3ABN Today Live

Altering Alzheimer's

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

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Series Code: TDYL

Program Code: TDYL190027A


00:01 I want to spend my life
00:07 Mending broken people
00:12 I want to spend my life
00:19 Removing pain
00:24 Lord, let my words
00:30 Heal a heart that hurts
00:34 I want to spend my life
00:40 Mending broken people
00:46 I want to spend my life
00:51 Mending broken people
01:09 Hello, and welcome to 3ABN Today Live.
01:13 I am so excited.
01:15 I have my co-host, Jason Bradley, my son.
01:18 Yay, Jay!
01:19 Good to be with you.
01:21 It's so good to have you here.
01:23 And we have two of our favorite folks on tonight.
01:27 You're gonna just...
01:29 You're gonna love it. I am so excited.
01:31 I am too.
01:32 You know, it's so great when you can learn
01:35 and have fun while you're learning.
01:37 And our guests tonight are two people
01:41 who teach us so much and yet there's so much fun.
01:46 They're full of life.
01:48 They are full of life for sure.
01:51 It's Dr. Curtis Eakins and Paula Eakins.
01:57 Curtis and Paula.
01:58 Now, honey, we need to do the same thing.
02:01 I like that.
02:03 We just did that just now, we put that in the squeal.
02:06 That'll be new. Okay.
02:07 Continue 'cause I kind of both destroyed.
02:09 That's all right. That's all right.
02:11 You are the co-directors
02:13 of the South Central Conference Health Ministry.
02:15 Yes.
02:17 And you're doing some amazing things.
02:18 And when we come back from our music,
02:21 we're gonna hear just what you're doing.
02:23 But first, we have this amazing,
02:27 amazing musician and friend, John Stoddart,
02:31 and he's going to be singing and playing, "I Turn To You."
03:02 What can I say
03:04 Tell me where to begin
03:12 How to explain
03:15 How I have been changed with it
03:21 Amazing grace caught me in time
03:26 Gave me new life
03:28 Now it's to you that I run
03:31 Jesus, I turn to You and in all I go through
03:37 Give You praise
03:43 I turn to you, Lord, the things that You do
03:47 I'm amazed
03:51 Oh, You are the joy
03:56 I'll never comprehend
04:03 Whatever life,
04:06 I'll never face the guilt
04:13 So when my life presses me down
04:18 I'll just hold on
04:20 And it's to You that I run
04:23 Jesus, I turn to You
04:26 And in all I go through give You praise
04:34 I turn to You Lord, the things that You do
04:39 I'm amazed,
04:41 I'm amazed Hey!
04:45 I turn to You and in all I go through
04:49 Give You praise
04:55 I turn to You, Lord, the things that You do
04:59 I'm amazed
05:02 You're worthy
05:04 Of all the glory
05:10 You waiting majesty
05:15 Don't bring on and power
05:20 You're more than the world to me,
05:25 To me
05:28 I turn to You and in all I go through
05:32 Give You praise
05:37 Oh, I turn to You, Lord, the things that You do
05:43 I'm amazed, I'm amazed, Lord
05:47 I turn to You and in all I go through
05:51 Give you praise, give you praise
05:54 Lord, you're worthy, worthy, Lord
05:57 I turn to You,
05:59 Lord, the things that You do
06:01 I'm amazed, oh, I'm amazed
06:07 Lord, I turn to You,
06:09 Turn to You, turn to You
06:13 For the questions of life, for the questions of life
06:17 Lord, I turn to You, turn to You, turn to You
06:23 When I don't have any places to go
06:27 Lord, that's when I turn to You,
06:30 Turn to You, turn to You
06:33 Oh, Lord, I turn,
06:38 Lord, I turn to You, turn to You,
06:41 Turn to You
06:49 I turn to You and in all I go through
06:53 Give You praise
07:00 I turn to You, Lord, the things that You do
07:04 I'm amazed
07:08 Oh Lord, I turn to You
07:22 Look at that talent. Yes.
07:25 I mean, John Stoddart just,
07:27 you know, he's just a phenomenon,
07:29 and we praise the Lord
07:31 that He uses his gifts for the Lord.
07:33 What a blessing!
07:35 What a blessing he is to us.
07:36 Jay, you know,
07:37 I realized that didn't give you your props, you know.
07:39 I introduced you...
07:40 I introduced him as my son,
07:42 and I did not say he is the General Manager
07:45 of 3ABN's Dare to Dream Network.
07:48 That's all right. I'd been your son longer.
07:51 So that works.
07:52 Oh, that's a good answer, that's a good answer.
07:54 I like that. It was good.
07:57 You know,
07:58 with our different programs and stuff,
08:01 we have the opportunity to meet a lot of people.
08:05 And some you connect with more than others.
08:09 And just the Eakins are like family,
08:12 like we just connect with them, look, they have their...
08:15 I just have to give just a moment we go in...
08:18 We want to zoom in on this.
08:19 For the pins that you're wearing right now.
08:21 Yeah, just a moment, zoom in.
08:22 You're wearing V-pins. All right.
08:24 I just have to say. Dare to Dream.
08:26 Dare to Dream.
08:28 So we thank you because everywhere you go,
08:30 you promote 3ABN and Dare to Dream.
08:33 And so we really appreciate that.
08:36 It's the family.
08:37 You know, we've been here now 22 years.
08:39 Wow!
08:40 And, yes, I mean,
08:41 I had a big Afro when I started so.
08:43 I don't know how that's worked out
08:45 but, no, that wasn't a joke.
08:46 Okay, I did.
08:47 But anyway it's a privilege.
08:50 You just choose to cut your hair closer now.
08:52 I choose to. Okay.
08:53 Yes, I choose to. Yeah, you choose to.
08:55 Good word, yes.
08:56 Thank you. All right.
08:58 Your hairs look nice too, honey.
09:00 I noticed, I love that.
09:02 I choose. You choose. Yes.
09:03 I change it all the time.
09:05 Yes, okay. You just burn my toast.
09:09 You know, the Lord has blessed you,
09:11 Curtis, with...
09:12 You're an ND,
09:14 and as a naturopathic doctor as I am,
09:17 and there are just things that the Lord will put,
09:22 the information in your path that lets you know
09:25 that there are natural things
09:27 that can be done as interventions
09:31 with the disease processes.
09:33 And so we're gonna talk today
09:35 about Alzheimer's and altering Alzheimer's.
09:40 Tell us about why is it...
09:42 Why has...
09:44 Where is Alzheimer's
09:45 in this whole scheme of diseases now?
09:49 Okay. Is it big?
09:50 Is it not
09:51 as many people having it or where is it?
