Today's episode is going to feel a little bit different and honestly I think it
should. We spend a lot of time on the show talking about food,
βkitchens, chefs, hospitality, and the people who keep this industry moving. Butβ
sometimes the bigger story is what people are carrying while they're still showing off. CG Castro was back with us and this time the conversation goes deeper than the plate. She's walking through a serious battle with stage four enemy triosis. A disease that has impacted her health, her family, her work, her body,
and her day-to-day life in ways most people never see. And that's the real point
today. Because in hospitality we're trained to present well, smile, serve, cook, host, show up. But behind the polished moments there are people dealing with pain, fear, uncertainty, and still finding a way to create care and keep going. CG is also cooking with us today, which says a lot about who she is. She's not here because it's easy. She's here because this conversation matters. We'll talk about
endometriosis awareness and what it looks like to advocate for yourself. What support looks like from the people closest to you and why these stories need more space. And of course we'll bring it back to the food because food has a way of making hard conversations feel a little more human. I mean, you can say that out loud, CG. You can't. It's okay. I was a fantastic intro. Thank you.
Welcome back. Thank you for having me. I love coming. You're a friend. You're always
welcome. I thought I thought we were family quarrel. When you hear your family and that's the truth, that is the truth. God, you know, I have to tell you, you are good. You're just simply great. I should say. All right, before we get into the food that you prepared, how are you doing? Really? I'm heavily medicated today. You know, it's nice to be here. It's nice that my body is cooperating, but I
βspent the last three days in bed sick. You know, so that's what it takes. You know,β
Monday and Tuesday was incredibly unbearably painful. Yesterday I was just soar and exhausted. So, you know, I let my body guide me. And typically, if I know that something's coming, I can make sure that I get the rest I need to prepare. And then like tomorrow, I've got nothing on my calendar, just in case. However, this is escalated incredibly fast. So, I've gotten to the point where my health is
incredibly unpredictable. And I don't know, am I going to be able to walk? Am I going to be able to cook or am I going to faint in your kitchen? You know, that is a real fear. Am I going to faint in the car on the way home? So, you know, there's lots of worries and things I have to plan for because I could be perfectly fine. And then, you know, feel like seven, eight centimeters dilated out of nowhere. And have
βa pain so severe that it makes me blind. And that's what I know that I'm going toβ
start to pass out. So, you know, it's driving in the right lane and being really aware of what's going on in case I need to pull over for a emergency. When we were cooking earlier, you had a cough. And you had a pause. I saw what you did. I asked, hey, are you okay? And you replied to me with something to the effect of, well, it feels like my ovaries just got crushed from from the inside. I don't know how on earth you decided that you wanted
to do this today. But like, for real, like, and I told you, you didn't have to, but you're there. You're you are culinary gangster. And you said, no, no, no, I need to do this because I don't know when it's going to happen again anytime soon. And also, like, this is an important conversation. And you know what, I feel like it gets, I feel like it'll get more attention because you're literally going through it. Now, I could see it on your
face. I can hear it in your voice. And I bless you. Thank you. It is hard. It probably wasn't the wisest decision from a medical standpoint to push myself. But like I told you, I respect the platform that Walk and Talk has. And I'm incredibly grateful that you've given it to me for this cause because we're friends or family, depending on the day.
But just pick it up. And so, yeah, you know, and I'm a trio. This was a word that I had never
heard until I was diagnosed with a stage four at like 30, 31 years old. And it wasn't until three years ago that I actually met someone that had endowed soap until that point, wasn't something we heard about. And I felt like we got to talk about it more. And we're going to get into that before we do, I don't want to get too far into this particular conversation without talking about the beautiful food that you made today.
