Alex Clark
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Like genes don't change that fast.
So it has to be something external that's affecting our methylation, right?
Our epigenetics.
I think the statistics these days are like, if you have a parent with autoimmune, you have a 15 to 30% chance of also having that.
I mean, that's not that high.
If you're talking betting numbers, like at the highest 30%, that means there's a 70% chance that you're not going to have an autoimmune, which is a pretty good shot if you're going to bet on it.
You know what I mean?
For sure, for sure.
And just like, I mean, we have so much autoimmune in America.
We're over-sanitized, we're over-vaccinated, we're fast living.
We have, you know, our food supply is improving, but we have, you know, a bad food supply.
We're over-sprayed with pesticides.
That's the two things I would say that shows like in charts of when autoimmune was really exploding in the 90s, like the other two things that exploded in the 90s were vaccines and glyphosate.
And so you have two toxins that were getting over-injected, over-sprayed.
and um that's the recipe for disaster like that's going to change the way your genes express themselves and it's going to give you that 30 chance of inheriting if you have parents that have it another thing with autoimmune is people don't even know they're walking around with it which is so crazy because there's there's three stages this is super important is stage one is silent autoimmunity which means that you have antibodies on blood work but you have no symptoms and so in this country you know people do routine blood work they're not getting scanned for antibodies
They're just not.
You know, so I think the average is 20 years to be diagnosed with an autoimmune before you're like finally diagnosed.
Yeah.
Hashimoto's, right?
Yeah.