In this episode of The Joe Rooz Show, we dive deep into the world of holistic health and wellness with co-host Svetlana Rilkoff, CEO of Ezra Healing. We discuss the importance of transitioning from traditional sick care to a more patient-centric, do-no-harm model of healthcare that prioritizes holistic wellness. Svetlana shares insights into Ezra Healing's mission to promote health and prevent disease through a grassroots movement that supports the body's integrated systems. We also explore the significance of delayed cord clamping and the potential harms of conventional hospital birthing practices, advocating for more natural and less invasive approaches to childbirth.
Additionally, we touch on the controversial topic of vaccinations and their potential links to mental health disorders, as well as the benefits of natural remedies over pharmaceuticals. Svetlana introduces an exciting new dating app aimed at connecting like-minded individuals who value traditional family structures and holistic health. This episode is packed with thought-provoking discussions on health, wellness, and the importance of informed choices in medical care.
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Ezra Healing https://ezrahealing.com
(00:02:54) Introduction and Show Overview
(00:03:34) Guest Introduction: Svetlana Rylkov of Ezra Healing
(00:05:44) The New Wellness Paradigm
(00:06:52) Svetlana's Experience in Red Wing, Minnesota
(00:08:50) Antidepressants and Mental Health
(00:24:16) Cannabis Products as Alternatives
(00:33:59) Hospital Births vs. Home Births
(00:47:37) Vaccinations and Child Health
(01:01:25) Ezra Healing's New Dating App
(01:11:40) Closing Remarks and Announcements
- Wayne Rankin
- Rosanna Rankin
- Carolina Jimenez
Transmitting live from the asylum studios deep in the bowels of Southwest Texas, it's the Joe Rooz Show. The show where we talk about anything and everything. Where nothing is sacred, nothing is watered down, and nothing is PC.
[00:03:15] Unknown:
Alright. Hey, folks. This is Joe Rooz. It is nineteen zero five hours on Tuesday, 09/02/2025, and we are bringing you the best quality talk radio we could muster without all the bluster. Welcome, my friends, to the Joe Rooz Show. Well, folks, it is great to be with you here on our do no harm episode of The Joe Rooz Show, and we have waiting in the wings the lovely Svetlana Rilkoff, CEO of Ezra Healing. But before we bring her on, we do have a little bit of stings to need to do first, and yes, I'm saying that like that on purpose, trying to get myself moving, right?
I got to get moving here. I got to send that energy level up, got to get our vibrations higher. We have a lot to talk about tonight. All right. Well, folks, head over to the website. First and foremost, very important, head over to the website and open up that contact form. And when you do that, send us over a message. Let us know whatever's on your heart, whatever's on your mind. Any questions, comments, cares, or concerns that you might have? Any issues that you might have? If you have any suggestions for a topic you'd like to have us discuss, or if you would like to have a guest that you'd like us to try to book, let us know what you think. We're always open to hear what you guys want. So head over to the website, open up the contact form, send us over that message. If you don't wanna use the contact form, totally cool with me. That's why we have an email address. Email me directly at [email protected].
[email protected]. Also, while you're on the website, don't forget to check out the support page. If you can help us out with the donation, we would really appreciate that, of course, if you have the means to do it. Don't put yourself at the debt just for us. Alright? So this is a value for value show, and if there is, any value that you're getting from the material and the content that we're putting out, we're just asking that you return that value to us in the form of a donation. It could be your time, your talent, your treasure. It could be one, two, or three, or all of them. No matter how you're able to help out, we appreciate that. So thank you very, very, very much.
Now we have, let's see, Ezra Healing. This is our Ezra Healing episode of the show. Alright? And that's our do no harm episode. And as always, we have, Svetlana, who's gonna be joining us here right now while I do this read. So, Svetlana is the CEO of Ezra Healing, and Ezra Healing is a substantial part of the new wellness paradigm currently being born in North America and around the globe. The global citizenry are no longer satisfied with the sick care version of so called health care. Band aid medicine, endlessly treating symptoms rather than root causes, must be abandoned as soon as possible. Patient centric care must be the priority.
We definitely need to transition to a do no harm model of private care that places humanity at the forefront of real health and wellness care. This new model examines your entire lifestyle and helps to promote and support the totality of your body's integrated systems. Ezra Healing is a solutions based health promotion and disease prevention grassroots movement that is always evolving to best serve you and your family. Most important thing, your family. So head over to ezrahealing.com. That's ezrahealing.com. And when you get there, just make sure you let them know you heard it right here on the Joe Rogues show. Ezra Healing's CEO Svetlana Rylkoff. Nice shirt, by the way. Do do you like my shirt? I like the shirt. This is Red Wing Minnesota
[00:07:01] Unknown:
Yes. Shirt. So I'm wearing it. I bought a pair of Red Wing shoes today, boots. Okay. And they were selling these shirts, and I it was I mean, I've been spending all week in Red Wing, so I thought I need a shirt as a souvenir. And the community has been absolutely off the charts friendly. I'm super impressed with this, you know, small to medium sized town in The United States. So it's it's been a wild week, and that's why we like America because it's 10 x everything compared to Canada. So Well,
[00:07:36] Unknown:
yeah. But remember, everything no matter how big it is up there, everything in Texas is bigger.
[00:07:42] Unknown:
Remember that. Well, just wait till I get to Texas. I'm just warming up in Minnesota.
[00:07:47] Unknown:
Warming in Minnesota? You can actually warm up in Minnesota.
[00:07:51] Unknown:
Well, I gotta I gotta get out of here because you could tell the weather is turning and, yeah. Okay. I'm gonna I'm gonna just leave my my Ezra Healing mark in Red Wing, Minnesota, and then and then we'll leave. But it's been a fantastic week here, and, this looks like the site of our first clinic in The US. That's awesome. Stoked about that. And So is that what you've been doing down there? Just laying the groundwork for that? Yeah. So I I came down here to do a a live session with Stu Peters in his in his studio, which was highly entertaining and an experience in itself.
That's true. It was sign all the signs really just started showing up to really root in Red Wing. The energy is here. There's rainbows, you know, coming out of the sky. I'm sure I'm gonna see a unicorn soon. Everybody is just so friendly. There's available nurses here. There's available healers here. So the energy is super great in Minnesota. And then, Minneapolis is here. Some great vaccine injured advocates. Shout out to Catherine. Kim Witsack is in Minneapolis. She's been, you know, the fighting the FDA for twenty years after her husband passed away on, a just called a suicide. He he he he killed himself after taking antidepressants for two weeks, so he wasn't depressed. But the family doctor, you know, prescribed he was always major advocates here in Minnesota, so we'd love to get into that. But, I think today we're talking about birthing and birthing trauma in a hospital setting. So it's it's kind of this what this random topic, but it it happens, you know, all day long in our countries.
