Dr. Jack Kruse: "You know, because you have experience in this, that when you get a diagnosis [of cancer] like this the first thing that happens you get scared."

Maria Menounos: "Yup."

Dr. Jack Kruse: "What I want people to know is: don't get scared. Because guess what? The way regeneration works. […]

"Because what is cancer effectively? It's a dedifferentiation of the cell to a more embryonic form. […] That's what Robert O Becker found in his work. That's actually what happens. Now here's the interesting part.

"A dedifferentiated cell doesn't cause a problem if the immune system, the T- and B-cells, actually operate. Why? Because it can controls that cell from being able to do the things that you know that cancers can do, specifically metastasize or grow uncontrollably.

"But if the immune system is not operational at the time that you get dedifferentiation, then guess what happens? Then you get your mom's problem, or you get your problem in the pancreas. […]

"But the reason I'm explaining this to your audience, I want you to know that you have to be decentralized. To be a good decentralized patient, you have to subtract the superfluous. That means you cannot be afraid."

Maria Menounos: "Yeah."

Dr. Jack Kruse: "You have to know that when you get a diagnosed of cancer, you have been injured, just like if you cut your finger, Maria, in your kitchen. That's how you need to think about it. And what your body is saying to you: 'there is something in your environment that is causing my cells to dedifferentiate.'"

Maria Menounos: "What could that be?"

Dr. Jack Kruse: "The number one thing is what I talked about the last time I was in Malibu. It's loss of melanin. It's hypoxia. […] When you have a lack of melanin you have no sunlight."

—Dr. Jack Kruse with Maria Menounos @ 33:22 – 36:03 https://youtu.be/Iq3tDpoFVL0&t=2002

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