Kaneh Bosm, also known as hemp or cannabis, has been used for medicinal purposes for thousands of years. From ancient civilizations to modern times, this plant has been valued for its therapeutic properties, and recent scientific research has begun to shed light on the potential of this ancient herb to address modern health challenges. On this podcast, we discuss Sula Benet's Born in Poland, Benet attended graduate school at Columbia University, where she received her doctorate in 1944. Sula published Early Diffusion and Folk Uses of Hempin in 1967. Here is a link to it. https://www.xn--4dbcyzi5a.com/wp-content/PDF/EARLY-DIFFUSION-AND-FOLK-USES-OF-HEMP-SULA-BENET.pdf The article discusses the mistranslation of the term "kaneh bosm" in the Old Testament, which has been erroneously translated as "calamus" or "aromatic reed" in many translations. The Sula Benet argues that "kaneh bosm" is actually a reference to cannabis, a plant that was used for both medicinal and ritual purposes in ancient times. The article explores the historical use of cannabis in various cultures, including the Scythians and the Hebrews, and argues that the plant has been long neglected in scientific literature. The author also describes various folk rituals and practices associated with the cultivation and harvesting of hemp, which has been used in many societies for thousands of years. Ultimately, we will ask the question: could this ancient plant hold the key to addressing some of the most pressing health challenges of our time? By exploring the medicinal properties of kaneh bosm, we hope to shed light on the potential of this remarkable plant to improve human health and well-being. www.freemiracleplant.com Produced by PodConx Justin Benton - https://podconx.com/guests/justin-benton Janet Benton-Gailard - askjanet.org https://101hempinnercircle.com/ www.themiracleplant.org info@101CBD.org Join Our #HealTheWorlders Messenger Tribe at https://bit.ly/TheMiraclePlant_Messenger
Kaneh Bosm, also known as hemp or cannabis, has been used for medicinal purposes for thousands of years. From ancient civilizations to modern times, this plant has been valued for its therapeutic properties, and recent scientific research has begun to shed light on the potential of this ancient herb to address modern health challenges.
On this podcast, we discuss Sula Benet's Born in Poland, Benet attended graduate school at Columbia University, where she received her doctorate in 1944. Sula published Early Diffusion and Folk Uses of Hempin in 1967. Here is a link to it.
https://www.xn--4dbcyzi5a.com/wp-content/PDF/EARLY-DIFFUSION-AND-FOLK-USES-OF-HEMP-SULA-BENET.pdf
The article discusses the mistranslation of the term "kaneh bosm" in the Old Testament, which has been erroneously translated as "calamus" or "aromatic reed" in many translations. The Sula Benet argues that "kaneh bosm" is actually a reference to cannabis, a plant that was used for both medicinal and ritual purposes in ancient times. The article explores the historical use of cannabis in various cultures, including the Scythians and the Hebrews, and argues that the plant has been long neglected in scientific literature. The author also describes various folk rituals and practices associated with the cultivation and harvesting of hemp, which has been used in many societies for thousands of years.
Ultimately, we will ask the question: could this ancient plant hold the key to addressing some of the most pressing health challenges of our time? By exploring the medicinal properties of kaneh bosm, we hope to shed light on the potential of this remarkable plant to improve human health and well-being.
Justin Benton - https://podconx.com/guests/justin-benton
Janet Benton-Gailard - askjanet.org
https://101hempinnercircle.com/
Join Our #HealTheWorlders Messenger Tribe at https://bit.ly/TheMiraclePlant_Messenger
Justin Benton: [00:00:00] Welcome back to the Miracle Plant Podcast, where we discussed this miracle plant with so many names and how it's helping people in so many extraordinary ways. Well, we're back again. And the word of the day, the word of the century, the word of the millennium, and then some is canna Bos.
Well after hearing so many people get back to us and so much excitement and so many people were blown away and had never heard of Canna boso other than maybe just bl you know, reading through the Bible in the Old Testament and Exodus. Um, now, um, we are coming back to give you more, as we said we would.
We've got Chris Bennett, the author. Of, uh, the book that, that has really done a great job of talking about some of these experts and the Dead Sea Scrolls and things like that. He's not gonna be on today, but we do have him scheduled for a future podcast, so stay tuned for that. He's actually coming out with a brand new book, um, so we might [00:01:00] actually be breaking the book, um, for you as well.