And we wanted to talk about birth and giving birth and the birthing process and the the harm usually caused in a hospital setting. Well, it's interesting because,
[00:09:48] Unknown:
let let me just circle back to what you said about, the antidepressants. You and I, we talked about this before. I was on antidepressants, and I am no longer on antidepressants. And I feel so much more clear in the way I think, and I feel so much better mentally than I did when I was on the antidepressants. It's the strangest thing. You know, they put you on these things because you're feeling a certain way, and then you get on these things and you feel like a zombie most of the time, and, and you you come off of it, and all of a sudden everything just seems much brighter. Yeah. It it really does. I mean, it's just it may sound silly. It may sound, you know, whatever, but it really does. It's it's it's just amazing. I am so thankful that I I got myself off of those things, and then you hear these horror stories of people getting on antidepressants because they're depressed and, have these suicidal thoughts, and yet all these antidepressants that you look at, one of the side effects is suicidal
[00:10:48] Unknown:
thoughts. Yeah. So so it's How how is that how does that make sense? So I just wanna tell this short story. Okay. So I was in Minneapolis at around the same time, but the shooting happened at the Catholic church, okay, where the kids supposedly passed away, where supposedly the shooter shot himself in the back of the church. Okay. So I was Right. I was there at that time. And I thought, oh, this is interesting. I I just happened to be in the area, so I I went to Ground 0. And I really checked it out, and I got I got a feel for it. And, you know, I was I was just looking at the crowd, and I thought, you know, the harm caused by this incident will seriously last for so long, maybe forever, in these people who are directly affected.
And, you know, what do what do people do after, you know, a traumatic event? Well, maybe they have a hard time sleeping. Right. Okay? So insomnia, prolonged insomnia actually causes depression. It it's a thing. So, you know, people go to their family doctor and say, hey. I can't sleep. And often they're prescribed an antidepressant to sleep. Yeah. So this story that I was, you know, in a way covering one of the when a when a mental health advocate, helping us uncover how we, you know, do antidepressants differently. Her husband, Kim Witsack's husband, Woody, twenty two years ago, highly functional corporate guy, just was having a hard time sleeping. Wasn't depressed. He was a happy guy just who was having a hard time sleeping. Went to his family doctor, was prescribed Zoloft.
Two weeks later, he was found hung.
[00:12:39] Unknown:
He was hanging. He hung himself.
[00:12:41] Unknown:
Okay? Totally not of character, but that's what Zoloft did to his brain. Mhmm. So, you know, my whole point of going to the Catholic church and, you know, try to sprinkle some energy and healing on these people is, you know, if, you know, through the trauma, you have a hard time sleeping, don't go on an antidepressant. Don't go on a big pharma sleeping pill because they only, you know, cover cover it up. They only are a Band Aid effect, and they have so many dirty side effects. So, to your case in point, they're so dangerous, and they cause more harm than good. So how you know, as a society, probably one in two, one in three people are on a big pharma antidepressant. That's massive. Yeah. So no wonder we have everybody walking around just this numb zombie.
So how do we actually wean the masses off of big pharma antidepressants? And that's something we're working on at Ezra Healing. That's great. And that's, it's it's an important stud it's important study to undertake, and it's important task to undertake.
[00:13:50] Unknown:
I think so many people are on antidepressants that don't need to be on there. And, you know, you you hear people talk about popping Xanax and things for anxiety anti anxiety medications, and they and they do it as a as as a as a as a as a goof most of the time. You know, you hear people say, oh, I'm gonna pump myself in. You don't realize what you're doing to your body with these things. It it took me to be being on antidepressants for about almost three years to realize just how much of a negative effect it was really having on me. And again, I feel so much better now that I'm off of them. And, you know, you you supplement other things, like, I, you know, I I I say all the time, I supplemented the, the methylene blue with it. I mean, it's a it's a great product. There's a reason why they tell you not to take that with SSRIs or SNRIs, and it it because it it there's there's a negative interaction between those things. And, since I've been using the the methylene blue, I mean, I I I just feel so much better. I feel like, I I feel like I actually have feelings again. You know, that I'm not numb to everything that's going on around me, and, not really caring about what's going on around me. I I have my cares. I have my concerns, but it's not overwhelming.
And, and that's one of the so you have to find something that's, that that you can you can, supplement out the the the pharmaceutical stuff, something more natural, something something that's actually better for you and and and can cleanse you out, like a methylene blue or, you know, for sleep problems, you know, they have melatonin. You could take the melatonin over the counter stuff that's, you know, good for you, or you can go to to, American, hemppub.com and use the promo code ruse and get yourself, free shipping on anything over $40.
[00:15:35] Unknown:
Okay. So See how long we're I did that. While we're on American Hemp Pub, I have these gummies. Okay? They're Mhmm. Blueberry in flavor. And I actually love the color they chose. It's blue because one of the one of the most popular big pharma sleeping meds is, zoplicone, imivane, which is a little blue pill. Okay. So so these gummies here, they are THC and CBN. Okay? So a cannabis product to help you sleep. This is what I would love everybody to transition to. So as opposed to a traditional sleeping pill. I've been trying it for the last couple nights. It's really nice.
It just takes the edge off. I I literally sleep till 06:30 because I'm usually up at 03:34, so I get that extra two hours. So Nice. I don't I don't need that nap in my day because I'm, you know, I I I'm sleeping a little bit longer. There's a bit of grogginess in the morning, but not too much. Mhmm. If you you know, to prevent the grogginess in the morning, just take it, say, two hours before you go to bed, and then, you know, it'll it'll it'll wear off. But non addictive, no side you know, no negative side effects. I don't even get dry mouth from this. So this is the American Hemp Pub, the blueberry kind gummy bears for sleeping that we're gonna transition everybody to if they want.
[00:17:00] Unknown:
Well, they should. It's I haven't tried the products yet. I'm I'm working on that. But, I I have taken other, hemp based products, and, they work. I mean, they work remarkably well, and they're not addictive. So, you know, now people freak out when you say, oh, you're you're you're like, when I when I when I first sent out the, the the graphic, I I posted it on a couple of places. I had friends text me, you're selling pot? No. I'm not selling pot, you idiot.
[00:17:29] Unknown:
It's medicinal cannabis. Right. It's it's It's a difference. It's a very big difference. That's absolutely correct. I think we have to look at why are we taking it. You know, are we getting it are we taking it to get high and stoned? Well, no. Not not usually. You can if you want. But if you use the right product in the right way, you're gonna have that effect. The, you know, the goal is to have a good sleep. And when do we heal? It's at night. When you sleep. Yes. So if you're not sleeping, you're not healing. So this is why I'm promoting a cannabis product to help us sleep. It's it's only for the best of intentions. And I visited where they make these gummy bears and the tinctures and, you know, they have a whole lineup. But I I actually visited the facility in La Crosse, Wisconsin, and it's a really great facility.
Very high end, very clean. It's organic. You know, you know you know the cooks in the kitchen who are making it, and that's huge. I mean, there's a cannabis store on every corner right now. Right? Yeah. In some states and all over Canada. But where is that product coming from? You don't really know the source. So True. Very true. I I I would rather, you know, get a trusted referral source than just going to some random shop and getting some random whatever. You know? I'm sensitive to cannabis, but this is really, really nice stuff. You're gonna enjoy the experience. And if you want a little bit more intensive an experience, there's gummy bears with different, you know, strengths of THC and CBD where you can, you know, like, it feels like you're meeting God, you know, where we're opening up our heart, our mind, you know, you're just it's great for meditation.
