Yes. Still, turbo-cancer is now all the rage among this crowd. Serial cancer might be a better description. Doctors playing whack-a-cancer -- they pop up in different places, seemingly unrelated. Metastasis I know about, and I am a cancer survivor myself. This is something different that I haven't seen before. And so many people at once.
Yes. Still, turbo-cancer is now all the rage among this crowd. Serial cancer might be a better description. Doctors playing whack-a-cancer -- they pop up in different places, seemingly unrelated. Metastasis I know about, and I am a cancer survivor myself. This is something different that I haven't seen before. And so many people at once.
In my practice I've had more patients diagnosed with cancer in the first quarter of this year, than were diagnosed in the past 3 years. And more unexplained blood clots as well.
You are not alone in commenting about this, and I appreciate that you do. I haven't gone near the clinic I use in over two years -- they call from time to time to confirm that I'm still here -- and I don't know what they are seeing. I work with a doctor in another state, remotely, that specializes in preventive medicine, and I pay cash.
I don't have close relationships with very many people, especially now, and being in California. Instead, I see what is happening through small group prayer requests at my church, and through five weekly prayer list emails that I receive, from four different local churches.
It all tells the same story. Some of those affected are people I know or know of. Among them there have been few deaths -- recently one elderly member of my choir (cancer), and a son whose mom I know (he "died suddenly") -- but much suffering.
Yes. Still, turbo-cancer is now all the rage among this crowd. Serial cancer might be a better description. Doctors playing whack-a-cancer -- they pop up in different places, seemingly unrelated. Metastasis I know about, and I am a cancer survivor myself. This is something different that I haven't seen before. And so many people at once.
In my practice I've had more patients diagnosed with cancer in the first quarter of this year, than were diagnosed in the past 3 years. And more unexplained blood clots as well.
You are not alone in commenting about this, and I appreciate that you do. I haven't gone near the clinic I use in over two years -- they call from time to time to confirm that I'm still here -- and I don't know what they are seeing. I work with a doctor in another state, remotely, that specializes in preventive medicine, and I pay cash.
I don't have close relationships with very many people, especially now, and being in California. Instead, I see what is happening through small group prayer requests at my church, and through five weekly prayer list emails that I receive, from four different local churches.
It all tells the same story. Some of those affected are people I know or know of. Among them there have been few deaths -- recently one elderly member of my choir (cancer), and a son whose mom I know (he "died suddenly") -- but much suffering.