Old Man Duggan: Fuck.
I mean—fuuuuuuuck.
We just finished watching the original run of the series this past week—I was rewatching while Jack Attack was seeing it all for the first time. It was a real trip seeing all our best friends and E.B. all grown up. And that fucker George Hearst too.
Wordy Ginters: The physical effects of time on most of these actors definitely caused some cognitive dissonance. I had the same feeling watching Twin Peaks: The Return. These beloved shows, and these characters, are a delicate thing to be picked up after years in storage. The two series (Deadwood and Twin Peaks) are too disparate for any meaningful comparison, other than their shared greatness, but it’s interesting to me how the passing of time itself, evident in the faces and bodies of the characters, ends up being a physical representation of some of the themes explored.
OMD: Indeed. It's kind of funny that they had to make some of them up to look even older because they hadn't aged as much as their characters should have. Still, Dayton Callie, Ian McShane, W. Earl Brown, even a suddenly almost distinguished looking Sean Bridgers all seem to have worn the weight of their characters' theoretical interseries/movie lives.
Not gonna lie, there’s so much to fucking unpack here. It’s daunting. May as well start at the top with the changes to Deadwood being shown in the form of the railroad carrying telephone poles and that “murdering, conniving, thieving cocksucker" Hearst, invading our wild-ass mining hamlet. Verizon and the Chicago and North Western Railroad doing their damnedest to gentrify what should surely have remained raw and untamed. Can you hear me now? Go fuck yerself, Change. Coming out of the darkness and emerging into the world strapped to the front of a train. I guess you’re gonna make us embrace change whether we want to or not, Mr. Milch.
WG: I’m thrilled that Milch was able to get the movie done. But after three seasons and 36 hours of Deadwood, it’s almost impossible to advance the cause in a satisfying way in 110 minutes.
OMD: It was weird seeing them refer to Jane as “Calamity Jane” for what I believe is the first time. Guessing the moniker was affixed to her after departing Deadwood sans Wild Bill. While she did grate on the nerves from time to time, there was something sweet about kicking shit off again with her slurring to herself, farting on muleback whilst lamenting loves lost, hoping to get the one she can back.
WG: I thought it was the perfect open. Calamity Jane. Drunk. Hanging the Deadwood-ese tapestry of swears over the valley. The half-crocked and mindless toss of the empty bottle brought to mind Tootie chucking a hunk of ice into the back of the ice wagon in your favorite movie, Meet Me in St Louis. Oh Mr. NEEEEEELEEEY.
OMD: Fuck that dumb movie. What kind of piece of shit culminates in marveling at a city in the throes of wishing it was Chicago while hosting a disaster of a World's Fair/Olympics. That dumb damn family was probably responsible for the historically disastrous Olympic Marathon, but Vincente Minnelli had them whitewash it all.
WG: We part ways on this one OMD. I'm unapologetically on board with that flick. I do admire the intensity of your ire.
OMD: Jumping to the Gem, glad to see there’s not been much turnover in terms of most of the staff. Obviously ten years in the life of a prostitute in the late 19th Century has to be somewhere in the neighborhood of 50 years now, so the women of the Gem from the series have surely gone to greener pastures, but Al Swearengen, Dan Dority, Johnny Burns, and Jewel are still holding things together—the glue the holds the whole damn place together, I suppose.
WG: The “brotherhood” amongst those villainous bastards was some of what makes this show so damn great. The monsters, they have heart. They bleed. They love each other. I hope they have some younger muscle on staff that they’ve been mentoring though. Should any events that require cardio present themselves, I’m not sure Dan and Johnny can be counted on for more than a round or two. By this point, they’ve got “guys” they send into the fray on their behalf. Right?
OMD: I mean for their sake, I hope so. But given the fact that Johnny and Dan are out in the thoroughfare, having Bullock's back, firearms at the ready, Johnny getting shot in the shoulder in support of the cause, I'm not so sure they've got young studs in the stable.
WG: I suppose the natural progression of old-timey muscle is to transition from hand-to-hand combat and knife work to the relatively less physically taxing gun-play. I still think Swearengen, being the mustachioed Machiavellian that he is, has to have some young beef at the ready should Dan need to tag-in someone else for a breather. We speak later of the Swearengen/Trixie relationship. The bond between Dan and Al also goes down as one of the all-time great pairings.
OMD: Seeing Al so haggard and jaundiced—a man whose previously indefatigable lifeforce propelled virtually everything in pre-territorial Deadwood—was jarring. As he seemed so much to be the mouthpiece for the show’s ailing creator, Al’s evident mortality and failure to recall the day of the week is poetic, sure, but fuck me, does it ever shake you to the core. A life lived hard. A liver done gone.
WG: One thing rewatching Deadwood drives home is exactly how much Milch has probably written himself into Swearengen. I don’t think it was a particularly big secret, but I didn’t realize Milch was a gambling addict. Ex-heroin addict too. Alcoholic. Stories came out a couple of years back about how he gambled away hundreds of millions. Mostly at the track. In several episodes, characters mouth the addict's lament—let me have my vices. Don’t bother me. I know it’s shameful, but I can’t do it any other way. I found an article from way back in 1994, the cultural conservatives (Rev Donald Wildmon) were shitting themselves over Milch’s NYPD Blue (nudity! swears!). Milch’s response to Wildmon’s concerns was something straight off the pages of a Deadwood script, “I represent the apotheosis of everything for which he has unaffected scorn and great alarm." Swearengen might be my favorite TV character of all-time. Seeing him diminished took a lot of the fun out of the movie for me. However, it was probably fitting closure and a true through-line of his character arc, from satanic to anti-hero to cucked good guy.
OMD: In the it’s-nice-some-things-haven’t-changed department, glad to see Doc Cochran is his old, cantankerous self, serving up his diagnoses with a heavy dose of piss and vinegar, all while having his medical advice roundly ignored.
WG: Brad Dourif one of my favorite actors. Wise Blood. Dune. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Bunch of Lynch films. Speaking of horse racing degenerates, he stars in a movie called Horseplayer. I haven’t seen it in years, but I loved it at the time. Dourif rocks a querulous perm in that one. Weirdly owns it.
OMD: Can't wait to track that one down. Need. The. Dourif. Perm.
Charlie Utter. First, he’s told by those pole cats that he needs to get with the times. Then, Don Swayze and Tony Curran—eventually revealed to be Hearst’s latest batch of henchmen—whose lack of manners rub Utter entirely the wrong way. Milch wastes no time with his hour-forty-five in getting things moving, setting up the incident that shoots the narrative into high gear in the first few scenes.
WG: Was the young lady they were harassing (Caroline?) supposed to be the sister of the prostitute Al whacked at the end Season Three as a fill-in for Trixie?
OMD: I've yet to find anything definitively linking Jen to Caroline Woolgarden, the newest would-be practitioner of the world's oldest profession. I suspect she's meant to stir those feelings in Johnny while showing that the more things change the more things stay the same.
WG: In retrospect, the timing and ages probably don't square. I happened to rewatch that particular episode prior to the movie, so the question of "notifying next of kin" was fresh in my mind.
OMD: The familial interplay at the Bullocks’ breakfast table was nice. I’m glad Seth and Martha were able to build a life together for themselves after William’s passing. Almost as pleasant was Hearst being thrown off his game as Bullock planted himself front and center while giving the speech commemorating South Dakota’s statehood. Think his ear was burning?
OMD: Old Man Hearst lamenting his back pain whilst Bullock busts out his downward dog, ear still firmly in Seth's grasp, would be manna from heaven.
WG: "Jesus H Christ Hearst, your ear is greasy." Bullock, probably, relatively early in the day.
OMD: Leave it to Trixie, the only character on the show more irascible than Bullock, to not be able to stay in bed while hurtling at breakneck speed toward the delivery of the Baby Star and instead barges out, mid-cigarette, to the balcony to call the now-Junior Senator from the State of California out as a “murdering shitheel” and a bevy of other factually (at least within the construct of the show) accurate and exceptionally foul things. If ever David Milch’s penchant for gutter-mouthed diatribes doubling as poetry were on display, it was being spewn forth from Paula Malcomson’s mouth, raining down on the "bald pate" of Gerald McRaney. Self-preservation is not in Trixie’s being.
WG: Trixie gonna Trixie. Milch’s penchant for showing how melodious the siren call of self-defeating behavior can be. No wonder the wet-mouthed rubes get all lathered up at Trump rallies.
OMD: While glad for the brevity of the exchange between Alma and Seth upon getting her settled at the hotel, Molly Parker and Timothy Olyphant still have that pregnant tension thing going. Bullock’s irritation with Charlie at having suggested the Bullock Star Hotel as Alma’s landing spot for her stay was priceless, as was Utter asking Bullock outfit him with a diaper upon suggesting that Bullock deal with Hearst in Utter’s stead regarding the sale of his land.
WG: It’s like reading Joyce. Or Cormac. It takes a few minutes to get attuned to the dialogue. Procure me an infant's linen.
OMD: I seriously wonder if there was anywhere else in the world where Hearst caught as much shit as he does here in Deadwood. A town refusing to bend the knee. Trixie’s public calling out followed by Al’s more measured undercuttings like “Does brevity exist in your repertoire, sir?” The fucking cocky grin on his face with Hearst’s returned stone-faced glare was a masterful bit of business.
The most surprising fate of any of the characters from the camp ten years prior has to be Aunt Lou, no? I mean who’d have thunk she’d have stuck around?
WG: Someone has to boss Richardson’s ghost around.
OMD: She better be continuing the antler-handed tributes on the stairs in his memory.
Utter prodding Jane to put aside the bottle and just go talk to Joanie was a nice moment. One last moment between friends of thirty years, and it’s one where he sets her head straight for maybe the first time we’ve ever seen on the show. Then Utter gets one last moment of giving no fucks about who he might be dealing with, suffering no shit from no one. His complete lack of deference to a man he knows to be a murderous fuck had me cackling. At every turn, Hearst gets virtually none of the respect to which he is accustomed from the denizens of this unruly boom town.
WG: I was hoping someone would throw a milkshake at his entitled ass.
OMD: I'd have been happy to see a Cornishman chuck a pickaxe headward.
Charlie’s not showing up for dinner set the same sinking feeling off that went down when Ellsworth got taken unawares while conversing with his dog in his tent. Hearst’s M.O. is pretty fucking cowardly, frankly. With the exception of the Captain’s brutal brawl with Dan, his men basically go in and shoot whomever Georgie Boy fingers from behind. Effective? Sure. Honorable? Clearly not. It seems clear that this is exactly how our sitting Shitbird-in-Chief would operate were such actions still viable.
WG: No accident, right? The Trumpian parallels. The great unwashed hectoring the one percenters. Maybe it’s just the times that color the perception. But yeah, Hearst is a decent precedent and stand-in for our current Shitbird-in-Chief. Fucking Gerald McRaney.
OMD: Major Dad. Who'd've thunk it?
Bullock shooting his gun off in the thoroughfare, Charlie Utter slung lifeless across his horse, putting Hearst on notice in front of the whole fucking town was a baller fucking move. The massive brass balls on Bullock never cease to impress. And his matter-of-fact “No” in response to Al’s asking “You ever think, Bullock, of not going straight at a thing?” was pitch fucking perfect. And setting fire to Hearst’s telephone poles? We get to see the fire brigade in action. Bullock’s just gonna keep yanking Hearst around by the ear, and I’m on board for every moment of it.
WG: "You ever think . . . of not going straight at a thing?" That was one of my favorite scenes. Pump Swearengen’s contemptuous yet incredulous reactions to the whack-ass or irrational thought processes of those who surround him straight into my veins.
OMD: If I could mainline that, I might never come back.
I have to say I like E.B.’s pervy upgrades to the hotel. That he can incontrovertibly confirm that Hearst pulled the strings in Utter’s execution leaves me once glad for Farnum’s general odiousness. That he got to call Lead and struggle with technology was just gravy.
WG: Of course E.B. has peep holes in his hotel. His peep holes have peep holes. He’s probably got an old-timey camera man stationed under the floorboards in the lady’s pisser.
OMD: Peddling fuzzy Daguerreotypes of water sports clearly became Farnum's metier in the years we missed.
The gall of Jewel putting out peaches for the auction. How dare she? Perhaps she knew that the town was going to rise up, middle finger defiantly extended, determined to outbid that fucker, ultimately saved by Alma, besting her ex-husband’s murderer this time.
WG: Thank God Jewel was smart enough to know that the Cinnamon stays in the pantry.
OMD: The one time I wish maybe she hadn't exercised the heroic restraint required to not put out the cinnamon. Perhaps Harry'd have gotten another gut full of pain. Gastric distress is the least that turncoat deserved in the lead-up to the climax.
“Wu, feed that fuck to the pigs.” The, ehrm, the General really gets the short end of the stick at almost every turn. Such a good dude. Don Swayze—his character’s name is Seacrest, but anyone who knows who he is ain’t calling him anything but Don Swayze—tries to leverage Wu’s grandkid at gunpoint against Bullock. Clearly he didn’t get the memo. Bullock and fucking around are not acquainted with one another. Mengyao ends up wearing some of Don Swayze’s brains on his shirt while Bullock beats the fuck out of Hearst’s other heavy.
WG: One of the many great things about Deadwood is how most of the characters know all the angles. And when the angles are lined up in opposition, a world weary fait accompli.
OMD: The stand-off in front of Hearst HQ was pretty fucking great. Really getting the full monty from Olyphant here, hanging acting dong with aplomb. Milch sure ratcheted up the tension there.
“Heavens open up. She expresses contrition.” What a delightful line. Mortality looming large in the first scene back between Al and Trixie. Guessing the Doc gave him liquid cocaine to get him going enough to make the wedding, as I can’t imagine what other elixir of the time might endow him with the energy to support his resolve. Maybe a liquid speedball? Al’s magnanimity in doling out advice and control of the Gem in the event of his imminent passing was a nice touch. The Gem as a dance hall. Hard to imagine, but as long as the peaches are always at the ready, Deadwood will probably approve.
WG: The love story between Al and Trixie is so well done. The relationship and marriage to Sol surely isn’t getting in the way of it. I wish parts of it weren’t made so explicit in the movie. It’s too holy to speak of out loud.
OMD: With the clock running out, both for Al and ultimately Milch, I think any point in secreting away those feelings, leaving them unsaid, sort of loses its utility.
Gotta be honest, Jane and Joanie’s reconciliation at the livery had me a little choked up. They’re both so broken and beaten down, that their finding happiness with one another—and a seemingly lasting happiness, at that—warms the heart.
WG: SAME.
OMD: When Bullock cockblocked Hearst’s arrest of Trixie at the reception, cuffing him and telling the Sheriff from Lead to go fuck himself, I was grinning from ear to ear, but Merrick’s getting a pic of Hearst mid-perp-walk with a “Smile, Mr. Hearst” for good measure was too much. I laughed so fucking hard.
I’ve joked on Twitter and in conversation, but holy hell was I glad to see the thrower of the bottles at Hearst was our old friend Garret Dillahunt, playing his third character in the burg of Deadwood. Bullock standing by until seeing his wife ushering their children away from the scene and realizing he couldn’t just let the mob tear that shithead limb from limb still allowed us a little catharsis. Hewing to history has its limitations, and in this case, we know that Hearst dies in Washington, D.C. two years later.