So, you know, I I would love to see, you know, the masses go from alcohol to a cannabis product if they're looking for a handling.
[00:19:23] Unknown:
Yeah. I agree with you. It you have to try it. I mean, it's not gonna get you high. I mean, unless you set out to do that, you gotta take, like, a ton of it to do that, but, it's it's it's a it's a good safe product. It's, and it's it's legal. You can get it you can get it in in these ways because it's legal. It's not you're not doing something against the law. I know some people may get concerned about, you know, well, what if they drug test me at work? Well, you it's a it's a legitimate product. You can have you provide receipts for it. It's a legal product. I don't think they really have any recourse if if if you test positive for this stuff in your system.
But, you I think you would have to take a hell of a lot
[00:20:01] Unknown:
for it to show up Yeah. In a drug test. If you wanna if you really wanna get into that conversation about testing at work, I mean, you know, you could ask what they're testing for, but it is often a cannabis product. I mean, if if even if it's legal in your state, your job says, you know, you can't have any cannabis, you know, products in your urine and you do I mean, that's a that's a problem, I I would assume, whether it's legal or not in your state. But if your employer says, like, is we you know, zero or whatever, zero drugs in your urine, like, as as part of your job, you need to take that seriously if you wanna keep your job. Absolutely.
[00:20:46] Unknown:
Absolutely.
[00:20:47] Unknown:
I I think any employer who's, like, saying no cannabis in your urine don't understand the positive medicinal benefits. I mean, if you're taking it for I mean, are they testing for alcohol? Look at look at the harms of alcohol. I mean, most people, a lot of people, let's be honest, you know, have a dream to get a buzz Correct. To feel something. Okay? So what we're seeing here is we're being honest. People like the buzz. But what are the negative side effects of that buzz? Correct. And and we're, you know, we're we're under the spotlight because it has destroyed people's health.
It has relationships. Has cannabis done that?
[00:21:35] Unknown:
I would say not to the alcohol has. Yeah. I was gonna say that there I don't I don't recall seeing any major studies saying how detrimental to your health cannabis products are, as opposed to alcohol. And I know we we talked about alcohol, last week, and, you know, that was that was a great conversation. That was extremely informative, and we covered a lot of that stuff on that show. It's it's dangerous to you not only to your health, but your relationships, your mental health, your your your, intimate relationships. It affects you physically in in your intimacy. It's alcohol is not is is not the, the the the the grand oh, what's the word? I just it just flipped out of my head. You know, they they they glamor that's a glamorizer.
They they glamorize alcohol use, you know, you see you see all these ads, you know, for for this thing. Everybody's having a grand old time, you know, partying and drinking, but, yeah, okay. At the moment, you might be having a good time. What's it gonna be like later? It it it it diminishes your inhibitions. It it it opens you up to to, a lot of negative energies that will totally tear you apart. So you you need to be careful with that stuff, and, you know, I would rather pop a gummy and just chill and relax than than, than than have the drink, to be honest with you. And like I said, I've told you before, I I've I've been I've drastically cut down my, my consumption. So, you know, and I'm feeling great. Feeling great since we did it. Another another
[00:23:04] Unknown:
trend that's upon us and that American hand pop has are actually cannabis drinks. So, you know, if you're like, you need to pick up a beer or wine,
[00:23:14] Unknown:
what about picking up one of these drinks that has cannabis in it? Right. Well, you I think you mentioned it last week too. Yeah. That that that's really important that the there are substitutions. You don't need to have it. And you could Yeah. You could substitute with something that's natural. Cannabis is natural. You could substitute with something natural that's better for you than than a heavily processed. Yeah. I know someone's gonna say, well, you know, alcohol is natural too. You know? You get it from
[00:23:37] Unknown:
there. Yeah. Yeah. But the process is not natural. So Well, plus it has a lot of sugar Yes. In it. Right? And then A lot of additives. If we're if we're on this, like, health kick of, you know, decreasing your carbohydrates and sugars, alcohol just doesn't really fit into our category. Correct.
[00:23:53] Unknown:
Correct. I mean, there's a lot of additives to the alcohol. Yes. I understand that the you know, you know, alcohol comes from a lot of plant based materials. I get that. I understand it. It's fermented. I understand that. But they also add a lot of additives, preservatives, things to keep it. Sugars, they add stuff to it. So you you're better off going something natural. Now I know that's that's another issue. We talked about that all last week, but I know this week you want to talk about, birthing, natural birthing, and the and the dangers of actually having a a a child in a hospital.
So, I thought that was a really interesting subject, and and and the reason I said that is because, interestingly enough, I I I frequent a website, a social media site called Minds, m I n d s. I've been on there for many, many years, and, you know, it's kinda on the fringe with a lot of information. But when you messaged me about this particular subject, just a few days ago, I had seen information on mines talking about some of the very things that you and I were talking about that we're gonna bring to this to the audience tonight, especially with childbirth.
And so I'm gonna give you the floor, go right on into it, get into it, and I'll throw my 2¢ in as as it goes along.
[00:25:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Thanks, Joe. This is a really special topic to me, because we're all here to save the kids at all cost. You know? And we really want kids to come into this world trauma free or, you know, let's try eliminate as much trauma as possible. And, you know, we were just born into this system, and we didn't really think anything of it. And we just do it because we're told to or we're advised or somebody's, you know, saying this is how you're gonna do it. But when we really stop to think instinctively, you know, does giving birth in a very medicalized system actually make sense?
You don't make love in the hospital, do you, Joe?
[00:25:58] Unknown:
Well, if you wanna get a little kinky, yeah, but, you know, not a not a not as a habit. Usually, we don't make love in the hospital. Okay? Yes. No. Why would we give birth and what?
[00:26:08] Unknown:
It's kind of like our opening line for our newsletter. Thank you, Julie. So we don't make love in the hospital. Why would we give birth and what? So, you know, there's a lot of trauma that goes along with, you know, having a baby in the hospital. And, you know, it's it's such an unfamiliar setting to us. You know, we're ready to give birth, and here we're rushed into a facility that maybe we've never been to. We're around people that we don't know. Mhmm. We're subjected to equipment that, you know, we we don't want. So there's a lot of trauma that goes along with actually just being birthed in a hospital.
I mean, everything from, say, an epidural, which are heavily, heavily pushed, in the in the birthing setting. Right? It it decreases fetal heart rate. It is a respiratory depressor. It's in increased risk of forceps or vacuum delivery, difficulty feeding, from reduced muscle tone. So there's a lot of harm in just having an epidural. Right? If a woman is, you know, prepped properly, she can, like, embrace the discomfort as opposed to running away and numbing from it. Doesn't it sound like a like, oh, here's just this pop of pill. Let's just numb the pain, right, which is really only a Band Aid, which, you know, increases chances of you tearing.
I really just wanna talk about when the baby comes out, or just about to come out of the mother. Mhmm. There was this story from, a neonatal intensive care nurse, Kristen Nagel, from Ontario, Canada. She used to work in the ICU and help deliver babies. And, she told us this horrific story that happens more often than not to monitor the baby's fetal heart rate and and and vital signs. They screw in this, like, corkscrew into the top of the baby's head in order to monitor the vital signs. K. They they it's literally like a corkscrew that you're you're you're screwing into their skull.
