People need to know this! Exercise should be viewed as part of daily self-care. You shower to prevent odor, brush your teeth to prevent cavities, dress yourself to maintain appearance, drink water to prevent dehydration and eat to prevent starvation. So why not exercise to prevent cancer, prevent heart disease, prevent mental health issues and prevent muscle atrophy as you age?
Not to get political or anything, but if for no other reason, I hope Trump wins only because RFK is now part of that group and his focus is on getting America healthy again, getting kids to be lean, and getting us all off of prescription meds. We need a drastic shake-up in the country and I don't see anyone taking on that task.
@@justinf1343Agreed! This whole movement of being happy in your obesity is insane. Just because someone is 24 and obese with no high blood pressure, diabetes yet, doesn't mean those things aren't coming for you. You can't out exercise a bad diet forever. Age, injury, mental well-being, addiction can really affect us.
In 2018 I had heart surgery to repair a bad mitral valve. Pretty common, from what I was told. Since then I've had yearly follow-ups with a cardiologist, just to make sure everything still sounds OK. One of his nurses - wildly obese - was taking my blood pressure before he came into the office. She was out of breath just STANDING there. By the way, my cardiologist is also overweight and may be borderline obese.
I started chemo felt sick but just told myself im going to work out through this. doing chest felt weird with a port so just working around it. im going to up cardio on a bike and just pushing forward thanks for the info
The type of exercise is high intensity. Literally every time i don't want to go for one of my 5x weekly 5kms (which is basically every time) i always tell myself it could be the difference between me not being the 1 in 2 that gets cancer in their life. Always gets me out the door.
@@liamc7097 Science was saying it's safe and effective - I doubted it and didn't give them my hand, now I'm really happy I doubted the science and those who didn't now have myocarditis/pericarditis/blood clots/neurological problems and so on. So depends in terms of long running as with any strenuous exercises you need time to recover - all professional athletes have health problems regarding their profession so you have to balance things.
This is about intensity and duration. Not just going through the motions but actually putting in work. A sort of use it or lose it / movement is life. Getting comfortable with being uncomfortable.
Well I have been working out cardio and strength training every week, three days zone 2, one day VO2 Max, and three days strength training. It is wonderful.
@@flyingosom202because 1. It’s relevant to the information in the video. 2. It’s motivating to the person who posted & hopefully to others that will follow.
Every piece of new science-based information like this is just another positive reinforcement to convince people that exercise is good for your health! Thank you for sharing this to the world! People need it! Even some of them don't know or simply deny!
If you train the body very hard several times a week then it’s always in a state of repair and adaptation, the general degrading and falling apart that takes place is considerably slowed down, each hard training session is a deposit in the health bank. I’ve been weight training and body building since 1978. I’m 60 now, still got a 6 pack, still benching 220 for 20 reps on a good day and still squatting 300 on the hack squat machine. My back won’t take a loose bar these days, my peers by comparison have thick bodies, pot bellies, thin legs and arms, saggy necks and generally look like death is manifesting in them. On a cycle ride they walk up a hill, they can’t run more than a few yards, can’t charge up the stairs like I do. Can’t piss properly, don’t get any bedroom action and don’t sleep well. They may out live me, some soldier-on like living corpses for 15 years but I’d rather not.
I worked out through all of my chemo and radiation treatments, and it helped me tremendously. I had very little physical fatigue. I continue to lift heavy and do intense weight training 4 days a week to prevent recurrence and for longevity as I age.
Words cannot express my gratitude for your and those like you who put up expertise vlogs on health and fitness etc…Not only do I practice good wellness regimens but now can reference such content to better communicate with my primary care providers. Thank you again!
No not everyone. Older generations enjoyed being home and cooking and baking. And both my grandmothers lived into mid ,80s and didn't exercise. I myself enjoy some form of exercise and at this time I have a love hate relationship with biking 😅
Thank you for the information. Going through chemotherapy is tough. But being active and eating a nutritious diet really helps. Eliminating all processed foods and being active has been my go to in my healing journey. I get my 10,000 steps in Monday through Friday. I get my cardio and strength training in at least 4 times a week. However after watching this video I may just turn up my intensity a little bit more. Thank you.
Thank you for this report. I've been reading through the comments. I see many testimonies about the benefits of exercise. I grew up watching Jack LaLane, Kirk Douglas Sofia Loren. The most fit and athletic people seem to stay more fit and athletic. Physical injury accidents can change people dramatically.
