This is just my personal opinion as I have no knowledge of specifically why Dr. D recommends what he does. But, I doubt my hypothesis is that far off from the truth. I'm going out on a limb by saying this but I have nothing to gain or lose.
I can only tell you that for 35 years I've seen only people practicing holistic medicine...and as the FDA gets stronger and the AMA gets louder, it's becoming more and more difficult to be in the field of holistic medicine without the threat of big brother trying to get rid of you. If you watch the video that was shared on this website called "Cut, Poison, Burn", you will understand this from a greater perspective. You will see first hand how difficult it is to get 100% holistic care in this country right now without threatening the person's livelihood who is treating you.
If I were practicing in the field of complimentary or holistic medicine and didn't go along with the protocols and guidelines of the very powerful AMA and FDA, I would be very careful not to ever say that to my patients or to anyone...I would play along best I could because this is the safest thing to do. Not for the patient, necessarily, but the only way I can practice within the guidelines that are out of my control.
I would use my own protocols and treat all patients with the same intention to heal... but don't think for a moment I wouldn't wish those other strong institutions would simply go away and allow me to do what I know I do best without their interference. Just can't be done...so, I would never share my personal beliefs or go against conventional protocols because it's a way to get sued and be put out of business. The goal of some very powerful people is to use harsh treatment because it's financially beneficial for so many institutions....drug companies, stock investors, doctors, hospitals and all the people who have something to gain by keeping down the real healers.
I believe it's rather a game that must be played according to the rules of the people who hold the cards...
"The happiest people don't have the best of everything.....they know how to make the best of everything!"
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he explains it all clearly in his cancer book
got the book from his health series?
I suggest you take out a copy at your nearest library
Dr D is all for prevention at a cellular level, unfortunately many patients go see him, looking for help, once invaded or having previously undergone chemo aggressive treatments
I have personally met many patients of his, all cancer survivors
''Just follow the book, don't look for magic fixes to get you off the hook. Do the work.'' Dr.D.'98 DNA mt/Haplo H; Y-chrom/J2(M172);ISTJ The harder you are on yourself, the easier life will be on you!
After watching my mother die from chemo and radiation. I will never have either. I know a lot of people who refused it and lived twice as long and even went into remission. Nothing that makes your hair fall out is good for you, IMO. And radiation causes cancer. It's a known fact. What's wrong with that picture? It's like killing a fly with a sledge hammer. My friend's mother was diagnosed with colon cancer in her 80's I believe. They didn't tell her and she lived 5 more years. Five! Most people die in one year after finding out.
FIFHI "Those who say it can't be done are usually interrupted by others doing it.” James Baldwin "Question Everything!", Science Channel
This is just one site that advocates aggressive taking responsibility for our self... with food!! and we have the advantage of doing it early..
I am in the process of really deciding that IF I developed cancer.. what would I do? Mom had four surgeries for separate cancers with cobalt radiation at 29 and radiation at 90.. she lived a long life.. so there is some value.. but prevention would be so much smarter..
what exactly would you be willing to do? go to Mexico and learn how to do whatever or stay close to home.. when asked seriously - then it is not a simple matter.. If we thought about it then we could do with FRESH foods what all the pills and potions try to do.. heal our body from many illnesses..
I mean if diabetics used to die in 3 years after the diagnosis, the today we are better of.. but what if juicing for minerals would prevent it in the first place? what is the age in which you would be willing to make the extra effort?
For me my diet recently has reduced the ill effects of diabetes, and heart issues and prevented Alzheimer's maybe.. yet it will take on act of 'congress' to make it main stream.. and we know how much congress is under the thumb of big and bigger business..
I remember when American companies went abroad and introduced all their latest (cheaper) goods, bought up local company after company, and left a business desert in it's wake... sad and so much good hand me down knowledge lost. Generations of families improved the material things while today there is no loyalty to anything but the 'branding'..
I ask not who is, but where is John Galt? Or is his name Norquist or Koch today? Are they guilty or just a victim of not enough push back by you and me?
When I see other peoples medicines schedule-I am happy to be here taking care of my health I only wish to drop weight more easily-life would be perfectionBeing 'here' creates understanding. BTD prevents damage from eating avoids. Thanks Dr D & your sups - all support and friendships
You have not seen anything until you see UNDER OUR SKIN .com
and yet the world is silent while young people suffer and die. Worth seing..
