Fred's Story
Fred (his real name) was diagnosed with prostate cancer in
late 1996. There was also a spot on his liver the size of "two
peanuts". The PSA was very high. He was put on the hormone
inhibitor flutamide, but no other treatment was offered. The
situation was much too far advanced. Surgery, he was told, would
be a waste of Fred's money and the doctor's time. In three
months he would be dead.
Fred and his wife live in New Brunswick. The two of them
made a trip to Seattle to visit his sister. While there, they
heard about my friend, a nutritionist we will call "Ann". Might
as well go visit Ann. There was very little to lose at this
point, although neither Fred nor his wife had any real interest
or confidence in non-toxic therapies.
As they sat in Ann's rather small spare bedroom that serves
as her office, Fred's wife felt that they were wasting their
time: "We know he is going to die." Ann convinced them to try.
The treatment involved three electronic devices. The first
was a PFG-100 Rife-Crane paddle type machine. He used 666, 690,
727, 2000, 2008, 2100, 2120, 2127, and 2130 Hz every second day
for 3 minutes each. One paddle was applied to each side of his
body at the waist line. On the outside of the left paddle was
placed the negative face of a large flat magnet. On the right
paddle, the positive side of a similar magnet. For parasites, a
few treatments with 20, 60, 81, 120, 125, 440, and 800 Hz were
used.
A Beck blood cleaner was used on wrist pulse points one hour
each day. Fred chose to discontinue the flutamide due to the
possibility of a toxic reaction. (The blood cleaner can cause
cells to take in much larger amounts of substances from the blood
than normal.) After each such treatment, he used a Beck magnetic
pulse generator on each lymph node.
Fred also sat on the negative face of one the magnets for at
least twenty minutes twice each day. It was felt that this
afforded the nearest point to the prostate.
Nutritional support consisted of just two items: Liquid
minerals and liquid shark cartilage.
Five weeks later, Fred was back in New Brunswick. He went
back to his oncologist for the appropriate tests and scans. All
were normal and he was pronounced free of cancer. The doctor
said that in several thousand cases, he had not seen any cases of
cancer just go away like that. Fred discontinued his treatments.
Fred never resumed his self treatment. He had quit too soon,
and eventually the PSA began to rise again. The MD told Fred
that the remission had just been a temporary fluke. Now he was
well enough for "real treatment". A radioactive implant was
suggested and in late 1997 Fred, alas, agreed.