Cover Image: My Journey, A Victory Over Cancer Through Alternative Methods

My Journey, A Victory Over Cancer Through Alternative Methods

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Member Reviews

I had difficulties making up my mind about this book as it seems to go in all directions at times, which can be very annoying, but this is how Valarie's journey went and we have to respect that.
It is a very honest account of what goes through your mind and life when you are hit by cancer and feel traditional medicine is letting you down.
I do not think that this book is for people who are looking for help to cure cancer but rather for people who are going through the same journey and find support in reading about other people's experience.
People looking for advice will be overwhelmed with "facts" which are not always facts but things she came across as she went on, so it might be a good idea to pick, choose and check "facts" up by yourself.
I think the book would have been better with some better editing and structuring but if you take it as a kind of one way conversation it is OK.
Valarie has her one tone and values, This cannot be changed.
She is not a therapist or medical expert but someone who went through the ups and downs of fighting cancer and telling you about it in her own way. It is up to the reader to decide to agree with her or not, to try things or not. If you look for reliable advice and cures, this is not the book for you, if you look for a testimony and ideas to go beyond standard treatments it is quite interesting but you do have to do your own research and see what works with you and for you.
I like your energy and fighting spirit Valarie. Wish you all the best.

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I began reading this book with much anticipation, having been learning about natural
treatments for cancer with great interest. However, I was somewhat disappointed -
although I know I shouldn't be : it is a true story, with a positive outcome. Maybe it
is the feeling that it could have been improved with editing - a good pruning would
have helped a lot. Maybe I was also expecting a deeper faith experience - after all,
other Christians get cancer, & pray about it, but still die. There has to be a reason
Valarie's story has a different ending - a purpose she has yet to fulfill - & I hope she
will pursue this, rather than returning to life as it was. I am sorry that I did not enjoy
this book, despite having expected to.

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My Journey, A Victory Over Cancer Through Alternative Methods,
A Book That May Save Your Life, Valarie Hendriks

Review from Jeannie Zelos book reviews

Genre: self-help, health, mind and body

Having had cancer myself 22 years ago, stories like this interest me and I've always had an interest on complemetary and alternative medicine.
I think its a very long time though since a book has made me as angry as this one. 

Its a dangerous book IMO, that suggests conventional treatment kills, that  current treatment is basically a stitch up between doctors getting paid by treatment, drug companies wanting to make money, that the medical profession as a whole are ignoring these simple and inexpensive cures. She posits that alternative treatment cures, and the book is full of sweeping statements that have no data or available research to back them up, though plenty of info from the makers of each. No bias there then.
Its presenting these statements, opinions and speculations as fact that angers me, and I feel its very dangerous for those who are desperately hoping for a cure.
I know I searched hard when I was undergoing treatment, to see what I could be doing to help myself, and back then its was all Sharks Cartilage, Apricot Kernels and coffee enemas that were the holy grail of alternative remedies. ( Coffee enemas feature here too...) 

There were times when we agree, she promotes healthy eating and looking after your body and I feel that's very true, we need to ensure our bodies can cope with what we want, give them the tools to fight off abnormalities. Its a common sense approach that a physically strong body should respond better to whatever treatment, whatever illness were dealing with.
She's a strong promoter of God and Prayer, for me its Positive thinking - I'm not a non believer, but I'm not sure if its god that's who I believe in, but it helps to think there's someone, something greater than us who can push our health in the right direction. 
I did find the religious pushing, the constant cheeriness, exhortations to Smile, group hugs, the use of Lots Of Capitals and Exclamation Marks were trying after a while!!!!
Its a tone that didn't work for me though, but it's just a personal thing and will be fine for others. 

