Dr Tim O’Shea
When singer Warren Zevon was diagnosed with lung cancer, doctors gave
him three months to live. He refused chemotherapy because it would have
interfered with working on his last album. He said in an interview, “I
didn’t want any drastic alterations in my health – other than dying.”
Warren lasted a year. And he kept right on smoking, till the end.
Not exactly a holistic approach, but he quadrupled their estimate
without treatment. Using their logic, I guess someone could actually
make a case from this that cigarettes are four times as effective as
chemotherapy for terminal lung cancer.
Perhaps you too have finally said – No more – whatever happens will
happen. You’ve refused further standard cancer treatment because you’ve
found out either through research or through personal experience, that
for the vast majority of cancer cases, it just doesn’t work. People’s
last months are made miserable with no upside.
So there you are, without a net. Guess what? There never was one. So
forget the politics of hospitals and insurance. You may feel that they
ran their game on you and the required funds were transferred from one
account to another in some data base somewhere, and here you are sitting
at home looking out the window.
A good warrior must always assess his present position, evaluate his
losses and assets, and move forward. So what have you got? Well, you’re
alive. Maybe they predicted that you wouldn’t make it this long or else
you’ve got X amount of time to live. Who cares? What do they know?
You’re no longer on their agenda, so now your calendar’s wide open. You
refuse to die on schedule.
What else have you got? Well, you still have some kind of immune system left, or else you’d be dead.
WHAT IS CANCER?
Everybody talks about the immune system, but few can tell you what it
is. Your immune system is a complicated system of cells and biological
reactions which the body employs to ward off invaders and to prevent its
own cells from deteriorating and mutating. The immune system is
responsible for recognizing foreign proteins and cells and for
triggering an attack against them.
The immune system is a never-ending second-by-second check of all
your cells to see if they still look like the rest of you. If they
don’t, they’re immediately attacked: the inflammatory response.
Most legitimate researchers, including Nobel prize winner Sir MacFarlane Burnet,
[22] know that in the normal body hundreds of potential cancer cells
appear every day. These defective mutated cells are usually destroyed by
the normal immune system and never cause a problem. Cancer only gets
started when a failing immune system begins to allow abnormal cells to
slip by without triggering an attack on them.
Other cancer cells do not trigger the immune response at all because
the DNA is not that different from normal cells. Then they begin to
proliferate, having lost the ability to specialize. De-differentiation.
That’s what cancer is. Runaway tissue.
So looking at it this way, a tumor is a symptom, not a problem. A symptom of a failing immune system. (Moss, [22])
Here’s another headline: Most cancers are not found until autopsy.
That’s because they never caused any noticeable symptoms. Examples
abound: 30 – 40 times as many cases of thyroid, pancreatic, and
prostate cancer are found in autopsy than ever presented to the doctor.
According to a study cited in top British medical journal Lancet 13 Feb 93, early screening often leads to unnecessary treatment: 33% of autopsies show prostate cancer but only 1% die from it.
After age 75, half of males may have prostate cancer, but only 2% die
from it. This means that the immune system can hold many problems in
check, as long as it is not compromised by powerful procedures. The body
has a powerful ability to encapsulate altered tissue areas,
indefinitely.
BIOPSY VS. ENCAPSULATION
It’s this exact natural mechanism of protective encapsulation that is
vehemently disregarded by conventional medicine whenever cancer is
suspected. Usually a lump. We have to biopsy it, they cry, to see
whether or not it’s cancerous. And immediately! Why?
First of all, by the time any lump is big enough to be detected, it
has usually been there for at least a year, maybe several. So what’s
the rush? Why not see how your body handles it, unmodified by human
experimentation? If it remains unchanged over time, chances are the
encapsulation can eventually be resorbed, or at least permanently walled
off.
The act of biopsy physically violates the body’s evolved powers of
self-protection by exposing the tumor to all the other tissues the
needle had to pass through both on the way in and the way out. As well
as oxygen. Any protective encapsulation is thereby breached and
contaminated. This virtually invites metastasis.
It is well documented that tumors can be encapsulated for an
individual’s entire life, never becoming active. These common sense
notions are simply not entertained, not deemed worthy of consideration
by the specialists who are anxious to let the billing cycles begin as
soon as possible.
The medical philosophy behind biopsy is classic Kragen thinking: the
body is a car, made up of unrelated, non-living, inert parts. What we do
here will have no effect on anything else.
If a lump is discovered, anywhere, your phone will ring off the hook
day and night until you agree to get the biopsy. The patient is not
allowed to get too comfortable with the notion that the more time goes
by without treatment, the better he feels. Or that the body actually
has powerful resources of healing all its own, encapsulation being one
of them.
You want to see some fancy doubletalking, bring this subject up with
your oncologists. They’ll be very worried you even thought of it, and
will go to extreme lengths to convince you that your body does not have
this power of walling off invaders and tumors, despite what the
histology and physiology texts have stated for the past 100 years.
Always remember, if you suddenly find yourself labelled as a cancer
patient; is the result of every single decision by your doctors going
to provide them with the highest number of billable drugs and procedures
in the shortest amount of time? Always ask that question first. Is it a
coincidence? Just try looking at it from that perspective and see if
you can put the pieces together. Your health, comfort, safety, overall
long-term well being? Not usually factored in.
Then consider delaying biopsy until some visible perceptible health
change warrants such an invasive and potentially carcinogenic procedure.
What’s the worst that could happen by doing that? Few people die of
cancer only; most die of cancer treatment. That’s the far greater
danger, statistically.
If you have cancer, guess which system is the most important to you
at this time, more than it’s ever been before in your whole life. Right –
your immune system. Now guess which system suffers the most from
chemotherapy and radiation. Right again. So the one time in your life
you most need it, your immune system will be weakened by those
therapies. Billions of free radicals. That’s what the word cytotoxic
means.
As we will see, most people don’t die of cancer; they die from cancer treatment. A study in Journal of the American Medical Association
of 223 patients concluded that no treatment at all for prostate cancer
actually was better than any standard chemotherapy, radiation or
surgical procedure. (Johansson [41]) Unlikely the statistics would be
any different today since the recommended procedures have not
substantially changed.
DYING ON SCHEDULE
An astounding feature of the standard high pressure sales job for
cancer treatment is when the doctor in his godlike fashion delivers that
Wagnerian pronouncement that the patient has X years to live. Very
sorry to have to tell you this but you probably have less than a year…
Hard to understand why most people would still want to follow any advice
from someone who has just told them that. Because what the doctor is
saying here is that according to our best estimates, using our best
available technology, drugs and procedures, our experience with patients
who have what you have puts your life expectancy at…
Defies belief that most people just roll over and comply without any objections whatsoever. Social Darwinism at work again.
What a more logical, thoughtful individual might perceive from such a
death sentence is that hey, this guy is telling me what will likely
happen if I stick around and do what he says. Time to roll. Time for
me to start looking around for a second opinion and see if I can’t find
out about some other solutions to my situation that have a little
sunnier outlook. Like a cure for example. Or survival. Somebody
somewhere must have some better information than this for my little
problem – it’s a big world out there.
And this is the type of initiative that leads people to investigate
natural cures, programs that don’t include words like terminal and
palliative and side effects and expiration date and cell death.
Alternative: the standard sheeplike compliance usually ends up as a self-fulfilling prophecy – they die on schedule.
Try this one. Best advice for someone who just been told how long he
has to live: ask the doctors to put it in writing. Just ask them.
They’ll never do it. Try and think about why not.
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