Guest guest Posted September 15, 2004 Report Share Posted September 15, 2004 Cheryl, Thank Lynn for her implicit explanation as to why her mother is dying so quickly and wish her the best. You could throw in one of those happy faces that she likes. As to the prayers, you could tell her that you'd like to pray for her but that you are wary of interfering with God's wrath toward willfully stupid and arrogant families -- and give her another happy face. At 03:44 PM 09/15/04, you wrote: >I thought you all would understand my total astonishment concerning this >situation. I met a woman on another list. Not a health-related list, but >an educational list. She made mention that she was very upset that the >doctors could do nothing further to treat her mother's cancer. They >thought she had 2-5 years and now she has very little time left. I >thought I would offer her some suggestions, because there are people out >there that just don't know what other options are available to them >besides allopathic medicine. I wasn' pushy at all, but rather gave her my >own story and told her of others I know and have heard about who have >achieved great success with alternative methods. I left it up to her if >she would like more info and offered to send her web sites, email lists, >book suggestions, etc. I just received an email from her, and I am simply >flabberghasted. Here's what she wrote: > > Thank you for your email. Both my sister and husband are physicians, >though, so you are preaching to the wrong audience. : ) I do appreciate >your prayers. Lynn > >The fact that her sister and husband are doctors is really irrelevant at >this point since the medical profession has written this woman off as a >hopeless case. Am I wrong in thinking that if you love someone, you would >want to do everything possible to help them survive? Why do people just >accept what they are told by doctors? I'm guessing I should just let this >matter go and not even bother emailing this woman back. I just feel so >sorry for her poor mother. Her fate is being decided without her >participation. I just want to commend all of you on this list who are >care givers to someone with cancer. How lucky they are to have someone in >their lives who is willing to go that extra mile. It's just so sad that >not everyone has someone like that. Blessings, Cheryl > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 15, 2004 Report Share Posted September 15, 2004 I CANNOT believe I just read this email. So, is this really a SUPPORT group? It seems that far too many of the emails are slamming one person or another because of their medical beliefs. People are going through the worst time of there lives (including me) here. I have a 50% chance to live and I'm looking for alternatives to help out my mainstream medical treatment. How about showing some compassion to everyone in the group!!!!!!!! And some understanding that not every person will follow every alternative guidance given by this group. Who is monitoring this group? This email NEVER should have been allowed to be posted. Calling a family with a dying mother " stupid and arrogant " as if it were a joke to be told is . well I don't need to say what it is. It's simply intolerable in my opinion. Would you like the dying mother or her daughter to get a copy of this email?? I ask again . who is monitoring this group? Anyone?? Re: [ ] ***I just don't get it*** Cheryl, Thank Lynn for her implicit explanation as to why her mother is dying so quickly and wish her the best. You could throw in one of those happy faces that she likes. As to the prayers, you could tell her that you'd like to pray for her but that you are wary of interfering with God's wrath toward willfully stupid and arrogant families -- and give her another happy face. At 03:44 PM 09/15/04, you wrote: >I thought you all would understand my total astonishment concerning this >situation. I met a woman on another list. Not a health-related list, but >an educational list. She made mention that she was very upset that the >doctors could do nothing further to treat her mother's cancer. They >thought she had 2-5 years and now she has very little time left. I >thought I would offer her some suggestions, because there are people out >there that just don't know what other options are available to them >besides allopathic medicine. I wasn' pushy at all, but rather gave her my >own story and told her of others I know and have heard about who have >achieved great success with alternative methods. I left it up to her if >she would like more info and offered to send her web sites, email lists, >book suggestions, etc. I just received an email from her, and I am simply >flabberghasted. Here's what she wrote: > > Thank you for your email. Both my sister and husband are physicians, >though, so you are preaching to the wrong audience. : ) I do appreciate >your prayers. Lynn > >The fact that her sister and husband are doctors is really irrelevant at >this point since the medical profession has written this woman off as a >hopeless case. Am I wrong in thinking that if you love someone, you would >want to do everything possible to help them survive? Why do people just >accept what they are told by doctors? I'm guessing