#263 In this mind-blowing episode, Guy welcomed Dr. Todd Ovokaitys back to the podcast. Dr. Todd discussed his specialization in stem cell therapy and how he uses light and sound to guide the stem cells within the body. They also delve into the topic of Kundalini, with Dr. Todd sharing his personal experience and its impact on his work.
According to Dr. Todd, rejuvenating the body allows individuals to reset their biological clock and gain an additional three years for personal development. These extra years can be dedicated to various practices like diet, exercise, lifestyle changes, meditation, yoga, martial
arts, and manifestation techniques. This extended time provides an opportunity to delve deeper into these practices and explore different modalities and disciplines.
Dr. Todd also highlighted the synchronicity and serendipity that often occur when individuals are ready to learn and grow. He stressed the significance of being open to new knowledge and the guidance of inspired teachers and masters who appear when the student is prepared. By continuously exploring and expanding their potential, individuals can evolve and become ageless.
Overall, this episode emphasizes the interconnectedness of rejuvenating the body and exploring one’s potential. By reversing the aging process, individuals can create more time for personal growth and continuously push the boundaries of their capabilities.This episode is packed with incredible insights that you won’t want to miss. Check it out and share with others who would benefit from this information.
If you enjoyed this podcast, you may also like: The Ultimate Of Everything | Dr Todd Ovokaitys
About Dr. Todd: Dr. Todd Ovokaitys M.D did his undergraduate studies at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. After 2 years hee was accepted to an accelerated medical training program at Johns Hopkins University Medical School in Baltimore, Maryland. During this time Dr. Todd also studied voice and classical guitar at the Peabody Institute. He received both BA and MD degrees from Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Todd’s subsequent training included an Internship and Residency at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, DC. He was invited to be a Chief Medical Resident in the Georgetown University system, responsible for the teaching program of medical students, interns, and residents. While at Georgetown, Dr. Todd experienced a deep insight into an elegant method for matching the vibrational states of biological molecules to neutralize toxins and enhance human biochemical functions.
He ultimately co-developed a fundamentally new laser electromagnetic resonance technology called QiLaser. Dr. Ovokaitys’s Qi laser technology platform also has the potential to stimulate the cellular regeneration pathways by direct application to the body. The range of modalities also includes the state of the art of stem cell therapies, particularly amplified umbilical cord blood stem cells as well as autologous stem cells derived from the person being treated that are then concentrated and delivered back to the person from whom they were derived. Dr Todd also leads Gematria, a nutritional research and development firm.
►Audio Version:
Key Points Discussed:
- (00:00) – The Mind-Blowing Potential of Stem Cell Therapy with Light & Sound
- (05:51) – Stem cell explanation.
- (09:30) – Teratomas and ethical implications.
- (15:09) – Stem cell therapy delivery.
- (19:54) – VSELs: Extraordinary Stem Cells.
- (27:58) – Stem cell regeneration and rejuvenation.
- (30:13) – The Horvath clock.
- (38:07) – Kundalini and rainbow spectrum.
- (41:20) – DNA as information encyclopedia.
- (45:26) – DNA as a geometric structure.
- (51:24) – Exploring human potential.
- (57:24) – Pineal tones and performance.
- (01:01:12) – Metabolic ways to turn back the clock.
Dr Todd Ovokaitys’ Website:
drtoddo.com
Todd’s Book:
drtoddo.com/growing-younger-book
The Victory Song:
drtoddovokaitys.com/tones-w-lyrics
The Book of Knowledge:
Info@gematria.com
About me:
My Instagram:
www.instagram.com/guyhlawrence/?hl=en
My website:
www.guylawrence.com.au
www.liveinflow.co
TRANSCRIPT
Guy (00:00):
Hey, Guy here. Today I welcome back to the podcast Dr. Todd Ovokaitys. I hope I pronounced your surname correctly, Todd. And wow, my mind is blown. This conversation is incredible. It’s probably something you’re going to want to listen to for a couple of times and hang in there as he builds the foundations of the direction of the podcast. As we lean in more and more, it becomes more and more apparent where the conversations go in. But we talk about stem cell therapy, which is what he specializes in. But not only that, how we use light and sound to essentially guide where the stem cells go within the body. It’s mind blowing stuff. I’m not doing it justice. But of course, I wanted to speak to him about Kundalini as well after my Kundalini experience and wanted to speak to him about his thoughts because he is. He looks at everything within the body and he blew my mind of what he shared around that too. And not only that, his own personal Kundalini experience and how it had direct impact in the very work that he does today. Amazing stuff. If you enjoy this episode, please let me know in the comments below. Please share it with a loved one or friend. This information I feel needs to get out there more and more and more. And without you guys, it can’t. So I appreciate your support. I hope you’re enjoying the podcast that I’m delivering. And of course, if you want to know anything about what we’re up to, our workshops with Live In Flow from our one day retreats to our three to five night deeper retreats or meditations or anything, links are below wherever you’re listening to this. Much love from me. Let’s go over a Todd. This is awesome. Dr. Todd, thank you so much for coming back on the podcast. Always a pleasure. Thank you. We tend to get into some of the deeper realms of theory and philosophy. So see where it goes today. Absolutely. And just to lay a platform, I know you came on the podcast, I think it was about three years ago, maybe even longer, shows how quickly time is going. But just for just for listeners, as a brief overview, I have to ask you the question if you were on an airplane and a stranger sat next to you and asked you what you did for a living, how would you answer that?
