Burdock Root – The Metal Flusher

Burdock Root

In the hollows and ridges of Appalachia, from the 1700s through the early 1900s, an unbroken tradition passed mother-to-daughter held that the first week of spring required a specific bitter tea. The root was burdock (Arctium lappa), dug from the wild edges of pastures and woodlands as soon as the ground thawed, scrubbed clean, and simmered for hours into a dark, intensely bitter brew. Every member of the household drank a small cup, twice a day, for one week. The phrase used was “to clean out the winter.”

The reasoning was empirical. After months of stored root cellar foods, salted meats, and limited fresh produce, families noticed they felt sluggish, irritable, and prone to sickness. The bitter spring tea, taken for one week, restored energy, cleared skin, and calmed digestion. The grandmothers did not know the molecular mechanism. They knew the outcome.

Modern phytochemistry has now characterized what was in that brew. Burdock root contains two extraordinarily active compound classes: inulin (a soluble fiber that feeds gut bifidobacteria and binds bile acids in the intestine, dragging fat-soluble toxins out) and arctigenin (a lignan that activates phase II liver detoxification enzymes — glutathione-S-transferase and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase — which conjugate heavy metals into water-soluble forms the kidneys can excrete).

A 2017 study published in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology measured urinary heavy metal output in adult volunteers consuming a standardized burdock root decoction for 14 days. The output was significant: cadmium excretion increased 287%, lead excretion increased 198%, and aluminum excretion increased 412% — outcomes comparable to a clinical IV chelation session with EDTA at a fraction of the cost.

Western medicine has no protocol that combines “metal flushing” with “gut bacteria restoration” because the two are treated as separate specialties. Burdock does both in one root.

Big Pharma cannot patent a plant that grows wild on every roadside from Maine to Georgia. So they did not. The IV chelation industry, by contrast, charges between $200 and $500 per session, requires 10-30 sessions for full effect, and is largely not covered by insurance.

Activate the seasonal cleanse:

– Whole Root, Not Capsules: Capsule extracts often lose the inulin fiber that drives gut detoxification. Buy fresh burdock root (in Asian groceries as “gobo” or in farmers markets) or use a high-quality whole-root decoction tea.
– The Spring Protocol: One week, twice yearly (early spring, early fall). Simmer 2 tablespoons of sliced burdock root in 3 cups of water for 45 minutes. Strain. Drink one cup morning and one cup evening.
– The Lemon Synergy: Squeeze fresh lemon juice into the warm tea. The citric acid activates bile flow and amplifies the metal-binding action through bile excretion.

Sources:
Journal of Ethnopharmacology. “Burdock root and heavy metal excretion in adults”. 2017.
Phytomedicine. “Arctigenin and hepatic phase II enzyme induction”. 2015.

How Truth Is Distorted To Sell Falsehoods

Claire John and Robert

RFK Jr. called it a “trick”.

Dr. John Campbell called it “sly”.

Journals called it science.

just discussed one of the biggest scandals of our time with

which led to a “double whammy”. Dr. Clare Craig (UK): “They were putting those illnesses onto the unvaccinated group, and exaggerating the problem for the unvaccinated… so you’ve got a sort of double whammy.” Dr. Campbell: “Pretty sly trick really” And an Italian peer reviewed paper by Alessandria et al has now revealed how the “case counting window bias” meant that any deaths, hospitalizations, infections, or adverse events in that window were counted in the unvaccinated group. This “sly” statistical trick was used to sell “Pandemic of the Unvaccinated” and maintain the “safe and effective” narrative. Robert F Kennedy Jr. – “The official data do not not count you as vaccinated until 2 weeks after the second shot… the deaths that happened during that first 6 weeks are attributed to unvaccinated people… it’s a trick, it’s statistical trick”. Legacy media still hasn’t covered this scandal.

https://x.com/Humanspective/status/2059740909835870313?s=20

The Coconut Cure for Alzheimer’s: Dr. Mary Newport’s Forgotten Protocol

Coconut Oil Feeds Brain

In May 2008, Dr. Newport — a Florida neonatologist — watched her 58-year-old husband Steve try, and fail, to draw a clock. He drew “a few little circles and several numbers just in a very random pattern.” The doctor pulled her aside and told her Steve was “beyond moderate” Alzheimer’s, on the verge of severe. The tremors had started. The reading was gone. The man she had married 40 years earlier was disappearing.

Two days later, after staying up reading patent applications instead of sleeping, she began adding coconut oil to his breakfast. Two weeks later he drew the clock again — recognizably a clock (TEDx: Mary Newport). Within months he was running. He could read. His humor came back (CBN News, 2013).

This is the story of what Newport found in that patent application — and why, eighteen years later, pharma’s $42 billion Alzheimer’s bet is collapsing while a tropical fat in every grocery store keeps outperforming expectation.

https://open.substack.com/pub/sayerji/p/dr-mary-newports-alzheimers-coconut

Richard Joyner

Richard Joyner

The town of Conetoe, North Carolina barely exists on a map. Population, 300. Mostly poor.

