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Cancer Warriors

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Comunidad De Sanidad

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39 contributions to Cancer Warriors
For my mum — and for this community
I never imagined I would be writing this. My mum passed away, and I don’t yet have the words to describe the emptiness she’s left behind. She wasn’t just my mother — she was my best friend, my anchor, my reason for fighting, and the heart behind everything we built here. This community was created for her. She carried more than most people ever see. She lived with bipolar disorder. She carried childhood trauma. She endured a painful divorce, the loss of both her parents, a cancer diagnosis, the death of Pepper — our family boxer — and the loss of Albert, our family’s closest friend. All of this happened within the last seven years. And yet — she kept going. She walked at least 10,000 steps a day. She swam three times a week. She went to church every Sunday. She worked tirelessly on the house. She quit smoking after her diagnosis. She tried carnivore. She cut out sugar. And most importantly: She kept our family together. She fought. She cared. She loved. Even when depression weighed heavily on her will to live, she chose to fight — not because it was easy, but because she loved us. She fought for us when her mind told her to give up. That is courage. We were hopeful. So hopeful. She had just started the Astron Health protocol — only one week in — and we believed we had time. Previous scans had been relatively reassuring, showing stable, very slow-growing, localised disease in the peritoneum and a coeliac lymph node, with no organ spread. Her CRP was 4 — within the normal range. Then everything changed — fast. She developed sudden, severe gastrointestinal pain, vomiting, and diarrhoea. We rushed to the hospital. A CT scan showed ischemic colitis. A mouth swab also confirmed COVID. She was put on palliative care, given fluids and heparin. Her circulation improved. Lactate came down. Symptoms improved. Objectively, things were getting better. But the narrative never changed. Despite improving vitals, improving markers, and improving symptoms, they continued to insist on bowel necrosis — even when the evidence did not clearly support it. At the same time, her CRP (an inflammation marker) rose rapidly from 4 (normal) just weeks earlier, to 14 on admission, to 150 the following day, and eventually to 455 at its peak. She developed rising oxygen requirements, hypoxia, and what appeared to be a clear systemic inflammatory storm — yet COVID pneumonitis was repeatedly dismissed.
1 like • 20d
Sending you so much love and strenght today. Your Mother fought so Hard and we know how much you cared for her. She was, and always will be, so incredibly proud of the man you are.
A little good news for once.
Just had my scan result and I’ve managed to shrink my largest met by 5mm from 65mm, a lung met also had a bit shaved off and my pancreas met looks thinner but the same length! What did I do? Well I added in fbz to the protocol 3-4 months before the scan and I added iscador Qu by subcutaneous injections for 4 weeks before the scan. A previous IV mistletoe therapy for an 5 week period gave me stability in the next scan. Mistletoe is an immune system mobiliser If you can do that and have some sauna’s/fevers I think you might get things working better. I’m carrying on with another course of iscador qu and will try and keep it going for 3 months. My oncologist went ape about it but I think it’s having an effect.
4 likes • 24d
Love it... this team deserve and need good news... good for you @Egg Scrambled
Any thoughts or advice?
Hello Friends. I just had another PET scan in January, and it shows some areas of moderate hyperuptake. I am staying calm and carefully planning my next steps. This is why I’m asking about your experience with Dr. Peavler. I love his videos and the great outreach work he does. I already had an appointment with him before my first PET scan about a year ago; however, the protocol he gave me was very generic. I’d like to know if any of you have experience with him regarding the development of more specific protocols tailored to the specific type of cancer. I have been reading Jane McLelland's book and there is a lot of valuable information, but I prefer to have medical guidance."
0 likes • 30d
Thank u both of you
Someone has already found the puzzle piece???
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8637646/ Great info. But tailored solutions for every case? That’s a different ballgame
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Help Lung Cancer
I am new here, was diagnosed with lung cancer one week ago, with metastasis on the liver. Looking for guidance on my particular case, I read a lot of stuff and honestly my head is spinning. Trying to follow Dr T Seyfried information’ Any guidance where to start, k would appreciate it very much.
2 likes • Feb 5
@Sergio Quiroga I am sorry to hear that news. The initial confusion is perfectly normal, and now is the time to prioritize quieting your mind. Through a spiritual connection with a higher power, you can find the strength to accept this situation. Only by accepting it can you transform it. My own path has included therapy and working with my hands (painting, gardening, etc.), which helps lower anxiety; with a calmer mind, I’ve been able to make better decisions. What was explained to you above is perfectly scientific; however, adapting to each diagnosis and person requires individual study. For now, don't feed the 'bug' with glucose (reduce carbohydrates to the maximum), start tracking what you eat with an app like Cronometer, and gradually begin fitting the other pieces of the puzzle together. Do you speak spanich??
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Melissa Mantilla
5
306points to level up
@melissa-mantilla-5135
Im from Colombia and i want to learn all about health

Active 11d ago
Joined Nov 9, 2024
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