In India, before I went there in 2012, people said, “Oh my God, Diane you’re going to die there. I’ve traveled to 27 countries, and I’ve seen what other people would say. I think that our generation was that last generation that teetered from nature to the hyper-awareness of competition that is social media. It’s simple for me to say this and it’s simple for everybody to look at it like that but there’s a lot of even younger generations now, they’ve never even known what natural beauty truly is. In our whole culture has predicated our feeling like we even matter or the value of our existence on our appearance. It’s like men with their hair or men with what’s happening down there, the size of things. Women tend to want to hide from what we are afraid of which is criticism. The root of chasing this perfection carrot that I call the toxic treadmill or the trauma treadmill. If you look at the Native Americans, they actually believe in a dark spirit called Wetiko and it is one that has absolutely perverted its way into all of our minds and it’s caused the root cause. This is, if you could imagine, just a goddess Gremlin that’s contaminated our bodies and some would actually call it Wetiko. It’s the compare and the compete paradigm and it is the ego’s job to constantly beat you up, to remind you that you’re not beautiful, but it’s not our own essence. Women are still addicted to this perfection prison that we have been enslaved. Is it the root? If one simply says, “Well, breast implants and Botox, and beauty toxins are very bad for the biological body and they destroy a woman’s immune system and in many cases are causing autoimmune disease, you might think that that would be enough for someone to say, “Oh, well if they’re bad for my body, then I’m not going to do it.” It’s actually not happening that way. Assuming there is some kind of a discrepancy there, what do you think are the main factors behind that?ĭiane: Yes, great question. If there is a difference between those two percentages and maybe there’re some hunter-gatherers we could pull today to find out. Why is it? Why is it that we have an epidemic, maybe that word is being overused right now, but an epidemic of women who don’t feel beautiful? Isn’t that odd? Particularly from an evolutionary vantage point, it makes me wonder what percentage of women in a hunter-gatherer context thousand years ago when asked that question would have responded, “No, I don’t feel beautiful?” I know there are some polls out there if women that have found this huge percentage of women don’t feel beautiful or don’t consider themselves to be beautiful. I want to talk a lot about female beauty and this is something that I’ve never really talked about on this podcast before, so I’m going to let you do most of the talking. For those who are listening and you can’t see this, it’s a picture of a girl with a bra and two big cartoon-looking bombs in the bra, and the book is called Killer Breasts, Overcoming Breast Implant Illness. That seems a long description, but I guess it’s because I’ve been through a myriad of things, right?Īri: One thing is, I would like you to show the book cover for your book Killer Breast, which I just mentioned, which is I think one of the best book covers I’ve ever seen.Īri: I think you just nailed it with the title of that book and the cover with bombs. It’s such a pleasure to connect with you.ĭiane Kazer: Thanks. She’s the author of Killer Breasts, creator of the Explant Solution, producer of the Non-Toxic Beauty Summit, and the 10-part Dying to Be Beautiful docu-series to inspire women everywhere to embrace their natural beauty and hot masterpiece life with love, laughter, and liberation. It supported thousands of women all around the world to overcome physical, emotional, and mental medical roadblocks that they never thought possible. After becoming a certified toxicity and detox specialist, she founded the CHI or CHI, functional telemedicine clinic in 2012. She created the Cleanse, Heal, Ignite, Holistic Health Certification, and Warrior Dox programs, which help women use the power of intuition to discover their inner healer by providing them lifelong tools to reverse autoimmune disease, breast implant illness, immunal balance, chronic pain, gut infections, emotional trauma, and perfectionism. She’s been through an enormous amount of struggles in her life and with empathy and fierce leadership, she is your go-to girl to break through anything no matter what you’ve tried or what you’ve been told. With me now is Diane Kazer who is a former pro soccer player, turned functional diagnostic nutrition practitioner, courage coach, and ballistic beauty expert. Ari: Hey everyone, welcome back to the Energy Blueprint Podcast.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |