Which make of black salve was this Rowena?  dee

On 2 Dec 2010, at 17:30, Rowena wrote:

> 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."
> 


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