The Healing IS In The BLOOD

Episode 239 — The Healing IS In The BLOOD

January 16, 202535 min read

Guest: Tapley Holland • Date: January 16, 2025

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Episode Overview

Tapley Holland shares how TruDose harnesses the body’s platelets to resolve cellular issues, transforming outcomes for children with autism and PANS/PANDAS.


About Tapley Holland

Tapley Holland is the creator of the TruDOSE™ Technology, a patented intelligent software testing platform that solved the longstanding dosing inaccuracy problem within the field of regenerative medicine. This technology led to uncovering the healing benefits of infusing dose-specific platelets back into the bloodstream, otherwise known as TruDOSE™ IV platelet therapy. Since 2018, the TruDOSE technology and IV therapy have treated, and reversed, thousands of patients with unsolvable symptoms and disease conditions.

https://trudose.com/


You’ll Discover

  • What is PRP? (4:36)

  • The Importance of the CDR (9:12)

  • A Very Misunderstood Opportunity (10:46)

  • Why Getting UNSTUCK Is Key (15:47)

  • How the TruDose Process Works (22:16)

  • Key Sequencing Considerations (25:53)

  • How Patients And Caregivers Both Benefit (32:36)

Referenced in This Episode


Full Transcript

Tapley Holland | 00:00

The neurological effects of this treatment is pretty remarkable. And if you look what's inside the platelet, it makes complete logical sense. But essentially, the way that patients have described this thousands of times without having any type of context is they say, it feels like it's rewiring my brain. And if you think about it, that makes complete sense. The brain gets injured. The brain has to develop a workaround. But the original connection is what it wants. When it has the ability to restore that. That would make complete sense of that. It feels like my brain's being rewired. These are things that change dramatically. Handwriting. Affectionate, you know, being able to say I love you. It's not uncommon for an autistic kid who's nonverbal to be verbal before they leave the parking lot at a doctor's office.

Cass Arcuri | 00:48

Want to truly be the best parent you can be and help your child thrive after their autism diagnosis? This podcast is for all in parents like you who know more is possible for your child.

Len Arcuri | 00:59

With each episode, we reveal a secret that empowers you to be the parent your child needs now, saving you time, energy, and money, and helping you focus on what truly matters most, And I'm Len.

Len Arcuri | 01:09

Your child.

Cass Arcuri | 01:10

I'm Cass. Welcome to Autism Parenting Secrets.

Len Arcuri | 01:26

Hello and welcome to Autism Parenting Secrets. It's Len, and I am at the Documenting Hope Conference 2024 in Orlando, Florida. There are some amazing speakers and presenters, and I have one with me now. Tapley Holland is here to explain a newer or novel, and he'll explain this approach, which may not be on your radar. And so, again, in the interest of explaining different paths and ways that you could perhaps help your child and really to unearth the root cause of what might be going on with them, This discussion will absolutely be something that I think you'll be hearing for the first time.

So with that, I'll ask Tapley to explain more about what brought you here to this conference and what drove you to create Trudos, a service that can help a lot of families.

Tapley Holland | 02:11

So my background... Has, well, for almost the past 20 years, has been in stem cells. And people always ask, what was my specialty? It's like, you know, I always tell people that I have a superpower for a photographic memory.

So when I got in the field back in 2004 and 2005, it turns out that I could, I understood medical literature. I can have it on recall, which may be pretty effective in the sales field.

And then over time I became what? You know, a subject expert that they would throw into the field. And so I got to see firsthand, you know, with stem cells, why these therapies work for a lot of applications. But why did it not work? That is the problem right there. We know that inherently we were created with this ability to heal ourselves, but why have we yet to unearth...

You know, to do it consistently or the extent of what these treatments can treat. Right. It's because there is a dosing and accuracy problem. This is something that's been in the literature now for the probably the past 15 years, and they just haven't put their finger on it to call it dosing up until about. The past maybe year or so.

Len Arcuri | 03:18

Ago. So stem cells have been around for a while. And as a modality, it can be helpful. And a lot of times it can't be. And you're saying that basically the missing variable or the key is dosing?

Tapley Holland | 03:30

Yes. And so let me explain that. Let's pretend that everybody...