I'm so excited about this because, you know, I felt like this is kind of like...
environment, at least when I come. And I wanted to, honestly, I'm probably going to be taking a little bit of a medical sabbatical for the next, you know, two to three months. I don't know as I prepare for my next surgery and cooking and cooking on TV is something that I just love. It makes me happy. And feeding you guys also makes me happy. So I wanted to bring something today that honors the friends and family that
βsurround me and that I've carried me through this journey. And so that's why I broughtβ
you, let my family affectionately calls Barcelona chicken, which is literally just rose chicken and potatoes. But it reminds us of this Boyaero who used to work on the corner of our apartment when we were living in Barcelona. What did you call me? Boyaero. Now you had to be careful. So Boyaero is someone who sells chicken or, I mean, depending on where. And I don't know another word for it. But Boyaero can also be
another word for like a coyote, you know. Okay. All right. You know, this is an educational program sometimes. And, you know, we get into language and, and yes, chicken. So we're talking about chicken, not human trafficking. Okay. Yeah. I just want to be clear people. Yes. And by the way, it was a delicious, delicious chicken. Talk about it. I completely interrupted you, please. If you will. You know, it was just something
that happened by accident. What, you know, I make a line of spices from scratch. So we have the other bowl and this us on. And then my unato oil. And we just make a compound about butter and slather the chicken in it. And then bake it. It's a one pan dish. But when it came out of the oven and we eat it, we were like, oh my gosh,
βit tastes like Barcelona chicken. And that's that's how that got named. So my kidsβ
referred to as Barcelona chicken when only one out of three lived in Barcelona with us. The other two weren't born yet. So we had two other flonds on this program in the history of walking talk media. One was from my wonderful, wonderful mother-in-law,
Cuban mother-in-law, like legit, amazing flon. And then also our other dear friend, Rhona,
who is the best, one of your besties. She's not one of them. She's, she is like, yeah. She's the bestie. My sole sister. She's a good person. We love her. When she was your last, she had done a coffee flon. Mm-hmm. And that was yummy, too. Anything she makes is delicious. So you're number three. Yeah. And I don't think we're going to do flon for a while. So you're, uh, I think that you are, um, you're in great, great company. Thank you. Well, this
was actually, you know, aside from the fact that the family loves flon. And this flon is special because it is a love letter to my best friend. You know, she makes flonilla, sugar, she makes flonilla extract and paste. And so this kind of brings the full circle. You know, the barcelona chicken. It's my husband. It's my kids. You know, I don't get the pieces that
I, my favorite. I love a drumstick, but, you know, a mother's love is sacrifice. So I never
βget the drumstick that I did today, which was nice. Um, so, you know, it's just, when I thinkβ
of these two dishes, I think of my family around the table after school, five o'clock, it's sacred and, you know, the vanilla flon, you know, Rhona. I never thought that I could have this kind of a friendship in old age. I'm not old, but, you know, I've never had a best friend. I've never had someone that I, I talked to as much as I talked to my husband or my mother, you know, and just someone to go through life that can still be a friend
to me because the fact of the matter is as I am chronically ill and people that I work with don't see it because I make sure that I show up in a presentable way, but my reality
is that I am sick a lot. And so, to be my friend means that I'm not always going to make
the dinner or the pedicure or the launcher or whatever. I am unpredictable because that's my life and she loves me through it. She is awesome. And by the way, um, she's out of Tampa, it's a Rhona's cookies and more. Any people out there in Tampa who hear this, check her out. She'll take care of you. I did five years in hospitals. While I was in the restaurant industry back in my early 20s, mid 20s. And you see all sorts of conditions come through.
And to me, Joseph, isn't one that would register in my mind as something that I saw very often. So for people who don't know what this disease is, can you give an explanation? Support for Walk and Talk Media comes from Metro Food Service Solutions, trusted by Kitchens that need storage and workflow that actually does the job. Learn more at Metro.com.
Sure, I can try to make it succinct.
like tissue, which is like the lining of your uterus grows outside of the uterus. Now, it's not
βthe same thing. It's like it. It mimics cancer. So it creates its own blood supply. It creates its ownβ
food source. And it attacks the entire body. Most commonly, it does attack, you know, the reproductive organs. But I've also had it on my bladder. I've had it on my rectum. I've had it on my intestines, my colon, I lost my appendix, padded in my diaphragm, which then makes it very painful to breathe their walker. You know, I have a friend who has it on her brainstem. I have multiple friends who lungs have collapsed because endometriosis has grown on the lungs and perforated the lungs.