WG: I’m glad you confirmed that, I thought that was him! Since you reran the series in its glorious entirety, you happen to catch the Nick Offerman cameo? If I recall, he was a card player at one of the tables at Tom Nuttall’s place? Season 1?
OMD: Oh, there's a lot more Offerman than that. He's one of the rogue road agents living the high life at the Gem after they slaughtered Sofia's family on the trail. Full frontal Offerman. That's what he gets for running with Persimmon Phil, I guess.
Nothing made me more glad than Bullock pulling Hearst into the cell by his ear. Or at least not until Jane got her big moment, taking down Harry Manning, who was in Hearst’s pocket and a second away from killing Bullock, and getting her groove back. After those moments during the series where her impotence in the moment led her spiraling into the oblivion found at the bottom of the bottle, it was fucking beautiful getting to see her step up to the occasion and succeed where she hadn’t been able to previously.
Hot on the heels of that overwhelming emotional moment, we’re treated to Bullock at Samuel Fields’s bedside, having his old friend Utter’s final moment related to him, the two commiserating over their friend being at peace when he went. Olyphant has two lines in that scene—five whole words—and it’s maybe the best acting he’s ever done. Fuck. Just destroyed me.
And finally we get a little bedtime duet from Jewel and Al of “Waltzing Matilda” setting off a montage in which snow lightly falls on a town in which the dust is settling after another Hearst power play has nearly torn it asunder, its residents going back to their lives, Bullock finally coming home. Duet having given way to an instrumental version of the Aussie ballad, Trixie sits down at Al’s bedside, his last breaths coming, and damned if he doesn’t go out on the highest note I can recall, cutting off the opening line of the Lord’s Prayer with a “Let him fucking stay there.”
WG: This is what got me. Having watched some of the older episodes myself, I was again struck dumb by how emotionally poignant Deadwood can be. Think back to Season 1, Jewel in her orthopedic boot, dancing around with Doc. “Tell me I’m as nimble as a forest creature”. The same emotional fuckery got me when Jewel started rubbing Al’s feet and singing "Waltzing Matilda." Again, hard not to imagine Milch thinking about his own mortality. Earlier Al opines that it’s the unseemly process of dying, the “chewing up and spitting out” that he finds distasteful. He just wants to get it over with. Decries the self-pitying aspect of it. I like the dignity involved of knowing the angles and accepting them.
OMD: We’ve all been waiting a long goddamn time for this. It’s hard to imagine how I could have been more pleased with what I just saw, having now watched it twice. I mean obviously, we’d all love for this world to just keep giving us stories with these characters in Milch’s voice forever, but short of that, this was a feat I worried was not going to be achieved. What thoughts have you?
WG: I didn’t enjoy it as much as you did. But I’m such a fan of the series in general, and these characters, I can’t be too disappointed. It’s a shame we didn’t get more from Milch. I like how he examines truth, and dignity and degeneracy, and honor. Sometimes all jumbled up in the same character. There is really no one like him.
OMD: If nothing else, the last 25 minutes or so are some of the best television I can remember seeing. I don't know how much I cried, but it was a lot. Bullock at Samuel Fields's bedside. Jewel and Al singing. Joanie and Jane looking like they're headed for a lovely final act. A seemingly finally soberish Jane stepping up and saving Bullock. Al staying secular to his literal dying breath. Fuck me. So much brilliance in that final act. Hell, I'm still numb to a world without Al Swearengen.
WG: Let's pour one out for Al.
12 comments:
Hey Josh-
Enjoyed reading this.
That Waltzing Matilda scene did remind me of my other favorite scene ever... Doc and Jewel dancing with her new leg. You're as nimble as a forest creature!
And omg the peaches throughout this show.
And Trixie and Al's love is holy. Agreed. Utter brilliance. ;)
I need to watch again. I miss them already.
Ann
Thanks. Watch it many, many times.