[00:28:23] Unknown:
Jeez. I never heard of that.
[00:28:25] Unknown:
And that's just common practice. The mother may not even know, k, because she's just so busy in her own head and world. You know, she's not gonna feel it, but baby's gonna feel it. So this was disclosed that this is a very common practice that they drill, like a probe into the baby's skull Okay. To monitor their breathing, their heart rate, you know, which I'm sure is all gonna go up once you stick something in your skull. Of course. So so that's one thing. Another thing is, you know, when baby's born, what do, you know, what do they like to do really, really quickly?
Like, okay. Baby's out. Cut the Yeah. The umbilical cord. Yeah. Cut the cord. Cut the cord quick. Right? Within ten seconds, it's cut. After, like, ten months of this, like, baby being attached to the mother, to the umbilical cord, they're so quick to cut it. K. Well, at least one third of the blood, baby's blood, is still in the placenta. Right. So if we're cutting the cord, that means we're cutting off the blood flow that should be going back to the baby from the placenta. So we're basically stealing one third of baby's blood. And I and I I when I found this out, I thought, okay. Well, that makes sense that the blood's still in the placenta, but why are they cutting the cord so early? Why is the medical system so quick to cut the cord?
My conclusion is they're actually they're harvesting stem cells from the placenta on the blood. Oh, yeah. For sure. So so we have organ harvest harvesting going on in the Birthing Room, in the hospital. They're they're they're harvesting baby stem cells. That makes sense to me that they're doing that because these guys are, you know, criminals, so they're gonna look every way to make money, and then they sell these stem cells somewhere. So delayed cord cutting is super important. The baby's gonna get the blood back. It's gonna be, you know, nice and, alert because it has all its red blood cells.
So, you know, what we really encourage, parents, mothers to understand that delayed cord cutting is really, really important.
[00:30:44] Unknown:
And, actually, like, it could stay on for hours to days, and it just falls off naturally. Yeah. Can I I'm I'm gonna interrupt you for a second here because I I have some information here? So, for the baby, the risks of cutting the umbilical cord early, you have reduced blood volume like you said. Immediate cord clamping, within ten to thirty seconds prevents the transfer of 20 to 40% of fetal blood volume that remains in the placenta potentially lower leading to lower iron stores, so they they become anemic, basically. A 2013 Cochrane review found that ICC increases the risk of iron deficiency anemia in infants in three to six months.
So you basically you're you're being you're you're born anemic. So it gives them another reason to pump you with more, pharmaceuticals. Preterm infants are at a higher risk of intraventricular hemorrhage or necrotizing
[00:31:47] Unknown:
Fasciitis?
[00:31:48] Unknown:
Enterocolitis. Is that what I'm saying right? Colitis. So, like, some inflammatory
[00:31:54] Unknown:
in the bowel. Yeah.
[00:31:56] Unknown:
With with ICC due to reduced blood volume and oxygen delivery. And then there's a respiratory transition. ICC disrupts the natural transition from placental to lung based oxygen supply. Right? Because when the baby's in uterus, in utero, how is the baby breathing? It's breathing through the umbilical cord that's connected to the mother. So those the baby's lungs aren't really equipped yet at that at this particular point to breathe on its own. So when you cut those cord when you cut that cord, you you are potentially doing damage to the baby's oxygen supply, damaging the baby's lungs.
[00:32:39] Unknown:
So this baby is, you know, new to the world. It already has one third of its blood stolen from it. And maybe the baby comes out, you know, flat. Let's just say flat, not breathing properly, you know, shallow breaths, maybe not crying. Yeah, and that could be from the drugs from the epidural. Okay? So the baby's already, you know, high on big pharma drugs already. And then it comes out and, you know, okay. One third of its blood, you know, is being stolen. So what's what you can have a flat baby. And what do they do? Oh, well, time to resuscitate the baby. You know? Like and then all these interventions on the baby and then take it away from the mother where the baby should be, like, you know, on skin to skin on on the chest. So another thing so after the cord clamp or the cord cutting that they do so quick, they they also they rub the baby, and they they wash it really quickly, you know, within within hours. And that that white vernix, it's called, it's a vernix. That's what the baby's been basically swimming in and and for nine months. That's like a nice natural lubricant.
That's protective layer. So but the hospital staff are so quick to, like, scrape it off, wash it off. Yeah. So another another thing that causes, harm.
[00:34:00] Unknown:
Yeah. And then, and also talking about, the cord clamping, or cord cutting, you you mentioned that there there is no skin to skin contact or delayed skin to skin to skin contact. But we know that the the it's it's important for that skin to skin contact with a newborn and its mother. Right? And the reasons are because it it it's it's a psychological connection. It's a physical connection. It's bonding, and, and if you would hope that the the parent the the mom would wanna have would wanna breastfeed, is the most is the best thing for the baby. You you know, they they're so quick to throw them on formula, which is why it's just chemicals.
That's all formula is. It's just chemicals. It's nothing natural really. It's nothing that's good for them. The best thing for them is mother's milk. And by by by whisking the child away as quickly as they do, you're depriving the parent. You're depriving the mother of being able to cuddle, nurture, bring psychological comfort to the baby, bring physical comfort to the baby, who just went through a very traumatic thing. Just think about that. It's a very traumatic moment. It needs the mother. And, I I always wondered also that that there's something to do with the eye contact as well. That another thing that they do, and and and you could probably speak more to this than I can, but another thing they do is that, when a baby is born, I remember this when my children were born, immediately, they're they're throwing eye drops in the baby's eyes to clean out the eyes, to clear out the eyes. But get but that makes the baby's eyes stay closed, and they but a baby needs that contact, that visual contact with the mother, that eye to eye contact with the mother at that very critical moment. But yet modern medicine takes that away from them.
[00:35:50] Unknown:
Yeah. It's called azithromycin antibiotic ointment. Mhmm. You know, they they they put the goop in there. And it's not just in, like, a liquid eye drop. It's literally goop. Okay? Can you imagine, you know, you're just coming out, and you have this, like, stinging goop in your eyes? Mhmm. You're right. You you you can't see. You can't see. So the bonding to the eye contact is lessened. One more, you know, one more traumatic thing for both, you know, mother and baby. It's it's criminal. This is criminal. And if you you know, I I I've seen mothers, fathers saying, oh, I don't want the eye drops.
Well, they freak out. The staff actually freak out. Yo. You have to have it. It's hospital policy protocol. So these are the things that maybe you don't know until you get there, and then you're surprised. So that's why we're having this discussion today. Anybody who's pregnant, thinking about getting pregnant, you know, having a delivery, where are you gonna have it? Who's gonna be around you? What kind of interventions do you want to your most precious child in the world? And, you know, who do you want touching and not touching? They're so they they're so quick to touch you, strangers touching you. Like, don't touch me. You know?
But they're so quick to touch and bring in the medical students and the residents and, oh, open your legs. Let's look at your vagina. Let's look at, you know, how far is she along? It's so invasive.
[00:37:31] Unknown:
It is.
