Chemtrail Awareness
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Chemtrail Awareness

The world will not be destroyed by those who do evil, but by those who watch and do nothing - Albert Einstein
 
HomePortalLatest imagesRegisterLog in
Search
 
 

Display results as :
 
Rechercher Advanced Search
Latest topics
November 2024
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
CalendarCalendar
Similar topics

 

 Good lord! I'm beating MS

Go down 
AuthorMessage
Admin
Admin



Posts : 8050
Join date : 2012-05-29
Location : Manchester UK

Good lord! I'm beating MS Empty
PostSubject: Good lord! I'm beating MS   Good lord! I'm beating MS Icon_minitimeSun 09 Mar 2014, 10:03

Good lord! I'm beating MS: How the Earl of Durham is fighting illness with a veggie diet, meditation and doses of sunshine vitamin


  • [size=18.2]Ned Lambton is battling multiple sclerosis with diet[/size]
  • [size=18.2]He was diagnosed in 2007 after more than a year of symptoms[/size]
  • [size=18.2]Earl of Durham has cut saturated fat from his diet and meditates[/size]
  • [size=18.2]He is now off medication and have not had a relapse for 3.5 years[/size]


By Ned Lambton, Earl Of Durham
PUBLISHED: 22:00, 8 March 2014 | UPDATED: 22:00, 8 March 2014


[size=15.6]The inexplicable and increasingly worrying symptoms had been plaguing me for more than a year when, in December 2007, aged 46, I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS).[/size]
[size=15.6]There had been problems with  my balance to the point where I couldn’t walk without a stick, numbness throughout my body, slurred speech and, most upsetting of all, a clumsiness in my hands that left  me unable to play the guitar.[/size]


[size=15.6]After examining my set of scans, a distinguished professor of neurology looked at me sympathetically and explained that I was among the worst new cases she had seen.[/size]

Good lord! I'm beating MS Article-2576316-1C209CFE00000578-80_634x462
Whenever you see this image, tap to view all the images in a gallery


Back on track: Ned Lambton, Earl of Dunham, was diagnosed with MS seven years ago but is now able to play the guitar again after following a low-fat diet


[size=15.6]It was incurable, like all forms of the disease, which gradually destroys the nervous system. I had the relapsing/remitting type – characterised by symptomatic flare-ups, followed by periods of latency.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Although effective drugs were available, I could expect to deteriorate slowly but surely. I was handed a leaflet on how to get a discount on a good-quality wheelchair.[/size]
 
[size=15.6]But I have, so far, defied that devastating prognosis. In fact, I have not had a single relapse in three-and-a-half years, and hardly any of my symptoms remain; I have been able to give up my medication, with no ill effects, and MS is now nothing more than a minor inconvenience  in my life. And it is, I believe, largely thanks to a special diet.
[/size]


[size=15.6]WERE MY CROCS TO BLAME OR WAS I JUST CROSS-EYED?[/size]
[size=15.6]The first hint of problems to come began while I was on holiday in  Tuscany with my daughter Molly  in August 2006. We had spent the day at a beach close to the town of Grosetto, and as we made our way back to the car, I stumbled.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Looking down, I blamed my momentary giddiness on the hideous yellow and black rubber Crocs flip-flops I had decided to wear that day – but it still seemed odd.[/size]

Good lord! I'm beating MS Article-2576316-1C209DA200000578-740_634x918


Full life: Ned Lambton marrying designer Marina Hanbury at Chelsea Register Office in London in 2011

[size=15.6]Molly, who was six at the time, asked me what was wrong. ‘It’s my flip-flops,’ I said. ‘They’re too high off the ground.’[/size]  [size=15.6]‘It’s not your flip flops,’ she replied. ‘It’s your brain!’[/size]


[size=15.6]She didn’t realise how true her joke was, and neither did[/size][size=15.6] I.[/size][size=15.6] The next day I had to stop the car and call for help because my vision suddenly became blurred, and that’s when I really knew something was wrong.[/size]


[size=15.6]I saw a series of flummoxed doctors who told me I had everything from labyrinthitis – a swelling of the inner ear that causes extreme dizziness – to something called bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia, meaning being cross-eyed.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Eventually, I was referred by a neurologist for an MRI scan.[/size]
[size=15.6]They found multiple lesions on my brain but, bizarrely, I was told that the best course of action would be to  do nothing and just ‘wait and see’.[/size]


