HHV6, and an Epstein-Barr. There's just a lot of neurotoxins floating around, and those are also all the viruses that cause the diagnosis for Lyme disease. I'm bringing Lyme in. I hate having to bring it in, but I'm bringing it in because it's taking over. It's taking over out of complete, you know, out of complete just people not knowing, meaning professionals not knowing how Lyme really works, the history of Lyme, how, what happened, everything, and what's going on in the labs. Nobody, the doctor and the labs are disconnected when it comes down to Lyme disease. The doctor has no idea what the lab is doing and what the lab is doing to make money and how it works and how it works, man. It is unbelievable how the system has developed and how pockets and coffers are being filled like you can't believe. But the bottom line is, the bottom line is those lesions, whether they're there or not, can be there, and they, and many people have plenty of markings in their brains. It's natural on planet Earth to be born here, to live your life, to have some markings on the brain that aren't even visible through MRI. Not even visible. And, and, and because first of all, MRIs aren't still not even that good. I mean, we're not there yet. We've still got another 20, 30 years before MRIs actually become, A, affordable, and B, actually really do their job to the degree they need to do the job. But by then, so much is going to be seen in the brain. Everybody's going to be completely confused and not know what's going on. And that's going to be a whole other game that occurs down the road. And in the end, they'll probably say, "Oh, it's Lyme bacteria causing brains to have all these problems once they do have MRIs that can scan." That's where it's probably going to go in the end. Everything's going to funnel into that. You watch. You watch. You know, you watch down the road. It's unbelievable where we're going. But the madness has to be, has to be figured out, meaning it has to be, you know, sectioned out. It has to be thoughtfully done. It has to, the information has to get out there. So the deal is if you're someone with MS, hey, look, you got, you got a diagnosis of MS, you might even be in a wheelchair because the nervous system was, was, was in such disarray. Tremendous amounts of neurotoxins, inflammation in the nerves when it gets so bad can, can dry and crack the nerves like never before. And if the diet's not right to feed the nerves, you can't get better from MS easy. So you end up in the wheelchair and then you take all the different immunosuppressive drugs, which breaks down the immune system more. And if you're on immunosuppressive drugs, that's okay. There's other things you could do to build your immune system up while you're on immunosuppressive drugs. So I'm just letting you know there are things you can do if you, if you've been stuck on the immunosuppressive drugs. Also with MS, you know, they give you a lot of steroids for a lot of different people and you get acute attacks and when people get acute attacks, they say, well, those are viral attacks. Those are viral inflammation and virus can, viruses can cause a lot of problems on nerves. But it's not multiple sclerosis it's supposed to be called. It's supposed to be called a virus. It's supposed to be called Epstein-Barr syndrome. It's supposed to be called, you know, multiple herpes virus symptoms like shingles, one of the varieties, maybe even an HHV7, maybe even the HHV6 or whatever. And these things have to be figured out and that's where medicine's behind. So instead, nobody knows what viruses are causing the symptoms, the neurological symptoms. There's only one group of viruses, I'm going to tell you right now, that cause most neurological symptoms, almost every neurological symptom. There's one group of viruses, one family of viruses and you heard it before, the herpes show. It's that herpes stock, it's that herpes viral family that cause the neurological symptoms. Bacteria can't cause it. Certain bacteria, if it gets to the brain, certain types cause a swelling, an instant swelling, inflammation that cause a brain problem that's completely, distinctively different than any ALS, multiple sclerosis, Lyme disease or anything could actually, any symptoms anybody can have in the neurological field. This is a whole different game. This is, it's all viral. It's viral infections. You know, I saw it on TV, on television, I saw a drug commercial. And the side effects was, if you have random neurological symptoms, you know, as a side effect to this drug, stop immediately and see your doctor because it could be a virus to the brain. They actually said virus to the brain. Now, the virus to the brain wasn't a virus that comes with the drug when you go and buy the drug, you guys. It's a virus people have in them. You catching wind of this? You catching it? You know, I mean, you know, like, here's the deal, here's the deal. So, how can a drug