I should just let this >matter go and not even bother emailing this woman back. I just feel so >sorry for her poor mother. Her fate is being decided without her >participation. I just want to commend all of you on this list who are >care givers to someone with cancer. How lucky they are to have someone in >their lives who is willing to go that extra mile. It's just so sad that >not everyone has someone like that. Blessings, Cheryl > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 > I CANNOT believe I just read this email. > > So, is this really a SUPPORT group? Hi Curt, yes, it is a support group. It supports survival and healing though, not just anything anyone might like to see supported. We all support different things, you know, in our different ways, doing the best we can. There's overwhelmingly more groups on the internet that support mainstream interventions than otherwise. If you believe you could get better support from one of those groups, perhaps you should look into joining one of them? I did, and indeed found people discussing the specific cancer I was looking to battle extremely supportive. They support chemotherapy and radiation wholeheartedly. They support " whatever your doctor tells you to do, just do it. " They support the " above all, trust your oncologist and you'll be fine " attitude. I was afraid to make a peep there. It's like an army, you know... Just obey all the orders and no one ever gets hurt, let alone dies, is that clear?! Yes sir!! Someone who was less careful than me and mentioned something about the possibility of questioning those orders was nearly torn to pieces by the supportive bunch in front of my very eyes. It's always a matter of finding the group that supports what YOU need supported. If this one is a wrong one, I sincerely hope you will find one that meets your expectations more accurately. Best wishes and good health, Elena Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 Curt, I got interested in the alternatives after friends started dying of cancer. About 1/2 of them made it, even though they did the most exhaustive treatment, including experimental treatments, that research facilities like City of Hope could offer. Some were sent home to die after their immune system was so badly damaged that they couldn't do any more chemo. Some have my platelettes helping their recovery. My own cancer was very minor by comparison, and cansema and surgery took care of it. No chemo, no radiation. For some others, frequency treatments, either by pad devices or by plasma lamp devices, helped, but virtually all had to get into serious dietary and nutritional changes in their lifestyles to win the war. Please consider that many here are in different phases of health, many looking for anything that might help, even after overwhelming odds, and some are very angry, having believed most of their lives that we in the US have the " Best " medical system in the world - until they, or their friends, ran into these horrible diseases, and the limited treatment options available from the US medical and legal system. I know MDs who practice alternative medicine, and they're busier than any rational person could wish on them (Calif, Texas, Georgia, Canada). There are alternatives to conventional treatment, but there are no " magic pills " - it takes a lot of determination and work to beat this disease; sadly, many are no longer able to fight that battle. Not all of us are always pleasant and consoling - sometimes the anger shows. In health, Dave me2youlink wrote: > > >>I CANNOT believe I just read this email. >> >>So, is this really a SUPPORT group? > > > Hi Curt, > > yes, it is a support group. It supports survival and healing though, > not just anything anyone might like to see supported. We all support > different things, you know, in our different ways, doing the best we can. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 Hi Curt, I'm on several discussion groups and every so often there's some kind of heated disagreement or a message that seems out of line. On one of the boards someone recently asked your question about the monitoring of the group. After a day or so of angry messages flying back & forth among several people, the monitor intervened to explain that on usually only new members are monitored for a while to make sure their messages are in line with the group's purpose, after that if someone who is a regular member continues to cause a problem through upsetting or off-topic messages, that person may get a warning (it could be done backchannel rather than on the discussion board). If the person continues to cause a problem after the warning, it's possible to be banned from the group. So, that was the explanation. I guess it would apply here, too. This group is owned by CureZone.org which has many discussion forums and many voluteers who help monitor the discussions. I try to look for information I can use out of the groups I read and let the rest go. Annie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 The parent suffers because of the children's arrogance and stupidity masquerading as knowledge. The blind leading the blind. Gammill <vgammill@...