Guest guest Posted December 15, 2010 Report Share Posted December 15, 2010 AH Tammy!! Miss the DD girls...I felt like they were my friends - even though I paid them to be! HA! And Northerners/New Englanders/New Yorkers are not rude, they are focused. They don't like little chatter to get in the way of the days' mission. At least, this is what I tell my southern friends... and of course, it irritates the crap out of me when I order something, and it isn't the way I like it...it's hard to tip when you are paying $$ for a coffee, and they aren't meticulous about how you like it...you could say " screw you " to my face, but if you get my coffee right, you're okay in my book. LOL! Don't need politeness, just get my order right.. okay, back to the genetics thing... What I have read, and I tend to believe or at least agree with, is that genetic expression is a problem with predisposition, but it's not a death sentence. Yes, one might have the predisposition, but if you get the diet/nutrition right, only the 'good' side to the genes will express themselves. If you don't then, you get the bad expression of genes. This happens mostly due to habitual/careless nutrition vs good habits/thoughtful process. (Ie. My Mom ate Ice cream every day, I eat ice cream everyday and we both are fat. It's not that I have a fat gene, it's that I have this bad habits.) ....and I have read about your cousin's and husband's nephews conditions...I forget where I read it, but I will try to find it and pass it along. I want to say it has to do with habenero peppers (they are high in something that helps with that condition, which is cancer related, but not, I have to think about it...and I know I will find it...) Let's say that everyone in my family gets heart disease. It might be a genetic predisposition, but if you know and understand that, and you eat/take supplements that ward that off (low fat diet, exercise, etc.) then you probably won't get heart disease. I just watched " Curing Cancer the Natural Way " -- and he does this little short thing on genetics, and I thought it was helpful to understand. Someone else, said they just watched a documentary on genetics, and I was trying to find it..because it sounded interesting to me. (No one has cancer in my family, I was looking at alternative methods more intense methods of healing...that's all.) about Rob...ah, how I love my brother. I want to start out by saying, he DRIVES me crazy...and I absolutely love him. He's doing great. The diet has done wonders for this kid. I mean, if there is a case to be made about the gf/cf diet, he's the one to make it. He went from a kid standing in a closet rocking himself to soothe the sensory overload, and watching TV out of the corner of his eye to staying home by himself, and getting a job! All in a year. (BTW, he watches TV normally now, however, he is wicked annoying because he talks and asks questions during the show. - I am like " ROB, shhh...wait, stop talking. " And as annoying as that is, there is this being, who has awakened from being inside himself for a long time...so it's amazing progress. He is with my sister in FL for the next two months. He is getting his eye glass prescription moved up closer to his actual prescription (this is to help with the sensory overload), and he is really happy with his new glasses, and having his teeth worked on getting the mercury removed and new fillings for his teeth (pretty white ones!) and he just started an art class. His doctor is amazed. His first office visit, it took 3 hours to get 9 viles of blood. Now he walks in, sits down, and say's " Okay Annie, I am ready. " and gets is blood drawn. 5 minutes, tops, now. It took 4 hours to get him to sit in the dentist chair, now he goes in, wants to know what your name is, introduces himself, and then will let people work on him. It's the difference of night and day. He is going up to see our Dad in NY for Christmas. My Dad has had another stroke but wanted to see Rob and asked for Rob to stay with him for two weeks. The family hasn't seen him for a year and a half now...I think they will be in shock. My sister and I both feel like if we don't get the mercury out of his teeth, then we won't know if a full recovery is possible. He's as far as he can go (I think) right now...so we want more. I think most people would be happy with Rob's rapid progress, but I can't help but feel like, I am missing something. I am currently looking into the Gerson Therapy for Cancer. (I know, why this therapy?) and the reason is that it looks extremely promising, and I have shown myself that I can be strict and dedicated to the process. Now I just have to convince Rob this is the way to go. I know he feels better. His processing time went from 20 minutes to instant (the Dr. measured it), and has improved in a lot of areas. (Especially socially!) Anyway...the long and short of it...he makes a very special case for biomedical therapies, as he is 26 years old, and responded beautifully to diet/supplements. I wish my Mom could have seen this, as she would be so proud of him, he worked really hard and had to give up a lot. We have a ways to go, but it's promising. Thanks for asking...I like telling people how great he is, and what a pain in the keister he can be. laura > > > > > > I believe the other part of it is so that people are not asking questions > >that > > > > >have already been answered IN the book as well > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.