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回  答: The Truth About Cancer挑挑揀揀 於 2015-10-12 07:28:09




Episode 9: “Cancer Conquerors & Their Powerful Stories of Victory” 

Go here to watch episode 9 

https://go2.thetruthaboutcancer.com/global-quest/episode-9/ 


Here’s just a few of the things you’ll get in the show - *Free Limited Time*

- Meet amazing Cancer Conquerors 

- Hear their courageous stories of survival 

- How they did it and what protocols they followed 

- The lessons they learned and what they’d do differently 

- Plus so much more 



Best wishes to your health!













25個癌症倖存者的故事



Here's a link to "25 Survivor Stories", a free e-book , courtesy of Jonathan Chamberlain   Download it here or Read below:



Cancer: the Complete Recovery Guide Series—Book 8



I dedicate these books to the memory of Bernadette, Sau-fong—for whom the information came too late.



www.fightingcancer.com



Copyright © 2011 Jonathan Chamberlain



The right of Jonathan Chamberlain to be identified as the author of this book



has been asserted.



All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in



any form or by any means without written permission of the publisher.



A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.



Published by Long Island Press



Printed edition available as ISBN 978-1-908712-07-3



Complete series of eight volumes: ISBN: 978-1-908712-08-0



This Book



In this book you will find the stories of 25 people who have cured themselves of



cancer—some by combining conventional and alternative therapies, but the vast



majority by means of alternative therapies alone. These stories demonstrate the



important role complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) can play in



helping people with cancer recover fully and completely from this terrible



disease—the incidence of which is rising year on year.



Disclaimer



I am not a doctor. The information in this book is for educational purposes only.



None of the treatments in this book are recommended for any particular person



with any particular cancer. You, and you alone, bear the responsibility for any



decisions you make in relation to any cancer treatment you may choose, be it



orthodox or alternative. The best decisions are based on the best understanding



of the facts.



 



Cancer: the Complete Recovery Guide Series



The Cancer Complete Recovery Guide Series—in eight volumes—is the updated



and expanded version of the book Cancer: The Complete Recovery Guide (2008



edition). Based on 18 years of research, which I did in order to discover for



myself what I would do if—as my wife did—I ever got cancer. I am sharing this



information with you because it could help you live much, much longer and



save you a great deal of pain. It is the single most comprehensive discussion of



all your cancer recovery options in print anywhere in the world.



 



Book 1: Cancer? What Now?



Make sure the first steps of your cancer journey are heading in the right direction



This book gives you all the basic cancer facts you need and outlines the four



sensible strategies for dealing with cancer—and the arguments supporting



them. Everybody approaches cancer differently. In this book I help you focus



on the strategy most appropriate to you—and then I give suggestions for



resources so that you can continue your journey.



 



Book 2: Cancer: Diagnosis and Conventional Treatments



The Pros and Cons of Cancer Tests, Surgery, Radiation and Chemotherapy



What are the benefits and drawbacks of conventional diagnostic tests and



treatments? This book provides a detailed look at what is available and what



the benefits and drawbacks are. Included also are various non-conventional



testing options and suggestions as to how you can protect yourself if you wish



to proceed with conventional treatment.



 



Book 3: Cancer: Research and Politics



This book helps you understand the wider context of cancer—why cancer



research has not come up with a cure and most likely never will; why the



medical profession is unable to recognise the value of herbs and supplements—



if a herb or supplement can cure cancer you will never hear about it from the



medical profession; and why we should all be worried by the erosion of our



health freedoms. You will also learn about the scientists who have bucked the



system, and what has happened to them.



 



Book 4: Cancer: Detox and Diet



Whatever else you decide to do for your cancer you would be wise to undergo a



radical change in diet. This book looks at the arguments and options in the area



of detoxification and diet. You will also find here a lengthy list of individual



foods and their benefits.



 



Book 5: Cancer: Herbs, Botanicals and Biological Therapies



Many herbs can help in the fight against cancer. Here we look at all the major



herbal options. Herbs have many advantages over drugs—but there are also



potential dangers. This book explores this world and explains all the issues and



options involved. This book also covers homeopathy and other biological



therapies.



 



Book 6: Cancer: Vitamins and Other Supplements



Everyone knows that vitamin C is good for you—but what kind of vitamin C?



In what quantities? And what about the other vitamins? The minerals? The



other chemicals—both natural and man-made? You will find everything you



need to know here.



 



Book 7: Cancer: Energy, Mind and Emotions



This book covers a wide range of ideas from electrical and magnetic devices,



sunlight, energy healing, prayer, exercise and the extraordinary interplay of our



physical and emotional lives.



 



Book 8: Cancer: Survivors’ Stories: They did it. You can too!



The proof is in the pudding. These stories tell how 25 people have reacted to a



diagnosis and how they became once again cancer-free. These stories are proof



that cancer can be cured with the help of diet, herbs, supplements and many



other strategies. Here you will learn what people have done to get well again.



There is hope.



 



Testimonials



Cancer: The Complete Recovery Guide



Cancer: The Complete Recovery Guide is an inspirational guide [and is] a must for



anyone who fears the dreadful diagnosis.’—The Midwest Book Review



‘This book gives hope .... It explains clearly the arguments for and against a



multitude of treatments .... I wish I’d read this book before I was diagnosed. My



doctor and the cancer charities didn’t tell me any of this.’—D Bushell



‘A very well written book, beautifully organised and easy to read and



understand.’—June Black, cancer survivor.



‘This book tells me everything I want to know. Why didn’t my doctor tell me



this?’—Rev Bill Newbern



‘I want to say how inspirational your book and all its suggestions have been. It



has enabled me to keep positive for my sister over the past terrible months.’—



Emma Greener



‘I just wanted to say thank you from the bottom of my heart. You gave us hope



when all we could see was despair and you gave us a path when we thought all



was lost.’—Colleen Crim



‘Being someone diagnosed as a terminal cancer patient, I have scoured the ’net



and read many books. This is the best. And it gives hope too ... Get this book;



read it; be inspired by it.’—Ian Clements, cancer survivor



Further testimonials can be found at the end of this book.



 



Why should you read this book?



The simple answer is that one day, cancer will come knocking at your door.



It may not be your cancer (you have approximately a fifty-fifty chance of



getting cancer yourself) but it will certainly impact on the life of someone close



to you, someone you love.



Of course, many people will read these words and still set the book aside.



This is not a problem for them now, why should they worry? They’ll deal with



that if and when the need arises. The trouble is that when cancer does come,



they will most likely panic and make some speedy decisions that one day they



might regret.



The time for thinking is now.



If there is one message I would like you to take on from reading these



stories, it is that there is no need to panic. Cancer doesn’t necessarily mean pain



and potential life-long damage. It can, instead, mean health and happiness.



Cancer is a bit like the war in Afghanistan. Attacking the tumours won't



work unless you also attack the causes of the tumours. Force alone will not win



the war.



Based on 18 years of research, this series of books is the most complete and



comprehensive discussion of all your cancer recovery options. The stories in



this volume demonstrate beyond doubt that complementary and alternative



medicine has a key role to play in helping anyone with cancer get well again.



So I urge you to read this book—and then to send it to all your friends and



relatives so that it might reach someone for whom it will have an immediate



benefit. You could help save someone’s life, extend their life.



‘An inspirational guide’—The Midwest Book Review



‘I wish I’d read this book before I was diagnosed. My doctor and the cancer



charities didn’t tell me any of this.’—D Bushell, cancer survivor



‘A very well written book, beautifully organised and easy to read and



understand.’—June Black, cancer survivor



 



Contents



Introduction 1



Who am I and why did I write the Cancer Complete Recovery Guide



Series 1



The Stories of Two Children 6



Cash Hyde 6



Connah Broom 7



Personal Stories 9



Beata Bishop 9



Michael Gearin-Tosh 10



Christopher Sheppard 10



Anne Frahm 11



Felicity Corbin-Wheeler 11



Glynn Williams 11



Elonna McKibben 13



Mark Olsztyn 14



Shirley Lipschutz-Robinson 15



Pattie McDonald 15



Bob Davis 16



‘Rompin’ Ronnie Hawkins 17



Bruce Guilmette 17



Ian Gawler 18



Fred Eichhorn 18



June Black 19



Percy Weston 20



Cliff Beckwith 20



Chris Wark 22



Polly Noble 23



Ruth Heidrich 27



Ian Clements 31



Nuro Weidemann 35



Appendices 43



The rich can afford the very best medicine 43



Letter to oncologists 45



Summing up 48



Tell others 49



Cancer: The Complete Recovery Guide Series 50



Testimonials 52



About the author 55



Other books by Jonathan Chamberlain 56



 



Acknowledgments



The original version of this book was Fighting Cancer: A Survival Guide. I would



like to thank Brian Stratford for introducing me to Pam Dix who, in turn, agreed



to be my agent and for finding me my first publisher, Hodder Headline.



Without Pam’s enthusiasm the book might very well have died an early death.



I also owe a profound debt to Vicky Parker who supplied detailed



comments on the chapter on radiation and whose commentary enabled me to



avoid many errors. Vicky was one of the leading activists of RAGE—an



organisation founded by and for victims of radiation treatment. Sadly, this



organization has ceased its activities, as the radiation victims were physically



unable to maintain their work.



In writing this book I have also been very fortunate in having the library



resources of the Hong Kong Cancer Fund. Without access to these books it is



unlikely I would have been able to start work on this project.



I wish also to acknowledge the invaluable help of Edith Segall, Annette



Crisswell, Gary Oden, Hazel Thornton, Charles Ha, Alan and Martha Cheng,



Louise Aylward, Chris Teo, Dr Alan Greenberg, Jack Gontier, editor of the



French edition, whose input has resulted in this new edition of the book being



very much better than its predecessors; Leonard Rosenbaum, who combined



editorial savvy with unbridled enthusiasm and support for this book; and to Dr



Shamim Daya and her staff at the Wholistic Health Centre in London, for



reviewing this book and educating me in some of the latest testing modalities;



to Pete Spurrier for facilitating the publication of the book and Margit Whitton,



whose critical support on the home front was very much appreciated.



I would also like to acknowledge the input of the people whose stories



appear in this volume, who had the courage to follow the alternative route,



solely or partly in their own cancer journey.They shared their stories in books



or in emails to me personally—in particular, I thank Ian Clements and Nuro



Weidemann whose input and involvement went beyond simply telling their



story. Thanks are also due to those contributors to various health Yahoogroups



who provided many much needed discussion and information that has



moulded my own understanding.



Finally, serendipity led me to Andie Davidson who has who has played an



important editorial, design (and sometimes even educational) role in guiding



this latest incarnation of the Complete Recovery Guide to press.



To them all, I would like to say thank you.



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 1



 



Introduction



Who am I and why did I write the



Cancer Complete Recovery Guide Series?



In January 1994, my wife Bernadette was finally diagnosed with cancer. She had



been showing symptoms for about six months, but because of a series of



mishaps, she was told everything was fine when the test results clearly



indicated that all was not well. For the next six months she underwent gruelling



surgery, radiation and chemotherapy, and then she started suffering some of



the consequences of this treatment—for one thing, her kidneys were failing.



And then she was told the cancer had come back and was now untreatable. At



midday on Easter Sunday, 16 April 1995, she died. She could not have died



faster if she had done nothing.



This experience was extremely traumatising for both of us. From the



minute we learnt that she had cancer I set out to read everything I could on the



subject. What I learnt stunned me. But no matter how fast I read I could not



keep up with events. Even when Bernadette died I still did not fully have a



grasp of the information I was coming across. All I knew was that I too was at



risk of cancer (as we all are) and that if I didn’t wish to follow in Bern’s



agonising footsteps then I had better keep on reading and learning. Eventually,



I felt I had enough information to write the first version of this guide—called



Fighting Cancer: A Survival Guide. This was published in 1997 by a leading UK



publishing house, Hodder Headline—but after two editions they allowed it to



go out of print. I was still reading more and more—and suddenly the Internet



began to blossom and a great deal more information became available to me, so



I rewrote the book and published it myself under the new name: Cancer: The



Complete Recovery Guide. In the same year, another small publishing house



agreed to put out a slim volume which looked at the options available from a



different angle. That book is Cancer Recovery Guide: 15 Alternative and



Complementary Strategies for Restoring Your Health (Clairview Books).



But still new information was coming my way and I wanted to include



these new facts and options in an updated version. Then the ebook revolution



arrived. I felt the Complete Recovery Guide was already too bulky (being close to



200,000 words) for it to grow any larger. So I decided to divide it up into eight



shorter volumes. Together, these books truly are a guide to complete recovery



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 2



and at the same time a far more complete discussion of all the options available



than you will find even after a year or two of surfing the Internet. And



reviewing the material has given me an extraordinary sense of how much hope



there is for the person seeking to cure their cancer by combining detox and diet,



herbs and supplements and exploring the world of mind-body interactions.



Let’s face it, there is a biochemical aspect for every emotion we feel. The



healthier our emotions, the healthier we will be in the physical realm.



The complementary/alternative approaches to cancer recovery



In the previous books in the Cancer Complete Recovery Guide series I have argued



that there is a great deal to be wary of in the conventional approaches to cancer



treatment. While surgery, in the short term, appears to be a fifty-fifty



proposition, the same cannot be said of radiation and, with a very few



exceptions, chemotherapy. The dangers associated with these treatments are



not simply that they are painful. They can result in life-long damage to health



and quality of life, and what is less often recognised, they often significantly



shorten life. One statistician has calculated that the average person with the



average cancer will live four times longer if he/she does nothing than if she/he



does something (i.e. undergoes conventional treatment).



On the other hand, I have argued that there are enormous numbers of



other approaches—diets, herbs, supplements, along with therapies that engage



the body, mind and emotions in a health-promoting, cancer-defeating way.



But the key question is this: Is all of this just nice-sounding theory, or do



they really work? Can these alternative or complementary approaches really



cure cancer?



How do we measure effectiveness?



The problem we face is that of measuring effectiveness. We have seen in the



discussion of research and politics (see Book 3 in this series: Cancer Research and



Politics), that the people who control the validating process, the people who



control medical and cancer research, have very little incentive to find cures that



don’t make money. The enormous profits that pharmaceutical companies make



on drugs cannot be made from selling diets, herbs, supplements or meditation



and visualisation strategies. In the absence of a real commitment to do scientific



research on these alternative approaches, how then can we judge whether or



not something works?



