Cancer is not a straight line. It's up and down.
The people who eat the most animal protein have the most heart disease, cancer and diabetes.
I have been a vegetarian for about 10 years. And it really was due to the reading that I did. And they explain so that you understand why it's important for the planet's survival along with compassion for animals. It certainly made it much easier for me. I lost weight really fast. My mother died from cancer so this is all very personal to me. And I just would like the planet to be a better place. And I think you'll find a vegetarian diet to be really incredible these days
Cancer taught me a plan for more purposeful living, and that in turn taught me how to train and to win more purposefully. It taught me that pain has a reason, and that sometimes the experience of losing things-whether health or a car or an old sense of self-has its own value in the scheme of life. Pain and loss are great enhancers.
Cancer had a chance to break me down, but I was determined to fight back with strength and positivity.
The cancer doesn't bother me. I have great faith that the technology will beat it.
[On lightweight movies:] Fun movies. They were never meant to cure cancer, only to take away the mind.
Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the assessment that something else is more important than fear.
Life is without meaning. You bring the meaning to it. The meaning of life is whatever you ascribe it to be. Being alive is the meaning.
To fear is one thing. To let fear grab you by the tail and swing you around is another.
Pain is temporary. Quitting lasts forever.
A quick example of that is a woman who said she'd been healed of throat cancer where the faith healer admitted he touched her on the forehead.
This particular nurse said, Cancer cells are those which have forgotten how to die. I was so struck by this statement.
I think that it is our intention to deny cancer any control over us.
Turning 30 was when my parents both got cancer and were fighting it and beat it, but their mortality started to get to me. Everything wasn't as hunky-dory like it was.
When you get cancer, it's like really time to look at what your life was and is, and I decided that everything I've done so far is not as important as what I'm going to do now.
Lance Armstrong, the famous cyclist and more importantly, cancer survivor, has said 'if you ever get a second chance for something, you've got to go all the way.'
I have friends who are going through chemotherapy, and they make the darkest, most hideous cancer jokes you've ever heard.
Humanity abhors, above all things, a vacuum in itself, and your class will be cut off from humanity as the surgeon cuts the cancer and alien growth from the body.
The Establishment center... has led us into the stupidest and cruelest war in all history. That war is a moral and political disaster - a terrible cancer eating away at the soul of our nation.
Cancer, like any other illness, is a bore.
I think governments are the cancer of civilization.
But when I first got cancer, after the initial shock and the fear and paranoia and crying and all that goes with cancer - that word means to most people ultimate death - I decided to see what I could do to take that negative and use it in a positive way.
Unfortunately, cancer is the number one killer of children in this country today, and it destroys not only these innocent victims, but their families as well.
Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches.
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