Dr. Todd (02:34):
How would I answer that? Good question. Depends on who it is. I might just say I’m a doctor. If I’m being more complete, I’d say I started out as an internist in pulmonary and critical care, but now I’m basically a stem cell biophysicist.
Guy (02:56):
Wow. And what if you could like distill what a stem cell biophysicist is in 30 seconds, which probably is impossible for us layman people, what would that mean?
Dr. Todd (03:11):
I’ll use a metaphor. And we think of music as literally making the various instruments of the human voice sing. And that’s in a certain frequency range. And molecules sing. And since cells are a collection of molecules, and they’re doing active dynamics, they’re doing active dynamic things, cells sing as well. So we’ve invented a new type of laser technology that creates a new type of waveform that allows a signal to go deeply through tissue. And we can also tune it, as it were, to sing the song of the cells. With our main work now, we’re singing the song of the stem cell so we can awaken a particular type of stem cell from its lifelong hibernation and then direct it where we would most like it to go for that particular person, which is more of a quantum sense, increasing the probability that a stem cell goes where a person would most like to have it. And by metaphor, even though we start with lasers, we adjust the waveform so we turn the light wave into more of a sound wave. And that’s a little bit technical, if you want. I could describe how that happens. So fundamentally, when we convert a light wave into an acoustic-like wave, we can literally play tunes of frequencies that are in resonance with the way the molecules are naturally vibrating and rotating. And as you know, anytime you provide a resonating signal, and resonance simply means matching the natural way the thing vibrates, you can put in little amounts of energy, but if put in the right frequency, you’ll build much more energy in the system.
Guy (05:14):
Wow. So I got to ask you the question then, or just to help break this down, what you just said. So I understand. So would it be fair to say then, a stem cell comes on, like produces every second, but they haven’t had instructions of what to do yet? Would that be a fair layman’s explanation? I probably need to go back a step. And find what a stem cell is. Please. A stem cell is a cell in the body that is capable of replicating and then doing one of two things. It either stays in its happy reserve pool as a type of cell that can come in and replace things that are injured or damaged or worn out. Or it goes out of reserve and helps to replace a cell that’s injured, damaged or worn out. So it’s basically like a pool of reserved materials to rebuild stuff. It’s like you got a wood shed and you got some wood. And if you need to build something, you take the wood out. The difference here is that the wood can reproduce itself and keep the wood pile high. Got it. Perfect. Perfect. And then, because we hear stem cell therapy all the time, and I’ve heard people fly into Panama or whatever it is and having stem cell injections. I know they’re doing it on Australia now. But am I guessing right then the challenge with that is, you’re hoping it’s going to go to the areas of where the repair is needed the most. And by using light or sound and frequency, we’re actually able to spot target the areas you want the stem cells to go?