Wow movie looks interesting. Years ago on an MTV show called The Real World ther was a girl named Irene who said she had Lyme's disease and this was the reason for all her problems. She had to leave the Seattle house after everyone turned against her. They more or less treated her like it was all in her head.
As for cancer treatment, it's not going to change in my lifetime. Cancer is hereditary mostly I think. I'm hoping to avoid.
I believe the good doctor, will work with those taking chemo which isn't saying he is recommending it. I have read in one of the books that an A in late stages of cancer, which he helped to keep them strong for the treatments. My impression of that account was that at this point chemo may have been the last resort, from the patient and their families point of view. Seems like he works with the patient and their doctor if possible.
It is the patient who decides what their treatment is.
I find it strange as well. Dr. D should try to work with antineoplastons, not chemo.
Nonetheless, few people know more about cancer than Dr. D. There must be some merit to it--I suppose. Hard to think of any, considering the dreadful side effects.
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Just my opinion, but Connecticut is an area with a lot of money, prestige and recognition. If Dr D wants to keep practicing and maintain public respect, he can't be a fanatic. People who are anti-mainstream cancer treatment are, whether we like it or not, seen as lunatics.
As the daughter of an oncologist for some cancers as Hodgkin's Lymphoma and child Leukemia, the results of the chemotherapy and allopathic treatment works very deep and well, plenty of long time survivors and with quality of life. My mother had five years ago a cancer between colon and rectum and she is doing pretty well, for a 78 years lady with Alzheimer since 2002 before the cancer. We consulted two good oncologists who confirmed our choice to have her treated just with surgery and no chemotherapy for her mind problems and anemia, which had made too difficult to treat her. May be the age itself justified this approach, but Alzheimer and anemia made it the only one. If I had some months of life I 'd not undergo chemotherapy, if it 'd give me some healthy years with quality of life probably yes. Common sense and to avoid therapeutic obstinacy when it is just a pain for the patient should rule.
The many cancer patients I spoke with did not resent at all the treatment.
They can't be all stupid, Dr D is really wise in his approach too as ever
I read he uses chemo, especially a LOT of chemo for teachers with cancer.
Seems like a primitive approach, and not in line with the Hippocratic Oath.
Thoughts?
Thanks for bringing this point up. I hadn't ever thought to discuss this important point.
Because in many instances, without it, people die unnecessarily.
Is that a ringing endorsement of modern oncology? No, but what do you propose instead to tell a kid with a pediatric leukemia that is highly treatable: to juice raw liver in take coffee enemas instead? Years ago I had a patient who had a stage three testicular cancer. This cancer is 100% curable with chemotherapy. His wife, a massage therapist, was pushing that he go 'completely natural.' I politely explained that there were many, many options he could use to help control and optimize his results, but it would not be wise to forgo a treatment such as this, which was so reliably successful. They opted instead to do juice fasts and go elsewhere. Six months later they were back in my office, he riddled with metastasis, now taking that very same chemo to simply 'debulk' the cancer and help him survive a bit longer pain free.
Epic fail.
I'm currently monitoring two brain cancer cases who are bucking the odds for long-term survival. In both cases they received convention treatment plus a tailored regimen from me. I doubt if they had received only one or the other that they would be alive today, though I am certain that Gary Null and Joe Mercola would have told them that this was all a big mistake. Trouble is, where are these guys when the patient comes back with the recurrence. I can tell you they are no where in sight. That's when they send in the assistant to tell you that 'maybe it is time to do the chemotherapy.'
Antineoplastons work in a very small number of people. I've seen several patients on Bryzinski's treatment, with no concurrent chemotherapy, die. Movies are nice, but reality should also include what they don't tell you. People die on Gerson Therapy. Chemo is not the be-all and end-all and some people are going to die no matter what.
A primitive approach, IMHO, is to base your decision on broad sweeping conclusions drawn from consumer reading material that limits your ability to decide what is the right thing to do then and there.
My goals are quite simple: to get my patients from one side of the river over to the other. If I can do that with exclusively naturopathic modalities, so much the better. If in order to do that I need to combine modalities, well, that is part of the equation. If the only way that I would agree to ferry them across would be to require them to do only that which is acceptable to me I would not be much a ferryman, now would I?
Hopes, aesthetics and dreams are nice. I get up five days a week and deal with realities.
Big difference.
