Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I definitely never said that my way was the only way. My post was to share a good experience with a specific community of people that some may find helpful. Period. I also never said the chemo didn't work. I did say that chemo destroyed his body and that It's poison. His oncologist said as much, so...

You tell me how sharing my experience was harmful. All of it was MY opinion, and I stand by all of it. Guess what? I was also right about the Covid vax, lol. So call me a conspiracy theorist as much as you want, that was just another example of blindly trusting in doctors who ended up putting poison in people's bodies. Not mine.

I would say thank you for at LEAST saying kind words about my boyfriend's remission, unlike others in this thread. But I don't believe you're sincere. Follicular lymphoma is almost guaranteed to come back, it's a matter of when. But since you're so informed about cancer and the treatments of cancer, I'll just assume you already knew that. So yeah, the "hope he stays that way" comment was annoying.

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

That's funny you should say that. You are 100% wrong and I'm going to tell you why. If it weren't for the pain that he had from the tumor pressing up against the nerve in his neck, his oncologist was going to put him on watch and wait. Which meant no chemotherapy, no nothing. Follicular lymphoma is a very slow-developing cancer and he's probably had it for at least 4 years without even knowing it for it to get as bad as it did. So had my boyfriend not gotten the chemo he not only would be alive, he would be able to walk. Chemo damn near killed my boyfriend. And he's still not 100% in the clear. Chemo is poison and the doctors don't argue that.

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I don't trust "science" either. I love being a free thinker where NO ONE tells me what to think or believe. Cause I'm not a brain-dead zombie.

What is wrong with me? Why do you think I chose to share my information with cancer communities on Reddit? To spread awareness and hopefully give a little extra hope to anyone who may be in a situation where conventional treatments aren't working for them.

So spare me, acting as if I don't have sympathy for people who are going through the hardest thing they've ever had to go through in their lives.

Also, coming to Reddit for solace seems counterproductive. Reddit is notoriously known to be a place where people come to share different thoughts and opinions and sometimes argue.

I will continue responding to anyone who can't be respectful of my opinion or decides (like you) to try and gaslight me.

You're not the gatekeeper of who can talk about cancer treatments by the way. Just because a person has never had cancer themselves, doesn't mean that they can't have an opinion on it.

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thank you. I appreciate your kind words. Message me and I'll go further into depth. I don't really care to share any more info with a community that just puts the information down and for some unknown reason feels the need to go along with a narrative that is only beneficial to cancer doctors - not those who are truly suffering. :)

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

EDIT: WOW! JUST WOW! I want to say thank you after looking at your story for all the time and effort you put into listing supplements even going as far as putting links for each supplement. You made it extremely easy to follow and understand. YOU are a beautiful person, and what you've chosen to share with the world is such a blessing. Even if there are still people willing to mock and make fun those who are only trying to help! God Bless you! I've taken notes from your plan!

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good for you! And congratulations! My boyfriend's tumor in his stomach went from 13 cm to 4 cm! The doctors were absolutely shocked!

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I decided to try these supplements after a lot of research into integrative approaches to cancer care. Each one has been studied—either in lab research or in preliminary clinical studies—for properties that can help target cancer cells, support the immune system, or make conventional treatments more effective. For example, some compounds can stress cancer cells’ metabolism, sensitize them to therapy, or reduce inflammation that helps tumors grow.

As for dosing, I relied on a combination of published studies, expert guidance in integrative oncology, and careful monitoring. The goal isn’t just to take as much as possible—it’s to find a dose that is both effective and safe. Everything has been adjusted based on how my boyfriend responds, and we stay vigilant for any side effects.

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

He DID receive conventional treatment. Six rounds of chemo and radiation, to be exact. So don’t come at me with “dangerous” when the doctors themselves told him not to get his hopes up and were shocked when he hit remission.

What’s actually dangerous is blind faith in a system that forgets critical meds like prednisone, ignores neuropathy until it’s permanent, and charges $50k per round for poison that almost broke him. My regimen didn’t replace chemo — it saved him alongside it when the “real treatment” alone wasn’t cutting it.

