Neways Maximol And Breast Cancer

by Sian on November 3, 2009

the deceptive beauty of breast cancer
Image by crafty_dame via Flickr

This is the short story of how I discovered Neways and Maximol and how what should have been a horrid experience, turned out strangely ok…

When the consultant confirmed that piddly little lumpoid in my boob was breast cancer, I had to resist the temptation to hurtle back home and start searching out every snippet of information on the internet.

I’d done this when my Mum was diagnosed with liver cancer and spent days, yes whole days, being sucked into the vortex of information, snatching at hopeful straws one minute and then swept into despair by gloomy tales and posts on forums.  It’s like climbing into a cancer cave where your eyes never manage to acclimatise to the dark.

I was adamant it wasn’t going to happen again and so I restricted my internet search to finding the one single book which had been recommended by someone at the breast care clinic.  It took me a while to find the exact book because there were a few with similar titles, and I had trouble finding a review, but eventually I sorted out The Rainbow Diet by Chris Woollams.   It turned out to have excellent explanations of prevention and cure and which foods you should avoid and which you should eat.  What I really liked was that this it wasn’t restrictive or fussy diet, which meant I didn’t worry too much about being faddy which not only did I really not feel like, but I wanted to relax and have a treat and remember that life was all about living.  After all – I’d spent 4 years chewing on organic Alfalfa and look where that got me.

The Rainbow Diet talks about Candida, and links to cancer, which was rather interesting because I’d suspected I had Candida for some while.  I don’t mean just the sort of Candida which we all refer to as thrush when we get itchiness down below, but something more deep rooted and living in my gut.  One of the reasons for this was my cravings for sugar and the effect that just a small sip of wine could have on me.  I guess the effects just weren’t bad enough for me to bother with the 8 week ‘candida diet’.  No bread. Say no more.

The Rainbow Diet book recommended a product called Parafree by Neways.  A sort of purge and I reckon anything which causes such a fantastic sounding word to become reality has got to be worth doing – especially when there’s not much to look at on telly and you can follow a few flukes round the WC pan. As it happens, I went on a Presentation Skills course in June when one of my fellow students, Sara, had done her practice presentations about Neways products, and I have to say she looked amazingly healthy.  I was going to say for her age but in fact she looked healthy for any age. It made sense to give her a call and find out a bit more.

I’ve not started on the Parafree yet, which is a shame, because I’m rather keen to see what else emerges, parasite wise, apart from the Candida!  I’m not sure what I’m more exited about – that I don’t have to give up bread and every sweet thing that ever grew or was made, or that I might have worms as well.  What fun!

The reason I’ve not started it yet is because it was suggested I hold off for a while to give my immune system a chance to get a bit stronger.  So right now I’m sorting out my immune and digestive system with the Pro-biotic, (which is also recommended as the Neways brand in the book), the Maximol and the Omega 3.  The parafree starts in a couple of months.

It’s not cheap stuff, but I’ve signed for free up as a distributor which means I can get it all at wholesale price. And anyone can do this. I’ve been taking it now for about 2 weeks and I’m writing this post at gone midnight – so guess my energy levels are improving.  Phew! ‘Cos I’ve been knackered for ages.

If you want some more information about how you can become a distributor then just email me at stormchasers.ltd@googlemail.com  and please make sure you put Neways into the subject line so I can pick it out from all the crappy stuff.

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Sian does loads of things, too many to be brilliant at any of them. She co-founded Stormchasers Ltd with her husband Mark, runs a internet marketing training group for small businesses, is a writer, blogger, Master NLP Practitioner and business coach. Sian & Mark contribute jointly to the Ex-armed Forces Club and their blog, Leaving The Armed Forces, the programme to support anyone leaving the armed forces (surprisingly enough). Oh, and they help small businesses with a boring old website sitting around like a lump of toffee stuck down the back of the sofa, to get a dynamic and fluffy blog.
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Dave@Candida Can Cause Cancer July 2, 2010 at 11:13 am

I’ve seen reports that candida can be a big factor in cancer. There is research out there on this, but it is not acknowledged by the scientific ‘authorities’. There is evidence that microbes are pleomorphic, which means that they have a life cycle that may include spore forms, bacillus, cocci, virus, fungi, etc. Look up a man named Antoine Bechamp and his debate with Pasteur.
Dave@Candida Can Cause Cancer´s last blog ..Symptoms of Pancreatic Cancer My ComLuv Profile

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