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We know that the anaerobic pathway yields much less energy for every glucose
molecule (2 ATP “energy molecules”, instead of 36). So cancer cells have a
higher than normal hunger for sugar. That means if you eat sugar and sweet
foods, you are playing right to the cancer. You must get all sugar, honey and
sweeteners out of your diet. Sugar is deadly if you have cancer.
In the meantime, many physicians got started treating cancer by flooding the
body with extra oxygen: and it worked! It worked then and it works now. So one
of the most important things you can do it to increase free oxygen in your body.
That can be done a number of ways. You may have heard of hyperbaric oxygen?
That’s a mechanism for increasing the air pressure of oxygen and so forcing
more into the blood and tissues. However this one is not used so much for
cancer.
Other approaches are to use oxygen flooding, peroxide and ozone. The latter
two substances are super-charged with oxygen and deliver a high-impact yield.
Needless to say, you do need to go to someone who knows what they are
doing—and I don’t just mean some alternative practitioner who SAYS they know
what they are doing. Both substances could be dangerous if misused though not,
I hasten to say, as dangerous as chemotherapy.
Peroxide or ozone can be delivered either by an intravenous line or, I think much
safer, removing some blood, oxygenating it and then returning that to the body.
Other routes of administration may sound strange but are perfectly valid
scientifically and probably far safer. Ozone or peroxide can both be given rectally.
This avoids the coughing reflex that patients sometimes get when administering
ozone intravenously.
It is also possible to give just plain oxygen, oxygen flooding, from a cylinder, via
the rectum, the vagina in women or even tubes in the ears. All that matters is
that the oxygen gets into the body, where it will make the cancer cells sicken
and die. The best part of doing intravenous therapies and using other injectable
healing substances is the chance to look at the patient’s venous blood. I used to
find it quite easy to recognize the difference in color: venous blood is normally
dark purple, wine color—but when it turns bright scarlet, you know the patient is
receiving plenty of extra oxygen.
Treatments vary from several times a day if the patient is in dire straits, to twice
weekly and then weekly, as recovery continues.