BTW, the Hippocratic notion of 'first do no harm' (primum non nocere) is not an accurate interpretation. It is more accurately, 'if at all possible, do no harm.' i.e it is a heuristic, not an algorithm. If it were a law then draining a abscess or giving a B12 injection would be a violation.
A whole system is a living system is a learning system.’ -Stewart Brand
Gatherer diabetic-70 Scorp/Sag on BTD/GENO 16 year Sam Dan
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Dr D.. THANK YOU for the update.. I think you are on track to wellness all around.. I think the references to others is detracting but only as it gives them, and others, fodder for similar statements later and taking them out of context..
Like the Gersen suggestions of using juices to strengthen the body .. doing only juices will not help everyone for every thing, yet I do think that juicing vegetables is a good thing. I am near certain that you would have no objection to vegetable juicing in support of better absorption of nutrients be that before and after chemo, with or without BTD.
Richard Bach who wrote 'Jonathan Seagull' wrote a small story of a man living in seclusion in a mountain cave. He had visitors and they where stunned to see that he had developed the PERFECT religion. They asked why it it not preached all over the world? His answer: Would you? (given the worlds people are always at war?).
That same premise follows all that we say here.. should we depend on BTD to the exclusions of other suggestions, start wars by exclusion of ideas or take the good and leave the rest? I for instance juice green vegetables with beets and other foods according to the teachings of Dr Bernard Jensen and learned about vitamins and minerals from Adelle Davis and about the need for fat from Dr Atkins, and I leave off the grains and now add a little dairy again with my BTD-SWAMI, (not 'milk' as that would be to painful for me) but quark works perfect in small amounts.. I eat BTD hardy no matter the amount, I leave vegetarians (by blood type) to their needs, but for me, please keep growing bulls and cows as they are a mainstay on my plate.
I could NOT do that- leave others to their believes or needs- if it was not for BTD and the learning I do here. But when I had pneumonia, and my insides where dried out to the point where nothing worked, then doing calema cleanses was the thing that healed me. Dandelion juice for some is bitter and distasteful, (I love it) - when I drank a glass of it for 6 weeks, the liver (brown) spots on my hands visibly got lighter, and have never gotten worse. When I drank peppermint tea for a few weeks - to replace coffee- my bladder relaxed to where I do not have to pee every 45 minutes, and my diabetes dropped all its numbers after adding a hormone for a few weeks...
Yes there are many modalities, and in the words of Bach: would you preach by exclusion?
Words taken out of context are harmful, diets out of context are harmful, and food is not the end all. Medicine has come along way.. some illnesses are near gone, diphtheria, polio, and many others.. yet other weakening of our immune system by micro organisms is happening in the fresh air. Bugs of all kinds are invading our body, and some will kill us the same as cancer might. Autism is a horror so is Lyme.. yet IF we at least fight them with our own TAKING RESPONSIBILITY for our food intake, then I do think we have a better chance at living - but not to the exclusion of medicine. I see my doctor every two month, we talk, and we compare notes & test results and we both learn and if I need a script I can get it with the consult. Without some anti this or that I would have been miserable over the years..
Dr D ....thanks for the post above and tanks for all your writings.. IF only you 'have' time to do more.. to become a SAGE living to 130, not on a mountain top, but living amongst us in good health.. May your vegetarian food needs nourish and keep you and your family healthy for a carefree life that ends in old age sipping on (vegetable green) yogurt!
All the best.
When I see other peoples medicines schedule-I am happy to be here taking care of my health I only wish to drop weight more easily-life would be perfectionBeing 'here' creates understanding. BTD prevents damage from eating avoids. Thanks Dr D & your sups - all support and friendships
I think it is important to remember that people need options and should not be bound to a "one size fits all" approach. If I were diagnosed with a type of cancer that was treatable and usually successful with chemo and/or radiation, I would definitely have the treatment and supplement with complimentary, alternative and holistic therapies.
In fact, many years ago I had the honor of being the chairperson of an AIDS fundraising campaign at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, which is one of the premier cancer centers in the world. Back then, Dana Farber had instituted a policy of offering ALL cancer patients a menu of natural health care approaches such as nutritional counselling, acupuncture, massage, etc. This practice is still in place today. This, IMHO, is the best of both worlds.
