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The world we live in today is not the same world that Jesus lived in. It

is much more polluted.

Dennis

Mike E Cornwall wrote:

> Hyperbaroman

>

> I did a 24 day fast on water only. Excellent results. I tend to

> dismiss

> those who say we need to SUPPORT the liver or any other organ during a

>

> fast. I was slim going in and lost an additional 24 pounds. Also

> shed

> various illnesses! The body has reserves of needed nutrients to

> support

> its functions during a fast.

>

> Mankind has been water fasting since Biblical ages, and before. Read

> the

> results of Jesus and others with up to 40 day water fasts.

>

> " If it ain't broke, don't fix it. "

>

> Corny

>

>

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> other alternative self-help subjects.

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Guest guest

Mahatma Gandhi said fasting was the ultimate therapy, and to fast at the

first sign of illness. Maybe if I'd listened I wouldn't be in the pickle I'm

in today *S.

Greg

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  • 3 months later...

,

One of the best ways to fast that I've heard about is to juice fast. You get

the nutrition you need and your body gets to rest from digesting the pulp of

the food you eat. The book I have to help is called Juicing for Life. I'd

talk to a person who advises people on fasting. Don't just try it on your

own.

fasting

> Does anyone in this group fast? if so, pls. let us know your results and

any

> details on the way you go about it ! thanks !

>

>

>

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The only fast I've ever done, and it was years ago, before any of the

books were written, is the Master Cleanser (aka Lemonade Fast).

6-12 times a day have:

2 T fresh squeezed lemon juice

2 T grade B or C maple syrup

1/4 t cayenne pepper

mixed into 8-12 oz distilled water

It's actually very tasty, with a spike. <g> I think you are supposed

to drink a quart of water with some salt first thing in the morning,

but I couldn't get it down. Of course, drink as much extra water as

you want.

There is a slim book I got in my HFS all about it.

E Long in TX

Does anyone in this group fast? if so, pls. let us know your results

and any details on the way you go about it! thanks !

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! Eating HB foods will detox your body better then any fast. If you

want to juice for a day or so, I;d say go for it, but it is not necessary.

Sure you will have people comment that " I felt so much better " but that

comes from consuming different foods. We tend to eat the same foods day in

and day out. So when you brake the cycle, the body simply " THANKS YOU " .

Following LR, is all most of us need.

love

fasting

Does anyone in this group fast? if so, pls. let us know your results and

any

details on the way you go about it ! thanks !

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It should be a veggie juice fast (and very short) only. Consuming fruit

sugar without protein for Os is asking for trouble down the road.

love

Re: fasting

,

One of the best ways to fast that I've heard about is to juice fast. You

get

the nutrition you need and your body gets to rest from digesting the pulp

of

the food you eat. The book I have to help is called Juicing for Life. I'd

talk to a person who advises people on fasting. Don't just try it on your

own.

fasting

> Does anyone in this group fast? if so, pls. let us know your results

and

any

> details on the way you go about it ! thanks !

>

>

>

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  • 1 year later...

From: cjcamt <aaa.woodwork@...>

> Has anyone ever come across the book, " The

Breuss Cancer Cure " , by

> Rudolf Breuss. If so, what do you think?

> Bye for now, Marie

I think it's fascinating. I believe he got

excellent success even though he exaggerated his

results. Such a water/tea fast can be extremely

effective, BUT

1. If I had cancer, I would consider water fasting

only under close medical supervision of

practitioner knowledgeable about fasting w/cancer

patients.

2. I wouldn't begin such a fast unless I was

serious about following through (completely

it)--consuming only water, tea, & a little juice

for about 6 weeks?

3. 1 practitioner told me that SOME cancers

" explode " following water fasts; that's all I

know.

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From: cjcamt <aaa.woodwork@...>

> Has anyone ever come across the book, " The

Breuss Cancer Cure " , by

> Rudolf Breuss. If so, what do you think?

> Bye for now, Marie

I think it's fascinating. I believe he got

excellent success even though he exaggerated his

results. Such a water/tea fast can be extremely

effective, BUT

1. If I had cancer, I would consider water fasting

only under close medical supervision of

practitioner knowledgeable about fasting w/cancer

patients.

