Digestive-Organ Dysfunction

PART 2: What do you do when you have several digestive conditions and they’re getting worse? Good question. What do you do? Do you take more medications? What do you think? Increase the number of pills? Do more surgeries? I had a patient of mine that had done 23 surgeries. True story. I’m telling you about clinical cases. These are not stories that we are making up… patients I see every day. 23 surgeries. Think about it, ladies and gentlemen, it’s horrible. 23 invasive incisions in the body. What do you do? Take more supplements?

One day I’m going to show you about the number and the amount of the supplements or supplement containers that people bring me, 30, 40, 50. Do you take more painkillers? I had a patient the other day; she’s taking eight painkillers. None of them is working. Eight! Do you want injections? How many of you and how many of your friends and family did the cortisone injections or pain blockers? And then after a while… I had a patient come to me three months ago. She had horrible, severe neck pain and her neck looks scary. She said the injections are not working anymore and she’s in pain, 11 out of 10. Eleven. Excruciating. Or just live in pain and misery.

So what do you do? Which one of these is an option? What do you think? Anyone have an option? Who would choose one of those? None. Right answer. This is very, very important. We’re going to look now, you and I and the world, about the neurological connections of the digestive system to the brain. This is crucial and it’s a breakthrough in understanding. This is the digestive track. For those who are not familiar, you start eating and then things start firing instantaneously. Liver, stomach, pancreas, large intestine, small intestine, gall bladder. So if we put these together, this is healthy, this is diseased. Healthy, diseased. So you don’t want to be in the stage.

Some of you say, “Well okay, you know, Dr. Jaudy, there’s nothing wrong with me and I feel good.” How do you know how good you feel? Things irrupt all of a sudden. How many people that you know of, friends, beloved family, whatever it is, they sleep and never wake up, or you’ve heard of? How many people have liver disease and they never drink alcohol? How many people have lung cancer and they don’t smoke? How many people drink tons of water, and they have kidney failure. We hear this all the time. There’s a problem. Obviously there is a disconnection problem between the organ and the brain. The organ is not firing, so we’re going to tell you what that is.

This is important. Please focus on that. Give me all your attention. Ready. A chain of command. We humans are majestically wired with a chain of command. The chain of command is this, for this purpose. The first nerve cell in the chain, which carries the commands of the central processing centers is located within the brain. The first synapse, boom, I’m firing, it’s in the brain or spinal cord, which is an extension, we’re going to show you this. This cell passes the instructions via a synapse. Synapse is a conduction. It’s an electric charge, which is an electrical or chemical signal to another nerve cell. Isn’t this wonderful. I’m so passionate about this. This first nerve cell that carries these signals is called preganglionic, which means it lives before its synapses on a booster station. Beautiful stuff. Now, the second nerve cell, which lives in the organs, is called postganglionic. Before the signal gets to your organ, it goes through a chain of command. Organs don’t function on their own.


copyright-640x100