Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Why RBTI?

So why exactly have I journeyed up to the dilapidated town in West Virginia known as Wheeling, where tattooed rednecks walk around with no shirt through city streets, where the Klopeks would be scared of their neighbors – and would have the best kept house in town...



...where cars like the one shot with my phone are parked on lawns, where some of the world’s most unnattractive and physically debilitated Americans can be found “wheeling” up and down the streets in wheel chairs like a scene out of Wall-E?

Well, because Carey Reams (who looked a lot like Harry Caray, coincidentally – maybe I’ll start calling him Harry Carey Reams) spoke to God and God gave him an equation for the numbers you should score on a bunch of pee pee tests, that’s why! Reassuring isn’t it?  Holy Cow! 

Today, for the first time, I meet with Challen Waychoff II, practitioner of a very purist form of RBTI – Reams Biological Theory of Ionization. And trust me, I’ve got more red flags flying than China during a big parade. More red flags flying than even Canadians visiting a foreign country to distinguish themselves from Americans (we really hate it when you do that by the way).

So why in the name of all that’s Holy would I make such a great effort to check this wacky stuff out?

I’m making the effort because Challen has such great mastery over the RBTI that he can look at some pee pee test values from anyone on earth, near or far, recite their medical history more or less, and then proceed to bring their “numbers” to the “healing range” within a week. This has been a consistent report from the people I know who have been working with him this year, which includes one of my most trusted informants – ol’ Pippa Galea, who is one of my best personal friends on the planet, and who has been following my writing since before I even began blogging (although, after seeing Wheeling I'm thinking of ending the friendship!). 

But none of that really impressed me. What really got me was that Challen could reliably tell when a person deviated from the eating regimen he laid out for them, and even tell what they ate to cheat and roughly what time of day they ate it – even if it was just a miniscule amount of something forbidden on the Reams program (like say, chocolate or canola oil).

I mean think about the power in that? With RBTI you are looking at a slew of tests that can be ascertained with home testing equipment. Using an agricultural tool called a refractometer you get a measurement of overall carbohydrate in your urine. With pH strips you get your saliva and urine pH levels and see what they are in relation to one another. You test other things as well, such as dissolved “salts” and albumin.

So Challen, looking at what these numbers are and the relationship to one another, sees sort of a fingerprint that is unique to each individual but at the same time shows a host of general and, depending on level of mastery and understanding of this cultish RBTI, specific information.

“Looks like you had some chocolate 5 days ago.”


“Yes, I had two chocolate chip cookies that night.”

Not only that, but using this information he can forecast a lot of what a person is going to go through as they undergo the healing process – also with freakish and difficult-to-believe accuracy.

Anyway, I’m keeping my skepticism flying mightily. As should any readers of the many articles I will soon write on my Wheeling dealings. But, knowing how powerful this knowledge could really be, and that he clearly possesses knowledge in an area of using nutrition that I do not, I’m eager to learn as much as I can and hopefully discover something very useful.

I’m attracted to the idea because of the general mantra of Reams, which is “Why guess when you can know?”

To me, gathering real observable data and using nutrition with surgical precision to bring that data into a harmonious balance is the ultimate use of nutrition. It’s basically doing what Western Medicine attempts to do with their endless array of blood and hormone tests, but foolishly and unecessarily using medication in isolation to tweak those “numbers.” With the human body, this doesn’t work very well, and comes with consequences. The RBTI, however, is about bringing several markers of good function into a synergistic alignment, stepping back, and watching how well the body heals itself from illness under those ideal conditions. At least that’s it in theory.

And, if the theory works even slightly like it ideally is supposed to, it would really be amazing. To me, the concept behind taking real numbers and, like I said, tweaking them with “surgical precision” using nutrition would be by far the most sophisticated, scientific, and reliable use of nutrition out there. Otherwise people just keep volleying back and forth between diets getting relief in some areas but causing problems in others, only to reshuffle the deck with a totally different diet and get a very different, but still mixed, mediocre hand.