What made me cross too was her constant pushing of certain manufacturers, her constant stating of her opinions and online finds as facts - ie Citing a case quoted by the inventor of the hot sandwich, how within one week of eating a "hot sandwich" every day - that's basically habanero peppers, garlic and organic butter on organic bread -the tumours in both his (patients) colon and liver had disappeared. (loc 2670)
Kelley Eidem, inventor of this sandwich also has a hub page - "how I cured stage 4 cancer in two weeks for less than the cost of a night at the movies."  
Hmnn now - do I think that's true? Is there details of the person who was cured? Is there any form of backing data, facts, real people coming forward who have been cured by this method? Is there really a huge conspiracy against this and similar treatments by the whole medical profession and drug companies, ensuring we still get ill just to keep them in jobs? They're not perfect, they're human and make mistakes but to take things that far is something I can't feel is right.
Then she goes on about how awful chemo is, ( true - but sadly necessary for lots of us), how more people die from the chemo than the cancer - again no backing data, and a quick sentence sneaked in among the heavy pushed alternative remedies tells us she had treatment of Rituxan - but that's OK because "Rituxan is not chemotherapy. Rituxan is a type of antibody therapy...." 
Well, that's true to an extent, its what the makers say, but its certainly conventional treatment for certain cancers, and not one of the natural vitamin supplement or coffee enemas she's so fond of. Chemotherapy is just that to me, therapy made from chemicals, from research of all kinds, some of which are man made and some found in nature. Rituxan is certainly that, so to suggest her cancer was cured solely by alternative methods is a little stretching things. Rituxan is actually made by fusing part of a mouse body with part of a human antibody, not quite a simple therapy.  There are deadly remeies in nature too, arsenic, cyanide, lead, so many things that are “natural2 can also kill. Its not nature good – man-made bad. Both have points for and against

Maybe the treatment in US is very different to UK, but when I underwent chemo some 22 years back I had a battery of tests, x-rays, CT and MRI scans, blood tests, urine tests both before, during and after to ensure that my body was able to cope with the chemo, that it would help, not hinder recovery. My chemo was tailored to me, not a blunderbuss of “might help” chemicals. She kind of suggests in US they throw that sort of treatment at a patient without all that monitoring, thus the many that she says die from the treatment not the disease, and I find it hard to believe it would vary so much from UK/rest of the world in US. 
I'm just so angry that she derides conventional treatment, makes these sweeping statements about how her research has shown that more people die of chemo effects after they've been cleared of cancer, that having chemo is akin to a death sentence, that with the right combo of vitamins, coffee enemas, using Bentonite clay inside and outside the body, massages, special saunas, fasting on juices for up to 14 days at a time etc you can be cured ( and the power or Prayer, she's a great fan of God's help - and that's good for her but not for everyone.)
When people are diagnosed, especially when the chances of living are minimal, then its natural to look for something we can do ourselves, and this book just takes me back to those sharks cartilage days. I worry that people will only see the alternative remedies as the cure, and not the very real conventional treatment she had.
Spurning data backed, tested and verified results of conventional treatment in favour of those alternatives could mean the difference between life of death. If anyone is going to do that don't just rely on one person's words, check facts, look up some of the science, look for results, for real people that have undergone what your doing. 
I'm not saying blindly accept what is offered conventionally, you should ask questions there too, what, how, why am I having....Its your body, you are the one taking the risk so look very carefully. 

What I can say is don't be disheartened by this book, don't feel its all one way or the other, that if you don't follow this regime, if you go with conventional treatment you are going to die. 
I have been cancer free for 22 years now, after an amputation and two rounds of experimental chemotherapy. By the time my tumour was diagnosed it was very big, very advanced, I was lucky it hadn't spread. My chances of surviving were assessed at just 15%. 
Ididn't have lots of alternative therapies, I did put my trust in the doctors who treated me having asked them and received answers to my questions. I didn't go for healthy eating all the while - I tried as much as I could but didn't always feel like eating anything, never mind swallowing a battalion of supplements. I couldn't have afforded them in all likelihood anyway, nor the special saunas and as for coffee enemas, well, I'd have to be very convinced they work. 

I'm glad that whatever worked for her did, but whether it was the conventional treatment or the alternative that worked who knows?
I'm all in favour of complementary therapy, something many cancer hospitals offer, all in for helping ourselves, of trying to wrest some form of control of our illness, not let it take over our lives, but Cancer is unpredictable - we can do a lot to help ourselves by way of avoiding unhealthy lifestyles, by ensuring we eat and drink sensibly, look after our bodies, and sometimes it regresses for no known reason. It just isn't as simple as she makes out and I worry she's putting out a dangerous message.
 
Stars: One, sorry, I'm sure Valarie put her heart and soul into writing this book, I'm sure she strongly believes what she's written but that doesn't mean alternative is best or that conventional kills.
If you want to go the alternative route talk to your doctors, research for yourself what actual results have been verified, not just someone saying "xyz people have been cured by...." Don't get fooled by smoke and mirrors

ARC supplied for review purposes by Netgalley and Publishers

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