09:53 All right.
09:54 So let's set the stage here, all right?
09:56 Number one.
09:57 The number one killer in this nation
09:59 is heart disease.
10:01 Cardiovascular disease,
10:02 number one killer since 1919, 100 years to this year,
10:07 right after flu epidemic in 1918,
10:09 heart disease took over.
10:11 It's the number one killer in this nation.
10:13 It's going down...
10:14 In 17 years, it's gone down 9%.
10:19 Alzheimer's...
10:20 Death due to Alzheimer's has went up,
10:23 hold on to your seat,
10:24 145% in the opposite direction. Wow!
10:29 More death in breast cancer,
10:31 prostate cancer combined, all right?
10:34 A lot of people don't associate Alzheimer's with the death.
10:37 Yes. That's with mental declines.
10:40 Right. But not death.
10:41 Right.
10:42 So over age of 65, one in three deaths
10:44 are due to Alzheimer's disease or dementia.
10:48 One-third, all right?
10:50 So it's increased. Now how does it kill?
10:51 Well, we're gonna get into that but this is the thing,
10:55 money is that it's the multibillion dollar industry.
10:59 People are aging more and more. Right.
11:01 So therefore it's gonna be more diagnosis
11:04 and more women than men 'cause...
11:05 And more baby boomers.
11:06 And baby boomers as well.
11:08 So therefore, this is an epidemic.
11:09 And the thing about this is there's no cure.
11:14 The drugs do not cure,
11:16 the drugs available right now, they do not stop the disease,
11:20 and they don't even slow it down.
11:23 So they don't retard the progression of the disease?
11:26 No. So it is mediocre at best.
11:28 So really, there's nothing out there
11:30 that can really...
11:31 It's like an old car.
11:33 If you have a car
11:34 that's maybe 20 years old
11:36 is beat up, smoking, backfiring,
11:39 and that kind of thing,
11:41 you can put in some gas treatment
11:43 doesn't really do a whole lot, all right?
11:46 So we're going to talk about some things
11:47 that can actually go in
11:50 and do an overhaul for the car itself.
11:56 Oh!
11:57 It changed out the sparkplug.
11:59 Come on. Okay.
12:01 Do the car a tune up...
12:02 Come on.
12:04 From a drug less perspective.
12:07 Oh, that's amazing. That's evidence based.
12:09 But before into that,
12:10 there's gonna be a two-part series.
12:12 Yes.
12:13 So let's talk about Alzheimer's.
12:16 We in Huntsville, where we live,
12:19 a person came to our church
12:20 and did Alzheimer's presentation.
12:22 We went through what's called a virtual dementia tour
12:27 where we have a simulation of what a person might think
12:31 or into their mind
12:33 as far as Alzheimer's is concerned,
12:35 and my wife, we both went through there.
12:37 Honey, why don't you show the people about,
12:38 this is a virtual dementia tour.
12:41 Okay.
12:42 Now Alzheimer's Association didn't do this tour,
12:43 but independent organization did it,
12:46 but they presented to the people
12:48 kind of get an idea
12:49 of what's going on in the person's mind
12:52 who has Alzheimer's disease.
12:54 Okay. Honey, share that with us.
12:55 Well, they were quite a few people there,
12:57 and they had to begin talking to us
12:59 about Alzheimer's and dementia.
13:01 And then they said,
13:02 we're gonna take you into a room,
13:04 and we're going to put different things on you.
13:05 Something on your feet, and your hands,
13:07 and your eye or some glasses on your face and all that.
13:11 And of course,
13:12 we're trying to figure out what's gonna go down,
13:14 which is what they really want you to do
13:15 to try to figure out what is going on.
13:18 And then they take us into this room.
13:19 Now someone takes us into the room
13:21 and they don't say anything to us,
13:23 as far as what we're supposed to do.
13:25 The room has all these different tables in it
13:27 and the room is dark.
13:29 And so we have the goggles on, we've got the hand gloves on,
13:32 we got the things on our feet,
13:33 and we're walking to each table.
13:35 Now we also have a phone
13:38 that's speaking to us about something.
13:40 You hear like trains, and cars, and you hear people talking,
13:44 and then there's a voice up in there,
13:46 and you're trying to figure out is the voice trying to tell me
13:48 what I'm supposed to do in this room
13:50 because no one's saying anything to you.
13:52 So I'm standing by the table.
13:53 I'm hearing all these different sounds,
13:55 and I'm trying to listen
13:56 as to what am I supposed to do at this table.
13:59 And I hear is a little bit, but I don't hear all of it.
14:02 And then I just stand there.
14:04 And you stand for so long,
14:05 and then the person comes and gets you
14:06 and he moves you to the next table.
14:08 And on these tables have different things,
14:10 like the first table might have a lot of mixed match socks,
14:13 and they're just there.
14:14 And you don't know
14:15 am I supposed to put the socks together.
14:17 "What am I supposed to do with these socks?"
14:18 You're just standing there.
14:20 And then they come and get you
14:21 after you stand a while and you go to second table.
14:23 And it might be like plates and spoons and cups.
14:25 And so you're trying to think about,
14:26 "Okay, am I supposed to set a table?"
14:27 or "Am I supposed to do..."
14:29 And that voice is constantly going on
14:30 in your ears.
14:32 And so I didn't do the first one.
14:34 I went to the second one.
14:36 And by time I got to the second one,
14:37 I'm now getting frustrated.
14:38 And I'm not sure what I'm supposed to be doing.
14:40 And so I heard a word put, that's all I heard,
14:43 then I heard cars and trains and all kinds of stuff.
14:45 And then they came and got me and move me to...
14:47 So there's five different tables.
14:49 By the time I finished the last table,
14:51 I was absolutely frustrated.
14:54 I kept looking back over
14:55 at the person who bought me in the room
14:57 and they just sat there.
14:58 You can't go back and ask them anything
15:00 because you're supposed to continue to move on.
15:02 So by the time I got to the last one,
15:04 I was just standing there, I just stood there.
15:06 I just stood.
15:08 I listened, I couldn't understand it,
15:09 I stood,
15:10 and the lady came and got me,
15:12 I did absolutely nothing at all five of those tables.
15:15 I played around a little bit but I didn't know what to do.
15:17 And I came out of the room.
15:18 Where there others in the room with you besides the person?
15:21 Just me.
15:22 Okay. Yep, one at a time.
15:23 Okay, so you had various stimuli.
15:27 You had stuff going into your head.
15:29 Speaking to me.
15:30 And yet and there was darkness.
15:32 You had the gloves on.
15:33 And had the gloves on.
