Did You Know...

The PH Factor and Cancer Prevention

 

It is important to maintain a good pH balance or environment as a means of fighting off cancer. The pH scale is from 0 to 14.  Below 7 on the scale and your system is acidic and above 7 on the scale indicates alkaline. Our bodies are designed to be slightly alkaline at a pH of 7.4 and at that level cancer cells become inactive. When our bodies have a pH level of 8.5 cancer cells die while healthy cells are not affected.

What we eat can create a healthy, alkaline, environment or an unhealthy, acidic environment. For examples, most fruits, vegetables and berries create a mild alkaline environment; dairy is okay but cheese is a cancer stimulant. (And dairy, cow’s milk, has its own problems for humans, especially babies.)

A strongly alkaline environment is created when we eat green leafy vegetables like broccoli, spinach and kale or take supplements like Calcium, Magnesium and Potassium. Cesium stands by itself in that it is extremely alkaline and it, along with Potassium, is an alternative cancer treatment.

We create a mild acidic environment when we eat grains, legumes, nuts and seeds but a strongly acidic environment when we eat the Standard American Diet (SAD) that consists of all meats, poultry and fish, as wells as eggs and soft drinks.

So foods are acid or alkaline forming, meaning what the pH factor is after we digest that particular food.  We need to consider also that some foods have a different pH factor when cooked versus eaten raw.

There are various ways to restore or create the proper alkaline balance in our bodies: We can eat mostly alkaline foods. Ideally, 80% of our diet should consist of alkaline foods and, for the other 20%, we should avoid the strongly acidic foods like meat!

We can supplement our diets with alkaline minerals. The salts of the alkaline minerals cesium, rubidium and potassium icon may be effective in fighting cancer.

We can also supplement our diets with freshly made vegetable juices, and fruit juices—except for me since I have diabetes and can’t handle the sugar in fruit juices. I try to drink six to eight 8 oz glasses a day as part of my cancer treatment. I couldn’t possible eat enough vegetables to equal the amount of nutrition I get from several glasses of juice.

 

Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

Syndicate


Home
I have been Beating Cancer! PDF Print E-mail


It will be 4 years in May (2010) since I was diagnosed with multiple myeloma (bone cancer) and I continue to have no symptoms except for the actual presence of the cancer cells. Every lab test I have taken since I have been diagnosed has shown a decrease in the number of cancer cells!

I have had several bone surveys so far (last one March 2010) and all show no bone damage or "holes," to the amazement of my oncologist. Yes, I am seeing an oncologist and have since I was first diagnosed but I have not accepted any of the "normal" cancer treatment. At first, when I would not accept treatment, the oncologist was angry, in fact very angry! But my point in going to him was for him to continue to monitor my cancer. Was the natural way I was choosing really working or not? The lab tests and the bone surveys were two ways to test this.


On this site I want so share those things I am doing that you might consider for yourself if you also are facing with dealing with multiple myelome. I am not a doctor but I have done a lot of reading and research. I have not gone this direction lightly and I have always been prepared to follow my oncologist advice if my way wasn't working. The last test I had to check on my "M-Spike" showed a drop from 3.4 to 3.2; this happening over a six month period (of heavy stress). My oncologist continues to be amazed at my progress--or maybe better said, at my lack of progress towards the normal progression that comes with bone cancer.

I am "attacking" my cancer from three different directions: diet, juicing and a special drink that I have most days--and, exercise.




 

 
Next >
Advertisement

Who's Online

We have 7 guests online

Photos

pict01.jpg
© 2010 Keys to Living
My story and the way I am dealing with my multiple myeloma on this site is for informational purposes only and it is not meant to substitute for the advice provided by your physician or other medical professional. Even though I have chosen this path to combat my cancer, I continue to see my oncologist and primary health physician on a quarterly basis and regularly have lab work to check on my progress--or lack of progress.