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How I Defeated Colon Cancer: The Real Story of a Survivor
How I Defeated Colon Cancer: The Real Story of a Survivor
How I Defeated Colon Cancer: The Real Story of a Survivor
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How I Defeated Colon Cancer: The Real Story of a Survivor

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Have you or someone close to you been diagnosed with cancer?

Are you preparing for a long hard fight?

This book will help you find the right path towards a cure!

It can be devastating news, hearing that you are suffering from cancer. The range of emotions you will feel at such a time will be wide and varied, but this sort of news is not the gloomy outlook it once was. In today's world there are many ways to tackle cancer and inside the pages of this book you can learn things like:

How the system in your country can give you cancer

Using emotions and feelings in the fight

Chemotherapy

Surgery

How to use diet to best effect

Alternative treatments

How to act and think during dark moments

And much more…

Every treatment you read about in this book has been tested on a cancer sufferer. Some of it may not work on everyone, but within the huge variety of treatments there will be something that will help, whether it is finding a total cure, boosting your immune or improving your mental state through the process.

Inspiration can be contagious and it is most effective when it comes from a survivor. How I defeated colon cancer: The real story of a survivor; is a book about one brave man's fight against imminent death (in form of colon cancer).

Bulus Andrei Tudor account of his traumatic experience in fighting stage three colon cancer carries unfathomable inspirational undertones. The book covers in detail the unsympathetic judicial system with ruthless and inhuman view of a patient suffering from a terminal illness. How he and his family battled the merciless judicial system and turned out victorious.

On the purely personal note, Andrei narrative of his physical and emotional state and suffering is simply extraordinary. It is the most humanely told story of a hero in making who sailed on the winds of pain and suffering to emerge as a winner at the end.

The most striking feature of the book relates to personal experiences during different stages of painful colon cancer therapy like chemotherapy. His description of the emotional and physical trauma and spirit to overcome all the suffering is a tribute to human unsurmountable spirit.

Andrei has painstakingly compiled very informative and exhaustive research and information on the symptoms and causes of colon cancer. He has added a special personal touch to the content basing on his horrendous experience. It is a literary treat to read the relevant chapters as the author carries the reader along on a personal journey through hard times.
Another interesting group of chapters deal with supplements and nutritional plans that helped Andrei in overcoming the critical colon cancer. It is a must read for anyone who is personally battling colon (or some other type of) cancer or assisting some loved one passing through the ordeal.

Andrei closes down the account on winning note with post colon cancer recapture of the events. He recounts his past year of his battle with colon cancer that he won through unflinching faith, determination and endurance. He brilliantly sums up the essence with what he learnt in his relentless fight with colon cancer.

The book is a must read for all those who value and treasure the heroic spirt of human fight.


Download and start reading the book, every hour counts.

Scroll to the top of the page and select the buy button.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 27, 2021
ISBN9798201833886
How I Defeated Colon Cancer: The Real Story of a Survivor

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    Book preview

    How I Defeated Colon Cancer - Buluș Andrei Tudor

    Chapter 1

    The Cancer in Our Judiciary System

    A Chapter by Lawyer Eliza Ene Corbeanu

    Andrei is 31 years old and for the past 7 years he had been struggling through endless courts of justice to prove that he is innocent. Because this is how things work in our country...

    Part I

    What had he done? One evening, more precisely on November 8, 2010, some guy who had decided he had lived enough – and he had surely had enough to drink – had jumped in front of his car and ended his own life.

    The police would have very much wanted to make Andrei guilty of the deed, but destiny was against that. How on earth can you foresee that a crazy guy would jump in front of your car and be torn to pieces?

    Well, our suicidal drunken guy had a family. Complications appeared immediately. Andrei was 24 years old at the time. He was a good kid, always joking and merry. All those qualities went to hell when they accused of him of having taken weed. Not alcohol. Drugs. That was what police and the prosecutor believed.

    This is how all his pain began. For seven years, they forbade him to drive any vehicles, but this was the smallest of the problems. Poor him, Andrei was struggling to prove once and for all that he hadn’t taken any drugs in that fateful evening of the accident.