And then they didn't even find out they had endometriosis until they went in for lung surgery, right? Because they're lung collapse. There's a really famous professional young golfer who had her lung collapse on a plane on her way to, you know, like the PGA tours, something like that.
βAnd you know, she was young. So a lot of us find out we have endo after emergencies like this.β
I have spent years and years of going to the emergency room with all kinds of pain that I couldn't explain because at the time I didn't know what it was. And so, you know, they'll just send you home, right? But I found out that I had endo by accident. I had an IUD placed before I was a mother because my menstrual cycles were so painful that I would pass out or vomit or just lose control of my bowels. I was in a really, really bad way for years. And so even though I had just come out and
we knew that it was, you know, primarily for women who've had children, they thought I was a good candidate for it with the risk that my uterus might deliver it. That's exactly what happened. So it got lodged in my cervix. They had to surgically remove it, which by the way, they do that without anesthesia. Just take two more training, come into the office. We'll dig it out. And when they went with the ultrasound to find the IUD, that's when they found a mass. I don't my left ovary.
And then when they went in for surgery to remove that mass is when they discovered I had stage four. The IUD was a blessing. It was a blessing to guys absolutely. I was suffering and miserable for about 20 years. This started at nine years old. I would pass out. I would vomit. I would miss school every single month. We had no idea. This wasn't something that wasn't until I got diagnosed that I even heard that word. That must have been brutal on your parents. It was because, you know,
my mom, you know, she didn't know, she doesn't know if she had to endow or not. She suspects, but, you know, she stopped having painful periods after she had kids. So we just did the best we could, you know, hot tea, hot heating pad, leave, you know. See, you have a terrific support system. Thank you. And I'm talking about Medialia husband. You speak so wonderfully about him.
Because he's amazing. Right. He's actually on the line. He'll, he's going to be coming on here
in a minute. You said in the past that the public sees you, you're your polished version.
βAnd Miguel gets to see what it takes to get you to that version. What don't people actually see?β
They don't see the suffering or the work that it takes sometimes to just make it on a red carpet. You know, I've gone to events where I've been incredibly sick and Miguel is holding my hair back while I'm vomiting literally all night. You know, he's, and we're traveling too, right? So I travel quite a bit. So he'll run to the pharmacy. He makes sure I have water. He makes sure that I get all the nourishment that I need because nourishment is incredibly important when you have
endometriosis. Right. So when I have events, I have to plan eat plant-based, eat anti-inflammatory, make sure I drink, I stay hydrated and Miguel will run and he literally takes care of me because when I have a flare up, I am completely incapacitated. It is debilitating and I couldn't do it without him. Miguel, it's been a while. I wish you were here in person, man, but but welcome to the program. Thank you so much. Thank you for having me. Of course, man. Like I said, if you were here today,
would have been, would have been more beautiful than just having you on the call. So Miguel, from your side, what's it like watching CG fight through this while you're still trying to show up for the family? You still have a lot of responsibilities.
Yeah, it's been basically a living nightmare watching someone who really taught me a lot about how to
Live life to the fullest.
a room in her energy and just her smile and, you know, she allowed me and taught me to embrace
βgoing from being an introvert to somehow an extrovert and to watch that person, my wife, CG,β
go from that light to just like a flicker, laying in bed, totally succumb to endometriosis. I mean, living through debilitating pain, surgery after surgery, frustrating doctor visited after visit. I mean, we've celebrated, you know, birthdays from my children, you know, while she was weeks at a time in a hospital. You know, it could really feel so crushing to witness that. And at the same time, as, you know, someone, I'm in a leadership position. I have to record
boards. I have to ship mentally to work mode and be present for for my career and more importantly, my children, right, and how do I stay, you know, very level-headed and consistent and,
βand not just wear that on my face for my children. So it's certainly really challenging, butβ
days like this where CG rises like a Phoenix, right, is where it really just helps me keep going when I see how she's able to bounce back as we work through this together. Well, let me just give you an insight. Well, you and the audience for that matter. So when we do these production days, obviously we have the podcast we're doing it now. But we also, we cook, we film, we have photography happening. There's a lot going on in the studio,
but the very first thing when someone arrives is it's the storytelling part of the show,
meaning we're filming, you're on set, and you're talking about yourself. You're talking about what you're cooking, you know, it's, there's a whole process. I've known CG long enough to know about that energy you're talking about. And she does. She's bright, lights up the room. She didn't come in here bright today. Well, let me tell you something. When the camera turned on, you know, it took us a couple of times. But man, she turned it on. You wouldn't, you wouldn't know
what she's going through right now. Object professional, unreal with with the circumstances,
like seriously, I'm staring at your face right now, CG. Amazing. You did terrific today.
