Cancer Support

Causes of Cancer:

The Differences Between Normal Cells and Cancer cells

  1. Normal cells are programmed to have a definite longevity while cancer cells are immortal.
  2. Normal cells mature while cancer cells don’t mature.
  3. Normal organ cells have uniform size while cancer cells have variability.
  4. Normal cells adhere to organ/tissue community structure and behaviour while cancer cells don’t and are able to metastasis (move to other tissue).

Two Processes are Needed to Cause Tumour Growth

  1. Continuous replication of cancer cells to form a tumour mass.
  2. Loss of competency of Immune System surveillance and destruction.

Section 1.: The First Process for Tumour Growth  

(Unrelenting Stresses & Cell Injury Drive Normal Cells into being Cancer Cells) 

Examples of unrelenting stresses: 

  1. Chronic pathogen infections—bacteria, virus, fungi, parasites (Covid spike is special)
  2. Chronic glucose overload. 
  3. Chronic toxin overload—industrial, commercial and natural and commercial foods.  
  4. Exposure to strong radiation (even for a short time)
  5. Chronic sleep deprivation. 
  6. Chronic autonomic nervous disruption—emotional stress, poor self definition, mind chatter.

The Evolution of a Cancer Cell 

  1. Combinations of these chronic stresses cause vulnerable cells to stop being community cells—and then they revert to being self-survival cells that use an ancient behavioural energy pathway linked to original single cell life-forms  that lived before oxygen was part of the atmosphere. 
  2. Normal community cells survive by ‘burning’ glucose by using oxygen (cellular respiration). In contrast, cancer cells  ferment glucose to lactate (lactic acid) even in the presence of oxygen (anarobic glycolysis) by using the ancient energy  pathway.  
  3. High concentrations of blood glucose assist cancer cell survival and replication.

Cancer Cell Food—carbohydrates 

  1. Carnivore or ketone diets restrict blood glucose to the normal low-high range of blood glucose without spikes and  this tends to ‘stave’ cancer cells. 
  2. All humans throughout their lives change their blood insulin, glucose and glucogon levels every month. 
  3. Regular spiking of blood glucose eventually leads to permanent high blood glucose and diabetes—and causes  heightened expenditure of immune resources to remove growing cancer cells. 
  4. High blood glucose benefits all cancer cells in the body. 

The Second Process for Tumour Growth  

(Reduced Immune Surveillance and Destruction of Cancer Cells) 

  1. A loss of competency in CD8 T-cell surveillance against tumour cells in specific organ or meridian regions. 
  2. A loss in competency in CD4 T-cell coordination of the other immune cells.
  3. A loss of competency in NK cell surveillance.

Cancers from Inherited Gene Mutations are Rare 

The formation of a cancer cell is rarely due to inherited genetic changes to the DNA. 95% of all cancers are  combinations of: 

  1. Epigenetic changes that shift gene expression to result in cells having difficulty participating as com munity cells (Epigenetics is the process of controlling the expression of the genome without altering the DNA—to form different  types of body cells with different functions)
  2. Along with mitochondrial dysfunction causing the cell to become functionally weak and needing a  different energy source.

Cancers from Gene Mutations are Rare 

Examples of cancers linked to gene mutations: 

  1. Polyposis coli tumour 
  2. Xeroderma pigmentation cancer 
  3. Retinoblastoma cancer 
Health Clinic Canberra

Treatment of Cancer

There are Three Ways to treat Cancer—1. Medicines, 2. Therapies, 3. Lifestyle 

Mainstream Hospital Treatment: Medicines, Therapies and Lifestyles 

Mainstream Medicines  

 Chemotherapy—Over 5 years varies with the cancer 10% to 40% average success.  Biological therapy—Over 5 years varies with the cancer 15% to 45% average success. 

Mainstream Therapies 

 Operations: Stage 1—over 5 years (varies with the cancer) 80% average success.  Stage 4—less than 30% success. 

 Radiotherapy: Stage 1—over 5 years (varies with the cancer) 90% average success.  Stage 3—about 30% average success. 

Mainstream Lifestyles 

  1. Balanced diet: fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins, healthy fats, limit red meat/processed  meats—(need to live near supermarkets)
  2. Exercise—regular walking, swimming, yoga.  
  3. Sleep—enough sleep and rest.  
  4. Stress management—find activities that you enjoy and relax you.  
  5. Alcohol—limit alcohol intake.  
  6. Smoking—quit smoking or get support to quit. 
  7. Social connections—stay connected with friends and family.  
  8. Sun protection—avoid excessive sun exposure and use sunscreen and protective clothing.   9. Vaccinations—get vaccinated.  
  9. Safe sex—practice safe sex to reduce the risk of infection. 

