Guest guest Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Elliot wrote: " Nowhere in the edition of " Beating Cancer With Nutrition " I have does Quillin recommend eating beef or pork. " For openers, a books such as Quillin wrote, is an 'information filled' book for more than people on this list or for Vegans. It is a book to the general population as well. People on this list also eat meat and while it is clear that Quillin warns that the diet of our ancestors, which included meat, is not the 'Cow' we eat today, but rather lean meat. He claims what meat they did eat was only 1/3 of the diet back then. That being said, he gives menus as a guide and in the issue I have, gives a menu which includes Pot Roast, that's beef. Flank Steak......that's beef and Ground Beef...........that's surely beef! The man knows that people will eat meat and he goes from that small point in his book to many more important matters and more thoroughly. The posts regarding this subject have gone far a field from the statement that started it. One simply stated something to the effect, " Quillin recommends meat " . My effort in response was to make sure people were not turned away from the book and simply show that Quillin was simply writing to everyone which includes meat-eaters. One quickly realizes, when reading his updated book, that eating meat is hardly its thrust. Not everything, in any protocol, works for all people.......all the time! One studies and gleans the best they can from what they find and 'Beating Cancer With Nutrition' is one heck of a good source for people interested in nutrition in general. It is a compact book of 415 pages chock-full of information, about minerals, vitamins etc., that I personally find educational. I then temper it, rightly or wrongly, with my own beliefs. This is it for me and the book. Joe C.+ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 30, 2007 Report Share Posted June 30, 2007 Opinions on the so called " right " anti-cancer diet are varied, and at times also very different from one another. While it is true that many of the famous practitioners who have relied heavily on diets to asist the body with cancer have recommend their patients mainly vegetarian diets with no or minimal animal fats, there some others that advocate completely differnt anti-cancer diets. One such person who comes to mind is Aajanus Vonderplanitz. He cured his cancer on a diet consisting mainly of raw meat. Another person who advocate an anti-cancer diet that is extremely rich with animal fat is Barry Groves from http://www.second-opinions.co.uk At the bottom of my post I will paste here an e-mail correspondence I had with Barry in June 2003, regarding diet. Around two years ago I had a woman patient with small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Three years before her cancer was diagnosed, she and her husband became total vegetarians and adopted a macrobiotic diet. SCLC is a disease which is highly (99%) associated with smoking. It is quite rare to see a patient like her, who was a non smoker and who was not exposed to second hand smoke or pollution contract this type of cancer. Moreover my intake with this woman did not give me any indication that she was exposed, in any extraordinarily way, to any strong or high magnitude carcinogens. Now, what type of an anti-cancer diet would one recommend in such a case? Should she continue with macrobiotics or should she adopt a diet that is quite different? Obviously, she thought that she was eating the healthiest diet on earth, namely macrobiotics. Unfortunately, for her macrobiotics did not serve as a good safety net. On the other hand, should we then generalize from her case, and conclude that macrobiotics is a lousy diet, or for that matter a bad anti-cancer diet? In my opinion that would be a grave mistake. There are plenty of cancer patients who are willing to swear that microbiotics actually cured their cancer. I guess the picture is a bit more complex than we would like it to be or are ready to admit. It was Lucretius who said: " what is food to one person may be bitter poison to others " . , I would love for you to contribute on this topic to the list. Would you please? Gubi ********************************************************************************\ ************************************************************************ Barry Groves' e-mail to me dated 6/23/2003: " Cancers thrive on blood glucose. Their supply must be cut off. Vegetarian diets inevitably contain large amounts of carbs. The only reason some work is that they are generally eaten raw, which means that few of their nutrients are bioavailable, and the patient starves -- which is another way of cutting the sugars out. The best dietary regime would cut out all sugars and most starches, making up the energy difference with animal fats. Ideal ratios are 70% fat, 20% protein and 10% carb. This means inevitably that the diet has to be animal product based -- and high in animal fat as well. I would cut out most fruit and include only small amounts of green leafy veges. I have included an idea below as it has been found effective. You will have to adapt it for either Jewish or Muslim religions, replacing pork products with something else. Buy fat meat. Buy from a regular butcher, not a supermarket, to get