It's so comforting to know that there are options and that thoughtful consideration of what works doesn't exclude any specific modality. In 1996 I had a tiny thyroid cancer which was detected very early because I had a benign parathyroid adenoma which exhausted me. I was very fortunate that after having both removed surgically, there was no sign of any spread and I didn't require any radiation or chemo. I just take high levels of thyroid hormone to suppress any cells that might have been left behind. I was fortunate enough to find ER4YT shortly thereafter. Most of us are here because we've discovered that the one size fits all approach doesn't work.
Suzanne Somer's oncologist Julie Taguchi prescribes both the Wiley Protocol which is a bhrt hormone regimen that mimics hormone levels of a 25 year old... AND also does chemo. She gives the WP to patients who had chemo and also uses Tamoxifen or whatever that drug is..... Point is, doctors use a wide range of treatments. Why would Dr. D be any different?
Gatherer diabetic-70 Scorp/Sag on BTD/GENO 16 year Sam Dan
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I have been wrapped in Glory.. Dr D himself ... wow.. ! Yes in truth, the teachings I get from BTD is using foods to prevent damage, first and foremost. When I eat compliant I have relatively NO pain so fewer pills, when I eat green juices I don't wash out all the mineral salts. When I take meds for a while I am happy to know that food soon will be making me get over the side effects. I tried sups and some longer then others, and yet I remember that Dr D has allowed for choices, here and on the outside, and even his protocols are only for a while..
I never saw (YOU) him be on one side or the other forfeiting judgment. When I am going to be in trouble, some day, I will do whatever research I can and form on opinion. Will it be right for me.. maybe.. would it be right for the next guy- hardly.. to each their own intelligence, and their own good or poor health care provider. Yet Nature is best. I drink coffee only for severe headaches. Avoid you say?! yes but so are aspirins.. so sometimes it's the lesser of whatever, sometimes is all I can afford.
The biggest transit I see here is that as knowledge grew - so did Dr D - and he was big enough and secure enough to change some entires in the latest book or in the on line Swami! IT takes a wise person with great generosity willing to do that and to include so much of this or that.. saving us millions collectively! Dr D. (you) did the research for us all.
'Take the high road' my niece said the other day, take the high road, step out of the swamp, fencing is only good with foils and full mask for safety. As for defending.. others will do it gladly.. and...
.... in the mean time I am 'up' like a puffin .. collecting wise words, meanings and intentions 'spoken' in type by Dr D! May gosh - if ever he makes a type - the world will jump all over him.. falling flat.
When I see other peoples medicines schedule-I am happy to be here taking care of my health I only wish to drop weight more easily-life would be perfectionBeing 'here' creates understanding. BTD prevents damage from eating avoids. Thanks Dr D & your sups - all support and friendships
I'm currently monitoring two brain cancer cases who are bucking the odds for long-term survival. In both cases they received convention treatment plus a tailored regimen from me. I doubt if they had received only one or the other that they would be alive today,
I'm wondering the age of these patients Dr. D? My mother was diagnosed at 78. The oncologist gave her one year. She lasted a year and a 1/2. They all said her age was the main factor of her mortality. I actually tried to get her to come see you and she refused, having never been to a ND before. (Go NJ with your MD's )
FIFHI "Those who say it can't be done are usually interrupted by others doing it.” James Baldwin "Question Everything!", Science Channel
Though I have a hard time trusting the allopathic approach most of the time because they are not willing to even consider any other alternatives, it's nice to know that there are some practitioners out there that are not so blinkered and are willing to consider all options for the good of the patient.
Planning to overcome Asthma and Adrenal Fatigue with SWAMI.
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John 14:6 - Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.
Thanks for bringing this point up. I hadn't ever thought to discuss this important point.
Because in many instances, without it, people die unnecessarily.
Is that a ringing endorsement of modern oncology? No, but what do you propose instead to tell a kid with a pediatric leukemia that is highly treatable: to juice raw liver in take coffee enemas instead? Years ago I had a patient who had a stage three testicular cancer. This cancer is 100% curable with chemotherapy. His wife, a massage therapist, was pushing that he go 'completely natural.' I politely explained that there were many, many options he could use to help control and optimize his results, but it would not be wise to forgo a treatment such as this, which was so reliably successful. They opted instead to do juice fasts and go elsewhere. Six months later they were back in my office, he riddled with metastasis, now taking that very same chemo to simply 'debulk' the cancer and help him survive a bit longer pain free.
Epic fail.