Does anyone still doubt natural herbs? I have seen the great importance of natural herbs and the wonderful work they have done in people's lives. I wonder why people still spend their money on English medicine when natural herbs can cure all kinds of mental diseases. I have seen it with my own eyes. My dad and aunt were cured from Huntington disease with Dr Bharet herbal medicine. He used BUJA herbal medicine to cure my dad and aunt from Huntington disease, I know it is hard to believe but am a living testimony. My dad was diagnosed with Huntington's disease in 2016, we have made use of all western medication yet no improvement and his doctors said there is no cure yet but still carrying out research, my dad experienced depression, anxiety and memory lapses that made him hallucinate always, he speaks to himself often and that made me shed tears each night that passes by. 2019 I searched through the internet for a solution and i came across a comment on a blog written by [George Lisa] saying she was cured of Huntington disease that she suffered from for 8years. Without wasting time I quickly contacted Dr Bharat whose name was mentioned in the comment Via his email. He asked me questions which I answered correctly he sent his herbal medicine to us here in Ireland through DHL, in less than one month I started seeing positive improvement on my Dad's health so I introduced the medication to my aunt as well, is been 4 years now, my dad and aunt are living their best life again. Though i gave the medication as i was instructed. My dad and aunt are Huntington disease negative after the medication, Huntington disease is completely gone from my family lineage. With Bharat herbal medicine called BUJA Huntington patients can smile again. For those with Huntington disease or having their love ones diagnosed with Huntington's disease contact Dr Bharat now via dr.bharatkings@gmail.com you will come back to testify
I want to make this testimony public and as a sign of gratitude to Dr Bharat. On how he saved my husband from Huntington's disease with his herbal medicine called BUJA, i decided to reach out to those still suffering from this disease.
My husband suffered Huntington disease and it was really tough and heartbreaking for me because he was all i have and the symptoms were terrible, my husband experience hallucination, depression, anxiety, abnormality walking, involuntary movement and memory impairment. We tried various therapies prescribed by our neurologist but none could cure him instead the situation got worsen each day that passes by. I spent much money yet no improvement, I really do not want my husband to die so i searched for a cure on the internet and i bumped into a testimony of (Ronda Jasil) who got cured from Huntington's disease. and she left the e-mail address of the Herbal doctor who has the cure of Huntington disease. I never imagined Huntington's disease has a cure until i contacted him and he assured me my husband will be fine. I got the herbal medication he recommended and my husband used it and in one month we started seeing improvement, now is been 1year and 6 months my husband is okay and full of life again. Huntington's disease has a cure and it is a herbal medicine called BUJA. contact doctor Bharat now on dr.bharatkings@gmail.com Thanks for reading my testimony
Read carefully, it's said that Huntington disease has no cure, yes with the western medication but not with herbal medicine, my daughter's situation made me to realize that with doctor Bharat herbal medicine it can be cured. In 2014 she experienced difficulty in concentrating, memory lapses and depression, at first I taught it was stressed from her place of work until I took her to hospital and the doctor made me to understand that it's juvenile Huntington disease because she is still in her late 20s, which she inherited from my late husband that died of the same disease, the doctor told me it has no cure, but gave her some medicine which I noticed that it has side effects, my daughter situation got worst each day that passes, she was the best at her place of work, now a shadow of her self because of this deadly disease, she speaks to herself often, she was really going insane, I do not want to lose my daughter the same way I lost her father, in 2018 I carried out research on internet and bumped into a comment of a lady that got cured of Huntington disease, without wasting time I contacted doctor Bharat whose name was mentioned in the comment, now is been 3 years my daughter is living her best life again, for those that have the disease or have any love one suffering from Huntington disease, contact doctor Bharat via dr.bharatkings@gmail.com
Hi everyone, this is good news, a perfect and greats one. My daughter of
38years who has suffered of Huntington's disease for 2 and half years has been