> wrote:Cheryl, Thank Lynn for her implicit explanation as to why her mother is dying so quickly and wish her the best. You could throw in one of those happy faces that she likes. As to the prayers, you could tell her that you'd like to pray for her but that you are wary of interfering with God's wrath toward willfully stupid and arrogant families -- and give her another happy face. At 03:44 PM 09/15/04, you wrote: >I thought you all would understand my total astonishment concerning this >situation. I met a woman on another list. Not a health-related list, but >an educational list. She made mention that she was very upset that the >doctors could do nothing further to treat her mother's cancer. They >thought she had 2-5 years and now she has very little time left. I >thought I would offer her some suggestions, because there are people out >there that just don't know what other options are available to them >besides allopathic medicine. I wasn' pushy at all, but rather gave her my >own story and told her of others I know and have heard about who have >achieved great success with alternative methods. I left it up to her if >she would like more info and offered to send her web sites, email lists, >book suggestions, etc. I just received an email from her, and I am simply >flabberghasted. Here's what she wrote: > > Thank you for your email. Both my sister and husband are physicians, >though, so you are preaching to the wrong audience. : ) I do appreciate >your prayers. Lynn > >The fact that her sister and husband are doctors is really irrelevant at >this point since the medical profession has written this woman off as a >hopeless case. Am I wrong in thinking that if you love someone, you would >want to do everything possible to help them survive? Why do people just >accept what they are told by doctors? I'm guessing I should just let this >matter go and not even bother emailing this woman back. I just feel so >sorry for her poor mother. Her fate is being decided without her >participation. I just want to commend all of you on this list who are >care givers to someone with cancer. How lucky they are to have someone in >their lives who is willing to go that extra mile. It's just so sad that >not everyone has someone like that. Blessings, Cheryl > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 As millions of lemmings rush headlong toward the cliff it is not that useful to focus on one and feel sorry for it. The smart move is simply to get out of the way. Blind acceptance of conventional medicine and the race to hospice is a multigenerational folly. It is not unfair to assume that the lady with cancer begat her own premature demise. We are witnessing nature in all its glory. At 05:05 AM 09/16/04, you wrote: >The parent suffers because of the children's arrogance and stupidity >masquerading as knowledge. The blind leading the blind. > > Gammill <vgammill@...> wrote:Cheryl, >Thank Lynn for her implicit explanation as to why her mother is dying >so quickly and wish her the best. You could throw in one of those happy >faces that she likes. >As to the prayers, you could tell her that you'd like to pray for >her but that you are wary of interfering with God's wrath toward willfully >stupid and arrogant families -- and give her another happy face. > > >At 03:44 PM 09/15/04, you wrote: > >I thought you all would understand my total astonishment concerning this > >situation. I met a woman on another list. Not a health-related list, but > >an educational list. She made mention that she was very upset that the > >doctors could do nothing further to treat her mother's cancer. They > >thought she had 2-5 years and now she has very little time left. I > >thought I would offer her some suggestions, because there are people out > >there that just don't know what other options are available to them > >besides allopathic medicine. I wasn' pushy at all, but rather gave her my > >own story and told her of others I know and have heard about who have > >achieved great success with alternative methods. I left it up to her if > >she would like more info and offered to send her web sites, email lists, > >book suggestions, etc. I just received an email from her, and I am simply > >flabberghasted. Here's what she wrote: > > > > Thank you for your email. Both my sister and husband are physicians, > >though, so you are preaching to the wrong audience. : ) I do appreciate > >your prayers. Lynn > > > >The fact that her sister and husband are doctors is really irrelevant at > >this point since the medical profession has written this woman off as a > >hopeless case. Am I wrong in thinking that if you love someone, you would > >want to do everything possible to help them survive? Why do people just > >accept what they are told by doctors? I'm guessing I should just let this > >matter go and not even bother emailing this woman back. I just feel so > >sorry for her poor mother. Her fate is being decided without her > >participation. I just want to commend all of you on this list who are > >care givers to someone with cancer. How lucky they are to have someone in > >their lives who is willing to go that extra mile. It's just so sad that > >not everyone has someone like that. Blessings, Cheryl > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 