I’m Not Fighting Cancer. I’m Fighting a System
Why Cancer Patients Deserve Better Than Outdated Oncological Playbooks and 70-Year-Old Toxic Protocols
I’m drafting this after dropping my metabolic fight post yesterday, a war plan to starve cancer with keto, fasting, RSO, and chemo. But here’s the raw truth: the bigger fight isn’t against cancer cells. It’s against a system still stuck in the 1950s when it comes to treating colorectal cancer, and most others.
For what it’s worth, I’ve always been stubborn. I don’t ask for help until it’s too much and too late. But I’m learning. While I work on sorting my income and figuring out how to fund this fight, I’m asking anyone who can to check out my Amazon List, real things I need just to stay in the ring. If you’d rather help with funding, a coffee or two goes a long way.
It’s hard for me to ask. But the alternative? Dying from cancer, untreated and broke. And I shouldn’t have to. I have a job. I have insurance. And I’m still drowning in debt, just one month into this mess.
🧩 1950s Cancer Science. Still Standard Issue?
Most oncologists still rely on cytotoxic chemo, radiation, surgery, the same brutal triage they’ve used for decades. Chemotherapy drugs date back to the 1940s and ’50s. Methotrexate, 5‑fluorouracil, doxorubicin. They kill fast-dividing cells, sure, but they also kill healthy ones, and overall survival gains are measured in months, not years .
We’ve accepted that as 'progress.' But cancer isn’t just genetic chaos, it’s metabolic chaos.
🔬 Meet the Metabolic Revolution: Press‑Pulse Protocol
Thomas N. Seyfried Professor of Biology, Genetics & Biochemistry at Boston College is at the forefront of the “metabolic theory of cancer”:
Press – Chronic metabolic stress: ketogenic or calorie-restricted diet to starve cancer of glucose and glutamine.
Pulse – Acute stressors via glutamine-targeting drugs, hyperbaric oxygen, periodic fasting.
Those ketone bodies protect normal cells while leaving rogue cells vulnerable. It’s not powerful in a microscope, it’s powerful in a body. I also wanted to note that I reached out to Professor Seyfried yesterday, he emailed me back this morning with data and information. Thank you sir I appreciate your assistance and guidance (not medical advice) very much.
💔 Why It's So Rare to Find Metabolic-Minded Oncologists
Institutional inertia – Big Pharma bankrolls chemo and older drugs. Anything outside that engine is dismissed as “unproven” or “pseudoscience”.
Research lag – Warburg’s discovery is 90 years old. But clinical trials on metabolic therapy lag behind. The science is emerging but accepted medical standards are stuck .
Lack of clinical adoption – Even small metabolic inhibitors are hitting trials now, but the mainstream still ignores diet, fasting, ketones, glutamine blockers as viable, cheap adjuncts.
🚨 Cancer Isn’t a Sentence it’s a Call to Act
Mainstream stats paint this as a death sentence. I refuse to accept that. With a coordinated metabolic approach I can:
Reduce glucose and glutamine availability.
Trigger oxidative stress via pulses.
Protect normal cells with ketones and RSO.
Track my Glucose‑Ketone Index.
That's not quackery. It's delivering a metabolic body-punch from every direction.
📌 What I'm Doing That the System Isn't
Targeting metabolism: pressing glucose/glutamine while pulsing with therapies.
Tracking biomarkers: glucose, ketones, GKI.
Pairing everything with RSO and chemo: not sacrificial—but tactical.
People think ketones cure cancer. No—they support treatment synergy.
📣 So What Needs to Change?
Oncologists must consider metabolic therapy part of stage 4 care.
Patients deserve access to proper metabolic testing and protocols.
We need real clinical trials evaluating press‑pulse in colorectal cancer.
Until then, I fight cancer on three fronts: biology, body, and bureaucracy.
If you're on this road with me, a stage 4 fighter or caregiver don’t just follow the script. Learn the science. Demand metabolic support. Track your data. Press. Pulse. Repeat.
I’m not just attacking cancer cells, I’m going after the system that treats us like abstract data, not living, breathing survivors. And please as always if you need to talk reach out and I would be happy to help in anyway I can. Thank you for reading, peace and love humans.