So, but today we wanted to talk about Sula Vanay, uh, and, , she's a doctor from uh, Columbia, uh, and she, uh, released a publication called The Early Diffusion and Folk Uses of Hemp in 1967. And actually let me welcome Dan Humiston and my mom, Janet Betten Gaylor. Dan. Janet, how are you? I know, uh, this is some really, really new, uh, informa actually.
It's really, really old information, but it's really, really new to our audience and I'm so glad you guys were here to join us. How are you guys doing today?
I'm doing great. This is a fascinating area that I'm just starting to deep dive.
I'm also doing great. And, uh, Justin, and I appreciate you bringing this to our attention because, , this should be more mainstream. Like Janet says, this kind of stuff should be on billboards and it . It never is.
Justin Benton: Exactly. Exactly. And so Sula Benet, uh, who's uh, also known as Sarah [00:02:00] Venito, uh, again, like I said, is a Polish anthropologist of the 20th century, and she studied Polish and Judaic customs and Traditions. And the book that we're, are the publication that we're most interested in, again, is early diffusion of folk uses of Hemp.
So she was the one, and I'm gonna read from her abstract, it's a 12 page abstract. This is the longest abstract I've ever seen. Um, and you know, we're used to going through abstracts for pubmed.gov and, and looking at abstracts for research and studies for cannabis or cannabis. And, uh, so anyways, let's get into it here a little bit.
Uh, uh, despite the growing volume of literature on the subject of hemp, this is from our abstract. The historical roots of its diffusion remain obscure, and there is a scant. To its ubiquitous role in folk ritual, magic, and menacing among European peasantry. The term cannabis itself has been considered to be Indo-European of origin.
Uh, and this paper reexamines the origin of the term cannabis to [00:03:00] demonstrate its derivative, uh, derivation of somatic languages. Both the word and its forms of use were borrowed from. No. Skins from peoples of the Near East and diffused among the people with whom they came in contact, ritual or other folk uses described, uh, goes on to talk about how hemp is one of the most versatile and important plants discovered by man.
Used for millennia. As we talked about here on, you know, at Nauseum, , um, and let's get into the good stuff here. Uh, there was a German person, uh, German scientist, uh, Schrader Hen and Busm. They were the first that translated the Dead Sea Scrolls that were found in 1945 with the Gospel of Philip and a lot of these other original texts that were firsthand of when Jesus was around.
But they hid in 19 in, uh, AD 360 7 because. The, uh, the powers that be, they decided, which, you know, Occhio text they were gonna put into the Bible, which is the traditional Luke John, math, Matthew, Matthew, mark, [00:04:00] uh, those four and they cut out the other eight and , including Philip. So they buried these firsthand accounts and when they found them, when these former, in 1945 was looking for actually manure, believe it or not, he found these Dead Sea scrolls.
And that's how we have access to these. And this German was the, these Germans were the first to translate it to German and then she translated it as well for us. So it says both an original HU Hebrew text of the Old Testament and the aromatic translation. The word Kana, K A N E H, or Kana, K E N E H, is used either alone or linked to the objective.
Bosom in Hebrew or BMA is the aromatic meaning aromatic. It is Kana, C A N A in sank. It goes on to talk about how God directed Moses to make a holy oil composed of mer sweet cinnamon, canna, boem, and cassia, and in many ancient languages, including Hebrew, the root can, k a n has a double [00:05:00] meaning both hemp and Reid.
So that's very interesting. If we sit there and think that again can means hemp or reed. In many translations of the Bible's original Hebrew, we find canna boim. Seriously and erroneously translated as kalmus and aromatic read a vague term, callus or callus. Aromatic is a fragrant marsh plant. The occurred in the oldest Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible.
Step two. Uh, In the third century BC where the terms canna canam were incorrectly translated as kalmus, and in many translations that followed, including Martin Luthers, the same error was repeated In Exodus 30 23. Canam is translated as sweet Calamus in a those di i, Isaiah 43. 24 [00:06:00] chapter Canna is translated as Sweet Kane, although the word sweet appears nowhere in the original.
In Jeremiah six 20, Kana is translated as sweet Kain. In Ezekiel 27, chapter 19, Canna is translated as kalmus in Song of Songs four. Chapter 14. Hannah is translated as K. Another piece of evidence regarding the use of the word canna in the sense of hemp rather than reed. Among the Hebrews, is the religious requirement that the dead be buried in canna shirts, centuries later linen was substituted for hemp.