And I think what is one of the potentially coolest things about it all, is that RBTI was designed specifically to achieve the type of healing a person might get from truly eating the perfect food grown in the perfect soil, but doing so using supermarket food. Regular old plain stuff that anyone can access.

And if Reams is right – that all disease stems from an imbalance or lack of minerals in the body to stimulate proper energy production (not a bad argument as we know how instrumental minerals are for the pH and productivity of soil, the basis of all life, and how this directly translates to the health of the animals that eat food from that soil), then that would certainly provide a better explanation for why refined, mineral-stripped carbohydrates always seem to be there at the onset of modern disease.

Most importantly, it’s going to be spectacularly fun and interesting for yours nerdingly. I’ve never done anything quite like this. It was time for a good shock to the groin, and hopefully Challen is the man to deliver the voltage.

37 comments:

  1. I have to say Matty -- I've been waiting for you to do these posts with some serious anticipation. Because, like you, I find that it all "sounds" pretty amazing but, my red flags are flying too. Not that I don't buy that it's possible to track such things and they could be accurate, but from what I've been reading in RBTI groups, the corrections seems to be pretty up and down; people experience extremes "getting back into balance", suffering blood sugar drops and depression and emotional instability it seems. I guess I'm just attached to my own Ayurvedic healing camp (the only thing that's ever actually worked consistently for me) which states: When trying to correct or heal a specific system in the body (i.e. digestion) one must never unbalance a secondary system (i.e. nervous) to get the job done.

    So, I am VERY interested to hear your final thoughts, or current or transitional thoughts on this...

    -- Linds

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  2. Interesting.

    My only knowledge of Reams is reading he believes you can 'cure' hypoglycemia by going on a lemon water fast. Looks brutal and raises major red flag'age.

    Are you able to test some of these theories yourself when meeting with him? Would be curious to see how accurate he can get with Mr Stone's fruity urine.

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  3. I would offer myself up as a lab rat for this rbti. If he can fix me old marrow I would be a happy camper indeed. Also , does the kid from Deliverence live there? he made banjos extra creepy. And river rafting.
    Xo

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  4. Very interesting! I'm all ears -and arms and legs!

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  5. Knowing about a coupla chocolate bikis 5 days ago? Maybe he's just a "wee" bit psychic, or psycho...

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  6. yeah, matty. second all the commenters also looking forward to this. very eager to see what you discover, what healing potential lies in rbti. and of course, always glad to see you on the 'journey, not the destination' tip. if there really was one solution, barring any great cover-up, we'd all have the answers now and be in perfect shape. but we can learn and grow along the way- kudos, buddy!

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  7. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  8. A healing crisis is what we used to call it and in hands on healing, it may take a week or two to get there, but it's necessary, else the system won't change.

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  9. I'm really looking forward to hearing all about the theories, and wheeling-dealings--but I'm getting the impression that I need to do some research just to follow along. I'd never heard of RBTI until your recent posts, it sounds fascinating, and I'm feeling like I'm missing some of the picture.

    That 'why guess when you can know?' is a very tantalizing tag: I guess I'm still skeptical as to whether it really is possible to 'know.'

    Totally agree that working to balance systems is a far more promising approach than any kind of drug-tweaking.

    I'm wondering what his theory on mental illnesses and eating disorders is, too.

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  10. RBTI works. The hardest thing in the world is to get well because people need to swap their bad habits for good ones as the old saying goes, "if you always do what you always did, you'll always get what you always got." RBTI is a program for life that involves rhythm in all you do from drinking clean water to eating good food and monitoring what is happening to your body chemistry efficiency is also essential then changing your program when indicated. If you don't plan to be 110% committed don't ever start.

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  11. really looking forward to this.

    Apparently what the world needs is for Challen's system to be reduced to code. Then a computer can offer guidance based on home tests. That would be rad. Righteous, even.