Well, , you and a few others in this group seem to feel strongly that conventional medicine is 100% useless to cure my cancer. So the consensus of several of you is to stop seeing my doctor and JUST do alternative therapy. OK. I'm here. I have Acute Myeloid Leukemia. Traditional medicine is giving me a 50% cure rate. It will include reduced versions of chemo/radiation with a new protocol out of Seattle, one of the leading places in the country for transplants for AML patients. They have clinically controlled studies to back up this cure rate. So traditional medicine IS offering me an option on how to cure me. It's not great, but it's something. So here's the challenge which I laid out in a prior email which no one answered. SHOW ME ONE CLINICALLY CONTROLLED ALTERNATIVE STUDY WHICH FACTUALLY SUPPORTS A CURE RATE FOR AML > 50%. If you or anyone can do, this then I'm in. This is a REAL situation. Who's up for the challenge????? Anyone?????? And if no one can answer this question, then maybe it's worth pondering the merits of conventional medicine if, say just in my case, it may offer a better cure rate than alternative medicine. In the meantime, while I wait for an answer to my rhetorical question, I'll continue down the path of using the best of BOTH medical and alternative treatments to give me the best odds possible to save my life. Re: [ ] ***I just don't get it*** As millions of lemmings rush headlong toward the cliff it is not that useful to focus on one and feel sorry for it. The smart move is simply to get out of the way. Blind acceptance of conventional medicine and the race to hospice is a multigenerational folly. It is not unfair to assume that the lady with cancer begat her own premature demise. We are witnessing nature in all its glory. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 Show me the one drug company that will do rsearch on Dr. Kelley's programme. The man cured people from AML and himself from pancreatic cancer, and what did he get? He was harrassed and they tried to kill him (by poisoning him). Show me who on earth, who wants to profit from a treatment he sells, like drug companies, will do research on macrobiotic diet, which is documented by Dr. Sherry to cure ALM. And lastly, why in 2004 do I have to see T.V programmes like that: non-conventional cancer therapist attacked on T.V From T.V program 19.8.2004 An Israeli T.V program crew member presented herself as having Acute Myeloid Leukemia (she is healthy, though) and went to an alternative therapist, he was pictured with a hidden camera, and was presented as a quack on T.V at prime time. The story goes, that she tells him she is 30 and she doesn't want to lose hair, and that the doctors said she must have immediately chemotherapy and bone marrow transplantation. She says she wants something alternative, she asks him whether it's possible to not go for the conventional treatment, and cure her cancer, and he assures her it's possible and that she has to change her nutrition. He also tells her twice, that chemotherapy is effective with her type of cancer, but he adds it has side effects and there's a possibility for cancer to return in the future. She asks him what he would do instead of her, he says that if he had cancer, he wouldn't have had chemotherapy, also if he had to die, because chemotherapy itself kills. So she tells him- so why don't they give this treatment in hospitals? He tells her of the profits they gain from chemotherapy, so she says that it's a scandal. he answers- It's not a scandal. It is murder. They murder the people. The whole presentation of the subject was to mock at him, when the investigative reporter of the program said he pretends to cure people with nutrition and encourages them not to go for their " essential " treatment, she said that he claimed he could cure them only with nutrition and when saying the word " nutrition " she made a face showing she completely doesn't believe in nutrition. Anyway, after they presented him as a criminial, they asked 3 conventional doctors what they think of this, and one of these doctors is the chairman of the israeli War on Cancer Association (or Israeli Cancer Society, a twin of the American Cancer Society). All of them said it's quackery except from the War on Cancer Association chairman who just said that he hopes that after 3-4 months, when she finishes the alternative and comes to the hospital, it won't be too late. The T.V crew investigative reporter said that they did speak to a woman who had had breast cancer and was cured after she had been to this therapist, but that they (T.V) couldn't check whether she was really cured because of his treatment or because of something else. This therapist was attacked after an israeli successful pharmaceutical company pressured our Health Ministry to block a treatment of water rich in minerals which he gave, with which many patients had cancer regressions. Actually my dog, when he was alive, showed a complete termination of bleeding from his nose and tumor shrinkage after drinking the water for two weeks. Also I know a guy who had brain tumor and it was cleared after he drank the water, and a surgery was cancelled, the doctors were amazed that they had nothing