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You can actually see what's driving real traffic and revenue into your restaurant. If you're looking for a more measurable way to bring in diners, Frankie's built to do exactly that. They're offering $250 in install purchases to get started. Find the link in the show notes to redeem the offer. And with that, Miguel, this is not like you went to school for this.
βThere's a learning curve. You have to become an advocate for endometriosis and not just the husband.β
How did you do that? Well, it really starts with understanding the role of an advocate. And for me, it's just being someone who can amplify CG's voice. And to do that, I had to really engage in everything related to her doctor's visits, asking questions. Being part of the endometriosis community, going to events, I go to all the conferences. I listen to patients and doctors and scientists because this is an ever-evolving
disease and sort of the treatments around it. So being an advocate, a big part is just listening, absorbing and learning. And not only listening to what's happening sort of in the research
Your partner, what CG needs.
And it's just been a process where, over time, CG and I were just a really great team. We've
always, you know, have great communication. And I just looked at her and I looked at the outcomes
of these decisions to help me sort of fine-tune how I could just be a better advocate for her, as well as, you know, endometriosis as a cause beyond CG and, you know, just looking towards the bigger picture of all those impacted by endometriosis. CG, we've spoken before about this. And you, you've, you've shared with me that when you speak to certain doctors or people in the medical arena, you're dismissed. You're unheard. Not often, they're not, yes, they don't take it seriously.
There's a lot to unpack just with that. Like as a person going through something like this and
βto not even be recognized as it's, it's a real thing. What does Miguel support meant to you in those moments?β
So two, three years ago, I had a gynecological procedure where they were looking for cysts, fibroids, and the next day I started to hemorrhage. I called the doctor and I said, hey, I'm hemorrhaging, which we knew was a risk. She said to go to the ER, went to the ER, my hemoglobin was low, but not low enough so they sent me home. The next day, I went in via ambulance and I tell them
I'm a stage for endopation. I'm hemorrhaging. I just had a gynecological procedure. My doctor
does rounds here. Let's call her. Carl, they admitted me as a GI patient where a suspicion of IBS. I just had a gynecological procedure. I felt like I was in a movie and nobody would listen. Now, this was, Miguel had just flown out for work. I went in at 8 o'clock at night. By the time I woke up in the morning, Miguel was in my bed in the hospital. They had no treatment plan except for colonoscopies and endoscopies, which I've done a handful of both. They would just sedate me under more
pain and that, you know, when Miguel was talking about celebrating our daughter's birthday, it was her seventh birthday. I was admitted in the hospital, but I just, I called that gynecologist every single day. I said there's been a grave mistake. They've admitted me as GI, you know, and nobody returned
βmy call. She never came. She never called me back in Miguel. I think we both thought that was the end.β
I felt like something serious was going on in my body. I felt like something was going to explode in my stomach. I was in the most excruciating pain I've ever felt. And there only course of action was to sedate me. And Miguel called every single enemy to the center of the entire country and trying to get me help. And he's like, I don't care where we have to go. I don't care what I have to do, but I need to get you help. And he saves my life. One of the scariest things that
you conveyed to me. Because if you listen, I'm on the outside looking and people are hearing this, the average person is going to go, what the hell is that? What is that even, right? Partly anybody is familiar with this. And then you have a concern that maybe your daughter is showing signs of the same disease to me. Because I have a ten year old and a seven year old. I don't know what I would even do with myself. For me personally, that would throw me over a bridge.
