Carole Weaver-Linsner gives her most important tip for people diagnosed with cancer as she finds her solution at the Beljanski Foundation. Cancer is probably one of the most dreadful words in the dictionary. Yet almost 50 % of us have been or will be faced with the diagnosis. Suddenly you are faced with sifting through a mountain of information to figure out how to survive this dreadful disease for the sake of yourself, your children and grandchildren. Many have decided against the orthodox treatment as the only option, because you’ve seen friends and family members who contracted cancer and followed their doctor’s recommendations, only to die within a year or two suffering the devastating effects of chemo and supposedly pinpointed radiation. Integrative Cancer Solutions was created to instill hope and empowerment. Other people have been where you are right now and have already done the research for you. Listen to their stories and journeys and apply what they learned to achieve similar outcomes as they have, cancer remission and an even more fullness of life than before the diagnosis. Guests will discuss what therapies, supplements, and practitioners they relied on to beat cancer. Once diagnosed, time is of the essence. This podcast will dramatically reduce your learning curve as you search for your own solution to cancer. For more information about products and services discussed in this podcast, please visit www.integrativecancersolutions.com. To learn more about the cutting-edge integrative cancer therapies Dr. Karlfeldt offer at his center, please visit www.TheKarlfeldtCenter.com.
[00:04:23] Yeah, because people when you're dealing with metastatic cancer patients say that they always feel that they have this, like you're saying, this cloud over your head all the time, that you you're never going to be able to get free from you can never really run away from because it can rear its ugly head at any time. I mean, what what are some of the what what would you tell people that are diagnosed with metastatic? I mean, how how can they get through that?
[00:05:33] So the two things are together, but it makes for an interesting leverne. I think if you can tolerate that, you can live vibrantly. My my new book is about is really structured on the monsters that you face with metastatic cancer, things like grief when you find out you're never going to be totally relaxed.
[00:08:19] And so we were going through she was dealing with all this pain and and so we were focusing on why the pain was there, but what boys. And I was kind of feeling that there were some some kind of a fear behind that pain and something she was afraid of. And sometimes I see that it's almost easier for patient to move on, to die, to not have to face their fear. And so we worked through that and identified and worked. There's a little technique that I use to to help to relieve the pain. And as the pain was leaving, I mean, she started to to just cry and shake. And I mean, it's tremendous the emotions that are stored that are driving this cancer.
[00:13:33] No, I didn't. I, I took. Different medications right now, I'm on Tamoxifen, which is what I took for those five years after the end of the breast cancer, and and that may be the reason why my blood markers are so good. Or it could be that the Belgica Foundation, which I highly recommend, is a naturopathic organization which looks at healing, cancer and other diseases naturally through herbs and so forth. I'm taking one of their recommendations called Christobel and UNC about those two.
[00:18:35] So they were a bunch of odd things. I mean, they weren't like museum pieces, but one was a Mexican escudo, which was a picture of the Blessed Virgin, actually a picture of the girl taking her vows as a nun depicted as the Blessed Virgin. And I love that picture because it's the Blessed Virgin, but she's got pearls around her neck. And next to it is a dance. This is in our house is another picture of a famous nun, an intellectual of the 16th century. I think it is Souda Juana and she has this Goudeau.
[00:25:40] And what in those days you were always in recliners and they put you in a room with eight other people. So it was kind of a stage the feet were all facing toward each other. So there was this space in the middle and she would get in there and tell jokes. She was just wonderful. She used to say, now, if if you're not good, I won't unhook you so you can go pee.
00:26:27] Excuse me for being so. I think the researcher that that studied breast, I mean, that seems like such a man thing to do to to create science, to get to look at women's breasts if seems very scientific. But we know what he was really thinking.