[00:37:32] Unknown:
So yeah. So, you know, cord cutting is too early. Scraping off the vernix doesn't need to happen. You know, goop antibody goop in the eyes doesn't need to happen. And then, you know, the the major fourth one is is the vitamin k shot that they give. Like, is is that is that a surprise to you? Do you do you know that? I I didn't know they gave them a vitamin k shot. Oh, like, they they give out vitamin k because their justification is, you know, clotting factors and make sure they don't bleed out. And but but they'll they get their first, I'm gonna call vaccination. Mhmm. They call it vitamin k.
I'm gonna call it vaccination or or bioweapon, on the first day before they even give it back to the mother. It's like, oh, let's get your vitamin K shot in. So this baby is getting traumatized, just cutting, pulling, and scraping, and poking and you know? Like, that is not normal.
[00:38:34] Unknown:
No. It's not.
[00:38:35] Unknown:
We're we're we're led to believe that's the way you deliver a baby, but that is the most traumatic
[00:38:41] Unknown:
entrance into this planet. Of course. I mean, just just think about, you know, you you you're born. I mean, we all went through it. We've all been born. You know? Thank god we don't remember those have memories of those particular horrific moments, but, or traumatic moments, really. You know, you you you're you're ripped you're you're basically you're you're ripped out of the safest place you could possibly be in, warm, comfortable. You're out in this cold place. You're getting poked, prodded. You're getting stuff shoved in your eyes to burn your eyes. You're getting stuck with pins and needles. It it it's it's crazy what they do to babies. Now that that wasn't always the case. I mean, prior to modern met modern medicine, you know, women gave birth mostly at home.
[00:39:27] Unknown:
Wow. Women just know what to do. They know how to get pregnant. Yeah. So you would think, you know, that they would know how to deliver a baby. And and this is this is what gets me. It's like modern medicine just thinks that they can step in and they know the best while while this woman has literally grown a human being inside her body. Do you think do you think that We act do you think that women are are are
[00:39:53] Unknown:
scared into going into a hospital delivery as opposed to doing a home birth?
[00:40:00] Unknown:
I think right now, women are scared to do it at home because That's what I'm saying. Yeah. Condition. They've been conditioned, and I know for a fact, family doctors and obstetricians will basically say you're a harm to your child if you want a birth at home. That's the consensus for the most part. Not not all doctors, but most are saying, oh my gosh. You're you you can't do that at home. You need the you need the interventions and the machines and you know? So so they disempower women in and women have been disempowered for as long as I know that, you know, giving birth has to happen in a hospital. And if you're not, you know, you're you're a danger to your child.
But this is the sort of the the the brainwashing that we need to, you know, start talking about and saying, you know what? You're right, Joe. Women have been giving birth for, you know, hundreds of thousands, millions of years. We've been doing this instinctively. Our bodies just know how. And if we're given the opportunity without outside pressure, the body will just do it just like it got pregnant. You didn't even know that you're getting pregnant, but it just did it. Same thing with the birth. So, you know, home birth should not be this, oh, wow. It's such a novel idea. No. Like, that's the normal. Or or in a place where, you know, you don't have all these, you know, interventions that we know cause harm.
It's just empowering the woman. It's educating her and the family. It's supporting the family with solutions. You know, many women are like, I don't want a birth in the hospital, but
[00:41:39] Unknown:
what do I do? How do I do it at home? You know? Well, you're pro you're programmed, you know, through not only through your doctors, you know, you know, scaring you to to not deliver at home, but you're also you also see it on in the media. You see it on TV shows. You see it all those things. They they exaggerate the complications and the risks that that come with home birth. It it's it's a lot of it's exaggerated. And but if you if you're planning this thing out, you're taking the appropriate steps to do it, you you'll you'll get you'll be able to do this, and the outcome is is better off. You're in a much more comfortable environment for yourself and for the baby, and and and and there's been nothing that that's that's shows anywhere that I've seen anyway, because I I because when we talked we talked earlier, I started looking up some of this stuff, that that show any any real negative, outcome from a home birth. As a matter of fact, it's mostly positive.
[00:42:40] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, there's there's so many positives for for home births. You know, there's this strong sense of empowerment for mother, for father, for the family. You know, it's it it it it's a it's a celebration. It's a time of celebration. Freedom of movement. You're already in your home. It's a comfortable setting. You know, faster recovery. Mhmm. Okay? Breastfeeding, easier. Pain relieving hormones, oxytocin and endorphins, help prevent postpartum depression. So you're getting more of your natural hormones. You know, doctors in the hospital, they're trained to touch you and interfere.
You know, and they're, like, so proud. Oh, I delivered the baby. Well, no. Actually, the mother did that. But but thanks for coming out. You know, it's not touching is such a big thing. I found it so invasive to have all these people that I didn't know touching me when I was, you know, giving birth. So, you know, there there is a place, a time and place for, you know, things there there are chances that things don't go totally right at home. Mhmm. Or maybe you're at high risk. You know? You're obese. You know, maybe you're high risk or something. There are these times when, you know, appropriate medical intervention is necessary in an emergency situation.
But for the most part, you know, women can do this at home in the comfort of their home with their doula, with their midwife, with their family support, and just, you know, empowering their mind that this is the way that they wanna go.
[00:44:28] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, I I I I think I I I so I'm stuck on that thing where where I really do believe that a lot of medical professionals kinda scare patients and and parents, mom and dad, into, you know, you you need to do this. It has to be done in the hospital. It's the safest place to do it when it's really not the case. And, it it is a very invasive process. I I I remember when when my kids were born, it's it's just the parade of people coming in and out, poking and prodding, my my my child's mother. It it was it's it's humiliating in a lot of ways. I mean, it's not the it's and I know they say, well, you know, they're medical professionals. They're they see it all the time. Yeah. Okay. Fine. But, you know, it this is I'm glad you see it all the time. I don't want I don't want you to see me like this.
You know? But it's I don't know. I I I think that I think that people need to have options presented to them clearly enough where they can make an informed decision. Now I know that Ezra Health, Ezra Healing I I don't know why I keep on saying health, but Ezra Healing, you you have you have programs in place where you can where where where people can come to you. Correct?
[00:45:50] Unknown:
Yeah. So, you know, if you're if if you're, you know, a mom or dad or expecting out there and you wanna talk about these things, you know, you can make, an appointment with one of our wellness nurses. And we're gonna, you know, we're gonna walk you through the process, answer your questions, get you in touch with the right people in your community. You know, obviously, you know, we're we're we're in Canada, and we don't have clinics everywhere that you can come birth at. But, you know, if this is something that you wanna do at home, we're gonna walk you through the process. We really celebrate kids.
You know, we have a wonderful story to share. We have, Madeline from California. She's on our Ezra healing team. She's the technology expert. And she she just gave birth to a really healthy, beautiful baby boy at home, and everything went, you know, pretty smoothly. And it's you know, she's already wanting to get back to work. I'm like, Madeline. You know? You know? But it it was just a really good experience. And, you know, this baby is not going to be vaccinated. You know? This baby is not gonna be stuck in the matrix. That's another that's another thing too. Right? We have a very awake, aware mother who, you know, will not be doing well baby clinics and vaccinations.