Dr. Todd (07:19):
Yes. That’s vitally important. If the cell doesn’t get there, it is not able to really repair or regenerate there. So that’s one factor. And even more, I just gave a basic definition of what a stem cell is. The biggest confusion in this whole arena is that when you say the term stem cell, it sounds like one thing. Like you’ve got your normal cells and you got your reserve cells called stem cells. And if there was just one type of stem cell, then it would be clear. And if I could take a few minutes, I can briefly give an overview of the hierarchy of stem cells. Please. So for the person who’s asking the question whether they should say yes to stem cells, it’s really important to know a few fundamental things, which is what is the type of stem cell, what is the source of the stem cell, and then what is the delivery method of the stem cell. So types of stem cells. We all begin in the magic moment of conception. And somehow we start with one cell that’s got half its genetic information from mom and half of it from dad. And it undergoes this extraordinary process where it begins to divide. And once it gets to about the 30 cell stage, all those cells would be considered embryonic stem cells. And that is the most powerful type of stem cell in the hierarchy. True embryonic stem cells can probably regenerate anything, yet they have a challenge. A true embryonic stem cell has the name totipotent, which means totally potent, which means that a single embryonic stem cell can become a whole new person. And because they’re so powerful, they are at risk for producing benign tumors called teratomas. And they’re not as dangerous because they’re benign. And that said, they can grow big enough that they may compress things or cause challenges that require the removal. What’s weird about a teratoma is that it’s a collection in kind of a random organization of all the tissues of the body. So it can be little like a ping pong ball or bigger like a tennis ball as big as an orange, as big as a grapefruit or as big as a cantaloupe. And what’s weird is that it can have hair and skin and teeth and nails and muscle and bone and cartilage and blood vessels and every other type of tissue. So basically it can be a giant hairball with lots of weird stuff in it. So I don’t want one of those. There are ethical issues about embryonic stem cells because they’re usually derived from in vitro fertilization, where a couple in their aim of fertility may have multiple embryos made because sometimes several are needed to have an effective conception. And when a couple has used all that they’re going to use, there’s some left over. And then the question is, well, do we use these for a potential treatment or do we just burn them in the incinerator? And fundamentally right now, they just burn them in the incinerator. And that gets around in a weird way the question about this could have become a person and that makes it ethically challenging to use it for medical treatment. So this solution is, well, just discard it basically. That said, even beyond the ethical questions and this is not the venue for that kind of debate, there is a true medical debate about the use of these in the medical risk, which is the formation of these benign tumors. And for that reason, I think it’s actually been wise to put a hold on it until the risk of that complication can be understood or mitigated. So that’s embryonic. Just past embryonic, the next step along the way is called pluripotent. So pluri means many and potent, of course, means powerful. A pluripotent stem cell has the ability to make all three germ layers. And just as review, early in this development process, this collection of cells splits into three layers, which you probably call from your biology courses, the endoderm, mesoderm, and ectoderm. And then each of those germ layers produce the types of organs and tissues associated with that germ layer. A pluripotent stem cell can make all the different germ layers and then literally has the capability of making any type of cell in the body. Next down the chain, we have germ layer derived stem cells. And these would be called multipotent. They can make many things, but not everything. The most commonly used type of germ cell line stem cell is the type of stem cell that’s derived from bone marrow or from fat called the mesenchymal stem cell. That’s a long word and a little bit complex. Fundamentally, these are cells that will produce these so-called mesodermal elements. So a mesenchymal stem cell abbreviated MSC, typically derived from fat before it was more derived from bone marrow, that these MSCs are designed to become mesodermal structures. So they’re already inclined to become muscle, bone, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, and even fat itself. So if these cells are being used for various purposes that would be musculoskeletal, for assisting joints to regenerate, supporting the strength of tendons and ligaments, even helping to support muscle that needs to be strengthened, they’re really designed for that purpose. And at the final tip of the chain, you have single tissue committed stem cells. So a stem cell that’s just going to become a liver cell or a pancreatic cell or a heart muscle cell, for example. Thus, you have this big hierarchy of different types of stem cells. And I think if we’re really being sophisticated, we would literally have a menu of all the different types of stem cells and what they’re particularly good for in what circumstances. So someone saying they had stem cell therapy, I’d say, oh, okay, well, what kind of stem cells did you get? Were they your cells or from another person? And then how were they delivered? In terms of delivery, the mesenchymal stem cells are particularly used for joints, ligament, tendon, and cartilage-related issues. And they’re pretty widely used for that. And to get a benefit, essentially, the best result is giving them by local injection, injecting them exactly where they’re needed. The challenge with MSCs, if you’re trying to get them somewhere, is that they’re big. And whenever you inject something intravenously, the first place that it goes is to the right side of the heart. And then it goes through the lungs. And then finally to the left side of the heart, where it can go to the rest of the body. And here we have a mechanical issue because the average range, a typical range of an MSC diameter is 12 to 30 microns. That’s really small, but a pulmonary capillary is even smaller at about six microns. So the MSCs may be useful to give them intravenously where they will large in the lung, only a very small percentage is small enough to somehow squeak their way through. And in the lungs, they still make cytokines and growth factors, chemistry that stimulates the body to regenerate. And there is a value, literally kind of like an internal pharmacy. However, very few of those cells actually get through to become replacement cells. The other issue is whether it comes from another person. If the cells are your cells from your body with your genotype, when you give them back, you don’t expect any immunologic reaction. They’re your cells, the immune system recognizes them. However, there