Im sharing my Facebook post because it’s gaining some traction and I want you guys to see it and share what you think @lemon I share a protocol I’m using AqqI posted this yesterday, but I let fear of judgment get the best of me and deleted it. Today, after many of you asked me to share it again, I built up the courage to repost — because at the end of the day, I have two little reasons to live for, and no one will ever care more about my health than I do. To those who commented yesterday before I took it down, thank you. I read every word, and your support meant more to me than you know. ❤️ I want to share something with you that I believe is not just important—it’s urgent. It could save your life. It saved mine. This is a story about what happens when you refuse to accept "bad luck" as an answer. When you dig deeper. When you follow your God-given instinct until you find the truth. Even if no one believes you. Even if it means turning your world upside down. In November 2023, I began experiencing a strange, dull pain in my flank. It was constant—24/7. It never stopped. I saw 8 or 9 different doctors. All of them dismissed me. Gas. Muscle pain. Stress. They told me I was too young for cancer. They didn’t take me seriously. I told them something felt wrong—I even said the word “cancer”—and they brushed me off. Eventually, one doctor referred me to a GI specialist. I told her everything—about my persistent heartburn, my esophagitis (Grade C), and that nagging flank pain. She ordered a CT scan. I didn’t even get a call. I saw the result on MyChart: "Kidney mass." I went numb. Then I went to Google. And I cried for weeks. Then I went to church. I begged God for answers, for guidance, for truth. I saw five urologists. Two said monitor it. Three said surgery. I chose to try healing naturally for six months. Looking back, I now believe I could have healed—if I hadn’t still been actively exposed to the very thing that was making me sick. In October 2024, I was diagnosed with a renal mass. On April 14, 2025, I had surgery. With kidney cancer, they usually don’t biopsy—it’s too risky. You don’t know if it’s cancer until it’s removed. Chemo and radiation don’t work well on kidney cancer. Surgery is the treatment.