My other neighbor was told (he likely has prostate cancer)

Connie Bennett

Well-known member
He likely has prostate cancer. This is the fella who is Bushogging my pasture.

This makes case #3 on my old country road that I know about. The men all in their 60’s 70’s. The other neighbor is still fighting it, my husband lost his battle 2+ years ago.

We are not near a power substation. We have city water, which they all drink or did drink. Personally, I have not drank tap water since the early 1980’s.

This particular neighbor has been talking to his friends who have been using Ivermectin for their prostate cancers and it seems to arrest it. I don’t know what to think about this theory, but then, I don’t know what to think about what seems to be a huge upswing in various types of cancer. For all the money we spend on research what is up with this?

Opinions welcome🤠🤠
 
I think a big part of it in older people is simply that we are living longer. The older we get, the higher our chances of having some kind of cancer.

Sorry to hear about your neighbor, Connie. Earlier this year a friend of my husband's died of pancreatic cancer. We heard that three people who grew up on the same street as her had all died of pancreatic cancer, so you know there is something going on with that.
 
I was reminded of this quip during Covid:
NO VACCINE FOR AIDS AFTER 40 YEARS OF RESEARCH

NO VACCINE FOR THE COMMON COLD

NO VACCINE FOR CANCER AFTER 100 YEARS OF RESEARCH & BILLIONS OF DOLLARS SPENT TO FIND A CURE

A VIRUS MYSTERIOUSLY APPEARS AND WITHIN A YEAR, A VACCINE IS
CREATED AND WE'RE ALL EXPECTED TO TAKE IT.
 
He likely has prostate cancer. This is the fella who is Bushogging my pasture.

This makes case #3 on my old country road that I know about. The men all in their 60’s 70’s. The other neighbor is still fighting it, my husband lost his battle 2+ years ago.

We are not near a power substation. We have city water, which they all drink or did drink. Personally, I have not drank tap water since the early 1980’s.

This particular neighbor has been talking to his friends who have been using Ivermectin for their prostate cancers and it seems to arrest it. I don’t know what to think about this theory, but then, I don’t know what to think about what seems to be a huge upswing in various types of cancer. For all the money we spend on research what is up with this?

Opinions welcome🤠🤠
I was told that if they live long enough, all men get prostate cancer. Most don't die of it they die with it. Metastises is the killer.
 
It appears there are two forms of prostate cancer and almost all men will get one of the forms if they live long enough. One form metastasizes and the other doesn't. Screening detects both but apparently cannot differentiate between the two. The metastatic form kills you almost no matter what you do, and the non-metastatic doesn't and exhibits a bit like BPH but with very elevated PSA levels. Both are treated since they cannot tell the difference. At least that is what I was told by two different doctors, one of whom succumbed to the disease as he approached 70 years of age.
 
My understanding was that, if untreated, prostate cancer can metastasize, spreading beyond the prostate, and, when that occurs, there is usually no coming back from it.
 
My understanding was that, if untreated, prostate cancer can metastasize, spreading beyond the prostate, and, when that occurs, there is usually no coming back from it.
To join the choir - my father was mainly a grain/vegetable eater, over the top sports from sailing to cross country skiing to following the Tour de France route on racers. Prostate was treated. He fell off his bike at the house, could not get up, three brain surgeries in one week.
 
As most in this forum know, I was diagnosed with prostate cancer in March of last year. My PSA at the time was 28. I had an MRI, Biopsy, 28 sessions of radiation and now I'm on (every 3 months) Lupron Hormone Injection. The last time my PSA lab was done, this past May 2026, it was 0.01. Where I was getting the Injection done, they done two labs on me for DNA (medical-grade generic testing) for the future and both labs came back negative. Wife and I were extremely happy that my PSA lab came down that much and that both DNA labs came out negative.

I'm able to do many of the things I did before, but by 2PM, I'm pretty bushed and have to rest. Other than that, and having some chronic diarrhea, caused by the Lupron Injection, I'm doing fine. Imodium AD, what the Oncologist doctor told me to take, is definitely helping. Also, thru his recommendation, I'm taking a higher amount of B-12 in the AM and also Folic Acid for blood cells.

For those of you that don't know, I have a 1/2 brother (same father, different mother) that wound up with prostate cancer also, but his got into him limp nodes. He's been thru the radiation sessions and is also getting the Hormone Injection, as well as taking a chemo medication. He's doing fine as well.
 
It appears there are two forms of prostate cancer and almost all men will get one of the forms if they live long enough. One form metastasizes and the other doesn't. Screening detects both but apparently cannot differentiate between the two. The metastatic form kills you almost no matter what you do, and the non-metastatic doesn't and exhibits a bit like BPH but with very elevated PSA levels. Both are treated since they cannot tell the difference. At least that is what I was told by two different doctors, one of whom succumbed to the disease as he approached 70 years of age.
Both doctors are correct. Additionally, there are many other naturally-occuring factors that cause elevated PSA levels.
I researched this extensively after one of my dad's doctors was very concerned about his elevated PSA and prostate cancer but said no treatment was necessary. I thought his doctor was "blowing him off." After reading up on it, I learned that treating a benign prostate cancer was harmful & had no benefit, so a doctor who relies on PSA only is taking his patient down a very bad road to dangerous & unnecessary treatment and stress.

A few months later, my dad insisted on another doctor's opinion since he needed reassurance. I took him to the same facility (Kaiser) & another doctor said to "Make immediate plans for Hospice care." That really upset my dad & angered me. I walked up to the doctor an inch from his face & said, "Get out you moron!" Another doctor came in the room & I told him what happened. He said, "I don't know why he would say that when all your tests, including bone scan show your cancer is benign." My dad died 15 years later of a fall.

Some of you may find this hard to believe: I did more research & found something interesting: There is a category of individuals who take great pleasure in seeing other people suffer. Many of them are attracted to professions like MD's, EMT's, Firemen, Police Officers etc. where they will see plenty of it. And such individuals also may create more suffering if they don't see enough to satisfy them. They also delight in giving bad news for mental suffering (like my dad's second doctor). I met a dentist like that once during a root canal. He told me to lift my hand if there is pain. When I lifted my hand, he ignored me & dug deeper. After the third time, I jumped out of the chair & said, "Have another dentist complete my root canal." He sad, "Why?" I said "Because you won't survive it." He got the message. When the other dentist came in, he asked me, "What happened - my partner looked scared & went home." I told him what happened & he said, "Well, you're not the first complaint about him; looks like I need a new partner."
 
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