to operate, because after receiving the " effective " radiations and chemotherapy, his tumor spread to the other side of his brain. He should have had a very big surgery (including his shoulder) but it was prevented by the water. The Health ministry representative whose father is a chemotherapy importer, threatened a hospital doctor not to give the water to end stage (cancer) children or else he would be fired. The children that did receive the water, by the way, were cured and sent home. Anyway, the Health Ministry caused the treatment manufature to close down, and now they attack one of the 3 therapist in Israel who treated people with the water, in addiation to vitamins, enzymes, supplements, chinese mushrooms. He has been treating cancer patients with nutrition for years. update: In the internet forum of the programme, people wrote reactions to the show. People were furious at the show, said that the info caused damage not only to , but also to the public because chemo doesn't work. Some people without knowledge on the subject, thought he was right to attack the therapist. Amnon Levi, the host of the show, sent a letter in reaction, and wrote that all these people protecting they are himself with different names, and some of his relatives. He writes that he didn't say is a criminal but that he dismissed the chemo (and that's not ok). But not only is it not true, but also as one of the people wrote, the whole programme subject (it's a every week on different subjects, exposing crimes) is crimes exposure, so the minute he is put in the programme, it's stains him as criminal. (And he also pays the price now, because he already lost patients to the TV show). That is not true, because A. the " patient " presented herself as someone who doesn't want chemo but wants alternative. It was a trap. B. He said, and it is shown by the camera, that the chemo has success with leukemia, but it still has side effects and one of the side effects is cancer. C. He didn't tell her what to do, he said that HE wouldn't go on chemo. He also offered her 3 months of nutrition treatment, and see the results. (If she didn't like it, she could always return to chemo), because he explained to her that the doctors always say to everyone that one must immediately to go on chemo, but it's not that if one doesn't go he dies the next day, so she can try for 3 months. He also said they do the " immediately " thing just because of the money incentive. Also, sent the TV program a research on a mushroom and how it succeeds with leukemia, and the data on chemo results, and he also asked them to come to the show and react on live, but they refused. He sent them a written reaction and asked to cite 13 lines but they cited much less. It was so purposely, it is so clear that it was on puropse. Also, taught nurses and pharmacists, he taught many courses in respected institutes. Re: [ ] ***I just don't get it*** > > As millions of lemmings rush headlong toward the cliff it is not that > useful to focus on one and feel sorry for it. The smart move is simply > to > get out of the way. > Blind acceptance of conventional medicine and the race to hospice is a > multigenerational folly. It is not unfair to assume that the lady with > cancer begat her own premature demise. We are witnessing nature in all > its > glory. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 Curt, Here's something else to consider as you work through the maze of ideas and possibilities. That 50% " cure " rate. Have you asked what exactly that means? Does that mean that 50% of the people who go through this protocol actually return to leading normal lives and don't get cancer again? Did you ask that? Usually, based on what I have read & witnessed - and I'm sure someone else can tell us more on this - when the drug/ medical industry says " cure, " they mean that you might stay alive for 5 years. I have read that their statistics are based on surviving for 5 years. They don't say in what condition. Also, who paid for the studies that indicate that the protocol will offer a " cure " 50% of the time? Again, from what I recall reading & hearing on tv, it's usually the drug company that will profit from the sale of their drugs or the use of the procedure. The whole system is a circular pattern. Drug companies donate money to medical universities and research departments, then the university does the research, the research gets published in JAMA which also depends on drug companies for the ads in the journal & I've read that that influences what they publish. So, when they tell you " 50% cure, " I wonder what that really means. An example of this is that drug companies and doctors (their clerks) told women (about 15 or 20 years ago) that they should start on hormone replacement therapy (synthetic estrogen & progesterone) & stay on it because it would help fight heart disease, it would help prevent osteoporosis, it would keep their skin supple & they would basically feel and look younger. I was on it for about 10 years, then I read reports that it wasn't doing what they had said; and, in fact, women on it for more than 10 years had a higher risk of breast cancer. I told my doctor, a woman, that I was stopping it. She was very much