cure by a Herbal doctor called Dr Bharat who uses herbal and traditional
medicine to cure people. I have spent so much money on my daughter's health for
years but no improvement. A friend told me about this herbal man who cure
people with herbal medicine. he cures all mental sickness, diseases, viruses, and
infections with his different herbal curing medicine.The result that
declares my daughter healed was from a hospital here in USA, And the
results of the test says my daughter was okay. Dr Bharat said my daughter will be heal in 8weeks(2 months) if she uses the medicine as directed. And
In 2 weeks i started seeing great improvement, exactly 8weeks we went to confirm from the central hospital and several test that
was done says my daughter is Huntington's disease negative. She got cured with Dr Bharat herbal medicine, this is super amazing. My daughter is fully okay and back to her work again. I can boldly say that Huntington's disease is 100% curable with doctor Bharat herbal medicine, is real, anyone with Huntington's disease or have love ones that is suffering from Huntington's disease should contact doctor bharat now on his mail. dr.bharatkings@gmail.com
My sister had severe Muscle problems, abnormal eye movements, Difficulty with the physical production of speech, memory lapses. she was placed on tranquilizers 3 times daily, it helped her but not very much. Her neurologist advised us to try natural treatments and introduced me to Natural Organic Herbs, {Huntington disease Herbal formula}, I visited his blogs and read a lot of positive reviews from other patients who used the treatment and made my orders. We immediately started on the treatment for my sister. she had great improvement and relief with this treatment, total decline of symptoms. All her symptoms left and she has been reserved from Huntington Disease. Great improvement with speech, co-ordination, balance, muscle, mood etc, I gained back my life with this herbal treatment and can never be thankful enough. Visit Natural Organic Herbs, reach him directly via {dr.bharatkings@gmail.com}. She's now living like a normal person without any symptoms of Huntington Disease. All thanks to Dr. Bharat
Read carefully, it's said that Huntington disease has no cure, yes with the western medication but not with herbal medicine, my daughter's situation made me to realize that with doctor Bharat herbal medicine it can be cured.. In 2014 she experienced difficulty in concentrating, memory lapses and depression, at first I thought it was stressed from her place of work until I took her to hospital and the doctor made me to understand that it's juvenile Huntington disease because she is still in her late 20s, which she inherited from my late husband that died of the same disease, the doctor told me it has no cure, but gave her some medicine which I noticed that it has side effects, my daughter situation got worst each day that passes, she was the best at her place of work, now a shadow of her self because of this deadly disease, she speaks to herself often, she was really going insane, I do not want to lose my daughter the same way I lost her father, in 2018 I carried out research on internet and bumped into a comment of a lady that got cured of Huntington disease, without wasting time I contacted doctor Bharat whose name was mentioned in the comment, now is been 3 years my daughter is living her best life again, for those that have the disease or have any love one suffering from Huntington disease, contact doctor Bharat via dr.bharatkings@gmail.com
Hi everyone, this is good news, a perfect and greats one. My daughter of 38years who has suffered of Huntington's disease for 2 and half years has been cure by a Herbal doctor called Dr Bharat who uses herbal and traditional supplements to cure people. I have spent so much money on my daughter's health for years but no improvement. A friend told me about this herbal man who cure people with herbal supplements. he cures all mental sickness, diseases, viruses, and infections with his different herbal curing supplement .The result that declares my daughter healed was from a hospital here in USA, And the results of the test says my daughter was okay. Dr Bharat said my daughter will be heal in 8weeks(2 months) if she uses the supplements as directed. In 2 weeks i started seeing great improvement, exactly 8weeks we went to confirm from the central hospital and several test that was done says my daughter is Huntington's disease negative. She got cured with Dr Bharat herbal supplements, this is super amazing. My daughter is fully okay and back to her work again. I can boldly say that Huntington's disease is 100% curable with doctor Bharat herbal supplements, is real, anyone with Huntington's disease or have love ones that is suffering from Huntington's disease should contact doctor bharat now on his mail. dr.bharatkings@gmail.com or Whatsapp him on +393509392854
