Introduction to Cancer, Cancer Exercise and the Zoom Guided Training Program
Jul 13, 2025Watch this video to learn about the OncoVie™ Cancer Exercise Specialist training from the first guided session that is part of the Zoom Guided training program with business support. (Exclusively from the Cancer Exercise Training Institute (CETI)). You'll also get an introduction to cancer and the importance of specific exercise program training to work with cancer survivors.
Andrea Leonard, President and Founder of CETI discusses the importance of the Cancer Exercise Specialist Training and how it can help individuals prevent cancer and improve their quality of life during and after cancer treatment. She goes over the structure and process for the Self Study and Zoom Guided training options, along with how to access both the digital training information and order the optional printed books for study and ongoing reference. The course addresses the need for a comprehensive approach to cancer prevention and treatment, including diet, exercise, and lifestyle changes. She goes over how the course content will help students understand the different types of cancer, their stages, and the impact of cancer on patients' lives.
VIDEO TRANSCRIPT:
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As people pop on. We have people from all over the world. So not everybody can make it to the live sessions, which is fine they are all recorded, and you guys can watch them at your leisure.
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00:00:15I I think Greg may have given you guys an introduction to this already, but just know that you have. When you sign into teachable.com, you go to your courses and under the courses you're going to see live zoom recordings or sessions and recordings. And then you're gonna see ces 14th edition. So the 14th edition is all of your course content. That's where your downloadable modules are. Your practice quizzes there's bunches of videos.
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00:00:42and then the Zoom sessions are what we're doing throughout the month. So he will post the links there each week, typically on Mondays. And so if you do not receive an email with the link to the webinar, just go there. The the links are there. Otherwise
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00:00:59certainly check in with us. Because there's some reason you're not getting the emails, either your email addresses put in the system wrong or any number of possibilities. But we are going to get started on our month long journey today of the cancer exercise specialist training.
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00:01:18And this is somewhat of a fast track, if you will, to get you through the course materials, you do not need to complete the course within the month by any means. Typically you have 6 months. But if you need extra time, all you need to do is is.
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00:01:33and I know we're going to be getting into the holidays and everything else, and it gets a little bit complicated.
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00:01:38So
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00:01:41We'll go through this little checklist right here, and starting with the hard copy books.
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00:01:47You have the down, the Pdfs of these in your teachable. But a lot of people like to actually, you know, have have books to be able to mark up. There are 4 handbooks. It's about 500 pages. We do print them on demand. We don't. We don't just keep stock of them anymore, because not that many people want them.
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00:02:06So if you want to get them, it takes about 2 weeks for delivery. And you can email me, I'm going to put in the chat box
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00:02:15right now. Whoops, hold on a second. My computer's being weird today. Okay, so you guys have my email, Andrea at the cancerspecialist.com. It will get buried. I I am not. I can't get to those in a timely fashion. So I'm going to give you my other email [email protected] as well as my phone number. If you are out of the United States, use one in front of it, and you can reach me through Whatsapp.
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00:02:43So through text, I'm very quick to respond usually. And this email is going to be much better for you in terms of getting a response. So just remember Andrea at the cancerspecialist.com. It is going to get buried. It will eventually get answered, but probably not in the timeframe you would like.
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00:03:01So that being said, if you email me, I can send you the direct link to order the books. So you don't have to go searching all over, teachable to figure out how to how to get them.
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00:03:13Okay. Another thing that I like to kind of put some fears away is the final exam. You're going to hear all kinds of horror stories about it, and that it takes people 10 h, 14 h, you know, however many, and sometimes it does, but it is part of the learning experience, and because of that we allow you open book untimed.
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00:03:35The answers
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00:03:37to the test questions are either in the handbooks they're in these sessions that we have or they're in your teachable in in any of the content. Do not Google for the answers. We all know how to do that, but the answers may be wrong, because, like anything else, there's different opinions. There's, you know, depending on. If this was from (202) 010-2020. The content changes. So all of our material is
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00:04:05gone through by our Board of Advisors, and we have 20 medical professionals from all across the board. So we feel that these are the appropriate and the most accurate answers. Therefore those are going to be the ones you're going to be tested on. So don't Google it.
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00:04:21You get 2 shots at the test. You can come and go. So what I suggest is that you take a piece of paper number one to 1, 25, and write, you know the accompanying letter, Abcde. So if it happens literally, like once or twice a year. Somebody's Internet, you know. Something goes wrong and they lose everything that way. If you have the answers written down, you can just go back and start popping them in. It doesn't shuffle the questions.
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00:04:50We're pretty simple in that respect. This is very straightforward learning. There's there's no trickery. It's very complicated material. And and that's that's what's going to be really beneficial about these sessions, because I'm going to show you how to uncomplicate it. If you will.
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00:05:09As soon as you pass the test you'll be able to print your formal certificate, and you'll also get one for Ceus.
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00:05:16you know. Every every month there's a person or 2 who has a problem downloading it, not a problem. Just email. Me, we'll we'll email you the copy very easy. And you'll also have the opportunity to send your information that you would like listed on the Directory. So any credentials, your address, if you don't want to use your real address, which I understand. Just make up a street number on a similar street nearby you. It's just because it
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00:05:41prompts the system to show where you're on on a map. So if I live at 9 Bell Pre Court, I could say, I live at 9, 87, Belpree Road. It's it's going to pop up. It'll be fine, and then you don't have to worry about somebody knowing your address.
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00:05:56What else? What else? What else? Okay, Facebook group. This is important. Let me take my phone out of
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00:06:02airplane mode, so I can show you this group is a private group. You have to ask to be admitted, which, of course you will get admitted, and this is your forever family, if you will. So it looks like this Ceti cancer exercise specialists with an S the end and go ahead and request to join.
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00:06:24The great thing about this group is, there are people from all over the world. They are doctors, nurses, Pts, OTS, personal trainers, Yoga Pilates, cancer patients, cancer survivors, you name it, who have either completed the course or they are currently going through. It's a great place that you can ask questions. You can talk about the exam. You can talk about your clients. You can talk about your own history as long as you keep a professional and unsolicitous non-solicitous, whatever the word is.
