A Man's Silent Torment:

"BPH"

 

 


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About Author

Autobiography

Please let me share a wonderful BPH natural self-treatment program with you that has allowed me and many others to discard all the powerful, dangerous, and expensive drugs I was taking when I first contracted BPH.

My natural alternative treatment has improved my quality of life dramatically, and the life of others all over the world.

My wife and I have been doing research on BPH for many years, painfully seeking ways to combat BPH effectively through self-treatment.  I am not a healthcare professional, but a natural health reporter & author. I am also a television and radio host in the Westchester, NY area. Although we do not have medical degrees, we have taken the opinions and research of experts, coupled with our personal research and experiments, and created a very effective way to combat BPH naturally.

Until recently, BPH sufferers from all over the world accessed my website to learn about my program. They were given information in the form of a detailed electronic report.  Due to the overwhelming positive response my program attained, I decided to write a book about my extensive research and personal experiments.

Our self-treatment program materialized thanks to the cooperation I initially received from the Urology Clinic, at the NYU Medical Center in New York City.  

Instead of an electronic online report, BPH patients now have a book full of constructive and enlightening information based on our exhaustive research and self-experiments, plus detailed information on how you can relieve your symptoms significantly without drugs.

Remember, more and more people are seeking safe, natural and alternative treatments to combat Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH).  

Our self-treatment program is definitely a revolutionary natural approach to combat BPH (Enlarged Prostate).  It enables you to throw away those dangerous and expensive drugs and improve your quality of life considerably. 

Our program has been medically documented at two of the most prestigious hospitals in New York City - NYU Medical Center and Saint Vincent Catholic Medical Centers. My urologist, Dr. Christopher Dixon, has treated me at both medical centers during the course of nearly 15 years.

Please feel comfortable to call or email me with questions any day of the week.

Joseph Parisi
Pelham, New York
(914)712-0373
__________________________________

My Autobiography

Until September of 2007, I was the publisher and chief editor of The Mount Vernon Inquirer, the city of Mount Vernon's hometown newspaper, located in New York's lower Westchester County area. I also had my own television shown and was a radio host for many years on WVOX 1460 AM. At the end of 2007, I decided to give up the newspaper and concentrate 100% on writing about Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH), since there is a serious worldwide epidemic afflicting millions of men, including me.

Hillary Clinton congratulating me on my newspaper's anniversary in 2006

Prior to The Mount Vernon Inquirer newspaper, I provided up-to-the-minute reporting as publisher/editor of The Pelham Forum online newspaper, located in my hometown of Pelham, NY. Visitors from all over the world visited our online newspaper. With four newspapers in town, I closed shop and started the The Mount Vernon Inquirer newspaper.

My celebrity radio and television talk shows were not boring and were a lot of fun, since I got to meet and interview many celebrities throughout the years.

I grew up in what is known today as the South Bronx. I escaped the dangers and brutality of gang infested streets by participating in organized sports as a kid. I was fortunate to excel in baseball and basketball, and was badgered by neighborhood kids on the way to playing fields.

I was an above average high school basketball player in NYC back in the 1960's. And I was also an excellent baseball player. I set a record at Morris High School high by striking out seventeen players in a seven inning game. I don't know if the record still stands.

After graduating from high school, although I had many scholarship offers, I put college on hold and enlisted in the Marine Corps just as the war in Viet Nam was starting to escalate. Some thought that going to war and not capitalizing on scholarship offers from top colleges was truly insane. But, myself and other neighborhood kids took off for Parris Island to serve our country nonetheless.

1964 (Okinawa)

At my desk as a USMC reporter in Sasebo, Japan (1966)

While serving in the Far East , I learned that Texas-Western had won the NCAA men's basketball championship, defeating Kentucky 72-65. The date was March 19, 1966 . Today the school is known as the University of Texas El Paso .

The news devastated me, since me and my high school teammate, Nevil Shed, had been offered scholarships by Texas-Western. Shed elected to attend Texas-Western and was on the winning team that defeated Kentucky .

Had I elected not to join the Marines and had accepted the Texas-Western scholarship offer; I certainly would have been on the team that won the NCAA men's basketball championship in 1966.

I have never forgotten the ill-advised decision I made as a youngster, but I have no regrets.

During my four year tenure in the Marine Corps, the Marines realized that I was better suited to work in an office, and converted him into a court reporter. After a brief stint as a court reporter, I volunteered to be a writer for Stars and Stripes, a military newspaper, and was accepted. After a crash course in journalism, I was assigned as a reporter and covered stories throughout the Far East .

I was almost killed one day when I went into a burning building in Sasebo, Japan, rescuing several sleeping residents. I was overwhelmed by smoke and became unconscious. The firemen rescued me and took me to a local hospital, where I quickly recuperated.

Shockingly, the Japanese police thought I had started the fire and arrested me. After thorough questioning of the people I saved, I was released as a hero, prompting a wave of positive press coverage on the matter throughout Japan.

After leaving the Marines, I returned home not as a hero, but as a villain. On the trip home I was actually reluctant to wear my uniform, since the Viet Nam War had escalated dramatically and returning veterans were spat on by anti-war demonstrators.

I soon enrolled at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and attended college at night, while I worked as a NYC police officer during the day. Working as a cop and going to college at night was a true challenge, but I managed to succeed in attaining my B.A.

In this picture (1977) my partner and I (left) are being congratulated after
making a narcotics arrest that got me promoted to detective.
 
I  retired from police work due to a serious and life threatening line of duty injury, later becoming a healthcare professional (an orthotist). An orthotist is one who fabricates custom orthopedic braces.

I ran a very successful orthopedic appliance business in the Bronx and had a large factory in the rear.  I employed 15 employees and actually did business at the international level.  My days as an entrepreneur came to a crashing halt when the rear-end leaf spring of a 1946 Ford I was working on snapped loose and struck my left hand. The injury was devastating and I nearly lost my left hand. The results of the injury prevented me from using my left hand for a very long time, so I decided to sell my business to my partner.

Some time later, I took the test to become a private investigator, passed it, and became a full-time private eye.

Being a private investigator was like being a NYC detective all over a gain. I wasn’t too thrilled about what I was doing, so I decided to abandon the field.

In 1994, I was diagnosed with a severe case of Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH). The urologist prescribed Hytrin to bring me relief, but the side effects were intolerable. I stopped taking the drugs and starting doing research on the disease. Months later, I managed to develop a program that has allowed me to improved my quality of life significantly. I have since been on a crusade to assist other men all over the world in combating BPH.

I decided to write an electronic book about my experiences and how I have managed to keep BPH under control for the past15 years. It took me a long time to put the book together all by my lonely, but I got it done. The book is updated periodically in an effort to provide readers with the latest information on the prostate. It will soon be available in hardcover form.

As for his training as a journalist is concerned, if you want to become a journalist, you don’t attend John Jay College of Criminal Justice at night as I did. So, the truth is that I have no formal academic training as a writer, other than a crash course I took in the Marine Corps. Fortunately, I think I have a lot of common sense and a natural talent that enables me to put thoughts on paper very fluidly.

I find that to be an effective writer, editor and publisher, one must be imaginative and creative, and be able to put together stories that will interest not just a few of your readers, but most of your readers.

I hope to commence interviewing healthcare professionals on the subject of BPH soon. The interviews will be televised throughout Westchester County, and will also be heard on radio.

My radio interviews will be made available to my readers on this website. 

Good luck to you.

Joe Parisi