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  12. A updated computer program is being put together. An initial program was put forward in about 1976-77. The hard thing is that everybody is different - including allergies and the individual body chemistry responses because not everybody gets the same amount of energy from every food, and even foods vary depending on where they come from. Some respond well, some don't, some are quick and some are slow, some are committed and some not. I'm looking forward to the program's release.

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  13. Brock-

    You almost could reduce what he's done to code. He is the only person on earth that has systematized the RBTI. He studied it enough to formulate various patterns in the numbers and their relationships with one another. He has a binder full of all the recognized patterns. Reams never did this but mentioned how nice it would have been to have it done.

    In any case, it is the real deal. I peed in a cup and he told me what I eat (and was puzzled by it for a minute in disbelief, you could tell he was thinking "well, bananas could cause this, but only if he was really eating a lot... I'm sure no one eats that many bananas) and proceeded to tell me exactly what was wrong with me starting at the bottom of my body and working towards the top.

    It was totally badass. I will write about it tonight. Last night I was making phone calls relentlessly to RBTI gossip whores and close friends who were waiting to see if Challen was really "Neo."

    Speaking of matrix references, what Matt said above is spot on. If you are not severely ill you will one day wish that you never heard about RBTI.

    Welcome-

    Don't pay attention to anything you've heard about RBTI. Only Challen does what Challen does. No one else. He has systematized it and cataloged it in a unique way that no one else has.

    We talked about Ayurveda yesterday. Ayurveda works under similar principles, but Ayurveda is more like a paper plane and what Challen is doing is like the Millenium Falcon.

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  14. RBTI is the core or hub to optimum health. The more you learn with an open mind...the more you understand it's power. Most people that have gone thru modern medical training will not be able to understand his concepts without alot of "unlearning". Keep in mind this is not about money like modern medicine.

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  15. Sounds like Matt ate the red pill. Hope it wasn't LSD.

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  16. Lorelei aka HawaiigirlJuly 13, 2011 at 1:49:00 PM MDT

    The question is, can it "fix" you, not just tell you that you ate 15 bananas yesterday? He'd be surprised at how many bananas we eat too... one of the cheapest foods on the island! Plus, you know, tasty when fresh from the tree.

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  17. Brock,

    well, Ray may wasn't that long ago was it eh? Maybe he's still in the spirit =p

    ---

    I remember a naturopath I went to long ago, he had some funky homeopathic thing that he had connected to his computer. It was supposed to pick up on what was happening energetically in your body. It actually worked pretty well, showing several things I hadn't mentioned to him, but when I told him I wanted to leave cavities in my mouth and that carbs don't cause diabetes he thought I was weird.

    He was also not very healthy looking; balding, with poor body composition being the most obvious things.

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  18. RC-

    Challen is balding with poor body composition as well. He's a frumpy little dude that looks kinda like Bernie Madoff if Bernie was happy all the time. He thinks being fat is from eating too much because food tastes so good. I would agree. Flavor enhancers and overly cracked-out food makes one overeat and gain fat.

    More revealing is his oldest son that was born when Challen had his best "numbers" and who was also raised under the rules of the RBTI. He's probably the healthiest looking human being I've ever seen. He looks like John Stamos on steroids. Perfect facial structure and dentition. It's the most impressive improvement in looks of an offspring vs. parent I've ever seen. It is the essence of "nutrition and physical regeneration."

    Hawaii Girl-

    Oh it can fix you alright. And the people that come to him are people on their death beds that have tried everything else. They are the type of people that didn't think they could survive the 3rd round of chemotherapy, and decided to try Challen instead only to find cancer totally eliminated without a trace in 3 months.

    But it is incredibly hard work. Tedious. With lots of ups and downs during the healing process and constant fine-tuning being done.

