About this deal
There is no miracle cure for cancer, at least not yet and there may never be, but you can attack the weaknesses of the cancer cells using as many drugs, supplements, medical treatments, and lifestyle changes as possible and see incredible results.
Because one thing for sure about this book is that you won’t finish reading it and then just put it on the shelf. I don't know whether the supplements that I'm taking are make the slightest difference, but they don't see to be doing me any harm, so I'll keep taking them for now - lol. However, we're diluting where those donations go, a little bit here a little bit there and everyone has their own agenda. Now of course I am wondering to what extent, if any, this outcome related to switching to a dairy-rich diet.A case in point being that plant based menopausal treatment through the use of transdermal natural progesterone cream, which I have used for decades now, has taken decades to reach any kind of universal acceptance. From the response I have had I think other men and couples find my/our experience useful to read even if it just giving them the confidence in handling this catastrophe in their lives in their own way.
Watch Jane’s acceptance speech as winner of the Lifetime Achievement Award 2019 ‘Amazing Women Global’ for unsung heroines. From Life Extension, she learned about a novel combination of a statin (lovastatin) plus a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug ( etodolac). Calciferol is an effective calcium replacement and it would have been safer for someone in your position than milk to ensure sufficient calcium absorption into the bones. On the other hand, starving the cancer by cutting off the supply to its three main fuel sources attacks the elusive stem cell.and adoption being off the cards for the foreseeable future due to the diagnosis just felt all so familiar. Using herself as a human guinea pig, she worked out the best drugs and supplements to starve her own cancer in an easy-to-follow 'Metro Map'.
George Yu, Clinical Professor of Urological and Pelvic Cancer Surgery, George Washington University Medical Center. It's all very scientific-sounding and well referenced from scientific journals but some of the dietary advice is very complicated. Jane’s book has given me an understanding of the different methods that cancer cells can use to grow and some of the ways that this growth can be blocked. Although I'm no expert in such matters but after keeping my PCa under control through dietary changes I made almost 20 years ago, I feel I've learnt a bit about somethings and milk is one of them.I am somebody that enjoys reading about science but I found some of the abbreviations tricky to follow in this book.