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I'm just now remembering something else he said to me. "He said "I didn't even realize I was on the ground."

Of course we know that we can be dazed when something happens suddenly. But I wonder if he passed out (rather than tripped) and that's what led to the fall. :(

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May 18·edited May 18Liked by Monica Hughes PhD

I strongly believe that it was due to a rotational seizure (documented mRNA side effect) that affects some mRNA injectees.

My colleague is now DISABLED after she failed while walking (not even jogging!). She was 2x BOOSTED.

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May 18Liked by Monica Hughes PhD

Good to see you still out here, screaming into the void Monica. I think about you and your toxins much too often these days, as I help take care of people much too young to be dying of cancer at a higher rate than I did pre-pandemic. Most, if not all, are completely uninterested in hearing about alternative treatments for their afflictions, which is a sad statement of fact about the depths of capture of our entire system. Blessings to you.

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I'm still here!

I got sidetracked by life. Needing to make a living and other such mundane things. :)

I want to write a post on their manufacture, and how people might do that independently. I don't think CT are actually illegal in the US. I think one should still be able to produce in one's own lab as long as one doesn't sell across state lines. That's been possible in the US in the past.

I think that's perhaps the most important post I could write. I really should do it as it wouldn't take too long.

Yes, sadly, most people don't consider alternatives to standard of care until they're at death's door.

There are also other obstacles.

1) financial

2) Age. If you have a child, you'll be forced into standard of care unless you abruptly leave the country. Even then you may not find anyone to treat your child. Most foreign clinics don't want to touch children with a 10 foot pole. If you stay in your own country and fight the system, your child will be taken from you. It's a lose-lose situation. Truly a nightmare.

3) For adults, most people get common cancers (breast, lymphoma, prostate) for which treatment options are more successful. If a person does not do well, they are generally battling a long time, and only at the end of that long battle they might consider another option when they are sent home to die.

The situations above are where I've generally seen people turn to alternatives.

Of course, there are others who reject most of the system right at the outset, but they are a pretty small minority.

The other situation? My husband's terminal diagnosis gave quite a bit more freedom for us to think outside the box. We were already non-mainstream in important ways.

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You were the first for me. Didn’t even consider other options. Glad that I had read your CT article which I still share with others to this day. Sometimes, when I know the universe has a funny sense of humor, I think the entire covid fiasco forced me to find like minded individuals so you and I can end up in the same tiny chat group where I was able to tap into you as a resource. Just sitting here admiring it all and feeling grateful. 🙏

Glad the old guy is ok. That’s wild. And kinda punk rock.

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Yes please I would love that resource from you when you have time. Luckily I have no current need but should it arrise I would truly at least attempt such an endeavor. Looking forward to more from you!

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May 18·edited May 18Liked by Monica Hughes PhD

Am dealing with one such case. Recurrant cancer. 3 bouts in 5 years. Currently on her 3rd or 5th round of chemo. (Not keeping track. My sister's MIL.)

And an advanced case of PD. (Her husband.)

Both moved into an assisted living facility. Selling off or giving away all their assets and worldy goods.

The cancer patient hasn't replied to any of my texts since March 24, 2023...

I still send what I consider to be helpful links.

Alas, I've come to the sad conclusion that you can only lead a horse to water if the horse is dying of thirst and even then, "Uncle Ed" will question the quality of water in the oasis.

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May 18·edited May 18Liked by Monica Hughes PhD

Glad to see a post from you, albeit this was a sad one. It's good that you could help him.

In answer to your wondering, yes, I have come across people who have fallen. One was a maybe 20-something man, mid-day, downtown, near the hospital, lost his balance, dropped his packages, and fell to his knees. He wasn't drunk; it was clear he had some neurological difficulty and couldn't use his legs properly. He managed to pick himself up. Of course I couldn't help but wonder if this weren't a jab injury. But I have no idea. I also came upon a small crowd including police around someone lying on the sidewalk outside the vet's clinic. The vet told me it was a man who'd had a heart attack and apparently died. Before covid times, apart from drug addicts and alcoholics, the last time I saw someone down like that on a public sidewalk was many years ago.