The answer has to be empirical—are people following alternative



approaches and succeeding in extending their lives, improving the quality of



their lives and even becoming cancer-free again? The answer is a resounding



yes.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 3



This book



In this book you will read the stories of two dozen people who have indeed



recovered from cancer either by a combination of conventional and alternative



approaches—or more commonly by means of the alternative approaches alone.



In preparing this book I set out to find people who had cured their cancers



and invited them to contribute their stories. Many were happy to provide their



stories and I would like to thank them for their generosity. In some cases,



however, there was suspicion that I was seeking to profit from other people’s



work (a quite understandable concern) which I hope to avoid by circulating this



book as widely as possible free of charge in pdf format. If you have this version,



please send this book to all your friends and ask them to send it on to all their



friends. If you want to obtain a pdf version then please go to my website at



www.fightingcancer.com.



The more people are made aware of the real potential of alternative



approaches to cancer, the less frightening a diagnosis will become. Let us



remind ourselves: This is a disease that currently fifty per cent of us will face in



our lifetimes—and it will strike perhaps three-quarters of our children’s



generation (if incidence rates continue to climb as they are expected to do). So it



makes sense to be prepared.



And then there was one case, a well-known exponent of alternative



approaches, who refused to have her story appear in this book because she



disagreed with much of what I had written. In her view there was only one way



to deal with cancer—her way, which had been revealed to her by God. Ah well!



You can’t win them all.



Many cures already exist



The idea that there is only one way to deal with cancer is not one that I agree



with, and not one supported by these stories. The people whose stories appear



in this book have done very many different approaches. So I think it is clear that



the search for a cure for cancer is misplaced. There are already many cures.



None of these cures may be 100 per cent effective on their own (though of



course some may be pretty close) but in combination with other therapies their



potential increases.



Do the maths



The mathematics is simple. If approaches A, B, C and D each have a fifty per



cent chance of working—and if they have different curative mechanisms, and if



they don’t interfere with each other—then if you do one of these approaches



you have a fifty per cent chance of curing your cancer; if you do two, the



probability will increase to seventy-five per cent; do three and it rises to eightyCancer



Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 4



seven per cent; do all four and the result is close to ninety-four per cent. And



then of course there are approaches E,F, G and so on.



And what if each of them has an eighty per cent likelihood of curing your



cancer? (The answer for four approaches is 99.84 per cent!)



You may find this simplistic, but we can see that there isn’t a lot of



difference between the combined effects of four approaches despite the



apparent difference between fifty and eighty per cent. And what comes out of



these stories very clearly is the power of diet and herbs and supplements to rid



the body of cancer.



But let’s make a very pessimistic assumption. Let us assume that each of



our alternative approaches has a very low probability of success—say 20 per



cent. Then combining four such approaches will give you a 60 per cent survival



probability, and you can take that up to 80 per cent by doing another four.



Clearly the more you do, the greater your chances of beating cancer.



Be your own guinea pig



Another issue that we should remind ourselves of is that we are all unique—noone



else on earth has a physiology exactly the same as mine or yours. Every



single one of us has bio-chemical processes going on in our bodies that place us



at the extremes of the normal distribution curve. This is a statistical certainty.



That means that what works for you may not necessarily work for me. There is



a good chance it will but there is no guarantee. Or it may have a different effect,



maybe stronger, maybe weaker, maybe completely different.



This in turn means that each of us has to be our own guinea pig. Trial and



assessment is the only way to proceed. We need to try things out for ourselves.



If we like it, continue. If we don’t like it, set it aside and do something else. We



need to take responsibility for ourselves. But how are we going to know where



to start? For some the answer will be glaringly obvious, for others a matter of



grave uncertainty and consequent anxiety.



I believe very strongly in the subconscious. I believe it knows what is good



for us—and it will tell us in its own way. If one approach seems very attractive



for some not very clear reason, this may be because our subconscious is



prompting us, or we may wake up at three in the morning with an image of a



particular approach. Trust this intuition, it is almost certainly our subconscious



talking to us. Or maybe just plunge in, make random choices and see where



they lead you. If you really can’t decide draft in some friends to help you talk it



through—but remember, all decisions have to be your own decisions. You are



the one who will suffer the consequences so you must do the choosing.



It is now time to let the stories do their own talking.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 5



The stories



The stories on the following pages are by people who have taken the step to



stand up and tell the world. They are doing so because they want to help



others. Some of them have written books, others have websites and in most



cases they have said they are willing to be contacted directly. These are not



anonymous, faceless anecdotes. These are stories by people who are not afraid



to stand up and tell the truth as they see it, as they have experienced it.



The collective weight of this testimony allows only one conclusion:



Alternative therapies do work and are vastly preferable to the conventional



‘weapons’. They offer health and happiness, not damage and pain.



I urge you to read these stories and take note for yourself. If you have



cancer you can apply these lessons immediately. If you don’t (at present) have



cancer at least these stories will help you prepare yourself for that possibility.



And I urge you to spread this word as far and as wide as you can.



With best wishes for your health and happiness



Jonathan Chamberlain



Brighton, September 2011



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 6



The Stories of Two Children



Children with cancer present a heart-searing problem. We want to do the very



best for them—and it seems sensible therefore to put them in the hands of the



best doctors at the best oncology units specialising in children’s cancers.



Although this seems at first sight to be unarguably the best course of



action, by doing so we know that we will be subjecting them to immense pain,



that they will inevitably suffer some form of brain damage—and their longterm



health will almost certainly suffer grievously. If you want to see the list of



possible ‘late effects’ of chemotherapy and radiation go to the American Cancer



Society website and do a search for ‘childhood cancers late effects’—the



description makes for sobering reading. And remember, these late effects are



not possibilities, they are much closer to certainties.



The problem for parents is that if they attempt to extract their children



from such punitive courses of treatment they are likely to find that the medical



system, child protection agencies and courts will require them to proceed.



For any parent wishing to explore the area of alternative therapies,



therefore, the options are limited and you may need to go for a long trip



abroad.



Is there any evidence that alternative approaches can be healing? These



two stories suggest there is.



Cash Hyde



Cash Hyde, a young boy from Missoula Montana, was only 20 months old



when he was diagnosed with a highly aggressive stage 4 brain tumour



surrounding his optic nerve. The doctors gave him very little hope of survival.



They gave him seven different chemotherapy drugs and among other



impacts this caused Cash to suffer septic shock, a stroke and heavy



haemorrhaging of his lungs. He was given the highest possible doses of



chemotherapy for two months. Cash was so sick that he didn’t eat anything for



40 days. In the end the sight of his son’s suffering was more than he could take



and his father, Mike, asked them to stop the treatment.



Without telling them what he planned, Mike decided to try out something



on his own. He didn’t tell the doctors because he knew they would oppose it.



Mike bought some marijuana and boiled it in olive oil. He then added this in



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 7



small doses of around half a teaspoon each time to his son’s feeding tube. His



father reported the impact in these words: ‘Not only was it helpful, it was a



godsend. Within two weeks he was weaned off all the nausea drugs and he was



eating again and sitting up in bed and laughing.’ When he admitted what he



had done the doctors continued to prescribe the cannabis—for his nausea. In



February 2011, news reports announced that young Cash was still in remission.



If he recovers the doctors will of course claim that the chemo. did the trick. But



although the cannabis is being prescribed as an anti-nausea medication, it has a



strong anti-cancer effect of its own (see discussion of cannabis in Book 5 in this



series: Cancer: Herbs, Botanicals and Biological Therapies).



Mike Hyde has set up the Cash Hyde Foundation to promote the medical



use of cannabis, which remains such a contentious subject.



Connah Broom



On 10 February 2009, The Daily Mail newspaper (UK) reported the following



story. In August 2006 Connah was diagnosed with stage 4 neuroblastoma, an



aggressive childhood cancer. He was given intensive chemotherapy for seven



months but in the end was sent home by the doctors so that he could die at



home. He had at this time eleven tumours in his body, mainly in the neck area.



The doctors said there was nothing more they could do and told his parents



that they should enjoy Connah’s final months of life as best they could. That



was in 2007. The Broom family decided differently. They put him on an organic



vegetarian diet and a daily sauna. They also did Reiki and went to a Mexican



clinic where they were able to undergo sono photo-dynamic therapy. They also



give him an ultrasound treatment (unspecified) but likely from the photograph



accompanying the story to be SCENAR (see Book 7 in this series: Cancer Energy,



Mind and Emotions for details). In 2011, Connah was doing well, and all but one



of the tumours were in retreat.



The doctors admitted this was unusual but denied that the alternative



therapies had had any impact. You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make



a doctor accept that a diet is more powerful than chemotherapy drugs.



????



I have no doubt that one day, hopefully one day soon, doctors will eventually



recognise the benefits of approaches that they currently ignore—and that a



truly integrative medicine will result. I believe the pressure to do so will come



from patients who, taking responsibility for themselves, inform themselves of



all the options and make their own judgements as to the value of diets, herbs,



vitamins and so on. By doing so, they will force doctors to recognise that there



is, in fact, a great deal of scientific support for these non-conventional



approaches to cancer recovery.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 8



Both these stories are very positive and clearly support the idea that



complementary or alternative approaches can be health promoting in the short



term and potentially curative in the long term. How these two boys will



continue to respond to their new therapies no-one can say but how many



stories like these do you need before you say: ‘Maybe there is something in



these alternative ways of dealing with cancer.’



It is now time to look at stories of adults who have chosen alternative and



complementary ways and who have, in many cases, survived cancer-free for



decades as a result.



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 9



Personal Stories



The following stories are of people who cured their cancers using alternative



therapies—although in one or two cases they also used conventional therapies. I



use the word ‘cured’ without the usual apologies because no other word will



do. People like Beata and Percy (read below) lived and have lived for decades



free of cancer. That is what ‘cured’ means. Others, it is true, did succumb to



their cancers, but only after having lived for years without any sign of cancer.



Others in this list will not assert that they are ‘cured’. They will simply say that



they are fighting a battle against cancer and up till now they appear to be



winning! Here then are some remarkable stories.



Beata Bishop



In the early 1980s, while working as a writer at the BBC, Beata Bishop



discovered that a mole on her leg was a malignant melanoma, one of the fastestspreading



and most lethal of all cancers. She underwent painful and disfiguring



surgery, but within a year it was found that the cancer had spread into the



lymphatic system and was appearing elsewhere on her body. She was told by



her doctors that she had a matter of weeks or months to live, and that there was



nothing they could do about it.



Fortunately for her, a friend had heard of the Gerson Institute and not



having any other options she chose to follow this diet developed by an eminent



German physician, Dr Max Gerson (see Book 4 in this series: Cancer: Detox and



Diet for further details). Taking her fate in her hands, she spent two months at



the world’s only Gerson clinic in Mexico where she learnt the theory and



practice of the intensive therapy which she then pursued for a further eighteen



months in London.



After two years on the Gerson Therapy, which transformed her both



physically and psychologically, Beata Bishop made a full recovery.



Today she is still alive, in her 70s, extremely active and free of her cancer.



She wrote her story in a book, My Triumph Over Cancer, first published in 1985.



Beata hated this title and later had the book re-published as A Time to Heal. She



has also collaborated with Charlotte Gerson, who now runs the Gerson



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 10



Institute, in writing an updated introduction to the Gerson Diet called Healing



The Gerson Way.



I have interviewed Beata for Conscious TV and you can find a link to this



interview on my Facebook ‘Cancer Recovery’ site (scroll down the page as the



link is near the bottom —the link can also be found at



www.cancerfighter.wordpress.com). Hers is a truly remarkable story. Not



many people live thirty years having received a diagnosis of untreatable



terminal stage melanoma.



Michael Gearin-Tosh



Michael Gearin-Tosh was, for 35 years, tutor in English at St Catherine’s



College, Oxford. In 1994 he was diagnosed with myeloma, a cancer of the bone



marrow which is normally considered to be untreatable. Although urged to



take chemotherapy, he discovered that this would give him only a four per cent



possibility of a cure. His conclusion: ‘Touch it [chemotherapy], and you’re a



goner’.



He embarked on a series of alternative treatments consisting of 12 freshlymade



vegetable juices a day, high-dose vitamin injections, acupuncture, raw



garlic, coffee enemas, and Chinese breathing exercises. He also used



visualisation techniques in which he imagined his immune cells attacking the



tumour. The result was that his cancer went into remission. He was still cancerfree



11 years later when he died in 2005 from an untreated blood infection.



Gearin-Tosh described his battle with cancer in his book, Living Proof—A



Medical Mutiny (Scribner, 2002).



Christopher Sheppard



In November 1999, Christopher Sheppard, a film producer, was diagnosed with



‘locally advanced’ rectal cancer and his doctors recommended surgery—as did



the homoeopathic doctors and acupuncturist that he approached to help him.



However, Sheppard refused surgery and chemo. but eventually, after a lot of



soul searching, did decide to accept radiation treatment. He also decided to go



on what he called a healing journey. It was his view that each cancer victim, not



their doctor, should be the authority on what they should do for their cancer.



And they should make their decisions on the basis of their own self-knowledge,



intuition and sense of the world.



For himself, he selected a modified version of the Gerson diet, developed



by his nutritionist, heavily supplemented with vitamins, minerals and herbs—



at one point he was taking over 100 pills a day.



He also decided to visit a Brazilian spiritual healer, Joao Texeira, also



known to his followers as ‘John of God’. He felt strongly that there was a



spiritual dimension—that his cancer was a sign of a spiritual malaise. This led



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 11



him to Tibetan Buddhism and he studied a special form of meditation at a



Buddhist community. Another self-devised therapy was to join an emotional



counselling group.



Within a year he was cancer-free, and remains so to this day. Radiation on



its own is not generally considered curative for rectal cancers.



Christopher describes his journey in great detail at his website at



www.christopher-sheppard.com.



Anne Frahm



At the age of 34 Anne Frahm found a tiny lump in her breast but, having been



assured it was not malignant, she did nothing. By the time the cancer was



diagnosed a year later, it had spread throughout her body. ‘I will never forget



seeing that light board with my skeleton displayed on it. It had tumours



covering my body. The tumours covered my skull, my ribs and shoulders.



