Summary
When you get deep enough into the natural health world, you learn about heavy hydrogen or deuterium. It is a natural contaminant that builds up in our body over time and stalls the nano motor in our mitochondria called the ATPase. Victor Sagalovsky of Litewater joins us once again to talk about the health benefits of depleting deuterium in the body, not only for disease prevention but also to radically extend human lifespan. He talks about the cancer connection with deuterium, how the Russians discovered it, how your body will intelligently shuttle deuterium to less important tissues, on average how many molecules of HDO are in a glass of water, and how deuterium affects our reflex time.
Key Points
- Impact of light exposure on health and circadian rhythm
- Alternative perspectives on cancer prevention and treatment
- Longevity-promoting strategies and interventions
- Deuterium depletion for mitochondrial function and longevity
- Traditional healing practices and moving beyond restrictive diets
Key Moments
Like a squid pyramid, what do you mean?
So, because it's really the harsh reality in the wake of Paul is stress is a real killer on the nervous system. They won't let that research on Wikipedia.
"Like a squid pyramid, what do you mean? You know, it's upside down. Nonsense. Forget it. So, because it's really the harsh reality in the wake of Paul is stress is a real killer on the nervous system. And nothing like figuring out your life to stress you out. So, stay ahead of it. They won't let that research on Wikipedia. Okay, that's fine. It's not about the water anyway. It's about how your body manages deuterium."
Ever since I realized I was getting older
Yeah, because you've been studying human longevity for quite a while, right? My early 20s, trying to piece together information from the standard information that we come up with in public school and parse that against things that are more observational and eventually become common sense and become
"Yeah, because you've been studying human longevity for quite a while, right? Ever since I realized I was getting older. My early 20s, trying to piece together information from the standard information that we come up with in public school and parse that against things that are more observational and eventually become common sense and become a challenge to the paradigm paralysis, which we think is the greatest thing of all time."
And we have a relationship with information, too
It's something profound in the sense of technology that could have been here 30 years ago. But what's profound is that we have such an intimate relationship with language that as soon as that relationship gets challenged or reshaped, it's a really big deal.
"And it's fascinating. It's something profound in the sense of technology that could have been here 30 years ago. In any case, it was. But what's profound is that we have such an intimate relationship with language that as soon as that relationship gets challenged or reshaped, it's a really big deal. And we have a relationship with information, too."
So experiments were conducted
And they discovered ultimately after trying to analyze their diet, genetics, all this stuff, in the late 50s that their water was 16% lower, their drinking water was 16% lower in deuterium.
"And they discovered ultimately after trying to analyze their diet, genetics, all this stuff, in the late 50s that their water was 16% lower, their drinking water was 16% lower in deuterium. So experiments were conducted. To that point, this is in the 50s, to that point, up in the late 30s when it was discovered that there's such a thing that can be made as heavy water because it has to be synthesized in the lab, pure heavy water, not H2O, D2O."