Cancer and its Triggers

This overview of cancer will identify the various pathways that act as triggers for the onset of disease and explain why any treatment for cancer patients needs to address the body, mind and spirit as a whole before full recovery can be assured.

Dr W. Douglas Brodie was a very smart man who had a lifetime of experience treating cancer patients. During his examination of thousands of patients, he noticed some very enlightening things. He first noticed that his patients tended to have similar personality traits. They would tend to be very caring, intelligent people who would be conscientious. They would try to help others and take responsibility for other people’s troubles in an effort to alleviate their pain from life’s tribulations. They would have a deep understanding of the value of happiness and seeing others in turmoil would be upsetting to them. They would often have disruption in their own lives from a lack of closeness with one or both of their parents and they would be harbouring toxic emotions like anger, resentment or hostility from situations that resulted in bad outcomes that they found impossible to resolve. These interactions left the patient with feelings of anger that were later compounded by other similar situations in life.
Dr Ryke Geerd Hamer, chief of internal medicine in a gynaecology-oncology clinic at Munich University, discovered that psycho-emotional trauma actually left visible markers within patient’s brains that can be read like a book to determine the precise disease and its organ location in the body. He determined from this information that every cancer originated from a dramatic and isolating emotional shock. These findings were confirmed by Madelon Visintainer who is the Associate Professor at Yale University School of Medicine. Often the patient has a traumatic event in their history that is compounded by a recent event. The more recent stress then becomes the trigger for the disease even though the original event laid down the foundations for it many years before. This results in a subconscious wanting to exit life that comes from the spirit. The body reacts to the conditions left by this deep-rooted desire in the only way possible and slips into disease.
Cancer patients have long periods of elevated cortisol that deplete the bodies limited reserves of adrenalin. We all know insulin is responsible for transporting our energy in the form of glucose into our cells but adrenalin is critical for cell respiration and the production of ATP (energy molecule) within the cell because it stimulates the production of GDP (guanosine diphosphate) that is used by the mitochondria during the Krebs cycle (energy process). This inability of the cell to produce energy in the normal way through the Oxidative Phosphorylation metabolic pathway forces the cells to switch to fermenting glucose instead. The fermentation process results in the production of lactic acid in the cell, leaving the cell and surrounding tissues with an acid environment that allows fungus to grow. Dr Otto Warburg director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Biology won the Nobel Prize for Physiology in 1931 when he discovering cells mutate into cancer cells after losing their ability to respire and produce energy in the normal way. Although he correctly postulated that the cells inability to respire was due to the lack of oxygen it is the depletion of adrenaline that is responsible for this predicament unless the blood supply is compromised. 
Any lowering of the pH in individual cells or tissue beds caused by prolonged chronic stress stimulates somatids to pleomorphise into stages of their life that includes viral-bacterial-yeast like fungus that enter the cells and produces more acid waste (mycotoxins). The acidic cytoplasm inhibits normal cell repair and suppresses the natural cell death (apoptosis). This leads to the cell mutating into a cancer and then reproducing into a tumour. The study of these somatids can allow medics to diagnose the onset of cancer up to 18 months before any tumour is visible. 
Most people try to heal the body when they are diagnosed with cancer but if a patient can rid themselves of the toxic emotions that cause the lactic acid in cells, the cancer-fungus will devolve back into the healthy harmless somatid, having no more lactic acid to ferment. 
The production of melatonin by the pineal gland normally occurs during deep sleep (between 1am and 3am) but it can also be stimulated during meditation and deep relaxation done with intention through massage or guided by recordings or hypnosis. Melatonin (interleukin 2) is the controller of our natural cancer-killing immune cells (T cells, B cells) and so, by bringing about a deep cleansing of your spiritual body, addressing the root of the psycho-emotional problem and then changing the environment that is responsible for the stress, the body will right itself and kill off the cancer naturally. It is extremely important to gently detox the liver during the recovery from cancer to alleviate the danger of overloading that could result in lowering the quality of liver function. It is important to get the correct nutrition from your food during this time and the depletion of vitamin C and niacin in particular needs to be addressed. The acid cell environment can be changed by simply eating alkalising foods.
Hopefully, it can be seen from this article how important it is to understand illness from a multi-layered point of view. The mind, body and spirit work together as one and any failures in the triad can result in disease within the organism.

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http://www.alternative-cancer-care.com/

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