Quarter-size holes had eaten through all my pelvic bones and the report



showed that virtually every vertebra of my spine had tumours grown right



through it. At that point, the doctor said that he thought he could keep me alive



for a while. He told me straight out, “I can’t cure you.”‘



Despite this she underwent a mastectomy, chemotherapy, radiation,



hormone therapy and a bone marrow transplant. During this latter procedure



she was in isolation for 52 days during which she very nearly died. ‘My kidneys



shut down, my lungs shut down, I got pneumonia, I was covered with fungus



rashes from head to toe, my fingernails and toenails fell off. I was a wreck!



[Then] toward the end of the 52 days, they did tests and came in and said they



were very sorry but “it just didn’t work for you”. I found out that I had a lot of



cancer still growing in my body so they basically sent me home to die.’



But Anne refused to give up. She decided to follow a strict nutrition plan



(which I have described in Book 4 in this series: Cancer Detox and Diet) and five



weeks later her astounded doctors could find no trace of the cancer at all.



Anne Frahm, with the help of her husband Dave, wrote her story up in a



book called The Cancer Battle Plan.



Sadly, Anne did eventually die ten years later from cancer, but to live



nearly ten years cancer-free after being given weeks to live is surely a great



achievement.



Felicity Corbin-Wheeler



Felicity Corbin-Wheeler is a Reader in the Church of England and also has an



international bible-based health ministry. She is also a Hippocrates Health



Educator, Hallelujah Acres Health minister, and she teaches around the world.



She is currently based in Portugal.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 12



Her own cancer story started in September 2003 when she was diagnosed



with untreatable pancreatic cancer. Having already lost a daughter to cancer,



despite what she refers to as ‘“the best” of orthodox medicine’ she began to



research the importance of nutrition in cancer. The conclusion she came to was



that a nutritional therapy should be firmly based on ‘what God tells us to eat in



Genesis 1:29 and 30’.



Although a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer is one of the worst diagnoses



anyone can receive, she did not give up hope but put her faith in ‘the living



enzymes in the seeds that God tells us to eat … and the seed of the apricot has



natural cancer cure qualities of hydrocyanic acid. This is also known as



amygdalin or laetrile, which has been given vitamin B17 status because the



seeds are vital for health.’



However, she found that she could not eat as many almonds as she felt she



needed so she underwent 13 intravenous treatments in Jersey, Channel Islands,



of laetrile (vitamin B17) under the direction of Dr Contreras of Oasis of Hope



Christian Cancer Hospital in Mexico, with mega doses of vitamin C and DMSO



(dimethyl sulphoxide) in the intravenous bag. She then continued to take B17



tablets for two years.



In addition, she also did the Gerson coffee enemas five times a day which



she continues to do. ‘I also went on a diet of living foods, fresh vegetable juices



including wheat and barley grass and detoxed from animal protein, dairy, fats



and flour.’ Within four months of starting this regime, scans showed the



tumours shrinking, and within a year all that was left was a scar. In a recent



email to me she said this:



‘Actually at [the age of] 70, I am fitter now than I have ever been! Yesterday



I won the Christmas golf competition, and also the December Medals in my two



different golf clubs here in Portugal, which is my daily source of vital oxygen,



exercise, friendship, laughter (!) and sunlight …. In my opinion, the answer to



all disease: cancer, diabetes, heart disease, arthritis, digestive disease, is in



correcting acidity in the body and building the immune system. We are what



we drink, eat, breathe and also think. The psychological and spiritual side of



healing is also vital.’



Her story has been reported by the BBC (August 2004) and she has written



the book God’s Healing Word, which recounts her story. For further details go to



www.felicitycorbinwheeler.org



Glynn Williams



In 1995, at the age of 28, Glynn Williams was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s type



Lymphoma. ‘I went to see the doctor because of swelling on both sides of the



groin area which came on within about a week …. I was totally exhausted,



lethargic, did not have the energy to get up, had no appetite and was losing



weight and I was having chills.’



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 13



He started taking Essiac tea (brand name Flor Essence)—two ounces in the



morning before eating and two ounces at night. The swelling grew larger and



then hardened up and the discomfort went away. By this time test results



confirmed that he had advanced stage Hodgkin’s. He was put on a course of 16



chemotherapy treatments but after experiencing severe side effects he quit the



course of treatments after the fifth chemo. session. Throughout this treatment



he had continued with the Essiac tea which he supplemented with vitamins and



herbs, one 400 IU vitamin E, one 10,000 IU beta carotene, two ginseng, one



shark cartilage, one 1,000 mg vitamin C, drops of liquid echinacea on the



tongue every three hours, and then capsules of echinacea 380 mg. He also took



a parasite elimination programme using black walnut tinctures, and



wormwood capsules. He drank kombucha mushroom tea three times a day.



Finally he did yoga with a strong focus on diaphragm breathing.



His doctors were amazed when he was eventually found to be cancer-free



as five doses of chemo. was not considered curative. In December 2007, he



confirmed that he was still cancer-free twelve years later.



Elonna McKibben



In 1989, having taken fertility treatment, Elonna found herself pregnant with



quins. However, as the pregnancy progressed, Elonna began feeling deepseated



pains. It was eventually discovered, after the birth of her children, that



the pains were not a side effect of her pregnancy—the exceptional nature of



which had camouflaged the fact that she had a tumour on her spine.



This was diagnosed as stage 4 glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), a very rare



and always fatal cancer. ‘As mine was in the spinal cord,’ Elonna wrote later, ‘it



made it even more rare, more aggressive and faster killing. I was told I would



not survive long enough to see my children’s first birthday.’



If that was not bad enough, the combined effect of the surgery and cancer



had left her paralysed from the waist down. The doctors recommended



radiation but were not hopeful that it would do more than delay the inevitable.



Fortunately, someone who read about her situation in the newspaper



contacted her husband, Rob, and told him about CanCell. Elonna was naturally



very sceptical: ‘If there was a cure for cancer, don’t you think they would be



using it instead of letting thousands of people die.’



However, she started taking it on the basis that she had nothing to lose



and everything to gain. Its effects were quickly obvious. ‘I began to eliminate



the cancer waste product about 18 hours after my first dose. It literally poured



out of me: I threw it up; my bowel movements were extremely loose, stringy



and frequent throughout the day; I lost it in my urine; my nose ran so much I



had to keep a tissue with me at all times; I sweated it out profusely; I had



hot/cold flashes and night sweats. When the nurses would give me a sponge



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 14



bath after a night sweat, the water would be a golden brown colour with what



they referred to as ‘tapioca balls’ floating in it.’



Despite these side-effects she persevered with the CanCell. After several



weeks she found she was feeling much better. Christmas came and went and



she started to do physical therapy to help her mobility. Then, in February 1990



she had scans to see what was happening. The radiologist was stunned to find



no trace of the cancer. Despite being cancer-free, Elonna continued the CanCell



treatment for a further two years. As of September 2011, Elonna McKibben is still



alive, and her full story can be read on her website at www.elonnamckibben.com.



You can read more about CanCell in Book 6 in this series: Cancer: Vitamins



and Other Supplements.



Mark Olsztyn



In March 1991, Mark experienced a major epileptic seizure which led to him



being hospitalized. There, a CAT scan revealed a darkened area in the right



frontal lobe of his brain. He was operated on and the tumour removed. It was



found to be a low-grade astrocytoma. No further treatment was recommended,



though frequent repeat scans would, he was told, be necessary.



Mark ignored this recommendation and for the next six years led a normal,



hectic life. ‘This was my denial phase,’ he recalls. When eventually he did go for



a scan in 1997, he was shocked to learn that the tumour had returned and was



now stage 4. In addition to surgery he would require chemotherapy and



radiation. He was also told by one of his doctors that he had better settle his



affairs. But Mark insisted in thinking positively that a cure was possible.



He followed doctors’ orders and underwent all these treatments even



though he knew that at best they would be palliative. Fortunately, his father was



a doctor of alternative medicine. ‘My father immediately sent me a case of a foultasting



liquid called PolyMVA which a colleague of his was using successfully



on brain tumour patients. Because PolyMVA can be used as an adjunct to



conventional therapy, I embraced it. I felt then that any nonconventional therapy



that came my way, so long as it didn’t interfere with what the doctors wanted



me to do, was what God wanted me to do and would give me the edge that I



needed to survive.



Among many other things, I became an ascetic, practiced Qi Gong, drank



Essiac and Chinese herbs, joined various support groups, received acupuncture,



ohmed and prayed and was prayed for, drank shark cartilage, ate macrobiotic,



practiced visualization and, after four out of six rounds, quit chemotherapy. That



last one was not what the doctors wanted me to do, however I felt I had enough



poisoning. Over the years I gradually let go of each of the aforementioned lifesaving



practices except for PolyMVA and eating organic. Doctors now tell me to



keep on doing whatever it is that I’m doing because it seems to be working.’



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 15



In August 2011, Mark is still very much alive and cancer-free. He can be



contacted at mark.olsztyn@googlemail.com.



Shirley Lipschutz-Robinson



In 1982, doctors recommended a mastectomy on Shirley’s left breast. She had



suffered recurring cyst lumps which no medication could control. Up until this



time Shirley was, as she calls herself, a prescription drug junkie—she was



depressed, overweight and suffering from a seemingly endless parade of



ailments—and the drugs seemed to only make matters worse. Her overall



health was steadily declining.



But Shirley baulked at having her breast removed. She decided she needed



to change her approach. She consulted a naturopathic/homoeopathic doctor who



put her on a dietary regime—‘a wholesome diet of fresh, organically-grown



fruits, vegetables, and nuts, mostly in their raw form’—supplemented with



homoeopathic remedies. The results were, in her own words, ‘dramatic’.



Within six weeks the lumps were gone. Within 12 weeks she had lost 60lbs.



‘My energy level and stamina improved dramatically. I was able to function



better overall. I became calmer, centred and focused, and generally I felt happier.



My overall resistance to infections became excellent.’



In the 1990s, she experienced a lump the size of a pea in her left nipple. It



grew to be the size of a small grape. She refused to see the doctor, instead selftreating



it with extra flaxseed oil, herbal extracts and homoeopathy. Within two



weeks her body had reabsorbed the lump and it never came back.



These experiences sparked her to study a wide range of alternative



therapies. Her full story, and the story of how she treated her husband through



a series of heart attacks, is told on her excellent website: www.shirleyswellness-



cafe.com. This website is a storehouse of useful information.



Pattie McDonald



In May 2002, Pattie, 58, was diagnosed with breast cancer ‘the size of a quarter’.



She believes now that contributing factors included being on HRT (Premarin)



for six years, long term antibiotic use and a very poor diet (‘I was a fast food



freak’) coupled with a negative outlook on life. Her doctors recommended



surgery and radiation.



However, Pattie had a close and trusted friend who had survived ovarian



cancer by using bloodroot. She used both bloodroot paste and tonic. The effects



of the bloodroot quickly revealed that the cancer had already spread to the neck



and three lymph nodes.



The Cansema bloodroot paste was applied to the biopsy site on her breast.



It took ten days to expel the tumour from her body. As the neck tumours also



began to be expelled, Pattie took the tonic and applied paste against the neck. The



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 16



whole process of treatment took about a month. She experienced excruciating



pain and two days of no sleep. (She later found out you should take pain killers.)



In August 2002 she had an MRI scan that confirmed she was cancer-free,



and four years later she has remained cancer-free.



‘This experience changed my entire life—body, soul and spirit. I am a new



woman. I changed my diet, quit my stressful job, sold my too-big house, rid



myself of all negative friends, and divorced my alcoholic hubby. I had no idea



what real happiness was until 2002.’



Pattie can be contacted at pjmacblondie@yahoo.com.



Bob Davis



In April 1996, Bob Davis discovered he had a massive cancer tumour—a foot



wide and several inches thick—in his abdomen and several other tumours in



his chest, some ‘the size of soft balls’. The cancer had also spread to his bone



marrow.



He was immediately started on a very heavy chemotherapy program over



the next three months. This had very little effect: ‘It [the tumour] seemed to



thrive on the stuff.’



The doctor told him that the chemo. wasn’t working. ‘He later told me that



another treatment would kill me. I knew that this was true because my body



was ravaged by the chemo. I was curled up in a foetal position unable to sleep



or eat. I was emaciated and had excruciating pain all through my body.’



At this time he received a call from a woman who had been selling his wife



pills made of dried green barley leaves for her arthritis. During the conversation



he mentioned his fight with cancer. ‘Don’t you know that cancer and arthritis



can’t grow in an alkaline body?’ she said. The same barley leaves that his wife



was taking for her arthritis would, she told him, also help in his fight against



cancer. He started taking the pills—20 tablets of dried barley green (340mg



each)—and ‘in ten days my cancer was 95 per cent gone!’ A number of tests



including a CAT scan showed that scar tissue remained but the cancer had been



killed. ‘I was incredibly lucky. I know most people wouldn’t be cured so simply.



In fact I only know one other person who had the same response.’



A few years later, even though he had maintained his intake of dried



barley leaves, Bob was diagnosed with a probable prostate cancer on the basis



of a lump and high PSA levels. Resisting pressure to have surgery, Bob went on



the Dr Shulze’s Incurable’s programme—involving juice fasting and colon



cleansing. Three weeks later he demanded a PSA re-test. His PSA levels were



now normal.



In 2011 he was still cancer-free. He still takes 20 tablets of dried green



barley every day. ‘It costs me a whopping 95 cents or so.’ He has adopted a 95



per cent vegan diet ‘I really like it. I feel better than I have in 40 years. People



say I look younger. I have “lotsa” energy.’



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 17



Bob Davis can be contacted through his website at www.cancersuccess.



com.



‘Rompin’ Ronnie Hawkins



Ronnie Hawkins is a famous Canadian rockabilly musician, reportedly one of



Bill Clinton’s favourites. In 2002 he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and



given no hope of recovery. When the news was announced that he had only



three or four months left to live, a film director by the name of Anne Pick



started documenting the last days of his life. There was a tearful tribute concert



in Toronto to bid farewell to ‘The Hawk’.



But Hawkins didn’t lie down and die. Instead he went on a regimen of



nutritional supplements and pot. Seventeen months later, a gifted, 17-year-old



named Adam McLeod, heard of Hawkins plight and offered his services. Adam



was what he calls a Medical Intuitive Healer. Hawkins accepted the offer. A



short time later Hawkins reported for his regular check-up and the doctors



were stunned to discover that his tumour had completely disappeared.