2. I wouldn't begin such a fast unless I was

serious about following through (completely

it)--consuming only water, tea, & a little juice

for about 6 weeks?

3. 1 practitioner told me that SOME cancers

" explode " following water fasts; that's all I

know.

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Share on other sites

I certainly would love to hear more about this. Anyone have more info?

Bev.

Re: Fasting

> From: cjcamt <aaa.woodwork@...>

> > Has anyone ever come across the book, " The

> Breuss Cancer Cure " , by

> > Rudolf Breuss. If so, what do you think?

> > Bye for now, Marie

> I think it's fascinating. I believe he got

> excellent success even though he exaggerated his

> results. Such a water/tea fast can be extremely

> effective, BUT

> 1. If I had cancer, I would consider water fasting

> only under close medical supervision of

> practitioner knowledgeable about fasting w/cancer

> patients.

> 2. I wouldn't begin such a fast unless I was

> serious about following through (completely

> it)--consuming only water, tea, & a little juice

> for about 6 weeks?

> 3. 1 practitioner told me that SOME cancers

> " explode " following water fasts; that's all I

> know.

>

>

>

>

> Get HUGE info at http://www.cures for cancer.ws, and post your own links there.

Unsubscribe by sending email to cures for cancer-unsubscribeegroups or by

visiting http://www.bobhurt.com/subunsub.mv

>

>

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Share on other sites

I certainly would love to hear more about this. Anyone have more info?

Bev.

Re: Fasting

> From: cjcamt <aaa.woodwork@...>

> > Has anyone ever come across the book, " The

> Breuss Cancer Cure " , by

> > Rudolf Breuss. If so, what do you think?

> > Bye for now, Marie

> I think it's fascinating. I believe he got

> excellent success even though he exaggerated his

> results. Such a water/tea fast can be extremely

> effective, BUT

> 1. If I had cancer, I would consider water fasting

> only under close medical supervision of

> practitioner knowledgeable about fasting w/cancer

> patients.

> 2. I wouldn't begin such a fast unless I was

> serious about following through (completely

> it)--consuming only water, tea, & a little juice

> for about 6 weeks?

> 3. 1 practitioner told me that SOME cancers

> " explode " following water fasts; that's all I

> know.

>

>

>

>

> Get HUGE info at http://www.cures for cancer.ws, and post your own links there.

Unsubscribe by sending email to cures for cancer-unsubscribeegroups or by

visiting http://www.bobhurt.com/subunsub.mv

>

>

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Share on other sites

I have no personal experience, but I have run across some interesting

articles indicating MAYBE there is something to it. As another

poster said, it probably is NOT a good idea to try this without help

from a medical professional.

AACR Meeting Oct 2002

http://www.aacr.org/1131zv.asp

The suggestion is that periodic fasting is BETTER than constant low

calorie diet (Keep in mind when reading, many chemos CURE cancer

in mice but we all know things don't work the same for people!)

[start snip]

Method of Dieting May Play a Role in Prevention of Breast Cancer

A healthy diet combined with periods of calorie restriction may

provide more protection against breast cancer than a constant low

calorie diet, according to researchers at the Hormel Institute,

University of Minnesota.

" The manner in which caloric restriction is implemented may play an

important role in the development of breast cancer, " according to

Margot Cleary, lead investigator of the study. " There appears to be a

point above which calorie intake stimulates the growth of breast

cancer and can potentially override, to some degree, the protective

effect of severe caloric restriction. "

Mammary mouse tumor virus (MMTV)-TGFa mice (TGFa regulates growth)

were fed either an ad lititum (as desired; AL), a calorie restricted

(CR) or an intermittent caloric restriction/refeeding (IR-R) diet.

The incidence of mammary tumors was 84 percent in AL mice, 37 percent

for the CR mice, and 15 percent for the IR-R mice. Age of mammary

tumor detection was significantly extended in the IR-R mice to 79.4

weeks of age compared to 67.9 weeks of age for AL mice. In addition,

AL mice were younger at death than were both IR-R and CR mice.