company, the drug company said a virus to the brain. Exactly. You know, or whether that virus goes to the brain or not, whether that drug company or research and science that's done that drug, whether it's neurotoxins going to the brain, whether it's neurotoxins going to the brain from having a virus that's completely active and completely going bananas in the body. You know, that's what I'm trying to talk about. Some viruses can go to the ganglia, some viruses can go to the brain or the cerebrum, some viruses can go to the different parts of the brain, can get to the pineal gland area, can get into the brain, frontal lobe, left temporal lobe, whatever. They can get in. They can get in here. But the point is, the pharmaceutical company didn't say bacteria to the brain. They didn't. They said viral. Meaning right at the beginning of Lyme disease, an example, right from the start, some of the best doctors in the world that were doing analysis on the Lyme disease patients and the cases and everything else all agreed 100% that Lyme disease was viral, was virus. The only reason why it popped out of the viral thing, and they moved it to bacterial, because back then in the early 70s, they had no treatment for viruses. They had no antivirals. They only had antibiotics, and the antibiotic world boomed because of Lyme disease, because it was the only treatment they can offer with steroids and antibiotics. So they had to call it bacterial in order to bank on it, because there were no antivirals made. Back in that day, if you had a smart doctor that said, "That Lyme symptom, that's viral," back in 1973, if you had that, the patient or the patient's mom would say, "Well, how do we treat it?" Like, "You can't. It's viral." That's back in that day. You can't treat it. It's viral. And that wasn't going to be good enough. And they knew. Well, what about an antibiotic? And all the doctors, "No, you can't give an antibiotic for a virus. No, that's bad. No, that's bad." By law, by law of the medical world then, knowing the medical world was smarter in many ways at that moment, and said, "No, you can't give an antibiotic for a viral infection. You will risk the patient getting worse at one time or another." Hence why the majority of Lyme disease patients, 85% of the Lyme disease patients get worse from antibiotics because 85% have a viral infection, not bacterial, even if bacteria comes up in the different testing, you see? So the other 15% can improve, but many times it's because they went to new Lyme doctors that are doing IV vitamin C. They're not just doing an antibiotic. They're doing vitamin C. They're doing tremendous amounts of supplements. They're doing cat's claw now, thanks to actually me, because I've actually helped a lot of Lyme doctors over the last 25 years bring cat's claw into the regime, and it's finally getting somewhere. If anybody's mad at me about talking crap about Lyme disease and not knowing where it comes from or where I come from, let me tell you something. When I was younger, I was working on really early cases, really early cases of Lyme disease. In fact, a couple of the people at the very beginning, their lives changed when they stopped antibiotics and they realized it was viral later on in their life, and it saved their life, why they watched a lot of other patients that they knew at the time die or get so sick back then. So I've seen it all, but the point is that with multiple sclerosis, yeah, you don't treat with an antibiotic either, but we're giving immuno... Okay, back to the point where what I was talking about before. The drug company knew it was viral, meaning everybody knew it was viral back at Lyme disease back then, and then like I said on that commercial recently, that drug commercial, they were like, "Okay, if you're experiencing this neurological problem, then yeah, then chances are you got a virus." Yeah, that's amazing actually. When I saw that, I had to smack myself in the face when I saw that, you guys. Had to smack myself in the face. I smacked myself in the face twice when I saw that. I still couldn't believe it. One smack wasn't good enough. It wasn't. I pinched myself too. I pinched my arm. Had to bruise myself for that one. All right? Okay, so what do you do? What do you do? First of all, you know you can heal with multiple sclerosis, and you can heal with Lyme disease, and you can heal with ALS. You can heal with a lot of things. You can heal with neurological symptoms. You can heal with anxiety. You can heal with depression. Depression's a neurological symptom. Anxiety's a neurological symptom. You can heal with all the neurological symptoms, and there's tons of them. Tons of them. All kinds. And you can heal. And multiple sclerosis, don't take the diagnosis so serious unless you need it for disability, and you need it because you need that label, and that gives you peace. I'm on board 100 percent. But don't take it as written in stone. Don't