You know, let's just say both you and I have a knee issue and I go to the doctor to get platelet-rich plasma, right? Which everybody hopefully is familiar with that. What they would do for the past five, decades is you and I would walk in, we would have a volume of blood drawn from our arm. Let's say it's 30 mils of blood. 30 for me, 30 from you. Let's say there's 10 more people in here. There's 30 mils of blood drawn from everybody in this room. They'll separate the components, give us back the good stuff back into our knee. And so the question I asked was, well, does it make sense that we do the same thing to everybody? And should we all have the same outcome result? And No one's really even phrased it that way. I just simply phrase it that way and use software to figure that problem out.

Len Arcuri | 04:24

Got it. So all these people are using their own blood, right? And they're injecting their own blood in a different part of the body. Right.

So, and could you explain for people who aren't from like platelet rich, talk about platelets.

Tapley Holland | 04:34

Yeah. So platelet rich plasma has been around for, you know, actually almost a century. If you just hear it described, there's thousands of articles on its safety and efficacy. There's literally every use you can think about it.

You know, primarily it's been popularized with Your knee applications, hair applications at the med spa, these are all applications known to be site-specific. So if there's a problem in your knee, you inject the knee. If you want your hair to grow, inject the hair. And actually, when I created Trudos, which I'll get into that. My background was in stem cells. But when I started and developed the technology, I said, we cannot start with stem cells because We have to start with the most basic thing that people can understand, which is my blood. I understand my blood. It's simple to understand. Versus stem cells, it's just, you know, it's that field where we're still...

You know, researching what is the magic stem cell. That can help us, right?

So I said we need to start with blood and solve that problem first. With the Trudos product that I created. And essentially, instead of you and I walking into an office and getting the same amount of blood drawn, what TruDose does is that you would walk in and have a few drops of your blood analyzed like from a finger stick and then it would be measured in about five minutes and that measurement goes into the software which I created. And it uses that plated measurement to bounce it against all the analytics in the back end that determine healing and not healing. Just consider it lots of lab data on the back end, all the things that could impact healing and non-healing. I just crammed them into one thing that's easily measurable, which is a plate lookout.

Len Arcuri | 06:15

And the key there being to figure out what is that therapeutic dose that strikes that balance, not too little, not too much. There is a sweet spot.

Tapley Holland | 06:25

What you just said right there is Perfect. That's exactly the nail on the head. And that is the case. Whatever that dose response is going to determine you know, do I need, you know, 35 mils of blood from you for the knee. You might need 235 mils of blood for me. We're both going to get the same knee healing dose, but our biology is different. It requires a different...

You know, blood draw in this case. And so my software figured out the dose response relationship to many therapies.

So when I started with this, it was, I just wanted to start with things that people could understand, which is make my hair grow and make my knee feel better. Which we solve that problem. If you do the right dose, there's no need to have three and four or five injections to have some benefit.

Sometimes there's no benefit. Sometimes there is a benefit. If you do the right dose for the hair or the knee. It's typically a one and done. Type of injection, you'll want to come back.

So there's a, yeah, what's the dose? What's the healing dose? What is it for my condition? And what is it for me? Those are all things you need to know. What changed my world? And my whole everything was when my fifth child was born. We took him to the doctor. He got his two-year checkup shots. That night he screamed through the night. I woke up the next morning and he wasn't the same kid. And when we finally got down to what was causing it, you know, it was, He changed that day, right? When he got his shots.

So you.

Len Arcuri | 08:03

For him, that was a tipping point for.

Tapley Holland | 08:05

That was the point. He was perfectly normal. He had four other brothers and sisters. He could walk and talk. He was... Advancing normal. And caused a lot of destruction everywhere, right?

Yeah. So for.

Len Arcuri | 08:20

Me... It's too familiar of a story. For our family, that was the case with our son, Rye, who's here at this conference with me. And for many of our listeners, it's a very similar.

Tapley Holland | 08:30

Refrain. It's... It's one you hear too much. Two years old, never the same kid again.

So something has to change with that. For me, it's my wife researching was saying, well, Help me, you know, in these Facebook groups to basically self-diagnose how do we heal our son? And she would always bounce the questions for stem cells off me. And obviously there are things that I would logically say, yeah, that would make sense. I would go down there and do that, sure. But... For me, when you, here's the thing about stem cells at a high level, when you have an autistic child, a pans and pandas child, an infectious disease, What happens to your cells is they go into this, what's called the danger response. The cell danger response, what that is that the cells in the body, they can't distinguish if I punched you in the arm. Whether that's a virus, a bacteria, or a punch in the arm. Every cell in the body goes into a mode of basically survival. They downregulate oxygen production and they throw ATP in the bloodstream.

