Podcast Summary: EXTRA ANORMAL
Episode: No COMAS Lo Que Te Regalan | Historias MACABRAS de Brujería en la Comida
Date: December 23, 2025
Host: Paco Arias (iEX Studios)
Guest: Luis Flores
Overview
This chilling episode of EXTRA ANORMAL explores one of the darkest and most unsettling aspects of brujería (witchcraft): how it can be administered through food and drink. Host Paco Arias and esoteric practitioner Luis Flores dive deep into real-life accounts and the esoteric theory behind "brujería ingerida" (ingested witchcraft), exposing how seemingly innocuous meals can harbor curses, manipulation, and even death. The episode serves as a stark warning: "No comas lo que te regalan" – don’t eat what you’re given without thought, because, as these stories illustrate, the consequences can be devastating.
Key Discussion Points and Insights
1. The Reality and Danger of Ingested Witchcraft
- Cultural context: Witchcraft hidden in food is an age-old belief in Latin America.
- Luis’s expertise: He draws from both scholarly study (teosofía, masonería, magia) and personal experience eliminating curses, including brujería through food.
- Scientific and mystical explanation:
- Everything is connected by energy and intention, symbolized through the "ley de correspondencias."
- Objects or food that carry someone's energy (hair, nails, bodily fluids) can be used to influence or harm them (05:35).
- Ingested brujería is especially lethal as it affects the body, mind, and even the soul.
"La brujería es real porque qué es al fin y al cabo [...] yo a través del pensamiento, cierto tipo de rituales, cierto tipo de actos puedo meter una información."
— Luis Flores, (05:35)
2. Notable Story #1: The Spellbound Family – Javier’s Story
[Starts 09:50]
Setting: Colombia
Summary:
Javier, excelling in school, becomes obsessed with Juliana, a local woman who sells food—and, as it turns out, is also entangled with his father. After the family begins eating Juliana's meals, conflict erupts, culminating in the sudden death of Javier’s mother. Javier’s obsession and illness escalate until a village healer helps him expel "vómitos de coágulos de sangre y una bola de vellos," confirming a spell.
Insights:
- Ingested witchcraft often manifests as irrational obsessions, family breakdown, inexplicable illnesses, and a sense of being under another’s will.
- Victims describe symptoms typical of possession or severe psychological manipulation.
"No podía dejar de pensar en ella, tenía la necesidad de estar con ella, me comía las uñas por poder verla."
— Paco Arias, reading Javier’s account (19:39)
"Siempre hay un cambio en la personalidad, siempre dejas de ser tú mismo, [...] te vuelves más agresivo, más retraído. Una característica de las brujerías con amarres es que no puedes dejar de pensar en la persona."
— Luis Flores (25:10)
3. Mechanics and Purpose of Brujería en la Comida
[Detailed through 07:31, 25:10, and 28:06]
- Ingredients: Nails, hair, menstrual blood, bone dust, cemetery dirt, animal blood, etc., sometimes hidden in bread, drinks, or other foods.
- Common motivations: Romantic obsession (amarres), revenge, offerings to darker forces (sacrificing someone’s vitality or luck).
"Se usa mucho sangre de menstruación."
— Luis Flores (09:48)
- Physical and metaphysical effects: Victims may experience declining health for no medical reason. Medical tests often show nothing until the spell is removed, after which physiological symptoms may suddenly appear in lab work.
4. Notable Story #2: Envy, Betrayal, and Poisoned Food – Raquel’s Story
[Begins 37:40]
Setting: Colombia
Summary:
Raquel recounts how envy tore apart a once-close group of cousins. Yolanda, beloved and newly-married, becomes the target of a jealousy-fueled plot. Her cousins, influenced by a social media video about curses, poison her food with ground human bones, resulting in her fatal illness—and that of her unborn child. After strange bones are found, the cousins confess and are imprisoned.
"En palabras rápidas, su prima muere por intoxicación con bacterias y toxinas de restos óseos humanos. En su comida había ingerido pedazos de huesos."