This caused problems for the film makers documenting his last months



(already they must have been a little irritated that he was taking so long



dying!). They solved the problem by changing the film’s title to Ronnie Hawkins.



Still Alive and Kickin’.



Hawkins attributes his recovery to the psychic healer Adam. Ten years



later Hawkins is still alive.



The healer Adam McLeod has since written a number of books and is a



figure of controversy in Canada. He uses the professional name of Adam



Dreamhealer.



Bruce Guilmette



In November 2004, Bruce discovered that both his kidneys had large cancerous



masses inside them. Kidney cancer is known to be highly resistant to treatment



and he was given only a matter of months to live unless he had both kidneys



removed. Bruce refused this option, turned to a combination of diet, supplements



and the use of a Rife machine. Bruce’s research led him to the conclusion that



cancer needs to be attacked from many different angles to be successfully put



into remission. He eventually put together a complex regimen which he followed



rigorously. Much of his food intake is in the form of juiced fresh vegetables. He



reduced his meat consumption to no more than ten percent of his total intake



and eliminated pork altogether.



Bruce died in November 2007—but he did not die of cancer. At the time of



his death his regular blood tests all confirmed that the cancer was no longer



active. His full story is told at www.survivecancerfoundation.org.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 18



Ian Gawler



In 1975, Ian Gawler, a 24-year old Australian veterinarian, was diagnosed with



bone cancer. He underwent surgery and had his right leg amputated. He was



told that he had only a five percent chance of surviving for five years and that if



the tumours returned he would only have a few months. The cancer did return



later that year.



Deciding to take a proactive approach, Ian went to the Philippines with his



wife, and received treatment from several folk healers (psychic surgeons). On his



return to Australia, he decided to follow a diet, take up meditation and explore



a wide range of natural therapies, He believed the secret lay in stimulating the



immune system and to letting go of stress and anxiety.



He won his battle and the cancer went away. To this day he remains



healthy and cancer-free. He wrote a book, You Can Conquer Cancer, and set up



The Gawler Foundation, based in Melbourne, to provide cancer support



programs for anyone seeking to follow the alternative path.



He attributes his success to the fact that he took responsibility for his



condition and recognized that he had been responsible for causing it. By taking



responsibility, he felt in control and believed that he had the power to reverse it.



In an interview with the journalist Beryl Rule he said: ‘Psychologically, the



big need is to change. If we recognize that a particular pattern has aided in



creating the disease, then obviously a new pattern is required …. The disease



creates the excuse for change. It produces a new situation or insight that allows



the patient the space to change their rigid patterns.’ For more information go to



www.gawler.org.



Fred Eichhorn



In 1976, Fred was found to have islet cell carcinoma, and was given a maximum



life expectancy of three years though most of the doctors he consulted believed



he would be dead within a year. He underwent surgery in which 90 percent of



his pancreas was removed along with his spleen and part of his stomach.



However, this was not expected to provide a cure. Fred decided to define the



problem. He felt that in every case ill health follows like a domino effect from a



first cause. The solution is to find that first cause in terms of the body’s



biochemistry and correct it. Then a good domino effect will result in the



elimination of the disease.



He decided good nutrition—a return to pre-1900s standards (i.e.,



completely organic)—along with exercise and a positive mental framework,



were the key cornerstones of good health.



In 1980 Fred enrolled in medical college and studied for four years



followed by a further three years research.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 19



Fred Eichhorn is cancer-free today 30 years later and so committed is he to



spreading the word that he has set up the National Cancer Research Foundation



(www.ncrf.org). He provides a number of testimonials on his site of people who



have benefited from following his regime. For further information contact



fred@ncrf.org.



June Black



June Black was first diagnosed with cancer (stage 1) in November 2000. She



eventually had a mastectomy but no radiation or chemotherapy. She was put



on tamoxifen but reacted badly to it and ‘threw it down the toilet’. In 2005, June



noticed a lump growing on the mastectomy scar and had it biopsied. The tests



came back positive. The cancer had returned. She underwent two further



operations but it was clear the cancer had spread. By this time she had read a lot



of books and had come round to the natural approach to treating cancer. So,



when her third oncologist (she had dumped two) told her: ‘I recommend the



whole gamut; chemo., radiation and adjuvant hormone therapy.’ She found the



courage to refuse, saying: ‘I am sixty years old, I have lived a good life, and I



have other plans.’



But at first the natural path did not appear to be doing her any good. ‘After



spending a month of a very strict diet and enough vitamins and supplements to



fill a small shop, I realized I was losing the war against this cancer. I was losing



weight, I had sweats, I was really weak and it was so bad that I thought death



would be a wonderful alternative to the hell I was going through.’



Then someone suggested the supplement PolyMVA. She went on it and



within four days felt better. This was in October 2005. In June 2006 she had a full



array of tests and they all came back clear. She was cancer-free.



Her regime was eight teaspoons of PolyMVA a day for six 1/2 months. She



then went to six teaspoons a day for about two months and since then has been



taking four teaspoons a day. She also takes CoQ10, artemisinin, pancreatic



enzymes and IP6 (inositol hexakisphosphate).



‘This is just the tip of the iceberg of what I am taking. I also take different



mushrooms, EpiCor, Lugol’s iodine, DIM (diindolylmethane), and calcium-Dglucarate.



If anyone is interested in my complete list please feel free to contact



me at june1@mesquiteweb.com. I just had my 62nd birthday March 1, 2007 in



Hawaii and gained more weight and feel fantastic. As of now, no signs of



illness. I have excellent health and work full time and care for 11 cats.’



June’s story is one of many testimonials that can be found at



www.polymvasurvivors.com.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 20



Percy Weston



Percy Weston was an Australian farmer who, despite being diagnosed with



terminal cancer in his late thirties, went on to live till he was 100.



His story is a remarkable one. At school his favourite subject was chemistry,



a fact that was to stand him in good stead when as a farmer he began to wonder



why his sheep were going down with an arthritic condition affecting their knees,



and manifesting cancerous lesions on their ears. Plants grown in the soil which



had been heavily treated with superphosphate fertilizer also exhibited strange



mutations. Thinking it through he wondered if the superphosphate fertilizer



that he had been using for the previous five years was the cause. He moved the



sheep onto pasture which had not been treated with superphosphates and fed



them the mineral salts that the superphosphates had leached from the land.



They recovered. He moved some of them back onto the treated paddock and



they developed the same problems again. He moved them off it and again they



recovered.



Sometime later Weston himself was afflicted with arthritis and a cancerous



tumour which developed on his hand. Remembering his experiences with the



sheep, Weston decided to reduce his own intake of phosphorus and started



taking in minerals—particularly magnesium and potassium. The arthritis went



away and the cancer tumour dried up and finally broke away from his hand.



Later he treated his wife with the same low phosphate diet and mineral



supplements when she had been diagnosed with cancer of the uterus. The top



gynaecologist in their state (Victoria, Australia) had advised an immediate



hysterectomy. Her cancer too disappeared and she went on to have two healthy



children. The specialist, when he was told of these events, commented that he



had never known a woman in the condition Mrs Weston had been in when he



had examined her to survive for twelve months, let alone have children.



Percy wrote his story in his book Cancer: Cause and Cure and has also



written a book entitled Cancer Fighting Foods. The mineral supplements that he



used can also be bought from various online suppliers.



Cliff Beckwith



Cliff Beckwith was a retired educationalist living near Knoxville, Tennessee. He



was one of the founders of the Yahoo health groups information resource on



flaxseed oil: http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/FlaxSeedOil2/files (requires



Yahoo Groups membership).



Here he tells his own story.



‘In January 1991 I was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer. Bone



scans and other tests indicated no spread so it was decided to operate. During



the operation it was discovered that the cancer had spread to the lymph glands



making it stage 4. The operation was not completed as that would not be the



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 21



answer. The only treatment used was Lupron (leuprolide) and Eulexin



(flutamide) to cancel the male hormones. I was told the male hormone does not



cause cancer, but if cancer is present, it is like throwing kerosene on a fire.



At the time of the attempted operation my PSA count was 75. It was six



months before I had the second PSA. When the call came from the doctor’s



office I was told ‘Mr. Beckwith! Your count is completely normal!’ It was 0.1



and 0.1 to 0.4 is normal.



The reason it was normal was because, in addition to the hormone drugs, I



had started taking flaxseed oil mixed with cottage cheese. I had read a number of



books recommending this approach, which was first formulated by Dr Johanna



Budwig and is commonly known as the Budwig protocol.



I quit Lupron after four years and seven months in October of 1995 as it



was no longer useful. I thought I was cured but not so. In roughly two years the



PSA was again rising. I began changing the amounts I took of flaxseed



oil/cottage cheese which led to a series of ups and downs with the PSA results.



I learned that there are 30 strains of prostate cancer. They are all different



and any man may have any combination of strains. This makes the problem



different from individual to individual. Mine is a medium aggressive cancer.



In January 2004 my PSA was 6.7 which is very close to normal for a man of



85. I thought I had it beaten. It had now been 13 years since diagnosis. Most



men with advanced prostate cancer do not live nearly that long. The doctor told



me after a couple of years that I was one of the lucky ones. Most men with the



condition I had did not make it six months.



In Jan 2004, I decided to try ellagic acid, which has proved effective in



many cases. However, my PSA went up instead of further down. Then I added



lycopene. I had been told that it needed to be used heavily to be effective; three



12 ounce glasses of tomato juice a day. I did that for four months.



Then I learned two things a couple of days apart. One was that Dr Budwig



had said in 1956 that if one is using flaxseed oil one must not use heavy amounts



of antioxidants, as it would neutralize the effect of the flaxseed oil. The other



was that both ellagic acid and lycopene are powerful antioxidants.



For over a year I was hurting the effect of the flaxseed oil/cottage cheese



and for four months I was cancelling it completely.



The result was that the cancer again began to develop and by the time I



woke up to this fact, the PSA had gone to 131.



I know that cancer in the prostate does not kill. What kills is the cancer in



the tissues to which it spreads. Flaxseed oil pretty much stops the spread. Until



I went the antioxidant route it hadn’t spread in 13 years. Now there are signs it



has spread to the bone.



So I immediately increased the flaxseed oil to six tablespoons a day and



am using my rebounder (small trampoline). The result appears to be beneficial.



I had been aware of an enlargement in the prostate gland and now it is getting



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 22



smaller and urination is easier. I do not believe I am in danger anymore.’



(February 2006)



Cliff Beckwith died from his cancer, aged 85, in late 2007.



Chris Wark



It was 2003. I was having some abdominal pain on and off for the better part of



the year, and being the typical male, I put it off. I was thinking it might be an



ulcer and that it would get better, but it didn’t. It was like Groundhog Day.



Every morning I would wake up feeling good, but several times a day I would



get these brief flashes of pain in the afternoon and evening. Sometimes in the



middle of the night. It wasn’t a constant pain and didn’t interfere with my life,



but I was concerned. The next morning I would wake up feeling good again.



Eventually the pain became so intense that I found myself balled up on the



couch every night after dinner. Time to see a doctor.



After a series of inconclusive tests, I was sent to a gastroenterologist for a



colonoscopy. Turns out there was a golf ball-sized tumour in my large intestine.



Great. They did a biopsy and told me I had colon cancer. It was two weeks



before Christmas and I was 26 years old.



I was in shock. I couldn’t believe this was my life. How did I end up with



an old person’s disease? I felt weak and pathetic. I was embarrassed and I shut



down mentally and emotionally.



Three weeks later, on New Year’s Eve, I had surgery. They removed the



tumour and a third of my colon. More good news, the cancer had spread to my



lymph nodes. It was stage 3. They brought an oncologist into my room and he



informed me that I would need nine months of chemotherapy after I recovered



from surgery.



The first meal they served me in the hospital after removing a third of my



large intestine was a sloppy joe. I was starving. I hadn’t eaten in three days, but



I couldn’t get down more than a few bites. I was relatively clueless about



nutrition, but I knew that a sloppy joe was the last thing my body needed.



Before I checked out of the hospital I asked the surgeon, ‘Are there any



foods I need to avoid?’ He said, ‘Nah, just don’t lift anything heavier than a



beer.’ Not the advice I was expecting.



When we got home, my wife and I prayed and asked God that if there was



another way besides chemotherapy that He would reveal it to us. Two days



later, a book arrived on my doorstep, sent to me from a man in Alaska who I’d



never met. He was a business acquaintance of my father’s.



That book was called God’s Way to Ultimate Health by George Malkmus, and



it detailed how he beat colon cancer nearly 30 years earlier using natural methods



including the raw vegan diet and juicing, and without surgery or chemotherapy.



I knew it was an answer to prayer. I realized that my diet of processed food, fast



food, junk food, and factory farmed animal products was killing me.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 23



I started to do more research on the harmful nature of cancer therapies. I



discovered that chemotherapy destroyed your immune system and killed



healthy cells; that it could make me infertile. And that it caused secondary



cancers. That was when I decided against chemotherapy.



This decision was not well received by my wife and many family members.



After intense family pressure I agreed to meet with an oncologist to hear what



he had to say. He told me I had a 60 per cent chance of living five years with



conventional therapies. To me that wasn’t much better than a coin toss. I asked



him about alternative therapies. He looked me dead in the eye and said, ‘There



are none. If you don’t do chemo, you are insane. And I’m not saying this because



I need your business.’ My wife and I left the clinic terrified. We sat in the car,



held hands, cried and prayed.



I knew I wasn’t taking care of myself and that there were massive changes



I could make to my diet and lifestyle. I decided to take control of my health, and



if that didn’t work, chemo would be my last resort. I radically changed my diet



to 100 per cent raw vegan, eating only fruits and vegetables, and drank eight



glasses of vegetable juice every day. I did every alternative holistic therapy I



could find including: fasting, vitamin C IVs, rebounding, natural immune



boosting and detox supplements, herbal teas, acupuncture, structural integration,



hydrotherapy, saunas, and more.



I found a local naturopath who was a tremendous ally and guided me along



my health journey, and I continued to research, reading all the information I



could find about natural cancer therapies. Within one year of my diagnosis I was



cancer free.



