Prostate Cancer
#12
I happened across this article a couple of years ago.
Normally dismissive of “personal accounts of beating cancer,” I found this one intriguing. Presented as “another view.”
Much of what he did parallels other advice here, specifically:
1. Get MULTIPLE opinions.
2. Look at the NEWEST treatment options.
3. Surgery is permanent, and generally...not what we would like to end up as.
4. Statistically, as another posted, nearly all of us will have it eventually. It’s just that something else will make us die “a natural death.” (My grandfather had it, but made it to 96).
https://moneymaven.io/mishtalk/econo...0ST3NX7CDPrtw/
Normally dismissive of “personal accounts of beating cancer,” I found this one intriguing. Presented as “another view.”
Much of what he did parallels other advice here, specifically:
1. Get MULTIPLE opinions.
2. Look at the NEWEST treatment options.
3. Surgery is permanent, and generally...not what we would like to end up as.
4. Statistically, as another posted, nearly all of us will have it eventually. It’s just that something else will make us die “a natural death.” (My grandfather had it, but made it to 96).
https://moneymaven.io/mishtalk/econo...0ST3NX7CDPrtw/
#13
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Feb 2014
Posts: 208
I happened across this article a couple of years ago.
Normally dismissive of “personal accounts of beating cancer,” I found this one intriguing. Presented as “another view.”
Much of what he did parallels other advice here, specifically:
1. Get MULTIPLE opinions.
2. Look at the NEWEST treatment options.
3. Surgery is permanent, and generally...not what we would like to end up as.
4. Statistically, as another posted, nearly all of us will have it eventually. It’s just that something else will make us die “a natural death.” (My grandfather had it, but made it to 96).
https://moneymaven.io/mishtalk/econo...0ST3NX7CDPrtw/
Normally dismissive of “personal accounts of beating cancer,” I found this one intriguing. Presented as “another view.”
Much of what he did parallels other advice here, specifically:
1. Get MULTIPLE opinions.
2. Look at the NEWEST treatment options.
3. Surgery is permanent, and generally...not what we would like to end up as.
4. Statistically, as another posted, nearly all of us will have it eventually. It’s just that something else will make us die “a natural death.” (My grandfather had it, but made it to 96).
https://moneymaven.io/mishtalk/econo...0ST3NX7CDPrtw/
I suppose I get it. If someone asks me how to get from CHA to LAS, I will tell them to fly CHA-ATL-LAS.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post