Glenda four years later.
The happier I get using all of the tools now available to me, the happier
my body is too, and the more activity I can handle. I have turned what was
once a hopeless existence full of lonely despair into a life of joyful
inspiration. I enjoy whatever life chooses to offer me in each moment.
I have a limited, part-time practice, but the people I work with provide
the impetus to continue being kind to my body. A well-rested me can be
more available to my clients and my readers.
I love this work!
I hope that
one day my story will prove to be as life-changing and inspirational to them
as hearing Dr. Joe’s story was to me.
WHEN SERIOUS DISEASES SIMPLY DISAPPEAR
I believe that many cases of remission from serious diseases are influenced by
mental fields. The bodies of these people are being bathed in positivity while the
cells are replicating and growing. When every one of those 810,000 new cells
that your body creates each second is born in an energetic environment of
kindness and love, it shapes their development.
When we create mental, emotional, and spiritual fields of love and kindness, we provide a healthy
energetic ecosystem in which our bodies regenerate.
The spontaneous remission of cancer without treatment has historically been
viewed by the medical profession as a rare phenomenon. One of the first authors
to make an estimate stated that it probably happened in 1 out of every 80,000
cases (Boyd, 1966). A contemporary estimate was 1 in 100,000 cases (Boyers,
1953).
Modern studies, however, are discovering that remission is common. One
found that about a fifth of breast cancers are healed by mind and body without
the need for medical intervention (Zahl, Mæhlen, & Welch, 2008). Others report
a similar percentage of patients healing spontaneously from a type of cancer that
affects white blood cells (Krikorian, Portlock, Cooney, & Rosenberg, 1980). A
bibliography of medical reports of spontaneous remission found over 3,000
cases reported in the medical literature (O’Regan & Hirshberg, 1993).
The spread of cancer requires signaling and cooperation between groups of
cancer cells. This signaling is triggered by stress (Wu, Pastor-Pareja, & Xu,
2010). Adrenaline, also called epinephrine, is one of our two main stress
hormones, the other being cortisol. High levels of adrenaline trigger the spread
of ovarian cancer cells far away from the primary tumor. They also activate an
enzyme called FAK that inhibits the destruction of cancer cells and hastens death
(Sood et al., 2010). A different enzyme, one that destroys prostate and breast
cancer cells, is immobilized by adrenaline (Sastry et al., 2007).
When we lower our stress levels, we reverse these effects, sometimes quickly.
Researchers report tumors shrinking to less than half their original size within a
few hours of an emotional healing session (Ventegodt, Morad, Hyam, &
Merrick, 2004). Among those who experience spontaneous remission or survive
much longer than usual after a diagnosis, a change in worldview is common.
They become more altruistic in their relationships with others and actively
involve themselves in their treatment (Frenkel et al., 2011). Anandamide, the
“bliss molecule” generated by meditation, also inhibits the formation of cancer
cells. As mind changes, so does matter.
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