I'm currently monitoring two brain cancer cases who are bucking the odds for long-term survival. In both cases they received convention treatment plus a tailored regimen from me. I doubt if they had received only one or the other that they would be alive today, though I am certain that Gary Null and Joe Mercola would have told them that this was all a big mistake. Trouble is, where are these guys when the patient comes back with the recurrence. I can tell you they are no where in sight. That's when they send in the assistant to tell you that 'maybe it is time to do the chemotherapy.'
Antineoplastons work in a very small number of people. I've seen several patients on Bryzinski's treatment, with no concurrent chemotherapy, die. Movies are nice, but reality should also include what they don't tell you. People die on Gerson Therapy. Chemo is not the be-all and end-all and some people are going to die no matter what.
A primitive approach, IMHO, is to base your decision on broad sweeping conclusions drawn from consumer reading material that limits your ability to decide what is the right thing to do then and there.
My goals are quite simple: to get my patients from one side of the river over to the other. If I can do that with exclusively naturopathic modalities, so much the better. If in order to do that I need to combine modalities, well, that is part of the equation. If the only way that I would agree to ferry them across would be to require them to do only that which is acceptable to me I would not be much a ferryman, now would I?
Hopes, aesthetics and dreams are nice. I get up five days a week and deal with realities.
Big difference.
BTW, the Hippocratic notion of 'first do no harm' (primum non nocere) is not an accurate interpretation. It is more accurately, 'if at all possible, do no harm.' i.e it is a heuristic, not an algorithm. If it were a law then draining a abscess or giving a B12 injection would be a violation.
MIFHI E-185 Naturopathic Doctor in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
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I am not convinced about the use of any chemo's, why... coz I saw too much of people gone by those treatments but not by their developed cancer..... ....
And then oncologists don't like us at all and want to send us to hell, my motto of todays.... do the best for all with healing mushrooms (pilzli)salvestroles,curcuma&bioperine and other stuffs... but the most important for me today is: get tested... everybody of us is an individual and none of us show up the same reactions to any kind of stuff or supplement... so far... I only can repeat myselve... test the compatibility of all stuff before intake ... ......
but then all is about awareness and agreements .... so far... choose the right -ones .....
MIfHI K-174
Revision History (1 edits)
Amazone I. - Wednesday, September 28, 2011, 3:10pm
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I stickied this important thread
''Just follow the book, don't look for magic fixes to get you off the hook. Do the work.'' Dr.D.'98 DNA mt/Haplo H; Y-chrom/J2(M172);ISTJ The harder you are on yourself, the easier life will be on you!
There is no reason that naturopathic and allopathic traditions cannot work together. They are doing it at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute and feel it helps empower the patient. I hope that more practitioners on both sides of the aisle can put their differences aside and work together for the benefit of the patient.
There is no reason that naturopathic and allopathic traditions cannot work together. They are doing it at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute and feel it helps empower the patient. I hope that more practitioners on both sides of the aisle can put their differences aside and work together for the benefit of the patient.
Gatherer diabetic-70 Scorp/Sag on BTD/GENO 16 year Sam Dan
Posts: 5,157
Gender: Female
Location: East Coast
Quoted Text
Dr. D. is utilizing the best of both worlds. I see his approach to healing as fighting the war and then cleaning up
well put
When I see other peoples medicines schedule-I am happy to be here taking care of my health I only wish to drop weight more easily-life would be perfectionBeing 'here' creates understanding. BTD prevents damage from eating avoids. Thanks Dr D & your sups - all support and friendships
Bottom line, we are responsible for our own health. I gave up my MD to find one who will accept my diet is causing my joint pain and overall health ailments and I also have to move on from my ND who feels my joint pain and overall health comes alone from mental being. Well, I found my diet is the biggest role in my mental and physical well being. I still believe in what the right MD doctor has to tell me although I feel skeptical towards a close minded one. I'm glad there are online resources to help me out, at least to open up options to try them out anyways.
Bottom line, we are responsible for our own health. I gave up my MD to find one who will accept my diet is causing my joint pain and overall health ailments and I also have to move on from my ND who feels my joint pain and overall health comes alone from mental being. Well, I found my diet is the biggest role in my mental and physical well being. I still believe in what the right MD doctor has to tell me although I feel skeptical towards a close minded one. I'm glad there are online resources to help me out, at least to open up options to try them out anyways.
