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Good morning everyone, this is Chip Littlejohn from Avini Health Company. What a wonderful joy it is to have this kind of information to pass on to people. What's your goal? What's the problem with the humans? Short time young, long time old. People think, well, I'm going to do these bad behaviors, I'm going to die of something anyway. Well, they don't realize that dying is an instantaneous thing. It happens over the course of decades. When you listen to Rick talk about his products and why he makes them as they do, he points out we are constantly replacing ourselves. Our minds are constantly reaching out to make new connections with other brain cells inside of our head. When these things are successful and you're replacing yourself frequently and you're having new thoughts, those are attributes of a younger person. When you're replacing yourself accurately, those are attributes of a healthier person. When you're not doing that and you're losing ground, that's aging. It's the accumulation of damage that you're not quick enough to repair. That's what aging is. Don't want that. You want to keep getting younger and younger and healthier and healthier and better and better. So those are some big thoughts to me. You're seeing a change in paradigm. You're seeing where people are going to be able to bring their health concerns into their own realm. Somebody could ask you, what do you do? Well, what am I? I'm a primary care advocate. I started with myself. It worked so well that I'm telling others what I did. Primary care, what's that? Well, that's how you take care of yourself so you don't have to do the other kinds of care. All right, so I was going to tell stories. I was going to tell stories about some people, and I wrote down some of them. One of them is an escaped biochemist. Okay, that's kind of interesting. And then the leaf blower guy at the hospital. And then the dog racing guy. I was going to tell something about the dog racing guy. And then the woman who you heard from last night whose spine literally exploded, the guy I talked to earlier in the week who said, my prostate's gone. They already took it. Those guys. I thought I'd tell you some stories about those guys. That would be product stories, wouldn't it? So somebody asked me, what do you do? Well, I represent a brilliant biochemist who escaped. Well, how do you mean he escaped? Well, they had pulled him aside and put him at Duke University where he was being taught to hurt people to help them. He was working with two Nobel Prize winners that developed chemotherapy drugs, Monroe Wall with Taxol, Gertrude Elion with Camptothecin. It was his job as a computer-assisted drug designer to figure out how to make them hurt you less while they're helping you. They're still in use today. They still hurt you to help you. He escaped. How did he escape? Got married, had kids, needed money, bailed out of his Ph.D. program, got picked up by Rexall as a product formulator. Within a year, he was their lead product formulator. Over the course of his career, he has developed hundreds of products that have sold billions of dollars. He finally got frustrated with the other part of the trap. The first part was they had to hurt people to help them. The second part was there was always some huge bureaucracy, whether it was a university or some kind of a big company sitting over his head that skimmed off all of the income. Whatever intellectual property he created was their possession. Whatever products he made were their possession. So he has taken his pick to the litter, and in May of 2022, like nine months ago, started his own company with one of his dear partners at the top of it and him. And he escaped. He escaped those limitations, and that's what you've run into this morning with Avini. So I really like that. So there's just a couple answers. You know, what do you do? I represent a brilliant biochemist who escaped. And he was literally, what were they teaching him to do? He was going to have to make a career out of losing people, wasn't he? Of hurting them. Didn't like it. Didn't like it. Was spring-loaded to think differently. All right, so you have become. What do you do? I'm a primary care advocate. I started on myself. It worked so well that I'm telling other people. That's kind of cool. As I walked by the hospital this morning, there was the leaf blower guy coming down, and he was blowing leaves in front of me. I'm walking right down the middle of the road. And as I went by, he stopped blowing for a second and, you know, greeted me. And he kind of, you know, as, you know, I think maybe he thought, oh, okay, the doctors and all that stuff, maybe they're cooler. And, you know, I'm walking by, and he was just being polite. And he looked at me and he said, oh, man, another day at the office. And I looked over at him and I said, look at the bright side. You know, you're outside. You get a job where you get to be out here with me. You don't want to go in there. And he looked over at the building and kind of smiled and went back to his leaf blower. And, you know, he said, you're right. You know, oh, yeah, right. You don't want to go in there. You don't want to go in there. What are we doing as a movement, as a company? We're helping people to not have to go in there unless it's just the right thing. You know, it's great when you go in and you do the thing they're good at. The bad thing is if you ask them to help you with something they're not good at and they feel like they're responsible to try something anyhow. So that was the leaf blower guy. Next one's an old story. This is a dog racing guy pulled up to the pump stat flying J. And the guy right next to me across on the other side of the pump stat, just a huge trailer full of greyhounds. And I said, wow, what do you do? And he says, well, I actually race dogs. I thought maybe he was a coyote hunter. They run them with greyhounds. But he said, no, I'm a dog racer. And he politely looked over at me and he said, what are you doing? I said, I got into some obscure profession. I represent products that