BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
I am a 54 year old male in good physical condition. I am a software engineer at a major aerospace company. I am 5’10” and weigh 167 pounds fully clothed. I am not on medication of any kind. The results of my wellness testing conducted at my company on 07/02/2013 are shown below.
Total Cholesterol: 201
HDL Cholesterol: 56
LDL Cholesterol: 128
Triglycerides: 85
TC/HDL Ratio: 3.6
Glucose: 72
Blood Pressure: 128/80
BMI: 24
Body Fat %: 18
As indicated by my numbers, I am generally pretty healthy. The only known health issue that I have is skin cancer. I know that I have skin cancer because in February of 2008 my dermatologist biopsied a skin sample taken from a small sore that wouldn’t heal on my face. It was basal cell carcinoma. Because of its rather prominent place on my face, the doctor recommended Mohs surgery. After about 6 hours of surgery at St. Louis University Hospital, I was left with a 2” diameter hole in my face. Because of its large size, the doctor said that the cancer had probably been growing for 7 or 8 years. Because of its size and place on my face, my surgeon did not feel comfortable closing the hole herself so she referred me to a plastic surgeon. A few days later, the plastic surgeon did a wonderful job of patching me up, leaving only a few small scars and a wrinkle. After the surgery, my surgeon admonished me to begin wearing sunscreen of at least SPF 50 which I have for the most part summarily ignored. Though not a sun worshipper, I like being in the sun and feel it is the best way to get vitamin D. That being said, it is probably the reason I still have skin cancer on my face.
About a year after my surgery, I noticed several red, flaky patches on my face similar to the one that the surgeon had removed though not in the same place. I did not relish the thought of more surgery and more scars on my face. I talked to my brother who had recently seen a dermatologist about some red patches on his body that wouldn’t heal. His dermatologist told him that the patches were probably cancerous and should be removed at a cost of $300 per patch. Since he was self-insured (high deductible) and would have to pay most of the cost of treatment out-of-pocket, he decided to investigate alternatives. He is a chiropractor and one of his patients suggested he try black salve. This patient had allegedly cured his cancer using a topical treatment of black salve. (I met this patient sometime later and he showed me his scars, enthusiastically stating that the black salve had saved his life.) So my brother obtained some black salve from the “back room” of his local health food store. The proprietor of the store told him that the main active ingredient of black salve was bloodroot and that his formulation also contained zinc chloride to promote penetration. My brother applied the black salve to a spot on his leg that had never healed since he injured it some years earlier. He followed the instructions given by the person that the sold him the salve and about a week after he started using it, a gray-green blob a little smaller than a half dollar fell out of his leg, leaving a crater about an inch deep. He then applied an after care cream that looked a little like petroleum jelly. The hole eventually healed over, leaving only a minor scar. Encouraged by his success, I asked him to get some for me. I used the topical black salve three separate times in three separate places on my face. The progression of events was about the same for each case. I applied the salve over the area I wanted to treat (usually not bigger than a dime), the spot burned like hell for a week to ten days (I took a lot of ibuprofen) and then a gray-green blob (eschar) would fall out usually with the removal of the Band-Aid I had covering it. I would then apply the after-care cream and keep it covered with a Band-Aid until it healed over. In each instance the duration of treatment from the time I initially applied the black salve to when I finally removed the last Band-Aid was anywhere from 6 to 8 weeks. That’s a lot of time to have a big ass Band-Aid on your face. Not to mention the fact that the formulation that I used contained zinc chloride, which burned like hell for over a week until the eschar fell out. Since I still have cancerous patches on my face, I don’t like wearing Band-Aids that scream, ”there’s something wrong with Steve’s face”, and I have an aversion to burning, searing pain, I’ve decided to try bloodroot capsules. The capsules that I have chosen contain only bloodroot and slippery elm.