15:35 And had things on your feet
15:36 that's uncomfortable when you walk.
15:37 Okay.
15:39 The simulation of frustration
15:41 in the mind of a person who has Alzheimer's disease.
15:43 That was the point.
15:45 Sounds like a lot of confusion. That's exactly.
15:47 And that's what they're experiencing
15:48 in Alzheimer's mind.
15:51 And not only was I frustrated,
15:52 I was so frustrated to the point of tears
15:54 like, "What?
15:55 What?" You know, "What is it...
15:58 What's going on?"
15:59 And when I came out,
16:00 they began to speak to me
16:02 about what I had experienced,
16:04 and I was in tears and ready for the next part.
16:07 So that's example
16:09 of what a person may be going through
16:12 who has Alzheimer's disease.
16:14 Every 66 seconds,
16:17 someone has Alzheimer's disease in this country,
16:21 over 5 million people.
16:23 This is a global epidemic, all right?
16:26 And so we're going to talk about that.
16:27 And so a lot of people who may be listening today,
16:32 about 70% of people are caring for loved ones
16:35 who have Alzheimer's disease.
16:37 So we talk to a lady, the Alabama coordinator
16:42 for the Association of Alzheimer's in Birmingham.
16:45 She came up to Huntsville and talked with us
16:48 'cause we told her that we'll be doing the program
16:50 with Alzheimer's disease.
16:51 And she's called the National Office
16:54 in Chicago, Illinois.
16:56 We're gonna give a 1800 number,
16:58 people can call because a lot of people are frustrated,
17:02 cared for their loved ones
17:03 who have Alzheimer's disease, people who...
17:06 A mother may be cursing.
17:09 "Oh my goodness, my mother,
17:11 she never cursed a day in her life.
17:13 Why is she cursing?
17:15 I mean, is she no longer saved?
17:17 She used to be a Sunday school teacher
17:18 or Sabbath School teacher,
17:20 and what's going on with that?"
17:23 When you call the 1800 number
17:25 that we're gonna put on the screen,
17:27 they have counselors,
17:29 master level consultants 24 hours a day,
17:34 7 days a week,
17:37 that would take your call
17:38 for those who are caring for their loved ones
17:40 who has Alzheimer's disease in many languages
17:45 is there for those caregivers.
17:47 So you don't have to be alone in this disease
17:50 caring for someone who has Alzheimer's disease.
17:53 That is such a good point.
17:55 You know, I read this book,
17:58 I think it's called "Before I Forget"
18:00 and it was written by the caregiver
18:06 of this particular woman who had Alzheimer's,
18:09 and he was her husband.
18:11 And he was talking about the challenges
18:15 of being a caregiver.
18:17 It's so demanding. Yes.
18:19 It's so draining.
18:21 We often think of,
18:22 "Oh, we're so sorry for that person
18:24 that has Alzheimer's,
18:25 but the person who's doing the caregiving.
18:28 It's a full-time job.
18:29 Yes, it's a full-time job. It's a draining job.
18:33 And you're watching your loved one change
18:37 before your very eyes
18:38 and you can't do anything about it.
18:40 Yeah.
18:42 There are no drugs that can cure.
18:44 No drug that can stop, no drug that can slow it down.
18:48 That's why it's called neurodegenerative.
18:50 It gets worse over time.
18:54 And so therefore
18:55 with that in mind, people call...
18:57 Let's put the number on the screen
18:58 and also the website.
18:59 There's a wealth, a resource out there.
19:01 There's the 1800 number.
19:02 Again, operators in Chicago headquarters,
19:05 they have been notified
19:07 that they're going to get some increased calls
19:09 because they are master level consultants.
19:12 People can ask any questions.
19:15 What about the symptoms,
19:16 the 10 symptoms of Alzheimer's disease.
19:19 Call them, they can put you in touch
19:21 with some local individuals,
19:23 seminars and education in your area as well
19:25 when you call that 1800 number 7 days a week, 24 hours a day.
19:31 And also go to the website there to ALZ.org,
19:35 video information, audio, educational tools,
19:39 resources, support groups, message voice, it's all there
19:44 and they're ready to take your call
19:46 for those who are out there
19:47 caring for their loved ones with Alzheimer's disease.
19:50 And so in Alabama,
19:52 we have the third largest death rate
19:55 of Alzheimer's disease in Alabama.
19:57 In Alabama?
19:59 It's number three.
20:00 Mississippi is number two.
20:02 So therefore, we need volunteers,
20:04 and Vermont's number one.
20:06 So that's the top three. Vermont?
20:08 Yeah, so two of the three is in South Central conference.
20:14 We're gonna talk about that later on.
20:16 It's the common denominator like what is the cause?
20:19 Yes.
20:20 Well, we're gonna get into the cause as well.
20:21 So with all that in mind, again,
20:23 I encourage people to call the 1800 number.
20:26 Folks, operatives are standing by.
20:29 You don't have to go at this alone, they're there.
20:31 And for those who do call,
20:34 those individual's stress levels
20:36 drops considerably by calling in the resource and tools
20:41 having the questions answered.
20:43 Case in point,
20:44 let's say that you're caring for your mother,
20:47 and let's say that the husband has died
20:50 past by maybe years ago.
20:52 And the mother might say to the daughter,
20:55 "Is your father back from the store yet?"
20:57 So that natural reply would be,
20:59 "Well, mother, Daddy's dead."
21:04 In her mind,
21:06 this is the first time her hearing this
21:08 'cause we're talking about short-term memory.
21:11 See, they can remember things that's 20 years ago,
21:15 but not necessarily 20 minutes ago.
21:18 And then, the next day,
21:20 she may ask the same question.
21:22 "Where's your father?
21:23 Is he coming back from the store yet?"
21:25 "Mother, I told you yesterday, Daddy's dead."
21:30 And then you bring a picture at the funeral.
21:34 And then she's hearing that again
21:36 not thinking that what has been transpired
21:38 the day before.
21:40 So in her mind,
21:41 her husband died all over again the very next day.
21:46 And this goes on continuously.
21:48 So it's all emotional rollercoaster ride
21:51 'cause in their minds,
21:54 her husband died
21:56 a fresh every time that brings up.
21:59 So what do you do with that?
22:01 That's why you call the 1800 number.
22:04 They will walk you through the situation,
22:07 one in six people wander off, sometimes may not be found,
22:11 they won't do that legal aspects.
22:13 So again, that 1800 number, 1800, put that on screen,
22:17 1800-272-3900,
22:23 location Chicago,
22:25 they are expecting your call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
22:30 and there is also the website as well.
22:32 So we want to get that information
22:33 and they need volunteers.