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00:06:54And everybody is so helpful
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00:06:57and just. It's just a family, that's all I can say. It's an amazing group of people. So go ahead and join that. And I want to give you something to think about right now, also along those lines, and that is creating your own group. So I know we're we're way premature for that. But not really, you know, if we start kind of laying the foundation by the time you finish this, take your test you're going to have you know everything in order. So
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00:07:232 things to think about now one is to go into to Linkedin Facebook. I'm not too familiar with Instagram or Snapchat, or the other ones in terms of groups. But type in cancer.
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00:07:36Now, you're going to have all kinds of groups, young breast cancer survivors prostate cancer survivors who live in the Middle East. I'm just naming random things because there's so many, so many different random groups. You're not going to fit
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00:07:50in all of those, and many of them won't even let you in. If you yourself have not gone through cancer or are not a caregiver. Don't, don't take offense. It just is what it is. Join any that will let you. If not, move on. But that's part one.
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00:08:07So part 2 is you create your own Facebook group. So let's say, I want to call it Andrea's awesome cancer warriors. And I just start setting it up, you know, whatever pictures I want to put in there, and then you can feel free to share my my content. So you can go to Ceti. Andrea is my Instagram, and on Facebook is is, I believe it's just cancer, exercise
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00:08:34and and copy share. I don't care what you you know, make it your own, or just just share it to your new Facebook group.
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00:08:42All right. So you're starting to compile some valuable information for other people. But meanwhile you don't have an audience.
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00:08:49So by being in these other groups, this allows you to share your group so you can't go into these other cancer groups and solicit yourself. They'll kick you out in a in a blink of an eye.
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00:09:02But you can start engaging in conversation. So let's say I'm in a thyroid cancer group. And I say, Oh, you know I had thyroid cancer 40 years ago, and these were my struggles and blah blah blah!
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00:09:13Why don't you come visit my personal Facebook group? Also, I share a lot of valuable content. And I'm going to be offering some free exercise classes or something like that, you know. You've got to have a a bait, and then you pull them into your group. That's where you can market yourself.
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00:09:28So even on your regular social media that has nothing to do with cancer. You figure one out of 3 people is going to have cancer. And everybody knows someone who has cancer. So as you develop your own group and you say.
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00:09:42Oh, I just posted this thing today on nutritional ways to prevent cancer. Please share this with anyone you know who has cancer or anyone you want to keep from getting cancer. So so these are things you can start doing now and then when you take that test and you're like, all right, I'm a cancer exercise specialist. I'm ready to go now. You can say, Okay, I'm starting a class, December first, st and
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00:10:04you know you might do 1st session free. So you get people in, and then so on, and so forth. And Greg Greg will talk to you in your marketing and branding sessions about how to price yourself, how to brand yourself. What's your story? So those are the sessions you'll spend with him. But this is something that I find helpful to just kind of give you these little nuggets right at the beginning. So
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00:10:27that's that. We also have. It's probably going to be released at the beginning of November. We have a coaching course that's going to be coming out, that we've been working on for the last year, and I'm excited about that, too, which also takes things to another level in my master's program. I actually took a wellness coaching as as part of the the masters, and it I've been a personal trainer for 32 years, and I
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00:10:56there's a certain way we kind of communicate with our clients, and we all have have different, you know.
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00:11:02personalities and different ways of doing things, but coaching really approaches it from a different style. We, we empower the patient or the client to honestly come up with the answers themselves. I mean, yes, we are the ones that are saying, you know, this is the exercise you should be doing, and here is the reason why or this is the food you should be eating, and so on, and so forth, but but we get them to pull the answers out of themselves, and I have found this
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00:11:27to be so much more effective. I wish I knew it before I raised my children. I wish I knew it in previous relationships, because it's a whole different form of communication. So keep you posted about that as well, and all of my communication. We have a newsletter that'll go out. And then we also have the Facebook group. So that's where I do most of the communicating.
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00:11:50So just a quick little question to get you guys engaged this morning and maybe learn a little bit about you 1st off would love to know. You know who you are, where you are in this world, and professionally, what you do. Maybe you're here because you yourself have been through cancer or are going through, or know someone who has
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00:12:12but also knowing what you practice, you know whether you're a doctor, a nurse, Yoga Pilates, whatever will also help me to kind of tailor this more towards the audience, and and, you know, answer those specific questions.
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00:12:26But I always ask, What is your why?
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00:12:28Why are you here of all the fun workshops that are out there all the fun ways to get ceus? Why, cancer
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00:12:37and I'll share with you my quick story, which, if you don't already know it, you're going to be sick of hearing after a while. But in 1981, my mom was diagnosed with her 1st breast cancer.
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00:12:50I was 15, and sort of didn't really understand what was going on, and this was right at the cusp of when they were doing very, very aggressive radical mastectomies. Removing the muscle, removing all of the lymph nodes the breast. What have you? She ended up with permanent nerve damage. She ended up with a frozen shoulder. She became addicted to narcotics to manage the pain, and she's never been the same. She's had chronic pain for the last, you know, 40 odd years.
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00:13:173 years later I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. I had just finished my senior year of high school was getting a college physical. They found a lump in my throat, and lo and behold! A few weeks later I was going to have my thyroid removed, and
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00:13:30while I consider myself one of the lucky ones. That is actually what prompted me to get into fitness, because when your thyroid is removed, you have no energy, you gain weight. You know just everything you know. It affects your hair, your nails, your whole body. And so I developed a number of eating disorders and
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00:13:51decided in 1992, I'm going to become a personal trainer, and that way I can help other people who are are dealing with similar issues while helping myself. In 1996,
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00:14:035, my mom was diagnosed with breast cancer in the other breast. At this time she decided to undergo reconstruction, which she didn't do the 1st time because of the nerve damage, so they literally will talk about this. Next week they took her rectus abdominis. They tunnel it along with the abdominal fat and skin up under her chest, bring it out to make a breast.
