www.youtube.com/@WalkingWithWarburg
Blogging simply takes too long, so I’m finally taking the plunge and starting a YouTube channel. I’m a bit embarrassed, but I need funds to keep going. The truth is, I’ve spent a fortune experimenting on myself—without charging anyone for the knowledge I’ve gained. But I can’t sustain this alone, especially when I see others making huge profits by offering similar information behind paywalls without my hands-on experience. My goal was never to turn this into a business, and I don’t want to keep asking friends and family for support. I want people to see this as a necessary change in the direction of cancer research—something they won’t find in traditional cancer foundations focused solely on the somatic mutation theory. I feel it’s time to support ideas that challenge the system, especially if they aren’t funnelling donations into CEO bonuses, staff wages, and advertising.
In my channel, I think I will often ask this: Why are we all still throwing money into an approach that’s not working? I feel it’s time to support ideas that challenge the system, primarily if those ideas don’t funnel donations into CEO bonuses, excessive staff wages, or big advertising budgets. I believe even a tiny amount of redirected donations to someone cutting through these traditional expenses and applying real science is worth it. Why keep funding outdated theories when legitimate science shows other promising avenues?
I need financial support to continue my work, but I’d rather not seek it from those dealing with illness and financial strain. If you value the time, stress, and risk I’m saving others, your support would make a difference. But if that’s not possible, subscribing to my channel, liking my videos, and helping me reach monetization would mean the world. Ask friends to subscribe and watch as well! Even if you’re not interested, just playing my videos on mute at 3x the speed would add watch time and help me reach monetization—so advertisers, not viewers, will fund my efforts.
In this field, I’ve encountered many taking advantage of others. One person, for example, has been charging $17 per mg for DON while purchasing it for a fraction of that; in effect, it has made hundreds of thousands of dollars off the desperation of others and then pretending or selling themselves as a saviour. Others capitalize on quick AI-generated summaries of Thomas Seyfried’s work, selling these as cash grabs. Some channels hide information behind paywalls or restrict it to members-only groups. The Mitochondrial Metabolic Theory of Cancer is growing in popularity, and so are those willing to capitalize on it. And honestly, I can’t blame all of them, but some I can.
I have also met actual millionaires who are working with scientists and are interested in my data for their projects. While they say they want to help, they don’t consider my financial well-being a necessary factor—though it’s essential if I’m to continue contributing. This disconnect is frustrating, as I’ve invested significant time, money, and personal risk into this work—not just for myself but for others. If this were only about me, I’d simply focus on my journey to cure my cancer and mind my own business. So please, if you have the means and you believe this is a true value to furthering cancer research, consider supporting me financially so I can continue.
A recent example of my commitment is my work with DON. Figuring out how to turn it into a subcutaneous liquid came with expenses well beyond money. I had to source supplies, endure trial and error, and face the fear of being among the first—if not the first—outside of a clinical trial to inject DON without formal medical guidance. Thanks to my efforts, others can access this information without facing the same risks, costs, and time investments.
The go-fund-me has been a lifesaver, and I’m grateful to everyone who has contributed to “Allison” and to the few who have financially supported “the research value”—it helps more than I can express. I’ve shared every lesson I learned about supplements, medications, and protocols, as well as taking personal risks so others don’t have to. However, being the only one contributing for free to this community is unsustainable. If I don’t make a change, I’ll ride my high horse straight to the poorhouse.
So, I’m shifting gears. I’ll keep documenting my journey and pushing boundaries, but I will try a different approach. I hope that, by using YouTube, I can monetize my content. Advertising dollars can support my work, freeing me from relying on other cancer patients for funding. But it will also get my blog out to a bigger audience, putting the go-fund-me out to a bigger audience. Hopefully, this is a win-win: I bring in more money off the crazy things I do, and others learn from it. The further I go and the more data I collect, the more value the metabolic community and the more value the researchers get from it.
So please subscribe to my channel, watch the videos (even if you don’t pay attention), and hit that thumbs-up button. To be monetized, I need to get at least 1000 subscribers and 4000 watch hours.
www.youtube.com/@WalkingWithWarburg
It’s a long shot, but when has that ever stopped me?! 🙂
Thank you again for all your support!