[size=15.6]Shortly after that, things became  a lot worse. I started falling over  for no reason, hence my need for  a walking stick, as well as numbness that extended from my toes into my feet, legs, torso, face  and fingertips.[/size]


[size=15.6]I felt a tight invisible ‘hug’ around my chest, and I couldn’t even cross my legs without lifting one of them up with my hands. [/size]


[size=15.6]Still the neurologist assured me I was fine and that all my symptoms were ‘transient’.[/size]
[size=15.6]But I knew was that there was something seriously wrong.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Some years ago, a trusted friend had told me that if I were ever to become seriously ill, I should consider going to the Mayo Clinic, in Rochester, Minnesota, where he himself was successfully treated for a serious illness.
[/size]


[size=15.6]I was fortunate that I could afford to go there, because in terms of its research and diagnostic facilities, as well as its treatment of chronic illnesses, the Mayo Clinic’s reputation is second to none.[/size]


[size=15.6]GETTING A DIAGNOSIS AND DOING MY OWN RESEARCH[/size]
[size=15.6]When I arrived I was told that they had examined the scans, which I had sent, and that they strongly suspected MS. I was immediately put on a six-day course of high-dose intravenous steroids to reduce inflammation and many of my symptoms improved, although the drugs made me feel absolutely furious and completely miserable.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Some 16 days later, after a barrage of exhausting tests, including  a new, and considerably worse  MRI, I was given my diagnosis  and prescribed Tysabri, a potent intravenous immunosuppressant drug, with potentially lethal side effects, that requires close monitoring of the blood, and is prescribed only to MS patients with serious symptoms.
[/size]


HEALTH COMMENT: CUTTING FAT IS ALWAYS GOOD FOR US
[size=15.6]By DR SUSAN KOHLHAAS[/size]
[size=15.6]Everyone living with relapsing-remitting MS longs for an extended period free from dreaded relapses –which can last days, weeks or months and cause debilitating symptoms, from loss of mobility to loss of sight. [/size]


[size=15.6]Research shows a healthy lifestyle, including a balanced diet and regular exercise, can help people manage MS.[/size]


[size=15.6]It can alleviate some symptoms, such as fatigue, and is recommended by most neurologists.
Eating healthily – cutting down on saturated fat – is a positive thing whether you have MS or not.
[/size]
[size=15.6]But research on the Overcoming MS (OMS) programme hasn’t yet provided conclusive evidence of its benefits, particularly in changing the underlying course of the condition. [/size]


[size=15.6]We often meet people who feel specialist diets have made a difference to their MS, but there are also many who feel such diets haven’t done anything. [/size]


[size=15.6]Before considering such a diet, we’d recommend people consult reliable, independent information and talk to their specialist nurse or doctor. [/size]


[size=15.6]OMS also recommends does of vitamin D supplements well beyond the recommended level and could carry side effects. [/size]


[size=15.6]There is also not currently enough evidence to say whether vitamin D supplements have an effect. Investigating vitamin D and developing and testing self-management programmes are two of the MS Society’s research priorities. [/size]


[size=15.6]Living with MS is hard, and although there are increasingly more effective treatments becoming available, it’s understandable that people want to take control of their lives and find a magic bullet. Sadly that magic bullet doesn’t yet exist – but researchers around the world are working on it.[/size]
[size=15.6]My neurologist had said: ‘We don’t know what causes MS and we don’t know how to cure it.’[/size]
[size=15.6]Those words – spoken by a true expert – terrified me. And it was  for that reason that I started to do my own research.
[/size]


[size=15.6]In truth, there are many less well-known treatments for MS that for whatever reason have not undergone the rigorous clinical trials that the neurologists require before they are willing to recommend them.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Their caution is appropriate, but I believe that just because a treatment has not undergone trials and is therefore unproven, that doesn’t mean it’s not effective.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Being diagnosed with a serious illness focuses the mind in a way that I don’t believe a doctor can ever fully grasp unless he or she has that illness. All of a sudden, it’s less about science and statistics, and more about the sheer visceral fear that your quality of life is going down the drain and an overwhelming sense of determination to do whatever it takes to stop that from happening.[/size]


[size=15.6]DISCOVERING HOW A VEGGIE, WHOLEFOOD DIET CAN WORK[/size]
[size=15.6]I first came across Professor George Jelinek’s website within a few days of being diagnosed. I bought his book, Overcoming Multiple Sclerosis, and ended up going to his retreat in the Yarra Valley near Melbourne in 2008.
[/size]