what you want. Also fry breakfast and some dinners, have cream in hot drinks where others would have milk, put butter occasionally on veges if the meat isn't fat and eat unsweetened fruit with cream. Below is a typical day's menu. By the way, the stearic acid in cocoa also has benefits as it inhibits thromboses. All cancers need a thrombus to metastasise, thus anything that stops a thrombus forming prevents metastases " . Breakfast 8:00 am 72g egg 75g bacon 75g apple 70g single cream (in cocoa) 18g cocoa powder 1 pint water C=13.5g: P=40.3g: F=68g -- 827.2 cals Lunch 13:00 115g pork 31g onion 60g carrot 80g squash 50g lard (for frying the above) 56g Cheddar 1 pint water C=14.9g: P=39g: F=70g -- 846 cals Evening meal 18:00 140g brie 75g apple 50g cream (in cocoa) C=13.9g : P=31g : F=45.9g -- 593 cals Day's totals: C = 42.3g; P = 110.3g; F = 183.9g C = 169 kcal, P = 441 kcal, F = 1655 kcal = 2265 kcals C = 7.5%; P = 19.5%; F = 73.0% Sincerely Barry http://www.second-opinions.co.uk ,_._,___ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 30, 2007 Report Share Posted June 30, 2007 Opinions on the so called " right " anti-cancer diet are varied, and at times also very different from one another. While it is true that many of the famous practitioners who have relied heavily on diets to asist the body with cancer have recommend their patients mainly vegetarian diets with no or minimal animal fats, there some others that advocate completely differnt anti-cancer diets. One such person who comes to mind is Aajanus Vonderplanitz. He cured his cancer on a diet consisting mainly of raw meat. Another person who advocate an anti-cancer diet that is extremely rich with animal fat is Barry Groves from http://www.second-opinions.co.uk At the bottom of my post I will paste here an e-mail correspondence I had with Barry in June 2003, regarding diet. Around two years ago I had a woman patient with small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Three years before her cancer was diagnosed, she and her husband became total vegetarians and adopted a macrobiotic diet. SCLC is a disease which is highly (99%) associated with smoking. It is quite rare to see a patient like her, who was a non smoker and who was not exposed to second hand smoke or pollution contract this type of cancer. Moreover my intake with this woman did not give me any indication that she was exposed, in any extraordinarily way, to any strong or high magnitude carcinogens. Now, what type of an anti-cancer diet would one recommend in such a case? Should she continue with macrobiotics or should she adopt a diet that is quite different? Obviously, she thought that she was eating the healthiest diet on earth, namely macrobiotics. Unfortunately, for her macrobiotics did not serve as a good safety net. On the other hand, should we then generalize from her case, and conclude that macrobiotics is a lousy diet, or for that matter a bad anti-cancer diet? In my opinion that would be a grave mistake. There are plenty of cancer patients who are willing to swear that microbiotics actually cured their cancer. I guess the picture is a bit more complex than we would like it to be or are ready to admit. It was Lucretius who said: " what is food to one person may be bitter poison to others " . , I would love for you to contribute on this topic to the list. Would you please? Gubi ********************************************************************************\ ************************************************************************ Barry Groves' e-mail to me dated 6/23/2003: " Cancers thrive on blood glucose. Their supply must be cut off. Vegetarian diets inevitably contain large amounts of carbs. The only reason some work is that they are generally eaten raw, which means that few of their nutrients are bioavailable, and the patient starves -- which is another way of cutting the sugars out. The best dietary regime would cut out all sugars and most starches, making up the energy difference with animal fats. Ideal ratios are 70% fat, 20% protein and 10% carb. This means inevitably that the diet has to be animal product based -- and high in animal fat as well. I would cut out most fruit and include only small amounts of green leafy veges. I have included an idea below as it has been found effective. You will have to adapt it for either Jewish or Muslim religions, replacing pork products with something else. Buy fat meat. Buy from a regular butcher, not a supermarket, to get what you want. Also fry breakfast and some dinners, have cream in hot drinks where others would have milk, put butter occasionally on veges if the meat isn't fat and eat unsweetened fruit with cream. Below is a typical day's menu. By the way, the stearic acid in cocoa also has benefits as it inhibits thromboses. All cancers need a thrombus to metastasise, thus anything that stops a thrombus forming prevents metastases " . Breakfast 8:00 am 72g egg 75g bacon 75g apple 70g single cream (in cocoa) 18g cocoa powder 1 pint water C=13.5g: P=40.3g: F=68g -- 827.2 cals Lunch 13:00 115g pork 31g onion 60g carrot 80g squash 50g lard (for frying the above) 56g Cheddar 1 pint water C=14.9g: P=39g: F=70g -- 846 cals Evening meal 18:00 140g brie 75g apple 50g cream (in cocoa) C=13.9g : P=31g : F=45.9g -- 593 cals Day's totals: C = 42.3g; P = 