Guest guest Posted December 23, 2002 Report Share Posted December 23, 2002 Frank wrote: > Curiously, his Majesty’s strength seemed to wane after all these interventions and > as the end of his life seemed imminent, his doctors tried a last ditch attempt by forcing more Raleigh’s mixture, pearl >julep and ammonia down the dying King’s throat. Further treatment was rendered more difficult by the king’s death.” [3] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Hehe....that gave me a chuckle. I can just imagine the worried " doctors " standing around the King's bed, wishing he hadn't upped and died so they could try just a little more poison... > As far back as 1976, the American Cancer Society itself and its government colleague the National Cancer Institute >terminated the routine use of mammography for women under the age of 50 because of its “detrimental” (carcinogenic) >effects. Whaaaaat? It did? What happened? It seems to be a given in our society that women should get mammograms every year, especially as they get older. So what happened between 1976 & now that routine use was no longer terminated? Oh, and speaking of which, does anyone know what time of the cycle you're supposed to check and not check yourself? I had a lump the size of a marble a few months ago - it scared the sh*t out of me though I tried to keep a cool head. I didn't do anything about it other than checking on it each day, and it eventually went away after about a week, and then I remember that there are times in a cycle when a lump will show up & you're not supposed to check at that time. > He points out that the $5-13 billion per year generated by mammograms controls the information that women get. 5 BILLION a year? Cheese and rice! > On the contrary, the painful compression of breast tissue during the procedure itself can increase the possibility of >metastasis by as much as 80%! Now I'm really mad....infuriated. > Personally speaking, critical debate should commence as soon as possible with regard to those ‘helping’ therapies that >only temporarily distract the seriously ill. I don't know....*sigh* There are some people you just can't debate with. The other side of the coin. As stubborn as you & I are about our alternative therapies, we all know people who are equally stubborn about allopathy. My MIL for example...*gulp* She had a pre-cancerous mole removed from her back 4 weeks ago, and when she went in for her checkup, the doctor said it was neither benign nor malignant - just pre-cancer. (That confused me, but she couldn't explain any further because she didn't know either. Does anyone know what the difference is between a regular mole, a pre-cancerous mole, and a benign mole? *confused*) She has tons of skin cancer in her family line, so she was actually surprised that it wasn't cancer. Well anyway. She is very, very, VERY allopathic-minded and would never ever consider other treatments. So on this one I feel like I can't open my mouth or she will look at me like I'm nuts. (I don't think books would work well, either.) This is just the start, my friends. Her daughter, mark my words, will have serious problems before long. It is already serious - for example, she's suffered the same sinus infection for 4-5 weeks. Does that seem unusual to anyone else? Because I've never had one last for longer than a day, seriously. (I'm not trying to brag on my own health or anything, because it isn't that great -- I'm only using myself as a comparisn. If I consider myself to be only halfway well and I can kick a sinus infection in a day, then how sick is she? Know what I mean?) Her doctor, bless his heart, refused to prescribe an antibiotic until she'd been sick for 10 days. So finally after 10 days, she received an antibiotic, but it didn't take. She's on her 2nd antibiotic - Zy-something - and it seems to be working okay for her, but my heart is torn 'cause I know it'll only make things worse in the long run. She is only 12 years old but takes about a billion pills every day (for things like asthma and can't remember what else). Zero vitamins. Blah blah blah. We all know people like this. Some of us have been there ourselves and we don't always feel like we have room to judge or speak.....right? > “Upon investigating the diet of these people, we found that the seed of the apricot was prized as a delicacy and that >every part of the apricot was utilized.” [27] Hmmm....exactly which part of the apricot seed did they eat? If I remember correctly from my little-girl-bug-smashing days, when I cracked open an apricot seed to see what was inside, I saw what looked curiously enough like an almond. I think. So was that it, that " almond " ? Or did they just eat the hard pit shell? Can't imagine why it would be a delicacy...what does it taste like? Mindy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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