make dogs run faster. And he kind of laughed and he said, are you serious? And I said, yeah, humans too. And so you can kind of be a little creative with things like that. The next ones, and these next two get awful, awful serious. These two people, last night if you were on Robyn's call, you heard a woman who had deadly cells escaped. And my point about these next two people is that we're getting to people not too late, but later than we'd like to. I mean, she was so happy to be helped. But what if we got there before that first cell ever went bad? And she began to be a beanie enthusiast and representative and didn't go there. Then she becomes one of Rick Dice's favorite testimonies. Rick, what's your favorite testimony? The ones that didn't happen because we got there in time. That's what we're about. I mean, ultimately, if we're working right, that's what we're about. I know you guys are getting courageous by the things that are coming in on the phones. And the thicker someone is, the more likely I'm going to wind up talking to them. And, you know, you guys are getting so courageous. It doesn't mean that we can't do it, but if we could get there earlier. In her case, you probably heard me say, if you have something growing inside of a bone and there's no place for it to grow, it'll be like ice freezing in your radiator. If you didn't have antifreeze in it, it'll expand and it will break. And it literally blew up, broke the bones in her spine. And they had just been repairing them with some sort of a composite. And she was recovering from the misery. And the misery would not go away. Because of that, she had turned to Thane and said, okay, you know, I'm using the product. I'm happy about that. That's all great, but I still hurt. I really, really, really hurt. And so we did a three-way call, as will often happen. And we just set a goal. Let's see if we can put our heads together and outsmart this thing. The three of us on the call right now, Thane, Devin, Chip, let's see if we can figure it out. Let's just set a goal to have it be better by tomorrow morning. And so we just really turned in that particular group. She was using all the products. That's great. Everything is going good. But that still hadn't solved that part of it. And so she's asking for more. What do I love? I love how can this be and tell me more? How can this be and tell me more? Those are the two best questions. And she was saying, you know, is there a way that we can figure a way out of this? I think always, yes, we can put our heads together and outsmart it. So we took the Plus Relief. All she had was the oral spray, which happens to be the most concentrated anyway. And you can certainly spray it any place you want. And, by the way, you can swallow the gel if you want. It's not made to taste good. But Rick says, yeah, it's not going to hurt you. It's just not made to taste good. So I suppose, in a way, we have, you know, the large-sized oral one. If you don't mind, you know, swallowing the one that's in the big eight-ounce pump. I hadn't really thought about that. But, okay, that's probably the most economical. And my kids said I killed all my taste buds years ago too. Maybe yours too. Maybe that's the way to do it. Anyway, she had the sprayer. So she sprayed it on the bottoms of her feet, the navel, the place on the back where the, you know, cuts had been. Went down the sides of her carotids. And, of course, that gets the bottom of her ears, her temples, her navel. And went, sat on the edge of bed, did all these things. And she put two sprays in her mouth. I said five. She remembered two. Called Thane during Robin's call last night and was giving him the report from yesterday morning. I'll be darned if it didn't work. So that's the story about that lady. But wouldn't it be more wonderful? She's still suffering from a spine that blew up because we didn't get to her soon enough. Next guy. I get a gazillion calls, you know, about people, males, of course. And what's the most common affliction where a cell goes bad in males? Typically it's going to be the prostate. So that's prostate with no R in it. Prostrate is a position which means you're laying down. Prostate is a gland that sits right under the bladder in males. It's actually almost part of the bladder. And the urethra goes through there. If it begins to harden or get oversized, then it will pinch off the flow from the bladder to the exit. Having that not happen is attributes of a younger male. But when that starts to go bad, I hope we look back at, you know, the medical interventions for that in 2023 and we say, you know, what they used to do to guys that had prostate problems was inhumane. It was barbaric what they did to them. This particular guy had already been removed. But in a way, he outsmarted it on his own. He was 60 years old, his girlfriend is 40 years old, he's still active, and he figured out a way mechanically to operate the plumbing so that he could still be with it. Now it has come back. I'm going to ask you, what do you count as a win? If you are taking care of somebody and you're a medical practitioner, let's say you're working at some big clinic that has escaped cells, what do you count as a win? Well, the one we went to 11 years ago with Marcy, almost 11 years, has a tree with leaves on it, and there were different colors of leaves. Someone who survived a year, quite a few of those. Two years, quite a few of those. Three years. Five years. Less and less. Ten years. Hardly any leaves up there. And I thought, hmm, I wonder what they call a success. I wonder what they count as a win. I wonder what those people at three and five and ten years whose leave is up there, I wonder what they feel like after enduring the desperate care, which you wouldn't do if you weren't desperate. And at that time, Marcy was insisting on doing the natural side, the things that she learned from Rick. And now I see what she's like these years later, and I think what would she have been like if she had, you know, accepted those treatments, if she had learned all those dirty words, you know, camphothese and cyclophosphamide, carboplatin, cisplatin. Probably wouldn't be like she is now. Anyway, this particular guy, now they were about to start administering the hormone treatment to him. Well, you know, hormone treatment, that doesn't sound too bad, right? He said, no, I thought that's kind of gentle. I said, well, why don't they call it what it actually is, chemical castration. Now what do you think about it? You know, how about, you know, consider holding that in reserve if you do get desperate, but right now you're still a fully functional male. It's trying to come back on you. You know, is it worth thinking differently, giving every possible disadvantage to the problem while giving every advantage to yourself, seeking to help yourself while you help yourself instead of hurt yourself while you help yourself. You understand what they're going to do is step on the neck of the disease and your neck at the same time. They're going to take you right to the edge of disaster and then step off and go through a rebound period and see which one of you is able to bounce back the best. That's how it works. It's actually called a rebound period. Wouldn't it be great if we could actually build you at the same time we were hurting it? That's where that gigantic word, selectivity, comes into the AVENI product line. If you don't hear anything else to use in a conversation today, please listen to this word, selectivity. AVENI is selective. We're able to excrete the poisonous metals while retaining, keeping the biologically active metals. We're able, once those are active, to go into a cell that's harmful to you, that's stealing your food, and not to enter a cell that's making you, which is a healthy cell. We're able to take something like AVENI Nano, cervical silver, and remove the things that are alive within you that are pathogenic, including the pathogenic bacteria, while leaving all the good, healthy cells and the good, healthy bacteria in place. Selectivity, gigantic selectivity. Then we come with AVENI Plus Relief, and we're able to truncate or modulate, moderate, the messages of misery and agony coming down a nerve while allowing or even enhancing the normal, functional, operational messages to go through that synapse. That selectivity is what's missing. If you go to a remedy for agony and misery from the medical side, it is going to take away, first of all, danger of addiction, danger of overdose, danger of putting your bowels to sleep, danger of numbing all of your other responses. You see the upside-down world of AVENI. You see the gigantic value at each point along the way. Why are we truly at the pinnacle, at the peak, at new ways of thinking? It's that selectivity. If you wanted to boil it down, those selectivities I just pointed out. The big idea, what if we could figure out a way to help someone while we help them, instead of hurting them to help them? You have to have a doctor, a diagnosis, a prescription, and a pharmacist, probably a medical device, if you're going into the world of hurting someone to help them, because you have to monitor how bad you've hurt them so you don't take it too far and pull your feet off of their neck and they don't come back, or they're hurt forever. Well, most of the ones that get a leaf on the tree are hurt forever. One of the things they offered as one of their new exotic treatments for Marcy was called HYPEC, HYPEC, H-Y-P-E-C, hyperthermic peritoneal effusion chemotherapy. Well, that sounds great. We've got a new specialist for that. We actually went back to listen to the guy because the concept was we don't have to go systemic with the chemo for that. I thought, well, that sounds some better. At least you're not going to do your brain. The guy, when we went to talk to him, said, trust me, you don't want to do it. He said, you're showing all the signs of a healthy woman. You do not want to do something like this prophylactically. And, by the way, it's a good test. Find out if the guy who's recommending you do something for your health is also doing it for his health. There's a bottom-line test for you right there. I assure you, if you're in a beanie, you are doing what you're suggesting to other people to support your health, to do their health. Who would think that it would be this powerful? But hyperthermic peritoneal effusion chemotherapy is they lay you on a special table in the operating room, open your peritoneum up, yep, that's where your guts are, lay your guts out, fill you up with hot chemotherapy drugs because those cells don't like heat either. There's a little trick. And slosh you around on the table and then dump as much as they can out, suck as much as they can out, and so you back up to begin recovering. By the way, before you undergo this hyperthermic peritoneal effusion chemotherapy, you have to sign a paper that you will not commit suicide during the first 90 days because everybody wants to. And I thought you've got to admire the guy for being honest because he's a specialist in doing this, and he pretty much laid it right on the line. This is what's going to happen. This is what we do. And I thought, oh, my goodness. Do you see what Rick escaped from? Do you see why I say I represent a brilliant biochemist who escaped? He was pulled aside and he was being taught to make a career out of losing, and he didn't like it. They stopped to think differently. That's all I got. Anybody want to open it up? I love to laugh, Chip, when you say, that's all I got. That's all you got? You're amazing. Thank you so much for everything you do. You're so inspirational. I appreciate you. It's big fun. I love to be with you guys. I love to be with you. Hey, Chip. Thank you, Chip. Sometimes we can only convince people against their will of what we know that we can share with them in a way that would make sense. Perhaps their will can become parallel. That's a big secret, Robbie. You just point out that they really do want to go where you're going. It's not us versus them. They just don't realize they want to go this way. And so in the conversation you have to somehow say there's new thinking available, and I bet you're going