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Terminal Illness |
Terminal Illness |
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TEN WAYS TO BEAT THE
REAPER "It ain't over till its over." (Yogi Berra) All terminal patients
need to be reminded that while there is life, there is more than hope
alone. Namely: 1. A condition may
be serious, and generally considered fatal by expert medical opinion. Well,
expert opinion has been wrong before this. Dewey did not defeat Truman. 2. You risk nothing
when you acknowledge desperation. Health practitioners often hide from
patients when they think nothing more can be done. Too bad, because
desperate patients work harder. Harness that will to live and go for
it. 3. Read Ageless
Body, Timeless Mind by Deepak Chopra (Harmony Books, New York, 1993) for
encouragement. 4. Death is to be
denied, fought and beaten for as long as possible. There is too much
talk about "preparing for death," "putting affairs in
order" and "accepting death as a fact of life." You can
if you want, but I will never negotiate with death. Death is described
as the "last enemy" in the Bible. We're all going to go, but
we certainly don't have to go quietly. Life may be fatal to everyone,
but it doesn't have to be today and it doesn't have to be you. Don't
wait until you hear the rattle of death; duck and run for it now. Is
this an attitude of "denying" death? Not really. In 5. Medical doctors
generally fight disease with one hand tied behind their backs. This is
because they arrogantly assume that if they don't know it, it isn't knowable
or worth knowing. Baloney. Aggressive use of vitamins and radical diet
revision DO have their place in the science of therapeutics. Besides, if
someone is going to die anyway, what have they got to lose? 6. Body saturation
of Vitamin C is indicated by diarrhea. Saturation of carotene is
indicated by orange skin. Saturation of niacin is indicated by
flushing. In order, these are the benchmarks of maximum use of the most
powerful antibiotic-antiviral, cancer/heart disease preventer, and
mind-calmer in nature. If you are really sick, and still haven't tried
these, then you haven't lived yet. If you are breathing, you haven't died
yet. 7. Practitioners,
here are four steps to harnessing the life force even in grave cases. A. LISTEN to
the patient; they will tell you more than technology ever can. Patients
will tell you why they are sick, and it is as likely to be from misery as
from microbes. Don't forget stress reduction training, counseling,
clergy, hugs. B. KNOW about
nutrition and vitamin therapies and ALL possible options. Never say never,
and do your homework. Were he a physician, Will Rogers might have said
"All I know is what I read in the journals." Get your nose out of JAMA
and read other journals, such as American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
and Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine. Doctor, if you are too
busy to seriously investigate alternatives, then you are too busy. Send
me a self-addressed, stamped envelope and I'll send you a free one-page list
of the very best health reading you'll ever do. C. Access your
patient and COMMUNICATE knowledge, one adult to another. Provide your
references and give homework. As you did yours, the patient should do
theirs. It only takes half a minute to provide a patient with an
alternative medicine reading list and the suggestion, "Take vitamins,
become a vegetarian, get and use a juicer, and load up on Vitamin C."
I'm NOT saying that this is a sure cure but rather that it is a very potent
and very low risk additional measure. D. MOTIVATE and
stimulate the patient to want to try all possible healing approaches. We do
not trivialize medicine nor do we guarantee miracles when we urge
alternatives. Doctors and patients alike must do everything possible to
get well. Every physician is duty bound to offer ALL options "for the
good of the patient, to the best of my ability." Your ability
includes offering encouragement. Build a fire and fan it. 8. For a terminal
patient, any improvement at all is cause for celebration. Slowing the
rate of decline is improvement. Stabilization is better. Some
recovery is better still. Cure is, of course, the best. Improved
length of life is a major goal, but improved quality of life is the most
important of all. 9. The only thing
good about yesterday's obituary column is that you weren't in it, and the
proof is that you are reading this today. The people that didn't make it have
no bearing on you. Will 10. I have worked
with the dying, and have come into intensive care units to find beds empty
that yesterday contained a friend. Sometimes it was because he'd died during
the night. Sometimes it was because she went home well. No one, but
no one, knows how long they have to live, whether sick or not. Copyright C
2004 and prior years Andrew W. Saul. Andrew Saul is the author of the books FIRE
YOUR DOCTOR! How to be Independently Healthy (reader reviews at
http://www.doctoryourself.com/review.html
) and DOCTOR YOURSELF: Natural Healing that Works. (reviewed at http://www.doctoryourself.com/saulbooks.html
) For ordering information, Click Here .
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AN IMPORTANT NOTE: This page is not in any way offered as prescription, diagnosis nor treatment for any disease, illness, infirmity or physical condition. Any form of self-treatment or alternative health program necessarily must involve an individual's acceptance of some risk, and no one should assume otherwise. Persons needing medical care should obtain it from a physician. Consult your doctor before making any health decision. Neither the author nor the webmaster has authorized the use of their names or the use of any material contained within in connection with the sale, promotion or advertising of any product or apparatus. Single-copy reproduction for individual, non-commercial use is permitted providing no alterations of content are made, and credit is given. |
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