It sounds like a fairy tale: A loved one is dying of cancer
after all treatments have failed, a stranger comes to the home and offers a mysterious
homemade elixir, and then everyone is healthy and happy ever-after.
But to get to the fairy tale part, one must first go back to
when Brian and Jackie Capers of Aledo, Texas were told their son was going to
die.
“He was walking along beside us and leaning on me like he
was being lazy and tired,” Jackie explained as we visited at their modest home.
“I kept telling him to straighten up. Later on, he just flat-out fainted.”
Caleb Capers was diagnosed with an accelerated brain stem
cancer called astrocytoma. The life-degenerating growth in the back of the
three-year-old’s head blocked fluids, hindered normal body functions and was quickly
spreading its roots deeper into the child’s brain.
“The doctors said we can let the tumor grow and watch what
happens – basically, watch our son die – or try a new high radiation thing
called gamma-knife,” Jackie said. The family decided on the dangerous but
possible life-saving operation.
The following brain operations, five in all, were
experimental last-ditch efforts to extend the child’s life. Then
came the staggering news that destroyed
what little hope the family held. The child now had two separate tumors.
The family was told the child would die shortly after
Christmas and he was medicated and released so he could enjoy his final
Christmas at home. However, Brian was not their normal son when he returned
home. With much of his brain affected by cancer and conflicting medications
pushing his life a month further, the child was almost out of his mind.
“His brain was frying. He was seeing bugs crawling all over
the wall and he had to have everything in a certain place. He had horrible dreams.
I just couldn’t see him like that,” Jackie said. “That’s when we called the
guy.”
A relative had seen a small classified ad offering possible
help for cancer suffers, and the desperate but skeptical parents reluctantly
called.
He was a very simple man, the parents recall, and he came
to their home in an older model white pickup truck. He put two bottles of clear
liquid on the table with homemade labels and told the family his own son died
of cancer before he discovered this medicine and he was now seeking parents who
would try the remedy. He boldly told the couple that in three days Caleb would
begin to act like a normal kid again.
“I hate to say it, but I flat told him to his face that he
was full of it,” the mother recalled.
The bottles contained hydrazine sulfate, a controversial substance that has been both praised and buffooned
for decades. The man left instruction for doses to be taken with fruit
juices over two weeks.
“It must have tasted bad because we had to watch Caleb to
make sure he took all of it,” Brian said.
“Three days after giving my son hydrazine sulfate, he
started bouncing around the house like a normal boy,” the father recalled. “He started playing with his brother and running around. He was Caleb
again.”
Brian said he later learned hydrazine sulfate, although used
as a treatment for some cancers in a few countries, is not approved in the U.S. by the FDA
and is normally available only in highly diluted forms as a dietary supplement. Some
articles written by hydrazine sulfate supporters offer a “Big Brother”
theory, surmising that a medicine which may be effective against some
forms of cancer would tumble the nation’s multi-billion dollar cancer industry.
Other articles on the internet flatly stat the elixir is a hoax.
At this point, the conversation is suddenly interrupted by a now ten-year-old Caleb as he bounds into the room shadow boxing and kicking as he makes “pow-pow” noises with his mouth.
“I like to exercise,” the aspiring super-hero exclaims as he
takes more swings at an invisible opponent before leaping abruptly into his
mother’s lap.
“It cost us nothing!” she exclaimed as she struggled to contain
the bundle of energy squirming in her lap. “The man charged us nothing. He gave
it to us for free! I feel bad that we can’t find him now, but look – I have my
son.”
Jackie said the mysterious man returned once a few weeks
after his first visit to check on Caleb, told the family to “enjoy your life,”
and left.
Caleb still sees his doctors and his cancer is classified as being in remission. His parents report the doctors now schedule him for less frequent visits to monitor his progress.
“They were totally against it back when we told them we were
giving him the stuff and they were very serious about it,” the mother said of Caleb’s
doctors. “After a while they were like, ‘Whatever you are doing, just keep
doing it.’”
Jackie reflects on what might have caused the drastic
improvement of her son’s health.
“We can’t honestly say if it was the new medicine or God’s
will,” she said. “We were praying for him and we had others praying for him and
we gave him this stuff. Now look at him.”
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