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Diagnosis Unknown PDF

252 Pages·2003·1.17 MB·English
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1 DIAGNOSIS UNKNOWN our journey to an unconventiional cure by Randy Smith A Quantum Reach Publishing 2 Copyright © 1997 by Randy Smith Published 1997, Hampton Roads Publishing Company, Inc. Republished 2003 in Paperback and E-Book editions by A Quantum Reach Publishing All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this work in any form whatsoever, without permission in writing from the publisher, except for brief passages in connection with a review. ISBN 0-9675448-2-3 e-book You may order a print version for $18.95 at http://www.diagnosis-unknown.com Quantity discounts for organizations are available. For information contact: A Quantum Reach Publishing E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected] Websites: www.a-quantum-reach.com www.diagnosis-unknown.com 3 This book is for Linda 4 Acknowledgments I am grateful to many people for their interest in and cooperation on this book. My wife, Linda, was not only the principal actor in our play, but its producer. Her willingness to allow me to describe the details of her many procedures is a demonstration of a lack of vanity unusual in so beautiful a woman. Our son, Noble, the real writer in the family, gave me valuable suggestions in organization and editing. Our son Shawn provided a great deal of moral support. My brother, Dr. Bart Smith, was my closest advisor throughout the entire experience. My mother, Mary Smith, typed the handwritten manuscript and made many suggestions. My father, Bob Smith, offered constant encouragement as he has done consistently my entire life. I am indebted to more than a dozen friends who read the manuscript and urged me to pursue publication. Ernie Martin, in particular, took an active interest in this project and led me to author Michael Schulman. Dr. Schulman provided an introduction to Al Zuckerman at Writer’s House. Al took the book to his friends at Hampton Roads Publishing Company, Inc. Now the book will take on new life as an e-book and print- on-demand publication thanks to A Quantum Reach led by the vision of Charlotte Anthonisen and ably assisted by Connie Said. Linda and I appreciate their support and encouragement. 5 Table of Contents Preamble 07 Chapter 1 The Bite 08 Chapter 2 Our Medical History 13 Chapter 3 We’re Going to the Doctor 28 Chapter 4 Searching for Wellville 41 Chapter 5 Crossing Over 61 Chapter 6 Hydrotherapy 73 Chapter 7 The Wheatgrass Diaries 86 Chapter 8 Toward More Natural Healing 101 Chapter 9 The Wizard of Ozone 113 Chapter 10 The Thief of Vitality 124 Chapter 11 Vibrational Healing 133 Chapter 12 Multilevel Marketing 144 Chapter 13 Cleaning House 154 Chapter 14 Breath of Life 164 Chapter 15 Doug’s Diagnosis 175 Chapter 16 Understanding Energy 185 Chapter 17 Cavitation Surgery 200 Chapter 18 Radionics 211 Chapter 19 Spider’s Song 230 Epilogue 241 Afterward 243 Reading List 245 A Quantum Reach Publishing 251 6 Preamble Linda Smith, a former Miss Seattle, once star of her own regional TV show, a highly regarded visual artist, performer in many community theater productions, devoted mother, community activist, antique collector, tennis player, bicycler, walker and hiker— a fit and very attractive forty-nine-year-old with no significant health problems on her resumé, woke up on her birthday with a dot on her eyelid. She believed it was a spider bite. Within two weeks the eye was swollen shut. Seven months later the eye was still grotesquely engorged. A year later she was a virtual invalid, a prisoner of her bedroom, her body racked with unexplainable symptoms. She was certain she was dying. 7 Chapter One The Bite On her forty-ninth birthday, on November 1, 1992, Linda looked into the bathroom mirror and saw a small red dot on the flesh between the eyelid and brow of her left eye. She surveyed her birthday face. She was sensitive about her eyes and had always been dissatisfied with their appearance. “My eyes are puffy,” she would say. “Someday I’m going to get them fixed. I can hardly hold my eyelids up. There’s just too much extra skin.” I had known Linda since I was twelve and she was eleven. We had been childhood sweethearts for awhile in junior high school and again for a brief interlude in college. She married someone else but I carried a torch and caught a nice rebound. She always looked good to me. “Your eyes are fine,” I would answer. She stared at the dot. “Come look at this.” I could see tiny red lines radiating from a center point. “I think it’s a bite,” she said. Her statement was actually a question. After twenty-eight years of marriage I had developed enough sensitivity to read her oblique inflections. “It’ll be okay,” I said. “It will go away.” “I think it’s a bite,” she continued. “When we walked around the park yesterday—remember when something flew into my eye? It’s a spider bite.” “Spiders don’t fly,” I offered. “It could have dropped down from a tree. There are lots of spiders in this house. We should get someone to spray.” “Poison would be worse