I'm back in therapy for it. It is, it is a very, very heavy weight to carry, especially because I know what this is like. So then how does that change the urgency behind what you and Miguel are doing in terms of your advocacy? Because you're even out there as an ambassador to Andrew and Dimitriosis at large. You're going through it. Yet you're still there for people who are going through it. You're
βout there amplifying the getting it out there. Just in general, how are you doing this?β
Because until three years ago, I didn't know anyone. I was Miguel and I, we were completely on our own with Dr. Google. We were trying to fake, we had no idea. And once we found ourselves within
The endometriosis community, it was the first time that I met someone else wh...
like. And Miguel and that other husbands who knew what it was like to be in the caregiver position.
βAnd I became an ambassador because I didn't want anyone here in my community. I'm talking aboutβ
you know, Tampa Bay. I didn't want anyone to go through this alone when I feel like now I'm equipped with some tools to help guide or just be, you know, someone that they can vent to that understands it. But now that I'm facing my worst fear of one of my daughters having this. And
one of our daughters is showing signs. I am more, I've gotten into politics, which I never, ever,
you know, I never thought that I would, you know, be interested in lobbying. But now more than ever, I am feeling like the cause is much bigger than me. It's for my kids. And for them, I will do anything. So right now that looks for fighting for more funding, for research and hoping that there's a cure so that they don't have to go the average of seven to 10 years for diagnosis, which is the average. As many people that have diabetes, that's the same amount of people that
have endometriosis. And we don't have, you know, we're so far behind. You mentioned the stats on that for funding wise. Yes. What are the, what's the dollar's versus? Well last year, we had the most money
in research funding that was 26 million. Mail patterned bonus got $150 million dollars.
Now, Congress has set aside 200 million for fiscal year, 2027 for all of women's health. Which means women with endo or agnomyosis, PCOS, breast cancer, Lyme disease, menopause. Anything that has to do with a woman's health, we have 200 million to share. That's for next year. Two years after, Mail patterned bonus got $150 million dollars. So when you put the numbers side by side into perspective, you see how low on the total poll,
you know, endometriosis researchers in regards to priority from, you know, the people who say yes or no, whether we get the money or not. Miguel, what do you make of that? I think that it's just systemic that we have a disparity in how we address women's health issues. There's a lot of information such as periods should be painful. There's lack of empathy. And I think endometriosis is sort of a, you know, microcosm of that where we're seeing women
really being turned away, funding, being denied. And I think it's really stems from overall taboos that we have around women's reproductive systems. Well, let me ask you it this way.
βSo before CG and endometriosis, to now, you must have had this epiphanyβ
or change of mind on women's health at large. Was there such a thing with you, Miguel? Absolutely. I mean, I come from a generation, which I think this mentality still persists where it's sort of like men should talk about women's, you know, reproductive issues or women's health issues. It's sort of like that name of a guy buying tampons at the store for
his girlfriend or wife. It's like it's always sort of put as like a cringe moment, right?
So of course, when with CG was experiencing issues, for me, one, I just want to turn away. I want to have anything to do with it because I sort of taught to cringe at that topic. And also, I've had these very inaccurate ideas of like, what should should be going through,
βwhat should she not, right? And I think those are kind of like the disparities that exist today,β
where as men, you know, when it comes to, you know, Daria say nudity, we're all, you know, we're like, yeah, show me in 4K, but when it comes to women's health issues, it's like, no, sorry, I can't hear this. Walk and talk media is proudly supported by rack porcelain USA, creating durable, beautifully designed tableware for chefs and hospitality professionals. Learn more at rack porcelain.com.
Picture this, 1991, you know, 17, 16 or 17 year old Carl goes to the store with Girlfriend. And Girlfriend says, hey, I have to get tampons. And I'm like, do I really have to be here for this,
Right?
