joseph
49.8K posts


We are thrilled to introduce our community to Wyatt, a brave young boy receiving integrative treatments supported by CRT. His mother, Maggie, shared his story: "After a month of odd sleep, agitation, and loss of appetite, Wyatt woke April 26, 2025 with leg tremors. In the ER we learned a baseball-sized brain tumor. The next day they placed an external ventricular drain and he had a 16-hour surgery to remove it. We waited weeks for pathology and worked on rebuilding his strength. After two weeks we transferred for rehab, but his EVD leaked and rising intracranial pressure required another surgery. Pathology showed choroid plexus carcinoma—under 1% of brain cancers—so most providers had little experience. At Duke we learned tumor remained and chemo had to start immediately. Wyatt used a walker he called his “choo choo.” After his first chemo he had a seizure, then months of vomiting and trouble eating; we moved from an NG tube to a G-tube. He had three rounds of induction chemo, another surgery, bridge chemo with lumbar injections, then three transplant chemo rounds, finishing chemo in February. Our next MRI is April 29. At home I’ve supported Wyatt with ozone therapy, red light, a PEMF mat, supplements, and pharmagenetic testing. Duke is monitoring mutations via specialized CSF testing. I’m working with a naturopathic oncologist and his oncologist agreed to mebendazole for maintenance. Being out of work over a year, we’re grateful to organizations like Cancer Response Team for helping with financial strain." Visit CancerResponseTeam.org to learn how you can help CRT support children like Wyatt. #ChildhoodCancer #DonateNow #Cancer #CRTCares







So... word has gotten out that my sweet wife was bitten by a large copperhead last night. When it happened, we rushed her to the ER. The staff at our local hospital were absolutely amazing. They were responsive, kind, very helpful, and overall fantastic. Our biggest concern was the possibility of it not getting better and having to use the anti-venom, which carries its own risks, along with the potential for an extended stay. Fortunately, things stabilized, her vitals were steady, and they sent us home. We're not out of the woods yet, though. She is in a lot of pain, probably more than I’ve ever seen her in. We’re a busy family with a lot going on right now, but we truly cherish your prayers and are grateful for all the support, texts, calls, emails, and well wishes. We love y’all. Keep praying. God bless. - RB





