So they create a scenario where they are non-opportunistic. Just in case, well, what does the virus want to do? It's going to want to take over an energy source. What is a bacteria going to want to do?

So it's basically a defense mode. You know, it did not make sense to me. To give stem cells which would you put them into a body They need help. They need help. Where's the problem? What do you want me to turn into? What caused this? Where are we going? There's all types of communication that has to happen. Educate me? That's a great scenario when you have a body that's not in the danger response. When you put that into the body where there's a virus in there or bacteria or just metabolic dysfunction, That to me did not make any sense at all.

So. I was basically searching what would logically make sense, what could help with pathogen load, what could help with metabolic dysfunction, what could heal his brain, what can cause vascularity to reform. Basically, I memorized all the literature on platelets. Because It comes back to this. The platelets in our bloodstream are just completely misunderstood. As far as their importance. And what they're doing in the body, what the responsibility is. And at the heart of the true dose treatment, which now the IV treatment. Is essentially using your body's platelets to put back into you at the right dose. To basically go into all these problems that are unresolved in these inflammatory feedback loops. Give the cells what they need, Because that's what the platelets are doing. What do you need? You need energy? Do you need mitochondrial support? Do you need heat shock proteins? What do you need? Let me help you get out of that response so you can complete that repair loop. That immune loop that you couldn't complete. Essentially, it's reversing a lot of these symptoms. That are with the autism and pans and pandas.

Len Arcuri | 11:39

And it really is the concept of You're tapping your body's natural ability to heal, and in this case, it's stuck, and you're using the body's own platelets. To basically help the body get unstuck and to do the repair that is necessary in that particular area. Is that a fair characterization?

Tapley Holland | 11:58

That is completely accurate. And what, it's kind of revealing to people. Is that, you know, when you have this type of overnight destruction, let's say with shots, or if you have Lyme disease that you've acquired over.

You know, a lifetime of, When I was two, I couldn't drain in my ears, so I got overuse of antibiotics, which led to basically vitiligo when I was five, which led to hormone dysregulation as a teenage girl, which led to Crohn's disease in my 20s. You know, ischemic ovarian syndrome in my 30s. These are all things I was collecting in my data from people's journals to figure out how the body basically arose over time. And Because patients did not, they found, when I was doing this in 2018, they found basically objective measurement scales insulting. Because their pain's at a 25, and this scale only goes to a 10.

So I started collecting journals. And so if you see how the body erodes, it paints a clear picture of how the body can reverse backwards if you put this treatment back into it. And that's essentially what's happening.

Len Arcuri | 13:02

That's amazing. So now you've had this theory, you developed your software.

So what have you seen? Particularly with whether it's autism or just kids with developmental challenges in terms of what might be the most effective thing for a parent to do is about what gets to the root cause.

So in this case, as you're thinking about Trudos and what you've seen from clients up until now, how could you help a listener understand Trudos? How does this, what is the root cause? Assuming it wasn't their wellness visit or there was some other condition, how would you characterize what's the root cause that this therapy addresses.

Tapley Holland | 13:40

So, I give this talk about three to four times a week with patients that are interested, right? And the one thing that. That without any medical background that I've come to understand is that the body does not recognize disease. It recognizes unresolved problems at the cellular level that are stuck. Right. And those things that are stuck lead to another problem. And those things that are stuck, the cumulative leads to a symptom. And those symptoms bucketed together are categorized as a disease. And that's how you and I communicate.

You know, I have this condition or that disease.

Len Arcuri | 14:14

It's a lousy way to communicate, but that is the way most people communicate. Yes.

Tapley Holland | 14:18

The way the body sees it is that I don't understand disease condition. I understand I have problems I have yet to fix or I don't have the resources to fix. If I can reframe your thinking to go like that, and you can have the play that's going in there. And restart and essentially reboot The body's repair and use system. And take a look at it and say, what do I need to fix first? What is... The underlying causation of these chain of events that I need to fix in the sequential order that only the body knows. How do I do that? That's the way you should look at.

Len Arcuri | 14:54

This. So what you just said then, in my mind, from a root cause standpoint, the root cause is that the body's repair and immune systems are stuck. Correct.

Like that's a way of looking at it. That's at the root. If those systems aren't working, you know, it's going to have a huge downstream implications across a number of areas.