take it as written in stone. I know you're suffering. I know you've been through hell. I know many people have been through hell. I know people personally have been through hell. I've helped people for decades with diagnoses of multiple sclerosis. I've helped for decades, all kinds of people, all kinds of people. Used to go to people's houses. Used to go to their houses all the time. Used to just go to their house, and I used to juice for them. I'd go to their house. I used to make them soup. I'd go to their—you wouldn't believe the things I did to get people walking again and doing what we had to do. And giving them information where it's not—multiple sclerosis is not a death sentence on any level. There's no way in hell it is, and you can get better. Let's go over some supplements. The B12 is critical. The zinc is critical. All Epstein-Barr supplements, critical. The cat's claw, critical. It's an amazing one. A little bit of licorice, critical. That's a good one. Lemon balm, critical. Olive leaf, critical. A little bit of eye bright could be really good. That's a good one, too. Elderberry, that one can work, too. Lomatium root, L-O-M-A-T-I-U-M, lomatium root. That's a good one, too. Propolis, really, really good. That's a great one. Nettle leaf, it's a great one. Silica, really important. A little bit of ALA, that's important. That's a good one. L-glutamine, that's incredible. Okay, that's a good one. L-glutamine. Omega-3s, those are helpful. Vitamin D can even be partially helpful. It doesn't fix the problem. You don't have to overdo it. A little bit to do some support is fine, because everybody loves vitamin D. They all love it. But you could take a little if you had to. But the vitamin C is absolutely critical. The zinc's absolutely critical. These are all great. Spirulina, very important. Barley grass juice powder, very important. Got to get the heavy metals out. Got to do the heavy metal detox, because there's always some heavy metals underlying something or in the back burner when it comes down to multiple sclerosis. So you got to have those. Foods, stay away from foods that feed the viruses, such as Epstein-Barr, which is the biggest multiple sclerosis producer of symptoms there is, and also one of the biggest Lyme disease producers, too. Okay, I'm just going to be like, I know how snarky as I am. It is, it is. I'm sorry, but it is. I can't not tell you the truth, just because of PC-ness or where the world is right now with things, because people don't want to hear it. I can't not tell you the truth. But Epstein-Barr, along with viruses like the shingles, sinomegalovirus, HHV-7, HHV-6s, you know, all those, they're all responsible for a lot of things, like the MS, responsible for the Lyme disease. They're responsible for all this stuff, the neurological stuff. So foods, stay away from the foods not to eat. The eggs, got to stay away from them. I know eggs taste good. They taste good, and they're light and they're fluffy, and they were such a good food before they were ruined. They were ruined. It's not my fault. It's not Anthony Williams' fault that eggs were put in labs feeding all kinds of bugs and all kinds of stuff in all the early labs when they were playing around with all kinds of different stuff and accidentally feeding bugs without knowing they were feeding bugs is what I'm trying to say. It's not my fault that eggs are the number one food for multiple sclerosis getting worse and number one food for all the different viruses and everything else. Dairy products, same thing with that. Corn, stay away from corn. You got to have a little fresh corn, organic corn in the summertime, corn on the cob. It still might be GMO related, but I mean you can still have a little fresh stuff maybe in the summertime. All right, let's keep this going. Let's keep it going. Keep your animal proteins low if you've got multiple sclerosis because what happens is practitioners will say, "Protein, protein, protein, protein," to get you strong to get your muscles. No, carbohydrates get your muscles strong. Carbohydrates, sweet potatoes, regular potatoes, fruit, bananas, all that gets you recovered from multiple sclerosis. Keep the animal proteins low. I'm not anti-animal protein because I'm not anti anything, but I'm -- well, I'm anti eggs for illnesses, but if you don't have a virus and you don't have any kind of -- you weren't diagnosed with a disease or symptoms and all that, yeah, you can eat eggs. I'll make them for you. I'll gladly make you the damn eggs for you. It's fine. If you feel perfectly fine, nothing ever happened. You never had a symptom in your life. You're not viral. I'll make you an omelet. The point is that -- but regardless of belief systems and everything else, keep the animal protein low and make sure there's lots of things like the celery juice. Make sure the wild blueberries, they restore nerves. They calm nerves down. Get the turmeric going. Do the turmeric ginger