— Paco Arias (47:45)
Reflection:
- Even misinformation (like internet videos on curses) can push people to deadly actions.
- Witchcraft loses none of its danger when practiced by the ignorant—often, it becomes even more lethal.
5. Lessons, Cases, and Preventative Measures
a) Luis’s Experience: Energy Healers, Family Betrayals, and More
- Case of a girl suffering extreme weight loss and illness due to her own mother’s misguided magical intervention (31:00–37:24).
- Another case where a young woman’s experimentation with the Ouija board leads her to ingest cemetery earth in a “love ritual,” almost resulting in possession (56:20–60:07).
b) Prevalence of Food-Based Spells in Domestic Settings
- Common scenario: A domestic worker acts as a spell-caster, ingratiating herself via food for the household's male head (Pablo’s story begins at 60:59).
- Signs include unexplained physical symptoms, obsessive behavior, and breakdown of family dynamics.
c) Specific Rituals and Countermeasures
[85:35]
- Habas de San Ignacio: Used in ritual cleansings to purge ingested witchcraft by inducing vomiting and diarrhea.
- Protections:
- Wear a silver San Benito medal near the navel (plexus area).
- Tie a red string around the waist with three knots under clothes to protect your energy.
- Use "bendición shamánica" to bless all food before consumption.
"La plata tiene una luz espiritual que se llama luz plátrica, lo que hace es acabar con cosas negativas. [...] Si quieren tener una protección contra brujerías, ya sea una medalla de San Benito o un tetagramatón, pero tiene que ser de plata..."
— Luis Flores (77:47)
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
-
On Detection:
"Si tu corazón te dice como que esto no me late, pues busca mil pretextos y no te lo comas."
— Luis Flores (88:32) -
On Intuition:
"La intuición no te engaña, pero desafortunadamente el no quedar mal [...] es por lo cual muchas personas terminan comiendo estas porquerías y les puede costar hasta la vida."
— Paco Arias (90:05) -
Medical Frustration:
"Me dicen que estoy loca, ¿No? Porque estoy bien, pero yo estoy mal, me siento mal… Yo sí te creo que estás mal, aunque los médicos digan que estás bien."
— Luis Flores (28:05)
Timestamps of Key Segments
- [01:03] Introduction to the topic and guest's background
- [05:25] Scientific/mystical discussion on how brujería works
- [09:50] Javier's family, obsession and loss linked to food-based witchcraft
- [14:37] Family conflict and sudden tragedy
- [25:10] Analysis: Mental/physical symptoms of love spells
- [37:40] Raquel’s account: Jealousy among cousins, food poisonings
- [56:20] Ouija game and “love potion” gone wrong
- [60:59] Pablo’s story: Housekeeper, seduction, and brujería
- [77:47] Silver as spiritual protection; recommendations
- [85:35] Ritual for cleansing ingested brujería (habas de San Ignacio)
- [88:32] How to detect and block tainted food
Conclusions and Takeaways
- Never eat food from someone in whom you don’t place absolute trust, especially if your intuition warns you.
- Symptoms of brujería ingerida can manifest physically, psychologically, and spiritually—and are often hard to detect by medical means.
- Protection is possible: through metals (silver), rituals, and strong intuition. Don't be afraid to say no or question suspicious motives.
- Even those with good intentions can cause irreparable harm when dabbling in the occult without proper knowledge or guidance.
Closing
Paco Arias and Luis Flores close the episode with a reminder: Listen to your inner voice, trust your instincts, and always be cautious about what you consume. The most insidious threats often arrive disguised as kindness.
"Por favor compártelo porque puede salvar, y no lo digo jugando… puede salvar a alguien de que realmente pierda hasta la vida."
— Paco Arias (91:12)
Guest Links:
- Facebook: Nueva Teosofía
- YouTube: Luis Flores Nueva Teosofía
- Instagram/TikTok: Nueva Teosofía
- Website: www.nuevateosofia.com
(For more exclusive content and advanced cases, visit the podcast’s official website as referenced by the host.)
