Seeking Holistic Doctor in DC Area for Pancreatic Cancer

Posted By Timothy (Camp Springs, Maryland ) on 07/15/2016

Hi, I am suffering with pancreatic cancer. I've lost a lot of weight and I am in a lot of pain. They are talking about putting me in hospice. I need help. I appreciate your response asap. Is there a holistic doctor in the Washington DC metro area that can put it in my veins. Thanks T.
REPLY         

Replied by Cindy (Illinois, Usa) on 07/16/2016

No one can tell you what to do but I will tell you what I would do. If they're suggesting a hospice, I will assume I've had both chemo and radiation treatments which...well...those would have to be dealt with which requires a little bit of time and is not particularly "gentle" so, it's possible there's nothing I could do to reverse things at this stage in the game. But here is what I would do if it were me.

First and foremost, I would hydrate as much as possible while I was preparing and all through the process. Not OVER hydrate, but everything the body does requires and consumes water. I would find some way to provide it with some. If I couldn't drink it and keep it down, and IV fluids weren't available, I would soak in it between applications of the protocol.

There's an MMS protocol called "Perfect Storm" but if I was in later stages, I would include large amounts of cayenne in an effort to stimulate life and protect the heart, keeping myself alive long enough to give things time to get started. I would apply these elements, externally, alternating various parts of the body.

No one else suggests this and chances are, no one would touch me due to the "late stage" issue - I would be on my own and that might be scary.

In a late stage case - assuming the ravages of chemo and radiation - the MMS and DMSO's first order of business is going to be clearing up some of that threat - enough so it can get to work. That's what the body is going to do with it, FIRST. The primary threat. And it's going to do that in the MOST most vital organs - the heart, lungs and brain which I would expect to be quite frightening so the most important element of ALL would be my courage.

I would expect my courage to be the difference between living and dying. Understanding that there may be drama and making the decision to laugh, breathe and SLEEP - as much as possible - THROUGH it.

Nobody can give you courage. Courage can come in two forms - spitting in death's face and LAUGHING in death's face - and laughing is, by FAR, the most effective. So, gather the funniest movie DVDs you can think of and go for it.

That's all just one option - let's address the FAR more important philosophical side of things:

The alternative - death - is ONLY scary from THIS side. I've been there and it was easy. Not scary, not traumatic - it was actually quite awesome. But coming BACK - THAT was the ride of ALL rides! Life looks totally different, after that. It's no longer scary. Imagine life without fear of dying. THAT'S life. YES, dying is awesome but you can do that ANYtime - THIS life, you can only experience HERE and laughing in death's face and the kind of life that FOLLOWS something like that is the experience of ALL experiences.

All you really have to do is decide to live. If you can do that, HOW you address the cancer won't matter. The decision will force your subconscious to take you where you need to be to get what you've decided to have. That's its job. Your subconscious mind has ONE job - to validate what you believe and take you to what you've decided. What you believe and what you decide. And your subconscious mind has every piece of information you've ever encountered. Piles and piles of information you don't even know you have - information you don't even know you've ENCOUNTERED. It DOES know and it knows how it all fits together. All you have to do is decide. It can even take you TO a course of action - all you have to do is decide what the outcome will be and not freak out. Look at it as an adventure. Expect some excitement and go with the flow of it.

One last thing - don't mistake being tired for "this must be the end". When you're tired, sleep. Don't assume you're dying because your subconscious can validate that TOO. It doesn't care - nobody dies. Wherever you go, your subconscious is going with you. Death doesn't mean anything to your subconscious unless you decide that's where you're going. So don't assume that fatigue = the end. Tired = tired - take a NAP.

There are two kinds of "life after death". There's coming back to THIS life and there's the life that death IS. Both of which are fun and neither of which can hurt you.

REPLY   6      

Replied by Rsw (Oh) on 07/16/2016

Hi Timothy,

The only doctor I would trust with this diagnosis is Dr. Burt Berkson, MD, MS PhD of the Integrated Medical Center in Las Cruces, NM (575-524-3720). If you need to stay close to home, Dr. Berkson will conference with your holistic doctor (or possibly advise you of someone good in your area - it would be worth a call), and describe the protocol needed for the IV ALA and whatever else he prescribes (like LDN). He has cured people of pancreatic cancer in the past. You can Google Dr. Berkson - he us on many sites. Best wishes for a successful treatment.

http://www.honestmedicine.com/2009/03/burt-berkson-md-phd-talks-with-honest-medicine-about-his-work-and-our-medical-system-the-interview-t.html

REPLY   2      

Back to Pancreatic Cancer Q&A