Life Enthusiast

Podcast 395: How to Avoid the Ventilator


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Let’s talk about the immune system, and how we can support it in order to avoid intensive care, even though there is no doubt that we will all meet the Coronavirus eventually.

Podcast 395: How to Avoid the Ventilator:
Welcome! This is Martin Pytela, presenting to you about the dangers of being caught in an emergency room, in intensive care, and being intubated. That is probably the worst outcome we can imagine for a person these days and the consequences of what we are dealing with right now. I titled it How to Avoid The Ventilator After You Meet the Coronavirus. There is no doubt that we will meet the Coronavirus. I don’t think that any one of us will be deciding if, it is when. And of course, the reason for that is the following: It’s just like any other virus. It’s going to spread through society. Eventually, we will encounter it. So we get to control the when, and we get to control the outcomes.
My name is Martin Pytela, I work as a health coach and a Certified Metabolic Typing Advisor at Life Enthusiast. I was also trained as a clinical hypnotherapist and I spent a good amount of time as a trainer in the computer industry before I became a health coach. I’ve lectured plenty. I was a systems analyst and management consultant. That’s where I went to school. I had the equivalent of an MBA in business administration and I was working in that field until I realized that the only way I was going to get out of the mercury toxicity hell that I got into after 12 mercury amalgam fillings were put in my mouth and I became very sick. The moment came that I had to start fixing myself because I was not going to be fixed by the mainstream health system. They are not set up for that. I realized that the healthcare industry shouldn’t be really called healthcare. It should be called the treatment industry. They’re not really interested in curing things. They’re interested in treating things.
“Root cause resolution” is the term used by functional medicine practitioners. The part of the medical system that calls itself that, functional medicine, focuses on cellular function rather than on dealing with symptoms. And when we resolve the cause of the malfunction, we usually have success, a health success. But this is not what’s being practiced in the mainstream medical system. As the metabolic typing advisor, I’ve now had a decade of practice, and I’ve been working in the field for about 35 years now.
So let’s talk about the immune system. What’s its normal response versus the system overload that lands a person in intensive care? When I try to explain to somebody the immune system, I use the nightclub model. Think of it this way: you have three roles involved in managing the flow and the happiness of the guests. You need to have somebody at the door keeping out the people that you don’t want to have in the club, but you need to keep out only the most obvious troublemakers because if you keep out everybody, there’s not going to be a whole lot going on in the club. You have the bouncer, that’s the person that’s inside the club that gets to eliminate the trouble once it erupts on the inside, and of course the bartenders, they’re involved in lubricating the crowd with alcohol. That’s the business of the nightclub, after all, selling you the alcohol, but they also need to be careful enough not to oversell it or over serve it, and they also need to be alert enough to point out the obvious trouble. Here we’re going to focus on the part that’s called the bouncer. The part of the system that’s involved in dealing with trouble once it’s on the inside.
So why do I say that we will all eventually have to get the virus? Because microbes are transmitted throughout the community, throughout the society. They get to move on the wind, on the water,
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Life EnthusiastBy Martin Pytela

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