We are one week from duplication of the protocol listed above. Going to combine the Fenben and IVM. We will be eradicating squamous cell carcinoma in oral cavity. We will also be saying asta to calling nodule that is 2.7 cm at the moment. This is my third bout with this bully, but first with the Fenben/IVM protocol. I have had one jab an…
We are one week from duplication of the protocol listed above. Going to combine the Fenben and IVM. We will be eradicating squamous cell carcinoma in oral cavity. We will also be saying asta to calling nodule that is 2.7 cm at the moment. This is my third bout with this bully, but first with the Fenben/IVM protocol. I have had one jab and a booster. (2 years ago). I have received chemo and radiation the first two fights. Visiting docs next week. I look forward to any and all suggestions for what and what not to do this time around. I can’t relay the positive vibrations I receive from each and every one of you here. This is a blessing from GOD which I certainly don’t deserve, but will accept with humble thanks.
My cousin stayed alive for 10 years with mouth cancer, with the only treatment being a juice that included fresh turmeric and fuji apples (which have stem cells) and apricot kernels. I don't know the details of why it got away from him in the end, but I'm telling you this because apricot kernels might be something to add to your protocol. However, I have no idea if they are compatible with the fenben/ivm protocols.
Apricot kernels sure sounds like the laetrile which was so disparaged. People went to Mexico to get this 'treatment'. No $$ to be made from peach pit kernels.
Thank you, Baga! I wonder how many in these threads can be witness to what that particular phytomedicine was able to accomplish. Cancer never heard of my family, so all of this is viewed from a distance. A very grateful distance.
It is. The phytochemical is delivered by apricot kernels but is called by different names in different forms including laetrile, amygdalin and vitamin B17. But Europeans must take care as they are only legal for sale in Europe (and England when it was part of the EU) in the debittered form, and it is the bitter element that is the medicine. They are illegal for sale in Australia except as a cosmetic aid.
One truth to watch is for those fairly obscure medicines that are made illegal across the globe for no good reason. Apricot kernels is one, blood root is another. Australia is trying to declare bloodroot a narcotic so that it is illegal to use even for animal medicines. This is the indicator that they do what their advocates claim they do, which is replace costly drugs with cheap natural alternatives.
Okay, Christine--I needed another rabbit hole, so thank you! 35 years ago I became interested in the concept of herbal medicine, and so devoted a section of my vegetable garden to those herbs, and made an herb-drying rack in my attic. Then for 20 years my life, although not my location, took a different turn, and I lost almost all of those plants. Around 2018 I decided I'd like to restore that garden section, and did. The upset and upheaval in the medical sector determined me, last summer, to be more attentive not only to growing and drying, but actually to using them. At present, I have a shelf filled with various tinctures (Everclear 95% alcohol) and oils. Made a black walnut salve which my husband has been using daily on his toenails for the last 3 months. It's actually about time (3 mos) to check the appearance of those nails. I myself had reason to drink artemisia absinthium and vulgaris tea for a week, and noticed that the incipient stiffness in my knee disappeared. Elderberry syrup I made in September; then threw the rest of the berries into the freezer, and on Valentine's Day started the extractive process for turning them into liqueur. I joke about all this being herbal medicine for people who don't get sick. But most of us purchase insurance, of one sort or another, the idea being that we hope not to need it--we hope that the premiums will prove to be money down the drain. And so, with my herbal preparations. Also, a reason that I like to grow my own is that I know what is, and what is not, going into those plants.
I was hospitalised with what was called covid, and was entirely unprepared as I did not believe it was real. Hypoxia of unknown cause, and double pneumonia nearly killed me. When I got home from hospital, I decided to make up some elderberry tincture (just soaking dried berries in vodka) in case I collapsed again. I left the tincture in my freezer. My health has never recovered from whatever it was that flattened me, and 6 months later I had a bout of shingles. I went to a doctor and reluctantly took an antiviral which seemed to do nothing. (I was suffering brain fog and so not thinking well enough to really look after myself.) Again, too late, I searched the internet for natural shingles treatment and the ONLY one that returned was elderberry. I remembered the bottle hidden in my freezer and started taking that. Almost immediately, the rash that was still spreading down my arm and still oozing and active, stopped spreading and dried up. The pain lasted a few more weeks but it was clearly on the mend from the time I started on the elderberry. Now I cannot prove that the anti-viral drug did not have a delayed effect, but I now keep a permanent stock of elderberry tincture in my freezer and dried elderberries in my medicine stockpile.
I have no access to outside space except a very small and very hostile balcony. I have tried growing elderberries in pots and they have not died but they are clearly very unhappy and struggling to survive. If I had a garden, with what I know now, I would grow, at the very least, elderberry bushes, dandelions, wormwood, grapefruit and lemons trees and pomegranate bushes. And if I had a sensible amount of space, I would plant apricot trees for the kernels and fuji apples for the stem cells. These are all easy to turn into very powerful medicines. They are going to be the critical temperate climate medicines for recovery from the existing assaults on our health and for the next pandemic.
