Cancer is only a touchable symptom of
implicit in emotional stress on the personify and the body's cells. But how
does effusive stress case cancer in the body? And wherefore does emotional
stress but case cancer in some people, when not in other people?
Because the absolute majority of
people, braving stress and extremely stressful or traumatic events or conflicts
is dealt with, on relative ease. Though those in this greater group find the
annihilative effects of stress, stressful effects, trauma, and battles, letting
in grief and loss – stressful events are attended as part of life's disputes,
aliveness ups and belts down, and they're for they most partially anticipated
and not totally unforeseen. These people are capable to advance with their
lives apace afterwards.
Those susceptible to cancer, are
extremely tender to lifetime stresses and harm, and feeling ineffectual to cope
while life contrives a breaking ball their way. This people are perfectionists
and live in care of battle, stress, trauma and going and are deep frightened of
damaging events "occurrence" to it. And when faced up with a
extremely stressful or stabbing event they accept not anticipated, which
ineluctably happens on their life, oppose adversely and are ineffective to header.
They experience Inescapable Shock and
remain deeply affected by the experience. They have difficulty in expressing
their inner grief, their inner pain, their inner anger or resentment, and
genuinely feel there is no way out of the pain they are feeling inside. And
because their mind cannot fathom what has happened, and remains in a state of
disbelief or denial, these inner painful feelings are continually perpetuated,
shooting up stress hormone levels, lowering melatonin and adrenaline levels,
causing a slow breakdown of the emotional reflex centre in the brain, and
creating the beginning of cancer progression in the body.
When faced with a major trauma, the
cancer personality feels trapped and unable to escape from the memory of the
traumatic experience and the painful feelings of the experience. Stress hormone
cortisol levels skyrocket and remain at high levels, directly suppressing the
immune system, whose job it is to destroy cancer cells that exist in every
human being. High stress levels generally means a person cannot sleep well, and
cannot produce enough Melatonin during deep sleep. Melatonin is responsible for
inhibiting cancer cell growth. This means cancer cells are now free to
multiply. Adrenaline levels also skyrocket initially, but are then drained and
depleted over time. This is especially bad news for the cancer personality.
Adrenaline is responsible for
transporting sugar away from cells. And when there is too much sugar in cells
of the body, the body becomes acidic. This means normal body cells cannot
breathe properly because of low oxygen. Cancer cells thrive in a low oxygen
state, as demonstrated by Nobel Prize winner Otto Warburg. Cancer cells also
thrive on sugar to keep them alive. Put simply, too much internal stress causes
a depletion of adrenalin, leads to too much sugar in the body, resulting in the
perfect environment for cancer cells to thrive in the body.
For the cancer personality, the news
of being diagnosed with cancer and the fear and uncertainty of death represents
another Inescapable Shock, creating another spike in stress hormone cortisol
levels, and a further drop in melatonin and adrenalin levels. There is also a
further breakdown of the emotional reflex centre in the brain that causes cells
in the corresponding organ to slowly breakdown and become cancerous.
Learned helplessness is a key aspect
of the cancer personality when facing a perceived inescapable shock, and is a
strong developmental factor of cancer. Researcher Madelon Visintainer took
three groups of rats, one receiving mild escapable shock, another group
receiving mild in-escapable shock, and the third no shock at all. She then
implanted each rat with cancer cells that would normally result in 50% of the
rats developing a tumour. Her results were astonishing.
Within a month, 50% of the rats not
shocked at all had rejected the tumour; this was the normal ratio. As for the
rats that mastered shock by pressing a bar to turn it off, 70% had rejected the
tumour. But only 27% of the helpless rats, the rats that had experienced
in-escapable shock, rejected the tumour. This study demonstrates those who feel
there is no way out of their shock / loss are less likely to be able to reject
tumours forming within their body, due to high levels of stress weakening the
immune system. [Seligman, 1998, p.170]
Cancer occurs at the cellular level.
And there are a number of factors that create stress on the body's cells,
causing them to become (1) depleted of adrenaline, (2) high in sugar and (3)
low in oxygen, where they are more prone to mutate and become cancerous. The
higher the sugar content of the cell caused by a depletion of adrenaline, and
the lower the oxygen content, the greater the likelihood of normal cells
mutating and becoming cancerous.
There are a number of factors that
contribute to a normal cell becoming depleted of adrenaline, high in sugar and
low in oxygen. Physiological stresses include (and are not limited to): Poor
nutrition, Chemicals, Toxins, EMF Radiation, Parasites, Liver / Colon / Kidney
disease, Lack of Exercise, etc. Psychological stresses include (and are not
limited to): Inescapable Shock, Repressed Feelings, Depression, Isolation, Poor
Sleep, Emotional Trauma, External Conflict, etc.
In the vast majority of those with
cancer, there exists both a combination of psychological as well as
physiological stresses that have contributed to the body's cells becoming
depleted of adrenaline, high in sugar and low in oxygen, causing them to mutate
and become cancerous.