Complementary Medicine Treatment: Medicines, Therapies and Lifestyles 

Complementary Medicines 

  1. Medicinal herbs (long term treatment)
  2. Homoeopathic medicines (nosodes and authoimmunisations)
  3. Re-purposed drugs (Ivermectin, Fenbendazole, Dichloroacetate, Meythelene blue, Transfer Factor, Cancema, Coley’s  toxins and others)
  4. Gut health (activated charcoal, hydrated bentonite, probiotics, Combantrin, intermittent fasting, hydrogen peroxide, col loidal silver, etc)
  5. Detox-cleanse—to kickstart the immune system. 

Complementary Therapies 

  1. Regular osteopathy or chiropractic treatments. 
  2. Regular acupuncture treatments. 
  3. Regular soft-tissue treatments such as massage, reiki, etc. 
  4. Occasional counselling, hypnotherapy, EMDR, psychotherapy, NETs. 
  5. Motivation courses (Eg. Tony Robbins)
  6. Electrodermal testing, Naturopathy (iridology)

Complementary Lifestyle 

  1. Diet Keto, carnivore and low fructose 
  2. Medicinal herbs 
  3. Controlling fungal, bacteria, parasite populations 
  4. Sunlight for vitamin-D and boosting of neuro-hormores 
  5. Detox-cleanse (+EDTA in some circumstances)
  6. Strong exercise to reduce and eliminate blood fructose concentrations. 
  7. Spinal alignment to assist cerebrospinal fluid movement. 
  8. Classical meditation. 
  9. Self hypnotherapy techniques.
  10. Construction of an anticancer collage (Vision Board)
  11. Breathing exercises. 
  12. Assisting and contributing to other people. 
  13. Diary/psychotherapy with support from friends/family. 
  14. Achieving small goals. 
  15. Stilling the mind (pratyahara). 
  16. Listing achievements and expressing a mantra. 
  17. Weekly physical exercising using a mixture of Yoga along with dancing, surfing, swimming, martial  arts—or Pilates with bush walking, moving sports such as tennis etc. 
  18. Bowel Saline Flush a few times a year. 
  19. Intermittent fasting (18 hours) one to seven times a week (autophagy). 
  20. Intermittent fasting (30+ hours) reduce small intestine pathogens (SIBO). 
  21. True fasting (more than 4 days) to starve gut fungi and bacteria. 
  22. Daily taking constitutional homoeopathic medicines assists some people. 
  23. Daily taking specific anti-cancer nosodes assists some people. 
  24. Daily taking anti-cancer herbs assists most people. 

Prevention of Cancer 

Unload, Boost and Refocus the Immune System 

  1. Daily address: emotional stress (Meditation, prayer, self hypnotherapy, balancing brain chemistry). 
  2. Have quality and adequate amounts of sleep—including catnapping. 
  3. Adopt an ant-cancer diet—Signature Diet—after the age of 40 years of age. 
  4. Take steps to control bacterial, viral, fungal, parasite body populations. 
  5. Weekly attempt to integrative Exercises (Strength, flexibility, balance, coordination, endurance, joint and fascia align ment, meridian balance—within/across/between joints)
  6. Live in an environment (with access to sunlight, one low in geopathic stress, and free of chemical/industry pollution).
  7. Bi-monthly organ detoxification/cleansing to boost function. 
  8. Micro-nutrition (vitamins, minerals, trace elements and nutraceuticals)
  9. Living environment (low fungal, low geopathic stress, mild weather, access to sunlight, personal living space, etc)
  10. Consciously follow a life philosophy, religion or, spiritual pathway. 
  11. Option to take medicinal herbs and homoeopathics. 
  12. Prophylactic use of repurposed drugs such as Ivermectin 
  13. Option to do intermittent fasting, true fasting, rotation of plant foods.

What Now? 

Live life to the full as much as you can 

Keep brain neurochemistry in a normal range 

Balance dependency on yourself with dependency on others 

Value freedom (people will always be a benefit and a challenge) 

Get to know your subconscious mind 

Dream of the sweetest future for you and your loved ones 

Keep high morals and value behavioural excellence 

Find value, quality and pride in your actions 

Seek your personal spirituality

Bill Giles & Larisa Zoska

Office

3 Wiluna Street, Fyshwick, ACT 2609

Southern Highlands, NSW 2575

Phone Number

Bill Giles: 0437 276 447
Larisa Zoska: 0408 942 178
Sophie Eldridge: 0418 488 729

Postal Address

5/30 Battle Street, Queanbeyan, NSW 2620

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