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00:14:24She didn't have enough tissue to do to do both breasts, so one side, the one without the nerve damage. They did an implant over the course of the next 10 years, the implant, because the skin was pulled so thin it kept ripping, and she kept getting staph infections, and eventually they had to remove the implant. Now she's in her seventies.
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00:14:43They're telling her. Oh, well, why don't you get a lap flap? Let's take your latissimus muscle and create another breast. And I'm like, Mom, you know, this is this is getting ridiculous. I know you want to be whole and complete, and all this but
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00:14:57this is too much. And then in
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00:15:01oh, God! 6 years ago, she was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer. So because they did not treat her properly.
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00:15:08they did not give her hormone blockers when she was estrogen receptor positive, which means her cancer grows in the presence of estrogen.
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00:15:16Cancer came back 23 years later, and so fortunately, the medicine that she's on now is working. She's 86. She's doing pretty well.
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00:15:25but the bottom line is, you know. That was that was the beginning. When my mom was diagnosed the second time I was training her breast. Surgeon and I said, What do you think about writing a book on exercises for breast cancer survivors? And she said, This is a great idea.
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00:15:39So we spent the following 3 years with the chiefs of Breast surgery at Georgetown, Gw. And Johns Hopkins, and wrote a book called Essential Exercises for breast cancer survivors. And then, within a few more years, my father was diagnosed with prostate cancer, bladder cancer, mild dysplastic disease. My grandfather had lung cancer.
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00:15:58and I learned that I had about 23 relatives who all had different types of cancer. And I said, Wow.
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00:16:04this goes well beyond breast cancer.
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00:16:07We need more people who know how to work with these patients. And so in 2,004 started the Cancer Exercise Training Institute. So that is my very long. Why.
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00:16:20Daryl, I'm I'm reading. Yeah, Daryl, do me a favor. Email me, please, at just scroll up. You'll see c eti [email protected], and we'll get you all squared away.
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00:16:34Okay.
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00:16:35alright. Well, anytime you guys feel like sharing. You know my email address otherwise feel free to put it in the chat box.
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00:16:44This is what I call the cancer continuum.
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00:16:48Now, it may seem odd that it starts with prevention when you're like, well, but I'm already dealing with somebody who has cancer, maybe. But this is also part of your your spiel is teaching people how to prevent cancer, you know, because, knowing what the statistics are, knowing that the cancer numbers are going up every year. Yes, more people are surviving.
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00:17:11Many more treatments are are fabulous. However.
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00:17:16the numbers of diagnoses are not going down.
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00:17:20So that's 1 point to the people who've never had cancer. Let's keep from getting it. But the other is for people who have had cancer. Diet plays a critical role as does exercise, especially with certain cancers. There are about 13 cancers that are linked to obesity. So when you think of heart disease and diabetes, and just the unhealthy people.
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00:17:46I can speak for the United States. Obviously, you know, we're not the only ones that share these issues. But certain places in the world have different types of cancer, you know, like, for example, in Asia or in Europe, high incidences of lung cancer, because the smoking is much more common. So so all of these things are really important. And if you are not a registered dietitian who specializes in oncology.
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00:18:12You should not be making nutritional recommendations beyond the basics like, Here's a carb. Here's fat. Here's protein. Here's how to read a food label. Let's go through your kitchen and get rid of this, this, this, this teach them about processed foods, all of those basic things organics. We'll talk about oxidative stress.
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00:18:34But if somebody is going through cancer treatment, you don't want to make recommendations without that background, because there are certain foods and herbs that can actually interfere with the efficacy of certain cancer treatments, and we certainly don't want to do that. So yes, you can talk about, you know, a calorie, how many calories they're burning, how many calories they're consuming, what the best
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00:19:01types of proteins and fats are. Those things are fine, but don't get into specific food recommendations or or herbs in particular, because they can definitely affect some of these treatments.
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00:19:12Take a sip of water real quick.
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00:19:17Okay. Prehab
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00:19:19is a very small window of opportunity. So that means somebody gets diagnosed with cancer. Let's say you're already training them.
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00:19:26And they come to you and say, Hey, Michelle, I was just diagnosed with
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00:19:32testicular cancer. And I'm going to start treatment in 3 weeks. Can you help me get strong
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00:19:38to prepare? And so Michelle's going to go into her book. She's going to look up testicular cancer. And Michelle, I'm just picking your name. I'm not going to ask you any questions. Don't worry. I can see I can see the nervous look. You're going to look up the surgeries and be like, all right. Here's here's what we need to do to prepare this guy, and maybe it's core strength. Maybe it's Cardio. Maybe it's stretching. You're not going to get a whole lot done in 3 weeks.
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00:20:03but it's more of an empowerment, you know, and just making them feel strong and ready to go. And you got this. You know, as soon as your doctor gives you the medical clearance. We're going to just jump back into this, although, you know, then we're dealing with recovering from surgery and that type of thing. So
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00:20:19these are all the steps that I'm going to teach you, and that are in the book, and I employ you to not go into the book. Yet I know none of you. Most of you should not have the hard copy. If you do want it. And you jumped on later. Email me, I will give you the links where you can order the hard copies. Otherwise you have the Pdfs in your teachable in each module. But don't start reading them yet you will do nothing but confuse yourself
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00:20:48for the next 2 weeks. I want you to do nothing but watch the videos. Okay, so you go to teachable, you go to courses. You have these zoom sessions. So you're going to watch these either live or in recording. But then you're going to go to your 14th edition, and I want you to watch all the videos from prostate cancer through breast reconstruction and and breast is in Module 2.
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00:21:09After you watch those. Then you start looking at the book because it's going to help you to just graze through the book as opposed to reading it. Line for line.