And I said, no, no, that's fine. Sure, okay, whatever. So we walk over to the aisle,
βand she proceeded to grab a handful, like I almost had been like five or six boxes,β
tossed them to me and hauled ass and ran. So all of the boxes, all of the whole things, a couple, a couple, a few people, and I'm just standing there with like, you know, tampon boxes in my hand, and she had totally led. Anyway, I just unlocked a memory, out of this conversation, and I was mortified. I was absolutely mortified, I threw them down, and then I proceeded to all ass. And I just, you know, I just laughed. I was, I'm out of here. And so just, I'm putting the
exclamation point, Miguel, on what you just said. And it is the absolute truth, because you and I are,
you know, I don't know how different an age, but I share your, I share your opinion. And this is even learning for me now, you know, just in the conversations with with CG. In hospitality, people are conditioned to push through pain. CG, what do you wish this industry understood about, invisible illness? Well, I am, I would all start pushing through pain. That is one thing I can say, and I will say that's the more I do it, the worse I get. And so it's a problem. I think that
βawareness is key. That's how we make change. Maybe you don't know something's happening.β
How are you going to know how to fix it? But we do need to make accommodations for the hospitality industry. And I mean, there's, that's a lot to unpack. And I don't know how to solve that problem. Miguel, do you have something to weigh in on here? I do. And I think this goes back to a lot of the misinformation that I was speaking to earlier on when it comes to, for example, that periods are painful or should be painful. So, you know, there's, again, lack of empathy
and understanding. So, there's one thing in hospitality when you're working through being exhausted, or you're banged up, got some injuries, right? I think that's one thing. But when you have
βdebilitating pain that knocks you off your feet. I mean, have you ever seen a box or get a lever shot?β
Right? I mean, they just curl into fetal position. Andometriosis is just like being hit and deliver, you know, every other man in it for days on end. Right? It's, it's a debilitating pain. And, and I think, overall, it doesn't matter if there's someone in a hospitality or someone working at an office who's going through it. Right now, there's no sort of empathy or even understanding or what that person's going through. Right? So, it goes well beyond working through
pain. I think there's the type of pain that just cripples you. And we need to spread more awareness that this exists. It's not normal. And we need to have a support system around it to make sure that people are seen and heard. In other countries, it's classified as debilitating.
So, if I'm listening to this program right now, never heard of this before. The awareness factor
is going to be too full. One is going to be, hey, the pain levels are unreal. Have some sympathy, have some understanding for it. And two, there isn't any funding really to speak of for this disease in the capacity that which people actually have it. So, not only is they're not funding, let me put it to you this way. Endometriosis is listed as one of the top 20 most painful diseases. Some have said that it is as painful as a heart attack and it is more painful than kidney stones.
Now, imagine a disease that mimics cancer spreads all over your body, but not only is there not research funding, there's no insurance coverage either. So, now, we have a bigger problem. More than one-in-10 women are people born with a uterus experience andometriosis. Only the people that can afford to pay for surgery, excision surgery out of pocket can access health care. The longer you go without it, the worse it gets.
I'm preparing for surgery number five and this one's going to be relatively easy because I'm hoping, I mean, not God would. But, you know, I just had his direct to me three years ago,
This is something that can only be diagnosed currently through exploratory su...
you have to be desperate enough to not have any answers and just be the cut me open and find out what's going on, right? The insurance will cover laparoscopic exploratory surgery with a don't cover
βexcision surgery. Andometriosis is like a weed you need to cut out the roots. Otherwise,β
it'll just continue to grow and spread. Can I add something to that response? Certainly. So, you know, given the fact that there's a seven to 10-year gap in diagnosing endode and that to truly diagnose it, you need to use imaging or actually like laparoscopic imaging.
Certainly, well, you know, you essentially need surgery. We currently know the 10 percent of
women worldwide, right? Suffer for endometriosis. Given the lack of of diagnosis of this, we're just scratching the surface, right? It could be several magnitudes bigger, right? And as far as cost our concern, you know, just for CG this year, I could anticipate somewhere in the 20-point dollar range to treat endode. And that's because this is my second excision surgery. My first excision surgery was everything set and done was probably close to $40,000.
So, if you were going to tell somebody who either thinks they may have this or just found out about it or whatever the circumstance is, what's the advice for somebody to navigate the situation? This session of Walk and Talk Media is made possible by citrus America, delivering fresh, Florida citrus and juice solutions to food service professionals nationwide. Learn more at citrusamΓ©rica.com. Get involved, get informed, make noise, it's the only way we can make change.