Finding the right doctor is key. I am fortunate that my PCP is an osteopath so seems to better balance allopathic and naturopathic medicine. She treats me with respect and would never discount my feelings and intuition about my health or wellness.
Thanks for bringing this point up. I hadn't ever thought to discuss this important point.
Because in many instances, without it, people die unnecessarily.
Is that a ringing endorsement of modern oncology? No, but what do you propose instead to tell a kid with a pediatric leukemia that is highly treatable: to juice raw liver in take coffee enemas instead? Years ago I had a patient who had a stage three testicular cancer. This cancer is 100% curable with chemotherapy. His wife, a massage therapist, was pushing that he go 'completely natural.' I politely explained that there were many, many options he could use to help control and optimize his results, but it would not be wise to forgo a treatment such as this, which was so reliably successful. They opted instead to do juice fasts and go elsewhere. Six months later they were back in my office, he riddled with metastasis, now taking that very same chemo to simply 'debulk' the cancer and help him survive a bit longer pain free.
Epic fail.
I'm currently monitoring two brain cancer cases who are bucking the odds for long-term survival. In both cases they received convention treatment plus a tailored regimen from me. I doubt if they had received only one or the other that they would be alive today, though I am certain that Gary Null and Joe Mercola would have told them that this was all a big mistake. Trouble is, where are these guys when the patient comes back with the recurrence. I can tell you they are no where in sight. That's when they send in the assistant to tell you that 'maybe it is time to do the chemotherapy.'
Antineoplastons work in a very small number of people. I've seen several patients on Bryzinski's treatment, with no concurrent chemotherapy, die. Movies are nice, but reality should also include what they don't tell you. People die on Gerson Therapy. Chemo is not the be-all and end-all and some people are going to die no matter what.
A primitive approach, IMHO, is to base your decision on broad sweeping conclusions drawn from consumer reading material that limits your ability to decide what is the right thing to do then and there.
My goals are quite simple: to get my patients from one side of the river over to the other. If I can do that with exclusively naturopathic modalities, so much the better. If in order to do that I need to combine modalities, well, that is part of the equation. If the only way that I would agree to ferry them across would be to require them to do only that which is acceptable to me I would not be much a ferryman, now would I?
Hopes, aesthetics and dreams are nice. I get up five days a week and deal with realities.
Big difference.
BTW, the Hippocratic notion of 'first do no harm' (primum non nocere) is not an accurate interpretation. It is more accurately, 'if at all possible, do no harm.' i.e it is a heuristic, not an algorithm. If it were a law then draining a abscess or giving a B12 injection would be a violation.
Thank you Dr. D. I appreciate you taking the time out of your day to address this important issue. You are a true healer!
I read this topic with great interest, and I'm very happy to have read Dr D'Adamo's reply.
I myself am still alive because of chemotherapy. It's harsh treatment, but it works. Of course, it takes a personal approach from a dedicated doctor to find the right kind of chemo, the correct doses, the right schedule, and the appropriate care on the side. But yes, chemo does save lives, and I am living proof. My mother, who had the same cancer as I do, did not have chemo and died from her illness a year later.
However, if chemo alone has kept me alive and the cancer in check, it has only started to cure me since I've started eating right for my type and (especially) eliminating stress from my life. So if you give your body what it needs, the chemo can do its job a lot better.
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Dr. D'Adamo is a very balanced person-- he looks at everything and then knows what is best. He is not opposed to conventional treatment when needed.
He is an incredible problem solver.
MIFHI
"Do not try to satisfy your vanity by teaching a great many things. Awaken people's curiosity. It is enough to open minds; do not overload them." Anatole France
"Healthy people have the least overt symptoms from eating avoid foods." Dr. D'Adamo
I read this topic with great interest, and I'm very happy to have read Dr D'Adamo's reply.
I myself am still alive because of chemotherapy. It's harsh treatment, but it works. Of course, it takes a personal approach from a dedicated doctor to find the right kind of chemo, the correct doses, the right schedule, and the appropriate care on the side. But yes, chemo does save lives, and I am living proof. My mother, who had the same cancer as I do, did not have chemo and died from her illness a year later.
However, if chemo alone has kept me alive and the cancer in check, it has only started to cure me since I've started eating right for my type and (especially) eliminating stress from my life. So if you give your body what it needs, the chemo can do its job a lot better.
