Interview with Stephanie, BJ’s mother.

BJMargaret: My guest today is Stephanie Abney of Mesa Arizona. She is a fourth grade school teacher at the American Leadership Academy. She is married to Jim, her husband of forty years. They are the parents of five children – four living. They have seventeen grandchildren. Their oldest child is their daughter Shannon, next is a son Matt, and then daughters Mandy and Kaci. (Their ages range from 27 – 37) Brian James Abney (BJ) passed away shortly after his sixteenth birthday. I met Stephanie when I joined ANWA (The American Night Writer’s Association.) She is an amazing woman. Stephanie, will you please tell us about BJ?

Stephanie: BJ, Brian James Abney was born Sept, 5, 1984. He was a beautiful blonde blue-eyed boy. He was always my healthiest child until he was diagnosed with cancer. He was lots of fun and had a great sense of humor. He was an incredible athlete – he wanted to play pro baseball and probably could have. He loved people and everyone was always drawn to him. BJ was known on campus as a gentleman, always holding the doors open for the girls, always encouraging everyone. He was charmer. He loved to work with his hands. He was very creative and innovative, always “improving” things. BJ loved woodworking and he was quite good at it. He loved music, nature, especially birds and reptiles, and his family. He loved the Lord.

Margaret: When was BJ diagnosed with cancer?

Stephanie: In 1995, at the age of 10½, BJ suddenly became feverish, clammy and threw up (he had just returned from a fishing trip with the neighbors and we thought he had heat exhaustion). After three days with no improvement, we went to the doctor who took one look at him (totally pale & weak), felt his spleen, did blood work and immediately sent us to the hospital.

Margaret: What was the diagnosis?

Stephanie: A.L.L.: Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Margaret: How long did it take from the first time something different/odd/or wrong was noticed until you received the diagnosis?

Stephanie: BJ had what was referred to as “rapid onset” – one day he was healthy and playing baseball, the next he was sick. He complained of not feeling well on a Sunday, I cared for him at home for three days, called the doctor, went in the next day (Thurs) and went straight to the hospital – they gave him immediate blood transfusions (which saved his life) and ran tests and gave us the A.L.L. diagnosis on Friday – so in less than a week our lives were forever changed.

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Interview with Andrea Orlowski, NMD

Dr. OrlowskiToday my guest is naturopathic doctor Andrea Orlowski NMD. Dr. Orlowski received her doctorate in Naturopathic Medicine from the Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine in 1997. She continued her education to receive a master’s degree in Traditional Chinese medicine.

Margaret: Thank you for visiting with me today. I am interested in why you chose to become an NMD rather than any other kind of physician?

Dr. Orlowski: I’ve always been interested in healing. However I did not perceive Conventional medicine as often truly healing patients. My observations of conventional medicine are that it doesn’t always address the deeper causes of an illness. Many of the medications and treatments just alleviate symptoms and some cause further heath problems. In Conventional Medicine there is a lot of influence from pharmaceutical companies and an overall capitalistic philosophy where much of it revolves around the profit margin rather than focusing on the true needs of the patient.

The philosophy of Naturopathic Medicine is as follows:

1.) First do no harm, never give the patient something that will ultimately make them worse.
2.) Work with the healing power of nature. This means utilizing plants, foods and natural medicines provided to us by the earth in their whole, balanced form and also recognizing our bodies natural tendency to return to homeostasis, or perfect health as long as the blocks to healing our removed.
3.) Treat the whole person, we are not a bunch of unrelated parts, but one organism and all aspects of health must be addressed physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually.
4.) Prevention is the highest form of cure. It is better to recognize that the path we are on is taking us to a place of illness and change it than to wait until we are sick and try to fix it.
5.) Doctor as teacher. We teach people how to live healthy and self correct.
6.) Find the cause of the illness. Do not just treat the symptoms. For example giving iron to an anemic person will bring their iron level up, but it is better to understand why it was low in the first place. Was there a digestive problem that interfered with absorption? Was there blood loss? Why? Treat these issues and you can permanently solve the problem.

The philosophy of Naturopathic Medicine reflects my own philosophy of healing which is why I choose to become a Naturopath.

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