So if parents are looking at it from that perspective...

Tapley Holland | 15:15

Yes, them to be connected.

Len Arcuri | 15:16

Those processes, for whatever reason, we could talk about what may have caused Absolutely.

Tapley Holland | 15:20

And that's a whole other talk, right?

Len Arcuri | 15:23

But if we just accept that that's the core issue that needs to be addressed, that's where this comes in, where, again, it's using... The body's natural ability to help with getting that system unstuck or to give it just what it needs to function however you want to look.

Tapley Holland | 15:41

At it. Let's just leave it with kids. When you do that, the kid's body was designed to thrive. I can now see that looking at thousands of growth charts and wondering My dad said I was supposed to be 6'4". Why was that never six four is because when I'm constantly under you know, inflammatory assault. Bye. Environment, whatever. That the body has to focus energy there and not grow. And so when you Focus energy on getting things unstuck. Guess what happens to kids' growth charts? They surpass where they're supposed to be. They they're I've yet to meet. I've yet to meet a kid. Our child or someone in high school have the best academic year. That they've ever had.

So the brain, the neurological effects of this treatment is pretty remarkable. And if you look what's inside the platelet, it makes complete logical sense. But essentially, the way that patients have described this thousands of times without having any... High clues. Context Is they say it feels like it's rewiring my brain. And if you think about it, that makes complete sense. The brain gets injured. The brain has to develop a workaround. But the original connection is what it wants. When it has the ability to restore that. That would make complete sense of that. It feels like my brain's being rewired. These are things that change dramatically. Handwriting. Affectionate, you know, being able to say, I love you. It's not uncommon for an autistic kid who's nonverbal to be verbal before they leave the parking lot at a doctor's office. Things that are in that toe walking phase. I've now come to see that toe walking is not a sensory thing to me. It's a fight or flight thing. Of wanting to cut, you know, to protect myself. But when you give this treatment, within the first 30 minutes over the course of the next three days. You start ambulating better. All these neurological things just start repairing itself. I would say one of the most powerful things is the emotional distress response. That people don't realize that trauma, emotional things, a kid treating with autism for 10 straight years there's actually trauma that's associated with them. Going through that experience. Their cells are in that danger response when you give this treatment. It's basically shifting that sympathetic fight or flight response out of them. And what do you see? It's pretty powerful. Whether it's Lyme disease or autism, you typically see people just emotionally crying right then and there. Again, they become more affectionate.

Len Arcuri | 18:27

Right after the.

Tapley Holland | 18:28

Trip? All the time. Wow. All the time. And they don't know why they're crying. They don't look. We get this ability where we can widen the hole through life with a chronic disease, but the body knows better. And so Especially with adults, they're a lot more telltale than a kid, but adults all the time, I would say a little over 50%. Will just spontaneously cry. It's this release. It's the sign of hope. It's just relaxing of the body. There's no. Chemically, there's shifts in cortisol. There's shifts in dopamine. There's shifts in serotonin.

And then if you look inside the playlist, what's it carrying? 99% of our body's entire payload is serotonin. If you look at that we have unresolved problems that we have yet to fix. And if you think of playlists as that, then it starts to make sense. And that's why I was telling you that healing is in the blood.

Len Arcuri | 19:25

Yeah. Yeah, that's the secret of this episode, by the way. I didn't start the episode with that, but yes, the healing is in the blood, which is a very intriguing concept. Most parents aren't thinking about the blood in that way, particularly if they're running labs for their child. They might do a CBC panel and see a platelet count, but nobody thinks anything of it. Okay.

Tapley Holland | 19:44

I'm glad you brought that up because I was doing a talk at a Lyme conference in front of a lot of critical eyes, very smart doctors. And I made the comment that I said, listen, I've seen thousands of these play-to-the-accounts. I can pretty much predict what's or guess what's wrong with you within reason. What's wrong with you? And one of the PhDs actually challenged me on it afterwards, and I guessed it right. And I showed a slide. I said, you know, I'm not making this up.

And then I showed a slide that basically said, These results summarize and conclude that the use of a platelet count as a biomarker for autism spectrum disorder is a valid point. So showing a slide that basically validated, you know, this is 2023. Things that I've been seeing, you know, I guess clinically. And through our providers eyes using the TruDose. Over the past seven years.

So... The evidence as to why this is doing it just hasn't caught up to what we've been seeing.