22:34 And so there's a wealth, a resource for those
22:38 who are caring for their loved ones.
22:39 And they'll have written information
22:41 that they can mail out.
22:42 Written information.
22:44 And they also, a lot of written information,
22:45 a source of wealth of information
22:47 for us as concerned.
22:49 We didn't know anything about all of this part
22:50 until we began to study and research Alzheimer's.
22:53 Yes.
22:54 We even know all those places existed
22:56 and all the information was available to us
22:58 and that is so important to the caregiver.
23:00 Yes. Yes.
23:02 So Lisa came up from Birmingham,
23:04 coordinator for the Alabama
23:06 and she's passionate about this.
23:07 So I told her that we'll be doing this program
23:09 on her behalf as well.
23:11 And they need volunteers in Alabama.
23:12 So I kind of put that in there as well.
23:14 So you're giving to me a little shout out right now.
23:17 But let me say this,
23:18 out of 22 years we've been on 3ABN
23:21 doing programs abundant level.
23:23 we covered many topics, diabetes, heart disease,
23:27 blood pressure, women problems,
23:29 digestive upsets, kidney, whatever.
23:33 Every time...
23:35 We did a program on Alzheimer's too years ago.
23:37 Every time that program we air,
23:40 we get the more calls, more emails,
23:44 more responses to any other program
23:47 in the 22 years of doing abundant level.
23:49 Wow!
23:50 This topic right here,
23:52 that's why we want to bring it to as soon as stage
23:55 to the two-hour live.
23:56 Right.
23:57 And especially since Alabama is number two
24:00 in the nation, did you say?
24:01 Well, the top three.
24:03 Number three as far as death due to Alzheimer's.
24:06 Okay, this is a bit number two.
24:08 Now so what we're going to do,
24:10 we're going to do as much as we can
24:11 with the time we have remaining.
24:13 So now, when Jesus was here on Earth...
24:17 I feel like you're setting us up for something.
24:19 Yeah, where are we going?
24:21 All three of us.
24:23 He has that little smile, you know, so I'm like okay.
24:26 I'm gonna give myself.
24:27 When Jesus was here on Earth,
24:29 He used a lot of objects to describe,
24:33 to expound different topics.
24:34 So people are clear as far as understand and concerned
24:37 about different topics.
24:39 And from those objects, He drew lessons from them,
24:42 objects that are familiar to the people.
24:44 So when you see the object,
24:46 the lesson is brought a fresh, all right?
24:48 So Christ did that.
24:50 By the way, there's a book called
24:53 "Christ Object Lessons."
24:56 I mean, these people are just absolutely amazing.
25:00 You're blowing me away. Okay.
25:01 Now let's keep rolling.
25:02 So initials is COL.
25:06 Well, my name is Curtis.
25:08 COL, Curtis Object Lesson.
25:13 Oh.
25:14 So here we can get a close up here
25:17 because we need to first understand
25:20 what's going on here.
25:22 So wait until we get a closer look
25:23 because this is very important to understand
25:26 as far as this is concerned.
25:27 Now here you have a telephone pole here,
25:32 a telephone pole here.
25:35 In between, it's a telephone cable.
25:38 It's connected to the two telephone poles.
25:41 Now, Jason,
25:43 for this signal to be transmitted
25:45 from this telephone pole to the next,
25:48 this cable need to be intact, highly insulated.
25:54 The telephone pole needs to be strong, firm,
26:00 coated with a solution for protection
26:03 'cause that lasts for 20-30 years.
26:05 Remember, this is made out of wood,
26:08 but it lasts a long time.
26:10 So for all this to take place,
26:12 meaning that there's a good transmission
26:14 from this telephone pole to the next, all right?
26:17 Okay. That's how it works.
26:19 Everything's working fine.
26:21 Telephone pole's good.
26:22 No termites, no breakage.
26:25 Everything is working good.
26:26 Now, Jason, this question is for you.
26:31 What will happen...
26:32 What can happen to disrupt this communication
26:36 from this telephone pole to the next?
26:38 Give me some idea of what can take place
26:42 for this process not to work?
26:45 Give me some examples. A tree could fall on the line.
26:47 Okay, number one.
26:49 So a tree can fall on the line.
26:51 In other words,
26:52 something must be disruptive of this cable
26:56 so that there's no transmission
26:57 from this telephone pole to the next.
27:00 Anything else other than tree falling on the line?
27:04 Some of the materials could be eroding.
27:07 Okay now, so the telephone pole itself
27:11 can be defected or termites can eat
27:14 into the telephone pole itself.
27:17 If that's the case,
27:18 then it won't be a good transmission
27:19 from this one pole to the next, all right?
27:23 So having said all that, this is also our brain.
27:28 This is a simplified form.
27:30 So this telephone pole
27:32 represents a neuron, a brain cell.
27:36 Okay.
27:38 This represents another neuron, brain cell.
27:41 And between here to transmission
27:43 between one brain cell to the next, all right?
27:46 That's the way it should work, everything's intact.
27:49 Now I want to take another graphic
27:54 and here we have...
27:57 Oh, wait a minute now.
27:59 Now we have a situation
28:02 where we have some added addition
28:07 on cable line.
28:10 We're gonna call this amyloid.
28:15 These are the pauses on the cable, telephone cable.
28:19 Also...
28:21 It also disrupts the telephone pole as well.
28:25 And when this happens, there's no transmission
28:28 from this telephone pole to the next
28:31 because it is amyloid, a deposit,
28:34 on the telephone cable.
28:37 Therefore, you won't have good transmission.
28:41 This also happens in our brain.
28:44 There's one thing that takes place on our brain
28:47 that causes these amyloid deposits
28:51 on the cable of our telephone.
28:55 So I'm gonna read it from my paper here.
28:58 Here it is.
29:00 "For both animals and humans, it has been observed that"
29:06 here it is, folks,
29:07 "sleep deprivation causes increase amyloid deposits."
29:14 "Coming from the Frontiers of Pharmacology, June 2019."
29:20 Just came out.
29:22 So basically, that's what I wanted.
29:25 That's what I want.
29:26 So, folks...
29:28 We're in trouble. Yeah.
29:30 Okay.
29:31 So when we are sleep deprived,
29:34 talking about six hours or less,
29:37 this amyloid starts to deposit on the telephone cable.
29:43 When that happens, it also disrupts
29:46 and also disrupt the telephone pole as well
29:50 because that tau, T-A-U,
29:53 for those who wanna do the research.
29:54 Right.
29:56 So therefore, when that happens,
29:57 then there's no transmission.