So this child will be literally, you know, in the upper, like, one percent of the world's population because it's not gonna have this, you know, damaging effects of the vaccinations. So that's really exciting to have Maddie, you know, birth a a child. And and we're going a different path because we know now. We know now. And, no parent ever wants to hurt their child, and that's why we've introduced these free wellness consultations for babies 12 her age. I'm super excited about this. So free consultations, free, you know, wellness information and help for babies that are 12 her age.
And the reason why we wanna do this is because we wanna, you know, save the kids at all costs. We'll take the cost. That's on us. You know, we if you have questions about should I or should I not vaccinate, you know, or maybe there's just any sort of medical question that you're concerned about your child, we're happy to, you know, walk you through and and do our best as very experienced nurses and healers to help you with your child, you know, before you maybe go into the emergency setting if you have to or go to your vaccination clinic. Like, we wanna be able to talk to you if you're on the fence about vaccinations.
[00:48:36] Unknown:
That's that's key also is is to stay away from the vaccines. You know? I I greatly regret that I wasn't more informed at the time that my children were born about the dangers of vaccinations. And, because I I I would have rethought everything, every step that I took with with my children. I would not have gone through the whole vaccination process and things like that. I honestly believe that a lot of the issues that my son deals with is a result of all of the vaccines that he got pumped full of. I don't know if I relayed the story to you, whether privately or on the show. I don't think I ever really talked about it. But, you know, when, when my son was born, of course, he he had a normal birth, normal childbirth in a in a hospital, you know, and I say normal in the quote unquote, in the hospital. You know, he got pumped full of all the medications. He got, all of the vaccine all the vaccines, the death shots, and all that stuff.
And, when he was about six months old no. Maybe less. Actually, it was less than that. He was about three of I think, let's see, July, August, September, October, November. Yeah. He was about five or six months old. I was working overnights up in New York. And, before I went to work, I was laying on the on the couch, and I had him laying on top of me. And, I had to start getting ready for work. And, you know, when I I I moved him to wake him up and no reaction. He felt very, very hot to me. So I sat up with him, and when I sat up with him, he just flopped back, arms back, everything, no color in his face, not breathing. And, of course, you know, I'm trained to handle this, but I'm trained to handle it on somebody else, not my own kid. You know what I mean? It's like everything that you taught just kinda goes out the window at that for, like, a split second.
So, of course, I'm I'm I'm I'm screaming this out. Call 911, and I'm trying to get his breathing going. I got his breathing going. So long story short, he ended up having a febrile seizure, and because his his temperature spiked up so fast, so high with no explanation given No explanation given, and he had just a few weeks before that had his next round of, of shots. But, of course, they had no explanation as to why the the the temperature spiked the way it did, and he stopped breathing for which felt like an eternity, but was probably more for just a few seconds, really. And after that, we noticed that his his speech was very, very delayed.
He developed all kinds of other, mental health issues, to where now today, he had you know, he was diagnosed as having Asperger's, ADHD, What else was it? And more recently, they they said that he was diagnosed as bipolar. You know? And I I think all of that comes from the vaccines that he that he received at, like, four or five months old and which just had maybe a delayed reaction. I don't know. But I'm, you know, I'm not a doctor. I don't I don't know these things, but, it just seemed that the timing in in hindsight just seemed so suspicious, you know, and, and I attribute a lot of that stuff to to the problems that he that he dealt with growing up. I mean, they they when when he was diagnosed, early on, I mean, they they threw him on Prozac, of all things. And he was in kindergarten, first grade, and the the dosage that they gave was incorrect, and he was having these violent outbursts to where I had to actually go to the school, pick him up, and football carry him out of the school with him kicking and screaming because of the reaction he was having to the medications.
And when I we went to the doctors and told them, you know, what is going on here? They had no explanations. Well, we're gonna try this. We're gonna try that. We're gonna try this. We're gonna try that. And just more medication, more medication, more medication on top of medications, and, you know, and I really do believe that it all stems back to all of those shots, those death shots that that they pump these kids full of, from birth up until, like, what is it? When they start school, they had that, like, 30 something shots now, but it's it's ridiculous. It's it's an absolutely ridiculous process.
And, and I I am so glad to see that there are so many more people that are finally waking up to this and are are are not vaccinating their children and are letting their bodies adapt naturally. You know, we build up natural immunity by playing in the dirt. You know? Go out there, get dirty. You know? Cut yourself. That's good. It's a good thing. You know? You don't need all these vaccines. Yeah. I I
[00:53:36] Unknown:
You know what? You just you just colored for me, Joe. You know what you just did for me and the audience is you really linked childhood vaccinations to mental disorders. Yeah. Like, your story was like this.
[00:53:54] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:53:55] Unknown:
So, you know, we finally caught on. These vaccinations are causing harm, not only in our physical self, but our mental self. And then it's like, oh, yeah. Let's give you a diagnosis of ADHD.
[00:54:09] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:54:10] Unknown:
Let's put you on the med. So It's so easy. That's why. Their their model is so clear to us now. And, you know, it's it's hard to fathom that we've even been subjected to this for so long. Like, we're talking about our kids when they were babies that have suffered basically a lifetime because they were vaccinated.
[00:54:34] Unknown:
Mhmm. Now just think about one of the ingredients. I'm I'm looking at some of the notes here that you and I shared today. Just just one of the ingredients alone in in vaccines is is what? Formaldehyde. And what does formaldehyde do? It's what they use to stiffen bodies. I hate to be so crude about it, but that's exactly what it is. It's it's to preserve bodies. And what does it do? It attacks the nervous system and it stiffens the nervous system. Yeah. And it causes leukemia. It causes cancer. It it it it's what is the statistic? It's it's like the most common type of of, leukemia is the most common type of cancer in children.
And what's in all of these vaccines is they're getting formaldehyde, which is known to cause cancer and leukemia. And then you could say, well, you know, it's such it's such a small amount, so it's really the, yeah, it may be a small amount in one vaccine. But when you're pumping them full of thirty, forty vaccines before their school age, that's a hell of a lot.
[00:55:40] Unknown:
See, this is where the system we have to, like, jump out of the system because these schools are, like, mandating the kids be vaccinated before they come to school or daycares. Yep. And the parents are just going along with it. Oh, well, I need to take my kids to day care, so I have to vaccinate them. I mean, I get it. You know? We need to work out to household incomes. But at the expense of what? Your child? Like, this is if if your organization is saying your child can't come here unless you vaccinate, this is the biggest red flag that you'll ever see, and you should run from that facility.
Yeah. I agree with you. I agree. So, I mean, just on the Stu Peter show, we are talking about these vaccination clinics that are literally the the the the epicenter of the genocides. Mhmm. Okay? And, like, Stu and I would have no problem burning them down, you know, with no people in them, but we would burn them down. A lot of people wanna burn vaccination centers down. I know that for a fact in Canada. So you know? And it sounds like you guys kinda feel the same thing here too. So Yeah. If we're if we're so strong on that feeling that we wanna burn it down, I mean, like, when are when are we gonna when is the masses gonna wake up over this? Well, hopefully to say we have to just take your control back. We have to stay home with our kids. You know? Teach them at home.