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00:21:19I'm going to teach you what to focus on as a health or fitness, professional as opposed to memorizing statistics or memorizing. You know who is the most common person to get prostate cancer, or you know where in the world has the highest number of breast cancer, it's all in there. But you don't need to focus on that focus on what pertains to you as a health and fitness, professional or someone who is going to be prescribing exercise programs
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00:21:45during treatment. There are
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00:21:48so many studies, so many studies in these next 2 phases during treatment and recovery and survivorship that show during treatment that it minimizes treatment side effects. The number one reported side effect is fatigue. I mean mind numbing fatigue. It can obviously improve
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00:22:10overall happiness, mood, you know, decrease depression, increase appetite. A lot of people lose their appetite and they have muscle wasting. It can manage body composition, I mean, the list goes on and on, and all of these things. We have these pre-made brochures and everything that you can order. Also one of your fellow students designed these all, and I'll share that with you later on down the line. But all these benefits are listed, and it's kind of already done for you.
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00:22:37and in recovery and survivorship, if we take the same
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00:22:41kind of cohort of a hundred breast cancer survivors between 40 and 50, who all, you know, eat the same thing. But this group exercises, and this group doesn't. The one that exercises is going to have a longer life expectancy and a better quality of life. So it begs the question, why is every doctor not saying you need to exercise.
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00:23:04And in speaking to some doctors, not a ton. I've tried to come up with the answer to that, and I have had doctors that have said, I have told my patient. You know this is what you need to do, and there's just some some lapse they just don't follow through. But those are few and far between. The bigger issue is that the doctors don't know who to refer to.
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00:23:30And so this is again, which is going to be part of your branding and part of your business that Greg's going to help you with. And that's another thing you can start to think of. Now, who are in your 6 degrees of separation?
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00:23:43Did you have cancer? Who was your surgeon, who was your oncologist? Who was your radiation oncologist who was your physical therapist if you didn't have cancer. But you know your mother did. Who's her surgeon, you know. So on and so forth. Do you know somebody in the news media? Do you know somebody?
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00:24:01You know some famous person who had cancer? Who would be a spokesperson? I mean I'm stretching it now. But but start to think about these things so that you're in a position to just rock and roll as soon as you pass your test, and you're ready to go.
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00:24:15So what exactly, is the role? I've told you what it isn't, and that is, we are not. You know we are not registered dietitians. We are also not doctors. We are not. I mean, you might be. If you're a doctor, then you're a doctor who's also a cancer exercise specialist. If you're a physical therapist, then you're a physical therapist who's also a cancer exercise specialist. So we can all share that umbrella.
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00:24:36But we each have our different specialties or our own modalities, and that's what you want to stick with. So I'm as a personal trainer, even though I know some Yoga and some Pilates. I'm not marketing myself as a Pilates specialist, because I'm not and and so, you know, you're going to see different exercises that are Pilates that are yoga.
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00:24:56You make it your own, and it'll make more sense as as we get to that point. But the goal, of course, is to improve overall physical strength and flexibility, correct muscle imbalances. So I'm going to give you a visual. And how, apropos, today is October first.st So the beginning of breast cancer awareness month.
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00:25:16This is also a fantastic time for you guys to start talking about this. Hey? I'm taking this course. I just want to bring your attention. It's breast cancer, awareness month. Feel it on the first, st you know, whatever. There's plenty of stuff that you can grab off of the Internet, and it's a great segue to introduce yourself to people. I'll try and get some stuff posted in the next day or 2, and you guys are welcome to just
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00:25:41share or copy. If you don't have canva CANV. A. Get canva, you can get it for free. It's an app. I pay a hundred dollars a year, and, you know, get more stuff.
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00:25:52But it's so easy for all your graphic stuff and plopping and dropping, and it's I can't imagine living without it. So you can make some great social media posts, and there's probably other apps, I'm sure, as well.
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00:26:05But going back to breast cancer. Somebody has a mastectomy, so they've got. Let's say they had both breasts removed. They've got an incision here and here, and then they've had lymph nodes removed here, and then maybe they've had radiation to the chest. So what happens is you've got scar tissue and adhesions that are pulling this inward
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00:26:23head goes forward shoulders are rounded back gets kyphotic. People start to have neck pain. It leads to low back pain. Then, because of this, they have limited range of motion, so they can't perform the activities of daily living that they're used to. So we have to identify these range of motion limitations, these muscle imbalances and choose the appropriate exercises for this person, because the wrong exercises can make it worse, and it can also bring on lymphedema.
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00:26:52Now, lymphedema is the swelling in this case of the affected arm, it could be the chest or the lat area. It depends on the part of the body that has either had radiation or lymph nodes removed, so we will also have a session on lymphedema, so don't don't worry too much, but it can be prevented through exercise. It can also be made worse
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00:27:15by exercise if you do too much too fast.
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00:27:22So a lot of fitness professionals.
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00:27:26you know, people will ask me, well, what's so different about working with cancer patients. And I'm going to say to you, you tell me when you're done with this month with me.
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00:27:35because it is so comprehensive that if you don't understand any of these elements.
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00:27:42that's 1 thing. But then we have to add the acute and chronic side effects of treatment.
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00:27:48the acute and chronic side effects of surgery. And we're going to build this like a cake, if you will, or a mathematical equation. We take, you know, the the surgeries and their side effects, the treatments and their side effects. We take the physical assessment, the range of motion, the postural assessment, and then the rest of their medical history. And it's only when we have all of that information that we can actually, safely
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00:28:12and effectively prescribe an exercise program. Otherwise, we're just, you know, pulling things out of a hat?
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00:28:19So ultimately, once we have all that information, then we can design, prescribe and teach personalized exercise programs. And please let me know if you are a group exercise instructor because I will spend more time talking about that and even if you're a personal trainer doing small group training, or or you know your your
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00:28:42Yoga therapist or a Pilates instructor doing small group training can be beneficial for both you and and the patients, because it's going to make it more affordable to them. And you're going to make more money. So you charge less. But you get more.
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00:28:56So all of those things are part of the business strategy.
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00:29:00Okay, I did something to animate this, and it slows it down all right. These are just the general categories of cancer. So again, cancers here, and then you've got these categories next. So if you hear that, somebody says I have a carcinoma
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00:29:16again, you don't have to memorize this, but you'll just become familiar with it. It's organs. It's internal and external linings. Different parts of the bodies are labeled different. Sarcomas are bone, their cartilage, their muscle, their vessels.
