10 Tips for Surviving the Holidays when you have Cancer
Those who struggle with health challenges often find it overwhelming to keep up the frantic pace while trying to preserve holiday traditions and maintain a semblance of normalcy.
Those who struggle with health challenges often find it overwhelming to keep up the frantic pace while trying to preserve holiday traditions and maintain a semblance of normalcy.
I was privileged to be interviewed by Darlene Kvist, MS, LN, CNS, and Marcie Vaskey, LN, of Nutritional Weight and Wellness on their Dishing Out Nutrition show.Â
Joe Tippens was initially diagnosed with small cell lung cancer in 2016. By January 2017 it was found that the aggressive cancer had spread all over his body including his liver, pancreas, bladder, stomach, neck and bones and he was given just three months to live.Â
What does Dr. Dwight McKee, MD, think about James Templeton’s book, “I Used to Have Cancer”? See Dr. McKee’s book review as published in the Townsend Letter, a periodical focusing on alternative medicine which has been in circulation since 1983.
It used to be that resting one day a week was a religious observance practiced in many cultures — a recognition that our very soul benefits from rest from our labor. Doctors also tell us to take it easy and avoid stress — recognizing that our bodies need adequate rest in order to rejuvenate and stay healthy.