Uh, Klein, uh, 1908 cites that. So again, we can, I can just keep going on and on. I'll pause here for a. But folks, this is the proof. This is the smoking gun. This is the exact, uh, you know, facts that happened when they changed the text of. Of Canam from Hebrew to [00:07:00] Greek. They changed the words. They literally took what it was originally written down as and they translated it to Kalmus.
So there it is, folks. You can, uh, Google search it yourself. You can see that this exact same, uh, abstract. If you go look at Sula, uh, Benet, B E N E t, and the name of her publication is abstract that I'm reading again, is early diffusion and folk uses of. Benet, boom. What do you guys think about that?
I am super excited cuz as we often talk about hemp, um, it has been used for thousands and thousands of years with humans for healing a lot of things, mainly based on healing. And obviously if they already had hemp shirts, they were also using it for a variety of other things. And as we talk about, hemp is the only plant that our bodies co-evolved.
So we have, as humans have had hemp in our bodies so much that we've actually evolved with [00:08:00] it, which is why we have the endocannabinoid system and it's like the C B D A we always talk about is literally interacts with every cell of our body and our endocannabinoid system of connections and receptors.
It's actually larger than our nervous system. and so it shows very clearly as humans, hemp has been a massive part of our lives for generations. So many generations that our bodies adapted and changed to, uh, you use it more efficiently. And so that's why I never could figure out why we weren't talking about it more.
Like you say, why wasn't it mentioned more in earlier texts if it's such a huge part of human, human history and human development. And so this makes perfect sense to me that we finally have someone talking about. I don't even know how many thousands of years ago this goes back or before. Uh, we started the whole ad system, but so I'm super excited about it and I need to do some more research on the herb.
They tried to pretend it was the sweet calcium or whatever it is, and how we lost that [00:09:00] translation. My biggest question is, during that translation, was it purpose? Translated to a less quote, innocuous plant. Uh, or was it a mistake? I'm guessing it was on purpose. Cause it was during that NICEAN conference in the three hundreds, that's when they made the decision.
They were trying to bring together different religions, uh, for the Roman Empire to coalesce the whole empire. And so they would just, they tossed out so much of the Bible that didn't fit in. Idea they had of making a unified religion system in, in the Romans. And so it makes perfect sense. They were very cleverly and purposely taking out parts and leaving in parts to come up with their own idea.
So I could see that they would have then very deliberately also, uh, changed That meaning, uh, the whole thing is fascinating. I can't wait to do more research on it.
Justin Benton: Absolutely. What do you think there, Dan? Pretty crazy news here that we're breaking on the podcast.
I know, I [00:10:00] know. I think, you know, I think if we, we talk about how this has been used, humans have used thousands and thousands and thousands of years. But unfortunately, because the written word really is somewhat of a new concept in the, in the span of the human existence. It was really never documented as you would think it would have been, I guess the most copied book of all time. Had references in it, which would've been an indication that this was part of our culture, a part of the world, part of civilization. Unfortunately, whether it was on purpose or through a mistake, that information was changed. And to me it doesn't really matter whether. purpose or a mistake that that's irrelevant. The point is here's the, the link, here's the link from when things were carried by word of mouth from generation to generation through storytelling, through word of mouth, [00:11:00] through one, one mentor to the next, to when it was in the written word.
And there's always been that argument, well, we don't see it written down. Well, now we do. And that's where I think, and I think that's really the. you said, the boom moment for me is that there is that now connection. We have written history of this being used 3000 years ago, which I think is, really the missing link.
Justin Benton: Yeah. A again, I mean, when you break down and, and what, you know, what, what, uh, you know, she's doing here, uh, is, you know, Sula, she is showing you. I mean, as an etymologist, the, the base of the word, you know, like when you go to a spelling bean, like, whoa, whoa, what's the base? Is it Latin? So she's breaking down these words exactly as they were meant in Hebrew text, right?
Because everything was written in, in Hebrew. There was no printing press back then, folks. So everything was handwritten. And remember they buried these dead seas, scroll. [00:12:00] And I'm pretty sure they didn't call 'em that in, in, uh, 360 7. We did. When the farmer found 'em in 1945, they buried these, this context because the, like my mom was saying, the Romans wanted to unify and put their stamp of approval on it and, and, and, and cast it out.