is the use of so-called allogeneic, which means for another person, and then another set of factors come in. And probably the most common allogeneic use would be umbilical cord blood, which those cells are really young, which makes them potent and powerful and full of juice. However, the may not necessarily incorporate as their person’s own cells. And they’re also big. So unless you inject them locally, there’ll be a tendency for them just to stick in the lung and give this really nice growth factor treatment for a while. There could be potential challenges of there being a tissue mismatch. They tend to be pretty robust with respect to that because they’re not expressing the tissue antigens that the body recognizes, unless they differentiate and then potential their issues. So there’s a lot of use of cord blood. It’s often been beneficial. They’re like the mesenchymal stem cells from fat. A cord blood is typically just mesenchymal stem cells that have often been used in the body. So they’re mesenchymal stem cells that have often been multiplied to give them more numbers. And particularly for local injected uses, they can be quite good. The other factor with mesenchymal stem cells is that they age. So if someone is getting MSCs harvested from their fat and the goal is to support a joint recovering faster, the MSCs work really great if someone’s 20 years old and they may work very little if they’re 80 years old. So stem cells in the body age just like the rest of the body with a particular exception. And that’s our area of work. So the platform that we’ve had the privilege of participating in is the discovery process of this amazing gift I would call it the gift from source of a type of stem cell that is just past embryonic that forms early ingestation from a region called the primordial germ ridge and they’re pluripotent. So they’re not embryonic with the risk of forming weird tumors. The name of these cells is very small embryonic like stem cells. They’re embryonic like because they still have early stage antigens but they’ve developed to the point that studies have shown they don’t have a risk of forming the benign tumors called teratomas. So they’re pluripotent which means they can form any type of tissue in the body depending upon the environment that you put them in. And they’re also very small which is useful and by very small it’s really small. A nucleus is about one micron in diameter and these cells in their usual dormant state are one to two microns in diameter. So a one to two micron V cell has little trouble getting through a six micron pulmonary capillary but a 12 to 30 micron MSC is just going to have a mechanical problem of fitting a big ball through a small tube. The other thing that is insane, well not insane like someone created it this way, but it’s extraordinary that for unknown reasons these cells that are called VSELs as I said for very small embryonic like stem cell and for short I just call them V cells. So when I say V cell it’ll be representing the VSELs. The most amazing thing about the V cells is that for unknown reasons they go into hibernation around the time that we’re born and they literally shift into a metabolically dormant state. They use very little energy and because they’re not dividing they’re essentially not aging which means their telomeres aren’t shortening. Their epigenetic patterns aren’t changing from younger cells to much older cells. While the body is aging the way it usually does these cells are basically in suspended animation and staying extremely young.
Guy (22:47):
So we have those logs on the wood pile waiting to be accessed is that what I’m hearing?
Dr. Todd (22:55):
You have logs on the wood pile that can regenerate themselves so far almost indefinitely that can make any type of structure that you want within the house of the body. Wow that is insane. It is yeah it’s useful. It’s very useful. I’m just going to ask a basic question. How do we access that? Well that’s work that we’ve been developing at both the basic science and clinical level. It turns out that to access these cells we don’t have to do anything more invasive than just drawing blood. Getting the fat derived MSCs requires a mini liposuction. The bone marrow requires putting a great big fat needle through a bone and pulling out the marrow. Whereas this is basically no more invasive than getting a blood test. Let me explain it a bit further. So please if our goal is simply anti-aging and the person is otherwise healthy then we only need to do the same thing. If the person is otherwise healthy then we only need to draw six 10 cc tubes of blood or 60 cc’s which isn’t so much. It’s about a tenth of a unit if someone’s giving blood. Often what people have drawn if they’re getting blood tests. So just 60 cc’s and from that we’re able to separate out what we don’t need. We don’t need the red or white cells and if they’re injected they’re potentially inflammatory. So from that we derive about 40 cc’s that’s this beautiful preparation that has plasma platelets, platelet derived growth factors which are also beneficial and then these v cells but they’re asleep. So the process we’ve developed with lasers she might have talked somewhat about before. We’ve invented a new type of laser system that creates a new type of waveform that allows us to send the signal much more deeply through the body and using this new type of laser that is engineered literally to sing the song of the stem cells in light. We treat that preparation with the laser and we have done and published a basic science experiment in what we call our Manchester paper because this work was done in Manchester England with one of the persons who developed in vitro fertilization. She was part of the team with Sir Robert Edwards that won the Nobel Prize for creating in vitro fertilization in 2010. So he’s a very good scientist. In his Manchester lab we did the experiment of counting the cells before the laser and after different durations of using the laser and we found that the sweet spot was about three minutes. That one minute initiated two minutes was better than one, three minutes was even a bit better than that, six minutes was worse and nine minutes was like not doing it at all. And for your enlightened audience you might find interesting that three minutes was the amount of time that I was using but I got to that number by using applied kinesiology. And then we did the experiment which confirmed that that was the ideal amount of time. What’s particularly interesting is that immediately after using the laser the cell counts of the V cells more than doubled and the actual number of cells in the roughly 40 cc’s is on the order of 1.5 to 2 million cells per cc or roughly 60 to 80 million of these very young potentially newborn caliber stem cells that are pluripotent, small enough to go through the lung and go anywhere in the body, at least from the clinical observations we’ve seen. It looks like they do go everywhere and then once these one day old pluripotent cells that can regenerate anything are in the circulation we can also increase the probability that they go where a person most would like them to be from a clinical standpoint.