So.

Len Arcuri | 20:48

How many years have you been actually with this particular approach that you have now with the software and the like, how many years have you been doing this.

Tapley Holland | 20:57

Since 2018? Okay. It wasn't the right time to tell people in the world what I was seeing and what was happening, that the client wasn't right. Got to sleep at that.-

And then, To me, it's kind of like how we found a lot of things post-COVID. Organically through social media. And for me, Everybody was saying you have to publish, and there's a number of studies we could publish right now that would be landmark. Why did I not do that? It's because I feel that the patients need to be informed and empowered And this treatment, which was I can't take a lot of credit. I take half credit. The other credit was probably from the guy above. That this is something that patients had to latch onto. And if this is going to survive, then I need to be reliant on them because we're talking about something that's already inside of you. There's an endless supply of it. It's relatively inexpensive that we've made sure that all our providers Don't charge. Crazy fees. Yep. And we've done that on purpose.

Cause I did this to help people. The trick is, if you take the software away, then you're back in the Guess not. Guess not.

Yeah.

Len Arcuri | 22:09

Yep. So with that, I mean, there's so much that's very exciting about what you're putting out there. In terms of what this would look like for a parent if they went through it, you're so basically, or is it where there are certain providers that have your... Process that Trudeau's and that they would like parents would go to someone local who does this or would they come down you're based in Texas right would that work if they want to go down this Although this could totally benefit any person.

Tapley Holland | 22:33

I'm glad you asked that. How road? No, I'm glad you asked that because we're talking about kids and not all of our providers are.

Len Arcuri | 22:46

100%.

Tapley Holland | 22:47

There's, I mean. We could go on all day what this does for Lyme disease and chronic fatigue and lupus. And I don't want to talk about other things that there's certain words you can't talk about, but I can show you data that it's not there anymore. Just think of that buzzword. Which is one I don't talk about, but... Some of our providers, they're specialized in what they do. There's only a few of them that They specialize in kids. That's on our website. And I would encourage anybody who's listening to who's doing this for a kid to only go to those providers who treat kids. Because. When you're dealing with the infectiously loaded kid of today, Their true dose is great. Okay. You need to have, there needs to be prep work. The gut work, you know, IV nutrition, there needs to be follow-up. Kids are just different.

And then part of my talk here to parents is what modalities do I use after this? Right? And the providers who specifically treat kids They know that they know the other ones. If you just go down the street and you just like, because it's in close proximity of you. I would recommend you not doing that. Because you'll have a great outcome. Great experience and the second treatment because of what this does to let's say pans and pandas kids.

You know, They'll say there might be a lot of Herxine in the second treatment. You need to be with a pediatric provider who knows what to do with that. Okay.

Len Arcuri | 24:24

So that's important consideration. And it sounds like this, like with a lot of interventions that a parent might do, the more that you have going in a strong foundation that's laid with your child, and then the more that afterwards, so in other words, if the diet's crap, or if there's other problems, toxins in the environment, the more you can have a cleaner environment will just enable something like this to even have more of a positive.

Tapley Holland | 24:47

Impact. Yeah, there's two ways that a parent or provider really should look at this. There's obviously those who've done a lot of work and who know the biomedical world, right? There's a lot of those who are just getting into this.

So there's two ways to look at this. When you're dealing with multivariable diseases, you still don't know where to start. And a lot of times... A lot of times providers will use TrueDose as a way to kind of start off treatment to wipe a lot of warning lights off the dashboard and to know exactly where to go now. That's even if you've done a lot of work. Obviously, that does not diminish Clean gut, clean everything, but it doesn't mean that you need to do six months of inflammatory diet modification.

Yeah. Right. It doesn't mean that. I would say that the one thing that I would I don't know if recommends the word, but when you're, when you do this treatment, there's certain things that you probably, you can't take before. A certain time period, you got to lay out things after.

And then depending on where your child is on, let's say their metabolic function, There's certain treatments you just should not do until they're until they become more functional. Like hyperbaric. Great treatment. No one would debate that. Doing this on the heels of Trudos when you have pans and pandas. You're just going to keep yourself in constant and healing mode and not have the appropriate recovery. Yep. Right. Eve. Great treatment. Wouldn't debate it. It's powerful. On the heels of Trudeau's. Do something gender like ozone. Once you get the body more functional, They booted the stronger counterpart, which would be eBoot.