Anything that didn't fit in the light that they wanted, uh, you know, to cast. And so, uh, again, when you just look at the word, the word canna literally translates to hemp. I mean, , what more Ev I mean, that should be it right there. And then Oh, oh, by the way, both 'em means aromatic. And for those of you that were out here in Ventura County, California in three years ago when we had all the homeowners associa.
Going crazy cuz one of the farmers forgot to harvest his pimp crop in time, uh, because of the aromatic smell. Uh, I I'm pretty sure that even makes the case obviously even [00:13:00] more so. Again, we are talking about in scripture, in Old Testament, in New Testament about canum. Canam is cannabis. It is, it has been verified.
It is, it it, and again, like Dan said, it doesn't really. If it was done intentionally, I have my opinion. Or if it was done unintentionally. The fact is it was done. So 1700 years ago, they changed the word, they changed the scriptures of what if, and had they not changed the word. What kind of world would we be living in 1700 years later?
Look, 1937 are, uh, you know, we changed the, um, the legality of this plant and even hemp, um, which George Washington grew and actually he, uh, uh, smuggled. Uh, hemp seeds, um, from Asia to [00:14:00] make, uh, gunpowder, to beat the English. So it was that much of a critical part of our history. Now, we're not teaching people about this.
I mean, we are here in the Miracle Plant Podcast, but this plant, again, like Jack Harra says, has over 50,000 uses. , and, and, and, and, and, and if this text wasn't changed, we would all be, I mean, one of my goals is just to have people talk about hemp, like they talk about alovera, right? For whatever reason, Alovera is known worldwide, especially in our country.
Everybody knows Alovera helps with sunburn, right? And all I want for, for the, for betterment of humanity is to people to know that hemp helps with pain and inflammation. Just let's just start there. And there are no side effects. There are no drug [00:15:00] interactions cuz it's not a drug, it's a plant. D b d cannabidiol is our own body.
Makes the form of it in the form of two dash ag. Cannabidiol is in human breast milk. Cannabidiol is in broccoli, cannabidiol is in kale. You know, this plant should be understood for what it is. It's been a part of the human experience for thousands of years, needing back 30,000 years, that we can trace humans starting the beginning of agriculture, carrying the seeds with this plant all over the country, all over the world.
Now, the reason we bring this, Is because yes, if they had hidden broccoli from us, that would've been bad. Broccoli's very good. Got all leafy green vegetables. Eat your greens are good for you, but broccoli doesn't help with neuro regeneration. Broccoli, if you rub it on your skin doesn't, you know, reduce [00:16:00] inflammation.
Cannabis can abot them. Hemp does. We were looking for a miracle for my son, and at the time there was no hope and I had flipped the script and, and done all the research I possibly could. I wasn't gonna give up. I looked for a miracle. I was looking, I was praying for a miracle. And, and that miracle came when I was first introduced to C b D with my friend Todd, when we were talking about his friend Dr.
Pres. And many of us know about Charlotte Figgy and her mom, Paige, and the beacon of light for shining the light on this miracle plant, which now is, uh, uh, you know, more accepted every single day. And, and, and on the verge of becoming truly legal again, which it should have always been. This plant is, is it's our God-given, right?
[00:17:00] Literally, God-given, if you look at the scripture and ex. Were gone through the burning bush. Spoke to Moses and said, put 250 shackles, a canam in there along with some cinnamon and some olive oil. So again, the reason that I'm talking about this is that what our mission is, is to reach 1 billion people.
Heck, let's reach 8 billion because what we need to know is that this plant can do no. This plant has been helping us for at least 30,000 years, medically at least 8,000 years, dating back to Oriental Medicine journals. We need to embrace this plant and if all we need to do is have a conversation about this plant and I would love to have a conversation, I will go on anyone's podcast.
I will go on any stage. I will talk to priests. I will talk to rabbis. I will talk to. About Cannavo because they need to be educated. Just like our doctors need to be [00:18:00] educated about the endocannabinoid system and the power of this miracle plant that was given to us, that is meant for us, that can help us in so many incredible ways.
So again, obviously you could tell I'm fired up cuz I've seen what this miracle plan can do for my family and I've witnessed it with thousands of other families in my own. Now it's time for others to experience this plant to try it, to use it. Heck, we'll give you some for free. Just cover shipping. Rub it on your shoulder when it hurts and get back to me cuz I was just in a volleyball scrimmage.