Now in 2011, eight years later, my wife and I have two beautiful daughters



aged 3 and 6, and I am still cancer free. As I write this I am reminded of how



good God is; how much He loves us and cares for us. I put my trust in Him, not



in modern medicine. He led me in the path of healing and He will lead you too



if you let Him.



Psalm 34.4: ‘I sought the Lord and He answered me, and delivered me



from all my fears.’



Chris Wark, Memphis, TN: www.chrisbeatcancer.com



Polly Noble



This is Polly’s story in her own words.



I was 24, living the ‘citygirl’ life in London working as a personal assistant



to the vice president of Sony Playstation. From the outside looking in, I appeared



to have a pretty good life. I had a good job, a lovely boyfriend, a nice house—



but it wasn’t enough, I still wasn’t happy. I always felt a bit lost and at that time



I was fed up and constantly felt that ‘there had to be more’ to life. I just felt like



something was missing. In the back of my mind, I hoped that one day I would



just wake up and know what I wanted to do and how I could make my life



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 24



meaningful. I had a very strong desire to know my real self and the difference I



could make in the world. I had no clue that my purpose would involve me



being diagnosed with cancer aged 24.



I had been feeling a bit run down, seemed to be sleeping from 8pm in the



evening straight through to 8am the following morning, was suffering with



some backache and had put on a few pounds. I put the weight gain down to



being out on the party circuit a little too much and it was only at a check up



with my gynaecologist that it became apparent that something wasn’t right. In



fact it was something quite scary and sinister. After more tests, I was told that I



had a 3cm tumour on my cervix which had spread to several infected malignant



lymph nodes in and around my pelvis. I had already mentally prepared myself



for the worst and my reaction to being told I had cancer was simply, ‘Okay,



what do we do now? Let’s get on and deal with it.’ Obviously on some level I



was upset but it felt natural for me to take a pragmatic approach and I refused



to throw myself a pity party. That’s just the kind of person I am—I was strong



for everyone else to make it easier for them to deal with. Falling apart at the



seams was going to be unhelpful for everyone. At the time I didn’t see the point



in getting upset about it, I was just keen to ‘get it dealt with’. So within a week



or two of my diagnosis I was rushed into hospital for keyhole surgery to remove



as many of the infected lymph nodes they could reach followed by six weeks of



simultaneous chemotherapy and radiotherapy, followed by what was at the



time, a pioneering treatment known as brachytherapy.



During chemo. and radiotherapy I had very little appetite and shrunk to an



unhealthy-looking size six, with sullen cheek bones and huge black circles under



my eyes. I was exhausted, weak and grew weary of the constant prodding and



poking from doctors plying me with drugs. The whole experience made me feel



very disempowered and consequently I spent the majority of my day either



asleep or bent over worshipping the porcelain god!



I wasn’t given any information on how I could help myself or what I could



do to lessen the side-effects I was experiencing so I began to conduct my own



research as to what I could do. I began juicing fruits and vegetables and began



eating more living foods in the form of salads. I grew up in a household where



a piece of fish or meat would hold centre stage with the vegetables making a



small token appearance, but gradually I began to educate myself of how I could



best support my body and boost my immune system to help keep me well. Up



until that point, I had never really made the connection between the foods I was



eating and my level of health. Of course I knew I needed to get my ‘five-a-day’



but I didn’t realise just how important they were or the detrimental effect some



of the other everyday foods I was eating like meat, bread, sugar, cheese and



alcohol were having on my body. I had always considered myself ‘healthy’ but



soon came to realise that my idea of healthy was very different from true health.



Soon after I finished my treatment, I developed lymphoedema in my right



leg making it swell to twice the size of my left leg which was unsightly, painful



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 25



and almost impossible to walk on. I was told there wasn’t much that I could do



and that I would have to ‘learn to live with it’. I told the lymphoedema nurse



that that was unacceptable and took it upon myself to heal it. (I’m sure she



thought I was a pompous Madam but I was 24 and I wanted a normal leg thank



you very much!)



I researched and did everything I could; I had manual lymphatic drainage



once a week, wore lymphoedema stockings, dry skin brushed, drank fresh



juices made from anti-inflammatory foods and visualised on a daily basis that



my leg had returned to its normal size. Approximately three months later, my



leg was back to normal and walking on it wasn’t a problem. The lymphoedema



nurse would always be surprised how much it had reduced each time she



measured it and would ask me what I had been doing!



On agreeing to subject my body to such harsh treatment in the form of



chemo. and radiotherapy, I was made aware that there was a possibility of



developing severe side-effects. Some were worse than others and thankfully it



would appear I have come away fairly unscathed in the grand scheme of things.



But I have suffered some nerve damage in my fingers and to this day still have



problems with them. When I get cold or when I touch something cold, even for



just a split second, the tips of my fingers go numb and they turn white.



Eventually, the blood comes flows back to them but it can be quite painful,



especially in winter. And then of course, having had such severe treatment I



was told that I have been left infertile. Despite still having my reproductive



organs, the treatment has had an extremely negative effect on my monthly cycle



which I am currently working on getting to function once again using



alternative methods.



I was also left with a compromised immune system, which left me



vulnerable to contracting severe pneumonia twice in as many years. During my



second stay in hospital for pneumonia in December 2009, I found a lump near



my collar bone which turned out to be the cervical cancer that had metastasized



to my lymph nodes around my neck. As the cancer was systemic throughout



my lymph system, I was told that the cancer was now deemed ‘incurable’.



I was offered surgery and radiotherapy which I was told may not make



any difference to helping to cure me and having experienced awful side effects



from it previously, decided it was now my opportunity to do it my way and so I



politely declined.



I had read a lot about health and healing in the years between my two



diagnoses, and had come to the conclusion that if the body had created



something then it should be able to ‘un-create’ it. I had tried the conventional



route and the cancer came back, so I decided now was my opportunity to



explore an alternative path to healing. I began researching how to support my



body and the things I could do to ‘switch on’ my body’s healing mechanism,



which has led to the most amazing journey of my life.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 26



I converted to a plant-based raw food diet overnight, with plenty of fresh



juices, meditation, visualisation and yoga making the foundations of my



healing plan. I made it my full-time job to create a sacred space to aid healing



on a physical, mental, emotional and spiritual level. This is my journey and it is



no coincidence that I feel happier and healthier than ever before.



Three months after embarking on my healing journey, a scan showed that



the cancer had reduced by 1mm although my oncologist was reticent to admit



this could be down to my approach, instead suggesting that the scan may have



been measured inaccurately. A scan four months later showed a little growth



and although I felt some disappointment realised that cancer has been in my



body for at least ten years and that it is going to take time to heal completely. I



don’t put a lot of emphasis on scans as I don’t believe that a lump is a clear



indication of my level of internal health. The lump is a mere manifestation of a



problem that I am working on resolving, but just because the lump is still there



doesn’t mean that healing isn’t already taking place on a cellular level.



I decided to take a break from having scans for a while seeing as they have



to inject glucose into my blood to measure the cancer in my body which in



effect promotes the cancer’s growth! It all just seemed a bit counter-productive.



So now, I have my blood tests and I am told they ‘look good’. I don’t take too



much notice of tests because I feel well and I know that I am doing everything I



can to aid my healing.



I certainly don’t intend to have cancer forever, but I do intend to live my



life with health and happiness. I commit every day to being an active



participant in my health and give my body the best possible environment in



which to create health by eating, drinking and thinking consciously.



We so often feel like a passenger on a runaway cancer train and I want to



use my journey to empower others to take back the reins on their health and



live consciously. Some foods will actually promote the cancer to grow, some



will promote the cancer cells to spontaneously commit suicide, and knowing



what these foods are and how to boost your immune system are crucial not



only to your health but to feeling empowered and in control of your own



experience.



I am passionate about helping others to help themselves get healthy and



prevent a ‘health crisis’ before it’s too late.



I now work as an holistic health coach and raw food coach, educating



others on how to adopt an anti-inflammatory, alkaline diet. I work with people



one-on-one, in groups, hold talks, workshops and retreats as well as provide



stacks of free health information via my website www.pollynoble.com. I am



also being filmed for a documentary due out in 2012 which is following my



healing journey.



I have co-authored a book called The Cancer Journey to help navigate



people through what can be an extremely frightening experience. It’s the go-to



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 27



handbook for anyone affected by cancer, and deals with everything from



diagnosis to diet to self-help techniques, to dealing with friends and family.



Ruth Heidrich



Known as the ‘other Dr Ruth’, Ruth Heidrich is a six-time Ironman Triathlon



finisher, has held age-group records in distances from 100-metre dashes to



ultramarathons, pentathlons, and triathlons. She has completed 67 marathons



including Boston, New York, Moscow, Honolulu, has held three world fitness



records at the famed Cooper Clinic in Dallas, Texas, named one of the ‘Ten



Fittest Women in North America.’ A graduate of UCLA, she holds a Master’s



degree in Psychology, and a doctorate in Health Education. She has also



lectured in this field at the University of Hawaii, Stanford University, and



Cornell University. Author of Senior FitnessA Race For LifeThe CHEF



Cook/Rawbook, she has an ‘Ask Dr Ruth’ column on her website,



www.ruthheidrich.com. Here is her story in her own words.



I was 47 years old and believed I was as healthy as I could possibly be!



Talk about being positive, I thought I had it all! My career was taking off, my



kids were successfully launched, and I loved all the travel that my job provided.



I’d studied nutrition in college and ate what I was told was a very healthy diet,



lots of chicken and fish and low-fat dairy. I was in the best physical shape of my



life except for a little arthritis which I was told everybody gets by the time



they’re 30. I’d starting daily running at the age of 33 and found I loved it! So, at



this time, I’d been a runner for 14 years and had even run a bunch of



marathons.



What I didn’t know was that my life was about to be dumped upside



down. While in the shower that morning, I found a lump in my breast. I got



right in to see a doctor, but he just remarked, ‘Oh, you’re too young for breast



cancer.’ He did, however, order a mammogram, ‘just to be sure’, he said. The



results were negative—a false negative as it turned out—because of my dense



breasts, it didn’t pick up any abnormality. I was told to come back for yearly



checks. The next year, the same result. The third year, however, the lump was



now golf-ball sized and very visible! The doctor looked shocked and ordered an



immediate biopsy. The diagnosis: infiltrating ductal cancer, an invasive cancer



that had already spread, indicated by ‘hot spots’ in my bones, a lung tumour,



and elevated liver enzymes!



I was so stunned and disbelieving that I got second, third and even fourth



opinions. Each doctor confirmed the findings, and as for my prognosis, none



could tell me whether I had three months, three years or what, just that it was



‘not good.’ They all recommended the standard chemo., radiation and



tamoxifen. I could not believe my body betrayed me in such a manner! I was



doing everything I was told were all the right things to be healthy.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 28



I was slated for chemotherapy but dreaded going down that path—but



terrified not to. I started searching for alternatives, any kind of help, anything—



I did not want to die! That was when I found a tiny three-line newspaper item,



‘Wanted, women with breast cancer to participate in cancer/diet research



study.’ I was sure that my ‘healthy’ diet (and I’d been told by the oncologist



that my diet had nothing to do with my breast cancer), so I thought this would



help prove it one way or the other. I ran to the phone and was put right through



to Dr John McDougall. I was so shocked to get him in person that I was



sputtering, trying to tell him that I’d just been diagnosed with breast cancer. He



said, ‘Get your medical records and come down to my office right away.’



After I got there, he was looking over my lab results. ‘Hmmm,’ he said.



‘What now?’ I was thinking. Another shock when he said, ‘You know, with



cholesterol of 236, you are at as high a risk of dying of a heart attack as you are



the cancer.’



I was literally stunned by the deception of my body and what was



happening—cancer, arthritis, and, now, heart disease? I was a marathoner, for



goodness sake! These things don’t happen to people like me! What is going on?



Dr McDougall said, ‘Don’t worry, all of this can be reversed and avoided.



Change your diet, and you’ll lower your cholesterol, lower your risk of heart



disease, and reverse the cancer. And, in order to show that it’s the diet that’s



responsible for these changes, you must not have any chemo. or radiation.’ Wait



a minute, I thought, undergo chemo. and radiation or change my diet? If Dr



McDougall is right, and I saw the research that supported his claim, I’d be crazy



not to go with the diet! ‘OK, what do I do?’ Dr McDougall said: ‘It’s very



simple—eliminate all animal foods and oils from your diet. Your diet will



consist of plant foods: fruits, vegetables, whole grains and legumes.’



No ‘transitioning’ for me—in less than two hours, I was vegan! I found the



diet amazingly easy to follow. I already loved brown rice, whole grain breads



and oatmeal; I just had to replace the chicken, fish and dairy with vegetables



and fruit, and throw out all the oils.



My body responded immediately. The next morning I discovered I’d been



constipated all my life but never knew it. I now know what ‘normal’ is, thank



goodness!



When I returned to the oncologist, I told him what I was doing. He



responded by saying that diet had nothing to do with my getting breast cancer



and I couldn’t possibly get enough protein, calcium, and essential fatty acids. I



made a mental note to check that out with Dr McDougall. In addition to the hot



spots in my bones, I was having serious bone pain that medication could not



relieve. A month later, those hot spots had significantly receded, and within



three months, they were gone, as was the bone pain. The chest X-rays, however,



to this day, still show an encapsulated tumour in my left lung. It hasn’t grown



in 29 years, and my liver enzymes are now normal.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 29



The oncologist had no explanation for the findings and told me further



that my new diet couldn’t have any effect on the cancer, and that I was taking a



risk in continuing to refuse chemo., radiation, and tamoxifen. Back to Dr



McDougall I went! I was reassured when he again showed me the dismal



results of chemo. and radiation plus data indicating I’d get plenty of all the



needed nutrients.



It was during all this turmoil that I happened to see the Ironman Triathlon



on TV. I was awe-struck and thought, ‘I’ve got to do that!’ I saw the 2.4-mile



swim, the 112-mile bike, and then the 26-mile marathon. I knew I could handle



the marathon and thought just adding swimming and biking would be a piece



of cake! Then it hit me, I’ve got cancer and, besides, looking at all the young



bodies, at 47 I’m way too old to do this. I then realized what an opportunity I



was being given: diet does affect cancer and I can show people that you can do



one of the toughest races in the world on a vegan diet and, at a relatively



advanced age to boot! I got excited at the possibilities and joined two running



clubs, got a swim coach, took a bicycle repair course, and was obsessed with



training in all three sports. Training daily, I could see amazing progress in my



speed and endurance. What’s more, I was enjoying my workouts, gaining



confidence that I could attain one of the most ambitious goals I’d ever set for



myself—to be an ‘Ironman’!



