Today we have Jenny Lee, I'm so excited to have her on the show today, and I know that you get so much out of it. Jenny battled cancer pretty hard and that was it was quite a while ago. 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.
[00:04:17] Yeah, I had a certain I had a recipe. It had it was goat milk, pumpkin ginger. I can't remember what it tasted like, pumpkin pie, but it was just made with that and I think I did ginger tea, the najia wasn't too bad. I was still having my periods and it was supposed to knock out my periods at the time, but it took four treatments before it did. My uncle just thought maybe it wasn't going to. I know that that he was very surprised at that. [00:04:53][36.1]
[00:06:47] And so because because you I would assume that they declared you're cancer free in between, meaning you did the treatment and everything was fine, then you were declared cancer free and then a year later, they would never say cancer free remission. [00:07:02][15.1]
[00:08:13] It's all I've been told is it's a gene and the Herceptin blocks its blocks of protein that's on that cancer cell, that gene. Yeah. Yeah, OK. And I've so I was really upset, obviously very upset. And because now I'm a stage for and to me, cancer was a death sentence anyway, so I'm super afraid. I went and got another opinion and they were talking about something trial then, but they said I would have had to travel to another state and they said I needed to really hurry because I was in trouble, that I needed to hurry and do the treatment. And they agreed with the treatment. [00:08:54][40.9]
[00:10:26] The blood counts up, there's a for that I forgot what it was, so then I was declared cancer free and they but I have to do Herceptin for ever because I was a stage four and they only had clinical trials for stage one cancers since for the Herceptin they had it was working so well, they said that they just stopped the clinical trials. So because I was stage four, they said I had to do it forever. So I was finished with the chemo, but continue to do the Herceptin IVs every three weeks. [00:11:03][37.2]
[00:12:31] Yeah, they got brittle in my hair. Just didn't. I mean, I was also getting older so who knows. My hair was getting thinner and breaking up. I don't know. But my fingernails got ridges and split and didn't grow very well but and my muscles would ache and stuff and I think some of that could have been Herceptin. [00:12:53][22.0]
[00:16:15] And it's actually more that it's a whole program that you follow which is taking. Enzymes and the and the counselor, the consultant guide you through it, it's a week she meets with you on a weekly basis over the phone. You don't have to go to her. She will meet with you over the phone and she guide you through everything. She integrates with the allopathic scientific medical stuff and that she would tell me what blood tests and things to get and she would look at the blood tests and then determine what supplements you should use. It supplements it in a different way of eating, and it's juicing and it's taking the enzymes and. [00:16:57][41.8]
[00:18:44] And it is very difficult because you have to take enzymes that are, you know, throughout the day of like an hour before you eat and then some when you eat, you need to juice, you have to eat certain things you can't. Of course, sugar is the big thing that you're supposed to give up. [00:19:01][16.6]
[00:20:49] Because if you do some other things, like, say, you take the IVC, vitamin C that will interfere with the enzymes because you know, anything that causes that A pop ptosis, you know, that would that would block the blood supply. That wouldn't work with the enzymes because the enzymes need to get to that cancer cell and go through the blood supply to get to that cancer cell. And so then they so you have to be careful not to do some of the other things that you hear about. You have to just stick with the protocol. [00:21:21][31.4]