We had like parents and kids and for my, my oldest daughter Zoe. And let me tell you, I haven't played volleyball in 20 years, but I was pretty impressed with my skills. But I woke up that next morning and I was pretty much sore head to toe and good old can canam. Uh, that we used hemp seed oil instead of, uh, olive oil.
Uh, all I did was plop a little under my tongue, hold it for five minutes and swallow it, and I [00:19:00] feel like a new man the next day. Anyways, I'm fired up. Dan. Janet, what do you guys got to add?
I'm still going back to the idea again too. I love it all. I am so excited Also cause I've always passionate. Believed in hemp. And especially like you say, when we were researching what to do, uh, with your son and with a very, very common condition now that's spreading all of our children in America. Um, and, and it's a solution.
And I just saw again, too, I could not be more passionate as a healing person who spent, who's better life healing. I've never found anything like it. And so certain things keep sticking out to me. One of. About hemp is that people were required to be buried in hemp shirts, and that really stuck out also.
So not only was it used in the anointing oils and used for other issues, they had also figured out how to make clothing out of it, and it was a requirement for a proper burial. And how did we get from that where the hemp plant was? Honored and [00:20:00] used and respected and, uh, required to be used everywhere to now where it's just become like a dirty word or whatever, to so many people.
And so I was just fascinated by that. And again, too, as you mentioned, just how important it is that this, like you mentioned, or our bodies make cannabinoids, and that goes back to the fact that we have, humans have evolved with. So our bodies make endocannabinoids made by the body cannabinoids and the one you mentioned, two AG neurologists make clear that several major neurologists that any kind of a neurological condition from simple pain to autism to, uh, Alzheimer's to ms.
Um, is caused by two low levels of the endocannabinoid two ag. And then the hemp, C B D A or cannabidiol acid, literally is a mimic or analog of that. So the plant cannabinoid form and the body one literally are [00:21:00] equal. And so for any neurological condition, it's very, very clear that the cannady acid, the C B D A, literally gives the body exactly what it needs in a form.
It can understand and use a form that interacts with all of our receptors in every cell of the body. And as a person who has worked with healing and every type of holistic healing my entire life, and there is just nothing like it, this is finally like the mother load. This is what actually heals. I've used every herb and every oil, and every combination and every relaxation technique and whatever out there and every diet.
But this is the solution. It literally, as we talk about a lot, when we train people, the C B D A literally balances or homeostasis our entire body system. It balances our immune system, which is inflammation versus anti-inflammatory effects. Oh, it is the most powerful anti-inflammatory. It balances all of our systems.
Anyway, I could go on forever about that. So anyway, it's vital. Our bodies know it and recognize it, and it does not [00:22:00] do that with other, there's no. Uh, what's a current fun thing? Uh, turmeric. There's no turmeric system in our bodies or ashwaganda systems in our bodies. There is a hemp, a raw hemp system in our bodies, and so I'm just so fascinated to find this, that.
Our ancestors, maybe they didn't read and write a lot, but they sure knew what they were doing from practice and time and spreading what worked. And so the fact that we can now go clear back to the Bible and even before that to document that hemp is this master plant, it is the solution we're looking for for our health.
And just that my frustration that it has been so demonized. For a variety of reasons. And in America, I believe it was demonized cuz it was competing with paper and cotton and other things because it can be made into almost anything. Um, so anyway, I'm just so happy that we have some other references outside of just what you can find on PubMed that point out to the long, historic and successful use of the hemp plant.
Justin Benton: Absolutely. Dan, you have anything to [00:23:00] add? I'm fired up. I'm, I can feel us healing the world. I can feel.
No, all I was gonna say is that I think that, you know, a lot of people that aren't familiar as we are with the plant, the, when they hear the word hemps, cannabis, marijuana, they immediately think of the intoxicating effects , and that's not the point here. The point is, This plant has a lot of benefits that are not related to intoxicating effects, and I think that if people who were maybe programmed through a lot of negative propaganda over the years could take a minute and look at the research and take a minute and look at the data, and now.
See how it was included in the scriptures and, and in and in be even beyond there's references to, to the healing power of this, of this amazing plant, this miracle plant. That'll be one major step towards, um, [00:24:00] legitimizing this and making it mainstream and making it just, Hey, of course, of course it's right.
