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Today’s subject: Cancer—Cure or Treatment?

Let’s say you’ve just received that awful diagnosis and you're preparing to begin treatment. The doctors are going to take aggressive action—chemo, radiation, surgery, or some combination. But did you know there are ways to prep your body to increase the odds of success?

Let’s start with chemotherapy. It’s essentially poison—engineered to kill fast-growing cells. The problem is, your healthy cells can absorb it too, leading to all those awful side effects. But here's what research has shown: if you fast for two days before your chemotherapy session, your healthy cells enter a kind of dormant state. They slow down. You’ll feel it—you’ll be lethargic—but your normal cells aren’t as active and won’t absorb as much of the chemo.

Your cancer, however, doesn’t have that luxury. It can't shut down. It remains hyperactive, gobbling up the chemo. That means more poison reaches your target—and the treatment becomes significantly more effective.

But we can go further.

Cancer is clever. It hides from your immune system by coating itself in mucus. Yes—mucus. But there's something called Mucidex—an over-the-counter medication that thins mucus. If you take it before treatment, you may be able to strip away that protective layer, leaving your cancer cells more exposed and vulnerable to both chemo and your immune defenses.

Now here’s where we get into the deeper, more experimental side.

If you want to stimulate your immune system into attacking the cancer without chemo, there’s another route. Fast for two days. Take Mucidex. Then go get your routine travel vaccines—as if preparing for a world tour. Why? Because those shots stimulate your immune system. They wake it up. Now your body is on high alert, scanning for threats. And without the mucus shield, it might finally see the cancer—and attack.

This idea has roots in history.

At the turn of the 20th century, a doctor noticed that while most cancer patients back then died, a few spontaneously recovered. After surveying them, he discovered a pattern: these people all developed high fevers. So he began intentionally inducing fevers by injecting bacteria into tumors. The result? In many cases, the cancer shrank—or vanished.

He was curing cancer.

Then he died. His work was buried, forgotten. Until his granddaughter, years later, became a doctor herself. She found his old research, published it, and revived interest in fever therapy.

Now, I’m not suggesting you inject yourself with dangerous bacteria. But if you have a cooperative doctor, there may be a modern equivalent—injecting vaccines like whooping cough, cold, or smallpox vaccines directly into tumors to stimulate an immune response.

This isn’t a guaranteed cure. The early doctor had to treat many patients several times before success. Some didn’t respond at all. But others did—and walked away cancer-free.

And even if it doesn’t work, you haven’t lost hope. You can still go through traditional treatment, this time with an advantage.

All I’m saying is—fight.

Fight the dying of the light. Don’t surrender to the long night. Explore every option. Consider every angle. Even unconventional ones.

I’m not a medical doctor. This is not medical advice. But it might be a spark. A spark that leads someone to something that works.

This has been the Mad Scientist Supreme. Signing off.


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