Medical Medium - celery juice and high to... - Cure Parkinson's

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Medical Medium - celery juice and high toxic metal juice

28028pdralph profile image
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is anyone following Anthony Williams - medical medium protocol, if so for how long and what success have you had? Are you taking any if the supplements recommend? Thank you in advance 🙂

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28028pdralph
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park_bear profile image
park_bear

facebook.com/TheMedicalMedi...

"The 'Medical Medium' is a Fraud"

"How many of you got really sick from CJ? I'm in the point where I can't eat, can't swallow, only liquids. Severe reflux, dysphagia, maybe esofaguitis and faringitis, just went to the gastroetorologist and tomorrow to the otorhinolaryngologist. Feel very sick, sometimes dizzy, high anxiety, something stuck in my throat something like globus sensation. 4 days now without eating solids and take a lot of time to drink and just like 500 cals or less every day. Have gone to the hospital this year 3 times."

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news.yahoo.com/goop-apos-fa...

"How Goop's Favorite "Medical Medium" Uses Spirituality to "Scam" the Sick"

"In the spring of 2013, Kate Gallagher Leong called Anthony William. She was desperate for help. Forty-eight days later, her son, Gavin, was dead...

But when William spoke to Leong for an hour-long, $300 phone consultation, William didn’t heal her son at all. He didn’t diagnose Gavin as he claimed he could, which is what Leong was expecting, and instead told Leong she had passed on the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) to her son in utero. Reading off a list she wrote based on their phone call in 2013, Leong tells Inverse William suggested a benign vitamin regimen, including liquid B12 and Zinc for Gavin, and a kind of charcoal “detoxifier” for Leong, a prescription of sorts for the mother given without explanation.

When Gavin died from a febrile seizure those 48 days after her consultation with William, Leong felt responsible for her son’s death....

William markets himself with a modern, exclusive flair. In addition to allegedly charging $500 for a half-hour telephone reading — several sources confirmed the dollar amount with Inverse, along with customer reviewers on Amazon — he is a “trusted expert” for Goop, where he’s dispensed some seriously dubious advice over the course of several blog posts...

In a recent Goop article about thyroid cancer, William claims that “real, malignant cancer” is a modern phenomenon that started after the Industrial Revolution, and that the extremely common Epstein-Barr virus is the source of almost all cancers.

Though his historical assertion is patently untrue — ancient Egyptians described cancer on papyri dating back thousands of years — William’s medical advice is even more unnervingly false:

“Ninety-eight percent of the time, cancer is caused by a virus and at least one type of toxin,” William writes in that column, not elaborating on what qualifies as a “toxin.” “There are many viruses that can be involved with cancer; the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is one of them…EBV is also responsible for breast cancer, liver cancer, almost all lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, colon cancer, prostate cancer, women’s reproductive cancers, leukemia, and many more...

Dr. Jennifer Gunter, a San Francisco-based OB/GYN who’s criticized Goop in the past, tells Inverse that promoting William on the site is unethical for multiple reasons.

“Apart from the wasted money on a book, I think that his advice could lead people to believe that they don’t need to think about genetics for their thyroid cancer,” Gunter says. “This just makes doctors’ jobs harder.”...

Promoting the Medical Medium is no different than promoting anti-vaccine views or cleanses or coffee enemas. The minimum is that people waste money, but there is great potential for harm with many of the therapies that are recommended and delays in diagnosis. Every day someone tweets to me or messages me on Facebook about a friend of family member who delayed real therapy that could help them to give snake oil a go. How anyone can publish that drivel and think, “I have done a good thing today” is beyond me" [Emphases added]

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Anthony William has elevated ignorance to an art form. In my opinion, using spiritual methods to diagnose or treat medical conditions is very hard, even for those with skills. As far as I'm concerned, this joker gives all such efforts a bad name. Never delay diagnosis or safe and effective medical treatment in favor of reliance upon spiritual methods.

