Cancer Help Forum

Cancer Help Forum

Notifications
Clear all

About my Protocol


(@mduffy)
Admin Admin
Joined: 6 months ago
Posts: 3
Topic starter  

Dear Fellow Fighters,

I wanted to take a moment to share the protocol I’ve developed—one that isn’t just about the supplements I take, but about the timing, structure, and strategy behind it. I call it a three-phase war plan:

Attack. Defend. Regroup.

This is how I’ve chosen to fight cancer head-on.


Attack Phase: Maximum Chaos for Cancer

Every morning, I go on the offensive. I don’t just hit cancer—I throw the kitchen sink at it. I deplete it of its three major fuels: glucose, iron, and protein. I block its main protective mechanism: glutathione, which acts like an armor around cancer cells. With that armor down, my arsenal of oxidative therapies can punch through and trigger apoptosis—cancer’s self-destruct button.

If I have radiation scheduled that day, I use this phase to make it 150% to 300% more effective. That’s not theory—it’s based on how much oxygen tension, redox stress, and mitochondrial pressure I can build in the cancer environment.

  • For colon, breast, kidney, or prostate cancers, I believe the enhancement can go as high as 3x, especially when using methylene blue.

  • But for digestive cancers (like mine), I recommend apricot seeds instead of MB—they work better for a direct-contact attack in the gut and colon lining.


Transition to Defense Mode (5 Hours After Radiation)

Five hours after radiation, I shift out of attack mode and into defense.

Now it’s about healing, recovery, and preserving my healthy cells. I load up on antioxidants to counter the oxidative stress I unleashed earlier. This doesn’t just protect my tissues—it recharges my immune system, especially T cells and NK cells, which are still out there hunting.

At this point, I’m still not eating—which keeps fuel levels low for cancer. Even though I’m blocking cancer’s uptake of nutrients, I don’t take chances. No glucose. No extra protein. No iron for it to feast on. I want to force autophagy—so my body eats away at the cancer itself.


Regroup Phase: OMAD, Autophagy, and Simplicity

When I finally do eat, it’s one meal a day (OMAD). I keep it extra simple and designed for recovery:

  • 🥚 Eggs

  • 🥑 Avocado

  • 🧈 Ghee

  • 🍲 Bone broth

  • 🌶️ Hot sauce (for taste)

  • 🍫 A piece of dark cocoa chocolate

Is it a gourmet meal? No.
But I’m in a war, not a buffet line.

I’ll have tacos, burritos, pizza, and burgers after I’m T0. For now, I eat to survive and recover—not to celebrate.

I keep carbs extremely low, protein minimal, and iron under 8 mg/day. Not too much less—because I don’t want anemia—but never enough for cancer to use as fuel. Calories don’t matter right now. I eat as much fat as I need to sustain energy. Those who need variety can get creative—there are plenty of fitting meals out there. I just keep it strict because I don’t care about food right now. I care about one thing:

Getting to T0, three weeks after radiation ends.


What Makes My Protocol Work? Not the Stack—The Strategy

Let me be clear: it’s not the brand or size of your supplement stack that matters.

It’s how well you:

  • Time your attack

  • Deprive cancer of fuel

  • Weaken its shields

  • Crush its escape routes (10 major pathways)

  • Give your immune system time to regroup and strike again

In the beginning, I didn’t get it right. The first month was trial and error—I did keto, drank tons of green tea, fasted a bit, and stacked a few supplements without knowing how to time them properly.

The edge came when I learned to match fasting windows to oxidative attacks, and radiation days to glutathione suppression. I finally built what I now call Protocol 2.


Results: T3B Tumor Couldn’t Last

I started with a T3B colorectal tumor—a big one.

It only survived two weeks of radiation under my full attack stack.
I’m now heading toward the finish line—no bleeding, no pain, and just a few days out from my hopeful T0 confirmation.


Closing Thoughts

This isn’t about being perfect. This isn’t about buying every expensive supplement.

It’s about having a battle plan:

  • Deprive the cancer.

  • Attack the cancer.

  • Shield your body.

  • Let your immune system mop up the rest.

If I can help anyone do that—even with a simplified version—then all of this has been worth it. Cancer sucks. But it can be beaten.

I believe it’s all about timing, strategy, and discipline. And that’s a protocol anyone can follow.

Stay strong.
We fight together.

Michael



   
Quote
Share:

Welcome to the Cancer Help Forum at Helping4Cancer.com — a free and supportive community for anyone impacted by cancer. Whether you’re battling cancer yourself, caring for someone who is, or looking for answers on prevention and recovery, our Cancer Help Forum offers a safe space to ask questions, share stories, and connect with people who truly understand.

Join The Cancer Help Forum

Our Cancer Help Forum is organized into detailed categories covering everything from fasting and metabolic therapy to traditional treatments like chemo and radiation. You can explore experiences with natural supplements, learn about anti-cancer diets, or just find emotional support from others walking a similar path.

Unlike other forums, our Cancer Help Forum is focused on evidence-based strategies, compassionate peer-to-peer discussion, and practical advice that’s actually useful. From early-stage diagnosis to post-treatment recovery, our Cancer Help Forum has dedicated threads for every phase of the journey.

The Cancer Help Forum is here for you 24/7.

Members of the Cancer Help Forum can also access exclusive insights from the Helping4Cancer.com protocol, including information on autophagy, immune reactivation, NAD+ strategies, and B17 therapy. Share your progress, track your success, or just vent —

Whether you’re looking for answers, inspiration, or understanding, the Cancer Help Forum is a trusted place to talk openly, stay informed, and never feel alone. Thousands of people visit our Cancer Help Forum each week to find hope, help, and healing.

Join the Cancer Help Forum today and discover the strength that comes from shared experience. This isn’t just a message board — it’s a movement of people reclaiming control over their health. Let the Cancer Help Forum be part of your journey forward.

👉 Visit the Cancer Help Forum