Two people in my circles, both boosted to the max, died of "falling, hitting their head and dying suddenly."

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May 19·edited May 19Liked by Monica Hughes PhD

I suppose we will never know 100% what caused this incident. All I can say is that I've been working in state funded Medicaid for the last year, and I am hearing more and more from people that they've had a stroke or heart attack. The most heart wrenching encounter so far was a mother who has given their baby all of their "vaccines" and the baby had a massive heart attack. Heart attacks in babies? Seriously? But we continue to hear how desperately we all should be getting every "vaccine" known to man and that they are all "safe and effective". Meanwhile, a bee sting or a peanut can kill someone, but it's impossible for a man-made product full of synthetic ingredients to hurt or kill someone.

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author

Oh my god. A heart attack in a baby. Horrible. Thank you for sharing.

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May 18·edited May 18Liked by Monica Hughes PhD

My dad smoked his whole life and developed COPD. The medicines he took help him to breathe but a side effect was "thin skin" as he called it. Long story short, all pre scamdemic, minor bumps would result in him bleeding like crazy. We used to joke that he was keeping Bandaid in business, not that it was the least bit funny :(

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My mum is a bleeder. On blood thinners for a heart condition.

Found her bleeding like a stuck pig this morning, from her nose. It eventually abated.

Any light scratch will bleed. A slight bump into furniture will produce heavy bruising. Unreal.

With all that said: She's 92 and still "in charge".

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wonderful that you stopped to help!

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author

Basic human decency, really. Anybody should be expected to stop and help in a situation like this.

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yes!

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Strange events of this kind happened to increase massively over the last years, as nearly everybody can confirm these days: spontaneous fractures, tears, bleedings, falls, in some instances, affected persons are pretty clear of the causes, but nobody can provide effective help or therapy and will resort to some kind of superficial symptom treatment. My sister, who died of seemingly sudden, especially aggressive, metastasized turbo cancer all over her body, had suffered a bike accident and broke her shoulder severely about two years ago - which was kind of strange to me, because she just slipped away on a tram rail and, as it seems, was not able to brace her fall enough to protect herself against severe injuries.

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Huh. Do you mind me asking what kind of cancer it was and where it originated in her body? More specifically, I'm curious if it precipitated around the site of the physical injury due to the fall.

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Her cancer had already spread on the whole body, when it was diagnosed initially. A major diagnostic problem was just that, to establish the original, primary tumor, which was supposed to be located in her lungs, a kind of bronchial carcinoma, that was already quite large without causing obvious symptoms (and later identified by biopsy as such, but I do not know the exact oncological diagnostics).

But the most acute problem of her suffering were a number of proposed metastases in her brain, that had led to severe symptoms like vision and hearing problems, dizziness, mental fog, cognitive impairments etc. At a later time she suffered extreme pain in her legs, that increased to bouts of sudden pain attacks and crippled her remaining mobility completely.

As a matter of fact there was no clear connection to her site of injury, but her first symtoms, dizziness and vision impairment, seemed to originate from her neck, and gave rise to consulting an orthopedist, who prescribed an MRI of her cervical spine, which was without any findings. Only later, when an additional MRI of her head was done, several suspicious lesions were detected.

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author

Damn. What was the timeframe from when she displayed the first symptoms to when she was gone?

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From obvious symptoms, beginning in late September 2023, cancer was first diagnosed mid December and finally confirmed end of January 2024, standard therapy was planned for the next day after the results of her biopsy had been established - starting with radiation of her head, then chemo therapy in combination with immune therapy (possibly with two different agents).

After one week of brain radiation with severe side effects, they terminated further treatment, so she died in mid February, all in all within less than 5 month.

But there were, possibly, earlier subtle warning hints, of vision impairment, my sister was not sure, when that might have begun the very first time.

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author

Wow.

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Thank you!

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Hey! Good to see you're still kickin'.

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