Guy (27:58):
Wow. So let’s say we are focusing on somebody like you mentioned that’s healthy and looking at just longevity in general because we age. Is that something then would need to be done on a regular basis to maintain that health or is it something you do once? What have you found?
Dr. Todd (28:25):
That’s an excellent question and that really is the next step of the discussion. You do it just once, if you do it again when do you do it? For the person who’s interested in anti-aging and I’ll make an important point here. A couple years ago I was in Boston and attended a lecture of Dr. George Church, the developer of CRISPR and he made a point and I agree with it. He said that anti-aging is really boring to him because even if you slow aging it’s still kind of dismal. Instead of like falling down the mountain really fast it’s not quite as fast but it’s just like diminishing returns things just get worse and worse. That’s just not really exciting. What excites him and me too is true age reversal. Like going back up the mountain, being younger, stronger, smarter, fitter, faster. What we’ve shown, when we look at biologic age using the most accurate clock that exists, which is the epigenetic DNA methylation aging clock. It’s a mouthful. I could explain that if you want the technical details. There are two clocks telomere length which people know about much more generally than the other clock. However, the inventor of the most accurate clock says telomere length is only 14 percent accurate whereas the epigenetic aging clock is much more accurate. That’s Dr. Stephen Horvath of UCLA and one of the most famous of these clocks is named after him the so-called Horvath clock. A little over two years now we’ve had the ability to actually look at someone’s biological age at the DNA level with the most accurate clock that exists. At the beginning we didn’t have any pre-treatment data. We just had the data of someone that had one or more treatments. What we found was really interesting. We found that if someone had had one of these treatments anytime in the past five years that they were generally three years younger biologically than their chronological age. People had had no treatments. We found that they were typically the same or even a little older biologically than their chronological age. That’s generally been the case. There are a few exceptions of people that are really doing all the right stuff. Yet as our yardstick those cases we did that hadn’t had a treatment were generally as old or older biologically than their birth date age. So someone having one treatment even in the past five years being three years younger that was pretty exciting. What was more exciting is if someone had two treatments they were six years younger and if they had four treatments they were 12 years younger. How accessible is this technology at the moment and how accessible do you think it will be in the future for people? You ask all the right questions. Thank you. So we have our home base in sunny San Diego and that’s where we’ve been developing these methods and we do more than just the treatments with the V cells. We stack it with lots of other things. I’ve coined the phrase the biohack is the stack and if these are capable of literally turning back the ageing clock by three years then why not do other things to make the effects even more potent. So we do that. We have nutraceuticals, peptides, various electromagnetic therapies, energy works like emotional medicine and that’s just a small part of the list of things that we may choose from working to get ideal results for a given person. So we’re really all about best outcomes and what total picture can we put together and how do we apply it to get the best results. So that’s our location and then I have developed a licensing program. This process is patented and laser is our invention so these are available only through us and we make them available to licensees who have done the training in the so-called standard operating procedures for doing the entire process as well as the logic of how you optimize the laser guidance minutes, the 20 to 30 minutes after we infuse the cells that we believe that giving them a signal to increase the likelihood that they go where we’d most like them to go is going to be orchestrated. So there is some art and artistry to defining the guidance minutes and there’s a logic that we share that only covers a general situation. There are often circumstances where the practitioner has to use their own art as an artisan to define that. The program now has 26 locations, mostly in the U.S. and we also have artisans in Belgium, Mexico, more recently in Panama and most recently Singapore and Malaysia.
