Letters to Friends, To Dr. Ming; Personal Observations and
Comments From an American Point of View
(George L Sammis, USA. September 19, 2009)
Monday September 14, 2009 from the Huaihua Red Cross Hospital,
China.
Dear Dr. Ming,
The first thing to tell you is that we are more pleased with
Michael's progress under your care than words can express.
A few days ago you came to our room and asked if you could use
what I'd written to our friends and family on your website. You
wanted to help others from the Western cultures to see what you
are doing through the eyes of a Westerner.
I sent you a copy of these letters so that you better understood
the reasons for our enthusiasm. My own understanding of medicine
and medical practice comes only from experience gathered over a
lifetime spent mainly in the USA. My first glimpse into
Traditional Chinese Medicine and its natural healing benefits
came from working as a consultant in Guangdong Province off and
on for about 6 years. Most Americans and probably Europeans as
well, might be dubious of Chinese healing arts because there is
little frame of reference in the West except for the fact that
over the last 10 years or longer, an industry sprung up with the
opening of "Health Food and Nutrition Stores" selling herbal
supplements, natural vitamins, minerals and so on. That industry
is rapidly growing by quantum leaps.
(The rest of my letter to Dr. Ming is found in part throughout
this narrative and in part at the end).
I was first taken to a TCM doctor in Hong Kong about 4 1/2 years
ago by a Chinese friend. It sure didn't look anything like a
doctor office to me. Instead, what I saw was a store-front with
hundreds of glass jars filled with herbs beyond my
description. It reminded me of a candy store selling bulk candy
when I was a small boy. After passing through to the back, I
sat with the doctor for an interview. He took my blood pressure
and knowing I was diabetic a blood glucose reading as well. He
had me breathe deeply, He listened to my chest for respiration
and heart beat, took my pulse and performed a few tests with
which I was most familiar. At the end of that he began writing
in Chinese characters on a piece of paper for maybe five
minutes. He handed it to me and sent me back out front to give
it to the man behind the counter. I was told to sit and
wait. The person behind the counter began gathering and
weighing herbs from the jars and finished by boiling them into
about pint or half a liter of "tea". I was instructed to drink
half of it when I returned to the hotel and the other half when
I arose in the morning. I was pleased when the pain from my
nagging acid reflux was gone. Simple, natural and it worked
like crazy. I realized then that what the doctor had written in
Chinese WAS his prescription. I thought to myself "humm,
customized herbal medicine, formulated just for me".
That experience, led me to look for an alternative for treatment
when my step-son Michael was diagnosed with ALS in The
Philippines about 3 months ago. As we so well know, Western
medicine has no solution for Lou Gehrig's disease. We were
simply advised that he had maybe 3 to 5 years to live and that
as his body deteriorated they would prescribe something for his
pain. We were shocked, devastated and in fear.
Another alternative medical experience in my past deals with the
inoperable colon cancer of my first wife when Mayo Clinic gave
her 3 months to live and installed a morphine pump in her belly.
That led to a Mexican clinic offering alternative care. It
ended where it began a year and a half later at Mayo when she
insisted they remove the morphine pump because her tumor was
gone. It was the first one they had ever removed. So I was "not
a slave" to Western medical practice and jumped on the internet
for Michael to find you.
Neither am I as health-conscious as I should be. I never
explored the health and nutrition stores being mainly oblivious
to it. We do take a few vitamins and supplements often purchased
at Walmart or the like on semi-annual trips back for
business. My primary diabetes doctor is there so I get
comprehensive blood tests at least twice a year. I spend a
small fortune on modern medicine prescription drugs to keep my
blood pressure, cholesterol, thyroid and diabetes in check. Had
I been Chinese, I might never have resorted to that stuff. But
it is the system over there and I simply went along with
it. Perhaps many of the people who may read this acted little
differently from me.
The letters that follow are self explanatory.
The first is a letter to my brother in Illinois. We'd first
exchanged the news on June 2, 2009. His wife manages a hospital
lab in a small city southwest of Chicago. They knew when
Michael was first diagnosed, talked it over with some friends in
medical service and explained a few things to me about ALS. I'd
not had time to bring him up to speed for some time so decided
he needed some history that he didn't know. I wanted also to
better explain why we sought a treatment so far removed from
their realm of experience but he was well aware of the success
we'd had in Mexico with his first sister-in-law.
Fri Aug 21, 2009 @ 8:20pm in Baguio
Hi Stu,
Sorry for the delay in responding to your last Email but I've
been up to it in alligators since you wrote.