30:00 One night of deprived sleep
30:04 brings some deposits on our telephone cable.
30:08 Oh my!
30:09 So therefore,
30:11 adequate amount of sleep also helps
30:14 for this not to take place
30:16 to accumulate on our telephone cable.
30:22 Now let me ask you this.
30:23 Okay, I got it.
30:25 Let me ask you this. No, you got us.
30:28 So now, okay,
30:29 let's say I've been sleep deprived
30:31 hypothetically, right?
30:32 Okay. Yeah.
30:34 I feel like personal but hypothetic.
30:35 Yeah. Hypothetic.
30:37 That's the word.
30:38 Let's say I am sleep deprived,
30:40 and now I'm trying to catch up and make up for that, right?
30:44 If I start getting eight hours of sleep
30:46 and going to sleep before midnight,
30:48 and all of these things
30:50 where they say it adds like two hours for each hour,
30:54 then will those amyloid deposits
30:58 start disappearing?
30:59 Okay, and I knew you were going to ask that question,
31:01 all right?
31:03 It can help.
31:04 It just won't get it worse.
31:06 Let me say this.
31:07 Now I will say this upfront, we have a three-page handout.
31:11 Okay.
31:12 We'll put our email address on the screen there,
31:14 where there's a whole sheet
31:17 just on sleep and Alzheimer's disease.
31:20 Okay.
31:21 Where when we have adequate amount of sleep
31:25 doing the sleeping hours, this is removed.
31:31 See, this accumulates throughout the day
31:35 by thinking, reading, writing, you know,
31:38 and this is the metabolic waste
31:40 of that process of our brain throughout the day.
31:43 So while we're sleep,
31:46 this is being removed by the glymphatic system,
31:51 not lymphatic, but glymphatic,
31:54 a system just been developed,
31:55 just been discovered just a few years ago.
31:58 It removes this every night while we're sleeping.
32:04 But if we don't sleep enough,
32:06 there's not enough time to remove all these deposits.
32:10 And year after year, they start accumulating
32:12 year after year after year.
32:15 That's why sleep is very important
32:17 for this concern.
32:18 And the thing about is once this is affected here,
32:21 then it also affects the two telephone poles as well.
32:25 Therefore, this disrupts the whole communication system
32:29 as far as that is concerned.
32:30 So sleep is very critical as far as
32:34 reducing the risk drastically of dementia
32:37 and Alzheimer disease as well.
32:40 I'm gonna go ahead and say good night right now.
32:45 Oh, that's why sometimes in afternoon, I'm tired,
32:50 I take a nap, take a nap.
32:52 And so whenever you take a nap,
32:54 then it starts to remove this process.
32:57 So this is just accumulation when we eat food
33:01 and what's waste it goes out of rectum.
33:04 When we think, etcetera,
33:05 this comes on when we sleep,
33:08 this has been removed while we're sleeping.
33:10 That's why sleep is very critical
33:12 as far as reducing the risk of this disease.
33:16 That is fascinating.
33:17 Okay, yeah.
33:19 One thing that I want to say is that I just read an article
33:22 the other day about tau protein.
33:24 Yes. And how...
33:27 One of the signs that you have Alzheimer's
33:30 is that you want to sleep more, you want to take a nap.
33:34 Yes.
33:36 Are you finding yourself sleepy when you weren't before.
33:39 So there's a change in your sleep.
33:43 And how interesting
33:44 that the creator put that in us.
33:46 It does, yes.
33:47 Yes, it does. Hallelujah!
33:49 And the thing about this is that,
33:51 let's go back to, what, 1906.
33:55 We weren't here then. Yeah, yeah.
33:57 Well, maybe Jason,
33:58 no you weren't here, yeah, Okay.
34:01 You probably get an off camera been away.
34:03 Dr. Alzheimer's in 1906 discovered
34:06 that there's one lady
34:08 who was showing erratic behavior.
34:10 So after she died, he did autopsy.
34:13 And on her brain, he found amyloid deposits.
34:18 It's a protein, amyloid deposits on her brain.
34:22 Hence Alzheimer's disease, all right?
34:26 It was named after him.
34:27 Right, yeah, Alzheimer's.
34:29 And then his two assistants, Dr. Creutzfeldt and Dr. Jakob
34:32 called that Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
34:35 Those are his two assistants. Okay.
34:36 You know, we're not cows so it's not mad cow
34:38 it's Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, all right?
34:41 So therefore,
34:42 this is very critical process as concerned.
34:44 Now let's move on.
34:45 So I want to go to the screen and there's one author,
34:50 she has been aspired author,
34:53 the most translated author in the United States
34:55 according to the Library of Congress
34:57 in Washington DC,
34:59 she's made a couple of statements
35:00 when it comes to this topic.
35:02 It's a very powerful statement.
35:05 And so let's go to the screen
35:06 and we're gonna read this statement here.
35:08 I want to get my paper
35:09 and this is a statement that she says.
35:11 This is coming from the book
35:12 Selected Messages Book 2, page 448.
35:15 It says here,
35:17 "The brain is frequently affected by drugs.
35:24 They only" underscore the word "stupefies the brain."
35:30 Drugs frequently stupefies the brain.
35:35 The word "stupefy" means to stun.
35:39 If a person is acting erratic in society,
35:44 a lot of times the police officer
35:46 will put out his stun gun
35:50 and immobilize a person, so therefore,
35:53 they're not, they're inoperable.
35:56 They're just, in three seconds, they're out.
35:59 It takes about 15 minutes or whatever.
36:01 So it actually stuns the person.
36:03 So therefore,
36:05 they're no longer functioning with stun gun.
36:09 Well, drugs also stuns the brain
36:13 just off to say, it stupefies.
36:15 I mean that's the word she uses.
36:18 There are some drugs we know now
36:21 a group of drugs that simply stuns the brain.
36:27 It stupefies the brain.
36:30 Let's go to the screen at this time.
36:31 I'm gonna read this, hold on to your seat.
36:34 And this is going to be a big word, all right?
36:35 But again, we have a handout for this as well.
36:38 Here we go.
36:41 "The use of anticholinergic drugs
36:47 in older people is associated
36:49 with increased risk of cognition decline,
36:54 dementia and death."
36:58 This is coming from the International Journal
36:59 of Geriatric Psychiatry, June 2016.
37:04 So therefore, Honey,
37:05 we're gonna do a little demonstration here.
37:08 I'm a part of this too.
37:09 And let's use this paper, all right?
37:12 Okay.
37:13 So I'll put this down.
37:15 So let's do this, all right.
37:18 Now on this left side,
37:20 that's opposite were you're seeing it.
37:22 This is a telephone pole.
