It's been a little over a year since we started this Natural Cancer Cures Forum. I hope it has helped many people, and I thank everyone who has participated and added to this important knowledge base.
After a year and a half of some intensive cancer research, I think it might be helpful to summarize what I've learned and how I would treat cancer if I were to be diagnosed with it in the future.
First, I'm of the opinion that chemotherapy is a death sentence. It makes about as much sense to me as bloodletting (which doctors of a certain time thought was a viable treatment for illness). It's primitive and detrimental, in my opinion. My brother died "of cancer", but I think he really died of chemotherapy and the collateral damage and complications caused by chemotherapy. The drugs are antiquated and ineffective. They destroy the immune system instead of bolstering it. They don't cure the "mother" but rather just reduce the secondary growth cells so it appears there is improvement. The reports of effectiveness are inflated by the pharmaceutical industry, and even then their numbers are terrible. And doctors get a roughly ten percent kick-back for prescribing chemo drugs. Every week my brother got $10,000 worth of chemotherapy, his doctor got an extra $1,000. If I ever get cancer, I won't be looking to a 1963 drug that has no real track record of a cure. My brother was sold on and convinced of the allopathic/naturopathic combined solution: attack the tumor hard with chemo, then stop the chemo and look to natural solutions from there. It would appear to me, since he's dead now, and his major setbacks were apparently from the chemotherapy, that any amount of chemo is the wrong amount. It destroys one's body's ability to live. How can that be a good thing?
In the many posts in this forum there are solutions, and the solutions in here are not exhaustive. As Dr. Roy Dittmann said, with a certain amount of irony to be sure, "It's a good time to get cancer." The information is coming to light, despite big pharma's best efforts to suppress it. If we stop looking at the western medicine party line treatments that cure nothing and look instead to the plant world and the body's ability to mend itself, we can get real results.
The approach I believe works, and the one I will take if ever needed, is the holistic approach. This implies naturopathic and not allopathic medicine, but that isn't the whole story. Holistic medicine is characterized by the treatment of the whole person, taking into account physical, mental, social and other environmental factors, rather than just the physical symptoms of a disease. A holistic approach is a multi-pronged approach to naturally optimizing the body so that the body can fix itself.
The human body is a self-cleaning oven. Actually in the machine world it's more like a robot that can repair itself. But someone has to identify that it's dirty and turn on the cleaning, or someone needs to lubricate the self-repairing robot from time to time so it can move properly to do its work. When the body isn't taking care of itself as it is designed to do, we don't need to blast it with napalm, but rather assist it to optimize its automated functions. Here are the primary factors to address:
- Root cause (almost always false signals of fight or flight sent to the cells from the subconscious mind, instead of a message of healthy cell growth)
- Energy field (we're energy beings renting a human body, so the spirit is the driver of the rental)
- Underlying infection - precursor to the cancer (almost always candida or sometimes a virus)
- General body environment (almost always too acidic, needs to be more balanced pH or alkaline environment)
- Immune system (almost always weak and could use a boost)
- Blood oxidation level (the body needs more oxygen, primarily through exercise)
Taking a holistic approach, one would seek to address all these areas in meaningful ways. Think of a pie chart. Each of these factors is a wedge of the holistic circle. And each of the treatments listed in this forum is a potential subsection of one of these wedges. If there are 6 wedges of primary factors, and 5 treatments chosen on average for each factor, then one has 30 little wedges of treatment that make up the holistic cure. Doing 10 may or may not yield the desired result. Doing 20 improves your chances. But the holistic approach isn't about doing some of it. It's about systematically addressing all the factors, identifying the best several options available for each factor, and then doing each component that comprises the whole cure. Another way of looking at it would be spokes on a bicycle wheel. You might get by with a few missing spokes, but the results are best with every spoke in place and properly adjusted.
When you look at the major factors, it might help to break them down into smaller pieces of the pie and/or look at the things that can be done as well as the general factors. This will help lead to the selection of treatments. For example, unless you can identify a virus as the underlying infection, you can almost always correctly assume it's candida. Now that you know that, treat it from every angle: starve it (no sugars or carbs), attack it with supplements that kill off the yeast infection, boost the immune system to fight it with probiotics and enzymes, put the body in an alkaline state by juicing organic vegetables, etc. Treat each primary factor like its own pie chart or holistic wheel, and figure out the best components to treat each factor. The good news is that cancer cannot continue in a body when each primary factor is properly treated. Your job is to identify the best treatments for each primary factor and put them to work to assist your body in fixing itself. Even though I lost my brother to cancer, I do not believe it's incurable. On the contrary, I am confident it's beatable with a holistic approach.
What many people don't understand or just can't believe is that the root cause is almost always mental. It's thought malfunction, either conscious or subconscious. It's your brain beating up on a part of your body by sending the wrong signals. Instead of producing the chemical signals for healthy cell growth, your brain is sending a fight or flight signal which halts healthy cell growth. Fear, stress, anger, sadness, anxiety and other such thoughts stewing in the subconscious mind are the culprits. While it can be difficult to control the subconscious, there are experts who can help. And though many say one cannot consciously control the subconscious, I believe I have proven otherwise to myself. The key is three fold: Forgiveness, gratitude, and love. Forgive everyone and everything, universally and unconditionally, especially yourself. Be in gratitude for everyone and everything, universally and unconditionally, especially yourself. Love everyone and everything, universally and unconditionally, especially yourself. This mind shift will improve your world in every way. It will allow you to consciously create the world you prefer, be present, manifest greatness, and (in combination with the other pieces of the pie) save your life.
With love,
Christian
GTEN Trustee