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson in reply to park_bear

That about says it all.

When I read the title of the thread, I thought I would chime in with, "He's a screwball. Pay no attention." but you have made that ever so unnecessary.

PS I can't resist adding my favorite video of all time.

youtu.be/7WSUoYvLHaQ?si=_P0...

The best part is at 5:00 min.

jeeves19 profile image
jeeves19 in reply to MBAnderson

Marc. I’m a bit bemused?! I imagined he would be caught out and made to look like a fraud, but he appears to get away with his game throughout. What’s so special about this?

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson in reply to jeeves19

What explains his success? Vulnerable people - desperate for relief, (which I have been. Not so much anymore.)

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson in reply to jeeves19

Adam,

How are you feeling about your DBS?

Marc

Godiv profile image
Godiv in reply to park_bear

And as pointed out, he’s on GOOP. Repeat that: he’s on goop, a site not exactly known for its sound medical advice. But if you want wacky… .

gomelgo profile image
gomelgo

I tried the heavy metal smoothie routine for a few months. I read his book. There are some principles I can totally understand and accept. I don't know if it did me any good but my symptoms did progress faster with each COVID I caught and I do believe wholeheartedly that viruses can cause serious harm even leading to cancer. However, I don't think he is truly what he is selling. It an age old battle between the "science" and belief. Which saddens me because they are both correct, necessary and useful. But sadly humans tend to like and fall prey to either or ways of perceiving. So we tend to throw babies out with their bath water. I took what made sense and left the rest. No one was harmed by any of the ingredients in the heavy metal smoothie (or his other concoctions).

Gisel profile image
Gisel in reply to gomelgo

I like your comment. I was diagnosed with PD in 2018 with 66 years. Because there is no medical cure I started to follow Anthony Williams strictly for 2 years in order to find out if it works at least for me. My idea: I cannot loose, I can only win. But after 2 years I stopped everything but the celery juice in the morning - helps digestion - and the heavy metal smoothie because I like the taste. I started to eat gluten free, but not strictly. I talked to a german architect who managed to become free from PD by changing nearly everything in his life including nutrition. It took him 4 years. He wrote some books about his experiences. Following that I started to have my teeth completely reconstructed, removing Palladium and one tooth that had a rooth canal treatment. Then I had the impression that my PD got better. But after 2 surgeries in 2023 (hip replacement and removing of a Schwannom) I got worse and I had to take 500 mg L-Dopa/benserazid instead of 300 mg plus Pramipexol 1.57 mg (agonist). Some days ago I listened to - in my opinion - excellent presentations of a neurologist (Dr. Matthew Phillips from Newzealand) about nutrition in PD (intermittent fasting and ketodiet). Here are the links

youtube.com/watch?v=5MM62kX...

youtube.com/watch?v=iBNNIID....

Now I started with intermittent fasting and in parallel with fast walking according to the advice of someone on this website and because there is a substantial amount of scientific studies in pubmed showing the benefit of intensive exercise to reduce symptoms in PD. Walk and fast.....and every second day I am sweating in a sauna-device, because I like it. I am curious if my brain cells will regenerate (BDNF). Sorry my english is not very elegant. Is someone behaving like me - trial and error?

Fricnfrac1999 profile image
Fricnfrac1999 in reply to Gisel

My husband has tried as much as he can so far. High dose thiamine, the Wahls diet, PRP therapy, a detox program with about 8 detox supplements that are designed as push/pull for 10 weeks, sauna tent... Nothing seems to be working yet. He started the thiamine, diet, and sauna in January and on the 6th week of the detox supplements. Maybe these things just take time I hope. The PRP therapy did not work, that was years ago.

28028pdralph profile image
28028pdralph in reply to Gisel

What is the name of the German architect please? Thank you

Gisel profile image
Gisel in reply to 28028pdralph

Manfred J. Poggel

heilnetz.de/anbieterinnen/m...

gomelgo profile image
gomelgo

what is prp therapy?

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