Like, somehow, like, decrease or yearly spending so we don't have to have two jobs to support the household. Like, can we get back to raising the kids, you know, with the mother present and not pressuring her to go to work or go to university, you know, if her if her heart was just like, I wanna stay at home with the kids, which
[00:57:35] Unknown:
instinctively, that's what a mother really wants to do. Yeah. I I agree with you. And and and why are why are women berated that make the decision that they wanna stay home and raise their kids? I don't think there's a more noble job you can do than to to be be an at home mom, and take care of your children and raise your family. I I I don't I don't I I can't
[00:58:01] Unknown:
see been the messaging. Right? This whole feminist movement. This feminist movement, I mean, I wasn't part of it there, but I am now you know, it was cool to go to university, cool to get a full time job, cool to work up the corporate ladder. Oh, but cool to have kids too. So how do I do it all? Right. Like, something suffers. Okay? So often, you know, a well educated woman, maybe in her late twenties, early thirties, she's, you know, she's just graduated from university, spent, like, all this money, all this time, but now her biological clock is ticking. And she's like, I wanna have a family. Mhmm. So she has a family. She has some kids. She goes off on mat leave, and then it's like, oh, I gotta go right back to work.
And I have to put my kids in daycare, but I have to vaccinate them in order to go. And now you have, like, a possibly retarded child for the rest of your life. Yeah. Where that's not smart. So, you know, I kinda wanna just tear this all up and and be like, why can't we just get back to being our own primal roles? You know, if the mother is instinctively and she wants to have kids and stay, you know, at home with them and support the family and household, let's celebrate that. Absolutely. While the bad you know, financially supporting the household and and being that leader in the household. Right? So that's that's actually, Joe, why I wanna start this or we're starting we're launching soon our primal,
[00:59:31] Unknown:
dating site our dating app. I was I was coming to that.
[00:59:36] Unknown:
Okay? And this is the whole philosophy. It's celebrating families, celebrating our children, whether they're biological or, you know, stepchild. Like, we we need to get back to the family unit, and I think everybody's craving that. There's been a lot of, you know, division, in the last five years, a lot of breakups, you know, a lot of divorces. You know, kids are a mess because of these divorces. So, you know, let's get like minded people back together
[01:00:06] Unknown:
and start building families again. So so did you so you're so you're developing this dating app with with the intention that you're gonna put like minded people together that that will have common values, and their their basic goal is it's not the quick hit not the quick hookup like most of the dating apps are. It's for a a long term positive relationship where where people come together with the intention of raising a family and living, in a in a, quote, unquote, traditional, husband wife, relationship.
[01:00:43] Unknown:
Yeah. We can call it, you know, what we want, but, it's it's exactly. It's more traditional. It's getting back to our roots. It's getting back to the basics. It's not the quick hookup. You know, you have your Tinders for that. You have your matches. You have your Facebook dating apps. But this is you know, we're gonna do our best to, you know, have a great filter. So the people that land on this platform, they're, you know, of the best quality that we can possibly, you know, have. So when we're That's awesome. People are when people are being connected, they're you're already working with quality people. We're gonna make it very clear on the dating app, you know, who we're attracting and, you know, really lift up that those those morals again and and the family unit again. That's great. And and kids and, you know, growing old with kids and growing old with your family.
And then you're gonna have this, you know, health care system behind you to back you up. For example, home births or,
[01:01:39] Unknown:
well baby visits or You're gonna work all that into the app?
[01:01:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Exact we're gonna work it all in. Nice. You know? And that I mean, there's a lot of dating apps out there, Joel. So what's gonna set ours apart from all the other ones? We're gonna throw in a lot of wellness, suggestions, and and portals for people to go.
[01:02:00] Unknown:
So yeah. So we're working on that. I'm super excited. So it's not really just gonna be like an app. It's gonna be more like a community, really, if you think about it. So you'll be able to put, like, articles and newsletters and things like that into the into the the framework of it so people can educate themselves as they're going. And, and and they'll be connected to Ezra Healing, which is fantastic. That's a great idea. That that's that's that's a novel approach. I like that.
[01:02:23] Unknown:
And then we'll you will advertise it, like, you know, on your show so people you're listening to viewers, right, who are all, like, you know, who are like minded Mhmm. Who are listening to your show, we're like minded.
[01:02:35] Unknown:
And then we could just start connecting with each other. I agree. I that that's a great idea. I love I love the idea of that, and I'm excited for it. So when do you think what's your, soft launch?
[01:02:44] Unknown:
I'm really, you know, I'm thinking within four weeks. That soon. Wow. Yeah. So Julie and Maddie have been working on it. So, we just wanted to start talking about it today because, it it will be coming.
[01:02:59] Unknown:
So you're announcing this for the first time on this show? That's awesome. Yeah. Thank you. That's fantastic.
[01:03:06] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I mean, you're you're special. Take that too. And, I there's just so much potential for you, Joe. Like, I'm so excited for your future, your future career, and, you know, the networking, and speaking. I I think this is you know, you're you're sharing a story before we we went live. You know, how you're just doing all these great things to elevate yourself, keep your vibration high, and then, you know, your work is not the most gratifying Yeah. At the moment. And then it just sucks the life out of you. You get there, and you're just like, ugh. You know? Yeah. And that's that passion. Like, we have to get back into our passion because it's not even work then when you're living your passion. Right? Love what you do and do what you love. So,
[01:03:55] Unknown:
I think that's it. And then we said too, it like, it's like, as soon as we start the show, the energy changed. Right?
[01:04:02] Unknown:
Yeah. We were tired and, like, oh. Exactly. But then we just kinda see, we're buzzing. We're we're buzzing together. We're aligning together. That's right. And I think I think you know what? You you said, okay. We'll keep your vibration high. And my my my question went my head when you said this, like, well, how do we do that? And I think I answered it. We're we're around people who elevate us, who motivate us, who want, you know, to see us do better Yes. Or cheering for us. Right? You're not criticizing me. You're not, you know, bringing me down.
You know, you're we're engaging. So that's what I want this app to be, like, too. Right? You're just connecting with people that are just
[01:04:44] Unknown:
empowering you. I like it. I think that's gonna be great. I think it can do really, really well, and I think you're gonna get a lot of people hooked up that are that are, of a like mind with with intentions for long term, and, I I think it's gonna be incredibly successful. So
[01:05:00] Unknown:
that's fantastic. I love it. I love it. Yeah. We and we wanna go worldwide with it. Right? Because there's a lot of, you know, there's a lot of people all around the world,
[01:05:10] Unknown:
you know Sure. Who think like us. And maybe they're not all in our little small communities, but they are out there. There are more pea there are more people that that are looking for that traditional, if I could use the term traditional, looking for that traditional type of relationship than than you might think. You know, the the the minority is very vocal, so it sounds like they're they're they're more prevalent. But the reality it is, I think the the majority of people, and especially with this upcoming generation, I think this coming generation, is a lot more, in tune with that than previous generations, and I think they are looking for that stuff. So the app, you know, you market it toward this generation, you'll you'll do fantastic with that.
[01:05:55] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean I mean, who doesn't want people that you love around?
