Re: Lloyd Pye – “On the Mend”!!

From: benthejrporter

Date: 2013-08-15 10:52:12

Fantastic news! 🙂 Blessings to Lloyd — In Cognoscence@yahoogro…, “Andrew Johnson” wrote: > > 2 Updates from Lloyd Pye – for those that don’t use FaceBook > _____ > > > > > LloydPye > > > 2.168515.214837897032&type=1> 12 August > > Day #8 at Marinus-INCREDIBLE NEWS!!! Don’t miss!!! > > Dr. Weber dropped by the room this morning to see how I was feeling. Today I > was much better, probably 90% back to normal after the chemo. He asked if I > felt any change in the tumor yet. Itold him Vivienne and I were convinced it > was both smaller and softer, but we couldn’t tell by how much. He said, “No > problem, we will look and see. Have your regular treatments this morning, > then come to my office after lunch and we measure it again.” > > That meant another ultrasound only 8 days after walking through the door and > only five days since getting the low-dose chemo (but after five of those > cancer-melting heat treatments, too, which is a very important aspect of all > recovery stories here). We readily agreed to go for it. We’d do another > ultrasound one full week after my first one, only 7 days ago. > > First, some clearing up of statistics. My tumor was measured in the States > at 10 centimeters by 13 centimeters. That was definitely its size then. > However, I hit it hard with home remedies while waiting to come here, and > the first “off the screen” measurement here seemed to be that I had only > managed to hold it at that size, not reduce it. Turns out that was slightly > wrong. Dr. Weber showed me today that after more careful measurement > following last Tuesday’s ultrasound, it was “only” 10 centimeters by 9 > centimeters. So I HAD backed it down a bit with the things my friends were > telling me to do to fight it. So good news there, for sure. > > Now came today’s readings. I laid on the table and his assistant applied the > gel to my bare chest. One of those major frog-in-throat moments in life. I > know a LOT of folks out there have been wishing me well, praying for me, > sending reiki healing my way, doing whatever they could think of to pitch in > and try to help. Well, it all seems to have paid off, at least so far! Wow! > What a difference! > > The width measurement had dropped from 10 cm to only 7.5 cm, and the height > dropped from 9 cm to only 4 cm!!! This is a HUGE jump that had us all very > excited. Basically from softball size to lemon size. And then there is the > remarkable change in its density! In the first scan the tumor is dark and > dreary looking, very thick with cancer cells packed in tight. In today’s > photos much of that is gone, and it looks as soft as it feels! INCREDIBLE! > > Needless to say, everyone here is over-the-moon about this result, and we > all feel we have it well on the run, as is usually the case here. Remember > Richard, with 8 small metastases knocked out of his torso in only three > weeks. We never thought to have such luck with me because of the obvious > large size of mine, but now three weeks here (the normal course of a > first-run at therapy), with maybe a fourth week necessary at the end of > September, just might do the trick! How exciting is THAT??? > > Lloyd Pye > Klinik Marinus > Branenburg, Germany > August 12, 2013 > > 2.168515.214837897032&type=1&relevant_count=1> > Photo: Day #8 at Marinus-INCREDIBLE NEWS!!! Don’t miss!!! > > Dr. Weber dropped by the room this morning to see how I was feeling. Today I > was much better, probably 90% back to normal after the chemo. He asked if I > felt any change in the tumor yet. I told him Vivienne and I were convinced > it was both smaller and softer, but we couldn’t tell by how much. He said, > “No problem, we will look and see. Have your regular treatments this > morning, then come to my office after lunch and we measure it again.” > That meant another ultrasound only 8 days after walking through the door and > only five days since getting the low-dose chemo (but after five of those > cancer-melting heat treatments, too, which is a very important aspect of all > recovery stories here). We readily agreed to go for it. We'”off the screen” > measurement here seemed to be that I had only managed to hold it at that > size, not reduce it. Turns out that was slightly wrong. Dr. Weber showed me > today that after more careful measurement following last Tuesday'”only > 1861987177033_176607687_n.jpg> > > _____ > > > Day #10 at Marinus-Sometimes The Magic Works… > > A few days ago Vivienne and I made a date with another patient here, Brian, > to go to Wendelstein, a ski lodge atop a nearby mountain that is accessed by > a 40 minute ride on a cog railway. Everyone says that in winter this place > is a skier’s paradise. I’m not a skier, but it sounded worth the effort to > go there to have a look. Brian has rented a car here, so he offered to drive > us for our excursion. > > Brian’s story is typical of many patients here. He owned a construction > company that was one of the largest in Las Vegas, fulfilling millions of > dollars worth of contracts each year-until the recession of 2008. He lost > everything and had to move his family back to his roots in Pennsylvania. It > is often said that excruciating, sustained stress can precipitate breakdowns > in a body that give cancer a chance to take root and flourish. Brian > believes this is when and why it happened to him. > > In his case, cancer launched an all-out assault on him! Like Richard, whom I > introduced earlier, Brian had nine major cancers throughout his torso. The > worst was a 12-inch tumor that extended from the lower end of his small > intestine through its connection with the upper part of his large intestine. > Prostate, bladder, kidneys, liver, lungs…he was horribly riddled with it. > > When his diagnosis was made nine months ago, he did what most people do at > first: he stepped onto the path of