to love it. So the adversarial thing kind of goes away, and it's so much better. Just put that in your head. In place of the adversarial, you know, we'll never get them to think this way. It's like everybody's going to love this, and it's just a matter of revealing it to them. It's so much better. Anybody else? Thank you, Chip. Hey, Chip. Rich Potter here. I enjoyed what you had to say about prostate issues. And as one who's benefited from the Aveni products in that area, it's been such a blessing to me. And what a wonderful thing that we have an alternative to the very best that the doctors have to offer. You know, when I met with my doctor, he said there are three things we can do in a case like this. We have these explosive mutant cells, and he said it's either radical surgery, hormone therapy, which you correctly named as chemical castration, or radiation, where they insert radioactive pellets into that part of your body to try to deal with the issue. That's really good compared to taking a few drops of Rick's Amazing Elixir in your mouth every waking hour. And what a wonderful choice I had to make. I didn't know about that choice when I first met with my doctor, but thanks to my good friend Barb Ostrom and Dave Johnson, who shared with me a better choice. So grateful. Well, I want to hold Rich Cotter up as what we count as a win. Rich Cotter, Dave Johnson, these are guys that went through that thing, and we got to them soon enough that they're totally functional human males after going through that experience, and they're protecting themselves. And I would submit that we are primary care, are the alternate, they are the desperate. You wouldn't do it if you weren't desperate, and we have to change that paradigm. These are the things you do to take care of yourself so that when you go to the best patient he's ever seen, and I think Rich's doctor actually said that pretty much directly to him. Rich is probably the most incredible best patient he's ever seen. I bet he would like to have that result for more of his patients. I'm guessing he's just like Rick. He would like to escape. He would not like to make a career out of losing or hurting people if he knew a different way. Hey, Chip, I'd like to add just a thought here also, if I could. I'm the guy that has the story that didn't do what Rich and Dave and others have done, and the impact of not having that choice to be able to make it, it gives me a stronger desire to be available and willing to share my story about having not done what they did because it wasn't available at that time. So I just look at this as a great opportunity to be able to talk to those who have the prostate problem and be able to share it from the downside and be able to share with them what the upside really is. So this is an inspiring call for me because it takes a lot of courage, and I still struggle with that, to share my story of why not to do what the medical community wants to do, and you said it so well, to butcher you. So that's my thoughts. Well, Frank, I think this is the fourth time that you've stepped up to reveal that, and you would be certainly counted as a win. I mean, I'm around you. I get to work with you. I actually use Frank to critique my presentations because he's brilliant at that. And, you know, what a great guy. But they heard him. They heard him bad. And, you know, at 80 years old, I'd like for him to be fully functional male, but they took it from him. And he's a little bit mad about it. To say the least. Frank, can I share a quick thought with you? Yeah, sounds like a thing. That is me. The invitation of the Statue of Liberty says to everybody that comes to America, bring me your tired, your weak, your huddled masses. And that's what a V is, because it is freedom to break free from the society of cut, burn, poison, and try not to kill you even though we're going to push you right to that brink. It's freedom to be able to choose for ourselves what we want our outcome to be. And here's the beautiful thing about this. As I was talking to Deb, Deb and I have been really, really good, close friends for years from a previous company. And the interesting thing about it, as I was talking to Deb, and I started telling her about the possibility of what these Avena Health products can do and what they have done for other people, she says, I've got two questions. One, will you teach me? And two, is this really possible? And when she asked me, is this really possible, there was a great deal of devotion and trembling in her voice because she was one of the tired, the weak, and the huddled masses searching for answers, not for the standard care of cut, burn, and poison, but true answers that resonated with who she is. She said several times to me, Chip, I've been praying for answers. And here we are several states apart. She lives in Texas, I live in Idaho. And at one point in time I felt the inclination that I needed to reach out to her to see how she's doing, and that's when I discovered her tragic health condition. So let's make it a point, an initiative, an imperative point of action that we go out and we find the people that are literally searching as if they are the tired, the weak, and the huddled masses learning to take care of themselves. Because what we're currently looking at today, and I don't want to bad mouth the medical system, if I get hit by a truck or fall off a roof, yeah, I want to get put back together again. But if I've got a chronic condition like that, uh-uh, that's my responsibility to take care of. The eat, drink, and be married for tomorrow we die mentality needs to change. And there's a lot of people out there just like Deb looking for us. Well, folks, I think that was our call for today. Thank you for participating, for being interested. And, you know, I still believe the products are dependable. You know, I used to think the products were a miracle. Now I'm kind of used to that. I kind of depend on it. To me the miracle now is you reaching out. The person who knows finding the person who needs to know. And that's where it is. That's where the miracle is flowing right now.