Blog: Starfire Transmissions

What I Would Do If I Were Diagnosed with Cancer or an Extreme Autoimmune Disease
Nik Heartsong Nik Heartsong

What I Would Do If I Were Diagnosed with Cancer or an Extreme Autoimmune Disease

There is a particular kind of silence that falls when a diagnosis lands. The room goes quiet. The words autoimmune, chronic, incurable, lifelong management hang in the air, and something inside you contracts. I know that silence. I have lived inside my own version of it.

So I want to speak to you the way I would speak to myself — not from a place of fear, but from the deep knowing that the body is not betraying you. It is asking you for something. An autoimmune flare is the body turning its immense intelligence inward, confused about what is self and what is threat. Our work is not to suppress that intelligence. It is to help the body remember.

What follows is what I would do — what I have done in my own healing — to support the terrain beneath an autoimmune storm. I want to be clear and honest with you from the very first breath of this piece: none of this is a replacement for the care of a skilled physician. If you have been diagnosed with an extreme autoimmune condition, you need a relationship with a doctor you trust, and the foundational protocol they offer you matters. What I am sharing here is the terrain work — the soil beneath the plant — that I believe can run alongside good medical care and help your body find its way home.

Take what resonates. Leave what does not. And please, move through all of this with your own support team beside you.

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The Repurposed Antiparasitic Drugs That Are Quietly Changing the Cancer Conversation — And Why I Use Them
Nik Heartsong Nik Heartsong

The Repurposed Antiparasitic Drugs That Are Quietly Changing the Cancer Conversation — And Why I Use Them

Something significant is happening at the edges of cancer research — and it is not coming from pharmaceutical companies or oncology departments.

It is coming from a growing community of researchers, practitioners, and patients who have been asking a question that conventional oncology has largely refused to take seriously: what if some of the most effective anticancer compounds already exist — cheap, off-patent, widely available — and have been overlooked because there is no financial incentive to study them?

In March 2026, a declassified document circulated widely online and was covered by the Daily Mail — reportedly a historical CIA-linked document referencing research into potential cancer-fighting compounds including ivermectin. The story sparked furious public debate. It also opened a door that many in the integrative medicine community have been trying to open for years.

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