Topic

Vaping

Inhaled vaporized hydrogenated oil is treated as a distinct and worse category than tobacco smoke. Hydrogenation converts vegetable fat into plastic; aerosolizing it deposits synthetic particles in the lungs, sinuses, and brain that the body has no enzymatic pathway to process.

Aajonus did not use the word "vaping" in any of the source passages, and the practice of electronic cigarettes or modern vape devices is never mentioned by name. However, he addressed what is effectively the same class of exposure in considerable detail under different terms: vaporized oils, vaporized hydrogenated oils, vaporized plastic oil, and liquid smoke used in theatrical and nightclub stage productions. In his framework, these represent a category of airborne toxin that is distinct from and worse than conventional tobacco smoke, because the substance being inhaled is not a natural combustion product but a synthetic, industrially processed material suspended in aerosolized form.

The mechanism of harm Aajonus described for vaporized stage smoke maps directly onto what he understood about any inhaled synthetic particle. When a substance is vaporized and inhaled, it enters the lungs and sinuses in a particleized form, penetrates deep tissue, and deposits throughout the body in ways that are difficult for the body to discharge. In the cases he described, this kind of smoke caused plastic particles to lodge in the sinuses, travel upward into the brain, and discharge through surrounding tissue over time. He was clear that vegetable-derived origin offers no protection when the oil has been hydrogenated, because hydrogenation converts a biological fat into a plastic.

Vaporized Stage Smoke Aerosol Plastic

Aajonus drew a direct line between modern theatrical smoke machines and what he called "liquid plastic." He explained that entertainment venues formerly used dry ice to create visible stage smoke, which was a relatively inert cold vapor. The industry transition away from dry ice moved toward machines that vaporize hydrogenated oils, and Aajonus regarded this as a profound and underappreciated hazard. His position was stated without qualification: "It's vaporized liquid plastic and that's worse than having smoke." He extended this to every entertainment context, not just large theaters: "I won't go to a theater, I won't go to anywhere where they use those plastic oils. And if they start using them, I'll walk out."

He was specific that the vegetable origin of the oil was irrelevant to the toxicity. The hydrogenation process, in his framework, is what creates the problem. Hydrogenated oil is plastic. Vaporizing it and inhaling it is inhaling plastic in particleized form. He said, "I don't care what kind of hydrogenated oil it is. Plastic is poison."

He applied the same reasoning to liquid smoke used in productions, describing it as "vaporized hydrogenated oils" and categorizing it explicitly as worse than conventional tobacco smoke inhalation.

Vaporized Smoke Exposure Case Studies

Aajonus described two detailed cases of patients who sustained serious injury from chronic exposure to theatrical vaporized smoke.

The first was a nightclub singer, a woman whose cancer originated from years of performing in clubs that used the new style of smoke machines. He described her as having "all kinds of plastic discharging all throughout" her sinuses and brain. The particles had gotten up into her sinus cavities and into the brain. Medical staff told her she was going to have major neurological consequences. Aajonus worked with her and described the outcome in another section of the transcripts as involving cancer that had grown into the nose, where he was ultimately able to address it with pineapple and vinegar applied topically, along with dietary protocol. He specified that he had her alternate fresh pineapple and vinegar on the affected tissue.

The second was Malcolm Gold, a guitar player and singer who had performed in a touring show with heavy vaporized smoke use for approximately three hours per performance. Aajonus told him repeatedly to quit the show. About three months after he did quit, a growth appeared at his eye, which Aajonus identified as the body expelling plastic particles that had deposited from the vaporized smoke. He described it as cancer discharging out of the eye area and said, "The worst you could do is lose that eye. But he didn't lose anything." He followed up that Malcolm was seen two months before the transcript was recorded, at which point he had not lost the eye and was continuing to recover.

A third case, less directly tied to vaporized smoke but relevant to the category, involved a musician who had performed in a show with "heavy smoke for two hours for a whole year." The condition appeared in the neck area three months after he left the show. Aajonus described the discharge as involving a small hole through which material drained, and he worked with this patient using topical application of fresh pineapple and vinegar on the affected site. He described the patient applying this alternating treatment for about a year and noted visible improvement on the treated side compared to the untreated side of the neck.

Plastic And Smoke Particle Protocol

For sites where the body was expelling accumulated material from vaporized smoke or similar inhalation exposures, Aajonus recommended a topical application alternating fresh pineapple and raw apple cider vinegar. The pineapple was to be a fresh slice rubbed gently on the affected area. He specified not to rub aggressively and to alternate between pineapple and vinegar applications. The purpose was to help break down the hardened or crystallized deposits that had migrated to the skin or mucosal surface and support the body's discharge process.

He showed photographic comparisons of a patient who had only applied the treatment to one side of the neck, with the treated side showing less wrinkling, fewer dead cells, and more active discharge compared to the untreated side.

Lung And Sinus Accumulation

Aajonus explained that vaporized particles of any kind, including theatrical smoke, deposit in the lungs and sinuses and over time can crystallize. He described smokers' lungs as sometimes containing visible crystals throughout the tissue, particularly in menthol smokers. The same crystallization process applies to any inhaled synthetic particle. In the sinuses, the material can migrate upward toward the brain.

He recommended silica from cucumber juice to help the lungs, explaining that the silica helps bind with crystals forming from tars and other inhalation residues. He also recommended hot baths of about an hour and a half to soften tars in the lungs so the body can mobilize them, followed by slow movement out of the bath, a ten-minute rest, and then a walk to support circulation and continued discharge.

For smokers and those with inhalation-related lung damage, he specifically recommended eating raw lung tissue, preferably buffalo lung, which he described as particularly effective at restoring respiratory function. He described eating it with raw milk and a small amount of salsa, and reported that the day after consuming it he felt he was absorbing and utilizing oxygen in a way he had not previously experienced.

Vaporized Versus Conventional Smoke

Aajonus consistently held that vaporized synthetic oils were worse than conventional tobacco smoke, not equivalent to it. Natural tobacco smoke produces tars and monoxides that are damaging but are biological combustion products. The body has some capacity to deal with them over time, and he developed protocols specifically for dissolving tobacco tars (green tobacco juice, raw meat, cucumber juice, hot baths, vinegar in the sports formula). Vaporized plastic, in his view, is a fundamentally different category of insult because the substance itself has no biological precedent in the body, and the body has no natural enzymatic pathway for processing hydrogenated synthetic oils deposited as particles in the lungs and sinuses.

He never offered a specific detoxification protocol specifically labeled for vaporized oil or theatrical smoke exposure as a standalone protocol, but the principles he used were the same as those for heavy industrial and chemical exposures: raw fat to absorb and escort toxins, raw meat to support tissue repair, topical pineapple and vinegar for external discharge sites, cucumber juice for silica to bind lung crystals, and hot baths to mobilize stored deposits.