mainstream treatment. Surgery was > scheduled. He showed us his scar, long and vertical along his lower abdomen, > still angry red for its relative freshness. They opened him up and sewed him > shut without doing anything to try to help him. What was the point? In their > terms, he was a goner, so far beyond help that they couldn’t even pretend in > good conscience to provide any hope. They told him to go home, get his > affairs in order, and wait as well as he could for his end. > > Turns out they didn’t know who they were dealing with. Once he recovered > from the aborted surgery enough to think straight, he went on the internet. > He found something I had never heard of before hearing it from him: the > “Greek” blood test. You can’t get it in the usual mainstream countries, but > it is available in Mexico. He doesn’t know if it’s available here in > Germany, but it hasn’t been mentioned so neither of us know. In any case, > the Greek blood test is a very special test that tells you some basic > parameters about the kind of cancer you have, and what kinds of things will > help it. Not all forms of treatment, alternative or mainstream, will help > all kinds of cancers. > > Brian learned that, as with most cancers, in his case chemotherapy would be > useless. As we noted in the last blog, in some cases chemo can provide > short-term gains against tumors, but they will usually come back, and when > they do they will be from cells that have become resistant to chemo. > Laetrile is a treatment that is highly controversial because it works in > many cases but not in others. Brian found out that for him it would be a > good healing modality, so he takes that religiously, among other things he > was told would be of benefit to him. And then he found this place, Klinik > Marinus. > > He came the first time in February of this year. His first round of > treatment saw his tumors shrink, on average, 20%. In his case that was a > huge, life-saving, life-giving improvement. He went home to do his > “aftercare” routine for six months, during which he shrunk them to 50% of > what they were when he started. Now he’s back again for Round Two here, > still working at shrinking them, and still doing it with heat and all the > other therapies practiced here. > > NO CHEMO!!! Everyone needs to tattoo and keep that somewhere in your > awareness. Brian had a body full of cancer spread around as extensively as > it can be spread throughout a body, so bad his doctors wouldn’t even pretend > he had a chance to survive it. Yet today I had a great trip with a jovial, > friendly, charming man who would be the last person on the mountain that > anyone would suspect still carries a torso full of cancer tumors that he is > slowly, methodically, rationally melting away. > > Now, for as fascinating as Brian’s story is, the day didn’t quite end when > we returned late in the afternoon. Because we were going on the trip, I had > to cram all of my treatments into the morning, so I got up early to do that. > Much of the time you’re just sitting or lying down as machines do their work > on you, or liquid vitamins and your own ozonized blood drip into veins in > your arms, so there is often time to read. I bring my Nook and hammer away > at all the cancer-related articles and books that many of you have sent me > over the course of the past month. I’m learning. > > This morning I started Chapter 11 in a book I’d been reading, which began > with a quote that caught my attention: “It amazes me how much of what passes > for knowledge in (mainstream) cancer therapy turns out to be incomplete, > inadequate, and anecdotal.” It was attributed to Ralph Moss, PhD, a noted > cancer researcher, in his book “The Cancer Industry.” I mentally logged that > title to check it out when I could find a moment to do so. > > Eight hours later, Brien dropped Vivi and me off at the front doors of the > clinic and we went in. There was Dr. Weber with a man about my age standing > with a boy of about 12 or 13. When Dr. Weber saw us he lit up as he usually > does and said, “So, Mr. Pye! I have another American for you to meet!” I > made the obvious assumption that a new patient from the States was checking > in, man or boy, so I wanted to do my best to make them feel welcome and at > home. > > “Hi,” I said, extending my hand, “I’m Lloyd Pye, and this is Vivienne.” He > shook our hands and said, “I’m Ralph Moss.” DING!!! A faint bell went off in > my head, but I couldn’t recall why. “Ralph Moss, eh? Your name sounds > familiar to me. I think I’ve heard it before somewhere, somehow.” Dr. Weber > said nothing to help me out, so I went on. “Is there a reason I would know > your name?” [This is translated as: “Are you anybody famous in any way?”] To > which he said, “Well, if you ever research into cancer therapy, you might > have run across my name.” And then it hit me!!! This was HIM!!! > > I explained that I had just that morning read a quote by him in a cancer > treatment book, not his own book, unfortunately, but still, I had faintly > remembered it, even with “chemo brain” holding me back. So we chatted for a > few moments and I went up to the room to fetch my Nook and show him exactly > what I was talking about, which of course was about as serendipitous as such > things can be. > > It turned out Ralph Moss and his grandson were on a tour of cancer clinics > in Germany because he will soon begin shooting a documentary film about > hyperthermia, the heat therapy that is the gold standard of treatment in > Germany and should be everywhere in the world. He was scouting locations and > meeting the clinic directors to get their permission to come on their > premises to film. > > On the grand scale of cosmic coincidences, where do you think THAT one > should be ranked? > > Lloyd Pye > Klinik Marinus > Brannenburg, Germany > August 14, 2013 >

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