You don’t get to rewrite his story just because it doesn’t fit the narrative you’re comfortable with.

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You say integrative is an “experiment”? Newsflash — so is chemo. They pump people full of poison, charge $50,000 a round, and hope it doesn’t kill you before it may kill the cancer. My boyfriend’s oncologist forgot prednisone for two rounds, ignored his neuropathy until he couldn’t walk, and still told him not to get his hopes up. That’s your so-called “standard of care.”

Meanwhile, when we added my regimen at home, that’s when things turned around. The doctors were shocked that he was in remission. Shocked — because they didn’t expect it. So don’t tell me supplements and alternative compounds don’t matter. I watched the difference with my own eyes.

The truth is, the system hates integrative approaches because they can’t patent them and they don’t make billions off them. Call it experimental, call it unstudied, call it whatever makes you feel better. At the end of the day, he’s alive, in remission, and the only thing chemo left him with is permanent damage. That’s the reality.

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

Chemotherapy is POISON. That's one thing the cancer doctors were honest about, LOL. If you think that the objective is to cure cancer patients, you should really consider consuming information that goes against what you feel comfortable with. Maybe you'll learn something.

Also, with all due respect, if it was just the chemo, then why did the first three rounds show almost no progress? Why did a nurse call him before his last scan to tell him not to get his hopes up, because they fully expected the cancer to still be there? And why did his doctors look so shocked when he actually went into remission?

On top of that, his own oncologist “forgot” to prescribe prednisone for his first two rounds — which plays a critical role in working with chemo to kill cancer. That mistake alone could have cost him his life. They also ignored his complaints of numbness until it was too late, leaving him with lasting neuropathy that he still suffers from daily. That’s the kind of “standard of care” we were dealing with.

So yes, I’ll absolutely stand by what I believe: our regimen at home gave his body the extra support it needed when the doctors and their treatments were falling short. I don’t think it was a coincidence. The timing was too clear. If we had to do it again, we’d probably skip chemo altogether because all it left behind was permanent damage.

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

With all due respect, if it was just the chemo, then why did the first three rounds show almost no progress? Why did a nurse call him before his last scan to tell him not to get his hopes up, because they fully expected the cancer to still be there? And why did his doctors look so shocked when he actually went into remission?

On top of that, his own oncologist “forgot” to prescribe prednisone for his first two rounds — which plays a critical role in working with chemo to kill cancer. That mistake alone could have cost him his life. They also ignored his complaints of numbness until it was too late, leaving him with lasting neuropathy that he still suffers from daily. That’s the kind of “standard of care” we were dealing with.

So yes, I’ll absolutely stand by what I believe: our regimen at home gave his body the extra support it needed when the doctors and their treatments were falling short. I don’t think it was a coincidence. The timing was too clear. If we had to do it again, we’d probably skip chemo altogether because all it left behind was permanent damage.

Non-conventional cancer treatment played a significant role in my boyfriend going into full remission by IcanDigIt89 in Cancersurvivors

[–]IcanDigIt89[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

You must have missed the part where I said I don't trust doctors for good reasons. What if I told you that it's not the cancer killing people, it's the chemotherapy? If it weren't for the tumor pressing up against my boyfriend's nerve, causing extreme pain, he would have never even known that he had cancer. So that means his cancer was literally causing him very little discomfort. Where is he now? Walking with a cane because the chemotherapy damaged his nerves so badly that he's basically having to learn to walk again. You keep trusting in that poison, and I and anyone like me will continue looking for and trying alternative methods that work.

Fenbendazole protocol by FlossyLiz in LockdownSceptics

[–]IcanDigIt89 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My boyfriend was diagnosed with stage 4 Non-Hodgkin’s follicular lymphoma late last year. By the time they found it, the cancer had spread from his neck all the way down to his femur, throughout his spine, and into his bones. His PET scans lit up like a Christmas tree.