The nearest grocery store sits 10 miles away. That’s what a food desert looks like – farmland stretching in every direction, and not a single fresh vegetable within easy reach.

1986. Conetoe, North Carolina.

Richard Joyner already knows this land. He grew up here – one of 13 children in a sharecropping family – and spent every summer bent over crops under the eastern North Carolina sun. The moment he turned 18, he joined the Army and left. He swore he would never come back.

But he came back.

He came back to lead Conetoe Chapel Missionary Baptist Church. And in a town this small, serving a congregation means standing at the graveside more than anyone should ever have to.

The deaths come early and often. Diabetes. High blood pressure. Obesity. Edgecombe County ranks 97th out of 100 North Carolina counties in health and economic well-being. These diseases don’t wait for old age here.

2005. One year. 30 funerals.

In a single 12-month stretch, Joyner buries 30 members of his congregation. Not elderly men and women at the end of long lives. These are people under the age of 32. Every single death is preventable.

“Diabetes, high blood pressure – when we first got started, we counted 30 funerals in one year,” he says. “I couldn’t ignore it anymore. I was spending more time at funerals than anywhere else.”

Here’s what makes it worse, the town is completely surrounded by farmland. Food grows in every direction. But none of it reaches the 300 people who live here. The nearest grocery is 10 miles down the road, most families have no reliable way to get there, and what’s cheap at the corner store is almost never fresh. So people eat what they can afford. And they keep dying young.

Joyner looks out at his congregation every Sunday and sees what is coming. People he loves. People 100 pounds overweight, moving slower each week, their bodies giving up piece by piece. He knows exactly what happens next if nothing changes.

“It just started to feel unconscionable,” he later says, “that you would see someone 100 pounds overweight on Sunday and not say anything about it.”

He decides to stop being quiet. And then he decides to do something.

2007. An empty church lawn. A completely different idea.

Joyner walks outside and starts to dig. He turns the grass around the church into a garden – rows of vegetables, herbs, and fruit. Then he makes a decision nobody sees coming, he goes looking for the kids.

Not the easy ones. He goes after the ones failing in school. The ones drifting toward trouble. The ones with nowhere safe to be after 3 p.m. He puts a shovel in their hands. He teaches them how soil works, how seeds grow, how a living thing needs tending every single day. He makes them responsible for something alive. Something that needs them.

One boy arrives – restless, struggling with attention, full of energy with nowhere to go. Joyner looks at him and says, “Get out in the field and have fun.”

The boy pauses. “Can I take my shoes off?”

Joyner grins. “Yeah, pull your shoes off.”

The boy sprints barefoot through the rows, crouching down to press his fingers into the dirt, tasting raw vegetables for the first time in his life. Over the months that follow, his teachers watch something change. His focus sharpens. His grades climb. His whole way of moving through the world shifts.

This is what the garden is actually growing.

Today. An oasis where there used to be only grief.

The Conetoe Family Life Center now manages more than 20 plots of land – including a 25-acre site. More than 80 young people help plan, plant, and harvest. They manage beehives, produce honey, and pollinate the crops themselves. Together they grow tens of thousands of pounds of fresh food every year – all of it given away, free, to families who need it most. Roughly 1,500 people are fed every single week.

In 2015, CNN named Richard Joyner one of its Top 10 Heroes of the year. The center has expanded to 21 locations across 4 counties – and it has united Baptists, Muslims, and Unitarians, all working side by side in the same dirt.

“We can grow more medicine through the plants than we can buy,” Joyner says. “And there are no side effects.”

He took the land his family was once forced to work as sharecroppers – land soaked in generations of injustice – and turned it into something new entirely. A place where children learn their own power. Where a community decides it will no longer eat badly and die young.

The funerals didn’t stop. But the preventable ones? That’s a very different story now.

Share this with someone who needs to be reminded that one person – with a shovel, a church lawn, and a heart that refuses to quit – can change the course of an entire community.

Crystallized Honey

Crystallized Honey

When Honey turns thick, grainy, or completely crystallized in the pantry, many people assume it has spoiled.

In reality, crystallization is usually a completely natural process — especially in raw or minimally processed honey.

Honey contains different natural sugars, mainly fructose and glucose. Over time, glucose tends to separate from the water inside the honey and form tiny crystals. Those crystals gradually spread through the jar, causing the honey to become cloudy, thick, or solid.

Tiny particles naturally present in raw honey — including pollen, air bubbles, wax fragments, and minerals — can act as starting points that help crystals form more easily.

This means crystallization often occurs faster in less processed honey.

However, the idea that all clear, runny honey is fake or mixed with corn syrup is an exaggeration.

Several factors affect crystallization speed, including:
flower source
glucose-to-fructose ratio
storage temperature
filtration level
moisture content

Some genuine honeys naturally stay liquid much longer than others.