From what you said in the beginning and that which I'd seen on
the internet, everything said that ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease) is
not treatable. When we first got news of Michael's final
diagnosis and I wrote you to advise family and friends, we'd
only been home a day or two. We had to come back to Saipan
because Ronald was on leave from the Air Force having been
transferred from Korea to Okinawa. We'd not seen him for six
years and that was important to us too. He'd been staying at
our place in Saipan for two weeks before we got back as it was.
We returned from the Philippines after sorting out doctors
stemming back to other visits beginning more than a year before
that. Something was wrong with one of Michael's hands. We first
took him to the doctor in April, 2008, got x-rays and some
pills. On the visit last November he'd gotten worse. By then it
was both hands and was almost as if the muscles in his hands
were melting, they were wasting away. We went to more doctors
and returned to Saipan just before Christmas. Every time we
called and Hilda spoke with Michael he would consistently say he
was okay but his hands still bothered him. When we returned in
April this year he could barely walk. We saw more but different
doctors for the first month or so but we remembered taking his
brother Jason to a neurologist so decided to see if she had any
answers. Jeez, we should have started there because she wrote
out a prescription and insisted we take him to St. Luke's
Hospital in Manila, a first rate highly accredited facility, one
of the best in Asia. He got MRI's of the brain and spine along
with an electromyogram. But we didn't have his final diagnosis
until a day or two after we got home. Michael's wife called
sobbing and in grief after speaking with his neurologist in
Baguio. It was a few days later I first told you guys about it.
I was not sure what "motor neuron" disease or ALS really was so
I searched the net. The first page I saw stated unequivocally
that it was always fatal, usually in from 2 to 5 years of
diagnosis. Essentially it was the same thing you said in our
first Email exchange about it. I was shocked and it brought
tears to my eyes the instant I read it. Stephen Hawking the
noted physicist from the UK (in a wheel chair) is the only
person I'd ever heard of that was stricken with ALS and lived.
Using Mom's thinking I considered that due to his important
contributions to the understanding of cosmology and science that
perhaps that his still being alive was a matter of divine
intervention.
When I began the search for something to help Michael, I found
only three choices:
1. A possibility discussed with Michael's wife was the
implantation of stem cells. It sounded like an option but from
what I could learn, the cost of treatment was about $10,000 if
done in China but I soon dropped it when I read elsewhere that
it is not a cure but a temporary solution. If his body was
killing off motor neuron cells, it would also kill off the
implanted cells over time because the root cause of the disease
had not been addressed and the body would remain still afflicted
with the disease itself.
2. Another potential solution was Traditional Chinese Medicine.
It rang a bell. I guess I never told you that at a stage, while
working in China that I'd been to Chinese Medicine men twice,
once in Hong Kong and later in Enping. I learned that the art of
TCM natural healing is many thousands of years old and was the
only medical knowledge or treatment in China prior to the age of
modern medicine. Many traditional Chinese people have stayed
with it to the exclusion of modern medicine. With a background
and history over the centuries there has accumulated a vast sum
of knowledge so this is nothing new, but the therapies change
and evolve as diseases present themselves in modern day
society. I was drawn to this particular therapy because of a
modest experience with it. So we took our first actions with
TCM.
3. After getting started on the quest I bought a most insightful
book called "Eric is Winning". Contrary to what I'd read and
what you told me, not everyone with ALS dies from it. In fact,
according to the book many people survive it. It is written by a
man from California who was diagnosed with ALS going on 20 years
ago. He made up his mind that he was going to beat it, after
getting the death sentence from his MD. It arrived mid-July but
by then we were seeking Michael's passport in The Philippines. I
began reading it in earnest on the flight to Manila to learn
that the author figured it out for himself and he's helped
others with the way he achieved it. It took him many years but
he early concluded that the cause of ALS was toxins, potentially
thousands of different ones, some in combination with others
including things such as amalgam dental fillings (50% mercury,
35% silver and 15% other metals), air pollution, water
pollution, living nearby toxic waste (such as in Guam), insect
spray, herbicides, fluoride in the water, MSG, artificial
sweeteners and many, many others. He found ways including
chelation to expel heavy metals and other toxins from his blood
and organs. He could follow his progress with hair analysis
which identifies heavy metals, toxins and also what vitamins and
minerals in the body are deficient. Once toxin-free he
proceeded to stay toxin free with a mainly fresh organic
vegetarian diet, a lot of herbal supplements and so on. He came
to avoid fast food restaurants and prepared foods of all kinds
because of the food additives. Becky, especially, would find his
book most interesting. If she ever becomes aware of an ALS case
where she works she should persuade the MD, neurologist or even
the patient to read it. It would be helpful to anyone with a
chronic illness. So this was the third option and no doubt a
viable one but we'd already taken action. Besides, I'd seen a
correlation between what he did for himself and the natural
herbal cleansing of Traditional Chinese Medicine.
