"Healing Revolution" on BrightU: The truth about addiction and how you can use urology to heal
- In Episode 7 of "Healing Revolution," investigative journalist Jonathan Otto talked about a fringe movement advocates aged urine as a transformative remedy, with users reporting euphoria, reduced cravings and healing effects—especially among former addicts and biohackers.
- Urine therapy (urotherapy) has ancient ties to Ayurvedic, Chinese and European medicine but was dismissed as pseudoscience until recent anecdotal successes revived interest.
- Advocates like Elizabeth Hoeger claim urine therapy reversed chronic conditions (e.g., hypothyroidism, obesity), while former addicts say it mimics drug highs without side effects, rewiring brain chemistry.
- Limited studies suggest urine's antimicrobial and autoimmune benefits, though mainstream medicine ignores it—critics attribute this to its lack of profitability compared to synthetic drugs.
- Biohackers like Troy Casey use urine topically, orally or nasally for mood enhancement and pain relief, arguing it's a natural, cost-free solution to addiction and imbalance. Advocates challenge taboos, calling urine “medicine.”
In Episode 7 of "Healing Revolution," aired June 13, investigative journalist Jonathan Otto talked about a fringe but growing movement claims to have found an unlikely antidote—aged urine. Yes, you read that right. Former addicts, biohackers and holistic health practitioners are swearing by the transformative power of stored pee, reporting everything from euphoric highs to eradicated cravings—without the crash.
The concept isn't new. Urotherapy, or urine therapy, has been practiced for millennia in Ayurvedic, Chinese and even early European medicine. But modern dismissals have relegated it to the realm of quackery—until now.
Elizabeth Hoeger, a registered health technician, was once plagued by hypothyroidism, weight gain and chronic fatigue. After ditching synthetic medications, she turned to urine therapy—and claims it reversed her condition entirely.
"I lost all craving for sugar. The weight just melted off. I'm back to the weight I was in my 20s," Hoeger shared. "People don't realize Big Pharma already uses urea in creams, lotions and medications—they just don't call it urine."
But the most explosive claims come from former drug addicts. Harry Matadeen, author of "Aged Urine: The Re-discovery of the 21st Century," asserts that urine contains natural DMT, neurotransmitters and hormones that can rewire the brain.
"People taking ecstasy, cocaine—they switch to aged urine and get the same highs, but without the destruction," said Matadeen. "It fills the void they were trying to numb with drugs." One recovering addict, the son of a Puerto Rican ex-police officer, reportedly underwent a complete personality shift after adopting urine therapy. "He was in constant pain, couldn’t sleep and was miserable," his mother shared. "Now? No pain. Deep sleep. Happiness like he’s never had before."
Troy Casey, a biohacker in his late 50s, uses both fresh and aged urine daily—drinking it, snorting it, even applying it topically before sun exposure.
"It lifts my mood instantly. Feels almost steroidal," Casey admitted. "When I put it on my temples, it's like a biofeedback loop—my body tells me what it needs."
Casey isn't alone. Underground communities report euphoria, pain relief and even spiritual awakenings from aged urine, theorizing that fermentation increases its psychoactive compounds. Critics dismiss urine therapy as pseudoscience, but studies hint at overlooked potential. A 2009 study in the
Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine found urotherapy effective against autoimmune disorders. Another in the
International Journal of Environmental Research highlighted its antimicrobial properties.
Yet mainstream medicine remains silent. "They don’t make money off pee," Hoeger scoffed. "But they'll sell you urea-laced creams for $50 a tube." With opioid deaths skyrocketing, could urine therapy offer a radical, cost-free solution? Advocates argue that its ability to rebalance brain chemistry naturally makes it a game-changer.
"Addiction happens when we're out of balance," Casey explained. "Urine therapy brings you back—no prescriptions, no side effects, just your body healing itself." As more testimonies emerge, one question lingers: Is the medical industry ignoring urine therapy because it works—or because it can't be patented?
For now, the underground movement keeps growing. And for those willing to challenge taboos, the answer to addiction might have been inside them all along. As Casey said, "They call it waste. We call it medicine."
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Sources include:
BrighteonUniversity.com 1
BrightU.com
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