Died Suddenly. USPS worker (On her usual route) has had 19 people DIE in the last 4 months...
(twitter.com)
🧠 SUDDENLY 🕳️
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That is the actual term. And sadly, it is the most difficult to treat and aggressive breast cancer there is.
I believe that was the type of breast cancer my mom had. It was the winter of 1990/91 and I was a freshman in high school. The doctor said that if the surgery was successful, she would have about 6 years to live. Our pastor, family and friends gathered around her hospital bed and prayed for her the night before her surgery. She felt a surge of tingling electricity course through her body and the next morning, the doctor cut out the completely dead cancer cells. God had healed her that night.
I was just 14 years old, and I asked my parents, "If God healed Mom, why do you want to do chemotherapy? Where is your faith?" They claimed some dumb reason for insurance or whatever. Then over the next several years, Mom was wrecked by the chemo. Combining that with menopause that lasted nearly a decade, my teen years were rather difficult. Then around the time I was married when I was 25, she was diagnosed with leukemia. I'm certain that the chemo brought that on.
If Mom had just claimed full victory over cancer and rejected chemotherapy instead of trusting the oncologist, she could be alive today. Since then, I've met two people who have conquered leukemia through naturopathic means. Mom died in February 2012, just a few weeks after I moved my family back to Japan.
Ugh, I'm so sorry, Steve. But thank you for sharing that.
I have to confess, I just get angry now when I lose a family member of loved one to cancer, the sadness is pushed way to the back. It's all a damn scam. They're still using many of the same barbaric methods to treat cancer, all the while well-meaning people pour billions into research that does nothing.
My family thinks I'm insane for being angry. "Well, it just must be a really difficult problem to solve". They can't imagine a world where big pharma intentionally bleeds people dry over a few years before letting them die since it's so much more profitable than curing them.
God bless, Steve. I hope you and your family are doing well in Japan.
You'll have to take it up with the medical profession, I'm afraid. I'm merely the messenger.