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  19. Jagrati-

    He's not psychic. We laughed about this today because it is so simple. It is analysis, not a psychic reading, and it's incredibly simple. Even I can do a little bit after two days.

    Like if your urea numbers total 13 or less and you are taking dolomite as a supplement your neck will get very stiff. Then you quit the dolomite. Neck stiffness clears right up. This is 100% reliable. So much so that he called someone on reading their urea number incorrectly today because they totaled 10, they were taking dolomite, and they did not have any neck pain or stiffness. Turned out to be a total of 14, not 10.

    That is what freaks people out. They can't take it. It's like it causes their brains to short-circuit. I'm having trouble with it even though it's phenomenally exciting to see it in action.

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  20. hi , you all , my name is fred careaga from mexico , believe me , this gentleman knows what he s doing,don t waste time finding out who he is , go meet him , and save yourselves,what kind of harm can eating right do to you all ?tks matt, a lot of people needed this ,the only way out of trouble, just by eating right,GOD KEEP HIM ALIVE FOR LONG. REGARDS.AND HAVE A GOOD ONE. fcareagac@yahoo.com

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  21. Lorelei aka HawaiigirlJuly 13, 2011 at 6:52:00 PM MDT

    Well, if it's something that I can test for and correct myself, then I'm all for it, despite tedious and hard. What I hate is paying to go to the doctor over and over to get lab tests done, and nobody even agrees on what they mean anyhow.

    So I'm wanting to believe.

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  22. Lorelei aka HawaiigirlJuly 13, 2011 at 8:08:00 PM MDT

    I'm wanting to believe as long as it's not so very specific for the rest of my life. Cuz that's no fun.

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  23. dude, i would totally have another baby if i could have as perfect a specimen as you describe his son! this is the kind of thing i want to know about! like if that son of his does not do RBTI for the rest of his life how will his health be? will it decline? how was his wife's pregnancy at that time and how was labor and delivery? why didn't they use rbti for the other kids (assuming since you said he is the oldest that there are more)? how are we supposed to feed our kids in general? or should the testing be done on them, too? seriously, i am fascinated by this kind of stuff and i would be willing, i think, to try it out.

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  24. And this all comes to us via God, right? Some kind of bible code, his list of 'no' meats is exactly what the bible says? (any other correlations to the bible?) Just curious the extent of the connection to religion, coming from a non-beleiber.

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  25. Ditto everything that Hawaiigirl said...everything. I mean it. Ditto :) The curiosity is really getting to me. We need more info Matt!!!! Do I have to figure out a way to get to WV to do this, or can I do his home study course and do it for myself? If it is all in the numbers, how does someone figure them wrong?

    C'mon Matt! Start cranking out the posts!

    desert dweller

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  26. I see that many RBTI practitioners, including Reams himself, have a list of "no" foods such as "white potatoes," shrimp, white rice, chocolate, etc.

    Now maybe I am taking all this out of context, or misunderstand or whatever --it is quite possible-- and the list of "no" foods is meant to applied to specific individuals to address specific problems. However, that is not my understanding: Rather, the list of "no" foods seems to be directed at everybody in general because these foods somehow take away the energy of the body.

    Huh! Tell that to the Irish...Tell them how those evil "white potatoes" destroyed their health, draining them of energy. The truth is, the Irish apparently had good health on their high potato diet. So do the few other cultures that made the "white potato" part of their dietary staple.

    The same argument can be applied to white rice and shrimp.

    Anecdotally, many people on the Abel Body Forums, who listen closely to their biofeedback, report excellent results from making many of these "no" foods a staple in their diet --reporting good energy, recovery, etc. If these foods drained people of energy, such feedback would not occur or exist.

    Speaking of Scott Abel: Nutrition in his view is a highly individual enterprise; there is no universal "no" list per se. This makes a lot more sense than demonizing foods that many individual do very well on.

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  27. Hey Matt,

    very interesting stuff! I researched a little bit like some others here, and read that he has a food list mostly out of the old testament of the bible.