110.3g; F = 183.9g C = 169 kcal, P = 441 kcal, F = 1655 kcal = 2265 kcals C = 7.5%; P = 19.5%; F = 73.0% Sincerely Barry http://www.second-opinions.co.uk ,_._,___ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 30, 2007 Report Share Posted June 30, 2007 At 04:56 AM 6/30/2007, you wrote: >[snip] > >, I would love for you to contribute on this topic to the >list. Would you please? > >Gubi Gubi, First one needs to set aside all one's petty little food indoctrinations, then look at the advisability of changing the diet. There are two starting understandings that should be addressed with ever cancer patient. First: the diet prior to the cancer diagnosis was not a cancer-killing diet. Second: No diet, no matter how " good " or " bad " has much influence on low-grade cancers. You start with those two common-sense notions. For example, do you tell a life-long vegan that he/she must become a vegetarian? No. Do you tell the life-long vegan that they must start eating meat? No. If it looks like the cancer is one that is amenable to dietary intervention you must next decide if diet is going to be the main strategy or determine how diet can effectively dovetail with the main strategy. If the diet is going to be the main strategy then you must explain the dietary conundrums (as the example above) to the patient along with his/her smartest dietary options. The patient must become involved. In my discourses at the Center I usually give many examples of other clients. Parables are a great way to teach. It is best to never insult the patient with platitudinous stories. The best teaching stories are those that are counter-intuitive. Those are the cases that teach us all. The whole process must be interactive just to make sure that you and the patient are on the same page. It is very useful to know if the client has no dietary discipline or can't get through the day with meat, sugar, alcohol, etc. The next great rule of cancer diets is that any truly worthy diet is going to be a forgiving diet. There should be some latitude to accommodate occasional quality-of-life venial dietary infractions. Patients must know this. If they don't then their nether-conscious mind could tell them, " Uh-oh, I ate a Snickers Bar so I guess I'm going to die. " Any diet that is not a forgiving diet is no diet at all. The same holds true for tobacco and alcohol. I told you about the guy whose terminal NSCLC with SVCS resolved in spite of his inability to quit smoking 3-4 packs of Pall Mall filterless cigarettes per day and drinking a quart of J & B scotch whisky daily. A smart diet can work around some very obstructive behavior. BTW, Perhaps the best answer to meat question is found in the movie, " My Big Fat Greek Wedding. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 30, 2007 Report Share Posted June 30, 2007 Hi, Gubi. With due respect, from what I have read about Aajanus Vonderplanitz, he is not a good example for anyone to follow. The man has become a fanatic about food. It appears to be all he lives for---to experiment with this, that or the other diet. Then, when I read for a fact, because it was from his own autobiographical writing, that he went into supermarkets, bought their beef and ate it raw, I said, " Enough, " and crossed him off my list of people to whom to pay attention. Regarding the macrobiotic diet, there is much confusion these days about what constitutes a macrobiotic diet. If you go to wikipedia, you will see that a macrobiotic diet is not at all necessarily wholly vegetarian---that fish and shrimp can be a part of it. I knew a woman in New York City years ago who ate a macrobiotic diet, and she was quite limited as to what she could and couldn't eat. She ate mostly brown rice and ate lots of very salty pickles. From what I understand, pickling things makes them difficult to digest and fairly worthless with regard to nourishment. Also, much of what one eats on a macrobiotic diet is cooked. Finally, for me, and, I think for many other people, eating macrobiotically is too detailed, too regimented, too complicated. A whole foods, high bulk/low calorie diet is working very well for me. But I agree with you and others who believe there is no one diet that should be applied across the board with no exceptions. Stress is a factor that must be paid attention to when a person is diagnosed with cancer. In fact for me, I believe stress has been the foremost factor that has caused the cancer to grow or to remain quiescent. I think perhaps to take someone who has been eating lots of animal protein all their life and to tell them they must not eat any more of it---to suddenly cut them off from it---could be too stressful for them. When I cut out animal protein, it took me weeks before I feltthe same sense of fullness/satisfaction subsequent to eating a vegetable/fruit/grain meal that I had when I was eating meat. In the early 90's, shortly after being diagnosed with cancer, I visited a naturopath. After interviewing me, he put me on a " vegetarian diet with a little chicken. " I expect he did so because he knew I'd been eating meat for decades. Another reason why a naturopath might want to be careful of suddenly putting a peron on a totally non-animal product diet is because it is quite possible for that person not to eat enough variety, and so to not get enough