37:25 My arm is the telephone cable.
37:28 My fist is the synapses.
37:30 Okay.
37:31 And they transmit to boom, the next fist,
37:34 go down the telephone cable to the telephone pole.
37:39 These drugs are called anticholinergic drugs
37:43 go in between my two fists.
37:47 So put the paper between my two fists, honey.
37:51 Therefore, it blocks the transmission
37:55 from one synapse to another
37:58 and those are the drugs that does that.
38:00 That's why those drugs cause dementia and eventually
38:04 because there's no transmission,
38:05 it causes death.
38:08 Anticholinergic drugs,
38:12 and there's been a lot of study
38:13 as far as that's concerned
38:15 where those who are taking those drugs,
38:18 I mean, it can impact cognition in about 60 days.
38:22 Wow!
38:23 And a lot of people are taking medication
38:24 over 65 years of age,
38:26 a lot of people are taking approximate
38:27 about five drugs per person.
38:30 And so I'm not 65 yet but I'm not taking anything.
38:33 So somebody's taking my five.
38:36 Really!
38:37 And so by allowing those drugs they're taking,
38:40 they're taking these anticholinergic drugs.
38:44 Now for those who don't know...
38:46 That stuns the brain.
38:48 And so for those who don't know what those drugs are...
38:50 Anticholinergic.
38:51 Right, I have our email address
38:53 at the end of this presentation.
38:56 Then when you email, I would download
38:59 those group of drugs that will block the transmission
39:03 at the synapses,
39:05 where there's no transmission,
39:06 the brain simply is stunned
39:08 like a stun gun causes dementia,
39:12 and eventually causes death.
39:14 And a lot of people are taking those drugs
39:16 and don't even know it, don't even know it.
39:19 So that's another area of not so much Alzheimer's
39:21 but also dementia as well, all right?
39:24 So therefore,
39:25 now we're gonna go to something else, honey.
39:28 And so therefore, we're gonna look at this.
39:32 And now there are some drugs out there.
39:35 Like I said before,
39:37 that don't really cure the disease,
39:40 they don't stop the disease, don't even slow it down.
39:46 But when we look at botanical medicine,
39:52 herbal medicine,
39:54 from a scientific standpoint, there are...
39:58 In my opinion, in my research with prayer,
40:01 there are two botanicals, herbs,
40:04 there are head and shoulders above all other herbs
40:09 as far as this disease is concerned, all right?
40:12 The number one,
40:14 and let's go to the screen at this time.
40:15 Let's read this first herb we're gonna look at.
40:18 Here it is.
40:20 "Bacopa monnieri decreased the formation of"
40:26 and within verbatim
40:28 "amyloid deposits almost entirely
40:34 and protects cells from dying due to amyloid's presence."
40:39 This was from the medical journal
40:40 called Annals of Neurosciences, May 2017.
40:44 So I did a presentation a while back
40:46 at a lifestyle facility over a 100 people.
40:49 And I asked the people,
40:51 "How many of you have heard of bacopa monnieri?"
40:54 Of the 100 plus people,
40:57 only two people raised their hand,
40:58 less than 2%.
40:59 Hopefully, it's going to be more than 2%
41:01 'cause now you're watching this program.
41:02 So this is the botanical
41:05 that simply removes this...
41:11 So that telephone cable is clear almost entirely
41:17 of the amyloid plaque.
41:19 And when that's done,
41:20 it also protects the telephone pole
41:24 from becoming damaged.
41:25 In other words,
41:27 this herb cleans out the telephone cable
41:31 and cause in pest control to take care of the termites
41:37 that destroy the telephone pole.
41:40 Therefore now you have communication
41:43 from one pole to the next.
41:46 Now in our handout,
41:47 there's a whole sheet for this handout,
41:49 as far as test been done,
41:51 as far as to what people are taking
41:53 and how they can improve cognition, memory, etcetera,
41:57 because this takes place in the cerebral cortex
42:01 deep into the brain where memories are formed.
42:06 So when this affects that,
42:07 then of course you have those memories
42:09 that you know yesterday, I can't remember
42:12 what we just talked about yesterday.
42:14 That's what memories are formed, all right?
42:16 Now if you think that's something,
42:18 there's another botanical,
42:20 but before we go into that...
42:21 Before we go to that,
42:23 I have one question. You have a question.
42:24 What is the...
42:25 Is there a common name for that botanical,
42:27 the first one?
42:29 No, but that's the common name,
42:31 you go in any health food store,
42:33 you'll see...
42:34 Now I just usually use
42:36 the whole word before us bacopa monnieri.
42:39 But most people just say bacopa.
42:41 You're going to health food store,
42:43 you see it, bacopa, all right?
42:45 And based on the clinical study,
42:47 300 milligrams and that will be part of the handout.
42:50 300 milligrams a day?
42:52 A day, yeah. Okay.
42:54 And that's in a clinical study, the handout that I gave you.
42:56 A lot of these studies are done
42:59 not in the United States, but in Taiwan.
43:04 Are these double bond studies?
43:05 Yes, clinical studies, yeah.
43:07 Control, yeah. Okay.
43:09 India, Ayurvedic,
43:12 and so these studies done
43:13 in overseas sometimes takes a while
43:16 for those information to get here
43:18 to the United States
43:20 if what's that concerned, all right?
43:21 But they did, just recently they did
43:24 The Alzheimer's Association had International Congress
43:27 in Los Angeles, July of 2019.
43:31 Over 6,000 researchers,
43:34 3,400 poster presentations, etcetera.
43:37 And a lot of information about diet
43:40 and the website has a lot of information
43:41 as far as the diet.
43:43 Now they do emphasize the Mediterranean diet
43:46 which is a good diet, whole foods,
43:47 grains, fruits, etcetera.
43:50 But there we emphasize, from my standpoint,
43:54 God's original plant-based diet,
43:57 we feel that's gonna be good as well.
43:59 So that's one herb.
44:01 I want to mention one other herb
44:03 that simply blows my mind.
44:05 I mean, it's just simply amazing.
44:07 If you thought that was good, wait till you see this one.
44:10 And so I'm gonna read the statement
44:11 here on the screen.
44:13 I'll read on my paper here.
44:16 "This study demonstrates that"
44:19 and here's the herb, "Ashwagandha."
44:24 Now you take it, you heard of it.
44:26 Yeah. Okay.
44:27 "Ashwagandha" and here's the word,
44:30 I'm reading verbatim,
44:32 "reversed Alzheimer's disease." Underscore reverse.
44:38 "Reduce amyloid as well as improve behavior."
44:44 The Journal of Alzheimer's Disease,
44:49 April 2019.
