Thursday, November 9, 2023

A magical cure? July 23, 2013

 

 

This latest passion started late in May – apparently when she discovered she would have to undergo surgery – which apparently took place in July.

I’m sure that a number of people around her are questioning this scheme she’s adopted to cure her cancer, as would I suspect the same had I not spoken to my friend, who runs Gilda’s Club in Newark, a cancer-survivor’s help network, who told me other people have used this same method and come up with a cure.

But a cure? After only a few weeks?  That seems a little farfetched.

But the whole affair seems to have hit her hard to the point where she is posting personal information on her Facebook and other pages, so over the top for the normally secretive person she is.

The tone of her posting is that of a true believer – someone who has adopted a new religion completely and unquestioning, just as she seemed to adopt all RR’s bullshit (at least for a while), suggesting perhaps that at times, she is gullible, and tends to believe things about other people until the bubble breaks and she gets crushed, turning bitter.

In this case, she laid out her life over the previous two years, how she kept coming up with bad pap smears and negative other medical tests, a cone biopsy, and many months of waiting out the results.

Now, suddenly, the burden of all that has been lifted from her shoulders and she is sharing the good news.

In the surgery she underwent in July the doctors expected to remove enough to have disabled her ability to have children, But as it turned out, they needed to remove less than originally anticipated, and she tested negative for the cancer.

There was no mention as to whether she would be able to have children in the future.

She credits the cure to her diving headlong into this new not-too-sexy nutritional program between when she received the diagnosis in May and when she went to surgery in July.

She said when she first embarked on this life-saving journey, she gave up many things, she did not later miss (except for the cheese and crackers).

With the help of her mother and others, she took up the routine that might have been seen as torture to others, and she claims after two months, this resulted in a magical cure.

Now, like all good missionaries, she intends to spread the word.

She apparently tried to convince our former temporary boss about it, just prior to his going into chemo to fight the cancer he has.

But as pointed out pervious to this, his wife talked sense into him, and he decided to follow the more traditional route for his cure.

 


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