[stop snip]

For those ALREADY having cancer (as opposed to healthy people trying

to PREVENT cancer), it is even possible that CR could increase

metastasis by suppressing the immune sytem as suggested in this paper

http://www.herc.org/news/mcsarticles/frame.htm

Caloric Restriction as a Mechanism Mediating Resistance to

Environmental Disease

Lynn T. Frame,1 W. Hart,2 and n E.A. Leakey2

[start snip]

Moreover, even caloric restriction may not be beneficial under all

circumstances. Although a decreased inflammatory response appears to

be beneficial during the early stages of the carcinogenesis process

(103,213), immunodeficiency once carcinogenic tumors have developed

will facilitate metastatic growth (209). As explained above, in most

animal experiments the caloric deficit and resultant hypercorticism

has subsided before most tumors reach the metastatic stage. However,

if caloric restriction is initiated in cancer patients once the

carcinogenic tumors have been established, the benefits of its

antimitogenic effects may be outweighed by the risk of its

immunosuppressive effects

[stop snip]

Abstract suggesting in MICE dietary restriction could inhibit

angiogenesis (blood vessel growth to tumor) in established cancer:

Br J Cancer 2002 May 20;86(10):1615-21

Dietary restriction reduces angiogenesis and growth in an orthotopic

mouse brain tumour model.

Mukherjee P, El-Abbadi MM, Kasperzyk JL, Ranes MK, Seyfried TN.

Biology Department, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, MA

02467, USA.

Diet and lifestyle produce major effects on tumour incidence,

prevalence, and natural history. Moderate dietary restriction has

long been recognised as a natural therapy that improves health,

promotes longevity, and reduces both the incidence and growth of many

tumour types. Dietary restriction differs from fasting or starvation

by reducing total food and caloric intake without causing nutritional

deficiencies. No prior studies have evaluated the responsiveness of

malignant brain cancer to dietary restriction. We found that a

moderate dietary restriction of 30-40% significantly inhibited the

intracerebral growth of the CT-2A syngeneic malignant mouse

astrocytoma by almost 80%. The total dietary intake for the ad

libitum control group (n=9) and the dietary restriction experimental

group (n=10) was about 20 and 13 Kcal day(-1), respectively. Overall

health and vitality was better in the dietary restriction-fed mice

than in the ad libitum-fed mice. Tumour microvessel density (Factor

VIII immunostaining) was two-fold less in the dietary restriction

mice than in the ad libitum mice, whereas the tumour apoptotic index

(TUNEL assay) was three-fold greater in the dietary restriction mice

than in the ad libitum mice. CT-2A tumour cell-induced vascularity

was also less in the dietary restriction mice than in the ad libitum

mice in the in vivo Matrigel plug assay. These findings indicate that

dietary restriction inhibited CT-2A growth by reducing angiogenesis

and by enhancing apoptosis. Dietary restriction may shift the tumour

microenvironment from a proangiogenic to an antiangiogenic state

through multiple effects on the tumour cells and the tumour-

associated host cells. Our data suggest that moderate dietary

restriction may be an effective antiangiogenic therapy for recurrent

malignant brain cancers. DOI: 10.1038/sj/bjc/6600298

www.bjcancer.comCopyright 2002 Cancer Research UK

PMID: 12085212

An online paper by A. B. (I think he used to work with Linus

ing but they had a " falling out " at some point) available at

www.nutritionandcancer.org reports on the results of rat experiments

using " dietary restriction " as a method to retard tumor growth.

claims that the effectiveness of vegetarian/raw fruit and

vegetable diets is really due more to the caloric restriction

inherent in following the diet rather than beneficial phytochemicals

found in the foods. concludes:

" In experiments involving 38 different diets and 1846 non-athymic

hairless mice exposed to UV radiation, we have found that the rate of

growth of squamous cell carcinoma varies over a 20-fold range as a

function of nutritional balance. This suggests that nutrition should

be carefully researched as a useful component of cancer therapy. This

conclusion is warranted by the magnitude of differences observed

herein and is probably independent of the particular cancer system we

have studied or the specific diets we have used.In addition, these

results suggest that, in the case of therapy for already established

cancer, special attention should be given to diets that are not

necessarily ideal for ordinary good health " .

