"Absolute Healing" on BrightU: Top natural protocols to reverse vaxx shedding, long COVID and spike proteins
By jacobthomas // 2026-01-09
 
  • On Day 4 of "Absolute Healing," Jonathan Otto featured a group of individuals who reported injuries from COVID-19 vaccines, describing chronic pain and neurological dysfunction.
  • The episode highlighted an alternative medical community where patients lived together for mutual support and pooled resources for treatments.
  • Practitioners like Dr. Syed Haider and Dr. Bryan Ardis advocated for controversial protocols, including long-term ivermectin use and nicotine gum to counteract spike protein effects.
  • They promoted a cellular-level approach to healing, recommending drugs like hydroxychloroquine, specific supplements and a "hunter" diet cycle.
  • The segment concluded with an appeal for donations to a crowdfunding campaign for the injured, emphasizing a distrust of mainstream medical institutions.
On Day 4 of "Absolute Healing," aired on Jan. 6, Jonathan Otto is joined by a group of individuals who say they have been injured by the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines gather together, their stories a tapestry of chronic pain, neurological dysfunction and medical gaslighting. This scene underscored a growing, underground medical movement where patients and a cadre of alternative health practitioners are waging a desperate fight for recovery using controversial and unorthodox methods. The episode features interviews with doctors and patients who operate outside the mainstream medical establishment. They paint a picture of a silent epidemic of vaccine and long-COVID injuries, treated not in major hospitals but through online coaching, shared protocols and a network of mutual aid. Central to the narrative is the story of Danielle Baker, a patient who describes severe post-vaccine reactions. The episode highlighted a “house” where the injured live together, pooling resources for support and treatment. “Part of the money that was raised for my medical bills, it was important to me to give forward,” Baker said. “I took a part of the money, in order to help fund the house here, so we could all be together.” This community aspect is touted as therapeutic itself. Dr. Syed Haider, one of the featured practitioners, emphasized the mental health toll of being disbelieved. “One of the worst things about this is the gaslighting you get,” he said. He advocated for group coaching, stating that shared suffering shifts focus. "You're not just naval gazing and just thinking about yourself all the time." The medical approaches discussed are a catalog of therapies rejected or marginalized by public health authorities. Haider detailed a regimen of daily ivermectin, with doses escalating over weeks, sometimes for months. He also described using over-the-counter antihistamines, such as Claritin and Pepcid or anti-inflammatories like ibuprofen, for some patients with success. The most provocative claims center on nicotine. Dr. Bryan Ardis, a recurring figure in alternative COVID commentary, asserted that the spike protein from COVID and vaccines acts like a venom targeting nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. He claimed nicotine, as a receptor agonist, can displace these toxins. "When I would tell them to chew nicotine gum, taste and smell, tinnitus, brain fog, deafness would be restored in 45 minutes for some people when they were trying ivermectin for months," Ardis said. As noted by BrightU.AI's Enoch, nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) are a class of ligand-gated ion channels that are activated by the neurotransmitter acetylcholine and by nicotine. They are responsible for fast synaptic transmission in the central and peripheral nervous systems, mediating the excitatory effects of nicotine. Another practitioner, Dr. John Thomas, described seeing new, severe diseases in previously healthy patients, like a 30-year-old marathon runner developing Type 2 diabetes after vaccination. He advocates for a holistic, cellular-level approach. "We have to treat from inside out," Thomas said. His protocols include long-term use of hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, cycled over months. He also recommended nicotine gum or patches, high-dose Vitamin D3, chelated zinc and vitamin C from whole foods. His dietary advice is stark: "Eat like our forefathers did. Eating as a hunter, what do we do? We go hunting. We killed. We ate that day. And then we didn't eat for three or four days, because we didn't have food." The episode concluded with a direct appeal for donations to Baker's GiveSendGo campaign, a crowdfunding site popular in vaccine-skeptic circles. Otto framed giving as a moral duty, part of a "culture of giving" that spans religions. The underlying message is one of profound distrust in official institutions and a turn to community-funded, alternative care. The documentary presents a world where healing is a clandestine battle, waged with nicotine patches and veterinary antiparasitics, fueled by personal testimony and united by a belief that the true path to health is being suppressed. It is a compelling and troubling snapshot of a significant segment of the population navigating illness and recovery in the shadow of the pandemic, far from the glow of mainstream medicine's approval.

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