44:53 Ashwagandha.
44:54 And I've recommended that to different people,
44:57 Ashwagandha for different reasons.
44:59 For different reasons, yeah. But this is phenomenal.
45:01 So let me explain what I just said.
45:04 Indian.
45:05 There are two types of amyloid deposits,
45:10 bacopa eliminates one type of amyloid deposits,
45:15 Ashwagandha eliminates two types of amyloid deposits.
45:21 At the same time,
45:22 it also regenerates the cable of the telephone pole.
45:29 Wow!
45:30 Strengthens it and it also recovers
45:35 the structure of the telephone pole itself.
45:39 It calls in the pest control
45:41 and strengthens the telephone pole,
45:44 and also strengthens the synopsis as well.
45:47 So the fact that it strengthens the telephone cable,
45:53 that means it's also useful for,
45:55 hold on to your seat, folks,
45:56 we're talking spinal cord injury,
46:00 Huntington's disease, and Parkinson's disease.
46:06 Ashwagandha published in the Journal
46:09 of Alzheimer's Disease, April 2019.
46:14 And what's the dosage on the Ashwagandha?
46:15 I'll give you the dosage.
46:17 The handout's gonna be in the doses as well
46:18 as far as that's concerned.
46:20 Okay.
46:21 So these herbs are very powerful
46:22 and very potent.
46:24 And again, we ask people that make sure that you contact
46:28 and make be aware to your healthcare professional
46:31 because you don't want to stop a drug,
46:34 start taking herbs.
46:36 That's very important.
46:37 That you may have litigation,
46:38 it can back fire adverse reactions.
46:40 So always ask people to contact your healthcare professional...
46:43 Absolutely.
46:44 Before you incorporate any alternative medicine
46:46 as far as that's concerned.
46:47 Now you two,
46:48 you asked about the Alabama, Mississippi.
46:51 One of the things that people are using a lot of medication
46:55 because of poor lifestyle.
46:57 So when there's poor lifestyle, when there's more obesity,
47:02 more high blood pressure,
47:04 people tend to take more medication.
47:07 With more medication, it takes sometimes those drugs
47:10 that cause that blockage.
47:13 That's why this increase of death rate
47:16 from Alabama and Mississippi
47:19 because of the blockage, because of blockage, all right?
47:22 So, honey, about to sleep,
47:23 now we mentioned about to sleep,
47:25 we got a little time here because here's a double whammy.
47:30 So a person because of sleep deprivation
47:33 and also increases amyloid deposits,
47:36 and so when a person has Alzheimer's dementia,
47:40 their sleep is disturbed,
47:42 which was brought up
47:43 in the Alzheimer's Association International Conference
47:47 in Los Angeles, July 2019.
47:50 So with that you tend to take more sleeping pills
47:55 which aggravates the situation that you already have.
47:59 It's a domino's effect.
48:01 So share with the audience some of the things you do
48:05 to help you go to sleep.
48:08 Okay, not that I have Alzheimer's though, right?
48:10 No, no, no. I mean, to just go to sleep.
48:12 Yeah, just to go to sleep. Okay. Okay.
48:14 I am glad you clarified that.
48:15 And I am too, you know.
48:17 You know,
48:18 whenever we're ready to do programming
48:20 or something like that, a lot of things are on my mind.
48:23 And so it's sometimes hard for me just to go to sleep.
48:25 I got to cross my t's, dot my i's,
48:28 and so I find that soft music
48:30 and I mean water sounds, nature sounds
48:33 really just knocks me out.
48:35 And with that in mind, I want to put that on.
48:38 Otherwise, I'm thinking about everything
48:40 that's gonna go on that next day.
48:42 And so the water sounds and the nature sounds,
48:45 bird sounds puts me to sleep.
48:48 So I always tell people,
48:50 we're not talking about any kind of sounds
48:53 or any kind of music
48:54 because if you have a song playing,
48:57 and I lost my man, my dog, my cow,
48:59 and everything is gone, you know,
49:01 you're trying to figure out in the song
49:03 what happened in and you're still up
49:05 and the song is still, okay.
49:06 So I find that just soft soothing music
49:09 with no words can actually calm the spirit.
49:13 Jennifer LaMountain always makes that statement,
49:15 "We're all created with a musical mind," you know.
49:19 So I like to put the music on,
49:21 and we suggest that also when people
49:23 who have called us about Alzheimer's
49:25 that basically they curse and throw things
49:26 and things are going on,
49:28 play soft music.
49:29 Yes. Spiritual.
49:31 Yes. Spiritual music.
49:32 And believe it or not,
49:34 they say that has actually helped that person
49:35 sleep during the night.
49:36 Yes.
49:38 So we got put on the screen our contact information,
49:39 our email where you email us
49:42 then we will download the three-page handout
49:45 of this program give you more additional information
49:48 based on highly reference studies.
49:51 Some studies are so new, it's not even published yet.
49:55 This is the online version. Yes.
49:57 You know, so this is like
49:58 the latest information on Alzheimer's
50:00 and alternative medicine as well.
50:02 Yes, this is great.
50:03 In fact, let's put your address up now.
50:05 Yeah, let's go ahead and do that.
50:06 So that we can have it.
50:08 Health Seminars Unlimited, P.O Box 2873,
50:11 Huntsville, Alabama 35804.
50:15 You can call at (256) 859-1982.
50:20 And then there's the email address,
50:22 HSeminar@BellSouth.net.
50:25 And you can watch them on YouTube.
50:28 YouTube, Curtis Paula Eakins.
50:30 Yeah, so go ahead and do that.
50:32 And I'll be glad to download that three-page handout
50:35 on what we talked about.
50:37 More information as well far as that's concerned, all right?
50:39 Great.
50:40 So we're gonna close off, I think you have a text
50:42 and we're gonna share with the audience
50:44 as soon as things that's coming up
50:46 in the coming future.
50:47 And we want to talk about
50:49 'cause in the next hour, you're going to be cooking.
50:52 Now you too would be coming with us or what?
50:53 No, we're gonna be smelling the smell.
50:58 Okay.
51:00 No, you guys are gonna give us some great food.
51:03 There's many scriptures in the Bible
51:04 from Genesis to Revelation.
51:05 And so I'm always amazed at how Father God talks to us.
51:09 This one's coming out of Philippians 4,
51:12 and it's verse 7.
51:13 And it says, "And the peace of God,
51:16 which passeth all understanding,
51:18 shall keep your hearts and minds
51:20 through Christ Jesus."