I have been trying to work out how apricot kernels compare to elderberries in level of anthocyanins. Elderberries are very high, along with other black berries, and seem to have more anthocyanins than apricot kernels when measured in grams per kilogram.
Oh my dear! Such a time for you! After you "sent" me on that search (was it only yesterday?), probably on GreenMedInfo--I saw a remark concerning the high purple-ness of elderberries, as indicator of high anthocyanin content, but their slightly bitter taste, as indicator of a hint of poison. I had understood from years back that females tend to dislike 'bitter'; while males appreciate it (think of hops in ale), and that this would make sense, in an evolutionary strategy, to keep females away from potential teratogens. So, I began to wonder about pokeweed--phytolacca americana, and an invasive plant where I live, which has extremely purple berries, but is "known to be poisonous", except that tradition says that folks do eat the boiled greens, and make pie from the berries. I have never dared to try a berry (but will this summer, should any show up), so cannot attest to any bitter content.
Thank you for this! Robin Openshaw spoke last summer of the 'black salve' used by her family against skin cancers---I went to internet to check on its ingredients. Sanguinaria canadensis. Blood root. Which I have in my garden. And the telling point was that PubMed article claimed that it should not be used, and most definitely should not be used on skin. Okayyyyy.
Not surprising that the bitter element is the potent part. In December, my curiosity having been aroused by all the medicinals in my own garden, I began to inquire (via PubMed) of just about ever plant growing on my little property. To my very great surprise, most of them do indeed have a medicinal value.
Thank you. I've known for some time there was a cure out there. My father had esophageal cancer. He was a WWII Vet Medic and sent to Hiroshima 2 months after the drop.
In 1977 he developed a tumor in his esophagus. They used his stomach lining to reline his esophagus. But, the cancer was what they called an "oat cell" cancer and it spread throughout his body. My oldest brother, I think, it was so long ago..was able to get him a drug derived from the apricot seed. It was working but the cost to keep it up, none of us had the money, the economy was like it is now...Pres. Carter was in... So dad, not telling us, quit taking it and died about a month later...
We are one week from duplication of the protocol listed above. Going to combine the Fenben and IVM. We will be eradicating squamous cell carcinoma in oral cavity. We will also be saying asta to calling nodule that is 2.7 cm at the moment. This is my third bout with this bully, but first with the Fenben/IVM protocol. I have had one jab and a booster. (2 years ago). I have received chemo and radiation the first two fights. Visiting docs next week. I look forward to any and all suggestions for what and what not to do this time around. I can’t relay the positive vibrations I receive from each and every one of you here. This is a blessing from GOD which I certainly don’t deserve, but will accept with humble thanks.
Blessings and best wishes, Max, for the best possible news at your doctor visit next week. 🙏🙏🙏
Thank you !!!
My cousin stayed alive for 10 years with mouth cancer, with the only treatment being a juice that included fresh turmeric and fuji apples (which have stem cells) and apricot kernels. I don't know the details of why it got away from him in the end, but I'm telling you this because apricot kernels might be something to add to your protocol. However, I have no idea if they are compatible with the fenben/ivm protocols.
Apricot kernels sure sounds like the laetrile which was so disparaged. People went to Mexico to get this 'treatment'. No $$ to be made from peach pit kernels.
In the late 60s my aunt went to Mexico for Laetrile treatment for breast cancer. She was in her 40s. She lived until her 80s and passed from dementia.
Thank you, Baga! I wonder how many in these threads can be witness to what that particular phytomedicine was able to accomplish. Cancer never heard of my family, so all of this is viewed from a distance. A very grateful distance.
My father took Laetrile in the 70's for his lymphoma cancer. Went into remission for 15 years.
It is. The phytochemical is delivered by apricot kernels but is called by different names in different forms including laetrile, amygdalin and vitamin B17. But Europeans must take care as they are only legal for sale in Europe (and England when it was part of the EU) in the debittered form, and it is the bitter element that is the medicine. They are illegal for sale in Australia except as a cosmetic aid.
One truth to watch is for those fairly obscure medicines that are made illegal across the globe for no good reason. Apricot kernels is one, blood root is another. Australia is trying to declare bloodroot a narcotic so that it is illegal to use even for animal medicines. This is the indicator that they do what their advocates claim they do, which is replace costly drugs with cheap natural alternatives.
https://substack.com/@christinekent/note/c-48796223
Okay, Christine--I needed another rabbit hole, so thank you! 35 years ago I became interested in the concept of herbal medicine, and so devoted a section of my vegetable garden to those herbs, and made an herb-drying rack in my attic. Then for 20 years my life, although not my location, took a different turn, and I lost almost all of those plants. Around 2018 I decided I'd like to restore that garden section, and did. The upset and upheaval in the medical sector determined me, last summer, to be more attentive not only to growing and drying, but actually to using them. At present, I have a shelf filled with various tinctures (Everclear 95% alcohol) and oils. Made a black walnut salve which my husband has been using daily on his toenails for the last 3 months. It's actually about time (3 mos) to check the appearance of those nails. I myself had reason to drink artemisia absinthium and vulgaris tea for a week, and noticed that the incipient stiffness in my knee disappeared. Elderberry syrup I made in September; then threw the rest of the berries into the freezer, and on Valentine's Day started the extractive process for turning them into liqueur. I joke about all this being herbal medicine for people who don't get sick. But most of us purchase insurance, of one sort or another, the idea being that we hope not to need it--we hope that the premiums will prove to be money down the drain. And so, with my herbal preparations. Also, a reason that I like to grow my own is that I know what is, and what is not, going into those plants.