against my stopping, brought it up several times. I don't go to her anymore. But this is just an example of how drug companies and the medical industry manipulate the truth in order to sell. It's a big, big business bringing in billions of dollars. They put pressure on universities & medical journals as well as politicians. I hope that you can get the answers to these questions. You're asking for an alternative study that will give you the same odds for a " cure, " but what exactly does that mean? Who did the studies that produced these statistics, how many people were in the study, where are the research results published, have you read them, who financed the study, can you talk to people who have have been through it? With the Gerson Therapy, you can talk to over 200 volunteers who were cured by the Gerson program. They will even work with you to start the program at home & stay on it. You can contact them through the Gerson Therapy Group or the Gerson Institute online. Just some more things to think about. Even though some of the messages in this group are not easy to deal with, they are giving you various points of view. You are getting responses. That in itself is support. Curt Rettke wrote: > Well, , you and a few others in this group seem to feel strongly that conventional medicine is 100% useless to cure my cancer. So the consensus of several of you is to stop seeing my doctor and JUST do alternative therapy. OK. I'm here. > I have Acute Myeloid Leukemia. Traditional medicine is giving me a 50% cure rate. It will include reduced versions of chemo/radiation with a new protocol out of Seattle, one of the leading places in the country > for transplants for AML patients. They have clinically controlled > studies to back up this cure rate. So traditional medicine IS offering me an option on how to cure me. It's not great, but it's something. > So here's the challenge which I laid out in a prior email which no one answered. SHOW ME ONE CLINICALLY CONTROLLED ALTERNATIVE STUDY WHICH > FACTUALLY SUPPORTS A CURE RATE FOR AML > 50%. If you or anyone can do, this then I'm in. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 > > So here's the challenge which I laid out in a prior email which no one > answered. SHOW ME ONE CLINICALLY CONTROLLED ALTERNATIVE STUDY WHICH > FACTUALLY SUPPORTS A CURE RATE FOR AML > 50%. If you or anyone can do, > this then I'm in. Curt, do you know of a single double-blind placebo-controlled in vivo human study of chemotherapy? If you do, I would much appreciate seeing it. To my knowledge, they don't exist. Elena Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 > SHOW ME ONE CLINICALLY CONTROLLED ALTERNATIVE STUDY WHICH > FACTUALLY SUPPORTS A CURE RATE FOR AML > 50%. If you or anyone can do, > this then I'm in. > This is a REAL situation. Who's up for the challenge????? Curt Rettke, You came to the wrong group. Please read group description: " We are interested in pursuing and trying therapies that have not been accepted, studied or researched by mainstream medicine - those that other people and the medical community may refer to as " snake oil " or have never heard about, and are afraid to try - the ones that the pharmaceutical industry will never invest in because most are natural and there is no profit to the companies. " If you are interested in CLINICALLY CONTROLLED STUDIES, please join other cancer groups that share such data, and please stay away from this group. Dushan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 wrote: > That 50% " cure " rate. Have you asked what exactly >that means? Does that mean that 50% of the people who go through this >protocol actually return to leading normal lives and don't get cancer >again? Did you ask that? Yes, I asked. It means that I will be free of my AML disease for 5+ years. And AML, from what I've heard, rarely relapses after a few years in remission. But I will still get a reduced intensity chemo/radiation treatment of the whole body, so obviously this can cause immediate and long term problems. But the intensity is MUCH reduced over traditional AML transplant protocols. The list of " risks " in the clinical trial consent form is amazingly lower and not nearly as daunting as the full chemo/radiation most AML patients go thru. The expectation from them is no long term problems with my health, but there is obviously no guarantee of this. >With the Gerson Therapy, you can talk to over 200 volunteers who were >cured by the Gerson program. They will even work with you to start the >program at home & stay on it. You can contact them through the Gerson >Therapy Group or the Gerson Institute online. Thanks, I will do that. Leonard mentioned it's cure rate for AML is very poor, but nonetheless it could help me get stronger before and after transplant. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 For Curt Go for it. No one has an option on cancer cures, if they did they would be making a fortune. I have had CLL for 24 years. average survival time is 12 or so I opted for a combination of Chinese medicine, Cleansing, juicing AND chemo. I took two protocols and got a 6 year remission each time. My quality of life was great. You would never know I had anything wrong, energy level good and leading a normal life. Don't let the naysayers discourge you, you can get well and it makes sense to use any means to accomplish this goal. why fool with your life. One more thing i did which was very helpful was tio see Gerald Epstein MD and consulted with him about healing visualizations. They work. You can buy his books on the we. Good Luck Arlene Pannullo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2004 Report Share Posted September 17, 2004 I want to add to Curt that the problem with alternative cures is that they don't have the funding to carry out research. That doesn't mean they are not successful. Take the Gerson Therapy (sorry, I am partial to that because I've researched it a lot and read about the countless of CURED incurables) for instance. They are extremely successful at erradicating cancer and other illnesses, but they can't afford the studies. Empirically, they have proven its effectiveness and you can read about it from the patients themselves. Several of them have written books. Curt, I urge you to consider it. Best, Amelia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2004 Report Share Posted September 17, 2004 The problem with doing both conventional AND alternative medicine is that drugs are harmful to the body and they prevent the alternative methods from being effective. I know that sounds drastic, but all drugs are poison and actually create tumors. They may succeed in the short term (sometimes), but usually fail in the long run. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2004 Report Share Posted September 17, 2004 From: " Amelia Gerlach " <ameliagerlach@...> > The problem with doing both conventional AND alternative medicine is that > drugs are harmful to the body Absolutely. > and they prevent the alternative methods from > being effective. Very often they do. In some cases, they're synergistic. > I know that sounds drastic, but all drugs are poison > and actually create tumors. They may succeed in the short term (sometimes), but > usually fail in the long run. Yes, they fail in the vast majority of cancers and the vast majority of cancer patients. However, it's easy to trash conventional therapy and preach the wonders of a pure alt. approach (which I endorse for the vast majority of cancer patients) when you don't have acute (let alone AML) leukemia. Leonard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2004 Report Share Posted September 17, 2004 Amelia, Here is another one for your files, from the latest Doctor yourself newsletter. Iris. GERSON THERAPY: A PERSONAL EXPERIENCE by Tony United Kingdom Diagnosed with advanced cancer in February 2002, I was told that I would probably not have as long as five weeks to live unless I followed the orthodox methods. I did not altogether reject conventional treatment, eventually having surgery for which I was extremely grateful. The biopsy was Dukes C3 staging meant the tumour had burst the colon and had been found extensively in my lymph. My situation was further complicated when blood tests showed I was also Hepatitis B & C positive. The devastating effects of chemotherapy on friends as well as my sister's suffering as she was subjected to one session after another of experimental chemotherapy to no avail following spread of breast cancer, was instrumental in me choosing against all the pressure, to take an holistic approach combining Gerson treatment with high dose supplementation designed to boost the immune system and create an internal bio-environment detrimental to cancer. Treatment included detoxification procedures such as three coffee enemas a day. This was an informed choice based on well-documented developments in nutrition and Orthomolecular Oncology, which provides ample evidence and clinical records of people being cured of even late stage cancers by alternative, if controversial methods. I have lost, as I am sure we all have, only too many good friends and family to cancer to realize that conventional answers are not forthcoming. Tumours may be shrunk but Metastasis is the killer. If conventional treatment were so successful why on earth should I and others like me seek elsewhere? In response to some of the comments made by the medical profession, I would like to set the record straight. The American Cancer Society tells us that there is no reason for coffee enemas to work, that they are dangerous and in extreme circumstances can cause death. Does that mean that cancer is less dangerous and that chemotherapy is a benign treatment, which is always 100% efficacious? As for why they work; coffee contains choleretics, substances that increase the flow of toxin-rich bile from the gall bladder. The coffee enema is among the only pharmaceutically effective cholorectics noted in medical literature that can be safely used many times without toxic effects. Coffee enemas are no less bizarre that mustard gas, which is the origination of chemotherapy. Costs of the Gerson treatment, we are told, can be high. How much does conventional treatment cost the taxpayer and groaning NHS per patient per annum? According to the Wall St. Journal, 16 October, 2002, over $2 trillion has been spent on cancer research and treatments. Numbers dying