We need this. Of course, it's part , of our body's design. There's no question. It'd be like saying it should be as, as common , and people should be as comfortable with this as drinking water or going out and getting sunlight. This is natural. This has to happen. And now this is one more layer of negativeness that is being removed and one more barrier that people can don't need to deal with and they can just get past it
so that's about all I gotta say. Justin, I know you're fired up. I'll let you wrap this thing up.
Justin Benton: Absolutely. Well, again, our mission is to reach 1 billion people by 2025, about the power of this miracle plant with so many names. You know, the, the fact that the, the, the translation happened in 360 7 and we lost this, we'd lost how much more powerful. Would, um, a again, my goal would be to get people [00:25:00] to think about hemp like they think about aloe vera.
I, I just think of all of the people that could have been helped from then until now. Uh, if, if that hadn't happened, uh, back 367, you know, I mean, look at, look at the influence that that religion has on, on humanity and, and you know, so many, you know, it, it's, it's crazy when I go to. You know, and, and I and I, and you know, take the kids and, and we go to church on, uh, you know, every Sunday.
And, and I remember when Canna first came out and, uh, C B D and, uh, you know, there are some places that, that, uh, you know, wouldn't let you bring, uh, C B D oil or C b D to, to school, uh, and put 'em in their juices. Um, and, and that's what we did for my son. Remember? That's how all this. We were looking to clear my son's brain from a, a late stage late developing autism [00:26:00] diagnosis where his own brain and body could not detoxify heavy metals, uh, that were in his body and pesticides that were in his body.
Uh, his body became overwhelmed, like an autoimmune disease of inflammation attacking itself, not knowing the good cells versus the bad cells, and that's what this miracle plant did. and I remember like, you know, I mean, I, I know that there's some parents out there and maybe you're listening right now and that's you, that they're worried about pushback or you're worried about what if and, and, and, you know, some things that could happen.
It never even crossed my mind. I know I'm an, uh, serial entrepreneur, like just like out there of the crazy one percenter type, but. For those of you that aren't like that, that are having any hesitation or resistance of like, you know, what happens if you know, you know, pushback from, you know, whatever, doctors, mother-in-law, whoever this plant dates back [00:27:00] 30,000 years of human connection.
That's why that, how do you think that that endocannabinoid system in our body that's set up to receive the cannabinoids from this plant develop? Right. So at the end of the day, this miracle plant, we belong together. We are, uh, you know, uh, we are, we are, I would say like brothers from another mother or sisters from another mister.
That's the plant version. And we're the human version. We belong together because we, this plant, it actually does a lot more for us than, than any other plant that any of us have ever, uh, come across. So I encourage you. You know that, and my point was, if this plant had not been mistranslated, and if we were talking about this plant like alovera, you know, I just, and I, my goal is to get us to talking about it again like that.
Right? Let's, let's, let's write the wrongs. Do your own research. Look, the proof is in the pudding. Reach out to us. [00:28:00] We'll send you a, a, a, a mini roll on that. You can just put in your. And take it with you. And if you got a bug bite or a scratch or pain or a headache, you can put some on your temples and, and it's cold sores, this plant.
It's unbelievable. And as we know that you guys have heard this podcast for a while. I mean, I just want to sing it from the mountaintops. I want people to try this plant because I've seen how many people's lives have changed forever. Connie Willick, I was just chatting with, she's been on a couple times.
She had chronic neuropathy and she could not fall asleep. She couldn't stand for more than 90 seconds. She hadn't slept in three years, not more than a couple hours, and she took this plant and she called it resurrection juice because after three days of taking this plant, this oil, this canose them, her pain was gone.
[00:29:00] To the point where she could walk again. Now she runs on the beach. She's in her mid seventies. She spreads the word to everybody. She comes across, you know, and she's also a pastor, and, and she had her, she had her very negative connotations of this plant as well, and was very resistant to trying it, but she was so desperate.
For the pain that she was in with neuropathy, sh you know, the shooting pain, the nerve pain, like someone's stabbing you with, with, with knives in your feet that you can't sleep, you can't stand that. She was willing to try it and so many people come to us and the, and that desperation after trying everything else. And my point is that I don't want it to get to. As Dr. William Courtney, who's been on our podcast, has said, if you ate cannabis hemp canam every day as a dietary essential, [00:30:00] which he believes it is, and I do as well, you wouldn't have to use it as medicine because you'd be getting those cannabinoids in your daily regimen.
