
It upsets me greatly to hear doctors warn patients away from alternative treatments saying that those only offer “false hope”. First, the definition of hope is “the feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out for the best.” Therefore, if you have hope, you do have it and therefore it cannot logically be false. Perhaps that doctor doesn’t have hope but that doesn’t mean the patient can’t. This factor is important because a person’s outlook and emotions have a very powerful effect on the healing process. People of faith point to the power of prayer as the likely reason for many mysterious “spontaneous remissions”. Also, there almost certainly useful remedies that the doctor has just not learned about. Therefore, saying “false hope” is not only a stupid thing to say, but it is also arrogant. Bernard Baruch said, “There are no such things as incurable, there are only things for which man has not found a cure.” Below are a couple of recent examples to prove my point.
- Let’s say that a person has a bad knee. The doctor might say, “this is a bone-on-bone joint and there is no hope for it getting better. Let’s just cut it out and give you a knee made of metal that will last a few years before it needs to be replaced.” The doctor could reasonably be negative about dietary supplements restoring such a knee, but he or she has apparently not seen the dramatic before and after x-rays due to the use of stem cell therapy. Another all too common problem is diminished kidney function. The patient is told that there is no hope for those kidneys and the person must be on dialysis until they can find someone to donate another one. Oops, stem cells have often restored normal kidney function. Autoimmune disease is another condition where the only hope given is to calm the symptoms with drugs and manage the decline. However, stem cell therapy can help the immune system get back on track, so it no longer attacks healthy tissue. Because stem cells naturally go to and help with inflammation, degeneration, and immune dysregulation (underactive or overactive), you can imagine all the ways it offers hope. If you know someone with a problem like these, please give them the gift of hope by telling them to get a complimentary consultation from a health professional at Infinity Matrix (800) 507-6509.
- The scariest time to hear the words “false hope” is with a cancer diagnosis. Depressing news for sure and we must remember that depression lowers immune function. Our immune system is the key. Cancer treatments per se (surgery, chemo and radiation) do not cure cancer. The idea is that they remove enough cancer cells to give the patient’s immune system a fighting chance to solve the problem. There are hundreds of natural ways to fight cancer (check our Library), but they might work too slowly or indirectly to count on them at this late and alarming time. Recently, drug companies have developed immune drug therapies. They sometimes help but just with certain cancers and at enormous expense and can have worrisome side effects. Gosh, if only there was a way to wake up the immune system without it going overboard and damaging healthy tissue. Oh wait, there is. During the Dec 4th 2021 interview, health investigative journalist, Bill Sardi, having analyzed the science and talking to experts around the world, he was able to answer two critical questions (1) Vitamin D is extremely beneficial to immune function, but why does it not always perform as expected in studies? This article tells how. (2) How can we effectively activate macrophages (those powerful Pacman-like immune cells) without having them cause damage from excess inflammation? Macrophage Activating Factor (MAF) can do that and is the subject of Several clinical trials underway. If you haven’t already, please listen to his interview and read the details starting at about 1/3 of the way into this remarkable document. MAF from Japan is now available in the US by calling 702 682-9945. (It is expensive, so probably just practical for someone with a serious immune challenge rather than for prevention.)
This Christmas (and always), give the gift of hope if you have the opportunity.
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December 10, 2021