I did have to dig deep, however, as I was challenged like I’d never been



before! Crossing that finish line of my first Ironman, I experienced indescribable



feelings—a mix of joy, empowerment, exhilaration, and total fatigue! I could



not have gone another step!



Since my diagnosis in 1982, I have completed the Ironman six times, run



67 marathons, have won nearly 1,000 gold medals including eight gold medals



in the Senior Olympics, won the title of ‘One of the Ten Fittest Women in North



America,’ and have a fitness age of 32, although chronologically, I am 76.



Because of the history of osteoporosis on both sides of my family, I tracked



my bone density and found significant increases with each test. I was obviously



getting enough calcium on this diet. I was also very pleasantly surprised to



discover that my arthritis disappeared and I could stop taking Naprosyn,



(Aleve, or naproxen), the drug prescribed for my arthritis that I was told I



would need to take the rest of my life. My joints today not only are not arthritic,



but I actually do my own little daily triathlon as part of my regular training!



How about that? A 76-year-old triathlete! I never thought my life could take



such a positive turn and am thankful that I found out, in time, the dramatic



impact diet has on our health!



Regarding the rationale for avoiding any kind of oil, the healthiest foods



are whole foods with little or no refinement or processing. Taking a whole food



like corn, olives, etc. and extracting and concentrating the natural oils from



them, represent the extreme in processing, leaving 100 per cent calories from fat



and is certainly not helping in the battle of epidemic obesity in this country. As



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 30



for the touted omega 3s in fish oils, it’s far better to get them from the source.



Fish do not make omega 3s; they get them from the sea greens, and we can do



the same, either from sea greens or any of the many other sources such as leafy



greens, walnuts, and flax seeds.



We also know that a low-fat (ten per cent calories from fat) diet lowers our



risk of heart disease, most cancers but especially breast cancer, stroke, diabetes,



and many other of the common Western afflictions. The substantiating citations



for all this is in my book, Senior Fitness. Here’s what I now eat.



Breakfast



Served in a large bowl, lots of greens for the base: mixed organic greens, 1



stalk kale, 10 or so sprigs of parsley or cilantro, half a mango, 1 large banana,



and half dozen large, seeded globe grapes. Top off with 1 rounded tablespoon



of B12-fortified nutritional yeast, and 1–2 tablespoons of blackstrap molasses.



Because I eat this after my daily workout, this is served late and I eat no



midday meal.



Supper



Lots more greens for the base: mixed organic greens, 3–4 broccoli florettes, 1



stalk of kale, 1 stalk of celery, a quarter head of green or red cabbage, 1 large



carrot, half a red (or orange, green, or yellow) bell pepper, half a large field



tomato, half a sliced yam or sweet potato, raw. On top of this, add to taste,



prepared salsa (mild, medium or hot), 1 tablespoon of regular mustard, 1



tablespoon of flax seed, freshly ground, a general sprinkle of curry powder,



and lots of freshly ground black pepper.



Dessert



A base of blueberries (fresh or frozen, depending on availability and



season)—usually 1 cup, plus about 8–9 prunes, topped with a handful of



walnuts, and a liberal sprinkle of ground cinnamon.



Snacks



For those times when the hunger pangs strike, I eat carrot or celery sticks,



grapes, dates, and in the evening, plain air-popped popcorn.



You’ll see that my diet consists mainly of raw foods. Raw is better than cooking



as cooking does reduce the vitamin content of the food but this is not absolutely



essential—the essential thing is to cut out the oils and to go to a plant based



diet. For me it is just more convenient to eat the foods raw—and actually I



prefer it.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 31



Ian Clements



I first met Ian when he contacted me having read my cancer books and



discovered that we lived in the same town. Here is his story in his own words.



My professional background: I am by profession an electronics engineer



and worked in Germany and Holland before training to be a college lecturer. I



have degrees in electronics, industrial design, and research to PhD level in



education, so I am very capable of reading and evaluating research papers. I



worked latterly as a lecturer in further and higher education, ending my



academic career as assistant principal in charge of technology. This is the story



of my ongoing battle with cancer. I don’t believe that you ever can say that you



have cured your cancer but I am currently, as best as I can tell, cancer-free.



I first became aware of general health issues in 1966 when I noticed that I



had the start of a pot belly. I started to take an interest in the subject and from



then on I became increasingly knowledgeable on health issues and



implemented them. One thing I have learnt over the years is that not everything



you read is true and, in a number of cases, things I once believed to be true



turned out later to be 180 degrees wrong, and I will admit that I have done



several reversals over the years. Being a scientist, I tend to follow reported



research—it is not possible to do all the research oneself.



Nevertheless, I seemed to be fit and healthy—jogging regularly, eating



mainly good nutrition, not drinking too much, and I stopped smoking more



than 30 years ago. I thus seemed on course to live at least to 100, and perhaps



more. In fact I was just about to sit down to write a book called—rather



hubristically—‘How to live to 150 years’, when I was diagnosed with cancer.



In October 2007, I had some tests which revealed I had cancer and this



quickly led to the surgical removal of a tumour from my bladder.



Unfortunately, further tests resulted and I was told that I had metastatic



terminal bladder cancer. I was informed by the urologist, and by the next two



oncologists that I consulted for second (and third!) opinions, that I had only



weeks to live, maybe a year at most (so my expected death-by-date was October



2008; it is now, as I write this, summer 2011).



I was told by these specialists that there was nothing orthodox medicine



could do—additional surgery was not possible; radiation was no use (as I was



metastatic); chemotherapy would only be palliative and make my life



miserable, and would not result in sufficient extra time to make it worthwhile.



This diagnosis traumatised me—I am terrified of death. Over the next few



weeks I would find myself curling up on the floor, crying, trembling, terrified. I



didn’t know it at the time, but my wife was similarly affected; and my eldest



son nearly quit his degree.



Luckily, I had recently been reading up on CAM approaches to cancer and



emailing one of the CAM experts (Dr Peskin, The Hidden Story of Cancer), who



then put me on to the nutritionist, Dr Bernado Majalca. Majalca was very



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 32



positive and gave me hope (where the orthodox medicos had given me none),



promising that he’d cure my cancer, no problem, if I did all he said—specific



diet, juicing, and specific supplements that he sent me monthly. I followed this



regime for a couple of months but it did not stop my tumour from re-growing.



His protocol (most of which I think is valid, but not all) did however strengthen



my immune system so that, or so I believe, when I did eventually do chemo. it



was both more effective than expected and I suffered less than I might have



done.



After about ten weeks on Majalca’s regime—during most of which time I



had been feeling quite well—my health suddenly plummeted. I had a severely



infected testicle and became feverish. The doctors told me I was entering the



last weeks of my life and that we should make preparations for that eventuality.



I was admitted to a hospice and the general expectation was that I would die



there.



However, shortly before this I had consulted with a fourth oncologist who



told me that while he agreed in the main with what I had been told previously



by the other oncologists, in his view there was a very slight chance that



chemotherapy might be curative. He said there was a five per cent chance. Since



I was dying anyway and the Majalca regime wasn’t working, I decided to give



it a go.



I started a regime of two chemo. drugs, cisplatin and gemcitabine. The



impact was not directly bad—I just sat in a chair whilst it was poured into me,



along with saline solutions. But an hour or so afterwards I was initially very



violently sick, several times. But eventually a correct anti-nausea dosage was



found that overcame that. But for about three months I was effectively bedridden.



I also had to take morphine for pain-relief and this caused panics,



constant drowsiness, constipation. I suppose one reason I was able to tolerate



all this was that I was feeling so bad anyway.



After about three weeks I was able to book myself out of the hospice and



go home. Although the hospice was very caring and supportive, the food was



completely wrong for my needs. They provided tasty comfort food—full of



sugar and sweet things—that was totally contrary to what a cancer patient



should be eating. Back at home I was able to resume my variation of Majalca’s



protocol, and start exercising again. And, amazingly, gradually, I started to get



better.



As soon as I could, I was back on the Internet, combing it for info; asking



questions on forums; buying books; getting supplements; exchanging info. I



gradually built up a huge amount of cancer-related information. From all this I



created my own anti-cancer programme—exercise, lots of fresh fruit (I



eventually realised berries were the best) and vegetables (especially broccoli



and Brussels sprouts), no sugar, little alcohol; and lots of curcumin and black



pepper, vitamin D3, and fish oil—were the major components. Luckily I had a



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 33



good juicer that I had bought some time before so I was juicing vegetables three



times a day to start with.



I also tried many ‘cures’. None of them worked for me, or at least that was



my conclusion in relation to myself. Maybe they work for other people.



Instead, I have myself evolved a programme that distils all I have learnt



over a lifetime, both as an engineer, scientist and cancer patient, and which I



think rests on solid scientific medical evidence too. I would like to share it with



you.



This programme is based on the well-known engineering rule ‘Knowledge



of results improves performance’. The first step is to measure your state of



health. The second is to analyse the results and the third step is to feed the body



whatever it is that will correct the situation if it appears that there are problems.



Then six or eight weeks later you repeat the cycle and see if anything has



changed.



In fact, I work on two separate cycles. The first is an assessment of my



cancerousness, the second is an assessment of my wellness. I make a distinction



between these two cycles and for both these cycles I have a number of tests.



To test for my state of cancerousness I do regular testing for specific cancer



markers—in my case I test for a specific urine marker for bladder cancer—the



NMP22 BladderChek Test that detects elevated levels of NMP22 protein. I



should warn you that the use of these blood markers is contentious. My first



oncologist claimed he didn’t know what cancer markers were! However, these



are well understood, if not well used, by the medical profession [Note: I have



discussed cancer markers in Book 2 in this series: Cancer: Diagnosis and



Conventional Treatments: The Pros and Cons of Cancer Tests, Surgery, Radiation and



Chemotherapy—J.C.] If your doctors won’t co-operate, then you will have to get



them done privately.



The second set of tests is those that, in my opinion, provide a good insight



into the state of overall wellness. I assess my wellness by measuring my levels



of vitamin D3, homocysteine, and essential fatty acids (EFAs). These are simple



tests that your doctor should be prepared to arrange. Vitamin D3 levels should



be high (not just normal)—above 200mmol/l; homocysteine levels should be



low and as for the essential fatty acids I am aiming for and AA/EPA ratio of 1.5.



You probably won’t understand that last bit so I will quote from one of the



doctors I currently use as a source of good quality information, Dr Al Sears:



‘There are only three fatty acids that can made into eicosanoids (the



hormones that control inflammation). These are arachidonic acid (AA),



dihomo gamma linolenic acid (DGLA), and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA).



From AA comes all the pro-inflammatory eicosanoids that in excess



accelerate chronic disease. From DGLA come very powerful antiinflammatory



eicosanoids that accelerate cellular rejuvenation. Finally,



from EPA comes very neutral eicosanoids, but its presence can help inhibit



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 34



the formation of AA as well as dilute out its presence in the cell membrane



thus making it more difficult to make pro-inflammatory eicosanoids. The



balance of these three fatty acids in the blood will tell your future with



laser-like precision. What you are looking for are the following levels:



AA less than 9 per cent of the total fatty acids



DGLA greater than 3 per cent of the total fatty acids



EPA greater than 4 per cent of the total fatty acids



But it is the ratio of these fatty acids to each other that tells the full story.



The true marker of silent inflammation is the AA/EPA ratio. If it is greater



than 10 then you have it regardless of how good you look in a swimsuit. A



good ratio would be 3, and the ideal ratio is about 1.5. You might ask where



I get those numbers? If you ask who are the longest-lived people in the



world today, the answer is the Japanese. If you ask who are people with the



longest health span (longevity minus years of disability), the answer is



again the Japanese. If you ask who have the lowest levels of heart disease in



the world, the answer again is the Japanese. And you wouldn’t be too



surprised to find out that the Japanese have the lowest rates of depression



in the world today. When you look at the blood of the Japanese population,



the AA:EPA ratio ranges from 1.5 to 3. If you have your AA levels at 9 per



cent and your EPA levels at 4 per cent, then your AA:EPA would be 2.2



which is mid-range for controlling silent inflammation. For comparison the



average ‘healthy’ American has an AA:EPA ratio greater than 12. This



means Americans are not only the fattest people in the world today, but



also the most inflamed. If you have chronic disease, then it likely that your



AA:EPA ratio is greater than 20.’



In addition to these tests I also have a regular c-reactive protein (CRP) test.



This indicates in a non-specific way the level of inflammation in the body—and



cancer is about inflammation (as are arthritis, heart disease and pregnancy).



So that is my baseline for assessing what it is I need to do. I test my cancer



and wellness markers on a regular basis and I tinker with my diet and exercise



based on the results of these tests.



My current (July 2011) situation is this: my urologist has failed to find any



evidence of cancer, though suspects it is still lurking around. My cancer



markers are all down, though one or two are still above the normal threshold. I



am fit. I feel healthy. In short I am winning. I am still alive.



My present diet is as follows:



Breakfast



is generally a whey powder, soya milk shake, with walnuts, freshly milled



flaxseeds, and an apple; or porridge twice a week.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 35



Lunch



is a big salad—some tinned fish with mixed leaves, bell peppers (chopped),



mixed bean sprouts, spring onion, mushroom with fish; dressing of olive oil,



cider vinegar, chilli pepper, mustard seed powder, curcumin and black



pepper.



Dinner



is protein (fish, white meat, lamb), greens (some of: broccoli, string beans,



cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, peas, tomatoes). Followed by berries.



During the day



I drink white tea and herb tea. Little or no alcohol. No sugar. Little or no



dairy. Little or no carbohydrates.



I also take the following supplements: a high quality multi-vitamin and



multi-mineral (Uni-Vite), several tablespoons of pure fish oil, vitamin D3



(5,000IU), zinc, magnesium, folic acid, and TMG (tri-methyl-glycine—good for



reducing homocysteine levels).