It makes me smile to see this thread appearing again. When I first came back to the forum last fall this thread was the one that caught my eye! Someone had stuck their neck out and generated a wonderful discussion!
I have known people who had chemo, and the doctors supplemented their protocols with special diets and supplements. All of them came out really well. One lady who had a breast removed didn't even lose her hair. Others I have known who had doctors who never even considered the thought of supplementing and diet are dead. Lots of them..... Very sad indeed.
"We are all born ignorant, but one must work hard to remain stupid." -- Benjamin Franklin
I am going for a cat scan next for lesions on my liver, also still have multiple uterine fibroids, now there is concern that perhaps it's cancer that spread to my liver. Quite frightened. But my mom who is 80 recently went through surgery & chemo for rectal cancer. So far, she's still doing well. She's strong. I certainly will not avoid chemo if it will be recommended if this is cancer. I waited too long to do something in my case, now I hope there is time. We'll see. Of course lately I've been doing well on explorer foods, wish I had been more compliant earlier on. Took too long to quit coffee, etc. Now I can't handle it. Green tea is about as much as I can stand.... But the foods that are on my lists are mostly soothing foods to my system. 2degreespisces, your story is inspirational! Thanks for sharing with the community!
Mom of 5, mostly 0's, DH & 1 son are B's, everyone else are O's, NJ transplant to SF Bay Area, CA ; ISFJ Explorer
I am going for a cat scan next for lesions on my liver, also still have multiple uterine fibroids, now there is concern that perhaps it's cancer that spread to my liver. Quite frightened. But my mom who is 80 recently went through surgery & chemo for rectal cancer. So far, she's still doing well. She's strong. I certainly will not avoid chemo if it will be recommended if this is cancer. I waited too long to do something in my case, now I hope there is time. We'll see. Of course lately I've been doing well on explorer foods, wish I had been more compliant earlier on. Took too long to quit coffee, etc. Now I can't handle it. Green tea is about as much as I can stand.... But the foods that are on my lists are mostly soothing foods to my system. 2degreespisces, your story is inspirational! Thanks for sharing with the community!
I am so sorry about this, Paula O! I do wish for the very best outcome from your scan. Please do let us know how it goes.... I'm glad most of your foods are soothing to you. That gives your body just the boost it needs right now. My foods have done wonders for me, and the strange thing is, they taste better than they have in years. Fruits taste so divinely sweet to me now. Even nice, fresh, organic broccoli is delicious just lightly steamed with a little lemon and oil. I don't know what all you can have but the entire mustard family is really good for women. There are a lot of veggies in that group. Take care. Spring
"We are all born ignorant, but one must work hard to remain stupid." -- Benjamin Franklin
Blessings for good health and strength to you, Paula.
I encourage you to take advantage of Dr. D's book on preventing and dealing with cancer. Even if you are following the Genotype diet, you can work with the supplements for your type. And check in with the Protocols here http://www.dadamo.com/protocols/index.htm
Normal day, let me be aware of the treasure you are. Let me not pass you by in quest of some rare and perfect tomorrow. ~Mary Jean Irion
My goals are quite simple: to get my patients from one side of the river over to the other. If I can do that with exclusively naturopathic modalities, so much the better. If in order to do that I need to combine modalities, well, that is part of the equation. If the only way that I would agree to ferry them across would be to require them to do only that which is acceptable to me I would not be much a ferryman, now would I?
Funny. You use the same metaphor I've always used with respect to my work with postpartum women: For them it's a raging river, and they just don't think they'll make it across to their new rôle and serenity/happiness therein.
Peter, as you know, I have long valued your appreciation of the Complementary approach. My brother's recovery from open heart surgery / valve replacement / aortic anastamosis / coronary bypass was with the assistance of the BTD, wowing his cardiologist. My own recent blog on blending a holistic outlook with even the extreme reaches of allopathic modalities was deemed worthy of comment by you. It's indeed important for those punctilious to follow a pathfinding practitioner / theorist such as yourself to think for themselves, too, in the moment, and be prepared to make choices they never thought they'd make or have to make, if these are what are called for.
I missed this thread in its original day. Glad to see folks here recognizing its importance. Maybe some will not be quick to have a problem with those who put themselves in the driver's seat and choose, using your work in conjunction with that of others.
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you will win this battle!!
keep us posted on your progress and stay compliant......now is better than never
''Just follow the book, don't look for magic fixes to get you off the hook. Do the work.'' Dr.D.'98 DNA mt/Haplo H; Y-chrom/J2(M172);ISTJ The harder you are on yourself, the easier life will be on you!