There is another article about caloric restriction research in

Science Daily Magazine (not specifically aimed at cancer)

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/07/020710081137.htm

Caloric Restriction Research: Moving From Lab Animals To Humans

For more than 60 years scientists have known that restricting the

caloric intake in several species of animals can extend life span and

slow down the aging process. The prevalence of obesity in America has

prompted scientists to consider caloric restriction (CR) research for

humans as a way to get America in shape and living longer.

Should scientists subject humans to research studies on CR to see

whether it produces the same results in humans as in lab animals?

What effect will CR have on psychosocial health and quality of life?

Should CR replace other human weight-control strategies? Is CR even

possible given the fact that humans have unrestricted access to food?

Anyway - just some thoughts. Caloric restriction/fasting an

interesting hypothesis with maybe a bit of supporting scientific

evidence, but as noted before I would think the application of this

might be a bit tricky for humans (e.g. advanced patients already

losing weight due to their cancer might be " too far along " to benefit

and dieting could kill them faster than the cancer.) Not clear just

HOW MUCH you should restrict calories during " fasting " periods, too

much could wipe the immune system as bad as chemo, which could be the

reason for another poster's statement <<practitioner told me that

SOME cancers " explode " following water fasts; that's all I know>>

Best Wishes,

Alternative Medicine Page

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/suthercon/Altther.htm

> I certainly would love to hear more about this. Anyone have more

info?

> Bev.

> Re: Fasting

>

>

> > From: cjcamt <aaa.woodwork@q...>

> > > Has anyone ever come across the book, " The

> > Breuss Cancer Cure " , by

> > > Rudolf Breuss. If so, what do you think?

> > > Bye for now, Marie

> > I think it's fascinating. I believe he got

> > excellent success even though he exaggerated his

> > results. Such a water/tea fast can be extremely

> > effective, BUT

> > 1. If I had cancer, I would consider water fasting

> > only under close medical supervision of

> > practitioner knowledgeable about fasting w/cancer

> > patients.

> > 2. I wouldn't begin such a fast unless I was

> > serious about following through (completely

> > it)--consuming only water, tea, & a little juice

> > for about 6 weeks?

> > 3. 1 practitioner told me that SOME cancers

> > " explode " following water fasts; that's all I

> > know.

> >

> >

> >

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Share on other sites

I have no personal experience, but I have run across some interesting

articles indicating MAYBE there is something to it. As another

poster said, it probably is NOT a good idea to try this without help

from a medical professional.

AACR Meeting Oct 2002

http://www.aacr.org/1131zv.asp

The suggestion is that periodic fasting is BETTER than constant low

calorie diet (Keep in mind when reading, many chemos CURE cancer

in mice but we all know things don't work the same for people!)

[start snip]

Method of Dieting May Play a Role in Prevention of Breast Cancer

A healthy diet combined with periods of calorie restriction may

provide more protection against breast cancer than a constant low

calorie diet, according to researchers at the Hormel Institute,

University of Minnesota.

" The manner in which caloric restriction is implemented may play an

important role in the development of breast cancer, " according to

Margot Cleary, lead investigator of the study. " There appears to be a

point above which calorie intake stimulates the growth of breast

cancer and can potentially override, to some degree, the protective

effect of severe caloric restriction. "

Mammary mouse tumor virus (MMTV)-TGFa mice (TGFa regulates growth)

were fed either an ad lititum (as desired; AL), a calorie restricted

(CR) or an intermittent caloric restriction/refeeding (IR-R) diet.

The incidence of mammary tumors was 84 percent in AL mice, 37 percent

for the CR mice, and 15 percent for the IR-R mice. Age of mammary

tumor detection was significantly extended in the IR-R mice to 79.4

weeks of age compared to 67.9 weeks of age for AL mice. In addition,

AL mice were younger at death than were both IR-R and CR mice.