protein/enough nourishment, and so to suffer physically and mentally. I once became seriously depressed, I believe due to eating an unbalanced vegetarian diet. Elliot >Opinions on the so called " right " anti-cancer diet are varied, and at times also very different from one another. > While it is true that many of the famous practitioners who have relied heavily on diets to asist the body with cancer have recommend their patients mainly vegetarian diets with no or minimal animal fats, there some others that advocate completely differnt anti- cancer diets. One such person who comes to mind is Aajanus Vonderplanitz. He cured his cancer on a diet consisting mainly of raw meat. Another person who advocate an anti-cancer diet that is extremely rich with animal fat is Barry Groves from > http://www.second-opinions.co.uk........ > , I would love for you to contribute on this topic to the list. Would you please? [see Gubi's post for his full message] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 30, 2007 Report Share Posted June 30, 2007 At 04:56 AM 6/30/2007, you wrote: >[snip] > >, I would love for you to contribute on this topic to the >list. Would you please? > >Gubi Gubi, First one needs to set aside all one's petty little food indoctrinations, then look at the advisability of changing the diet. There are two starting understandings that should be addressed with ever cancer patient. First: the diet prior to the cancer diagnosis was not a cancer-killing diet. Second: No diet, no matter how " good " or " bad " has much influence on low-grade cancers. You start with those two common-sense notions. For example, do you tell a life-long vegan that he/she must become a vegetarian? No. Do you tell the life-long vegan that they must start eating meat? No. If it looks like the cancer is one that is amenable to dietary intervention you must next decide if diet is going to be the main strategy or determine how diet can effectively dovetail with the main strategy. If the diet is going to be the main strategy then you must explain the dietary conundrums (as the example above) to the patient along with his/her smartest dietary options. The patient must become involved. In my discourses at the Center I usually give many examples of other clients. Parables are a great way to teach. It is best to never insult the patient with platitudinous stories. The best teaching stories are those that are counter-intuitive. Those are the cases that teach us all. The whole process must be interactive just to make sure that you and the patient are on the same page. It is very useful to know if the client has no dietary discipline or can't get through the day with meat, sugar, alcohol, etc. The next great rule of cancer diets is that any truly worthy diet is going to be a forgiving diet. There should be some latitude to accommodate occasional quality-of-life venial dietary infractions. Patients must know this. If they don't then their nether-conscious mind could tell them, " Uh-oh, I ate a Snickers Bar so I guess I'm going to die. " Any diet that is not a forgiving diet is no diet at all. The same holds true for tobacco and alcohol. I told you about the guy whose terminal NSCLC with SVCS resolved in spite of his inability to quit smoking 3-4 packs of Pall Mall filterless cigarettes per day and drinking a quart of J & B scotch whisky daily. A smart diet can work around some very obstructive behavior. BTW, Perhaps the best answer to meat question is found in the movie, " My Big Fat Greek Wedding. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2007 Report Share Posted July 1, 2007 Studies from " Low Value " High school's to Penal systems have shown that correct food changed the " negative " to positive. You are what you eat. Blue From: breathedeepnow Something else appalling about " Vonderplanetz, " aside from the very bad,made-up name. He makes it clear that he believes what one eats affects one's temper. He says that when he was not eating meat, he easily got into a rage; but when he eats meat he is able to keep his temper. Gandhi was a vegetarian, and the Massai, who drink blood and whole raw cow's milk, are/were some of the fiercest warriors in the world. Patience and keeping one's temper are vastly more due to working on one's personality than they are due to what one eats. Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2007 Report Share Posted July 1, 2007 Elliot, " Patience and keeping one's temper " are rarely due to either diet or purposeful self-development. Rage and violence are functions of testosterone, of genetics, of maturation, of cultural norms, of encouragement, of indoctrination, of fear of retribution, and of the passions of the moment. Sometimes religion has a constraining influence; sometimes not. In this week's LA times were articles on marine chaplains telling the soldiers it is morally, legally and ethically correct to go to Iraq and kill, while their commanders are teaching them to kill selectively to win the hearts and minds of the civilians. Soldiers who were shipping out to Iraq often seem to have romantic notions in how they plan their own funerals. I have met with soldiers at the VA hospital who feel that they have been ordered to die or get dismembered for oil and neo-con Christianity and this doesn't sit well with most of