@Paula O+: what a tough time this must be for you! When will you have the CAT scan?
In all the uncertainty there is one thing you can do for your body, and that is to take the best possible care of it. I also hope you have a supportive circle of family and friends around you, as that helps in dealing with these things.
Please let us know how your scan went; in the meantime I wish you all the best!
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Live Cell O has some nice sprouts in it. Very convenient form.
"For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well." Psalm 139:13,14
Thanks for bringing this point up. I hadn't ever thought to discuss this important point.
Because in many instances, without it, people die unnecessarily.
Is that a ringing endorsement of modern oncology? No, but what do you propose instead to tell a kid with a pediatric leukemia that is highly treatable: to juice raw liver in take coffee enemas instead? Years ago I had a patient who had a stage three testicular cancer. This cancer is 100% curable with chemotherapy. His wife, a massage therapist, was pushing that he go 'completely natural.' I politely explained that there were many, many options he could use to help control and optimize his results, but it would not be wise to forgo a treatment such as this, which was so reliably successful. They opted instead to do juice fasts and go elsewhere. Six months later they were back in my office, he riddled with metastasis, now taking that very same chemo to simply 'debulk' the cancer and help him survive a bit longer pain free.
Epic fail.
I'm currently monitoring two brain cancer cases who are bucking the odds for long-term survival. In both cases they received convention treatment plus a tailored regimen from me. I doubt if they had received only one or the other that they would be alive today, though I am certain that Gary Null and Joe Mercola would have told them that this was all a big mistake. Trouble is, where are these guys when the patient comes back with the recurrence. I can tell you they are no where in sight. That's when they send in the assistant to tell you that 'maybe it is time to do the chemotherapy.'
Antineoplastons work in a very small number of people. I've seen several patients on Bryzinski's treatment, with no concurrent chemotherapy, die. Movies are nice, but reality should also include what they don't tell you. People die on Gerson Therapy. Chemo is not the be-all and end-all and some people are going to die no matter what.
A primitive approach, IMHO, is to base your decision on broad sweeping conclusions drawn from consumer reading material that limits your ability to decide what is the right thing to do then and there.
My goals are quite simple: to get my patients from one side of the river over to the other. If I can do that with exclusively naturopathic modalities, so much the better. If in order to do that I need to combine modalities, well, that is part of the equation. If the only way that I would agree to ferry them across would be to require them to do only that which is acceptable to me I would not be much a ferryman, now would I?
Hopes, aesthetics and dreams are nice. I get up five days a week and deal with realities.
Big difference.
BTW, the Hippocratic notion of 'first do no harm' (primum non nocere) is not an accurate interpretation. It is more accurately, 'if at all possible, do no harm.' i.e it is a heuristic, not an algorithm. If it were a law then draining a abscess or giving a B12 injection would be a violation.
I know I've commented on this thread a long time ago, but I just saw it again and have to add: Dr. D, I've been on this board since 1999. I have read many brilliant posts by you. This one is the most brilliant.
"If you are on one of Dr. D's diets and it isn't joyful, you aren't doing it right." - moi -
Thanks for re-posting Dr D's enlightning text, Peppermint Twist.
I wouldn't be alive today if I hadn't had BOTH chemo and access to good, healthy, healing food through BTD/SWAMI.
On chemo alone I wouldn't have prospered as I have, without chemo I would have died.
So there's a time and a place for all treatments, even for chemo, and eating right should be a daily way of being/staying/becoming the healtiest possible YOU you can be.
I'd never seen this essay of Dr. D'Adamo's before.
It reminds me of my own use of the "ferrying across the raging river" analogy I began using a decade ago in my own practice. (Always knew this doctor and I had stuff in common. ) I blogged approx. 7 years ago here about bridging standard and alternative approaches, and where our best option is often to cooperate with the arena in which an unstable client/ patient has the strongest support system. Being "holistic" can mean taking more into consideration than a few probability percentage points on a scale that excludes "psychological" (if that's what you want to call it) factors. You work enough with people, you discover the power of those factors, and you deeply, deeply respect them. Within the context of a program that works, such as the chemotherapies for various cancers, sometimes we have to defend ourselves against the diehard, uncompromising, very unholistic "holistic" ideologues.
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