shots. That's in two other rhizomes and roots you can use. Burdock root helps really with multiple sclerosis, too, burdock root. A little bit of dandelion greens. Bring dandelion greens and spinach, dandelion greens. Mosh, if you like collard greens, bring them in. Wrap up some guacamole in a collard green if you can. Avocado is really good. Hemp seeds are amazing for multiple sclerosis. Walnuts, hemp seeds, watermelon seeds. Get the watermelon seeds, the edible ones that are shelled and they're dehydrated. Get the watermelon seeds. That is a powerful food for multiple sclerosis. Get that. Start eating a handful. You'll notice the symptoms getting better. Get the zinc levels back up like I said. Get on the MTHF methylfolate. Get on that. Get on a B complex for symptoms, for the neurological symptoms along with the right methylamine, adenosylcobalamin mix. Go to my directory on my website, medicalmedium.com. Get the right supplements. I don't sell them. They're there for you as a directory. They take you where you can buy them. Okay? And so all these are really, really important to do. Like I said, the L-glutamine. Make sure that's in the package right there. L-glutamine's really great for multiple sclerosis, for helping with nerves in the brain, any pockets, any kind of MSG pockets, any kind of pockets of all kinds of different things that we get in the brain that make spots. Remember I talked about a lot of people walk around with calcium deposits in their brain, calcium deposits. Yeah, calcium. It's displaced everywhere in the body. Gets into the gallbladder, gets into the kidneys, creates stones, gets into the brain, all that. So calcium that's coming from dairy products, calcium that's coming from sources we're not supposed to put in our body. So make sure you have that. If you're doing grass-fed butter, it's better than the store-bought, grocery store-bought garbage, but stay off the dairy if you have any neurological symptoms whatsoever. Start juicing once in a while. If you can't and you're in a wheelchair and you don't have much help, if you don't have much help, that's okay. Get somebody to make you some potatoes. Do potato soup. Have potato soup every day. Put some carrots in there. Have some carrots in there. Have some onions, a little garlic in there. Get somebody to make you a garlic potato soup with carrots and all kinds of different things and celery and everything and eat that. Eat that a couple times a day along with everything else you're doing. Try to get ahold of some supplements if you can too. And these are some of the supplements you can use that are helpful. Rosehip tea, really helpful. I always go back to rosehip tea. When it comes down to multiple sclerosis, it's a great tea. Rosehip tea. Go get the rosehips in bulk or buy the bags and start drinking glasses of rosehip every day. Really helpful for any neurological stuff that's Epstein-Barr related that's causing multiple sclerosis. Realize you can heal. Without a doubt, you can. I've helped so many people recover from MS over the years. So many people. So many. And you can recover. You can get better. So, you know, all that is important that I'm talking about. There's also, you know, a wheat grass juice that you can get frozen. You can get frozen. I got it on my directory. You can order it frozen. You can defrost it, mix it up in some water. It defrosts. That's one thing. I like the barley grass juice powder. I like that really good for, like I said before. And, you know, all these things matter. Make sure your vitamin C is up. Make sure it's in the right direction. And, you know, take one day at a time. You can heal with MS and MS-related symptoms and Lyme disease-related symptoms and all the other neurological-based symptoms. And really, MS should be re-diagnosed as Guillain-Barre, which is basically a viral infection. Guillain-Barre is a viral infection that causes neurological symptoms, and that's what it should be diagnosed as. So the MS diagnosis alone doesn't hold a lot of merit because really it's a virus causing it. And we put these labels on things. I talk about that all the time. You get it. Guys, I love you. I love you. I love you. And just hang in there one day at a time. Thank you for getting through the show with me. All right? I adore you. Bless you. You're the greatest. Take care. Love you. Bye now. And really, MS should be re-diagnosed as Guillain-Barre, which is basically a viral infection. Guillain-Barre is a viral infection that causes neurological symptoms, and that's what it should be diagnosed as. So the MS diagnosis alone doesn't hold a lot of merit because really it's a virus causing it. And we put these labels on things. I talk about that all the time. You get it. Guys, I love you. I love you. I love you. And just hang in there one day at a time. Thank you for getting through the show with me. All right? I adore you. Bless you. You're the greatest. Take care. Love you. Bye now.