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00:29:31Leukemia is blood and bone marrow. So now we're looking at more of a
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00:29:36systemic cancer as opposed to, there's not a tumor per se. It's affecting the blood. Same thing with lymphomas. Lymph nodes, and the lymphatic system are affected. But this is not the same as cancer that has spread to the lymphatic system. So, for example, my mother has breast cancer that has spread in her lymphatic system, and it's in the liver. It's in the bones, it's in the lungs. It's not lymphoma.
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00:30:02That's a totally different cancer. Okay? So and in fact, it's not liver cancer. It's not lung. Cancer. It's not bone cancer. It is primary breast cancer.
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00:30:13And then those other cancers are what we call secondary. And when we're at stage 4 cancer, the cells are not easily distinguishable. They start to look like this so that it becomes very difficult to determine what type of cancer the cancer of origin was. So it took them several weeks to figure out that she had metastatic breast cancer. We didn't know if it was just a new cancer.
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00:30:39So then, of course we have skin cancer, melanoma being the most deadly, but we also have basal cell and squamous cell. Gliomas are of the brain and the spinal cord.
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00:30:51So those are our our different different types. So humor me, guys for a sec. And
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00:30:58will you please write in the chat box what you think? The number one cause of cancer is, you're not graded. You're not going to be insulted. You're not going to be laughed at. You're probably going to get it right.
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00:31:10But what do you think the number one cause of cancer is?
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00:31:17It's just I get time to drink water.
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00:31:25Okay? And I didn't mean to press heredity diet can actually be a very big big part of it. What I was hoping to see is that a lot of people say heredity, when, in fact, it is only making up 5 to 10%. So Daryl, lifestyle, yes, all of the things that we do on a daily basis. So think about this. Let me press the next button here. Radiation.
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00:31:54I was in 1st grade and knocked my front teeth out, playing hopscotch. I had tons of dental work.
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00:32:02unhealthy diet and lifestyle. Yes, and so throughout my life, I continue, you know, every year you go to the dentist. They do your you know your X-rays, and then you break your arm. You get your MRI, you get your cat scan whatever over a lifetime
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00:32:17you are accumulating that radiation.
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00:32:21If you fly all the time
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00:32:23in an airplane. I don't think any of us have wings yet. You are exposed to more radiation. My husband works in nuclear facilities, and he told me that there's more radiation in an airplane. So all of these things over time accumulate. And when you, when you realize that most people who most people who get cancer are in their sixties, their seventies, you know. It increases as you get older. A lot of it is because of this accumulation
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00:32:49of toxins of viruses. Epstein-barr, Hpv. Hep, B. You know. Hpv. Human Papillomavirus. Now they have Gardasil, which is a vaccine for it. But you know what was vaginal warts or venereal warts, because it's guys and girls is now presenting itself as cancer. And it's throat cancer. It's esophageal cancer. It's mouth cancer. I'll let you figure out how and why.
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00:33:17Obesity not only can lead to certain cancers, particularly like breast cancer, ovarian cancer, stomach cancer, any kind of hormonally driven cancer, not only can it lead to an initial cancer. But then, of course, it can decrease your risk of survival and increase your risk of a secondary cancer.
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00:33:39All right. The big key word for today is oxidative stress.
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00:33:45To think that 10 years ago I had no idea what this was in all my naivety, and I continued to do all these terrible things that now I have to stop doing
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00:33:55this list is so important.
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00:33:59Create your own if if you want me to share this slide presentation email. You, I'll send it to you through dropbox. And you can.
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00:34:07you know, copy and paste it, or whatever
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00:34:10this is so important to share with your clients and don't expect them. You're not going to go. Okay, guys. Everything on this list. We're starting today. Forget it. They will never succeed, neither will you. Nobody can do this all at once. So you pick you have your client. Look at this, and be what? What? Pick one thing here, and tell me what is a reasonable place to start, and so let's say they say well.
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00:34:37you know I do live in Texas, and I like my steak, and I have a steak at least 5 times a week.
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00:34:43you might say. And does that concern you? And and they say, well, that is too much animal protein in my diet. So is that something you would like to change?
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00:34:53Yeah, I think I could start with that.
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00:34:56So what I'm hearing you say is that of all these things on this list that you think reducing the amount of steak you eat is a goal that you can achieve. Is that correct? Yes, I think I can do that. Okay, so that is a goal you believe you can achieve. Let's narrow this down. How many times a week do you think you can commit to not having steak?
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00:35:22And they think about it? Well, I know Friday night is barbecue, and oh, Saturday is our church potluck, and you know I can commit to only eating steak
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00:35:333 times a week.
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00:35:35All right, we can start there. So what I hear you say is that on Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday you're going to have your steak days. But the rest of the week. Is it safe to say you're going to avoid animal. You see where I'm going with this? I don't. I don't need to keep going, but this is the style of coaching
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00:35:52for them to figure out. You know, they're giving you the answers. They're making the commitment. It's inherent. Okay? As opposed to me, saying, All right, this week we're going to quit sugar. You are just going to wipe out all sugar, all carbohydrates, no sugar, and if you succeed for a month you're going to get a gold star. That's not
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00:36:12motivation. Extrinsic motivation can work. But we want it to come from inside. Okay.
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00:36:20so we look at this list. All of these things are a part of pretty much everybody's life, one way or the other. So toxic chemical compounds and pollutants in the body from the minute you wake up, and you put your body lotion on you, brush your teeth, you put gel in your hair, you put your makeup on, you go, and you have coffee that has 200 chemicals in it.
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00:36:44or pesticides. Maybe you start with a glass of red wine in the morning, which has 80 pesticides. You have your eggs, which are not organic, and the chickens are not grass fed, and they've been eating
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00:36:59poisonous grass, so on and so forth. Each of these things begins to accumulate. So it's not one thing, and it's not one day it's all of the things every day. So if we start to cut back a little bit, little bit, little bit, little bit. You may never have this list down. I don't, but I'm much better off than I was. We hear about hydrogenated fats, you know. We know you shouldn't eat hydrogenated fats.