The book is in its 9th printing and is likely widely spread
among PALS around the globe. It coins the term PALS meaning
"People with ALS" a term often seen and used much on the
internet.
We began our journey with Traditional Chinese Medicine a month
or so before I read the book and Michael was already
experiencing some good benefits with their "tea" which he began
using mid-June. Also there is a Chinese Hospital in Baguio
involved mainly in Western Medicine but they also do acupuncture
and medical massage. Michael was confined there for two weeks,
after which we continued his acupuncture and massage treatments
10 days on, 10 days off, but he used the Chinese "tea" every day
morning and evening throughout. By the time he came home his
pain had mainly subsided.
Before the first batch of herbs ran out we ordered the second
batch. Michael¨s wife wondered if they sent the right stuff
because it didn't taste the same and he was a bit nauseous to it
at first. I wrote back and asked. Sure enough, they had used our
descriptions of his reactions to the first batch and wanted
details about his current condition. They modified the second
one as a part of their continually evolving medical plan for
patients. The third batch changed yet again.
We'll talk more about this when we see one another but this is
the short version of the story so far. It appears for all the
world that Michael is responding well and may be on the road to
putting it into remission.
Love ya' bro,
George
Now to what I said to my close friend Phil Stone, a chemist by
trade. He is both analytical and creative. I deal with Phil in
business. He's had three close friends die of ALS. He didn't
say, but I know him well enough to think that he was skeptical
that anything could be done to save Michael:
Monday Aug 31 @ 10:30pm in Hunan Province
Hi Phil,
Without writing a whole lot of paragraphs I just wanted you to
know that bringing Michael for these Traditional Chinese
Medicine treatments is the best decision I ever made. When we
arrived in Baguio he had greatly improved on the herbs from
China and the acupuncture and massage he got in Baguio. His
color was back, he was speaking more clearly, he could walk at
least a hundred yards, his pain was gone, he was eating like a
horse and he looked like a new man to us after not seeing him
for 2.5 months. His hands were still next to worthless as I'd
noticed the day we got his passport when in my own unthinking,
he could not use his key to unlock the door of the house. He
also dragged his feet but damit, he could walk. Coming over
here we had 4 airports to negotiate, a terminal change in Tokyo
and in Guangzhou we had to do it twice because of a forced
overnight. We used wheel chairs to get him around.
We arrived last Thursday about 6pm. His med team met with us on
Friday morning, interviewed and examined him and set their
initial course of action. The day starts at 9am when his doctor
comes to the room. He's examined again and is asked to perform
a various range of motion tasks such as lifting his arms as high
as he can, holding them out at 90 degrees, he is asked to spread
and move his fingers, stick out his tongue, do a couple of knee
and elbow bends and simple things like that. It's followed by
the doctor jerking his arms, legs and so on and wanting to know
exactly where it hurt. The acupuncturist is present and he
gives his explicit instructions as to exactly what he wants
done. I'm pretty sure the formula for the herbs is changed from
day to day in order to target exactly what the doc is trying to
accomplish. At 3pm the acupuncturist arrives and begins to
carry out the doctors instructions. Immediately following that
he is given a medical massage. The process takes about an hour.
His first treatment began Friday afternoon. The routine changes
a bit every day so now he's had just 4 days of it. He's
improved maybe 50% from the day we left Baguio! This morning,
Hilda nudged me to notice that he was putting on his own
clothes. Then he put on his sneakers and more surprisingly
began slowly but deliberately tying the shoe laces with hands
that hadn't worked the week before. We both watched in utter
amazement. He's not been able to do that for probably close to
year now, since long before the original diagnosis. The first
thing I noticed is that he is now laughing out loud and
beginning to enjoy himself. I'll bet he could now walk a
kilometer unaided, albeit slowly. Arliss is staging a formal
wedding in Baguio on December 5th. I told Michael today that if
he wanted to impress the gathered throng, he might do a little
running for them. I'm quite sure that on the return trip at the
end of the month he will walk through those same airports going
back.