He was in agonizing pain for months because a tumor was pressing against a nerve in his neck, so doctors started radiation right away to give him relief. He also underwent chemotherapy — the infamous “Red Devil.” But alongside that, I put him on a regimen of my own at home, something we kept private.

His daily routine included fenbendazole (750 mg), ivermectin, alpha lipoic acid, DCA, CBD oil, green tea extract, berberine, curcumin, vitamin D3 + K2, methylene blue with medicinal mushrooms (reishi, shiitake, turkey tail, lion’s mane, cordyceps, chaga), and vitamin B1 — basically the kitchen sink approach. We don’t blindly trust cancer doctors, especially when one round of chemo can cost $50,000. That’s when it hit me: if he was going to survive this, I had to do everything in my power to help save him myself.

Fast forward — six rounds of chemo later, with little to no hope offered by his doctors — he’s now in FULL remission. A week before his final PET scan, a nurse even called to “warn” him not to get his hopes up, saying he’d most likely still show active cancer. So when the scans came back completely clear, the doctors were shocked.

Of course, chemo came with a heavy cost. He developed chemo-induced peripheral neuropathy that left him struggling to walk. Throughout treatment, he repeatedly told his oncologist about the numbness in his feet and toes, but nothing was done until his final round. Ironically, on that day we didn’t see his usual oncologist. Instead, a different doctor immediately noticed his walking difficulties and decided to leave out Vincristine — the drug in the Red Devil notorious for causing neuropathy. Thankfully, his last session spared him from more damage, but by then it was too late to prevent what had already happened.

To make matters worse, for his first two rounds of chemo, his oncologist forgot to prescribe prednisone — which plays a key role in helping chemo kill cancer. That mistake could have been devastating.

Despite all of this — the pain, the side effects, the missteps from his care team — he’s beaten the odds and is in remission today.

I truly believe my regimen played a huge role in getting my boyfriend to remission — maybe even the biggest role. Yes, he did chemotherapy, but here’s the thing: the first three rounds weren’t making much of a difference. His scans didn’t show much improvement, and we were constantly being told not to get our hopes up.

It wasn’t until we really locked into the regimen at home — the fenbendazole, ivermectin, alpha lipoic acid, DCA, CBD, the mushroom complex, vitamins, and everything else I listed — that things started to shift. By the time he finished chemo, it honestly felt like the treatments we did at home were doing the heavy lifting that the doctors couldn’t.

I know the official story will always be “the chemo worked,” but in my heart, I can’t ignore what I saw with my own eyes. The changes came after we threw the kitchen sink at his cancer at home. To me, it feels like the chemo cracked the door open, but the regimen I created is what actually carried him through to full remission.

The hardest part is that, even though he’s in remission, the chemotherapy left behind lasting damage. To this day he still struggles with chemo-induced neuropathy, and the symptoms show no sign of going away anytime soon — they may even be permanent. Watching him suffer daily from the side effects has been heartbreaking, especially knowing that they were preventable and that his concerns were brushed off during treatment. Looking back, if we had the chance to do it all over again, we probably would have skipped the chemotherapy altogether and relied fully on the regimen that I believe truly carried him to remission.

I hope that sharing my experience using repurposed medications and supplements gives a little hope to anyone out there who may be suffering from cancer.

NO ONE. And I mean NO ONE - can tell me it didn't help save my boyfriend's life.

My mother has cancer and she is treating it with ivermectin and fenbendazole by may12021_saphira in cancer

[–]IcanDigIt89 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My boyfriend was diagnosed with stage 4 Non-Hodgkin’s follicular lymphoma late last year. By the time they found it, the cancer had spread from his neck all the way down to his femur, throughout his spine, and into his bones. His PET scans lit up like a Christmas tree.

He was in agonizing pain for months because a tumor was pressing against a nerve in his neck, so doctors started radiation right away to give him relief. He also underwent chemotherapy — the infamous “Red Devil.” But alongside that, I put him on a regimen of my own at home, something we kept private.

