A friend of mine (I call her Kate on line) got her sister in NZ to apply black salve to a skin cancer on her back. She had treated many skin cancers of all kinds previously, and was in NZ to help her sister treat a breast cancer.

This cancer on her back took far, far longer to exit the body than any other she'd had previously . When it came out, she came to the conclusion it must have been wound around her spine, and that this is why it took so long.

A few quick pointers from Kate's experience: She says to apply the salve several times. She doesn't use it on her face anymore, because of the scarring. She prefers to use chickweed on the face, but she says it oozes and stinks in operation, quite different to the black salve. One time when she was treating a cancer on her temple it started bleeding and wouldn't stop, so she had to go to the emergency ward. It had penetrated an artery.

I caught up with her the other day. She showed me the photos she took of the cancers she treated in her breast and adjacent lymph nodes. She had them on an iPod type thing, and couldn't find the cord to connect it to a computer, otherwise she would have sent them to me before. If you make an Lshape with your fingers and sticking-out thumb, and imagine the whole of the rectangular space formed filled with a tumour, that is the size. The size of the breast cancer, and the size of the lymphatic one. At the last, the lymphatic one was "hanging on" by one thread, and was abysmally painful. Despite Neurofen she was crying with the pain. Also the breast cancer was more painful than a leg broken in three places that she sustained at the same time as she was treating the canceer. Percy Weston (google him, buy the book Cancer its Cause and Cure) told of a cancer on his hand or finger that just wouldn't come away because of a "thread" connecting it. He snipped it, and it was so painful he reckoned it must be a nerve.

When I caught up with Kate, DH and I had just been to the "best skin cancer clinic in (Capital City of State)." I showed them a mole on my back that had been itching for some time and had lost its brown colour. No problem, I was told. When we came home, I put on some black salve. It immediately swelled up, got a typical skin cancer appearance, and within a few days dark brown stuff came away on the dressing. It is healing nicely now.

I'd had the confidence to go to this clinic and this man in particular because of his amazed and favourable reaction to a skin cancer on my friend's finger which he saw treated with black salve successfully. He said this was going to revolutionise the treatment of cancer. He had changed his opinion since then, telling us that whereas salves, with only anecdotal evidence on line, might work in fifty per cent of cases, it would be unethical for him to offer anything else except surgery, which they knew to be 100% effective.

DH was given liquid nitrogen on several sites on his face without a by your leave, and offered surgery to the site in question, with a diagram of the size of the cut and stitches (huge! The site in question is not much bigger than a thumb nail). We have been managing the site quite nicely for five years. After original diagnosis, I got some black salve, and this was applied. DH applied more himself, probably too much, causing a hard crust to form. This dislodged the eschar, which came away prematurely. I think this is why tiny recurrences have occurred since then around the edges of the scar. Or, maybe the way I treated it caused the site to heal over before everything was out, or maybe I should have applied it more than once each time. Most recently, because the salve was now rather dry and hard, I moistened it with DMSO, coconut oil, Magnascent Iodine, and some commercial Aloe Vera. I also applied it several times. The trouble spot this time was brown, which scared me rather, but I suspect this may have been because the cancer tapped a capillary, which showed up as a tiny red dot when the scab came away, and coloured the lump with haem. This time, perhaps because of more frequent applications of salve, five small spots have been active over the scar site, and the whole process has gone on for forty three days, far more than the ten to fifteen days I'm used to. The main site is healed over, it is the other small ones which continued scabbing - only one left now, and it looks nearly ready to call it quits.

It was here and the Rife site that I originally learned about black salve, so when the original diagnosis came I already knew what to do. I am ever grateful to the people who mentioned it, and like to pass on the information I have when needed.

Kate is also happy to share her info with sufferers, and I will paste her story below as I told it when I first met her.

Treating Ca with Black Salve or Chickweed:

When I was away in the city recently, I was given a lift a few times by
a lady I shall call Kate.  In conversation she mentioned a friend who
had breast cancer, but who had wasted precious time being treated by a
"natural" guy who turned out to be a charlatan.

I asked whether this lady had tried herbs, or whether it might be worth
researching black salve.

"Oh, Black Salve," said Kate, in a meaningful tone of voice.

"Yes," I said.  "Some women have even treated their own breast cancer
with it."

"I did," said Kate.

"What?"

"I did."

It turned out that Kate had spent a lot of time in the sun on a boat in
New Zealand in her youth, and in recent years suffered skin cancers on
her face - basal cell, squamous cell, and even melanoma.  She showed me
the scars.  The melanoma scar was on her neck, under the chin near her
ear.  She pointed to a scar on her temple.  "This one started bleeding,"
she said, "and I ended up having to go to hospital.  The roots were in
the temporal artery.  They kept asking me what I had been doing, but I
didn't tell them.  I just said I was under the care of a dermatologist."

The breast cancer she treated just a few months ago, in March of this
year (2009).  She applied the black salve, a ring formed, and the cancer
started to come out. She just applied it topically; she didn't do
anything to get it to the lump.  And yes, it was painful.  While this
was happening she fell and broke her leg in three places (she was still
hobbling with a stick).  The breast cancer was more painful than that.
One day it came out, in all its tentacled glory, and she said it was
moving even though it was out of her.  I didn't have time to ask many
questions, as we got to our destination, so I don't know whether the
cancer pulsated or moved in some other way, but I hope to be able to ask
her later on.  I did ask if she minded me sharing this information.  She
was willing.

She said that in future she wouldn't use black salve on the face because
of the big scar it leaves, but she would use chick weed. (Jethro Kloss
in "Back to Eden" says it is one of the best remedies for external
application to ... skin diseases, tumors, cancer, and all kinds of
wounds.
http://middlepath.com.au/plant/Chickweed_Stellaria-media_Caryophyllaceae.php
also lists chickweed as being used in treating cancer.)  Here in
Australia, however, one has to wait until winter before it grows.  She
says the action is quite different with the chickweed - I think she said
it kind of oozes away.

She originally heard of black salve through someone who ordered it from
America to treat cancer in a dog.  She was able to source it locally,
though that person no longer makes it.

She said that prior to treating her breast cancer the armpit on the left
side was always smelly.  After the cancer came out it stopped being smelly.

As if all that wasn't enough, she'd also had ovarian cancer.  She'd had
certain symptoms for some time, but the doctors didn't come up with
anything.  Then one day she saw a TV program, where women were told that
if they had certain symptoms they should ask their doctor whether it
might be ovarian cancer.  She did so, and was given an ultrasound.  She
did have ovarian cancer.  She told the doctor she only wanted the lump
taken away, not any lymph glands, and didn't want radiation, chemo, or
blood transfusion.  The surgeon was very unpleasant, but the
anaesthetist told her, "I'm the person who keeps you alive, and I
guarantee you won't be given anything you don't want."

The lump was taken away.  She found later that she had pain in three
places on the same side.  She applied the black salve to those places,
and in time the pain went away.  I can't remember whether she said there
was any ooze.  Later, she told a naturopath about it, and was told that
those three places corresponded to the site of lymph glands.

What a woman!



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