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My decision to become a nutritionist was directly related to
my own experiences using nutrition to cure my breast cancer.
The dietary
changes I made following my diagnosis arguably saved my life, and my decision
not to have surgery was perhaps the most important I ever made. I wanted to get the message out about how
much I was helped by ...
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We had put our house on the market earlier in the year and
at the end of November 2005 we sold up in Cardiff and moved 45 miles away to Swansea.
It was a very stressful time as most moves are, especially as we had booked up
a holiday to go away for Christmas again to Fuerteventura, and the time of the
completion was likely to clash with ...
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I carried on with the diet and supplements. When I had been away at Christmas I ate really well and found that I could still enjoy a lot of good food without feeling that I was “depriving” myself of anything.
However, having to watch what I ate all the time did get to me at times. I’m not the kind of person that responds ...
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In September 2004 I visited my GP as I was suffering from bouts of diarrhoea and was worried that I was not absorbing my supplements enough. He told me to take Imodium to stop it, but the symptoms persisted along with other IBS symptoms I had not experienced for a long time.
During this time I lost a lot of weight, developed a high ...
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The new health regime I had introduced to beat my breast cancer had two particularly noticeable effects.
My reaction to B17
I was taking large doses of B17 in the form of up to 50 kernels a day plus two tablets twice a day. The nutritionist was surprised I could tolerate so many, and certainly I felt a bit nauseous from time to ...
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The results of the blood tests gave me even more conviction that surgery was the wrong route.
When doctors take a tumour away, they cannot take the cancer away completely as it is not a local disease but a symptom of a disease. If cancer is a rogue healing process, as many experts seem to think, taking healthy tissue away at the same ...
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The blood tests I was told to have every six months to monitor my progress measured two main things, or tumour markers:
1. The level of telomerase. Telomerase is an enzyme that helps a cell to self-replicate. If an increased number of cells have active telomerase, it means that there is some destruction of transformed ...
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In July 2004 I went to see a nutritionist who had once been a medical doctor. I had found her name on the Internet, and made an appointment to visit her practice in Bristol.
We talked about the possible treatments, and took a blood test. She asked me what my diet was like now, and I told her that I had started taking apricot kernels ...
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Of all the advice I received at this time, I specifically remember something one lady said to me that really hit a nerve.
“They don’t know what they are messing about with,” she said. “They should sometimes just leave things alone, as all they do is spread it around more when they operate.”
I also read that ...
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On the way back home from the clinic my husband and I were in turmoil, and all the time the whole implication of this was going through my head – but at the same time everything seemed so unreal. We ended up going for a drink and getting quite drunk, which helped at the time.
I decided that the next day I would phone up one of my ...
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