I have a, a hemp seed, hemp protein shake, you know? And, and I get those, that protein in there. I use the oil every day. And, and if, if humanity knew, just like aloe vera and sunburn, what this plant could do for you, I feel like I've done what I can do because look, I'm here to pay it forward. I needed a miracle.
There was not hope for my son. There was no hope that he was ever gonna live a normal, happy. According to the experts, quote unquote, but I did not believe that were to be this case. I was his father. My job was to get him healthy again. And I didn't know how it was gonna do it, but I knew I was gonna [00:31:00] do it.
And when my prayers were answered, I made a, a promise to God and to myself that I would pay it. Until people would be able to know about the power of this plant. And it's not just the plant. The plant helps, the miracle plant helps. You gotta take control of your, your, your own health. It's, it's, it's, it's, it opens the door for you to realize to, to lift the veil.
You are in control of your health. The things that you put in your mouth and your mind, you are in control. Do not give that control over to somebody. That's what I want. I want people to be happy. I want people to be at peace. I don't want people to take things that hurt them. As we know, these pharmaceutical drugs are hurting people.
So again, I'm so fired up. Um, any final words before we, uh, do our sendoff?[00:32:00]
I just wanna say that I just feel really blessed that you found this more information, and again, too, to give more legitimacy, which we again, too, we should not have. You with hemp, but in our current American culture, we have to go back and if you don't believe the Bible, uh, I don't know how else to approach you.
Um, so again, too, the fact that we can find those roots and find more and more of the documentation of how critical this plant has been to us, our entire. Lives as humans and our bodies by the way, don't change quickly. It takes forever for our bodies to change. So you can imagine how many years and centuries we were using hemp for our body to adapt to its use.
That became a primary maintainer of our health. Both for the nutrition and the healing benefits. And so I am just as excited as Justin is because I get so tired. Like I say, I see the miracles all the time. I do free consultations for anybody that has any kind of a health issue, and I see the results and just my frustration of living in a culture where the [00:33:00] smallest little problem goes wrong and someone's running to a pharmaceutical solution and not by the way, looking at their diet or anything else they could do.
And so to me, this is the legitimacy that hopefully will. Far more people than just us reporting success of it for different conditions. So I could not be more excited and more excited to actually do more research, and especially going back into the Chinese who were writing long before, um, even the Bible was put into writing just to keep documenting this.
So congratulations. I'm so excited this knowledge came to Justin, that he heard about it first, and that we're now able to spread it around the world along with our goal of having a billion people be aware that there is a solution. There is something else than what we've been taught, uh, in America, especially of how we solve our health issues.
Justin Benton: Anything else, Dan?
I think Janet said it all. It's healed the world. We got them. We got 8 billion to go, but you're gonna get through this first billion in a couple.
Justin Benton: You know how the old, old saying [00:34:00] goes, the first billion's the toughest, then after that it's gravy trained. So on the count three we're gonna say heal the world, cuz that is the mission here at the Miracle Plant. To pay it forward, to educate, to raise the vibration, to help people take in control of their health, to realize that you do have the power to be healthy, to be happy.
It is in your hands and, and, and sometimes in your mouth. The things we put in our heads, in our, in our mouth. So in the count of three we're gonna say heal the world. We're gonna try. Some can ofum, we encourage you to swing by any of our websites in the, uh, in the show notes. There. We'll get you a free product to.
And, uh, see for yourself the power of can. So on the count of three, let's say heal the world, 1, 2, 3.
Heal the world. Woo.
Justin Benton: Thanks for swinging by the Miracle Plan Podcast everybody. I promise we will be talking more Canna, bok. We've got so much more. I've got all these documents in front of me. We only got through, like half of one of 'em. Uh, send your questions into [00:35:00] info@themiracleplant.org. G if you want to be a guest, if you want to speak on this subject, please uh, reach out to us.
Uh, we've got booked podcasts like crazy. I've been talking to Dan and his team at Podcast Con X. Probably gonna have to start releasing multiple episodes a week. We can hardly keep up with all the excitement and, and energy that's going on with the podcast. So thank you for all the listeners, and if you really want to do us a solid, if this information really resonated with you and you've never heard it anymore before, and, and eventually it becomes a, a part of your.
You know, daily life. Then please leave a review. Please rate it and, uh, and please pass it along, forward this, this podcast to somebody, uh, who's, who's, who needs a miracle, who needs some help with the health element. So thanks again for tuning in, and we will see you next week. Be a blessing everybody, and a happy healing.