About
Benjamin Smith
Author and Health Coach
My interest in health started at a young age. I remember asking my dad who is a dermatologist, all kinds of abstract and philosophical questions. Why is the sky blue? or why does the sun cause skin issues? I was fascinated with wanting to know why.
In my early 20s I thought about pursuing a career in the medical field, specifically a naturopath. Life changed course on me and I got into the automotive detailing industry, owning my own company for the last 30 years.
All this time I was still interested in health and how the human body worked but it was more of a leisurely pursuit. I read a few articles and watched a few videos here and there.
It wasn’t until 2012 when I became more or less obsessed with why people get chronic disease. That year my sister died of cancer. I thought to myself “does the body want to kill itself?” It didn’t make sense.
In 2014 I started to really dive “deep into the woods” so to speak with my discovery of water’s amazing properties. I learned water had memory and it could hold information. This blew my mind and I started to voraciously read everything I could get my hands on about water.
Fast forward to 2019 and I was realizing I needed to share this information with people around me and with my loved ones. I thought “I can become a health coach!” This way I can share my information and help people get well. I signed up for The Primal Health Coach Institute after much research as they were inline with my values. After getting my certificate, I realized I wanted to help people through teaching and lecturing.
A friend of mine suggested “Why don’t you write a book?“. I thought this would be perfect. I could get my message out there for people who wanted to listen. Over the past four years I have been researching and working on this book and it has finally come to fruition. This “model” that I created and developed is a decade of research and reviewing hundreds of articles as well as talking and learning from experts in their respective fields. I hope this model gives you hope and you find value in it. If I could save one person from chronic disease I have succeeded at my mission.