Thyroid or Hormone Problems—or Just a Toxic Liver?
If Your Liver Could Talk…
The liver is a fascinating organ, made up of 50,000 bile ducts tasked with filtering the blood and performing over 2,000 essential functions every single day.
If you’ve been diagnosed with a thyroid or hormone issue, it’s important to ask: Why?
- Why are my hormones off?
- Why isn’t my thyroid functioning properly?
More often than not, the root cause points to a toxic liver. Walk through the liver of the average person today, and you’d likely encounter heavy metals, pathogens, neurotoxins, and parasites. With over 80,000 chemicals in the average body, the liver carries a tremendous burden.
But the liver isn’t working alone—its toxicity usually stems from toxic blood, which comes from a toxic lymphatic system, which in turn is often caused by toxic bowels.
When discussing symptoms with clients, our first question is always: “How do you poop?”
- How often?
- How much?
- What does it look like?
Is it hard like rabbit pellets, or large and irregular like a cow pie? Does it smell? What color is it?'
What we almost always find is a bowel problem. If your body isn’t efficiently eliminating the remains of recent meals—or worse, meals from several days ago—you develop a toxic lymphatic system, which in turn leads to toxic blood.
Many practitioners have turned to coffee enemas as a quick fix. But dumping toxic bile from the liver into an overcrowded bowel can backfire. Think of it like trying to empty a stadium of 100,000 people through a single 3-foot doorway already backed up with people—your liver’s toxins can get trapped and recycled back into your body, potentially making you feel worse.
The truth is, you may blame your thyroid or hormones, and eventually the liver—but often, the bowels were the first problem all along.
It’s not just hormone or thyroid symptoms that can frustrate you—brain fog, depression, and anxiety can also be signs of this deeper underlying issue.
Start with
proper bowel cleansing, and your liver—and in turn your hormones and thyroid—will thank you.










