Page 36
#7. This means a Career Shift
I’ve said it before and it bears repeating: cancer is a wake up call but it is
not a death knell. It tells you loud and clear that something is wrong with your
life and lifestyle and that has now reduced your health and vitality to ruinous
levels. You must listen to the message from Mother Nature and take appropriate
action.
If you heed the warnings and put matter right you will be quite safe. Many
people have had cause to BLESS the fact that they got cancer: it alerted them
to the fact that their life was wildly off track and that they must do something
effective to put matters right—or pay the ultimate price.
I’m going to be telling you what your treatment alternatives are. You’ll be
surprised how many different actions you can take that will raise your chances
of beating the disease successfully. In fact I’d like to encourage you that, in the
early stages at least, cancer isn’t that difficult to conquer at all.
Yes, I did say conquering cancer. You can survive this affliction and it never
return. There are many success stories that prove this. Unfortunately,
the prevailing attitude in the medical profession is that of ignorance and
disinformation. Doctors seem to have a very negative view of cancer survival,
despite all the propaganda. In some territories it is even illegal to talk of cancer
cures.
But my years of experience allow me to assure you that if you approach the
disease properly and tackle its causes at root, then that cancer isn’t going to
come back. There is more likelihood of someone else getting the disease—who
hasn’t taken the proper steps to put their health issues right—than someone who
has already beaten off cancer. You just need to take effective action and correct
the obvious problems that led to the disease.
Now by “effective action” I do not mean leave it to the oncologist. The single
biggest mistake that you can make if you are diagnosed with cancer is to leave
it to the experts to save your life. Conventional doctors are pretty useless at
dealing with this disease. Despite all the propaganda, the survival rate for cancer
treated solely by conventional means is largely unchanged over the last 50 years.
In a later report we will be looking at how the figures are massaged to look
good. But for the moment I ask you just to consider the obvious: that almost
everyone who is diagnosed with cancer dies, sooner or later (mostly sooner).