I was hospitalised with what was called covid, and was entirely unprepared as I did not believe it was real. Hypoxia of unknown cause, and double pneumonia nearly killed me. When I got home from hospital, I decided to make up some elderberry tincture (just soaking dried berries in vodka) in case I collapsed again. I left the tincture in my freezer. My health has never recovered from whatever it was that flattened me, and 6 months later I had a bout of shingles. I went to a doctor and reluctantly took an antiviral which seemed to do nothing. (I was suffering brain fog and so not thinking well enough to really look after myself.) Again, too late, I searched the internet for natural shingles treatment and the ONLY one that returned was elderberry. I remembered the bottle hidden in my freezer and started taking that. Almost immediately, the rash that was still spreading down my arm and still oozing and active, stopped spreading and dried up. The pain lasted a few more weeks but it was clearly on the mend from the time I started on the elderberry. Now I cannot prove that the anti-viral drug did not have a delayed effect, but I now keep a permanent stock of elderberry tincture in my freezer and dried elderberries in my medicine stockpile.
I have no access to outside space except a very small and very hostile balcony. I have tried growing elderberries in pots and they have not died but they are clearly very unhappy and struggling to survive. If I had a garden, with what I know now, I would grow, at the very least, elderberry bushes, dandelions, wormwood, grapefruit and lemons trees and pomegranate bushes. And if I had a sensible amount of space, I would plant apricot trees for the kernels and fuji apples for the stem cells. These are all easy to turn into very powerful medicines. They are going to be the critical temperate climate medicines for recovery from the existing assaults on our health and for the next pandemic.
I have been trying to work out how apricot kernels compare to elderberries in level of anthocyanins. Elderberries are very high, along with other black berries, and seem to have more anthocyanins than apricot kernels when measured in grams per kilogram.
Oh, how I wish I had a garden, but not to be.
Oh my dear! Such a time for you! After you "sent" me on that search (was it only yesterday?), probably on GreenMedInfo--I saw a remark concerning the high purple-ness of elderberries, as indicator of high anthocyanin content, but their slightly bitter taste, as indicator of a hint of poison. I had understood from years back that females tend to dislike 'bitter'; while males appreciate it (think of hops in ale), and that this would make sense, in an evolutionary strategy, to keep females away from potential teratogens. So, I began to wonder about pokeweed--phytolacca americana, and an invasive plant where I live, which has extremely purple berries, but is "known to be poisonous", except that tradition says that folks do eat the boiled greens, and make pie from the berries. I have never dared to try a berry (but will this summer, should any show up), so cannot attest to any bitter content.
You are my hero! Where did you get the knowledge to make the tinctures?
When I began this investigation, in the 1980's, print sources were the only location for knowledge. But you have the internet at your command.
Thank you for this! Robin Openshaw spoke last summer of the 'black salve' used by her family against skin cancers---I went to internet to check on its ingredients. Sanguinaria canadensis. Blood root. Which I have in my garden. And the telling point was that PubMed article claimed that it should not be used, and most definitely should not be used on skin. Okayyyyy.
Not surprising that the bitter element is the potent part. In December, my curiosity having been aroused by all the medicinals in my own garden, I began to inquire (via PubMed) of just about ever plant growing on my little property. To my very great surprise, most of them do indeed have a medicinal value.
You might enjoy greennmedinfo.com
Thank you! Have spent the last half hour on this.
Important to know that it mostly references the same material you will find on PubMed, just sorted and accessed in a different way.
Thank you for that helpful piece info!
They can be added. This a natural form of arsenic that combats cancer.
Sending prayers for successful healing.
Keep us updated.
Thank you. I've known for some time there was a cure out there. My father had esophageal cancer. He was a WWII Vet Medic and sent to Hiroshima 2 months after the drop.
In 1977 he developed a tumor in his esophagus. They used his stomach lining to reline his esophagus. But, the cancer was what they called an "oat cell" cancer and it spread throughout his body. My oldest brother, I think, it was so long ago..was able to get him a drug derived from the apricot seed. It was working but the cost to keep it up, none of us had the money, the economy was like it is now...Pres. Carter was in... So dad, not telling us, quit taking it and died about a month later...
I'm sorry you lost your heroic father, Martha. It's horrible that so many can't afford treatments. May he rest in peace. 🙏💕
Thank you. It's so sad that Americans are sold lies and overwhelmed with medical debt.
Dear Max, Your last sentence is all that He asks. I am praying for your healing.
I have just offered prayer for your healing.
Good luck! I got my stage 4 diagnosis in January, you are an inspiration.
God bless you max wishing you well and a full happy recovery