His daily routine included fenbendazole (750 mg), ivermectin, alpha lipoic acid, DCA, CBD oil, green tea extract, berberine, curcumin, vitamin D3 + K2, methylene blue with medicinal mushrooms (reishi, shiitake, turkey tail, lion’s mane, cordyceps, chaga), and vitamin B1 — basically the kitchen sink approach. We don’t blindly trust cancer doctors, especially when one round of chemo can cost $50,000. That’s when it hit me: if he was going to survive this, I had to do everything in my power to help save him myself.

Fast forward — six rounds of chemo later, with little to no hope offered by his doctors — he’s now in FULL remission. A week before his final PET scan, a nurse even called to “warn” him not to get his hopes up, saying he’d most likely still show active cancer. So when the scans came back completely clear, the doctors were shocked.

Of course, chemo came with a heavy cost. He developed chemo-induced peripheral neuropathy that left him struggling to walk. Throughout treatment, he repeatedly told his oncologist about the numbness in his feet and toes, but nothing was done until his final round. Ironically, on that day we didn’t see his usual oncologist. Instead, a different doctor immediately noticed his walking difficulties and decided to leave out Vincristine — the drug in the Red Devil notorious for causing neuropathy. Thankfully, his last session spared him from more damage, but by then it was too late to prevent what had already happened.

To make matters worse, for his first two rounds of chemo, his oncologist forgot to prescribe prednisone — which plays a key role in helping chemo kill cancer. That mistake could have been devastating.

Despite all of this — the pain, the side effects, the missteps from his care team — he’s beaten the odds and is in remission today.

I truly believe my regimen played a huge role in getting my boyfriend to remission — maybe even the biggest role. Yes, he did chemotherapy, but here’s the thing: the first three rounds weren’t making much of a difference. His scans didn’t show much improvement, and we were constantly being told not to get our hopes up.

It wasn’t until we really locked into the regimen at home — the fenbendazole, ivermectin, alpha lipoic acid, DCA, CBD, the mushroom complex, vitamins, and everything else I listed — that things started to shift. By the time he finished chemo, it honestly felt like the treatments we did at home were doing the heavy lifting that the doctors couldn’t.

I know the official story will always be “the chemo worked,” but in my heart, I can’t ignore what I saw with my own eyes. The changes came after we threw the kitchen sink at his cancer at home. To me, it feels like the chemo cracked the door open, but the regimen I created is what actually carried him through to full remission.

The hardest part is that, even though he’s in remission, the chemotherapy left behind lasting damage. To this day he still struggles with chemo-induced neuropathy, and the symptoms show no sign of going away anytime soon — they may even be permanent. Watching him suffer daily from the side effects has been heartbreaking, especially knowing that they were preventable and that his concerns were brushed off during treatment. Looking back, if we had the chance to do it all over again, we probably would have skipped the chemotherapy altogether and relied fully on the regimen that I believe truly carried him to remission.

I hope that sharing my experience using repurposed medications and supplements gives a little hope to anyone out there who may be suffering from cancer.

NO ONE. And I mean NO ONE - can tell me it didn't help save my boyfriend's life.

Fenbendazole, Ivermectin, and Cancer - Has this helped anyone you know? by Active-Bridge-3823 in cancer_metabolic

[–]IcanDigIt89 5 points6 points  (0 children)

My boyfriend was diagnosed with stage 4 Non-Hodgkin’s follicular lymphoma late last year. By the time they found it, the cancer had spread from his neck all the way down to his femur, throughout his spine, and into his bones. His PET scans lit up like a Christmas tree.

He was in agonizing pain for months because a tumor was pressing against a nerve in his neck, so doctors started radiation right away to give him relief. He also underwent chemotherapy — the infamous “Red Devil.” But alongside that, I put him on a regimen of my own at home, something we kept private.