[stop snip]

For those ALREADY having cancer (as opposed to healthy people trying

to PREVENT cancer), it is even possible that CR could increase

metastasis by suppressing the immune sytem as suggested in this paper

http://www.herc.org/news/mcsarticles/frame.htm

Caloric Restriction as a Mechanism Mediating Resistance to

Environmental Disease

Lynn T. Frame,1 W. Hart,2 and n E.A. Leakey2

[start snip]

Moreover, even caloric restriction may not be beneficial under all

circumstances. Although a decreased inflammatory response appears to

be beneficial during the early stages of the carcinogenesis process

(103,213), immunodeficiency once carcinogenic tumors have developed

will facilitate metastatic growth (209). As explained above, in most

animal experiments the caloric deficit and resultant hypercorticism

has subsided before most tumors reach the metastatic stage. However,

if caloric restriction is initiated in cancer patients once the

carcinogenic tumors have been established, the benefits of its

antimitogenic effects may be outweighed by the risk of its

immunosuppressive effects

[stop snip]

Abstract suggesting in MICE dietary restriction could inhibit

angiogenesis (blood vessel growth to tumor) in established cancer:

Br J Cancer 2002 May 20;86(10):1615-21

Dietary restriction reduces angiogenesis and growth in an orthotopic

mouse brain tumour model.

Mukherjee P, El-Abbadi MM, Kasperzyk JL, Ranes MK, Seyfried TN.

Biology Department, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, MA

02467, USA.

Diet and lifestyle produce major effects on tumour incidence,

prevalence, and natural history. Moderate dietary restriction has

long been recognised as a natural therapy that improves health,

promotes longevity, and reduces both the incidence and growth of many

tumour types. Dietary restriction differs from fasting or starvation

by reducing total food and caloric intake without causing nutritional

deficiencies. No prior studies have evaluated the responsiveness of

malignant brain cancer to dietary restriction. We found that a

moderate dietary restriction of 30-40% significantly inhibited the

intracerebral growth of the CT-2A syngeneic malignant mouse

astrocytoma by almost 80%. The total dietary intake for the ad

libitum control group (n=9) and the dietary restriction experimental

group (n=10) was about 20 and 13 Kcal day(-1), respectively. Overall

health and vitality was better in the dietary restriction-fed mice

than in the ad libitum-fed mice. Tumour microvessel density (Factor

VIII immunostaining) was two-fold less in the dietary restriction

mice than in the ad libitum mice, whereas the tumour apoptotic index

(TUNEL assay) was three-fold greater in the dietary restriction mice

than in the ad libitum mice. CT-2A tumour cell-induced vascularity

was also less in the dietary restriction mice than in the ad libitum

mice in the in vivo Matrigel plug assay. These findings indicate that

dietary restriction inhibited CT-2A growth by reducing angiogenesis

and by enhancing apoptosis. Dietary restriction may shift the tumour

microenvironment from a proangiogenic to an antiangiogenic state

through multiple effects on the tumour cells and the tumour-

associated host cells. Our data suggest that moderate dietary

restriction may be an effective antiangiogenic therapy for recurrent

malignant brain cancers. DOI: 10.1038/sj/bjc/6600298

www.bjcancer.comCopyright 2002 Cancer Research UK

PMID: 12085212

An online paper by A. B. (I think he used to work with Linus

ing but they had a " falling out " at some point) available at

www.nutritionandcancer.org reports on the results of rat experiments

using " dietary restriction " as a method to retard tumor growth.

claims that the effectiveness of vegetarian/raw fruit and

vegetable diets is really due more to the caloric restriction

inherent in following the diet rather than beneficial phytochemicals

found in the foods. concludes:

" In experiments involving 38 different diets and 1846 non-athymic

hairless mice exposed to UV radiation, we have found that the rate of

growth of squamous cell carcinoma varies over a 20-fold range as a

function of nutritional balance. This suggests that nutrition should

be carefully researched as a useful component of cancer therapy. This

conclusion is warranted by the magnitude of differences observed

herein and is probably independent of the particular cancer system we

have studied or the specific diets we have used.In addition, these

results suggest that, in the case of therapy for already established

cancer, special attention should be given to diets that are not

necessarily ideal for ordinary good health " .