    Can you paste it here? :D

    And what is if you want to maintain your "perfect diet" once you found it via RBTI for yourself? All the time you have to do the labtests to modifiy if it's necessary for the reason that your needs are changing constantly? Is it easy or do you need to have a RBTI lab near you?
    You thiink there is some lab in europe (germany) for this kind of treatments?
    Didn't find anything.

    Greetz

    Sylwester

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  28. Nutrition is indeed highly individual. Read this thread:
    htt p://forums.scottabel.com/showthread.php?t=3263&page=1.

    Notice that some people stay full longer on potatoes, while others stay full longer on rice. (No, I don't think Scott Abel and his followers are right about everything. However, they ARE very aware of how food is affecting them, and track it very closely. Hence they provide strong anecdotal evidence about the influence of various foods on health and performance).

    Any individual, or group of individuals, who come up with a list of "no" foods that have such a lack of evidence for being universally bad, are very suspect to me. This is not to say they are therefore wrong about everything; sometimes people get a general approach or methodology correct and are wrong about the particular details.

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  29. MATT-


    Have you read about the REFRACTOMETER to test the quality of fruits and vegetables? More BRIX supposedly equals better quality.

    http://crossroads.ws/brixbook/BBook.htm

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  30. Sheila-

    Yes, I'm excited to test produce.

    Testing Laboratory-

    No need to come here at all. The vast majority if his clients live elsewhere. The testing kit, which he doesn't sell for legal reasons, is $395

    Challen's rates are very steep though! He charges $25 for a reading of your numbers, which most people do a test and call in every 2 weeks in the first few months and then less frequently once they start maintaining their numbers in the "A range." Plus, you learn it as you go. You know what food does what to your numbers. Like I said, it's pretty simple.

    Joking about it being expensive. It's absurdly cheap once you get past the cost of the testing supplies.

    There are a handful of required supplements, but you wean yourself off of them over time. Challen takes two pills a day. A mineral supplement. That's it.

    Jessica-

    Yes, many of the "no-no foods" come from the Bible. Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14.

    The whole religion element of it is a massive bummer if you ask me. But it is what it is. I'm not going to fight it or let my beliefs get in the way of exploring this thing fully.

    Team Smith-

    Challen and his family have been off and on the RBTI. So there were periods on and many periods off. His oldest was raised according to the precise guidelines of RBTI, and he was frequently tested.

    I may ask him for a picture of him and his wife at the current age of his oldest son and a picture. When you see it, you will be pretty impressed.

    His other son has never had a cough, a sinus infection, a fever. Nothing. He's almost 30 now.

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  31. Carey Reams died at age 81. Not sure what caused his death. One would have thought he might have lived longer. Julia Child died at 92 and she probably ate all of the foods on the 'no no list'. ...Maybe it is still back to -all in moderation-.

    I am still interested in reading where this experience takes you, Matt.

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  32. If minerals can be so healthy,then how about young coconuts? The water is full of minerals and tastes great. The creamy meat is also tasty and full of good fat...

    why is it so difficult to find information on RBTI?? I could't even find this no-food list...
    VERY sceptical about this by the way.

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  33. Finally! A movie reference that I understand and is hilarious!

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  34. Nice article Matt. RBTI does help people regain health. We run a retreat that operates under the Biological Ionization principles. You would be welcomed to come visit if you are ever in Eastern Kentucky.
    www.HomeforHealth.net

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  35. A pic of an old car and not a pic of the girl with the impressive body...you call that journalism.:)

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  36. Where can i order the RBTI test kit from?

    Been suffering with adrenal fatigue for year,and getting worse..
    Im now in stage 3.

    How do i contact challen waychoff?

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  37. Just call Challen and he will get you all squared away. You'll likely be on your feet again in a week or two IF you do what he tells you to do. Don't do it half assed.

    304-230-9283

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