I have decided to chronicle my experience with bloodroot capsules in this blog in the hope that others can benefit, whether the outcome is positive or negative. Though I’m not a conspiracy theorist, I do think that a lot of people and organizations have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo when it comes to cancer treatment. Against the wishes of my daughter (a registered dietician) and my wife (my loving companion of nearly 30 years) I am offering myself up as a test case for the treatment of skin cancer using an orally taken formulation of bloodroot and slippery elm.
DISCLAIMER
This blog is for informational purpose only. The author is not a doctor and nothing in this blog should be construed as medical advice. Information contained in this blog is not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The author assumes no responsibility for how any of the information contained herein is used.
I am a 54 year old male in good physical condition. I am a software engineer at a major aerospace company. I am 5’10” and weigh 167 pounds fully clothed. I am not on medication of any kind. The results of my wellness testing conducted at my company on 07/02/2013 are shown below.
Total Cholesterol: 201
HDL Cholesterol: 56
LDL Cholesterol: 128
Triglycerides: 85
TC/HDL Ratio: 3.6
Glucose: 72
Blood Pressure: 128/80
BMI: 24
Body Fat %: 18
As indicated by my numbers, I am generally pretty healthy. The only known health issue that I have is skin cancer. I know that I have skin cancer because in February of 2008 my dermatologist biopsied a skin sample taken from a small sore that wouldn’t heal on my face. It was basal cell carcinoma. Because of its rather prominent place on my face, the doctor recommended Mohs surgery. After about 6 hours of surgery at St. Louis University Hospital, I was left with a 2” diameter hole in my face. Because of its large size, the doctor said that the cancer had probably been growing for 7 or 8 years. Because of its size and place on my face, my surgeon did not feel comfortable closing the hole herself so she referred me to a plastic surgeon. A few days later, the plastic surgeon did a wonderful job of patching me up, leaving only a few small scars and a wrinkle. After the surgery, my surgeon admonished me to begin wearing sunscreen of at least SPF 50 which I have for the most part summarily ignored. Though not a sun worshipper, I like being in the sun and feel it is the best way to get vitamin D. That being said, it is probably the reason I still have skin cancer on my face.
About a year after my surgery, I noticed several red, flaky patches on my face similar to the one that the surgeon had removed though not in the same place. I did not relish the thought of more surgery and more scars on my face. I talked to my brother who had recently seen a dermatologist about some red patches on his body that wouldn’t heal. His dermatologist told him that the patches were probably cancerous and should be removed at a cost of $300 per patch. Since he was self-insured (high deductible) and would have to pay most of the cost of treatment out-of-pocket, he decided to investigate alternatives. He is a chiropractor and one of his patients suggested he try black salve. This patient had allegedly cured his cancer using a topical treatment of black salve. (I met this patient sometime later and he showed me his scars, enthusiastically stating that the black salve had saved his life.) So my brother obtained some black salve from the “back room” of his local health food store. The proprietor of the store told him that the main active ingredient of black salve was bloodroot and that his formulation also contained zinc chloride to promote penetration. My brother applied the black salve to a spot on his leg that had never healed since he injured it some years earlier. He followed the instructions given by the person that the sold him the salve and about a week after he started using it, a gray-green blob a little smaller than a half dollar fell out of his leg, leaving a crater about an inch deep. He then applied an after care cream that looked a little like petroleum jelly. The hole eventually healed over, leaving only a minor scar. Encouraged by his success, I asked him to get some for me. I used the topical black salve three separate times in three separate places on my face. The progression of events was about the same for each case. I applied the salve over the area I wanted to treat (usually not bigger than a dime), the spot burned like hell for a week to ten days (I took a lot of ibuprofen) and then a gray-green blob (eschar) would fall out usually with the removal of the Band-Aid I had covering it. I would then apply the after-care cream and keep it covered with a Band-Aid until it healed over. In each instance the duration of treatment from the time I initially applied the black salve to when I finally removed the last Band-Aid was anywhere from 6 to 8 weeks. That’s a lot of time to have a big ass Band-Aid on your face. Not to mention the fact that the formulation that I used contained zinc chloride, which burned like hell for over a week until the eschar fell out. Since I still have cancerous patches on my face, I don’t like wearing Band-Aids that scream, ”there’s something wrong with Steve’s face”, and I have an aversion to burning, searing pain, I’ve decided to try bloodroot capsules. The capsules that I have chosen contain only bloodroot and slippery elm.