There is another article about caloric restriction research in

Science Daily Magazine (not specifically aimed at cancer)

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/07/020710081137.htm

Caloric Restriction Research: Moving From Lab Animals To Humans

For more than 60 years scientists have known that restricting the

caloric intake in several species of animals can extend life span and

slow down the aging process. The prevalence of obesity in America has

prompted scientists to consider caloric restriction (CR) research for

humans as a way to get America in shape and living longer.

Should scientists subject humans to research studies on CR to see

whether it produces the same results in humans as in lab animals?

What effect will CR have on psychosocial health and quality of life?

Should CR replace other human weight-control strategies? Is CR even

possible given the fact that humans have unrestricted access to food?

Anyway - just some thoughts. Caloric restriction/fasting an

interesting hypothesis with maybe a bit of supporting scientific

evidence, but as noted before I would think the application of this

might be a bit tricky for humans (e.g. advanced patients already

losing weight due to their cancer might be " too far along " to benefit

and dieting could kill them faster than the cancer.) Not clear just

HOW MUCH you should restrict calories during " fasting " periods, too

much could wipe the immune system as bad as chemo, which could be the

reason for another poster's statement <<practitioner told me that

SOME cancers " explode " following water fasts; that's all I know>>

Best Wishes,

Alternative Medicine Page

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/suthercon/Altther.htm

> I certainly would love to hear more about this. Anyone have more

info?

> Bev.

> Re: Fasting

>

>

> > From: cjcamt <aaa.woodwork@q...>

> > > Has anyone ever come across the book, " The

> > Breuss Cancer Cure " , by

> > > Rudolf Breuss. If so, what do you think?

> > > Bye for now, Marie

> > I think it's fascinating. I believe he got

> > excellent success even though he exaggerated his

> > results. Such a water/tea fast can be extremely

> > effective, BUT

> > 1. If I had cancer, I would consider water fasting

> > only under close medical supervision of

> > practitioner knowledgeable about fasting w/cancer

> > patients.

> > 2. I wouldn't begin such a fast unless I was

> > serious about following through (completely

> > it)--consuming only water, tea, & a little juice

> > for about 6 weeks?

> > 3. 1 practitioner told me that SOME cancers

> > " explode " following water fasts; that's all I

> > know.

> >

> >

> >

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Share on other sites

I have also read somewhere that your body has a lot of work to do by

digesting food, and that fasting allows your body to heal disease, however i

cant remeber which book i read and would certainly reccommend much more

looking into before taking my advice, but maybe its worth more of a look,

just my thoughts anyway

lea

Re: Fasting

> >

> >

> > > From: cjcamt <aaa.woodwork@q...>

> > > > Has anyone ever come across the book, " The

> > > Breuss Cancer Cure " , by

> > > > Rudolf Breuss. If so, what do you think?

> > > > Bye for now, Marie

> > > I think it's fascinating. I believe he got

> > > excellent success even though he exaggerated his

> > > results. Such a water/tea fast can be extremely

> > > effective, BUT

> > > 1. If I had cancer, I would consider water fasting

> > > only under close medical supervision of

> > > practitioner knowledgeable about fasting w/cancer

> > > patients.

> > > 2. I wouldn't begin such a fast unless I was

> > > serious about following through (completely

> > > it)--consuming only water, tea, & a little juice

> > > for about 6 weeks?

> > > 3. 1 practitioner told me that SOME cancers

> > > " explode " following water fasts; that's all I

> > > know.

> > >

> > >

> > >

>

>

> Get HUGE info at http://www.cures for cancer.ws, and post your own links there.

Unsubscribe by sending email to cures for cancer-unsubscribeegroups or by

visiting http://www.bobhurt.com/subunsub.mv

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have also read somewhere that your body has a lot of work to do by

digesting food, and that fasting allows your body to heal disease, however i

cant remeber which book i read and would certainly reccommend much more

looking into before taking my advice, but maybe its worth more of a look,

just my thoughts anyway

lea

Re: Fasting

> >

> >

> > > From: cjcamt <aaa.woodwork@q...>

> > > > Has anyone ever come across the book, " The

> > > Breuss Cancer Cure " , by

> > > > Rudolf Breuss. If so, what do you think?

> > > > Bye for now, Marie

> > > I think it's fascinating. I believe he got

> > > excellent success even though he exaggerated his

> > > results. Such a water/tea fast can be extremely

> > > effective, BUT

> > > 1. If I had cancer, I would consider water fasting

> > > only under close medical supervision of

> > > practitioner knowledgeable about fasting w/cancer

> > > patients.

> > > 2. I wouldn't begin such a fast unless I was

> > > serious about following through (completely

> > > it)--consuming only water, tea, & a little juice

> > > for about 6 weeks?

> > > 3. 1 practitioner told me that SOME cancers

> > > " explode " following water fasts; that's all I

> > > know.

> > >

> > >

> > >

>

>

> Get HUGE info at http://www.cures for cancer.ws, and post your own links there.

Unsubscribe by sending email to cures for cancer-unsubscribeegroups or by

visiting http://www.bobhurt.com/subunsub.mv

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 months later...

---Tia dont fast with hypoglycemia its very dangerous and you need to

keep your protein level high. Is your's controlled by diet or other

means. I have two hypoglycemic twins. And there's were controlled

by diet. They are older now and have grandparents that are

diabetic's. So being a mom I still jump on them when I see that they

are eating candy by the handfulls. Take Care. You can eat seeds but

if you are trying to loose weight. Dont eat alot of them. But keep

them around for snacks. I personally like turkey jerky. See ya

In , " son " <mcnlambs@m...>

wrote:

> Greetings,

>

> Just wondering if any of you have had an experience with fasting as

subscribe on the curezone website? Also, have any of you done the

liver or any of the other cleanses that he recommends. I am

hypoglycemic and wonder if these are safe for me to do.

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I am only broadline and it is controlled by diet. I have stressed adrenals so

my syptoms can be quite severe if I do not watch myself for a week or so. I am

very in tune with my body and really know when I have gone to far with the fruit

or carbs. Unless you are making the jerky yourself, it probably has some form

of sugar in it.

I am doing the ER4YT diet and have been for about a month. About a year ago I

had a miscarriage and that is when I found out about the hypoglymeia. It took

me about two month or so to figure out exactly what was wrong with me. I was

very depressed because of the miscarriage and the gypoglycmia was making it

worse.

I did the zone diet for awhile but I was so nervous about getting sick again, I

think that I over did it because I gained 20 lbs. It has been a rough year.

Before all of this, I had been following the Fit for Life recommendations. This

worked really well for me until last year.

I have lost 8 lbs so far with ER4YT and am looking fwd to more. I am still

learning what works well for me. My husband is getting a big kick out of

watching me as I desire more and more red meat. I feel best aft. consuming a

rare steak and a salad with romaine.

Thanks for your input. Anyone else?

MC

Re: Fasting

---Tia dont fast with hypoglycemia its very dangerous and you need to

keep your protein level high. Is your's controlled by diet or other

means. I have two hypoglycemic twins. And there's were controlled

by diet. They are older now and have grandparents that are

diabetic's. So being a mom I still jump on them when I see that they

are eating candy by the handfulls. Take Care. You can eat seeds but

if you are trying to loose weight. Dont eat alot of them. But keep

them around for snacks. I personally like turkey jerky. See ya

In , " son " <mcnlambs@m...>

wrote:

> Greetings,

>

> Just wondering if any of you have had an experience with fasting as

subscribe on the curezone website? Also, have any of you done the

liver or any of the other cleanses that he recommends. I am

hypoglycemic and wonder if these are safe for me to do.

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Share on other sites

In a message dated 2/16/03 12:08:54 PM Eastern Standard Time,

mcnlambs@... writes:

> Just wondering if any of you have had an experience with fasting as

> subscribe on the curezone website? Also, have any of you done the liver or

> any of the other cleanses that he recommends.

I have done the liver cleanses, and felt great afterwards. I too was

hypoglycemic when I did them, and found I had no problems at all.

Hanida

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