I was at peak fitness at the start of the year. Ate a “clean” vegetarian diet, ran 3-4 times a week and did strength training 3 times a week. Never missed a day of hitting 10k steps and slept well. Then, in February I was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma. It might help lower your risk slightly but if your body is going to mutate and create cancerous cells, there’s nothing you can do.
Is the reduced risk of dying from breast and colorectal cancers because of the pre-cancer or post-cancer diagnosis exercise, or due to some confounding variable? Could it be that people who are more inclined to exercise are also more physically able to combat the cancers?
Positive self care benefits the whole body including the immune system. If other self care protocols were added the benefits would be even greater because you are living not dying.
If circulating cancer cells are sheered by the blood movement from intense exercise, I have to wonder if the residual Covid following getting over the acute phase of the infection would similarly be affected. Perhaps “long Covid” might be correlated with not getting enough physical activity. If that is the case then it’s a self reinforcing condition that would take pushing oneself to exercise despite becoming rapidly tired.
No because long covid is your immune response ‘on edge’ so to speak after the infection has finished. Over compensating if you like. However exercise enhances immune function by other mechanisms so do it to prevent a severe infection of any virus.
Man. Such awesome info. Strength training is great. Muscles are like built in medicine for the mind and body. If you actually use them lol and put them to their limits.
I lost a friend to prostate cancer who was an avid marathon runner and cyclist... the cancer went all through his body, including his brain. I guess there's exceptions
@5:22 seems that in the situation where the patient is already having symptoms, health is already deteriorating, couldn't this make it increasingly difficult to increase exercise duration or up the intensity. Is the analysis somewhat dependent on how far along the patient is?
Which one puts you into zone 4, 5, or 6... All of the ones you mention would help. I would keep the animal protein to a minimum (good source: ua-cam.com/video/qC3Euh8Ghbs/v-deo.html) if cancer avoidance were you goal.
I do lots of stuff but hill sprints is one of my "go to" cardio sessions. They get me past my max heart rate and I can barely breathe by the end of a session, even though the session is probably 15 or maybe 20 minutes. Would this be a good way to stimulate this adaptation?
Since I took a fluorquionolone (Antibiotic) I can't exercise anymore because that would result in a 3 month fatigue and pain Crash so sad I wish I could
How does the required exercise intensity and duration change with age, if at at all. At 85 an 8km run is beyond me as is operating at 85% of heart rate since I have AT?
One more thing to add. I like RP, but she gets some of the facts about the 4X4 study wrong in her video/podcasts. I recommend looking it up for yourself for best understanding. She has the gist of it right, but the details aren't 100% accurate.
One of the parameters not discussed is exercise for young vs older. With older, research has alluded to burst training to improve metabolics. I’m wondering if this has the same effect on IL6, anti-tumor and quinolinic acid.
im confused. if we exercise too hard regularly doesnt that over stress the body? like fight or flight is constantly on? or like marathon runners getting high on their own supply
Totally agreed. Ridiculously high intense work out put too much stress on our body. I believe everything in moderation like easy leisure walk, light weigh training etc. Staying away from processed sugar is more important.
She's pushed the 4x4 Sweedish Protocol extensively for general fitness. I'll bet she'd say that would do. But research the protocol for yourself--she's misrepresenting what it is. It's actually slightly easier than she is claiming.
They feed into each other. Both are important. You will not get all the benefits of sleep without exercise and you will not get all the benefits of exercise without good sleep.
There’s no such thing as best exercise intervention stupid. Go do your research. At best its your anecdotal experience. Because it works for you doesn’t mean it will work for the next person. If it does go show evidence of 10k people who did it that got better vs other exercise modalities 🤷🏻♂️
I only clicked on it because I saw you for the first time smiling in the picture and I wanted to see what made you smile 😂 but it wasn’t in the video …..smile is free
Thank you for reaffirming. Suggestion. Put the science on the last half of the video. Start with the ideas and concepts and benefits a person may have. The science just clogs peoples minds with useless data. Unless you're a scientist, you don't need excess data/ideas floating around in your head.
Get my free protocol guide for improving cognition:
bdnfprotocols.com/
Qi Gong is much better
People need to know this! Exercise should be viewed as part of daily self-care. You shower to prevent odor, brush your teeth to prevent cavities, dress yourself to maintain appearance, drink water to prevent dehydration and eat to prevent starvation. So why not exercise to prevent cancer, prevent heart disease, prevent mental health issues and prevent muscle atrophy as you age?