I have decided to chronicle my experience with bloodroot capsules in this blog in the hope that others can benefit, whether the outcome is positive or negative. Though I’m not a conspiracy theorist, I do think that a lot of people and organizations have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo when it comes to cancer treatment. Against the wishes of my daughter (a registered dietician) and my wife (my loving companion of nearly 30 years) I am offering myself up as a test case for the treatment of skin cancer using an orally taken formulation of bloodroot and slippery elm.
DISCLAIMER
This blog is for informational purpose only. The author is not a doctor and nothing in this blog should be construed as medical advice. Information contained in this blog is not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The author assumes no responsibility for how any of the information contained herein is used.
Me
Treatment Areas
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Day 30
Finished the last of the 3 bottles of TumoRx yesterday. No apparent change in the treatment areas. My conclusion is that the TumoRx taken at the dosage levels I used had no visible effect on my treatment areas. In all fairness, I didn't follow the TumoRx protocol which I have resolved to do in the not too distant future. I will begin posting again when I start the protocol.
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I made all of the comments on this blog so far :) I don't work for TumoRx. I have a degree in Chemistry and A&P and BS in Aeronautics from Parks College of St. Louis U :) But worked developing software for embedded systems to monitor and control remote airports in Alaska. But plants and ethnobotany has been my passion and study for 30 years.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I looked up the ED formula, and it is 263mg Slippery Elm and only 87mg Bloodroot! SO! It would take a dozen of those ED capsules to even reach 1 gram of Bloodroot! I just weighed my OO capsules, and they are 0.7g :) And I ate 4 of them tonight! So ... I ate 2.8, almost 3 grams. That is equal to uhhh ... 32 of the ED capsules!
Hehe ... and I didn't even reach the "naseous" stage, which I think occurs around 5-7 grams from what I read ... I'm sorry that my comments were not keeping up with your current postings, I don't know why I was not seeing your latest posts. My interest is for the future, because 1/2 of the population gets cancer now, so I want to know how to take care of things in case I do get cancer. It may interest you to read books by Weston A. Price, DDS - they can be found on the internet.
In my experience, the "analog" effect of herbs and essential oils heal far better than the "digital" effect of a surgery or pharmaceutical, but though I tried, I haven't found anyone personally document a cure with Bloodroot in the powdered form, but I have read many scientific journals documenting its ability to destroy just about everything - bacteria, fungi, cancer, etc - and I have read about doctors curing cancer with proteolytic enzymes, and supposedly, when combined, they work 2x faster.
I am just researching the ability of Bloodroot to cure cancer internally. You have done an excellent job in creating a well-designed and informative blog. I will likely return in the future as I continue this line of research. I wish you all the best.
Hi again. Came back to add more info. I quit medical school at the U of Iowa after 2 years because I became disillusioned with medicine. My interest was to be a doctor pre-1970s. Generally, doctors today match symptoms to pharmaceuticals, and then prescribe. Unless a surgeon, in which case the job is similar to a butcher, and my view is that cutting the body is an extreme insult to the physiology. Of course I respect science, and respect trauma surgeons, and those with high degrees of knowledge that deal with difficult situations wherein modern medicine is the only hope, and I do see a place for such doctors. But more commonly, overall, doctors they do more harm than good IMHO. Luckily, you have some good physicians in St.L, however, in most places, they are 3rd rate, 3rd world, and it really is one's own responsibility to understand their health and health options.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, please don't be frivolous with this skin cancer. It is a killer. It will not go away just by ignoring it. If you study medical journals, you will see that animal cancer tests are performed by taking human cancer cells and depositing them into the animal, so in this sense, you can see how cancer IS contagious. If cancer cells enter the bloodstream (especially most skin cancers), or if they are placed into another animal, they will grow wherever they are deposited. This is why cutting cancers is dangerous - it opens up the possibility of migration into the bloodstream. Area 5 concerns me. If it is on your back or under clothing, I would poke it with a needle before applying black salve paste so it can "grab" it. And I would treat it aggressively until it is gone and then as much as possible, ensure a flat smooth scar without raised/thick borders. Double-check my words because I am talking off old memories off the top of my head, but black spots ring alarm bells with me. I would apply the salve, let heal, needle and apply again, until there is no further reaction, using best judgment. Keep in mind that scars are not healthy - they are hypoxic and have little blood/lymph flow, and are cancer-causing in themselves for this reason. It is best to have a scar that is thin and flat, without thickness, thus my previous posts on scar enhancement.
Anyway, I hope I helped in understanding that your bloodroot dose was far below any useful level. You have a gallon and a half or so of blood, so think how diluted a few 100mg of herbs are, and even that is a small fraction of bodily tissue. I would be very aggressive with this until it is gone, completely, because cancer cells are immortal, and if you have multiple lesions, chances are you have a malignancy, though I saw no data on this, but your doctors should have checked this and informed you. For whatever it is worth ... that's all :) I am not a doctor, but I do help many family and friends and do have a few years experience with Bloodroot.
Hmm, an edit didn't take effect. I meant to say that the black spot rings melanoma alarm bells, which is the most dangerous of all skin cancers. I would attack that fast and hard. Needle doesn't mean draw blood, it just means poke thru the dead layers and create a pin-cushion effect so that the salve can grab onto it without being blocked by dead skin. Also, it seems that the TumoRx site has a cancer test that can be done cheaply by mail, and appears 99% effective or so. Very similar to a test for pregnancy (which has a lot in common with an accurate cancer test). This will allow you to know for yourself when your body is free of cancer cells (which emit markers into the blood, which then dumps into the urine). I am not big on the early education of the TumoRx people, it seems like a family operation, but they have immersed themselves into this for 15+ years, they have been sued and have gone thru a little hell, and I am sure they have learned some valuable things. They are also open to phone calls/consultations, which I believe they do for free. They must have helped 1000s based on the expenses of their business/web operations, but I am a little surprised to find such few reports on the success/failure of their protocols. You'd think people would be saying something, whether good or bad.
ReplyDeleteJust based on the efficacy of the bloodroot salve, I would think it must be useful to some degree. If you do a search, you will also find a clinic in NY that uses nothing but proteolytic enzymes to cure cancer, which may be worth knowing about, and understanding how both bloodroot and enzymes in combination may be a good idea.
OK, I only mean to add to a knowledge base, and hope I am not ummm, being a pest :)
Damn, another last thing. You can't realistically expect to notice results in less than 3-4 months of being very diligent with maximum doses of Bloodroot+Enzymes - that is my opinion from what I have studied, which seems "lengthy", but think about how "lengthy" it is going to be to have doctors perform Mohs surgery and plastic surgery all over your face, and even then, there is a good likelihood they either will not get it all and it will return, or there is more cancer that just hasn't been visible yet in other places. A systemic solution would seem best from that perspective (always IMHO :) Thanks again, and good luck!
ReplyDeleteSomething most people don't know: How cancer kills.
ReplyDeleteCancer is not poison and it is not painful in itself. It kills merely because cancer cells are immortal tissue, and they grow and grow, but never die. And as they multiply, they drain the blood of glucose, and starve the body/brain of vital energy. This is why late stage cancer patients get very weak and lose a lot of weight. And as the cancer cells multiply, they also begin to displace and crush other vital organs of the body, causing pressure-based pain and destroying the function of these organs. This is why cancer patients suffer a lot of pain, and require morphine. And that is how people die from cancer. It is not a nice way to go at all. It is like a medieval torture where you are within a screw device that is slowly turned over many months, crushing a person to death. Not nice to hear, but important for people to understand.
Upate on 2+ grams of Bloodroot powder.
ReplyDeleteI would not recommend the dose of Bloodroot that I took to anyone else. I am a large man, 6ft+ and almost 200lbs. And I eat once/day over 2 hours. And I eat a fairly large amount - maybe 3-4x what most people eat. Anyway, after posting here, I got big itchy red rashes on places on my skin that are slightly irregular, ie, old scars, etc.
SO ... I am confident in the doses prescribed by Raber, the protocol has anti-cancer action. And after that test, I feel confident in his Bloodroot/Enzyme protocol. As I stated previously, I did study his work, and learned a little about him, and can see why simple minds may attack him for things like "his daughter makes that crappy website" and "he was a preacher from Georgia" - but those are logical fallacies that have nothing to do with whether the man is issuing functional and credible information and products. If he wants to keep his business a family operation, good for him. Who cares if he doesn't want mega-corporatize his business. And if his background was a preacher, and he learned more things in life, good for him. These are really childish attacks. And I myself notice quite a few spelling errors, etc, but let's just look at the protocol and products, which is the only real matter.
Almost everyone knowledgeable with Bloodroot knows that it is effective, and numerous NIH and other scientific studies demonstrate this as well. The question is "can enough alkaloids get into circulation orally to be effective" - and as in my test - I think anyone that takes a high dose can see that it is very possible (5-7g Bloodroot Powder/day).
Second, are the Proteolytic Enzymes effective? Yes. He sells animal based enzymes which are well understood to be much more effective with cancer than plant enzymes - which makes sense, since cancer is animal tissue, not plant tissue. And we can see that a doctor in NY kills cancer exclusively with animal-based Proteolytic Enzymes.
SO ... The combination of Bloodroot with food, and Enzymes without food, is an all-day killer against cancer in reasonable likelihood. The major f-up I see with cancer patients is that they do 10 things wrong, and not a single thing right. So, IMHO, it is best for people to do the Bloodroot+Enzyme protocol, focus on that, do it correctly, and keep all other things in life simple and routine as possible.
To sumarize, the protocol is to increase Bloodroot with food 3x/day until nausea, and then back-off one capsule. And to increase Animal-based Proteolytic Enzymes daily until you feel your ass becoming raw from them. And as a last note: it is critical to have enough Magnesium (in particular), Zinc, and Vanadium for Enzymes to function. Magnesium Sulfate is Epsom Salts - very cheap - and bitter. But 2 large pinches in a large glass of coffee is tasteless - it matches the coffee bitters.
OK, just came back to post my results so people can know that oral Bloodroot is not nonsense in high-doses. But beware, some people may be extremely sensitive to the nauseating aspect of Bloodroot.
IMHO, forget the Easy Digest - I think it is for severely ill people that can't stomach anything. I would go with the protocol using Bloodroot Full Strength and the Proteolytic Enzymes, and use each of them at their maximal dosages, as prescribed (Bloodroot Full Strength with food until nausea 3x daily, and animal-based Proteolytic Enzymes without food 2-3x daily, until your ass becomes raw), backing off slightly once you find your tolerance levels.
ReplyDeleteI have studied this cancer stuff for years and know just about every possible alternative and medical treatment, and my opinion is that this is the most effective possible treatment at this time. And I would be very serious about this. There is no middle ground. Either you win or the cancer wins. And the loser dies.
One must keep in mind that people generally only seek "alternative" treatments after the medical establishment fails and people are on their deathbeds from chemo and radiation (all cancer causing), which is the EXACT WRONG WAY :) And I think the Easy Digest stuff is for people like that. And the medical establishment fails over 90% of the time, closer to 100% (of course, their are a very rare few exceptions).
ReplyDeleteOne cancerous lesion, OK - maybe surgery can help ... But more than that ... and you are really taking a *much* bigger risk IMHO.
Time's-a-wastin', whatya gonna do? :) Listen to some silly women or for-profit whitecoat techs, or cure everything with empirically based evidence? Once you go down the AMA road, the body can't heal with these natural methods because it is too far gone.