[size=15.6]It wasn’t too far to go, as I was living in the Far East at the time. What strikes me about Jelinek today, as it struck me then, is that he offers the one thing that is in chronically short supply in the lives of people with MS, and that is hope. Real hope. He’s not a neurologist, but a medical academic who was diagnosed with MS in 1999. His own mother died  of the illness, giving him a proper understanding of the misery and devastation that it can bring.
[/size]


[size=15.6]He’s not against MS drugs, but argues that to have the best chance of recovery, people with MS, in addition to taking whatever drugs are prescribed, need to make changes to their lifestyle, with a focus on cutting saturated fat from their diet.
[/size]


[size=15.6]He himself adheres strictly to the approach that he recommends to his patients, and has gone 15 years without a relapse and is symptom-free.[/size]


[size=15.6]Jelinek has published several papers in respected mainstream neurology and other medical journals, and the links to these appear on his website.
[/size]


[size=15.6]He describes his treatment as ‘a mainstream preventative medicine approach with modification of lifestyle risk factors thought to be responsible for MS progression’. The approach is broadly this: a plant-based, wholefood diet with seafood, regular exercise, regular sun exposure or Vitamin D supplements, flax (or fish) oil and stress reduction.
[/size]


[size=15.6]His book has sold tens of thousands worldwide, and his research is showing that those who have adopted his approach are doing extremely well, and he hopes that this expanding base of evidence  that he and his team have put together will convince clinicians that there is more to treating MS than medications alone.
[/size]


[size=15.6]The evidence for the effectiveness of the diet is already there.
[/size]


[size=15.6]In his book, Jelinek explains the robustness of the work of the  late Dr Roy Laver Swank, the American Neurologist who conducted a 35-year-long study into the diet of 150 MS patients.[/size]
[size=15.6]Half of these patients ate the standard Western diet, and half of them ate the low-saturated-fat diet that Swank had devised.[/size]


[size=15.6]After three years, those on Swank’s diet had experienced  80 per cent fewer relapses than the  non-dieters.
[/size]


[size=15.6]After 35 years, a third of the 72 people who stuck to the Swank diet had died, compared with an 80 per cent death rate among those not following his diet. Only five per cent of the Swank dieters had noted any deterioration of  their condition.
[/size]


[size=15.6]COMING OFF THE DRUGS AND PLAYING THE GUITAR AGAIN[/size]
[size=15.6]I came away from the retreat with great confidence that if I followed the advice, I could stop the illness in its tracks, and eventually become well. That is exactly what happened.[/size]
[size=15.6]After a year on the diet, I traded the Tysabri for Copaxone, a less dangerous medication, and then in 2012, after almost five years on the diet, made the very personal choice to stop the drugs altogether.
[/size]


[size=15.6]I still have a few symptoms like occasionally crying when I don’t feel sad, and a slight numbness in my feet, but these things don’t bother me too much. I play the guitar again, and live life to the full.[/size]
[size=15.6]I don’t meditate as often as Prof Jelinek would like me to, and I even allow myself the occasional skinless chicken breast, but mainly I don’t cheat, because I know that I’m the one who’s being cheated.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Wild fish, rice, brightly coloured and leafy vegetables and berries  and fruit are the order of the day but there is huge variety within that. It isn’t hard once you get used to it.[/size]
[size=15.6]You’re allowed coffee and alcohol, and if you abstain from meat and dairy for a while, you cease to crave it, and it becomes slightly repulsive.
[/size]


[size=15.6]Crucially, the diet does take three to five years to work, so it is vital to be patient. To anybody with MS who is sceptical, I’d say you have nothing to lose; it’s effective, simple, inexpensive, healthy, and can be done without help.[/size]


[size=15.6]There is a saying among people with MS that goes something like: ‘Take control of your illness, don’t let it take control of you.’ It’s great advice – and  the only side effects of an ultra-healthy diet are a happier and longer life.[/size]


[size=15.6]http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2576316/Good-lord-Im-beating-MS-How-Earl-Durham-fighting-illness-veggie-diet-meditation-doses-sunshine-vitamin.html
[/size]
Back to top Go down
 
Good lord! I'm beating MS
Back to top 
Page 1 of 1
 Similar topics
-
» Why are purple foods so good for you? Learn the science of why these pigmented choices are good for heart, brain health
» What happens when a Lord and a Cabinet Office Minister are asked about chemtrails. Er, nothing
» Advanced Doctors “Tell All” About How Their Patients Are Treating And Beating Cancer In This Original Docu-Series

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
Chemtrail Awareness :: Natural Health-
Jump to: