In 2012 My grandfather (smoker for 55 years) was diagnosed with Small Cell lung cancer (the worst kind, both lungs, then it spread to his neck and shoulder). He is the father I never had and I love him dearly.
I am an engineer, NOT a medical professional but I have an amazing brain that I made into my bitch so it does what I want it to do. I knew NOTHING. I was so afraid for him.
Then I started praying. I DIDN'T ASK GOD FOR SHIT. INSTEAD I THANKED HIM PROFUSELY FOR THE CURE I KNEW I WOULD FIND. I found it in 2012 with maybe 7 or 8 hours of research. I also credit this to the fact that what you seek, also seeks you.
VA oncologist advised him to get hospice, go home and die! Cancer started spreading. He lost 95 pounds. Hospice did come. Then, he called his (pre 2006) 1510 SAT / 99 ASVAB grandson. He (then 73yo & STILL a smoker 🙄) was cancer free in 2 months. Hospice left on their own accord after a month and him gaining 20 pounds of healthy weight back. Subsequent scans showed no sign the tumors had ever even existed. Been 12 YEARS now.
Then there's this guy. Joe Tippens. The only survivor of roughly 1100 patients in a stage 3 & 4 cancer trial. He was the only one taking Fenbendazole (yeah, the one for dogs).
He learned about it from his veterinary friend who noticed many dogs cancer goes away when they are treated. She then used it on her own inoperable brain tumor and then subsequently shared it with him. ⬇️ 3 minute vid.
https://youtu.be/HYILnjc_wuY?si=yfgvg939wt4-SkCv
"Even as you seek wisdom, so shall wisdom seek you."
WWGIWGA!
EDIT: if there is enough interest, I will post an explanation of how I COMPLETELY cleared out my father-in-law's arteries in four weeks before his scheduled heart stent procedure. During the procedure, but after I had already treated him, the doctor said his arteries were "clean as a whistle. Then the doc he sort of got scared because he thought it was SO IMPOSSIBLE that his office might have made a mistake and mixed up heart scans with someone else. Upon further checking, There was no mistake. Father in law was 51, average build and couldn't walk across the room without getting out of breath. So much fear in his eyes. In ONE month he was playing 18 holes again. That month, in 2015 his clinically diagnosed "heart disease" disappeared like a fart in the wind.
EDIT 2: I'm working on it right now. Will post it as a new post at 5:00pm. Title will be: "My personal story on how I 100% cleared out my father-in-law's arteries in 4-weeks. His scheduled Heart Stent procedure: Cancelled."
EDIT 3: sorry for the delay fellas. Here's the link:
https://greatawakening.win/p/17t1yJNoJV/
EDIT 4: I see many people asking about dosing so I want to clear it up here.
I use PanaCur brand Fenbendazole. For horses.
$12 at a ranch/farm store for 4 or 5 doses for a 200 lb person.
It is a large plastic syringe of paste with markings on the shaft (in pounds) to dose by bodyweight.
My wife is 100 pounds so I gave her a '125 pound' dose.
It's simple once you see it in your hands.
There is so much more to it. Fenbendazole, alone, has been shown to be less effective when not taken in conjunction with the other supplements. The mycancerstory facebook group has been the most helpful resource and source of hope.
Many people take the Panacur packets of 222mg once per day. Some take 444mg per day, and others take even more.
It’s important to research a lot to understand what can happen. A lot of people see increased liver enzymes and panic. Of course, their doctors use this as a reason to bash Fenben. The truth is that the liver has to work overtime to filter out the dead cancer cells, and liver supports (such as TUDCA and milk thistle) are recommended ad part of the protocol.
Many have also reported that their tumors increased in size. It turns out that the tumors can go into panic mode and blow up as they are dying. It often turns out that these tumors are calcified or are composed of dead cells.
I say all of this to emphasize that Fenbendazole is not a miracle cancer cure. It is a tool in the arsenal of an active cancer warrior who is prepared to do the research and hard work of composing and adhering to a customized protocol for their specific circumstances.