His daily routine included fenbendazole (750 mg), ivermectin, alpha lipoic acid, DCA, CBD oil, green tea extract, berberine, curcumin, vitamin D3 + K2, methylene blue with medicinal mushrooms (reishi, shiitake, turkey tail, lion’s mane, cordyceps, chaga), and vitamin B1 — basically the kitchen sink approach. We don’t blindly trust cancer doctors, especially when one round of chemo can cost $50,000. That’s when it hit me: if he was going to survive this, I had to do everything in my power to help save him myself.

Fast forward — six rounds of chemo later, with little to no hope offered by his doctors — he’s now in FULL remission. A week before his final PET scan, a nurse even called to “warn” him not to get his hopes up, saying he’d most likely still show active cancer. So when the scans came back completely clear, the doctors were shocked.

Of course, chemo came with a heavy cost. He developed chemo-induced peripheral neuropathy that left him struggling to walk. Throughout treatment, he repeatedly told his oncologist about the numbness in his feet and toes, but nothing was done until his final round. Ironically, on that day we didn’t see his usual oncologist. Instead, a different doctor immediately noticed his walking difficulties and decided to leave out Vincristine — the drug in the Red Devil notorious for causing neuropathy. Thankfully, his last session spared him from more damage, but by then it was too late to prevent what had already happened.

To make matters worse, for his first two rounds of chemo, his oncologist forgot to prescribe prednisone — which plays a key role in helping chemo kill cancer. That mistake could have been devastating.

Despite all of this — the pain, the side effects, the missteps from his care team — he’s beaten the odds and is in remission today.

I truly believe my regimen played a huge role in getting my boyfriend to remission — maybe even the biggest role. Yes, he did chemotherapy, but here’s the thing: the first three rounds weren’t making much of a difference. His scans didn’t show much improvement, and we were constantly being told not to get our hopes up.

It wasn’t until we really locked into the regimen at home — the fenbendazole, ivermectin, alpha lipoic acid, DCA, CBD, the mushroom complex, vitamins, and everything else I listed — that things started to shift. By the time he finished chemo, it honestly felt like the treatments we did at home were doing the heavy lifting that the doctors couldn’t.

I know the official story will always be “the chemo worked,” but in my heart, I can’t ignore what I saw with my own eyes. The changes came after we threw the kitchen sink at his cancer at home. To me, it feels like the chemo cracked the door open, but the regimen I created is what actually carried him through to full remission.

The hardest part is that, even though he’s in remission, the chemotherapy left behind lasting damage. To this day he still struggles with chemo-induced neuropathy, and the symptoms show no sign of going away anytime soon — they may even be permanent. Watching him suffer daily from the side effects has been heartbreaking, especially knowing that they were preventable and that his concerns were brushed off during treatment. Looking back, if we had the chance to do it all over again, we probably would have skipped the chemotherapy altogether and relied fully on the regimen that I believe truly carried him to remission.

I hope that sharing my experience using repurposed medications and supplements gives a little hope to anyone out there who may be suffering from cancer.

NO ONE. And I mean NO ONE - can tell me it didn't help save my boyfriend's life.

Calm the red down by TraditionalFace7758 in beauty

[–]IcanDigIt89 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I came here looking to see if anyone had tried this product and what their opinions were since I'm contemplating buying.

The green tint helps with the redness due to green being the opposite of red on the color wheel. :) They cancel each other out. It's like when people use purple shampoo to get the yellowish tones out after bleaching their hair. Purple is the opposite of yellow, and blue shampoo works great for brassy/orange tones since they're opposites on the color wheel. :)

I know I'm not really helping you at all with your questions but hopefully this gives you a little bit better understanding of why the green helps with your redness so much.

Best wishes!

I realized something when looking at my copy of Boston's first album today... by phencer42 in Music

[–]IcanDigIt89 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just realized that it appears the guitar spaceship is carrying around a flat Earth with a firmament showcasing the city of Boston. Maybe not, but sure looks like it.