Guy (34:26):
Okay, okay. No one in Australia yet. Yeah, no one in Australia yet. There’s interest and we’ve had the challenge of all the COVID related issues of making it available which may be lightening up. Is that any better over there or can you like, you know. Yes, they finally loosened the grip over here. You can get around now. You can stop more than five kilometers from home. Yes, yes, yes. Thankfully, yeah. Fortunately, I live in a small little surf town so it kind of avoided most of it anyway. My next question to you is then, I want to touch on the metaphysical a little bit, but what is our human potential do you feel with this knowledge that you continually gain? I asked the question because we were speaking off air that I had a movement of energy, a Kundalini awakening about eight, nine years ago. When that was occurring, I felt, it was like I felt every single cell in my body come alive. It was a symphony because when you spoke about the symphony of cells at the beginning, that’s what I felt and experienced that. It really woke me up to think, I know nothing. I’ve been almost blind my whole life and I’m experiencing something more. It’s always led me to ask more questions about, well, what is our potential? Because that energy at the time felt very realigning, healing. It keeps me curious to think, well, what is the potential of our body, our cells? Where can we go with all this? Because the more I lean in, the more I just keep asking questions and not getting.
Dr. Todd (36:30):
Every answer you get leads to three more questions. Exactly. Exactly. Yep. We did chat a bit before we got online and brought up the issue of Kundalini and if I had any insights or experience with that. It’s really relevant to this discussion about laser awakened and guided stem cells. The reason I’m even doing this is because during a Kundalini meditation, I had a vision that ultimately gave me the instructions to create what I’ve produced now. It was a setup. It was in a meditation course I was taking and that particular day, we focused on Kundalini energy. For those who don’t even know what the definition is, kunda refers to a spot at the base of the spine and Kundalini is described as the serpent energy that rises up the spine when you’ve opened up all the channels and goes all the way to the crown, activating the crown chakra by endocrine association, the pineal gland and creates an advanced and enhanced state of awareness, like supercharging the body and the cells with energy and awareness. That’s where the meditation began. We started with that and then we did a process which you might want to do yourself, which is really fascinating in that you can also intend that Kundalini is in a rainbow spectrum. Once we activated it, once we activated it, we paired up with another person in the class and each of us was told to literally do the rainbow starting with the red and going up the spectrum while the other person took notes and then switched. I did that process and I went through the spectrum. First the red, then the orange, then the yellow, then the green, then the blue and indigo. Each color has its own flavor, its own set of characteristics, the particular things that would bring balance to the body depending on the circumstance. There’s this whole realm of color therapy which is part of what we have studied because we work with different colors of lasers. That gives us a starting point for understanding what a particular color of laser light will do as well. What got interesting was when I got to the violet and then I had this experience like Jodie Foster in contract of like some sort of a wormhole and coming out in what experientially was another type of dimension. And when I got to this vision, this new realm of information, the first thing I saw were the guardians of the gate and it was like these two eight foot tall Alibaba guys with big curved swords swords. And the message was you have permission to enter here. However, there’s responsibility that goes with it. And they said that others have not used this responsibly and they were destroyed. And they showed some heads flying literally. As you do. And when I went through the portal, I came to this giant room and what was the key element of it was that it was filled with DNA. Like you’re taking the DNA in a one micron nucleus and expanded it many, many, many times. So it filled a whole room and it had a living awareness and it communicated. And it said that the understanding of science about DNA is correct, but incomplete. DNA is a massive information encyclopedia. That describes the recipe of making thousands of proteins in the body that are necessary for life to exist. And it’s more than that. DNA is more than just a double helix. So the double helix is iconic. It’s probably on thousands of brands and their logos. And yet DNA is more dynamic than that. In a cell, you don’t just have a double helix, you have super coils. So the double helix wraps around proteins called histones and so becomes a super coil. And then even those can create another level of coil. And I’ve read up to seven levels of super coil. And the information was you have coils within coils in an electronic movement, the environment where charges are moving. And what is generated is essentially a radio-like phenomenon that over and above the instructions of how to build a protein, DNA is a super coil. And so when you have a protein, DNA is also transmitting and receiving frequency signatures that is integral to its function. And the message was, the tape call message was, if you can learn the types of frequency patterns that DNA makes in health and disease, you can construct a sick cell to become healthy or an old cell to become young. And that was the information which inspired me to segue from pure conventional medicine to doing biophysics research, understanding frequency medicine, electro medicine, everything that came before. And then finally, ultimately building a technology where the waveform that we create, and I’ll give you a little information about it because it’s cool. So ordinary laser produces waves and phase, and you add them, you get an amplified wave. What we’ve done, which allows the types of signatures that we give and the depth of penetration that we get to make it useful, is ordinary laser light in the frequencies we use only goes about five millimeters through tissue, and we go up many times further than that, is instead of the waves exactly in phase, we’ve developed a way to align them exactly out of phase. And when you add them together, they basically cancel each other’s vectors. So you get a vector sum zero of the electric fields and a vector sum zero of the magnetic fields. From the observational standpoint, you have two visible ways of light going in, and what comes out is invisible. You can’t measure on a parameter because in that wave pair form, there’s no net electric or magnetic field, which is what deflects the electrons to be able to measure their presence. Now it’s interesting in this discussion of this DNA vision that gave rise to go on this discovery process, is that light also has what’s called a polarization state. So a wave of light looking at it one way is like a sine wave going through space, but if you look at it coming towards you in its polarization state, it’s cycling like a spiral. So what we’ve created is a spiral counter spiral wave form of light, which is basically the geometric structure of DNA also.