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00:37:25But what does that mean to most people? Can you explain that to your client in a way that they understand it.
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00:37:33all kinds of pollution. So if you live in Shanghai or New York City or India, you know Bangladesh, or you know, wherever
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00:37:42there's a lot more air pollution, there's a lot more water pollution.
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00:37:47How do you think the crops are getting fed? They're getting fed with the polluted water
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00:37:52if you're in California, and there's, you know, massive wildfires, all that that
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00:37:58ash is going on the crops, and we're then eating the crops. Everybody knows about Monsanto, if you don't. The roundup lawsuit for lymphoma, so roundup is a pesticide that's used on on crops, I mean, it's 1 of them sure many.
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00:38:15And over the years it's been linked to lymphoma.
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00:38:19So I never thought about buying baking flour. Okay.
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00:38:26go buy baking flour. Did you ever think about buying organic baking flour, because the flour that is in the field that is treated with the pesticides. You are now eating flour with pesticides in it, which is making up your bread, your cookies, your pastries, whatever else.
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00:38:42So Monsanto is, is fascinating because they settled out billions of dollars in lawsuits, which is a direct admission of guilt. Okay, I think Monsanto is owned by Bayer. I'm not 100% surely bear aspirin.
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00:38:57They continue to say that roundup is safe.
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00:39:02So if you go to the website, it says roundup is safe to use. Meanwhile they've paid billions of dollars
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00:39:11to people who have died or are dying, or are living with lymphoma.
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00:39:17So, being a staunch advocate for yourself, for your clients, for your family, for your friends, is the number. One thing that that I can tell you. Through all of this, through everything I've seen personally, professionally, is empowering people to take control of their own health.
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00:39:38their own health care, and the healthcare decisions that they have to make, because
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00:39:45throughout our times together I'll give you some different examples where I've embellished things because I knew I needed to get a cat scan, or a pet scan, or a MRI, or whatever, and insurance wasn't about to give me one. And I'm like, you know, I need to know what's going on. And a lot of times people are not diagnosed early enough because they can't get the tests that they need
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00:40:09to get the diagnosis. So I know I'm a little bit all over the place, but there's so many things that I just want to share with you that are so important, and this 1st session is kind of all about that excitement.
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00:40:22Oils. So olive oil is fantastic. The Mediterranean diet is hands down, probably at least in the top 2 healthiest diets you can
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00:40:32consume.
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00:40:35olive oil heated above 375°F can become carcinogenic, which means cancer, causing. So if you're using olive oil, make sure you're cooking at lower temperatures, otherwise use your coconut oils, your grape seed oils, or you know whatever other healthy oils you have at your disposal.
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00:40:54Not much needs to be said about cigarette smoke. We all know about it. Don't smoke, don't inhale smoke. I grew up with a father who smoked in our car. So you know, hopefully, one day, I don't get secondhand lung cancer dehydration. Our bodies are made up of mostly water. We need to replenish the water. How are we getting our water?
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00:41:14Is the water filtered? Is it pure? I switched to this big.
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00:41:19whatever tin thingamajigger stop drinking out of plastic unless I have no choice. I'm on a road trip and go to 7, 11, and all they have is plastic bottles of water, you know, whatever. But the Bpa is. The chemicals that are in those bottles that are in anything that is stored in plastic are being absorbed into your food. This is in the news pretty regularly now that they do these tests. And you know people have, like a credit card size worth amount of
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00:41:47plastic in their body from all of the plastic that's been absorbed through the foods. We eat everything. You go to buy meat. It's packaged in a styrofoam thing, and it's wrapped in plastic. All of your processed foods are wrapped in plastic. Get rid of your plastic tupperware. Substitute glass. Don't use Saran. Wrap don't put it in the microwave. I mean all of these things, and you've probably heard some of them.
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00:42:12But this is how we prevent cancer guys for the 1st time for the second time. For the 3rd time it starts with this.
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00:42:20And so, even though this is a cancer exercise course, I'd be remiss by not sharing this with you
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00:42:26too much sugar.
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00:42:29According to the National Institute on Health, the National Cancer Society. All of these big organizations there is no direct link between cancer and sugar.
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00:42:39However.
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00:42:41eating too much sugar, of course, affects our blood sugar levels, it affects our insulin production, it affects our growth hormones. It affects obesity, it can lead to diabetes, diabetes can lead to, you know, all these other things can increase our risk of cancer.
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00:42:57and while I can't say it factually. I can say just through personal experience. I do recommend that people reduce the amount of sugar for all health reasons, not not just cancer but
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00:43:11and dairy. And you know, carbohydrates, you know not not healthy carbohydrates, but processed carbohydrates because none of it is going to have health advantages for patients who are fighting for their life and trying to make healthier choices. So there are so many options now of making baked goods with almond flours, and you know all kinds of different nut flours and whatnot.
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00:43:35not using dates and monk fruits and different things for sweeteners that aren't processed refined sugar.
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00:43:45even sugar in the raw is better than white sugar, brown rice is better than white, white rice, whole grains better than
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00:43:52process. All the all of those things we already kind of talked about too much animal protein, geophysical stress. So living near power lines or waste dumps. If you've ever seen Aaron Brockovich or heard of it. Or I think there's another movie called Muddy Water, or Black Water, where environmentally, you see, pockets of people who all come, you know, end up with a certain type of cancer. And it could, it could be due to something like this. There's runoff from a dump.
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00:44:20So you've got all this, this food decaying, and it rains, and it goes into the river, and the river feeds the the crops, and
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00:44:27so on and so forth. Some things we can control some things we can't. If you have a choice between moving into a house that has huge power lines running behind it, and not, I would choose the not
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00:44:41oftentimes you can tell when a house is on the market for a long time, or the price is much lower than a neighboring house. There's often a reason why. And so it's important to look into that.