Find your community. There are some programs that I heard that NYU now has the program where the surgeons banded together and hit up the insurance agencies that dealt with the hospital there. And so they are covering, they've figured out a way to have the excision surgery covered,
βbut you have to go to NYU for that. So, more people are getting involved. And honestly,β
I feel like if the insurance starts to cover it, more doctors will be interested in studying it
and learning about it. I've seen a drastic shift. I mean, I think the first and no conference we
went to, there might have been like 40 people. This last when we went to, there was over a hundred and it was sold out. And then we had people streaming in from all over the world. So, I've seen the growth in the research in the doctors interest to, I've seen more doctors show up to these things. But that's what it's going to take. It's going to take talking about it and getting people interested in wanting to help people who have it, even if they don't have it. And that's my hope. My hope
is that by the time, you know, my daughter really needs to help. Help will be available to her insurance coverage. You'll be available for her surgeries. I mean, imagine a man like Miguel, he's got enough on his shoulders. He's got work. He's got three kids. He's got a chronically ill wife. You know, we've got a house in two cats at a dog. You know, on top of that, we've got surgeries that we have to pay for at a pocket. And right now, it's just mine.
We've got three girls and they are 70 percent more likely to have endo because I have endo,
which is the fact I didn't learn until two years ago. So, what are the odds that all three of them come out of this unscathed? They're low. So, it's a big burden. It's a big burden and it's not fair. Excision surgery should be available to everyone. Today's conversation is serious. Today's cooking was comforting. Family driven. In your heart, where do you hope this message lands from the food and from this conversation? My hope is that leadership, you know, and leadership in this
country in our states, right, individually, take more of an interest in helping us. But also,
βI think what I would love for people to take away from this is I feel like a lot of ears have closedβ
at endometriosis because initially, people believed that what would cure endo would be birth control. And when you start talking about birth control in young girls, that turns a lot of people off. And now we know more. We know that, you know, hormone therapy is just a bandaid. It's helped me for a year. I mean, I've been on birth control for a year. I had a history rectumy,
It helped me.
to turn away from the old rhetoric and realize this is an entire body disease. This affects
the whole body. And yes, it affects reproduction, but it affects quality of life for everyone, for the husbands, for the families, for the kids, for the wives, every one. Hey, Siege, let me just add here that, you know, not only is food comforting and nourishing, but we know it has a positive impact on endo through combating inflammation. So not only is this food bringing us together and giving us an opportunity to talk about things like endo,
but there's also hope, as we continue to learn, through foods, we can actually improve
βthe symptoms of endo, right? And I think that is one of those synergies bringing food,β
endo, and hope together. Well, listen, if I'm hearing all of this, and I can't test because the dish that you can dish that you did today is such a home meal and comforting. Miguel, what you just said, that is the explanation point on this whole thing. Well done, man. It's how Jay is amazing. I really believe today was eye-opening, and I believe a lot of people
who have never heard of this now, well, now they have. I'm hoping that whatever it is that
can be had from, you know, being on the program, discussing this, happens, and in spite of everything,
βand you said you're going to be off a couple of months, few months, whatever. We're going to beβ
praying for you in a family number one, and number two, this has to get better before June 8th for 200th episode of Celebration. Man, that's going to be great, by the way. CJ, Miguel, you guys really are great people. Number one, number two, whatever you need from us, and all of this, you let us know because we got your back. What do you want to say and how do we find you, CJ? Well, you find me through domestic gourmet,
but if you are someone, or you know someone battling enemy trio says the enemy trio says foundation of America, aka endo found is available with all the resources and community that you need. What's your socials? Domestic gourmet everywhere. I'm trademarked. I love that. All right, I thank you both for being on the show today, John. I want to see the pictures. I want to see what's going on. Can we get those out? Mods rapid, or what? I mean,
I'm snapping the fingers. I'm looking for them. Listen, we're going to put this out. This is this is out tomorrow Friday. Okay, this is not something that's going to wait. All right, we are out.
βMarketing is hard. But I'll tell you a little secret. It doesn't have to be. Let me pointβ
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