them. The newspapers have photos of the men heading off to Iraq. The commanders looked very brave and their wives seemed proud. Most of the enlisted had a how-did-I-get-into-this look on their faces. All to many who come back can be found standing by the freeway off-ramp with crude signs pleading for help. I can't hire them. They were naive when they signed up and mentally/emotionally damaged when discharged. If food were a major determinant of rage, then military commanders would have exploited this long ago. At 07:20 PM 6/30/2007, you wrote: >Something else appalling about " Vonderplanetz, " aside from the very >bad, made-up name--- > >He makes it clear that he believes what one eats affects one's temper. >He says that when he was not eating meat, he easily got into a rage; >but when he eats meat he is able to keep his temper. > >Gandhi was a vegetarian, and the Massai, who drink blood and whole raw >cow's milk, are/were some of the fiercest warriors in the world. > >Patience and keeping one's temper are vastly more due to working on >one's personality than they are due to what one eats. > >Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2007 Report Share Posted July 1, 2007 , Thanks for pitching in. I can certainly relate to diets having to be forgiving every now and then, especially when they constitute a magnitudinal change from the patient's former diet. During the meeting, patients often ask me, what they should do on those relatively rare occasions that they are invited to a wedding or any other celebration banquets. " they don't serve organic vegetables in these places " , they would say. This is usually an indication to me that they will be compliant. On the other hand, I find myself calming them down, and explaining that these deviations from the norm, are exactly the things that will keep them sane, and give them the strength to keep up with their anti-cancer diets. have not watched " My Big Fat Greek Wedding " yet. Recommended? Regards, Gubi Re: [ ] Quillan's book and eating meat At 04:56 AM 6/30/2007, you wrote: >[snip] > >, I would love for you to contribute on this topic to the >list. Would you please? > >Gubi Gubi, First one needs to set aside all one's petty little food indoctrinations, then look at the advisability of changing the diet. There are two starting understandings that should be addressed with ever cancer patient. First: the diet prior to the cancer diagnosis was not a cancer-killing diet. Second: No diet, no matter how " good " or " bad " has much influence on low-grade cancers. You start with those two common-sense notions. For example, do you tell a life-long vegan that he/she must become a vegetarian? No. Do you tell the life-long vegan that they must start eating meat? No. If it looks like the cancer is one that is amenable to dietary intervention you must next decide if diet is going to be the main strategy or determine how diet can effectively dovetail with the main strategy. If the diet is going to be the main strategy then you must explain the dietary conundrums (as the example above) to the patient along with his/her smartest dietary options. The patient must become involved. In my discourses at the Center I usually give many examples of other clients. Parables are a great way to teach. It is best to never insult the patient with platitudinous stories. The best teaching stories are those that are counter-intuitive. Those are the cases that teach us all. The whole process must be interactive just to make sure that you and the patient are on the same page. It is very useful to know if the client has no dietary discipline or can't get through the day with meat, sugar, alcohol, etc. The next great rule of cancer diets is that any truly worthy diet is going to be a forgiving diet. There should be some latitude to accommodate occasional quality-of-life venial dietary infractions. Patients must know this. If they don't then their nether-conscious mind could tell them, " Uh-oh, I ate a Snickers Bar so I guess I'm going to die. " Any diet that is not a forgiving diet is no diet at all. The same holds true for tobacco and alcohol. I told you about the guy whose terminal NSCLC with SVCS resolved in spite of his inability to quit smoking 3-4 packs of Pall Mall filterless cigarettes per day and drinking a quart of J & B scotch whisky daily. A smart diet can work around some very obstructive behavior. BTW, Perhaps the best answer to meat question is found in the movie, " My Big Fat Greek Wedding. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2007 Report Share Posted July 1, 2007 , I was not looking for your political/religious opinions about Iraq or anything else. I was simply pointing out that " Vonderplanetz " is off- the-wall. Let's keep this board about cancer. Otherwise, we can get off on many tangents, and can end up in serious arguments. Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2007 Report Share Posted July 1, 2007 Blue Willow, The debate about what is " correct food " (???) could go on ad infinitum. Generally, " correct food " means elimination of junk, sugar, etc. It is not about animal products versus vegetable products. I was simply pointing out that Vonderplanetz is incorrect. Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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