Breast Cancer Testimonial by Marion Brunton & Paul Beatty via emails.
Hi Paul,
You can share my results with anyone you like. I'll talk to you when I get back.
Marion Brunton
From: Marion
To: Paul Beatty
Sent: Tue, December 28, 2010 12:32:01 PM
Subject: ultrasound results
Hi Paul,
I just wanted to let you know about my test results. I had an ultrasound done of my left breast in Sept. and it said, "There is no change when today's study is compared with the previous examination." Previously my tumor had been measured at 6.8 cm. This test said it measured 5.3 cm. I asked my family doctor if that didn't mean there was a change. He just said there could be that much variation in the results. I had another ultrasound done before Christmas. I spoke to the nurse over the phone about the results. She said it again indicated no change, so I asked her if it gave a measurement. She said it was 4 cm.
They might not be impressed, but I sure am. I was pretty sure of it before I went because I can feel the difference in size myself. It is down 2.8 cm. For many people that would be more than the size of their whole tumor. If ultrasounds were that inaccurate, what would even be the point of having them? It appears they won't believe there is any change until there is nothing left to measure, but I am confident I will get to that point.
The oncologist had told me he had hoped with about 4 months worth of chemo that the tumor could be reduced to about 4 cm at which point we could go ahead and do a mastectomy. It may be 4cm now, but I have no intention of having any surgery. I will get rid of this completely naturally, and keep both my nice beautiful breasts intact. Thank you for helping to save me from all the pain and suffering I might have undergone.
I am taking my boys on a 6 week trip to Europe in a few weeks. I had planned on doing it last year, but I wasn't confident this was going to work, so I let my plans get derailed.
When I get back I plan on writing a book about my experiences. I would like to interview you to discuss the work of Dr. Horrobin, how you found out about him, other people you have helped and the different types of diseases they have had. I would like to refer some to Brian Peskin's book The Hidden Story of Cancer. Hopefully I can create a book that is easier to read than his. I am meeting with the nurse next week to get copies of my medical records dealing with cancer and I plan on publishing them in this book just to document that it can be done.
Thanks for all your help.
Have a happy new year
Marion Brunton
On 29-Dec-10, at 10:58 AM, Paul Beatty wrote:
Hi Marion: Congratulations on your tremendous progress and thank you for keeping me informed. Could I have your permission to share your findings with Susan Nicholas and Brian Peskin... please advise.
Your remarks bring up major flaws in our current system. First, the doctors are not trained in sharing real hope--rather they seem obsessed with caution and pessimism. I believe most of this comes from repeated failure and the existing procedures that legally "control" the doctors’ behaviour. In other words-- protect thy legal ass at all costs and don't spread unnecessary hope in case of legal ramifications. SAD! SAD! SAD! I have always found it interesting that our medical system uses a measuring system that is 2 dimensional (ultrasound) to measure a 3 dimensional object (tumour) and that serious life altering decisions are made on this “measurement", and yet when the news is positive as in your situation--the measurement is denounced as inconclusive.
The fact is this ---you know if the lump is smaller--it’s your body and the ultrasound comparison reveals over a 30% reduction on comparative ultrasounds. Just ask yourself-- how is my colour (blood flow), how is my energy (O2 getting thru) and how is my appetite--- answering these questions truthfully is more accurate than many tests. Too bad doctors don't ask these questions of patients.
In closing, Happy New Year and go to Europe and celebrate life with your family. Please advise me so I can share your great results---it is important for everyone to celebrate your tremendous improvement-- this is what keeps us motivated to help others and force change to the system and its many flaws. Stay in touch and please have others contact us for help if they wish. God Bless and I look forward to you helping us help others in the New Year!
Let's help everyone get healthy,
Paul Beatty
Hi Paul,
You can share my results with anyone you like. I'll talk to you when I get back.
Marion Brunton
From: Marion
To: Paul Beatty
Sent: Tue, December 28, 2010 12:32:01 PM
Subject: ultrasound results
Hi Paul,
I just wanted to let you know about my test results. I had an ultrasound done of my left breast in Sept. and it said, "There is no change when today's study is compared with the previous examination." Previously my tumor had been measured at 6.8 cm. This test said it measured 5.3 cm. I asked my family doctor if that didn't mean there was a change. He just said there could be that much variation in the results. I had another ultrasound done before Christmas. I spoke to the nurse over the phone about the results. She said it again indicated no change, so I asked her if it gave a measurement. She said it was 4 cm.
They might not be impressed, but I sure am. I was pretty sure of it before I went because I can feel the difference in size myself. It is down 2.8 cm. For many people that would be more than the size of their whole tumor. If ultrasounds were that inaccurate, what would even be the point of having them? It appears they won't believe there is any change until there is nothing left to measure, but I am confident I will get to that point.
The oncologist had told me he had hoped with about 4 months worth of chemo that the tumor could be reduced to about 4 cm at which point we could go ahead and do a mastectomy. It may be 4cm now, but I have no intention of having any surgery. I will get rid of this completely naturally, and keep both my nice beautiful breasts intact. Thank you for helping to save me from all the pain and suffering I might have undergone.
I am taking my boys on a 6 week trip to Europe in a few weeks. I had planned on doing it last year, but I wasn't confident this was going to work, so I let my plans get derailed.
When I get back I plan on writing a book about my experiences. I would like to interview you to discuss the work of Dr. Horrobin, how you found out about him, other people you have helped and the different types of diseases they have had. I would like to refer some to Brian Peskin's book The Hidden Story of Cancer. Hopefully I can create a book that is easier to read than his. I am meeting with the nurse next week to get copies of my medical records dealing with cancer and I plan on publishing them in this book just to document that it can be done.
Thanks for all your help.
Have a happy new year
Marion Brunton
On 29-Dec-10, at 10:58 AM, Paul Beatty wrote:
Hi Marion: Congratulations on your tremendous progress and thank you for keeping me informed. Could I have your permission to share your findings with Susan Nicholas and Brian Peskin... please advise.
Your remarks bring up major flaws in our current system. First, the doctors are not trained in sharing real hope--rather they seem obsessed with caution and pessimism. I believe most of this comes from repeated failure and the existing procedures that legally "control" the doctors’ behaviour. In other words-- protect thy legal ass at all costs and don't spread unnecessary hope in case of legal ramifications. SAD! SAD! SAD! I have always found it interesting that our medical system uses a measuring system that is 2 dimensional (ultrasound) to measure a 3 dimensional object (tumour) and that serious life altering decisions are made on this “measurement", and yet when the news is positive as in your situation--the measurement is denounced as inconclusive.
The fact is this ---you know if the lump is smaller--it’s your body and the ultrasound comparison reveals over a 30% reduction on comparative ultrasounds. Just ask yourself-- how is my colour (blood flow), how is my energy (O2 getting thru) and how is my appetite--- answering these questions truthfully is more accurate than many tests. Too bad doctors don't ask these questions of patients.
In closing, Happy New Year and go to Europe and celebrate life with your family. Please advise me so I can share your great results---it is important for everyone to celebrate your tremendous improvement-- this is what keeps us motivated to help others and force change to the system and its many flaws. Stay in touch and please have others contact us for help if they wish. God Bless and I look forward to you helping us help others in the New Year!
Let's help everyone get healthy,
Paul Beatty