So if you think about it like that... You know, as far as what to do. If you have a mindset of Don't stack treatments. When the body is dysfunctional, keep the treatments just very, soft and delicate, if you will.

And then as the body becomes more in control, then you can expand out to more stimulating treatments.

Len Arcuri | 26:52

Yeah, there's no bonus points for doing too much at once. So if this sounds like with this particular treatment, there's some do's and don'ts in terms of what would make sense, what may make sense to park and maybe do down the road. I.

Tapley Holland | 27:05

Would say it's... The great thing about Trudos is that there's a lot of treatments that can progression of a disease. There's nothing that I know that can reverse damage. It's been done. This is the one thing that becomes the hub of the spokes of all the other treatment modalities to know which one to do and when to do it. And at what frequency? And I think that's probably the great thing about it.

Len Arcuri | 27:27

Fascinating. Yeah, no, I think, well, let me just continue the thought process on parents looking to do this. Let's say they have a younger child. Who perhaps has some health crash, something that has happened that resulted in them being diagnosed with autism or some other condition, if they went down this road, found a practitioner who works with kids, I'm guessing what it entails, the child would need to be able to have their blood drawn, right? At least be, I'm guessing, of a certain age and be able to have that done. And is it a one and done or is it a...

You know, how frequently would the – because, I mean, with my son, blood draws were a nightmare early on. He's great with it now, but, you know, back then it was a real challenge. I'm sure a lot of parents are listening saying, my kid's not going to sit for a.

Tapley Holland | 28:16

Blood draw. That's, you know, that is – that's a great – you bring up two points that are actually great points with kids, right?

Yeah. So, you know, it's a blood draw at the very simplest level. It's just that. But obviously, that can be a challenge.

So, again, going to a pediatric, someone who knows what to do. Is advisable.

Len Arcuri | 28:36

- The right phlebotomist is everything.

Tapley Holland | 28:38

- my gosh. And so they always, they have the tips and the tricks to kind of, you know, they know what they're doing. As far as how many treatments, what we've learned. Is that you need at least four of these. And commit to four. I would not do this just to do it one time.

Len Arcuri | 28:59

Over how long of a period of.

Tapley Holland | 29:00

Time? Every eight to 12 weeks.

So every eight to 12 weeks, do one of these. Why? Because at about the 8 to 12 week mark, and this is some of the data, is that that's when the body at the cellular level And at the organ level, things are metabolically changed and imprinted and permanently fixed. You have a new homeostatic normal. Your novel might not be as far as someone else's because they might've done more work, but you'll eventually get there.-

So every eight to 12 weeks and in between there, you're doing other support modalities to keep it going. And then, so you're looking at four. Why? Because that's the level. Or that's Lyme, it's Lupus. It's autism that you the likelihood of you metabolically relapsing back to where you were is greatly diminished. You simply just put enough distance between healing distance between you and where you were, You're not going back. Assuming you're doing all the right things. Right.

So and what we found is about 84 percent of people just keep doing this. And I think we had to ask them why. It's because their medical monthly spend has dramatically changed. Dramat. And their supplement The bill has dramatically changed that they can now budget for this very easily and they see this as you know, preventative. Let's say I got where I wanted to get. Yep. Now I'm doing it for preventative. Let's say you have Parkinson's and you're just... You're on the fifth treatment. I can show you the data. The more you do, the better you keep getting. It's really as simple as that.

Len Arcuri | 30:48

Amazing. And so I'm guessing for pretty much any condition, whatever it is. This can have some benefit. I know it's a huge thing, but like we're talking about autism and.

Tapley Holland | 30:58

Lyme. No, it's funny because my kids, now that they have access to this, right?

I mean, They are bugging me because, you know, I have one of my. Kids that's blogging me because we're coming up in the Christmas break and she wants to get a tune up. Because she knew she was self-aware enough to know That, you know, she was struggling with reading. She was below grade level, you know, and she, I said, we're going to get this now. The following spring, she took the same Texas assessment test and went from below level to master it. We didn't do any type of intervention. She wasn't on any type of program.

So my point is that I still do this because I travel a lot. I can't get away from life. I still have emotional stress and trauma with my lifestyle and the kids and crazy life that you're not getting away from that. You're not getting away from anything post-COVID world.

So I do this to, I don't get sick. I don't get sick. And I basically my it keeps my brain sharp.

So that's the way you should look at it at some point when you've achieved what you wanted to achieve.