Guy (44:50):
Wow. There’s a lot in there. I’m still thinking back to that contact moment you said, because I had one of those myself, and I tapped out the other end, or I didn’t stay there, freaked me out. I was like, oh my God, that’s just unbelievable. So the fact that you stay there and hang out, I’m like credit to you. That’s incredible from that. So if we’ve got this potential within the, like you say, the DNA, and it’s a sender and receiver of frequency and sound, how much can we then use ourselves through intention, through meditation, through visualization, through toning our voice? Because they’re all contributors to, is that in your mind worth an exploration for people to allow our human potential for those cells to, I guess, reorganize themselves to become a healthier cell?
Dr. Todd (46:45):
I’ll go further than that. I think it’s essential to really explore all the avenues of enhancing the human potential. If there’s a particular advantage to what we’re doing with biologic age reversal, here’s how I look at it. We have this incredible gift of whatever you want to call a God, source, all the other many names of whatever this unifying principle is through the cosmos, this unifying love and unity field principle that we already have in our bodies. A type of essentially newborn caliber pluripotent stem cell that can make anything and reverse the age, not just of adult cells, we believe even make your other stem cell pools younger. And if we just look at it from the standpoint that we provide this information to the body and these awakened cells simply provide the information and the timing reset to shift the body to three years younger, someone has gone back up the mountain three years and they’ve got a reset. Now they have three years to look at diet, exercise, lifestyle, meditation, yoga, martial arts, and a thousand and one different types of manifestation practices throughout all sorts of different traditions and many inspired teachers and masters and guides for those things that as they say when the student is ready the master will appear. There’s all the synchronicity that gets involved in when you learn a particular body of knowledge that seems to be right for you to learn. So what I would say is the real benefit of this age reversal and the simple math would be if it turns back the clock three years, if a person did this every three years they could literally become ageless. If a person does it more frequently than every three years they can actually start turning back the clock and we have people now that are 12 to 18 years younger biologically than their birthday age doing this process. And if we kept it simple just say do one of these every three years, turn back the clock three years, how much better a version of yourself can you be if you’re really working on it for three years? And what if you do that again and build and build and build it build and build and build it offers the time and opportunity to have a young vital high functioning well connected cognitive vehicle for asking the question how can I up level? Like how much can I up level in three years and do it again well now I’m at this level how can I push the envelope and move further? I think it’s really offering a platform a springboard as it were to have the time to explore the full range of human potential which my simple answer would be essentially limitless.
Guy (50:19):
Yeah and it’s such a great exploration like I love it, I love it you know and that’s why I do this podcast and I get excited by potential and my wish is to transfer that enthusiasm into other people so they kind of light the fire within themselves you know to ask the questions and see what’s out there and really go for it.
Dr. Todd (50:49):
Well if someone looks from the outside at the work that I’m doing they’d say well you’re a pioneer in this area of age reversal medicine and I love it and it’s so satisfying seeing people get better in various ways there are probably a few things that feel better than that other than maybe a good meditation or having Kundalini awaken and it seems like that’s the purpose is to provide this new modality that could be beneficial for health wellness and longevity and to me it’s really about being the bridge and the passion that drives me the most and it sounds like even drives you the most is really exploring the limits of the human potential and I’ve had the good fortune of meeting people with various modalities disciplines and techniques and it’s amazing what you can develop a if you do the discipline like it doesn’t just happen you got to do the work if you really want to perform better doing these things and yet it’s amazing what we can do if we have a training method that’s really good that takes you from one place to another I’ll comment on one in particular because I’ve done the first two or three levels of it it’s so cool it’s called vibrovision and it’s based on an Indonesian martial art called merpati putih which means the white dove and vibrovision is the subset there are five different areas including actual martial arts and combat there’s one area that’s about enhancing the physical senses so vibrovision is a method of learning how to see the world blindfolded and it’s brilliant they start very basically and build and build with a combination of martial arts movements yoga meditation breath work and intention and at the end of a five-day intensive pretty much everybody can find things blindfolded much much better than chance and they say each level boosts your chi by a factor of 10 and then you use that amplified chi to use it to see the world around you using your pineal gland as a secondary organ of vision and then level two boost that to yet a higher level of being able to literally use your now enhanced super sensory system now you go beyond just moving something that or tuning into and finding something blindfolded but you start discriminating colors blindfolded and you get better at moving through a forest of poles without hitting them blindfolded and it’s also about tuning in to a higher level of awareness and bringing in a different level of information that’s really about what is your journey what is your path what is your next best step and how can you take these steps to explore what you’re really here for and what you really have the ultimate potential to be and become and if you can keep rejuvenating the body you just have more time to do that so i think it’s part of the equation that really goes hand in hand with exploring this question of what are we really capable of being and becoming.