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00:44:54There's a section in your book. I believe it's in module one on the human microbiome. It's not too complex, because it's just very basic information from for you. But it's really important to understand, because without a healthy gut, nothing in your body is going to be healthy when you talk about the gut brain axis, there truly is a connection. And so a bacterial, fungal viral infections that are going on within your body can also cause dis-ease
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00:45:24preservatives and food. Need I say more preservatives or preservatives? You could take a Mcdonald's happy meal, put it in your garage for a year, come back a year later. It's going to look exactly the same
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00:45:37drugs over the counter or prescription. You're taking a magnesium capsule or a calcium, that's, you know, like a horse pill.
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00:45:46What is it made out of? Aside from the calcium? What's encapsulating it? How is it sourced? So yeah, that one calcium tablet is not going to give you cancer. But when you think of the 20 vitamins you might take like me in a given day. I get organic vitamins. Now I look at how they are sourced, artificial, same thing as preservatives. That word should be an indicator, that it's not something that we should eat
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00:46:10doesn't mean I don't. Doesn't you know I'm not perfect
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00:46:13talked about plastic chemical cleaning supplies. If you're not wearing rubber gloves, and you're, you know, you're using ammonia, and you're using scrubbing this and that, whatever it's going right into your skin. Your skin's your largest organ, so you may as well. Just drink the ammonia
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00:46:29try and wear rubber gloves that also can help prevent lymphedema for those who are at risk for lymphedema
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00:46:35chlorinated water.
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00:46:38I say this every session, and maybe one of these days I'll actually get a chance to look it up. But I'd be curious how many people who are
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00:46:46avid swimmers in chlorinated water and what they're, you know, if they get cancer more than other people.
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00:46:54I think there has to be a correlation, you know, for people who swim all the time. If you're in a hot tub or a Jacuzzi, you're absorbing that chlorine into your skin. I'm not saying to never do these things. I'm just saying, be aware
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00:47:10and and keep these things in mind, and maybe that's something that you you know. I swim. I swim every day. I can't live without that. That's fine. Then then ease up on some of the other things. Pesticides we're just talking about, you know, buying organic organic food still has pesticide on it. But it's like 7% instead of a hundred percent unless you grow it yourself.
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00:47:33Radiation exposures. Talking about that with, you know, X-rays and and flying. And then, lastly, psychological and emotional stress destroys our body.
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00:47:44It's linked to so many different disease and cancer is no exception. So you're going to also read about the type C personality which which we talk about in the Handbook, and that this certain personality type, you know kind of the worry wart. The person who's always taking care of everybody else doesn't take care of themselves. There is a strong correlation between those people and cancer.
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00:48:08So infection, chronic irritation and inflammation
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00:48:14all kind of make up oxidative stress. And that ultimately leads to cancer.
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00:48:20So out of everything I've just shared with you, you know I propose to you as well. Look at. Look at your own lifestyle choices, and and pick one thing to start with. If it's a client. I'm going to try and say, you know, look for 2 weeks. Let's try this and see how you do, and if they're successful I'll ask them if they're ready to check off another item on the list. If they're not, I'll say, all right, you're doing great with this. Let's stick with it.
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00:48:45and we'll reevaluate this in another 2 weeks. But by not addressing these things.
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00:48:52you know you can't out exercise a bad diet. You've heard that expression, and usually it's about weight gain, but it's also about lifestyle and and and overall health. So start to think about what lifestyle changes can reduce cancer risk. And that is, you know, mental health, that is, sleep.
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00:49:13that is, food that is exercise. Surrounding yourself with with people that make you feel good about yourself. That could be quitting a job that
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00:49:25does not
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00:49:26make you happy. I mean, you know it's it's everything, and I'm not. I'm not suggesting you overstep your boundaries and become a therapist. But you can certainly propose things that people can. That's where the coaching comes in which I like, because you're not a therapist. But you're you're helping people to find their own answers, whereby a therapist is giving them the answers.
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00:49:45So I kind of like the coaching better.
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00:49:49All right. There's much more information in your handbook than what I'm going to cover here. But I just want you to understand what you need to know about grading and staging of tumors, which is very little. Okay, it's really about, what does this mean to the client? So if I come to you and I say, I have stage 0 cancer.
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00:50:08You're going to go. Okay, this is the earliest stage cancer. It is contained. It's non-invasive. Andrea got a really good diagnosis. So she has a 97% chance of beating this. So
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00:50:22I'm not happy. Andrea is not happy that she's been diagnosed with cancer. No one is, however, I have a much better outlook than somebody, perhaps, who has been diagnosed with a more aggressive cancer. And this is subjective, because I know people who have stage 4 cancer who have amazing outlooks on life.
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00:50:41Stage one. When looking at the cells under a microscope, they are still well differentiated. They look like normal, healthy cells, slow growing. They're less aggressive. And they're still in this contained site. They have not, you know, jumped a ride into the lymphatic system or into the bloodstream. They haven't broken out of this specific area. So again, it's a very good prognosis
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00:51:07stage 2 and 3. Now we talk about moderately and poorly differentiated. So now they're not. So
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00:51:15they're more like this.
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00:51:17you know, they're reproducing more rapidly, they become less differentiated. And as that happens, the cancer becomes increasingly life threatening. So stage 2 still remains confined. Stage 3 has usually metastasized, which means again, it's gotten into the lymphatic system, into the bloodstream. It's probably, you know, gone to another part of the body. And typically it's like the brain, the liver, the lungs.
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00:51:45So we know that somebody with Stage 2 stage 3 does not have quite as good of a prognosis, and so we can anticipate that they might be a little bit more depressed. They're a little more scared. Maybe they're having a harder time processing this. We're in Stage 4. I described this with my mom. The cells were so deformed they couldn't even tell what the site of origin was, it took quite a while.
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00:52:13and if you can't determine the site of origin, it makes it difficult to treat it appropriately, because the treatment for breast cancer is different than the treatment for lung cancer, liver, cancer, brain cancer, different types of chemos, different types of
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00:52:26you know, immunotherapies, and so on, and so forth. There's so many these days. They grow rapidly and are extremely aggressive. So
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00:52:35your client comes to you, and or your friend says I was just diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer.
