Guest guest Posted December 31, 2006 Report Share Posted December 31, 2006 Luigi, If you join the flaxseedoil2 group, you can read testimonials of people who used the Budwig diet in their " files " section. Personal testimonies mean more to me than research. It is hard to deny someone else's experience. Research can be rigged to prove whatever they set out to prove. I know 3 middle-aged moms in my church who did exactly what their doctors ordered, and they're DEAD. That's enough for me. I do have two personal testimonials of men who " cured themselves " of cancer by nutritional means. They are too extensive for me to write out for you, but there are men I know of personally, and I feel confident that they are legitimate. Even my surgeon admitted that chemo and radiation are a " stab in the dark, " though she insisted that surgery was undeniably necessary. I still said " no. " As far as convincing other people, I have come to the conclusion that it's not my job. They have to do what they believe is best. Maybe I will feel differently when I am on the other side of this and have my own testimony of cure to give. There is a guy on this list who has his own web site and claims to have cured his own cancer. I cannot think of his name right now, but maybe he will respond. A lot of people may be off-list for the holidays. Hi , Do you know where I can find documented results ? Are there people on this site who cured their cancer naturally ? Luigi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 31, 2006 Report Share Posted December 31, 2006 The main person who needs to be convinced, Luigi, is you. The information you are looking for is out there (thank God for the Internet!). Keep digging for it. Stay with lists like ' ' and 'flaxseedoil2' and different posts will bring links to your attention. Another outstanding book available on amazon.com is " Cure Your Cancer: Your Guide to the Internet " by Bill . Also, Rudolph Breuss claimed to have cured 40,000 people of cancer with simple fasting. His book, also on amazon.com, contains many testimonials. Most of these people are still living. If you are really serious about research, you could go to Austria where he did most of his work. Gerson and Budwig healed many of cancer using simple foods and their methods continue to do so. So far as convincing doctors (you mean, of course, allopaths), who cares? It is important to understand that allopathic medicine is first and foremost a business that sells the products of the pharmaceutical industry. This is a trillion dollar industry and its interests are to destroy any competition that may come from natural sources where it cannot cut a profit. This is exactly what they have attempted to do to dozens of working cancer cures that have been supported by decent research and healer-patient experience. Why should they admit there is a real cure for cancer which costs pennies when each cancer patient is bringing in an average of $500,000 from surgery, chemo and radiation? Just let your doctor step a little away from the party line and he will be severely disciplined and his practice damaged when referrals stop coming his way. Posted recently on this list was documentation that chemo increases life expectancy only 2%. What is important is to get the word out there one person at a time that there are alternatives out there that work far better than surgery, chemo and radiation. When people stop buying their product, doctors will come around to a better way of thinking. There is much value in the knowledge and training they have. Dwight luigis155 wrote: >Thank you for your reply, Dwight. The reason why I'm looking for those specific studies is that this is to me the only way people (and eventually doctors) can be convinced to try alternative cancer therapies...... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2007 Report Share Posted January 3, 2007 You have summarised the problem nicely. While many approaches can be done simultaneously, others can't - and the Budwig protocol apparently doesn't mix so the vitamin C and the fish oil you're taking are likely counteracting each other. My own view is that one should do say the Budwig protocol for two months and then see what effect if any that's had. If it's good then continue. If not then move on to say intravenous vitamin C or a grape diet or CanCell. Repeat. I am sure that even if one of these methods is not in itself 100% effective that it will nevertheless slow things down and buy time. wrote: I understand the concept that we are all conducting our own research & do so myself. However, how does one know, for example, whether one should sit in an infrared sauna a couple times a day, down umpteen curcumin capsules, go for acupuncture, get some kind of electro-magnet device, or juice? Part of the problem, I think, is that for the most part we only read the success stories, and you're left with the feeling that you should do all of the above ( & more). However, it might be better to follow one plan faithfully rather than mix & match. Also, how does one know how much of anything to take -- as much as he body will tolerate ( & what is that number?)? ......... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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