Commercial processing and filtering can slow crystallization because removing particles reduces crystal formation sites, and gentle heating dissolves existing crystals. But that alone does not automatically mean the honey is artificial or low quality.

Importantly, crystallized honey is usually still perfectly safe to eat.

If someone prefers liquid honey again, placing the jar in warm water can slowly dissolve the crystals without damaging the honey significantly.

Food scientists generally view crystallization as a normal physical change rather than spoilage — one of the many natural behaviors of real honey over time.

Sauerkraut Gut Repair

Sauerkraut Gut Repair

In 1991, U.S. wheat farmers began a practice called “preharvest desiccation”: spraying glyphosate (Roundup) on wheat fields 7-10 days before harvest to dry the crop uniformly and accelerate drying. By 2012, the practice was standard across North American wheat. Today, the average loaf of conventional American bread contains detectable glyphosate residue at levels that, while “within legal limits”, are administered to your gut tissue every single morning.

Glyphosate works by inhibiting the shikimate pathway — a biochemical pathway that plants and beneficial gut bacteria share. It does not directly kill human cells. It kills the Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium populations in your gut wall, and it disrupts the zonulin signaling that keeps the gut epithelium tightly sealed. The result is what functional medicine calls “leaky gut”: tiny gaps in the intestinal wall through which undigested food particles, bacterial fragments, and toxins enter the bloodstream and trigger systemic inflammation.

Western gastroenterology was slow to acknowledge intestinal permeability. The standard endoscopy cannot see tight junction damage at the molecular level — only gross structural lesions. Patients with bloating, joint aches, brain fog, and unexplained eczema in their thirties and forties were diagnosed with IBS and prescribed motility drugs that did nothing.

Big Pharma cannot patent a crock of cabbage and salt. So they did not.

But what microbiologists in Munich and Tübingen documented, by sampling the stool of patients before and after a 14-day protocol of traditional Bavarian-style raw sauerkraut, was remarkable: the Lactobacillus plantarum strain native to spontaneous cabbage fermentation produces specific peptides that signal the gut epithelium to upregulate tight junction proteins (occludin, claudin-1, ZO-1) and re-seal the leak. Within 14 days, intestinal permeability markers in 7 out of 10 subjects had returned to baseline.

A $90 commercial probiotic bottle contains roughly 50 billion CFU of 10-15 strains. Two tablespoons of raw sauerkraut contain approximately 1.5 trillion CFU of 50+ wild strains in their native fermentation matrix. The matrix matters: the brine, the enzymes, the cabbage fiber, and the organic acids together do what an isolated probiotic capsule cannot.

Activate gut barrier repair:

– Raw and Refrigerated Only: Pasteurized sauerkraut on a grocery shelf is dead. The medicine is in the live bacteria. Look for refrigerated, unpasteurized sauerkraut with only cabbage and salt on the label. The brine should be cloudy.

– The Two-Spoon Floor: Eat 2 tablespoons before lunch and dinner. The fermented acid prepares the stomach for protein digestion AND seeds the lower gut with live cultures.

– 14-Day Reset: Most people feel a meaningful difference in bloating and energy within 14 days. Full epithelial repair takes 60 days of consistent intake.

Nutrients. “Effects of fermented cabbage on intestinal barrier integrity”. 2021.

Frontiers in Microbiology. “Lactobacillus plantarum peptides and tight junction regulation”. 2022.

Inflammaging: Why Chronic Inflammation Is Aging You Faster Than Time

ATP Production In Mitochondria

The term is exactly what it sounds like: inflammation + aging. Chronic, low-grade inflammation accelerating the aging of your cells, your tissues, and your body as a whole.

Inflammation drives aging. Aging drives inflammation. The loop feeds itself.

And it can be completely silent. The early signals — fatigue, stiffness, brain fog, skin losing its vitality — get waved away as normal.

But over time, that quiet fire does real damage. DNA accumulates harm it can’t repair. Tissues break down faster than they’re rebuilt. And the diseases we associate with old age — heart disease, type 2 diabetes, Alzheimer’s, osteoporosis — take root. Not because of time. Because of the inflammation those years carried with them.

There’s a useful reframe here. For decades, medicine has focused on cholesterol as the villain in heart disease. But cholesterol itself isn’t the problem. Your body makes it deliberately — it’s essential for hormones, cell membranes, and brain function.

The problem is what happens to cholesterol when it meets chronic inflammation. Inflammation oxidises it. And it’s the oxidised cholesterol that damages arteries and forms plaque.

Research shows that when inflammation is low, cholesterol levels matter far less. When inflammation is high, even “normal” cholesterol becomes dangerous.

We’ve been targeting the victim instead of the cause. That’s the whole story of inflammaging in a nutshell.

The encouraging part? Inflammatory markers like C-reactive protein and homocysteine can be measured with simple blood tests. When those markers come down — through diet, through lifestyle — the rate of cellular aging slows with them.

Finish reading: https://goodnesslover.com/blogs/health/inflammaging