MITO Red Light therapy founder reveals how sunlight-deficient modern life demands photon supplementation

  • Chronic Light Deficiency Crisis: Modern indoor lifestyles deprive humans of essential solar frequencies, harming cellular vitality, mitochondrial function, and disease resistance. Chaverri notes 93% of time is spent indoors, worsening health issues like fatigue and aging.
  • Misguided Policies Worsen Crisis: Banning infrared-emitting incandescent bulbs for toxic LEDs and excessive blue-light screens compounds the problem. Sunscreen overuse also blocks vitamin D synthesis and melanin production.
  • Red-Light Therapy Benefits: MITO’s devices mimic solar wavelengths (590–850 nm) to boost ATP production by 60%. Results include higher testosterone, improved thyroid function, and neuroprotective effects—especially with 810 nm near-infrared.
  • Adjustments for Melanin: Darker skin absorbs red light less efficiently, requiring 20% longer exposure. Near-infrared is recommended for deeper tissue impact, aiding vitamin-D-deficient groups like African Americans in northern climates.
  • Future Innovations: Upcoming “light pods” will customize wavelengths per user. Synergy with photoactive nutrients (e.g., astaxanthin, spirulina) enhances results, with a skincare line using spirulina-activated antioxidants.

In a groundbreaking interview with Mike Adams on Brighteon.com, Scott Chaverri, founder of MITO Red Light, sounded the alarm on a global health crisis few recognize: chronic light deficiency. The culprit? Modern indoor lifestyles that have severed humanity from the solar frequencies essential for cellular vitality, mitochondrial function, and disease resistance.

The War on Light

Chaverri didn’t mince words. “The modern human spends 93% of their time indoors,” he noted, citing an EPA study. “Our ancestors bathed in sunlight daily. Now, we’re starved of the very wavelengths that power our biology.” This deficit, he argues, exacerbates everything from low energy and poor sleep to hormonal imbalances and accelerated aging.

The problem is compounded by misguided policies—banning incandescent bulbs (which emit infrared) in favor of “toxic flickering LEDs” and blue-light-heavy screens. Even dermatology’s sun-phobia has backfired. “Slathering on sunscreen blocks vitamin D synthesis and deprives skin of UV-dependent protective melanin,” Chaverri explained.

Science of Photon Supplementation

MITO’s red-light devices (starting at $249) mimic critical solar wavelengths—590 nm (yellow) to 850 nm (near-infrared)—that penetrate tissue without overheating cells. Unlike sauna-based far-infrared, these frequencies target mitochondria, boosting ATP production by up to 60%.

One example? Testosterone. Chaverri shared anonymized data from MITO users who applied red light to “the crown jewels”: Men with baseline T-levels of 200–300 ng/dL saw jumps into normal ranges (~500 ng/dL) within weeks. Similar benefits occur for thyroid function, wound healing, and neurodegenerative protection—especially with 810 nm near-infrared, which penetrates the skull to nourish brain cells.

Skin Color Matters

Adams raised a critical nuance: Melanin blocks EMFs (5G, Wi-Fi) but also absorbs red light. “Darker-skinned individuals may need 20% longer exposure for comparable benefits,” Chaverri acknowledged. His solution? Prioritize near-infrared (which bypasses melanin) for deeper tissue impact—a lifeline for vitamin-D-deficient populations like African Americans in northern climates.

The Future: Smart Photon Therapy

Chaverri teased next-gen “light pods” that scan users and customize wavelengths—a vision Adams endorsed. Meanwhile, synergy with photoactive nutrition (astaxanthin, spirulina, turmeric) turbocharges results. “These molecules fluoresce and amplify red light’s effects,” Chaverri revealed. His upcoming skincare line harnesses spirulina-derived antioxidants activated by MITO devices.

Takeaway

Modernity’s artificial environments demand “photon supplementation” as urgently as vitamin D. For Adams, MITO’s panels aren’t optional—they’re “corrective tools for a sunlight-starved world.” As research mounts, one truth emerges: Light isn’t just for vision; it’s food for every cell.

Watch the full episode of the “Health Ranger Report” with Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, and Scott Chaverri as they cover therapeutic light supplementation for health and longevity.

This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.

More related stories:

Beyond the gym and spa: Red light therapy hits mainstream wellness

Ari Whitten explains how to harness the power of light for health and wellness in “The Ultimate Guide to Red Light Therapy”

Strategic morning light exposure: A natural solution to combat sleep fatigue

Sources include:

Brighteon.com

HealthRangerStore.com

 

 

 

 

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