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00:52:43There is nothing that you can or should say other than I am so sorry I'm here for you. I got you.
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00:52:53I got you back. We're going to get through this
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00:52:55because unless you have the same exact cancer diagnosis, unless you have walked the same path. Don't pretend you understand? You don't.
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00:53:05And I'm not being mean. I don't understand. Even though I've had cancer. It's different different cancers, different treatments, different family situations. So there's also a section in your book on what to say to someone who has been diagnosed with cancer. So in my opinion, less is more, I'm here for you.
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00:53:25Anything you need. I got your back
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00:53:28and you'll figure it out on your own. I had one situation. I was teaching a group of prostate and breast cancer patients. They're about
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00:53:3930 of them that would come to class and before class they would all sit outside the classroom and just chit chat.
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00:53:46And one day I I get to class, and just everybody goes quiet.
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00:53:51And
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00:53:52this gal Pat says, Can I talk to you? And I had a pit in my stomach. You know. I knew it wasn't good, and she walks me into the room and says.
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00:54:01My cancer has come back. It has spread to my brain. I've been given a month to live.
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00:54:09So a what did I say? B. What did I do? What I said. I gave her a big hug. I mean, I was really close to these people, and I said, I'm so sorry.
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00:54:19and I probably said, You know I'm here for you.
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00:54:22and then I had to go. All right. Let's go. We're going to teach this class.
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00:54:27you know, and then I had to teach the class, like everything was okay, because I wasn't gonna like, you know, take her down and everyone else with me. So prepare yourself. It's not gonna happen often I've been doing this for 30 something years. I've lost
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00:54:45more than a handful, less than 2 clients each one sucks.
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00:54:51but the positive is that you know you made a difference, and their family members say to you, you know what you made her life so much better. She had a better quality of life. She she loved you like family, you know, so so on and so forth, and it can be gut wrenching.
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00:55:12but it's also the most rewarding thing I have ever done.
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00:55:16and there are times I'm not going to lie that I want to run away.
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00:55:20but I'm always pulled back in, because I know that the work that I've done has changed so many lives. And it's through you guys that that has happened because I can only do so many people on my own. And so when I look at training 20,000 other people to go out and maybe train 1020 individuals
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00:55:39exponentially, we're changing the world. So thank you for being a part of this. I know there are easier and more fun things that you can do.
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00:55:47So to finish up for today. Just think about, you know, prognosis, what is the stage of the tumor which we just talked about? If the patient is sedentary or bedridden, they're not going to have as good of a prognosis as someone who is physically active. So getting people moving, even if it's in chair exercise really important. And then the biological features of the drug of the tumor. Pardon me, play a big role, too, because
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00:56:13some are resistant to certain drugs. So you'll have people who have tried 5 different types of chemo. They go to immunotherapy. And basically, they're told, we can't do anything for you. Very rare. But it can happen. Metastasis means the cancer has spread, and apoptosis means programmed cell death, which is the goal of treatment. So all of these things obviously are going to affect
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00:56:40the life expectancy. So that's the prognosis. And as far as patient considerations, you know. Where are they at? In the stages of grief, anger, denial, bargaining, depression, acceptance, understanding or trying to get a feel for that will will also help you to relate to them. Because if you're dealing with someone who's angry.
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00:57:00I mean 1st off. It may not be a great relationship for you, but there's going to be a certain way. You're going to interact with that person versus the person who's in denial. And they're like, Oh, I'm going to live forever, and this and that. I'm not going to tell them that they're wrong or they're not you know. It's it's just. It's a different personality, dynamic
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00:57:20their life choices. You know what kind of family support they have. Are they able to work or they've lost their job. How are they? Financially? We know cancer can financially destroy you. Are they able to do their activities of daily living to continue the things that make them happy. And then, you know, worst case scenario. They're at end of life planning.
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00:57:42All of these things are kind of the underpinnings of the cancer diagnosis. Not going to talk about this after today, we're going to get right into surgeries. So on Thursday, we're going to start breaking down a few different types of cancers, their surgeries. What that means to you, and that will help you to understand how to start going through the book.
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00:58:04But, as I said, if you want to get a jump, start right now, don't jump into the book or the Pdf. Start watching those videos in module one and module 2. Remember, if you have any questions, email me at [email protected], I will eventually get it at Andrea, at thecancerspecialist.com. But there are hundreds of emails every day and they get buried.
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00:58:30My phone number is also in the chat box one. If you're out of the country. 5 0, 3,
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00:58:365, 0, 2,
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00:58:386, 7, 7, 6. I'm really fast at answering texts, because I've usually sadly always got my my ball and chains on me, and I can give you a quick answer where I can't always email back or answer the phone right away. So I am done for today, unless any of you have any questions. Remember, if you want to order the hard copy books, it's going to take about 2 weeks to get to you
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00:59:01so the sooner the better. And I can give you the link. Yeah, if you let me put it in the chat box again. So the email is Ceti [email protected].
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00:59:12Okay? And I'll
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00:59:14why won't it go? It's not letting. It's not the chat box isn't working. Okay. Oh, it's going directly to Daryl. Hold on everyone in meeting.
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00:59:24There we go. Okay. So just think of the Acronym Cancer Exercise Training Institute, [email protected]
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00:59:33anything else. You guys
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00:59:35all right to those of you who are in TV land watching this later on, which is the majority of you reach out. If you have any questions on Thursday? We'll like, I said. We'll jump into surgeries. We'll probably do 3 or 4 different types of cancer. Then next Tuesday we'll do breast cancer, breast reconstruction and lymphedema.
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00:59:54Don't let this overwhelm you. I can almost guarantee. I'll put my own life on the line that you're going to understand this. By the end of the month you will not be an expert, but you will understand how to put the pieces together to become the expert.
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01:00:10So have a great couple days. Have a get out and enjoy fall. If you are in that part of the world, and I'll see you on Thursday.
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01:00:19Bye, you guys.
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