from the disease are soaring to plague proportions with one in two projected within the next twenty years. In the developed world it is already one in three. Yet we are constantly being informed that 'the magic bullet is just around the corner.' " Rather than narrow the research spectrum we have a duty to humanity to throw the door open and explore every single avenue yet alternative treatments are continuously vilified without any honest research into their efficacy. Moves are afoot through current EU (http://www.doctoryourself.com/news/v3n21.txt) and Codex Alimentarius directives (http://www.doctoryourself.com/supplement_limit.html and http://www.doctoryourself.com/news/v2n12.txt), eventually intended for global implementation, to ban every nutrient that I and others take to deal with cancer as well as many other degenerative conditions on the basis of being 'unproven,' even though these same supplements have papers published in respectable scientific journals for peer review showing much to recommend them. It is a scandal that this choice is to be removed from mature adults by legislation. Good nutrition is our Common Wealth but modern, chemically saturated, farming techniques, has stripped the soil of essential nutrients, which can only be replaced by nutritional supplementation. Cancer kills its host and the plundering of the earth's resources by the few will do the same. Dr. Max Gerson was, as Albert Schweitzer said, a genius. As a fellow human being Prince has every right to state an opinion as much as the next man. If his detractors have the answer, then where is it? " (Doctor Yourself editor's note: Another article by Mr. on the benefits of the Gerson therapy appeared in the UK newspaper The Guardian, and is posted at http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,1115514,00.html. His email is tjaxon@... . A search for " Gerson " at http://www.doctoryourself.com will bring you much more information on this important therapy. RE: [ ] Re: ***I just don't get it*** > > I want to add to Curt that the problem with alternative cures is that they > don't have the funding to carry out research. That doesn't mean they are not > successful. Take the Gerson Therapy (sorry, I am partial to that because > I've researched it a lot and read about the countless of CURED incurables) > for instance. They are extremely successful at erradicating cancer and other > illnesses, but they can't afford the studies. Empirically, they have proven > its effectiveness and you can read about it from the patients themselves. > Several of them have written books. Curt, I urge you to consider it. Best, > Amelia > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2004 Report Share Posted September 17, 2004 Iris, thanks for the information. I totally agree. What is your situation now, are you better? How long have you done Gerson? -----Original Message----- From: Iris Atzmon Sent: Friday, September 17, 2004 3:37 PM Amelia, Here is another one for your files, from the latest Doctor yourself newsletter. Iris. GERSON THERAPY: A PERSONAL EXPERIENCE Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2004 Report Share Posted September 25, 2004 Hi Leonard: <<However, it's easy to trash conventional therapy and preach the wonders of a pure alt. approach (which I endorse for the vast majority of cancer patients) when you don't have acute (let alone AML) leukemia.>> ==>I've been following this thread. My best friend's mom (a very active and vibrant 73 year old) has AML. What can she take to help? Her blood counts have crashed after the chemo (can't remember the exact name of what they're giving her........) I'd like to get her on some alt things to improve her systemically. Any suggestions? ~Amber Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2004 Report Share Posted September 25, 2004 Hi Amber, From: " Stargazer " <Stargazer@...> > ==>I've been following this thread. My best friend's mom (a very active and > vibrant 73 year old) has AML. What can she take to help? I've already posted pretty everything I know about alt. treatments for AML. > Her blood counts > have crashed after the chemo (can't remember the exact name of what they're > giving her........) I'm sorry to hear that. > I'd like to get her on some alt things to improve her > systemically. Any suggestions? I'm not a health practitioner and don't feel like I have the medical knowledge to recommend anything for her personally. I think others on this list could answer your question better than I could. Let me know if you'd like me to email you names of holistic cancer practitioners in a particular geographic area or information I've compiled on diet and natural supplements for people w/cancer in general. Best wishes, Leonard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2004 Report Share Posted September 25, 2004 Thanks for your reply Leonard. I hesitate to recommend anything to her beyond immune boosters either since this is not a solid tumor. She does have a great onco that is willing to think outside the box :-) ~Amber > I've already posted pretty everything I know about alt. treatments for > AML. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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