51:22 When I think about this particular scripture,
51:24 I think about,
51:25 the only way we can have a peace for that caregiver,
51:28 or even the individual
51:29 going through Alzheimer's and dementia,
51:31 is to concentrate on what God has said
51:33 that I'm always with you, I'm always there,
51:35 I can give you a peace that passeth man's understanding.
51:39 And so with that in mind,
51:40 as you put that time in with God,
51:42 that devotion with God, that prayer to God,
51:45 and by all means,
51:46 praying for the individual and ourselves,
51:49 asking God, you know exactly what this person needs,
51:52 you know what I need.
51:53 I'm worn out, I'm tired.
51:55 Help me, Father, and God says
51:57 I can give you a peace and them a peace
52:00 that passeth any human understanding
52:04 because I'm in this with you.
52:06 God is always with us. He is always nearby.
52:09 He is waiting for us to speak to Him.
52:11 He is waiting for us to just ask Him for His help.
52:14 And most of time, when we get stressed out,
52:17 we forget about God.
52:18 But God says, every time we pray,
52:20 He says to us,
52:22 "I've been waiting for you to ask Me.
52:24 I've been waiting.
52:25 And I can give you that peace, and I can help you.
52:27 I can move you through
52:28 whatever you need to go through."
52:29 I just love the word of God.
52:31 Amen. Amen.
52:32 So we're gonna finish up with upcoming events
52:35 and then what's in the kitchen.
52:37 So let's gonna on the screen there,
52:38 and we're going to be going to a separate places here
52:41 in the South Central Conference.
52:42 Okay.
52:44 And so the first place
52:46 will be coming up is Vicksburg, Mississippi.
52:49 Okay. We were there last year.
52:51 So we're coming to the Vicksburg auditorium.
52:53 The mayor of Vicksburg is inviting us
52:55 to the Vicksburg auditorium, Defeating Diabetes.
52:58 He is so impressed last year on heart disease.
53:01 I wanna bring this couple back next year.
53:02 Wonderful.
53:04 Before I realize I have both arms around neck.
53:06 I had no shame.
53:07 I said, "Oh yeah, we can do that."
53:09 So Vicksburg auditorium,
53:10 just a free and open to the public.
53:12 The 1800 number,
53:14 you still must call to register,
53:16 the 1800-732-7587.
53:20 1800-732-7587.
53:24 That's Sunday, September 15 at the Vicksburg auditorium,
53:27 Defeating Diabetes, all right?
53:30 The next one's in Selma, Alabama, all right?
53:34 And that's going to be Defeating Diabetes
53:35 as a Selma, Alabama,
53:37 the Wallace Community College there in Selma.
53:40 Again, the same 1800 number, 732-7587.
53:46 That's Selma, Alabama, that Saturday and Sunday,
53:51 November 2nd and 3rd I believe.
53:53 So just call to 1800 number to register for that as well
53:56 because we didn't mention that.
53:58 But there are instantly receptors
54:00 in the brain connected to our memory.
54:03 And so sometimes or some diseases
54:06 known as type 3 diabetes.
54:12 This is... Oh, I'm...
54:13 Come on.
54:14 Oh, yeah, there's a connection. I'm gonna get into that.
54:16 But yeah, so those who are diabetic
54:18 have twice is risk of having Alzheimer's disease
54:21 'cause there's a connection, all right.
54:23 Let's go to the next, our health retreat.
54:26 Now this is a health evangelism retreat.
54:29 All right.
54:30 We have seven of these over the years
54:32 but this is evangelism.
54:34 And we incorporate not just South Central Conference
54:38 but also Gulf State Conference is joining us
54:42 and also people from South Atlantic Conference.
54:45 So it can be a whole weekend, October, 4 through 6.
54:50 And it's a wonderful camp McDowell Conference Center,
54:53 beautiful facility.
54:54 We've been there seven years, and wonderful,
54:56 we got people coming in
54:58 who will be talking about kitchen remedies,
55:01 how to alleviate pain and suffering
55:05 for things you have in your kitchen.
55:07 All right.
55:08 Things about health evangelism,
55:09 tools, resources and information literature.
55:13 So it's gonna be a wonderful
55:15 physical fitness instructor certified.
55:18 She's coming along with us,
55:19 the pastor who's topping evangelism and baptism.
55:22 So you can call the 1800 number.
55:25 Again, 1800-732-7587.
55:30 That's October 4 through 6.
55:36 Now are these free?
55:37 No, that one's not free.
55:39 That one's cost 162.
55:42 This is two days, two nights, and three days.
55:44 Okay.
55:45 Meals and lodging included.
55:47 So again... And materials.
55:49 Yeah, so just looking at the first 40 people
55:52 for that as well.
55:53 So looking forward to those
55:54 who will be coming up for the next...
55:56 And then one last one.
55:57 I'm excited. I'm excited. Okay, okay.
55:59 And that's going to be the first part of the year,
56:00 the following year.
56:02 We're on our way to Tobago.
56:04 Yes. Trinidad, Tobago.
56:06 We're going there to do a big whole week evangelism.
56:10 Diamond Andrews is bringing us.
56:11 And this is the ASI,
56:14 president of ASI is bringing us in to speak.
56:16 And we're excited for a couple of reasons.
56:18 Number one is that
56:20 we've never been there, number one.
56:21 And number two, my mid name is Blake.
56:24 And so understanding
56:25 that there are Blake's on the actual premises,
56:28 I cannot wait to meet them, and I'm excited.
56:31 I'm excited.
56:32 You should do Ancestry.com if you can find some relatives.
56:37 Having a Blake T-shirt out of airport,
56:39 you know, whatever.
56:40 So there's gonna be healers. Yeah.
56:43 H-E-A-L-E-R-S, healers.
56:46 So every night is a letter.
56:48 So whole week. Nice.
56:50 We are looking forward to that.
56:51 And in the kitchen, honey, you got...
56:55 We're doing those meals in minutes
56:56 as quick and fast stuff that you can do
56:58 'cause you've got a lot of stuff going on.
57:00 We're fixing salt-aid spinach
57:02 and we're fixing some yellow-steamed rice,
57:05 and we're fixing some Cuban black beans,
57:08 and jack fruit barbecued,
57:10 and we're finishing with a no-bake banana pudding.
57:15 Oh, man!
57:16 We were sticking around for it.
57:18 I know it. All right.
57:19 Well, you may be changing the mind now, baby.
57:21 All right. All right.
57:23 Well, we thank you so much for being with us
57:25 and for all that you do,
57:27 and we're looking forward to tasting what you do.
57:31 But we thank you so much and thank you, Jason.
57:34 It's good to be here.
57:35 And you stay tuned for some great food.


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Revised 2019-09-10