I'm no longer worried about going to Iowa for two months. We'll
take back his current formula of herbs and even though the
acupuncture in Baguio won't be so well directed, I think he will
continue to improve after we leave. And we are prepared for
setbacks. I was able to get multiple entry visas for maximum 3
month stays, good for the next 12 months by having prepared a
3/4" inch thick set of documentation. With 11 expired China
Visas in my current passport and Hilda with six of them in hers
it let them know we knew the rules and not to over stay. The
best I ever got while working in China was a 3 month multiple
good for maximum stay of 30 days. If he even gives a hint of
going backwards we will bring him back here in a heartbeat
without hindrance or delay.
This place has only 20 patient rooms but they are in the process
of constructing a much larger facility. So far, over the last
3-4 years since they opened the International Department, they
have treated more than 300 ALS and chronic illness patients. As
they go home, family and friends are impressed with their
progress, the word spreads and more people are beating a path to
their door. The people in the room next to us have been here
for two months and are leaving at the end of the week. Their
daughter has been being treated for epilepsy. The parents are
thrilled with her progress. They learned of this facility
through a friend who came here with ALS and they were so amazed
by his progress they inquired what could be done for their
daughter.
The real inspiration to us is hanging out with the other ALS
patients who are in various stages of treatment. We've seen a
few use wheel chairs, one with a cane, another with a crutch but
most of them walk on their own two feet and many quite
normally. We were fortunate to have started Michael on the
herbs and acupuncture more than two months before we got
here. Most of them begin their recovery the day they arrive. A
man from Finland is here as a student to hone his acupuncture
skills. He doesn't treat ALS or deal with herbs but he remarked
that it was nice that Michael had such a light case of
ALS. When I told him he'd been on the regimen a bit longer than
two months back home and that he couldn't talk and be
understood, he couldn't dress himself, at times he couldn't feed
himself, he couldn't walk 10 feet, he had a hard time swallowing
and had been in ferocious pain, etc, he understood it for what
it had been. Every single ALS patient here has a story to tell
and all of them say they have been helped. Most stay 2-3
months. If you ever have another friend with ALS, don't hesitate
to have them contact me.
So that's the story for now, Phil. No doubt there will be more
in the weeks ahead.
George
The next letter is in response to something I said in Email to a
man most knowledgeable about ALS. We'd met by Email on the
internet about a different subject. He was amazed at my
description of Michael's rapid progress and wanted to know more
about the clinic and what they do.
Excerpted from my reply:
Sept 1, 2009 @ 6pm in Hunan Province
Thanks for your message above and yes, WE ARE ECSTATIC about the
rapid progress of our son Michael. I'm more than happy to
communicate what I know about this place with you. I'll give you
a link so you can weigh what I've said against what they say
about themselves. In chasing links on the net I ran across a
blogger, supposedly a PALS, saying that the book, many of the
herbal retailers, the stem cell treatments in China and this
place were all money scams for personal immoral enrichment. It
boiled my buns. First, I know from business that authors of
books receive royalties or if they publish themselves still
receive only a fraction of the retail book price. The book is
definitely not a scam nor is the herbal supplement dealer he
named.
As for this Chinese Hospital, their mission is strictly limited
to the practice of Traditional Chinese Medicine. They know
exactly what their healing art is and they know "Modern
Medicine" has no answer for PALS. This place is not High Tech,
rather it is Ancient Wisdom Tech. There are no visible signs
that they make big money doing this. They wear simple clothing,
their personal cars are average to less than that. They work
long hours and believe 1,000% in what they are doing. There is
nothing here as opulent as an average American doctor¨s
office. In improving the lives of PALS and other chronic
sufferers it takes some time to administer their own style of
natural healing so it is inadvisable to come here for a very
short time. To give you some examples that the motivation is not
money:
The room cost AND treatment is $70 per day. Like most Asian care
facilities they encourage patients to bring a caregiver to stay
with the patient and the cost to do that is an extra $10 per
day. They would like new patients to stay at least a month but
longer is better. There is no charge to the patient for herbs,
acupuncture, massage or anything else while they are staying
here. I'll point out that you are on your own dime for food,
laundry or other personal necessities. They take caregivers
and/or patients shopping for two hours three times a week as
many prefer to use the kitchen to do their own cooking or use
their washing machines to do their laundry. They can provide
those services along with 24 hr nursing or meals at additional
cost. Each room is equipped with high speed internet access at
no extra cost. So they are hardly getting rich. I'm a
businessman so asked a few questions to quickly learn they get
miffed if you refer to it as a business!