    An ample expertise was undertaken. Evaluations followed, then re-evaluations, proceedings of inferior and superior committees, humans and superhumans together – each of them had an opinion about what it meant to ingest forbidden drugs. Everything was put into extremely cryptical and obscure terms, so that they could be interpreted and turned on all sides.

    As the trial was ongoing, the Judge had to untangle all this which was caused by the lack of courage of some coroners, who avoided giving clear answers: he had used / or he had not used drugs.

    Three years went by, until the final report was issued from the Institute of Legal Medicine. It had everyone’s signature, but the conclusions were extremely strange: the possibility for Andrei to have ingested drugs existed, but all the tests indicated that he had not.

    Most certainly, the doorman of the respective Institute would have had a clearer position about all this, had anyone asked him. It is not easy to spend your life between the covers of a criminal case file – which was growing thicker and thicker. Andrei was 30 years old by now.

    One day, they told him he had cancer. Just like that. And those doctors were not uncertain, like the people in the judiciary system. They told you had cancer – then this was what you had!

    How do you fight death at 30 years old? But he fought hard. Very hard. And he defeated the illness. With dark-purplish shadows around his eyes, Andrei is the living proof that strong-will can defeat the momentary weakness of the body.

    God started loving him. On his first trial, they found him not guilty – there was no evidence pointing at any infraction. Finally, after being threatened with a fine, the Institute of Legal Medicine had issued a document stating that his ability of driving vehicles had not been affected and that they cannot determine if I had ingested any drugs or not.

    *

    Stirred, most probably, by my endless thirst for living and by the courage of having fought death, the Prosecutor’s office opened an appeal trial.

    Upon the first Appeal hearing, the prosecutor was extremely brave – and he asked for my acquittal, stating that the deed was inexistent. All those who were present where shocked to the core by this. My defense Lawyer was triumphant... everyone but the Judge. Yes, the Judge is the true hero of this story.

    The prosecutor’s request disturbed his logic. For his entire life, the Judge... judged and condemned. He was trapped. He had to admit something he did not believe in: the fact that innocent people actually existed.

    Mr. Prosecutor, are you sure that you wish to ask for the acquittal of the accused person?

    Yes, your Honour.

    State your evidence.

    We do not have any.

    Therefore, what are we doing here today? a terrified Judge inquired.

    A short description of this character – because it feels as if my fingers are burning and I cannot be silenced. He is an extremely well-known person – he is also feared, because of his arrogance and because he never acquitted anyone.

    For him, condemning people is his only life-purpose; punishing people must trigger unknown pleasures to him. Sometimes, I believe he is well-aware that people are disgusted by him and this very fact gives him pleasure.

    He may also have qualities, but even the best character traits look monstrous when embedded by him. He is a moral Quasimodo, as a poet said. Sometimes, I imagine him in the evening in his bedroom as he carefully arranges his blankets on the bed and bows to some mysterious god, to then calmly and peacefully fall asleep, pleased to have sent all the bad guys to prison.

    When in Court, he is always irritable and unbalanced, he asks all sorts of short questions and does not even listen to the answer.

    As he had just gotten out of the hospital, Andrei had asked for his first judgement term to be postponed.

    What did you do for three months, why didn’t you have time?

    I got diagnosed with cancer and...

    Forget about that. Say, are you taking a lie-detector test?

    Your Honour, my Lawyer interjected. The accused is currently undergoing chemotherapy. I believe we do not need a lie-detector test when the conclusions of the Institute of Legal Medicine are as clear as they can be.

    "Forget about that, Mr. Lawyer, I investigated; one can take a lie-detector test despite of having cancer. The only condition is to be alive, not to be healthy! Cancer makes you get rid of life, not of justice!" – he said, with a horribly cynical laugh.

    If I must, I’ll do it, the accused answered feebly.

    Your Honour, the Prosecutor himself interjected, I consider this specific solicitation as excessive.

    What if I prove he is lying? What will you do then, Mr. Prosecutor? With an attitude like yours, we’ll fill the streets with offenders.