I have prepared a paper on my full anti-cancer programme, which is



available on Jonathan’s website at www.cancerfighter.wordpress.com. It is



available only on the understanding that it is for information only and



represents my thinking at the time of writing. But I do tinker with this and if



anyone wants to get my latest version they can email me at



ianclements@hotmail.com.



Nuro Weidemann



Here is Nuro’s story in her own words.



In January 2009 I noticed a tiny lump in my right breast. I went to my local



GP. She eventually transferred me to the breast clinic where a couple of fine



needle aspirations were made. I then had an ultrasound scan and a biopsy of



the lump. The result was an aggressive (meaning fast spreading) form of non-



Hodgkin’s lymphoma with a tumour in my right breast. I was devastated!



I had worked for almost 20 years in the field of complementary health. I



was of the opinion that I was of very robust health. I had quite a solid



understanding of nutrition, was never really ill, had hardly any colds, went



running regularly, did a very dynamic form of yoga and my busy work as a



remedial massage therapist provided the necessary muscle strength training.



Admittedly, my daily coffees and teas had become more regular and also



the occasional glass of wine had become more frequent. On top of my



physically demanding job, the commuting between Brighton and London was



stressful and every so often I wondered how much more my body could take



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 36



…. However, as I never really felt ill I had no real reason to worry, I thought.



So, I felt like I’d been hit by a hammer when the consultant told me. It was a



terrible shock, but in a way I could see it coming. I was pretty stressed and



running on adrenalin. Outside work I went running regularly and had a very



busy social life … which tired me out even more. I remember driving home



from London on the motorway one day and thinking ‘I wonder when my body



will crack?’



So getting a diagnosis of cancer completely threw me. I felt betrayed by



my body. I simply could not believe it, as I didn’t feel ill in the first place. For



days I was in shock and kind of numb. Lots of pictures of people with cancer



came up, I remembered my mum, who had died of cancer ten years previously.



I was in an awful state.



The consultant told me that the form of cancer that I had was aggressive



and would spread through the lymphatic system quickly. Chemotherapy was



essential and possibly radiotherapy later. When I heard this I knew I couldn’t



face the treatment. Your hair falls out, you go into immediate menopause, your



immune system is utterly shattered. I just couldn’t do it.



Through this emotional fog I remembered an old friend of mine who had



had cancer as a child. She overcame the illness by a purely natural approach



and then a second time around 30 years later when she had cancer again, she



also cured herself with alternative methods. I called her up and she encouraged



me to embark on a similar route.



All the things she suggested weren’t new to me. To apply them and



believe in them when doctors were of the opinion that the only answer to my



health problem was chemotherapy, was a huge challenge and a step I didn’t



know if I could make. On the other hand, I wanted to live! I didn’t want to get



poisoned. So I felt I didn’t have anything to lose really.



So despite all the fear of the possible consequences of not doing



chemotherapy, I wanted to give myself and my body a chance to heal itself.



I wanted, I needed, to try it out—at least for the next couple of weeks to



see how I would do on a very clean diet, eliminating all possible sources of



toxins, meditating, generally giving myself time and space to decide about my



route of healing from a place where I wasn’t terrified.



I gave up my job and with the help of my husband started some serious



research on the ’net. I realised that this was about rebalancing my whole



system—although there’s this tumour, the illness is really in the whole of the



body.



The first step I decided to take was to go on a diet to cut out acid-forming



foods. Cancer loves an acidic environment. Stress creates a lot of acid, but so do



some foods. So I cut out dairy, wheat, alcohol, meat, sugar and learnt about



juicing and raw food. I also took up daily dry brushing and weekly colonics



which became daily coffee enemas. I needed a way to eliminate the ‘die-off ‘ of



the cancer cells—it can be toxic enough to kill you. A coffee enema literally



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 37



squeezes the toxins out of the liver. I also listened to a meditation tape every



day, took hot and cold showers to stimulate the immune system, sunbathed for



vitamin D, and walked along the coast near where I live. To get to the beach



there is a 186-step cliff stairway. This was my way of gauging myself. How



could I be that ill with cancer if I managed to climb all those steps? I



surrounded myself with people who believed in me and read inspirational



books. That was the hardest part, sticking to my guns when many people



thought it was crazy.



But I could soon feel the whole-body approach was working. I began to



feel fantastic after a couple of months. I woke up every morning and said, ‘I



have cancer, but I feel good.’



Here is a more detailed description of what I did. I hope it will be helpful



to others who have the courage to treat their cancer using natural methods.



The first stage of my health regime looked something like this.



Phase 1



Diet



I went onto a mainly alkaline diet and cut out: dairy, meat, alcohol, sweets



(including fruits, honey, any form of sweetener), gluten, salt, no nightshade



vegetables (potatoes, tomatoes, aubergines). Instead I upped my organic



vegetables, mainly raw as salads and juices, mostly made out of green



vegetables, which I had before breakfast and dinner, supplemented by wheat



grass juice. I also increased my daily water intake, trying to sip about one and a



half to two litres throughout the day. My daily diet then became:



Breakfast



gluten-free porridge with a few raisins (that was my only sweet treat!)



Lunch



salad, lettuce, cucumbers, sprouts, few carrots, few beetroots, zucchinis, olive



oil, lemon with a bit of quinoa or brown rice on the side and occasionally



tofu.



Supper



were much the same vegetables as for lunch but steamed or as a stew with



some added quinoa or brown rice.



I was on this diet for about eight weeks and it was roughly based on the



book: The pH Miracle by Dr Robert and Shelly Young. During this time I didn’t



take any supplements, as I wasn’t sure what would benefit me.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 38



Additional healing approaches



In addition to the change of my diet, I had weekly colonic hydrotherapy, did



daily meditations, visualisations (letting the tumour shrink and dealing with



the fear of the diagnosis) and tried to go out for one-hour walks as often as



possible. I also took MMS (Miracle Mineral Solution, an unfortunate name for a



very effective remedy). I took MMS for over a year as suggested, first orally and



for several months in combination with DMSO (dimethyl sulphoxide) topically.



On this diet I lost about 5kg over a span of two months. So did my



husband who supported me on the diet, a good indication for me that I hadn’t



lost weight because of the cancer but because of my change in diet. It was a



reassuring observation as advancing cancer is accompanied by weight loss.



Meanwhile, I tried to find a medical practitioner who would support me



in my endeavour to heal the cancer with natural methods. I found a former GP



who now works as an acupuncturist and nutritional therapist in Devon, UK.



It was clear from the start that he had many suggestions and insights



regarding my condition but he couldn’t take me on as a patient (law in the UK



[Cancer Act, 1939] forbids anybody from claiming to heal cancer by any other



means than chemotherapy, radiation or surgery). However I felt it was a step in



the right direction.



After seeing him I slightly altered my diet, started to take supplements,



dropped the regular colonics and introduced daily coffee enemas instead.



Phase 2



Diet



From my initial detoxifying diet I switched to a kind of building up or



strengthening diet. Essentially it was the same as before but I added a few of



the so called ‘super foods’ like bee pollen, goji berries, freshly ground-up flax



and hempseeds, flaxseed and hempseed oils in my breakfast porridge, and



augmented my usual lunches and suppers with fish, organic chicken or lamb’s



liver twice a week.



Supplements



As far as supplements went, I started to take iodine, krill oil, zinc, selenium,



magnesium, a multi-vitamin, I ate apricot kernels and drank Essiac tea.



Naturopathic approaches



I also added the following naturopathic techniques to my daily routine: coffee



enemas as mentioned earlier, castor oil packs over the liver, dry brushing, hot



and cold showers, occasional Epsom salt bath, continued with my one-hour



walks several times a week and tried to get into the sun without sun protection



for 20 minutes a day to top up on the spirit-raising sun’s health-bringing



vitamin D stimulus.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 39



Working with the mind



I carried on with my daily meditations and visualisations, as I understood the



importance of working with the mind. I needed to have each and every aspect



of my life supporting my longing for health. I listened to the ‘Teaching of



Abraham’ These are teachings channelled by Esther Hicks. I know it sounds



batty, but in fact they have been very important for me, as have lectures by the



writer Eckart Tolle.



Mental attitude



During all this time I tried to stay clear of talking about trying to ‘fight the



cancer’. Ultimately my body had created the illness and I saw it more as a



wake-up call that somewhere along the line I had gone against my own truth. I



wanted to be kind to my body. I felt that was my way forward in all areas of my



life. I wanted to learn again to go with the flow without compromising my own



truth. At the same time I wanted to stay open to learn new things and change



my approach along the way if needed. As long as it benefited my general health



and wellbeing.



Electromagnetic radiation



During this time I also came to realise how health damaging electromagnetic



radiation is. So we stopped using wireless broadband and went back to using



cables, exchanged our cordless phone for an old fashioned hand held phone



and I tried to use my mobile phone as little as possible (if I had to, I used an ear



piece).



Creativity



On my quest for health I also wanted dedicate time to pottery again. I had



started years before but had given it up when I got too busy with work. Now



seemed the perfect time to start. So I enrolled on a course again. Two years on



and I am still doing it. I really love to have my hands in wet clay and forming



objects out of it. Mostly I do objects I can use around the house. My pots are



getting better and looking less wonky, the glazes become more predictable, and



they crack less.



This year for the first time I will exhibit some of my ‘masterpieces’



together with other friend’s art in Cornwall. For me it is not so much about



making perfect pieces of art, it’s more about expressing an important part of



myself.



Toxicity in cosmetics and cleaning products



The other important area of possible toxin burden that needed to be addressed



was cleaning products, toiletries and cosmetics.



We basically switched them all to environmentally friendly products that



were free of petrolatum, mineral oils, sodium lauryl/laureth sulfate, parabens,



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 40



lanolin, and that hadn’t been tested on animals, didn’t contain any animal byproducts



and were biodegradable.



High quality water



On top of all that we installed a reverse osmosis filter for our so-important daily



water consumption. This filters out the good and the bad, so we added extra



mineral drops to our drinking water. We also installed a filter in our shower



head that cleans out fluorides and other damaging ingredients.



Monitoring my progress



When I was first diagnosed and I wanted to go onto my alternative health



regime, one big issue for me was how to monitor my progress.



The oncologist couldn’t offer me any on-going tests other than invasive



PET scans that they normally do every six months. As I was considered opting



for ‘no treatment’ in the eyes of conventional medicine I wasn’t given this test.



However, as I mentioned before, these tests are taxing on the body and I



was rather looking for a test that was less invasive. We eventually came across



the ‘Navarro Test’, which quite few people do when approaching cancer in a



natural way.



Initially the test seemed to be very complicated to do and sounded a bit



‘cowboy’-like. However, we overcame all obstacles and I did the test every



three months. Besides feeling good in my body, the test became an important



indicator of how I was doing on a less obvious level. After doing the test a few



times it wasn’t all that complicated as it initially seemed.



Success



After 18 months on this regime the lump in my breast had dissolved. Where



there used to be a bulge that was as big as a chestnut, there was now nothing.



At this point I felt that my body was strong enough to do another PET scan.



A reluctant oncologist eventually agreed to do the test. It showed that I



had no cancer in my body anymore and I was declared as being ‘in complete



remission’. The oncologist was very surprised.



What now?



After the result of the PET scan, I had a big celebration with friends who had



supported me through my healing journey. Everybody asked me if I would go



on with my strict diet.



Well, there were a few things in my mind that I wanted to eat again. I tried



them out but I can’t really say that it was the big ‘wow’ experience that I was



expecting.



For one thing, I have now completely lost my appetite for alcohol. It



makes me feel strange and I don’t like it any longer. Croissants with butter,



strawberry jam and a coffee used to be my ultimate fantasy while I was on my



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 41



regime. Even that has lost its appeal. However, I still love my daily crunchy



organic veggie salads, the occasional bit of chicken and fish here and there.



My healthy diet has become a way of life. I still have the odd bits that I



regard as not that healthy but I easily find my way back.



One thing that I find important for me is not to become too obsessed with



food.????I still like to go out for a meal every so often and eat what feels right for



me without being too concerned, and then I go home and carry on with my



daily green juice, the salads and steamed veggies and plenty of good quality



water.



As a result of my healing journey I have enrolled in a nutritional healing



course. That course teaches more or less the approach that has helped me



immensely.



Over the last two years I feel as if I have done a crash course in healthy



living. The nutrition course gives me the time and the support to go over



everything I have done to get better and to come to a deeper understanding. I



hope that with my own experience and the help of this course I will be able to



inspire people to try out the gentle way of healing cancer.



Summary



Initially I was trying to find the ‘right’ healing method. Everything I read felt



very overwhelming, confusing and at times was contradictory. Initially, when I



came across these contradictions they felt like a major obstacle and a big worry



on my journey. But now I feel much more relaxed about them. Gradually, all



the reading I did and the information I had accumulated fell into place. I



developed a sense of when to incorporate another healing method, and which



one I wanted to incorporate. I needed to stick to something that felt right to me



before I understood all other methods.



I am sure I could have done it in a different way, but the methods I chose



felt right to me at the time. What I want to express here is the fact that there is



not only one right method of healing. Finding my own inner voice and my own



intuition was pivotal.



Although initially it was a very scary situation, it eventually became a



very empowering process. I was, and I am, still amazed by the way my body



reacted to positive, loving, caring and gentle attention. It felt that there was this



part in me that wanted to be heard and acknowledged. Once I had tuned in, it



was delighted to support my healing process on every conceivable level. The



illness was a true blessing in disguise for me.



Having said all that, I don’t feel I have reached a place from where I can



simply go back to my life how it used to be. On a physical level my healing is



complete for now but emotionally I feel like a work in progress.



Nevertheless I felt that I had a story that might help others so I contacted



The Guardian newspaper Health Editor to offer her my story. This was the reply



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 42



I got back: ‘I’m sorry—it’s good to hear you are well, but we are a very sciencebased,



evidence-based newspaper and would not run stories based on one



person’s experience, which may well not be typical.’



If that’s their attitude, how is anyone going to learn that it is possible, as I



have proved for myself, that you can cure cancer by natural means?



If anyone wishes to know more I can be contacted at



nuro@insafehands.co.uk.



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 43



Appendices



The rich can afford the very best medicine



When it comes to cancer, I feel sorry for the rich. They can afford the very best



treatments that money can buy. And they must be the best treatments—right?—



because they are the treatments proposed by the most eminent doctors to whom



only the very rich have access.



Often these treatments are the very latest, most cutting-edge. The more



you can pay, the more you are going to suffer. But since these oncologists don’t



have the cure for most cancers and are not going to have that cure for the



conceivable future—(read oncologist Siddhartha Mukherjee’s best-selling book,



The Emperor of All Maladies, if you don’t believe me)—then all this money spent



on painful treatments is just buying the pain. The more money you have the



more pain you can afford.



But if we can’t put our hopes on these latest, cutting-edge treatments what



can we do? Well, there are so many options that I could suggest, that I don’t



know where to start. That’s why I wrote the Cancer: The Complete Recovery Guide



(see www.fightingcancer.com). That’s where you will find the answers that suit



you.



But let’s return to the issue of wealth, fame and cancer. Recently we have



had two famous pancreatic cancers: Steve Jobs’ and Patrick Swayze’s and a long



time ago we had Steve McQueen’s mesothelioma. Both of these cancers—



pancreatic and mesothelioma—are considered to be pretty much untreatable



(by conventional means). But that doesn’t mean they won’t treat you anyway.



Doctors will often treat you just to stop you becoming so depressed that you’ll



do something crazy like go to the alternative treatments (I’m not joking. This is



policy in some quarters. They treat you until you’re so far along that there’s



little anyone can do for you).



Swayze and Jobs both went the conventional route. Although Jobs did also



follow an alternative regime to start with, and very possibly continued doing



some through his conventional treatments (certainly he survived much longer



than most people diagnosed with pancreatic cancer), Swayze was only



interested in following the conventional route. He died 18 months after



diagnosis. Felicity Corbin-Wheeler, whose story I tell in this book is today alive



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 44



and cancer free, having recovered from the same cancer using the much



derided alternative, Laetrile. If you get pancreatic cancer, which do you think is



the best model to follow?



And then there was Steve McQueen who famously, having exhausted his



conventional options, chose to work with the alternative cancer therapist,



William Kelley, then after a year with him allowed himself to be operated on—



and died on the operating table. Who gets the praise and who the blame?



Dr Nicholas Gonzalez, who has continued William Kelley’s work (for



details of Kelley’s approach see Book 3 in this series: Cancer Research and



Politics—Kelley, too, cured himself of terminal stage pancreatic cancer), has



complained about the way the media responds differently to conventional



doctors on the one hand and alternative therapists on the other:



‘You see, when a conventional oncologist loses a celebrity patient, they [the



media] portray him as a hero fighting this terrible disease against



enormous odds; working late into the night trying to keep the celebrity



alive. But when an alternative practitioner loses a patient, they consider



him a sleazy quack getting money from unsuspecting cancer victims.’



The Steve McQueen case has been used particularly to stigmatise



alternative approaches, but Gonzales has responded robustly to the suggestion



that Kelley killed McQueen:



‘He [Steve McQueen] was terminal when he came to Dr Kelley. He had



failed radiation, failed immunotherapy. He had been misdiagnosed for a



year. The reason he ended up with Stage 4 mesothelioma is because he was



misdiagnosed by his fancy conventional doctors in Southern California.



Then they gave him radiation—there's not a study in the history of the



world showing that radiation helps in mesothelioma; they gave it anyway.



Then they gave him immunotherapy. There’s not a study in the history of



the world saying that immunotherapy helps in mesothelioma. They did it



anyway. Then he was dying and he went to see Kelley. He died, and Kelley



got all the blame. Not the doctors who misdiagnosed him! In fact when you



read the newspaper articles, there are still articles about how Dr Kelley



killed McQueen. No! Cancer killed McQueen. You see, an oncologist at



Sloan-Kettering can do a bone marrow transplant on celebrity patients.



They die, and he’s written up like a hero …. Kelley tries to help after



conventional doctors failed miserably and misdiagnosed him, and



McQueen lived longer than he should. (He was a half-compliant patient—



he continued to smoke, drink, and eat ice cream.) …. About two or three



years ago, there was an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal attacking



unconventional cancer therapy. They talked about McQueen, and how



Kelley killed him. … Conventional oncologists lose patients every day, and



no-one says they’re murdering anybody. Instead they’re considered heroes



for trying so hard.’



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 45



So there it is. Two morals to this article. First, money may or may not buy



happiness but, when it comes to cancer, it doesn’t necessarily buy a longer,



healthier life. Second, don’t believe everything you read in the national press



when they criticise alternative medicine.



Letter to oncologists



For decades you have been seeking to cure cancer—first through surgery,



attempting, at first, to achieve your aims by increasingly disfiguring and lifethreatening



operations until sanity came to the rescue and you realised (I do



hope you have realised) that surgery only works at a very early stage of a



cancer’s growth, and therefore a lumpectomy is as much as needs be done—but



of course if the cancer has spread to other parts of the body, then even this is



useless—possibly even worse than useless, as the healing process may



incidentally provoke a more rapid growth of distant metastases.



Then came radiation, which is still with us, which has the same limitations



as surgery—and more besides. You realised eventually that only a systemic



approach could work. So you turned your focus on chemotherapy. But despite



repeated attempts to cure cancer with multiple, highly toxic, drug regimes, this



approach too has sadly failed. You now recognise it only works in about five to



six per cent of cancers (for the ‘benefit’ ultimately of maybe three per cent). This



benefit, sadly, comes with it an extraordinary range of qualifications—early



onset of new cancers, slowing down of brain functions, and so on. But you



know all this. Patients generally don’t, but you do. Oncologist Siddhartha



Mukherjee has admitted as much in his wide-ranging, best-selling book, The



Emperor of All Maladies, but this fact has been known for a very long time. The



problem is in persuading you oncologists to be straight with us on this. Now it



seems there is a move in this direction.



Currently, you are placing all your hopes on smart drugs that attack



proteins and enzymes specific to each of the 2,000 (or some say 20,000) different



cancer types you have discovered. But even this approach you understand will



not work. The closer you get to the bio-chemistry of these ‘evil’ cells the greater



their complexity. And of course, cancer changes genetically very fast and each



drug ceases to be effective equally rapidly. The cure for cancer has simply



disappeared over the horizon. But you have not told people that. You go along



with the press releases from drug companies that announce each supposed



advance. You allow the press to laud these developments. You remain satisfied



with the small incremental improvements in mortality measure, decade on



decade. But you know that the pain and failure of conventional cancer



treatments will go on and on—perhaps forever, because you cannot see any



alternative. And yet the alternative is there in plain sight. You even call it



‘alternative medicine’.



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 46



For the most part you have given up on the hope of cure and are now



moving to a philosophy of palliative medicine. It is your hope that if you cannot



cure cancer you can at least help cancer patients live longer. It is here that the



horizons of the alternative movement converge on your own sphere.



If you allowed yourself to embrace alternative medicine—and why should



you not? There is no research to show that a regime of diet, supplements, herbs



and other health supporting does not also substantially extend life, and quality



of life. And as the stories in this book demonstrate clearly, some people cure



themselves of cancers that conventional doctors have given up on. Yes ‘cure’ is



the word we can use when someone remains free of cancer for 30 years, as



Beata Bishop has done.



So here is a suggestion, one first suggested to me by Ian Clements whose



recovery story is truly remarkable—a recovery that suggests a potential benefit



of chemotherapy—to reduce the size of a tumour, if it is a tumour that obstructs



a vital organ, until the longer-term strategy of diet and supplements can



become effective. The suggestion is this. All cancer patients should be seen



long-term on an outpatient basis. They should be given regular blood tests to



determine not only the progress of various cancer markers but also to monitor



other key indicators of overall health. Then they should be encouraged to



follow whatever therapies and treatments they may deem to be appropriate—



alternative as well as conventional—all the time maintaining a beady eye on



changes to these markers for cancer and health. Offer everyone this series of



books so that they can see the full range of the options that may be beneficial.



And of course keep testing, keep evaluating the results, keep being prepared to



fiddle with the regime.



I can assure you, you will be amazed. Suddenly, people you expected to



die will recover. Perhaps not everyone but certainly more than do so currently.



Others—the vast majority, I suspect, of those who take the job of getting well



again seriously—will go on living far longer than predicted.



It is really that simple. So the question I put to you now is this: Why have



you not already done this?



You see, cancer is not just a problem for doctors, it is—more pressingly—a



problem for the patients, the people with the cancer. Cancer patients need to



learn to begin to take responsibility for their own cancers (and their own health



overall) and doctors need to help them. Indeed, more and more patients are



seeing for themselves the benefits of complementary and alternative treatments.



People are already moving towards CAM treatments for their cancer—and they



are not telling their doctors because of the weight of disapproval. It’s a secret



move away from orthodox medicine, and this movement is getting bigger and



bigger all the time. (Ask yourself this: if people believed doctors had a good



cure for cancer there wouldn’t be a need for alternative therapies. So if more



and more people are using CAM: complementary and alternative medicine—



what does that indicate?)



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 47



Here’s what University of Toronto cancer researcher Heather Boon



discovered in 2005: ‘… more than 80 per cent of all women with breast cancer



report using CAM (41 per cent in a specific attempt to manage their breast



cancer), CAM use can no longer be regarded as an “alternative” or unusual approach



to managing breast cancer.’ (my emphasis). According to her, younger, more



educated women, in particular, are more likely to have a high commitment to



CAM therapies.



Cristiane Spadacio, another cancer researcher, says: ‘… there has been an



exponential growth in interest in—and use of—complementary and alternative



medicine (CAM), especially in developed western countries …. Studies show that



the number of patients who use some form of alternative therapy after the diagnosis of



cancer is high … [and they experience] high levels of satisfaction with alternative



therapies.’ (my emphasis).



At present, the situation is this: if patients decline to undergo surgery,



radiation or chemotherapy—or any of the other treatments on the conventional



menu—then you oncologists wash your hands of them. ‘We offered them



treatment and they refused, what can we do?’ You tell yourselves.



Well, what you can do is this: continue to see them on an outpatient basis,



offering your access to blood tests, scans and so on, so that these patients can



monitor their own bodies. That’s what you can do, and indeed should be doing.



Otherwise you are monopolising certain services to the detriment of the health



of people who wish to work out their own solutions to their cancers—and they



have every right to do this because it is they, ultimately, who are going to suffer



the consequences.



So, please, please, can you set aside your prejudices and help them.



Jonathan Chamberlain



www.fightingcancer.com



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 48



Summing up



Taken individually, each of these stories can be, and generally has been,



dismissed by doctors as inexplicable. In each case the doctor might say that the



recovery was unexpected but ‘it is unlikely that alternative therapies have had



any real impact’. However, taken collectively, the case they make for the



potential of a wide variety of alternative therapies from diet, herbs,



supplements and so on becomes increasingly hard to reject.



Many doctors will claim that they know of sad cases where ill-advised



patients have taken to the alternative route and died shortly thereafter, But they



don’t mention the cases where patients have undergone painful and damaging



conventional treatments and who have, like my wife did, died shortly after.



Of the dead we cannot speak. Undoubtedly, many people going the



alternative route do die—perhaps because they have not done enough of the



right things or they have stuck to one thing, or who knows what other reason



(but undoubtedly they will have saved themselves a great deal of pain and very



likely will have lived longer than expected). But what these stories do tell us, is



that many people following alternative approaches have cured their cancers, or



are continuing their battle against cancer, never allowing themselves to think



they have defeated it but that, for the time being, they are winning. And let us



remind ourselves of the extraordinary range of cancers represented by these



stories—breast cancer, prostate cancer, melanoma, sarcoma, cancers of the



colon, kidney, bladder, pancreas and anus, brain tumours, lymphoma and



myeloma. Whatever is working is working across the whole spectrum of cancer.



How many times do you need to press a light switch to know—with 100



per cent certainty—that there is a causal relationship between pressing the



switch and the light coming on. Two? Three times at most. How many cases do



you need to read of people recovering from cancer using alternative means



before you can accept that maybe there is something to the alternative



approaches to cancer?



It is my hope that you will see that the promise of freedom from cancer by



means of health-enhancing (not health-damaging) therapies is real. As one



contributor to my blog said recently: ‘It was very early on in my journey that I



began to question the conventional methods of treatment. I was sitting in the



break room at work one morning, and I posed a question to a co-worker: ‘Why



Cancer Survivors’ Stories



2011 © Jonathan Chamberlain 49



would God want to use radioactive poison to heal me? Why would He want to



kill all that is right and good to kill that which is not?’ The ‘logic’ in that has



never computed in my mind and is something I cannot get around. The answer



that came to me was that He wouldn’t. That question became the driving force



behind my decision to find a natural remedy for my cancer.’



It is by asking these simple innocent questions that we discover the



nakedness of the Emperor of Conventional Medicine. Cancer comes from



nature—the answer too must be available in nature.



Respect for me is a word that has enormous power. If we respected each



other, if we respected our environment, if we respected ourselves more fully,



then the world would be a very different place. But we don’t respect this planet



we are all travelling on enough. We don’t respect other people—people who are



different from us—enough. And we don’t respect our bodies enough. If we did,



we wouldn’t allow them to be attacked with such toxic chemicals or with such



toxic and damaging radiation (see Book 2 in this series: Cancer: Diagnosis and



Conventional Treatments: The Pros and Cons of Cancer Tests, Surgery, Radiation and



Chemotherapy for a full discussion of this topic).



It is my hope that this book will be helpful to you in extending the length



and the quality of your life, the lives of your family members, and the lives of



your friends, neighbours, colleagues and even casual acquaintances.



Tell others



 



Tell others



If you have found this book (in pdf format) useful then send it to all your family



and friends. Cancer is part of all our lives—either the cancers we are harbouring



in our own bodies, or the cancers that are affecting the lives of loved ones,



friends, neighbours, colleagues and so on. If you do not have the pdf version



then please go to www.fightingcancer.com



The better we are prepared, the better our outcome is likely to be. If we



build into our lives strategies that can ‘cure’ cancer, then by adopting them in



advance we will be doing a great deal to prevent that cancer in the first place.



As a cancer patient wrote after reading my book Cancer: The Complete



Recovery Guide: ‘I wish I'd read this book before I was diagnosed. My doctor



and the cancer charities didn't tell me any of this.’



Help your family and friends avoid the pain and suffering that goes along



with cancer. You could save someone's life.



 



癌症的真相 (3)



癌症的真相 (2)



癌症的真相



這樣吃最健康



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