Hi everyone, this is good news, a perfect and greats one. My daughter of 38years who has suffered of Huntington's disease for 2 and half years has been cure by a Herbal doctor called Dr Bharat who uses herbal and traditional supplements to cure people. I have spent so much money on my daughter's health for years but no improvement. A friend told me about this herbal man who cure people with herbal supplements. he cures all mental sickness, diseases, viruses, and infections with his different herbal curing supplement .The result that declares my daughter healed was from a hospital here in USA, And the results of the test says my daughter was okay. Dr Bharat said my daughter will be heal in 8weeks(2 months) if she uses the supplements as directed. In 2 weeks i started seeing great improvement, exactly 8weeks we went to confirm from the central hospital and several test that was done says my daughter is Huntington's disease negative. She got cured with Dr Bharat herbal supplements, this is super amazing. My daughter is fully okay and back to her work again. I can boldly say that Huntington's disease is 100% curable with doctor Bharat herbal supplements, is real, anyone with Huntington's disease or have love ones that is suffering from Huntington's disease should contact doctor Bharath now on his mail. dr.bharatkings@gmail.com or WhatsApp him on +393509392854
Read carefully, it's said that Huntington disease has no cure, yes with the western medication but not with herbal supplement, my daughter's situation made me to realize that with doctor Bharat herbal supplement it can be cured. In 2014 she experienced difficulty in concentrating, memory lapses and depression, at first I thought it was stressed from her place of work until I took her to hospital and the doctor made me to understand that it's juvenile Huntington disease because she is still in her late 20s, which she inherited from my late husband that died of the same disease, the doctor told me it has no cure, but gave her some medicine which I noticed that it has side effects, my daughter situation got worst each day that passes, she was the best at her place of work, now a shadow of her self because of this deadly disease, she speaks to herself often, she was really going insane, I do not want to lose my daughter the same way I lost her father, in 2018 I carried out research on internet and bumped into a comment of a lady that got cured of Huntington disease, without wasting time I contacted doctor Bharat whose name was mentioned in the comment, now is been 3 years my daughter is living her best life again, for those that have the disease or have any love one suffering from Huntington disease, contact doctor Bharat via dr.bharatkings@gmail.com or Whatsapp him on: +393509392854
Make me a promise Phyna, my mother said. "Promise me you won't put me in a home or make me live with one of your sisters". It was a joke at the time when my mom was just starting to forget things. 07/10/2020 was the hardest day of my life. Watching my mom talk to herself, packing her things 4-5 times a day, saying she has to go home. It was heartbreaking. I broke down and cried with her a few times and then I realized how hard it must be on my dad too. He can't leave the house, he has to convince her that she lives in their house. I came to the decision to quit my job. My dad needs help. I live 6 hours away but instead of visiting my parents, I'll be visiting my husband. My mom has always been there for me and been my best friend so I want to be there for her. I keep telling myself that I can snap her out of it. I got her numerous medications including RISPERDAL(RISPERIDONE), HALDOL(HALOPPERIDOL), THORAZINE(CHLORPROMAZINE) and TETRABENAZINE(XENAZINE) and DEUTETRABENAZINE (AUSTEDO) instead of helping her, they almost destroyed her due to the side effects. As I was reading more about Huntington's Disease on the internet, I met with some comments of people testifying about Dr. Bharat and his BUJAA HERBAL SUPPLEMENTS that it works for Huntington's. I contacted the doctor immediately and explained my mother's condition to him, he assured me that my mom will be fine and her memory will come back to normal. I ordered his Herbal Supplements and it was delivered to me here in Canada by DHL courier company in less than a week with instructions on how to use them attached in the package. After 3 weeks of using these herbs, we began to see improvement, after 6 months my mom was better, and it's been 2 years now and my mom is completely free from this horrible disease called huntington's. In case your loved one is suffering from huntington's disease I will advise you to use BUJAA HERBAL SUPPLEMENTS it may also help you. You can contact Dr. Bharat via email: dr.bharatkings@gmail.com or Whatsapp him on: +393509392854
Post a Comment