Len Arcuri | 32:06

Right. So for a condition four times, eight to 12 weeks apart, but you're saying a lot of people who do that. We'll continue on just in terms of the ongoing benefits that they see, but in terms of addressing some underlying issue, it's about four visits, eight to 12 weeks apart.

So we're looking at like about a year.

Tapley Holland | 32:27

Yeah. And if you look at the cost of going back, you know, listening to patients and collecting this data and this marketing data, the. The cost of going back to where they were It's too costly. They spent too much of their time there. Below one of the pieces of data I collected was how long did you spend dealing with this condition. On average, autism is about 70% of the kid's life. Lyme disease, it's about 30% of the life, a little over 34%.

So you think of lost Finances, lost opportunities, lost relationships. Family dynamics. I would say one of the most Humbling things that I've seen about this is that if you collect patient's data, that's healing is one thing. If you collect the data from the caregiver and the family, The impact that it has on them is probably more profound because they get their life back. They can go back to work. They don't have to worry about taking care of this or that. They can now go get The dynamics change. And so I think that it heals a lot more than just the person's physical body. And I think that's probably the most humbling thing about it.

Len Arcuri | 33:40

That's wonderful. So one question I know that most people who are listening want me to ask is, How is your son now? If you were the.

Tapley Holland | 33:50

Inspiration. Everybody wants to.

Well, I would say that he's no longer receiving any services. He just got another treatment about Two weeks ago? And I'll leave you with this. I was FaceTiming him because I was at a conference and it was at nighttime. And it was, I don't know, November 4th. What he told me was this.

Yeah, hey, Dad. "Yeah, I think I'm really smart now." "Why?" He says, "Well, because everybody was doing all the math facts and times tables and nobody was getting them and I got every one of them super fast." Everybody was asking me, coming up to me afterwards, how was I doing it? And he said, I was just telling them because I watch a lot of number blocks. But he said, I can tell since Halloween that I've gotten a lot smarter. Now take that comment. From an eight-year-old. From an eight-year-old. How aware do you have to be? To know. That you're getting smarter. And that you know you're getting smarter. In looking at his handwriting, it's not, it's dramatic. His coloring is dramatically improved. His. Compliance is not the word, but you know, the, you know, Hey, you can't have that. No, we can't buy that. It's like, all right, there's no fuss. There's no tussle. It's just, all right, dad. And there's... It's like kids grow up. And... They assimilate better, the affectionate. He's an affectionate kid, but he's just... More affectionate, more aware. More a lot of things So I would say I'm a little critical. I would say that he's almost healed, but you know, Not yet. But definitely, he's not even remotely close to where we started.

Len Arcuri | 35:43

Right. It's all about measuring backwards for sure. And it sounds like he's so young. But it sounds like, yeah, he reminds me in many ways of my son as you're talking about him.

So I'm excited for you and your family, excited for what you're doing. I'm delighted I got to learn more about this because I do have a client who has been doing Trudeau's and who has only given positive feedback. And she's the one who kept saying, I needed to talk to you.

So I'm so excited we were able to do this at the conference. There'll be links in the show notes, but otherwise, Tappy, tell everyone where they can go specifically for more information and to find a T-R-U-D-O-S-E dot.

Tapley Holland | 36:20

Provider. Yeah, go to Trudos.com. A lot of patients are just Google search Trudos. There's com. Dot com, T-R-U-D-O-S-E dot com. Go to that website, go to the providers, and we have, I think, close to 53. We're bringing on another 30 or so in the next 90 days. We just haven't. Since we started telling people about this last October, it's kind of been... The word of mouth explosion and which is great. Hopefully in these times we're going to enter into now, we can hopefully have a lot more people, but, or you can Google search Trudos. And I would encourage anybody to listen to the testimonials. I would listen to people who are in your condition. Do not take my word for it. And now there's tons of videos out there. And if it speaks to you.

You know, make a decision.

Len Arcuri | 37:16

All right. Well, now with this episode. It's much more clearly laid out. And again, I appreciate for taking the time to explain this to our audience and just excited for what you're bringing to these families.

So thanks again for joining.

Tapley Holland | 37:29

Me. No, I'm grateful you have me on. Thank you. All right.

Len Arcuri | 37:32

Your child wants you to transform now. And the fastest way to do that is with personalized support. To learn more, go to allinparentcoaching.com slash intensive.

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