[01:06:01] Unknown:
You know? Yeah.
[01:06:03] Unknown:
Nobody wants to grow old alone. Pretty sure
[01:06:06] Unknown:
we don't. It's true. Yeah. For the most part.
[01:06:10] Unknown:
Right? I I wanna see the kids, you know, grow up and have grandkids. Absolutely. You know? And and I think they're you know, just speaking from personal experience, there's been a lot of, you know, separation. Right? I'm separated from my family, my kids. But that doesn't mean that I can't have, you know, another family, you know, whether it's a biological family or a stepfamily. Right? Sure. So I I I mean, I think the divorce rate skyrocketed in the last five years. So there's a lot of, like, single people kinda hanging out
[01:06:40] Unknown:
just waiting for that aligned mate to show up. Yeah. I think the divorce rate right now is fifty one percent or fifty two percent almost.
[01:06:49] Unknown:
What what is? Sorry. Fifty two percent.
[01:06:52] Unknown:
Is what? The divorce rate.
[01:06:55] Unknown:
Yeah. Like, that's just you know, it's too high and, you know, is is I know, like, for me, speaking of personally, why I got divorced, you know, the second time. I actually I got divorced once to the same husband, and then we reconciled. And then 2020, we got officially divorced forever, and that's been five years. We couldn't withstand the COVID blow. Yeah. But, I I I think, you know, we're we're a lot more wiser in our in our beings now that when we choose our next mate, we're gonna be really choosy about it. We're gonna be really picky about it, and we'll know very quickly if these people are aligned with us or not. So, you know, I just wanna attract the aligned people who are already, you know, focused and wanna be in a committed relationship, not this. I you know, I I've I've tested out, you know, quite a few dating sites, and it's like, what's your intention?
Like, one night, forever, married, you know, grew like, I'm just like, what? Yeah. What what do you mean what's my intention? Like, it doesn't even make sense to me. Or or, like, what's your gender? And you get 12 different choices. I'm just like, well, no. And I got I got kicked off a dating site for for mentioning Ezra Healing. I'm just like, are am I being monitored here? Really? What's going on? So you got kicked off for that? Yeah. I I got kicked out after I paid for three months. I'm just like, that's not fair. How can you keep, Like, I'm, like, I'm just looking for love. Like, why are you being so harsh? Like,
[01:08:45] Unknown:
I don't know. I get you, though. I get you. I I tried I played around some of the dating apps, early on when, when I got divorced, and, man, it just wasn't for me. It really wasn't. The, first of all, where I live, the, the dating pool is kinda thin. It's kinda shallow. Not much available around here. And so being that I live so close why you need her app. Yeah. There you go. That's why and so and plus I live so close to Mexico. So what what was happening was I was getting matched with significantly older women from Mexico who had didn't speak any English whatsoever.
And when I say significantly older, I mean older. I'm 55. I'll be 55 this year. Alright? I'm talking 70 when that wasn't even the range that I put on the app. Right. You know? And I'm like, are you kidding me? I I can't. So I I got off that thing and, you know, things are good. I'm I'm not I'm I'm not complaining. You know? I I I like I like my I like I like my alone time. I mean, there are times where, you know, you definitely wanna have, you know, companionship. You want some company. You want, you know, you for sure. But, you know, I've gotten I've gotten used to being alone.
And, and it it may sound negative, but it's really not. I mean, I I look forward to coming to my home, after a day of work and, you know, getting on the show and doing stuff and meeting meeting, you know, people and learning like, and then I I've been saying this a lot lately, and it's the truth. You know, I do these shows, and I'm I'm I'm in I'm meeting all these different people, and I'm learning so much from all these different people, all the different perspectives that I'm hearing, and, and and having these conversations with, I'm enjoying that. And, honestly, I think that if I was in a relationship right now, it would be very difficult because, you know, I love what I'm doing, and I'm not gonna change that for, you know, for for anybody.
I I did that for too long. You know, I I put myself behind somebody else only to get stepped all over, you know, in in the end. And, I'm not gonna do that again. You know? So I'm I'm doing this, and if if I don't find somebody that's in alignment with what I'm doing, well, that's, you know, your your your goal has to be supporting my goal. If it's if it's not gonna do that, then it's not gonna work.
[01:11:17] Unknown:
Well, that that's the thing. I mean, you know, that's the line with the You probably said too much. No. No. You know, somebody who supports your your passions. Mhmm. You know? I mean, somebody who is a cheer cheerleader.
[01:11:32] Unknown:
You know? Yeah. Yeah. There we go. Alright. Well, Svetla, any, anything you wanna impart to us before we, wrap this baby up?
[01:11:41] Unknown:
You know, I just, I just love the topic we were talking about tonight, you know, the birthing, the trauma that's caused in in a hospital setting. I think it's really important because, you know, it affects a child. You know, we didn't talk about circumcision, and we could do that another day. Yes. But, you know, the least trauma, the better, because we don't know how these these things at a small age affect us when we're older.
[01:12:08] Unknown:
Very true. Very, very true. Joe for for having me. No problem. And and for the folks that are watching and and listening, if you have any comments on this whatsoever, feel free to head over to the website, joeroos.com. Send us over a message. Let us know what you Or if you're watching, you can just drop a comment down below. It'll stay there, in perpetuity, so we'll be able to get to it after the show comes to an end, and we'll be able to respond to it at a later time. And, Svetlana, thank you again. God bless you. I I love having you on the show. You're a blessing to me, and I I really appreciate you and everything that Ezra Healing is doing. And, you know, thank you so much. This was great.
Thank you, Joan. Alright. You have a great night. You're a blessing to me too. Alright. Thank you. Yeah. You have a great night. Yeah. You too. Bye bye. Alright, folks. So Svetlana Rylkoff of Ezra Healing, CEO of Ezra Healing, the boss, as we say. So hope you guys found that interesting. I sure I certainly did. And, you know, it's it's amazing the stuff that you learn in having these conversations. That's what I was trying to say earlier. And, it's really it's really great that we can have these open conversations, and we have this platform here that we can do that. So thank you so much to everybody that's been watching tonight. So just let me tell you a couple of quick things. So Podhome is our host platform for the audio side of the podcast. Podhome is the most modern and easy to use podcast hosting platform that's out there today. You can use it to publish your episodes, enhance your audio, and automatically generate broadcast your show live across the modern two point o platforms, like pod Podcast Guru and fountain.fm and and hundreds of others.
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Alright. Well, I think that should just about do it for us for tonight. So, folks, thank you again for spending the time with us here on this Do No Harm episode of The Joe Ryu Show. Thank you to Svetlana Ryokov for spending her evening here with us as well and bringing us some great information. Don't forget folks, make Texas independent again. Go podcasting, keep a steady stride, and keep talking. Good night. We'll see you tomorrow night.
Introduction and Show Overview
Guest Introduction: Svetlana Rylkov of Ezra Healing
The New Wellness Paradigm
Svetlana's Experience in Red Wing, Minnesota
Antidepressants and Mental Health
Cannabis Products as Alternatives
Hospital Births vs. Home Births
Vaccinations and Child Health
Ezra Healing's New Dating App
Closing Remarks and Announcements