ColonCancer.News — You Are Not a Survivor. You Are a Conqueror.
Stage 4 does not mean game over.
Read this before you do anything else.
Get My Story
For the newly diagnosed — this page is for you

Abolish The
"Survivor"
Mindset And
Conquer Cancer.

I had advanced Stage 4 colon cancer. With the help of my doctors, an amazing team and a completely different mindset, I beat the odds and completely destroyed colon cancer. I'm here to share everything I know with you. It's the stuff doctors won't say. I'm not trying to sell a book, I'm not asking for a dime. I'm here to help if you need it.

5 Surgeries in one year
54 Years of life before diagnosis
100% Personal responsibility. No excuses.

I Know Exactly
What You're Feeling
Right Now.

You just Googled "Stage 4 colon cancer survival rate." I know. I did the exact same thing. And I know exactly what those numbers did to you when you read them.

I need you to hear this, clearly and without sugar-coating it: that number is not your sentence. It is a statistic about a population of people. It is not about you.

What happens next — right now, in the next few weeks — will matter enormously. Not just the treatments. The mindset. The team you choose. The questions you ask. The responsibility you decide to take.

That's what this site is about. No products. No pitches. No false hope. Just one human being who went through it, came out the other side, and wants to give you everything I wish I'd had on day one.

Survivors Ring Bells.
Champions Raise Trophies.

When the Seahawks won the Super Bowl, did they jump up, ring a bell, and scream "We survived!!!"? Hell no. They held up the Lombardi Trophy. They're champions. To conquer this thing you have got to change your mindset.

Every infusion day, I'd sit in that chair and watch people come and go. Some days, someone would walk over and ring the bell — the bell you ring when you're done with chemo. Everyone would clap. The nurses would cheer. It was a beautiful moment.

I can't shake the framing. "Survivor." The word has always felt wrong to me. Like cancer is the predator, and I was just lucky enough to survive. Like I'm the prey, and I dodged the bullet.

I was not the prey. I was the predator. I was the one pulling the trigger. And if you're reading this right now, I want you to make the same choice — not because it's a feel-good mental trick, but because it changes every single decision you make from this moment forward.

Colon Cancer
Was My Fault.

I know how that sounds. Let me be clear: I didn't give myself cancer on purpose. But I was 100% responsible for having it, and I decided I would be 100% in control of getting rid of it.

That's the moment everything shifted.

The second I stopped being a victim, I started being a force. And there is a profound difference between the two. One waits for things to happen. The other makes things happen.

I questioned everything. Respectfully. Humbly. But without apology. I wanted answers, and when I wasn't getting them, I went and found better people.

I left my first medical team and hired another one. You have to question everything! You have to be your own advocate!

Not because the first team was bad — they weren't. But because you are allowed to choose your team. You are allowed to ask hard questions. You are allowed to push back on the protocol that's been handed to you like it's the only protocol that exists.

The doctors are good people. The nurses are good people. They work incredibly hard and they genuinely want to help you. I will never say a disrespectful word about any of them.

But the system they operate in is designed for compliance, not conquest. And those are two very different games.

The system treats you like a victim. It's not malicious — it's just the culture. My job was to refuse that role entirely, take 100% ownership, and fight like my life depended on it. Because it did.

I Learned More in
12 Months Than in
the Previous 54 Years.

01
Question Everything

Not in a hostile way. Not in an aggressive way. But with total, relentless, respectful curiosity. The doctors have a protocol. That doesn't mean it's the only one.

02
Talk to Survivors — No, Conquerors

I learned more from people who beat this disease than from any medical professional. They had context no textbook or oncologist could give me.

03
Choose Your Team

You are a customer. You are allowed to fire your doctors and hire new ones. The first team I had was fine. The second team was better.

04
The Science Is Necessary

I'm not anti-medicine. I'm not anti-chemotherapy. The science saves lives. But science without the right mindset and the right questions is only part of the fight.

05
The Gaps Are Real

There are massive gaps in what you'll be told and what you actually need to know. I lived those gaps. I found the answers the hard way so you don't have to.

06
Mindset Is Step One

Before anything else — before the next appointment, the next scan, the next decision — you have to decide who you are in this fight. Prey or predator. Victim or conqueror.

I'll Tell You
Everything
I Know.

I'm not a doctor. I'm not selling a program, a supplement, or a book. I'm a guy who had advanced Stage 4 colon cancer and came out the other side — and I want to give you everything I wish someone had told me when I was sitting where you're sitting right now. Fill out this form and I'll get back to you personally.

God bless you. Now let's get to work.

Ready to fight? Let's talk.

I'll Tell You Everything I Know.

I'm not a doctor. I'm not selling a program, a supplement, or a book. I'm a guy who had advanced Stage 4 colon cancer and came out the other side — and I want to give you everything I wish someone had told me when I was sitting where you're sitting right now. Fill out this form and I'll get back to you personally.

God bless you. Now let's get to work.