ReplyDeletePS. Everything in this world is done for money/power via "conspiracy". Conspiracy just means 2 or more people doing something in private, and that is what makes the whole world go round. I wish I could share all I know and have done, then you would understand things better, but I will just say this: I GUARANTEE YOU: if you do this protocol at maximal dosages for 1 week, YOU WILL SEE IT WORKING. I know because I have been doing it myself now for several days, and I can see it in action.
Cancer isn't a cause, it is a result, and your body has a lot of cleaning to do, and the protocol will accomplish this as well, whereas other things will not. Anyway, please don't be an idiot ;)
Some more things on Bloodroot based on some scientific journals I have read lately, in case it may help others.
ReplyDeleteSanguinarine is about 1% of bloodroot powder, more or less, which is fairly common among active alkaloid contents in many medicinal plants. Based on the effective concentrations of Sanguinarine on both bacteria and cancer, 5-7g/day seems like it was a good recommendation: this would be about 60mg of Saguinarine/day, which in 6 liters of blood, that is .06mg/ml or 60mcg/ml (if it was all taken at once, and it was 100% absorbed, which is not the case - but this gives a good idea of the maximal amounts getting into circulation). To the best of my memory, this was a ballpark baseline for it's effectiveness against cancer and bacteria, so it seems to be a good reference point for an effective dosage. Possibly some cancers in some organs may require more or less, but 5-7g seems like a good ballpark figure of an effective dose.
Sanguinarine is NOT very toxic at all, and there are Czech studies/reviews on animals (it is used in animal feed in Europe in place of antibiotics) that show massive amounts are required to do any damage. I can't remember the exact numbers, but it would be in the many 100's of grams/day to the best of my memory. Of course, everyone's body is different, and YMMV.
Sanguinarine is distributed fairly well throughout all cells of the body, so all these factors demonstrate a potentially very powerful anti-cancer medicine, as no cancer seems resistant to Sangunarine, and with good distribution, it seems well-suited for all types of cancer.
My own experience was this:
The first week or two, eating about 2g/day with my single daily fatty meal, I noticed my gall-bladder fibrilating. Like a mouse was jumping around in the heart area but on the right side of the chest. I didn't know if I hurt myself or not! But after 2 weeks it stopped. I figure my liver or gall bladder was stimulated, and maybe for good reason. I felt a "deflation" of sorts in my abdomen afterwards, and felt better because of it. I always felt like sleeping after a dinner + bloodroot dose. It did make me lose energy, and it can cause strange dreams of bizzare and realistically surreal nature. It really does require a fatty meal, or it will be very upsetting in the GIT. I always felt a little better from taking them. It seemed to have benefitted my GIT in general, though I can't clearly describe why, but it had a noticable and positive effect.
In conclusion, IMHO, Bloodroot has great potential, but many people are scared of it from it's action with ZnCl2 topically, and from all the misleading propaganda of Bloodroot toxicity. Yes, it is the most disgusting taste you can imagine, and nobody could ever drink a strong tea of this, and if I was cancer, I would kill myself if I was forced to taste Bloodroot, and yes, the taste alone is enough to tell you "this can easily make me vomit!", BUT it is not poison, and there is no evidence of any bad physiological effects from ingesting Bloodroot (other than potential nausea), even in very large quantities.
Read the science yourself, it's out there. I didn't have time to collect links to footnote everything in this post unfortunately, but for those that are brave and studious enough to understand the science, and weed out the BS, there really is great potential here. I will continue taking Bloodroot as I only find good effects from it, and the longer I take it, the more I can take. It's no problem for me to take 3g/meal at this time, and I also don't feel the same level of weakness afterwards as when I first started. I feel more immune to the negative side-effects. I also feel that it was very beneficial for my heart. I had various little problems with it before, but now, Bloodroot made it seem to be A.O.K. once again. I highly recommend it for further use and study by others!