than spiders,” I argued. “You’ll be okay. You have a strong body. Whatever it is will heal.” “Remember when Steve was bitten by the spider?” she asked. “They weren’t positive it was a spider,” I replied quickly. “Pretty sure. They were pretty sure. What else could it have 8 DIAGNOSIS UNKNOWN- The Bite been?” she wondered out loud, still staring in the mirror. “I want a doctor to see this. Linda was convinced she had been bitten by a spider and was concerned because she had heard on more than one occasion that spider venom could desiccate the tissue leaving holes in the flesh. Our friend and former neighbor Steve, a physician, had presumably been bitten in his sleep by a brown recluse spider and nearly died, kept alive only by the massive intervention of his colleagues on the hospital medical staff. He had been shaken by the experience. We knew spider bites could be serious. “It’ll go away.” I said again. You’re not always right!” she told me. And it turned out I wasn’t. Within a few days the tissue around the dot began to redden and swell. As her eye began to close up, Linda experienced strange waves of unwellness. She believed it was spider venom coursing through her veins. She felt she was being poisoned. I was concerned about her reactions to this event but was confident the infection, or whatever it was, would disappear. We were shocked when the eye continued to swell dramatically. In the corner of her left eye, close to the nose, a distended bag of fluid distorted her face. We stared at the eye, studied it with a magnifying glass, not knowing quite what to do or to say but, as always, assuming this ailment would run its course. She wanted to see a doctor immediately. We felt we knew how to enter the medical system. We had many friends and acquaintances who were physicians. An eye problem required an eye doctor. Even though we had recently moved to a new town and knew no doctors personally, it only took a week to get an appointment with an ophthalmologist— Dr. Elias. I had to take her. By that time the swelling had impaired her vision and she didn’t feel safe driving a car. Dr. Elias, the ophthalmologist, didn’t know what it was. “It might be a bite,” he told her. Or it could be an allergic reaction from a dust particle or animal matter of some type. I can’t see any foreign objects in the eye.” Dr. Elias prescribed an antihistamine and cortisone cream. We went home to wait for the medicine to work. A week after this first visit to the doctor the eye was much worse. It hurt, it ached, it was scratchy. Each morning, it was filled with sticky stuff. I 9 DIAGNOSIS UNKNOWN—The Bite drove her back to the eye clinic. I sat in the waiting room and read several magazines. Dr. Elias was apparently baffled. What did he say?” I asked as we walked to our car. “He said he enjoys a good mystery!” It was inconceivable to me that a highly trained eye specialist could not diagnose her condition. Why should it be such a mystery? I wondered what Elias would do with this mystery. How does a physician go about enjoying a good mystery? Does he sit in his den at night and quietly savor it? What he did was the “handoff.” He referred Linda to a local internist—Dr. Lewis. “An internist is a specialist at diagnosis.” Dr. Elias told Linda. We knew that, of course. Our friend Steve was a board certified internist. She saw the second doctor a week later. Dr. Lewis thought it was a bite. He told her to return in a week if it wasn’t better and he would prescribe an antibiotic. Linda was upset because Dr. Lewis didn’t even take a close look at the eye. “He just glanced at it,” she said in a confused tone. “He didn’t even get close to me! Then he asked me if I’d had a pap smear lately. When I left he hollered at me as I was going down the hall, ‘Have you signed up for a mammogram?’ I don’t want to go back to him.” “He’s supposed to be good,” I said, trying to be helpful. “Who says?” she questioned. We realized that we didn’t know as much as we thought we did about how to enter the medical system. We had an eye problem so we picked an eye doctor. The eye doctor thought an internist, a diagnostic specialist, would have the right answer. That made good sense to us. But the internist didn’t ask enough questions to come up with a diagnosis and was busy trying to promote pap smears and mammograms. Linda didn’t really want any more X- rays. She wondered about radiation. Our new dentist had taken several X-rays during the summer. Linda had some concern that the swelling and redness was the result of X-rays. But finally, we decided that X-rays would also have to cause damage to the eyeball itself and Linda could see when she held her eye open. We were concerned, but not worried. Everyone, even normally healthy people get sick once in awhile with a cold, flu, or other 10

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man who used a computer and copper probes to diagnose her ailments years of training and experience, carried more weight than mine. Of course, said Dr. scream, slam the book shut, and deny the possibility. My brother, Bart
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.