Introduction

In March 2022 I was diagnosed with Stage IV Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (the staging was laughably exaggerated, if you ask me, but whatever), with spread in three nodes. Other than removing the largest (2.5cm) tumor that was sitting above one of the eyes, I refused all “conventional” treatment, which, of course, included chemotherapy and what the medical profession euphemistically calls immunotherapy.

A secondary lump of 1.5cm that was previously quite obviously sticking out disappeared in August. I gave it another month and then followed up with an MRI, which showed all three previously affected areas to be clean. While I’m continuing with a slimmed down version of the protocol to ensure things continue to be well, I think certain conclusions can be drawn even now.

What did I do to achieve these results, then? I followed a natural path that included detoxification, a large number of supplements, and so on.

This series of posts is meant to describe the approach I followed during these months (and beyond), for those who may want to explore a similar path. Of course, it is only one of many thousands of stories of people who cured themselves of cancer using an entirely (or at least mostly) natural approach.

Some have asked, “What are your credentials in writing this?”

I have a few: I know how to read; I have an open mind; and I have fairly well-developed critical thinking. Even with all the suppression, deplatforming, and persecution of “alternative” information, we are still vastly better off today than 30 years ago. You don’t have to go to multiple libraries to find the information you need; simply typing a few search terms on the computer will give you more raw information than you can ever handle. The key is attention to detail, an open mind, and discernment. Have I read and watched it all? Obviously not. I am still finding new information on at least a weekly basis — and that’s without actively looking. But what my wife and I found was enough for me.

However, my most important “credential” is that I am alive and well — something that cannot be said about those who get a (clearly false) sense of security from white coats and walls plastered with pretty diplomas. Many of them are alive, to be sure. A lot fewer are well. It needs to be understood that the cancer industrial cartel, driven by Big Harma, does not exist to make you healthy — it exists to increase even more its already enormous power and wealth by feeding off people’s most fundamental fears. What is very rarely talked about is that a huge number of surviving cancer patients’ problems happen because of their doctors’ failure to disclose all the complications that will inevitably arise in the future as a result of their treatments and which are a lot more common than they would like you to believe. Any doctor who has been practicing for more than a few years and thus should know better and who tells you that chemotherapy or radiation will not have any repercussions, is lying and deserves nothing but disdain.

Ultimately, though, these articles are not meant to convince anyone to follow any particular path, whether natural, conventional, or anything in between. It is simply an account of one’s person’s experience. No one has a responsibility for your life but you, and you have to make decisions according to your best judgment and discernment. These posts are simply a reference tool should you choose to go down a similar path. Neither I nor anyone else can (nor should) give cut-and-dry recommendations without knowing anything about a person’s unique situation, and you should certainly examine all of your options, both medical and so-called alternative. If you strongly believe that your problem is purely physical and a simple surgery will take care of it, it would be foolish not to consider it, especially since (judicious) surgery is one of very few areas of modern medicine that truly help people. However, a serious problem that affects the entire human being, emotions very much included, is rarely purely physical in nature. Most crippling diseases have underlying causes that have nothing to do with the physical, and it would be equally foolish to completely ignore this aspect, either.

These posts consider both these facets of dealing with cancer in detail, with an emphasis on a holistic approach — the way Nature intended.

Note: Being diagnosed with cancer can be a devastating experience. If you’re in a rush to get to the “meat” of the series, start with The Big-Picture Approach to Treatment and then The Protocol. Even in this case, however, I strongly recommend going back when you have a couple of hours and reading the posts in order.

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