I'll give you the link at this point so can explore it for
yourself. I learned from Dr. Ming that he made most of the web
site himself when they first opened. Realize that some of the
pages are older but the main ALS page was updated this
year. Dr. Ming is a fairly young man who realized that in order
to deal with the West he HAD to learn to speak and write
English. The staff of TCM doctors and the experts he brought on
board speak no English. They spent their time in school and
after in pursuit of learning and teaching Traditional Chinese
Medicine, all of which has been handed down in Chinese writings
over the centuries. Rather, the doctor comes to the room with
an interpreter and the acupuncturist. The link has a couple of
short home made videos of interviews with patients. I didn't
click on them until today because of slow internet speed in both
Saipan and Baguio. When I watched them they fairly present
exactly how it is here.
Of course you have my complete permission to post anything I say
to you for the betterment of other PALS.
http://www.tcmtreatment.com/images/diseases/ALS-Report.htm
His team of experts have "some skins on the wall". They are well
schooled, have written published papers and so on. In the West
we can't have a good understanding or appreciation of how highly
regarded they are in TCM. The man next down from the top
(Professor Yang) is Michael's doctor. I see him often in
Michael's room when he is being treated and noticed that his
herb prescriptions change every day or so and the focus of the
acupuncture changes as well.
http://www.tcmtreatment.com/Our-Experts.htm
I'll also point out that the term "Red Cross" in their hospital
name is a distinction granted them by the Chinese Ministry of
Health, something earned, not just said in words.
I think several things that contributed to Michael's quicker
than usual success is that I got in touch with this place within
a week of diagnosis. The holdup in getting him here sooner was
that it took about two months getting his Philippine passport.
While we were waiting he was taking his prescription herbs
morning and evening and he was getting acupuncture and massage
locally.
Another thing that no doubt helped was the near poverty of the
family over there - meaning that they eat mainly rice and
vegetables. Michael is 40. Earlier in life he had some dental
fillings, but as his teeth began to worsen he had them removed
because it was less expensive than the fix. The family is too
poor to have any excesses. All his life he's been technically
disabled due to hearing loss. At less than 2 years old his
natural father whacked him across the head for crying and he's
been stone deaf in that ear despite corrective surgery we got
him shortly after I married his mother. His work has always
been physical labor doing construction for his uncle or on the
family farm or digging for gold on family land. (A common thing
in the mountain province because the commercial mine leases
start at 20 feet below the surface so the land holders are free
to dig on their own land). We think his ALS stems from regularly
using mercury.
Oh, another thing that might be contributing to his recovery is
the fact that no one, not his wife, his doctor or any of his
family ever told him the likely outcome in 2-5 years. He's had
no idea of what trouble he's been in. His own belief of what
happened is that about 2 years ago he slipped and fell. When he
landed he no doubt sprained his wrist - which never improved
probably because of the onset of ALS. He figured that it
poisoned his body somehow and spread, causing the other
deterioration of his body. I've long believed that for some,
"ignorance is bliss" so we left him with his own thoughts about
it.
I tend to think that early treatment here will bring early
results. For the longer term PALS in wheelchairs who claim
improvement, it's a big win for them too. As my friend Phil
would say about his own inventions "this is science, not magic".
If anyone writes me Email if you choose to post any of this,
trust that I will answer as promptly and as correctly and
honestly as I know how. I'm no shill for anybody. As a
consultant working on the fringe of the Orient my main mode of
communication is Email. Some days it feels like I've been
responding to Emails for a hundred years.
Faithfully, and in friendship,
George
------------------
A Final Note To Dr. Ming:
I knew your objective in asking permission to include my letters
on your web site. The substance of the above comes mainly from
those letters. I added some paragraphs to include my first
experience with TCM in Hong Kong so that potential readers
might have a better idea of Traditional Chinese Medicine from
the view of a layman. I re-arranged the order of precisely what
I sent you and cleaned up some of the phrasing and
grammar. Also included here is a letter sent to my brother in
August telling him what we settled on for Michael, and why.
I'm thankful for this opportunity to share this with people
inquiring about your century's old healing art. For us it is
working even better than hoped and I know from the patients I
meet in the halls or the courtyard that not one person with whom
we've spoken voiced any negative comments to us. Let this serve
as both our testimonial and our personal endorsement. It may not
work for everyone but it is sure working for Michael and many of
the people I've met here. Keep up the good work!
George