Guy (54:56):
Incredible and that sounds incredible i have heard of them before vibravision and i believe it was on i had a documentary maker on a couple years ago caroline corey i’m not sure if you’re familiar with the work but um i think that’s where i first hear that is that something you’re learning like in a class somewhere near you or is that are they a global outfit?
Dr. Todd (55:15):
Their training center is in augden utah occasional they do trainings outside the main center but not so much and i actually did my first level in austin they just i think that was the first time they actually did a training off site they’re about 30 of us and even the children could find the objects blindfolded which is pretty cool then the second level i actually did the main training center which was in augden utah and that really took things to another level it was quite amazing what you’re actually able to see and perceive blindfolded if you awaken your super sensory capabilities and i’m waiting for level three which will be in the same training center this July.
Guy (56:06):
Wow sounds amazing that i look forward to see how you go with that that’s for sure i i just want to i just to wrap up the podcast i wanted to touch on something before we finish and that was your pineal tones but are you doing that again in next year?
Dr. Todd (56:19):
Yes yes yeah right yeah yes so we’ve done 11 choirs around the world and that’s got a huge backstory we could spend another session just talking about that and to keep it short each of these has been at a special location of the planet to activate a type of whole energetic planetary system with a goal of helping to clear the planet of its accumulated miseries and it will be the 12th choir of 12 the final choir in the series called the aloha choir which means hello and goodbye on the island of my words that was last done 26 000 years ago before this modern series and that will be on 12 12 24 and we expect over a thousand choristers for that one wow that sounds incredible public able to come and and is it something how to to come and tone along well this is a actually going to be a choir with the okay so it’s a performance yeah performance with uh well the room may only hold 700 people the first choir we had five to six hundred people twice new range it will allow 700 it’s uh at kaanapali where there is black rock and at that time of year in december you can dive underwater and hear a whale song symphony too amazing so the prerequisite to sing in the choir is actually learning the tones and tonal patterns which are we call ancient and future tones that are really about awakening your full potential and having rejuvenate effects as well so the the basic system is 12 levels of pineal tones each of which has an intention that’s what we did in the first choir which was also in maui and 12 21 12 a date you probably recognize the end of the mayan calendar date and i thought it might end there but there are now a series of additional levels and patterns there’s now at least 36 different levels and the newer ones are even more complex and sophisticated tuned for where we’re at this place this time this century so there’s a pretty big body of work we usually have two to four conductors and there’s two days of rehearsal there might be three for the next one because it’ll be longer so we gather people from as many as 60 different countries of the world and then they haven’t sung together before so there’s two days of rehearsal with the co-conductors and that prepares it for the actual performance day so you can imagine a sound bath with hundreds and hundreds of like-minded people singing with clarity of intention
Guy (59:43):
I was giving me goosebumps all right wow that’s incredible right absolutely incredible I wonder if you ever take that like how do you fit it all in that’s the quite the other question but that’s probably for another time you’re not the first to ask that question ask that question amazing just to wrap up the podcast I asked this everyone on the show with everything we’ve covered today is there anything you’d like to leave the listeners to ponder on?
Dr. Todd (01:00:21):
I think the core question for everyone should be is how can I up level and what’s the next thing that everything is guiding me to go for perfect brilliant where can I send people to if they want to check out more of you your work I’ll have links in the show notes but it’s always good to say it out loud as well yeah probably the easiest while we’re developing even more information to share with people is DrToddO.com
Guy (01:01:05):
and you have get a book I’ve written called growing younger which I have yes which goes into the metabolic ways that are really cost effective that can also turn back the clock then we have stem cells that can do it and then there are peptides and meditation does it too so all these things work together totally well Todd thank you so much for coming back on the show today I know you’re a busy man and I really appreciate your time I really appreciate our conversations the wisdom that you share my mind is always blown I will re-listen to this episode myself to ensure that I get everything that you say but thank you for doing what you do and it’s greatly appreciated it’s nice to know that there’s people like yourself out there and doing wonderful things like this so thank you so much well thank you for creating a platform for information to be shared I love these conversations too it’s a great pleasure.