    Part II

    After seven years of trials, investigations and super-investigations, the Institute of Legal Medicine reached a conclusion which proved that the accused was innocent, even though the terms in which his innocence had been put were beyond strange: there was a possibility for the accused to have ingested forbidden drugs, but all the tests proved he had not. In other words, no matter how hard the Judge had tried to condemn Andrei, he had no evidence to do so.

    It was as clear as it could be – the accused had been acquitted during the first trial as there was no evidence of an offence.

    The prosecutor’s office had made an appeal, asking for the accused to be acquitted because the deed itself was not included in the Penal Code and therefore it did not constitute an offence in itself.

    Meanwhile, life decided to be unfair with Andrei one more time. Andrei was diagnosed with cancer. He fought hard and defeated the illness. He got back to Court – and he only wanted for everything to end. He knew that the Judge had to acquit him. But despite all this... The Judge asked him to take a lie-detector test! I investigated; one can take a lie detector test despite of having cancer.

    All the people present looked at the Judge with pure disgust. The prosecutor objected. The defense Lawyer objected. Andrei was undergoing chemotherapy, for God’s sake, he was not at all up to take a lie-detector test.

    The Judge insisted furiously. The sentence was to be pronounced soon. Two weeks went by – and nothing. God, they could only acquit him!! What took them so long? But how can you expect for a Judge (who never acquitted anyone) to acquit you?

    I used to believe that judges who took pride in the fact that they condemned absolutely anyone who ended in their Court - had, probably, a heart which was surrounded by barbed wire. I was wrong. This particular Judge is made ENTIRELY of sharp and poisoned barbed wire, of knives and heavy chains barely holding together a person which is rotten down to the last cell in his body.

    If I were a painter, I would paint him with the wrong end of my brush, with old, dirty paint on a rotten canvas.

    Back to our story, the trial started from the beginning once again, as the Court members were not convinced – even more so, they were confused.

    Upon the first hearing, the Judge decided to call the coroner to testify – the one who had examined Andrei in the evening of the accident; also, they called the police officer who had arrived at the scene and another witness to testify.

    Seven years had passed – during which, the coroner had investigated thousands of patients, the police officer had arrived at hundreds of other accident sites and the witness had probably witnessed many other things.

    A new prosecutor had also joined the scene. Andrei was trying to keep it all together, to joke and to try and hide the bitterness he felt. He had been moments away from death and he had won that battle. He did not want to give in to a Judge who looked at him with contempt and despise – and who wanted to condemn him against all odds – even against the law.

    He asked Andrei to step forward and say if he wanted to add something. Andrei said that he did not want to add anything else.

    Do you still have cancer? he asked him with the same lack of concern which one would exhibit when extending an arm to pick a cigarette from a pack. Of course, he never waited for his answer.

    The day arrived when the witnesses had to testify. The Judge looked happier than he should normally be. He was rubbing his hands and hoping to find out interesting things.

    "Put your hand on the Bible and repeat after me: I swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help me God. What do you still remember from the night of the accident?"

    What accident? For I have witnessed quite a lot.

    The one which was provoked by the accused behind you!

    I do not know this person. I don’t remember.

    "What do you mean, You Don’t Remember? the Judge thundered. You were an assistant witness that evening, when the accident took place!!"

    Yes, but I was called on three accident sites since then. No, wait, on two accident sites. It was long ago, I really don’t remember, sorry!!

    The Judge suddenly got furious! The witness seemed to have read his emotions and he was rather trembling.

    I... I am sorry but... I really don’t know what to say!

    The next witness was the police officer. He made the sworn testimony and waited to be questioned.

    Do you know the accused?

    Honestly, not really, no.

    You were the first to arrive on the accident site. You took a testimony from the accused, after which you took him to the Institute of Legal Medicine.

    All due respect, Your Honour, do you know how many drivers I see in a day? I have seen thousands in seven years.

    Then let me read you the testimony you wrote that evening.

    I am listening.

    "I am listening, Your Honour," the Judge sharply corrected him. You wrote here that the accused did

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