Not to get political or anything, but if for no other reason, I hope Trump wins only because RFK is now part of that group and his focus is on getting America healthy again, getting kids to be lean, and getting us all off of prescription meds. We need a drastic shake-up in the country and I don't see anyone taking on that task.
@@samuelbrainsamplehe does look a million dollars, especially for his age
Completely agree. Obesity should be frowned upon as well, just like smoking and alcoholism. None of them are conducive to longevity.
@@justinf1343Agreed! This whole movement of being happy in your obesity is insane. Just because someone is 24 and obese with no high blood pressure, diabetes yet, doesn't mean those things aren't coming for you. You can't out exercise a bad diet forever. Age, injury, mental well-being, addiction can really affect us.
In 2018 I had heart surgery to repair a bad mitral valve. Pretty common, from what I was told. Since then I've had yearly follow-ups with a cardiologist, just to make sure everything still sounds OK. One of his nurses - wildly obese - was taking my blood pressure before he came into the office. She was out of breath just STANDING there. By the way, my cardiologist is also overweight and may be borderline obese.
This video should be in a public health notice.
I started chemo felt sick but just told myself im going to work out through this. doing chest felt weird with a port so just working around it. im going to up cardio on a bike and just pushing forward thanks for the info
I hope your treatment is successful and you feel better soon
@@quarteracreadventures855 I appreciate it thank you
❤❤❤
💯
♥️
🔥
🤘
@@yeshuasaves7882 do not go gently
The type of exercise is high intensity. Literally every time i don't want to go for one of my 5x weekly 5kms (which is basically every time) i always tell myself it could be the difference between me not being the 1 in 2 that gets cancer in their life. Always gets me out the door.
I believe regular long distance running is unhealthy. Strength training exercises are more beneficial.
@@PakistanIcecream000 it doesn't matter what you believe. What the science says should be your main concern.
@@liamc7097 My belief is influenced by science.
@@liamc7097 Science was saying it's safe and effective - I doubted it and didn't give them my hand, now I'm really happy I doubted the science and those who didn't now have myocarditis/pericarditis/blood clots/neurological problems and so on. So depends in terms of long running as with any strenuous exercises you need time to recover - all professional athletes have health problems regarding their profession so you have to balance things.
Same reason I eat Whole Food Plant Based, and intermittent fasting !
This is about intensity and duration. Not just going through the motions but actually putting in work. A sort of use it or lose it / movement is life. Getting comfortable with being uncomfortable.
It's like all aspects of life, I suppose.
Train hard. Train right. Train smart.
Eat right. Rest right. Get results.
Keep on rockin'! 🤘
Training hard and training smart are oxymorons
@@kadijaish Get after it. 🤘
So very accurate and true. It's amazing how you can feel so so much better mentally and physically.. practically over night.
@kadijaish no they're really not. It means push yourself within your means. Don't use terrible form and don't lift so heavy you'll injure yourself.
Well I have been working out cardio and strength training every week, three days zone 2, one day VO2 Max, and three days strength training. It is wonderful.
Why is it after a video like this people feel the need to tell everyone what they do?
@@flyingosom202because 1. It’s relevant to the information in the video.
2. It’s motivating to the person who posted & hopefully to others that will follow.
@@bradleycannicott2348 it's not. Nobody cares what some randoms exercise routine is.
i am doing the same!
Never quit.
Exercise can solve a lot of problems. I know two different people who have reversed diabetes by doing long distance cycling.
Dr.Rhonda, can you do a video compilation of your personal exercise routines and how often you do them?
It could be helpful. Just a thought.
Every piece of new science-based information like this is just another positive reinforcement to convince people that exercise is good for your health! Thank you for sharing this to the world! People need it! Even some of them don't know or simply deny!
You’re a national treasure, Dr. Patrick. Namaste XX
Our bodies really are amazing. Thanks Doc for helping us understand it better!👏👏
If you train the body very hard several times a week then it’s always in a state of repair and adaptation, the general degrading and falling apart that takes place is considerably slowed down, each hard training session is a deposit in the health bank. I’ve been weight training and body building since 1978. I’m 60 now, still got a 6 pack, still benching 220 for 20 reps on a good day and still squatting 300 on the hack squat machine. My back won’t take a loose bar these days, my peers by comparison have thick bodies, pot bellies, thin legs and arms, saggy necks and generally look like death is manifesting in them. On a cycle ride they walk up a hill, they can’t run more than a few yards, can’t charge up the stairs like I do. Can’t piss properly, don’t get any bedroom action and don’t sleep well. They may out live me, some soldier-on like living corpses for 15 years but I’d rather not.
Great comment & I follow a similar regime
Aren’t you just the cat’s pajamas!
How many times a week would you train typically?
You kinda went in on the geezers there in that second half, fella 😂😂😂
@ryank.1214 you sound Jealous !
I worked out through all of my chemo and radiation treatments, and it helped me tremendously. I had very little physical fatigue. I continue to lift heavy and do intense weight training 4 days a week to prevent recurrence and for longevity as I age.
What does your diet look like?
Sean Omara talks about these. He recommends that everyone do sprint repeats.
Sprint intervals are a game changer.
Yeah, my mom, who can’t walk, will try this tomorrow.
Words cannot express my gratitude for your and those like you who put up expertise vlogs on health and fitness etc…Not only do I practice good wellness regimens but now can reference such content to better communicate with my primary care providers. Thank you again!
Everyone needs to MOVE!!!
No not everyone. Older generations enjoyed being home and cooking and baking. And both my grandmothers lived into mid ,80s and didn't exercise. I myself enjoy some form of exercise and at this time I have a love hate relationship with biking 😅
Thank you for the information.
Going through chemotherapy is tough.
But being active and eating a nutritious diet really helps.
Eliminating all processed foods and being active has been my go to in my healing journey.
I get my 10,000 steps in Monday through Friday.
I get my cardio and strength training in at least 4 times a week.
However after watching this video I may just turn up my intensity a little bit more.
Thank you.
Awesome video, Dr. Patrick - as usual. Great information. This science is fascinating.
Feast or famine/fight or flight. It's all about throwing survival adaptation lever. Then allowing the adaptation to happen.
Intervals and compound resistance circuits are the way Luke
You are correct, try adding sandbag training, it is a game changer.
@@marshallgiles6255 i have an old sand bag between my legs
Thank you for this report. I've been reading through the comments. I see many testimonies about the benefits of exercise. I grew up watching Jack LaLane, Kirk Douglas Sofia Loren. The most fit and athletic people seem to stay more fit and athletic. Physical injury accidents can change people dramatically.
Genuine question: was Sofia Loren athletic? I had no idea!
@alicejwho I don't know how athletic she is, but she will be 90 years old and is still fit in appearance.
@@kenycharles8600 oh, I see where you're coming from. I agree, she has always been a very beautiful woman.
Lots of great info in this short clip.
Terrific . . .As usual. Thanks for always posting great content. The Lane Norton interview was WELL worth the listen!
thanks for this Rhonda. you rock!!
I was at peak fitness at the start of the year. Ate a “clean” vegetarian diet, ran 3-4 times a week and did strength training 3 times a week. Never missed a day of hitting 10k steps and slept well. Then, in February I was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma. It might help lower your risk slightly but if your body is going to mutate and create cancerous cells, there’s nothing you can do.
Carbs and sugar support cancer. Eat meat.
Been doing hardcore Airdyne and weights for over 25 years
Great job, never quit 💪.
@@marshallgiles6255 Can't quit when it becomes a lifelong habit. Feels so good.
@@tonygriffin6144
Yes it does.
@@tonygriffin6144I’m an amateur boxer and use the airdyne often, can say in confidence it never ever ever feels good 😢
Very cool topic that I haven't heard explained this way.
LOVE Dr Rhonda
Is the reduced risk of dying from breast and colorectal cancers because of the pre-cancer or post-cancer diagnosis exercise, or due to some confounding variable? Could it be that people who are more inclined to exercise are also more physically able to combat the cancers?
Rhonda, can you do a video on C15?
Positive self care benefits the whole body including the immune system. If other self care protocols were added the benefits would be even greater because you are living not dying.
Thank you 🙏
Great video
If circulating cancer cells are sheered by the blood movement from intense exercise, I have to wonder if the residual Covid following getting over the acute phase of the infection would similarly be affected. Perhaps “long Covid” might be correlated with not getting enough physical activity. If that is the case then it’s a self reinforcing condition that would take pushing oneself to exercise despite becoming rapidly tired.
Long Covid may be dangerous with exercise.
No because long covid is your immune response ‘on edge’ so to speak after the infection has finished. Over compensating if you like.
However exercise enhances immune function by other mechanisms so do it to prevent a severe infection of any virus.
Summarize research on HRT for women please. Does estrogen prevent Alzheimer’s, stroke and certain cancers? Please do research on this Rhonda!
Man. Such awesome info. Strength training is great. Muscles are like built in medicine for the mind and body. If you actually use them lol and put them to their limits.
She has great skin
I'll do it if Rhonda spots me ❤
I lost a friend to prostate cancer who was an avid marathon runner and cyclist... the cancer went all through his body, including his brain.
I guess there's exceptions
Are you speaking more to aerobic type exercises or do you get similar benefits from other forms such as weight training ?
As a doctor, excersize goes not kill cancer cells...
Being fit helps your body deal with things better, but it doesn't cure cancer...
Thanks Dr Patrick!
@5:22 seems that in the situation where the patient is already having symptoms, health is already deteriorating, couldn't this make it increasingly difficult to increase exercise duration or up the intensity. Is the analysis somewhat dependent on how far along the patient is?
So what do you recommend.?3-4 times of 20-30 minutes moderately high intensity a week?
Whole Food Plant Based Nutrition + Exercise + Intermittent fasting = epic health trio!
Who can fast eating a plant based diet?
@@Doyle-nu5el Intermittent fasting (8 hour window), and large, filling meals. Not that difficult to do :)
@@Doyle-nu5el It's easy.
@@bryant475
I'm on a plant based diet and I do a two day fast every month.
It helps.
Does intensity & duration refer to Only aerobic exercise or does it include vigorous difficult resistance training (eg weights)??
What type of HIIT 4x4 minutes, 8x20 seconds or 10x1 minute is best for fighting cancer?
Sprinting, bupees or row machine with intensity etc
Which one puts you into zone 4, 5, or 6... All of the ones you mention would help. I would keep the animal protein to a minimum (good source: ua-cam.com/video/qC3Euh8Ghbs/v-deo.html) if cancer avoidance were you goal.
@@timmorakinyo9529 Thank you, but I was asking what type of HIIT is best for fighting cancer, not what type of exercise.
@@smithilini13 Thank you, I appreciate it!
It would be nice to know.. what are you talking about?most people have no idea.
Thanks Dr. 😊
I do lots of stuff but hill sprints is one of my "go to" cardio sessions. They get me past my max heart rate and I can barely breathe by the end of a session, even though the session is probably 15 or maybe 20 minutes. Would this be a good way to stimulate this adaptation?
Biking is more fun than running.
Since I took a fluorquionolone (Antibiotic) I can't exercise anymore because that would result in a 3 month fatigue and pain Crash so sad I wish I could
Would squats and deadlifts fall into the vigorous exercise category?
Strength training feels hard but is not cardio training. So I dont think so.
@@FrekeOne but there’s new data stating high reps squat(10 rep range) is considered cardio.
Absolutely yes they are
@@dondiesel929so it is like a sprint?
@@FrekeOnethat’s what the studies showing. How it improves your VO2 and cardio output. Check out Menno Heselmans page.
How does the required exercise intensity and duration change with age, if at at all. At 85 an 8km run is beyond me as is operating at 85% of heart rate since I have AT?
I'm nearly 60. I'm not doing a bunch of HIIT. I mountain bike and lift, but I'm not going 100% in my efforts.
I get raised IL5 eosinophil production from a intense exercise causing a bad asthma attack days after the exercise session, what is the remedy here?
Do you follow Dr.Alan Goldhammer’s work on how fasting kills cancer cells?
Going thru lung cancer treatment now , been doing Norwegian 4x4 for circulating tumor cells. How many times a week is recommended to fight CTC?
Godspeed.
Good luck!! Try ivermec tin
There are vsrf videos on rumble on cancer. Pierre Cory is working on patients with turbo cancer
Please check with your doctor, and don't beat yourself up if you don't manage to work out as much as you'd like. Your life is hard enough already!
One more thing to add. I like RP, but she gets some of the facts about the 4X4 study wrong in her video/podcasts. I recommend looking it up for yourself for best understanding. She has the gist of it right, but the details aren't 100% accurate.
Battle ropes for 6 to 7 sets, approximately 30 - 36 secs
One of the parameters not discussed is exercise for young vs older. With older, research has alluded to burst training to improve metabolics. I’m wondering if this has the same effect on IL6, anti-tumor and quinolinic acid.
im confused. if we exercise too hard regularly doesnt that over stress the body? like fight or flight is constantly on? or like marathon runners getting high on their own supply
Unless you're a professional or high-level amateur athlete, exercising too hard is probably the least of anyone's worries.
@@jamesj6597 true lol
No. cortisol levels go down after exercise
Totally agreed. Ridiculously high intense work out put too much stress on our body. I believe everything in moderation like easy leisure walk, light weigh training etc. Staying away from processed sugar is more important.
Thanks Rhonda! : )
You're welcome!
Super interesting....Thx
How do myokines relate to cortisol in the body?
I know a woman who’s terrified of getting cancer. Her homeopath told her just to drink lots of sweet orange juice.
😮 That’s a lot of sugar!
You should add some graphics and stick to topics section by section.
@FoundMyFitnessClips what is the relationship between afib and high-intensity training? How much is too much?
Covered during my interview with Dr. Ben Levine at this timestamp: ua-cam.com/video/qMs145DJyb0/v-deo.html
@@FoundMyFitnessClips thx 👍
What is the intensity and duration that is needed to produce these results?
For blood cancer too ?
Not sure how many cancer patients can do HIIT training?
I thought she was going to recommend kettle swings...
Kettlebell swings and kettlebell circuits can and will do wonders for physical fitness.
Thanks
What kind of intensity and duration range are we talking? Is doing squats for 90 seconds good? Is a 1 hour timetrial good?
She's pushed the 4x4 Sweedish Protocol extensively for general fitness. I'll bet she'd say that would do. But research the protocol for yourself--she's misrepresenting what it is. It's actually slightly easier than she is claiming.
Thanks ❤
Cool video. Andre
What is more beneficial, very good sleep or exercise?
They feed into each other. Both are important. You will not get all the benefits of sleep without exercise and you will not get all the benefits of exercise without good sleep.
@0ooTheMAXXoo0 sleep is more important
sleep !
Both
High quality sleep is THE most important thing that you can do for your health! 😎👍
What we do about bad genes?
Qi Gong is far, far better, more effective, longer lasting effects, taps into the right side of the brain, more comprehensive, and the original.
There’s no such thing as best exercise intervention stupid. Go do your research. At best its your anecdotal experience. Because it works for you doesn’t mean it will work for the next person. If it does go show evidence of 10k people who did it that got better vs other exercise modalities 🤷🏻♂️
Good job :)
I’m sorry I know a ton of athletes that have had cancer. You should be ashamed of yourself by making this claim.
23% and 24% was expecting 80%+ reduced risk
23% is pretty profound. 80% would be off the charts.
@@gazorpazorp9798 23% is crazy, are you kidding me?
Based content
People on internet trying to reinvent the wheel 😂😂
thx
Help me Rhonda, help, help me Rhonda. Help me Rhonda, help, help me Rhonda. Help me Rhonda yeah. Get her out of my heart ❤️
I only clicked on it because I saw you for the first time smiling in the picture and I wanted to see what made you smile 😂 but it wasn’t in the video …..smile is free
Insane that you can title a video this
A Testament to Epigenetics: I solid dose of nurture is able to stick it to nature.
Myokines!!! Andre
All I need is a gym and a kitchen.
Thank you for reaffirming.
Suggestion.
Put the science on the last half of the video.
Start with the ideas and concepts and benefits a person may have.
The science just clogs peoples minds with useless data. Unless you're a scientist, you don't need excess data/ideas floating around in your head.
High Alkaline Body.. Reduces High Acidic Body.
Not sure how to interpret 26% chance less chance of dieing from all cause???? Does that mean you will 5 years longer…….????
Exercise to kill cancer cells? Yes, also oxygen and water were also found to be very important for survival. Don’t forget.
Straw man.
Cancer is a thief and lazy~ Stay active and alert!
An 8 mile run ? You are teasing . Right ?
I know right? 😂😂😂
😊
My Lord your so beautiful to look at, but I think lll just asked chat GPt to summarize your video for me so I can read it in 30 seconds.
How did the Hawk Twah girl get so edumacated.
Bill and Ted's school for the gifted
❤