I would be happy to have a copy of the book you mentioned . . .  if you
could forward the request . . . . 




JBB




[email protected] wrote:
> 
> I know a woman with cancer who was sent home to die by her doctors about
> twelve years ago.  She had Stage IV ovarian cancer and the chemo had almost
> killed her.  She saved her life using Benefin shark cartilage, which acts
> as an antiangiogenesis factor, keeping the cancer from sending out blood
> vessels to bring it nourishment.  I learned about her on the forum at
> Benfin web site, before the Feds shut them (Lane Labs) down for anything
> but the most innocuous of  "supplements" advertising a few years
> ago.  However, we have become friends by e-mail, and Kay gives away copies
> of the book she wrote with her husband, documenting her disease and how she
> saved herself.
> 
> I also had a teacher friend who had breast cancer metastasized to her
> liver.  Her onco docs knocked it out with chemo, though it was already
> Stage IV when located.  However, as always, it came back, and they told her
> they could only buy her a little time, and put her on vincristine (I think
> that is was it was, a last gasp chemo;  I read up on it on the Net and
> found that the average length of life left when a person in the study
> started it was 25 weeks, and none lived as long as a year.).  She was very
> sick, the chemo shut down her intestinal tract, she had horrible mouth
> sores and pain in the hands and feet.  She knew it was all but over.  At
> that point, about October or November, I told her I thought she had nothing
> to lose by trying Benefin, and she agreed.  It takes about 12 weeks before
> any sign of benefit is seen.  At her checkup 12 weeks later, her doc's jaw
> dropped and his eyebrows flew up when he read her lab reports.  They were
> improving, not getting worse.  That was the first week of Feb.  Well before
> summer arrived, she should have been getting ready for her
> funeral.  Instead, she looked good, felt good, ate like a horse, worked at
> school all week long, and played tennis twice a week.  I guess she didn't
> know she was supposed to be dead, soon.
> 
> However, as fall came on, the Cancer markers in her blood began to creep up
> again, and her doc started her on more chemo.  Her grown son went on the
> Net to read about shark cartilage, and read all the Feds' and
> Pharmaceutical houses'  propaganda pages, saying it was useless (as indeed
> it is, for some patients -- nothing works for everybody) and a scam.  He
> told his mom she was a damn fool for wasting her money that way.  And so
> she stopped taking the shark cartilage.  Her deterioration was obvious, as
> she suffered the same horrors from the chemo.   We planned her birthday
> party for the first week of February, exactly a year since her doc had been
> so amazed at her improvement.   Three weeks later, she was dead -- not of
> the cancer, but of a massive infection that started as a cold on Tuesday,
> and took her life the following Monday, overpowering her ruined immune system.
> 
> Here is the thing that still gives me goose bumps to think about it.  I
> learned from Kay's book about three years later that when the cancer is on
> the ropes and all but beaten, it starts to disintegrate and enters the
> blood stream for elimination from the body.  At that time, the cancer
> markers go up because of that,  but patients panic and think the cancer is
> back instead of almost beaten.  Then, they do as Tina did and go back on
> the chemo.   She might be alive today if her son hadn't gone surfing on the
> Web that day!
> 
> If you would like to get a copy of Kay's book, or write to her, e-mail that
> you would like to hear from her.  She is a missionary for cancer patients,
> in the truest sense, and a real shining role model.  I have had cancer
> (lumpectomy and radiation, 6 1/2 years ago), so I keep up on alternatives,
> because I know it can come back anytime.  Kay is a heroine to me, for
> trying to help others walking in the Valley of the Shadow.  I could post
> her e-mail here, but that would be unfair, and I would rather just serve as
> the go between.  Post your questions and I will forward the Silver List to
> her and she can answer.
> 
> Oh, yes, her onco doc who was so upset with her twelve years ago when she
> turned her back and went with Benefin, now has opened an alternative
> treatment clinic in AZ with some other doctors, to provide additional
> treatment modalities besides the ones that almost killed Kay.   Guess she
> made the point for him!
> 
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