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Cancer: Healing the Mind and Soul Besides Going After the Tumor

July 31st, 2008 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Cancer: The Monster That Kills?

For most people, a cancer diagnosis means death. Unfortunately, the world is primed to the idea that cancer always kills. It is not necessarily so. I have often told cancer patients: You don’t have to die of cancer. I do not have cancer but I may die earlier than you. So take it easy and don’t worry so much. It is not good for your . I do not say this just to please them. I have seen so many miraculous healings of cancer cases that I remain in awe, preferring to experience them, rather than to reason.

Karl Menniger (in The Vital Balance) wrote: “Cancer is said to kill some patients who would otherwise not have died so quickly from it”. Abraham Khazam (in You Don’t Have to Die From Cancer) said: “You don’t have to die from cancer and many people die unnecessarily and prematurely from this wrong word, which is a wrong belief that produces a wrong mental set.”

Mindset of Cancer Patients

Cancer patients are not ordinary people. They may show the following characteristics:

1) Cancer patients are very frightened people even though some of them do not show their fear. They may put up a false front.

2) Cancer patients are people in distress. At the back of their mind they only think that they are going to die soon. The future can never be certain anymore.

3) Cancer patients are intensely anxious people. They may be in a hypnotic-like state. As such, they are highly gullible and are highly receptive to any suggestion. They would grab at any straw that promises a cure.

4) Cancer patients are emotional people. They are not capable of rational thinking. Reasoning and logic do not apply to the emotional mind.

5) Cancer patients are highly sensitive persons. They will find reference to their problems just about everywhere. Every word and action of people surrounding them appeared to be directed at them.

6) Cancer patients are demoralised people. They feel hopeless, helpless and are in great despair. They feel powerless and frustrated. They feel that there is nothing that they can do to help themselves and there is nothing that others can do to help them. They suffer from the inside and the world does not seem to care or be able to help.

One Person, Two Diseases

When you are told by the doctor that you have cancer, what does he really mean? This is an odd question to ask, is it not? Many of us, doctors included, see only the biological cancer in you; that is to say, all of us think of cancer as the presence of malignant tumors in the body. We have been trained to think in terms of the visible and measurable aspects of the body.

Let me tell you that there is more to having cancer than the mere presence of the biological disease. Medicine tends to ignore or neglect the fact that a person with cancer also suffers from emotional or psychological cancer. This type of cancer does not show up in the X-ray film or blood test results. Emotional cancer is equally serious if not more serious than the biological cancer. Emotional cancer leads to psychogenic death. Such death comes after patients are being diagnosed with cancer. They die unnecessarily so, long before the biological cancer may even have the chance to kill them. Such a death is a result of self-destruction arising from a wrong conviction that one must die when one gets cancer. In short, this is like the voodoo or bone-pointing death curse. Unfortunately, this death goes unrecognised and unrecorded because it is presumed that deaths of cancer patients is caused by biological cancer.

Today, cancer patients could be under a modern day voodoo curse. They are told that they have contracted cancer and with it too come the doctor’s prognosis – only three to six months to live, etc.
There is no more chance. Death is inevitable. Prepare yourself. This curse is made real in the emotional mind of cancer patients in two ways:

1) The wrong mindset of the patients themselves. They fully believe in their doctors and what they say. As patients they feel hopeless and helpless. They believe they will die of cancer!

2) The social pressure brought about by the wrong mindset of family members, relatives, friends, doctors, nursing staff and many others. While these people may have good intentions, they may unfortunately have the wrong mindset.

I am reminded of Madam Kiew, a patient who came to see me many years ago. She was warded in a private hospital after having her cancerous breast removed. A nurse came to her ward one day and said: “You must realise that you are suffering from cancer. This is a serious disease. You have no chance at all. You will die soon.” Madam Kiew was devastated and confused. She came to my house crying and pleading with us to help her. She said she was not ready to die yet — her only daughter was still small. We understood her distress. Of course the nurse did not realise that what she did and said was very destructive. It amounted to pushing Madam Kiew to her death — to follow the usual, expected path. Many well-meaning friends, relatives and even doctors commit similar deadly mistakes.

Treatment of Cancer

Having understood the above, perhaps it would be easier now for us to understand that there is more to than the surgery, , radiotherapy and drugs that the doctors ask you to undergo or take. Medical science only addresses the physical aspect of the biological cancer, leaving a big hollow or void with regards to the emotions. This is inadequate and unsatisfactory. What the world needs is to recognise and address the emotional or psychological cancers that exist in the patients. These are equally destructive forces that eat up the patients from within. Psychology is still often viewed with suspicion. Perhaps the study about the problems of the head is only relevant in cases of mad men? I have a strong feeling that it may take too long for modern medicine to come to terms with the new truth that man is not only a physical body but consists of the mind and soul. Healing must address all these three.

Chris Teo, Ph.D.
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Breast Cancer: Telling Your Kids About It

July 31st, 2008 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

One of the hardest parts about being diagnosed with is how to tell your children about it. Generally speaking, the best thing to do is to be honest with them. If they don’t hear it from you now, they’re bound to find out some other way - they’ll overhear a conversation when you assume they’re out of the room, or a friend or neighbor will inadvertently say something. And when they hear it that way, in the form of a terrible secret they were never supposed to know, it will be a lot more horrifying for them. By talking about it openly with them, you can demystify it. In addition, if all goes well your children gain an opportunity to learn about survival after . Kids need to know they can trust you - you don’t want to do anything to violate that trust. It’s a two-way communication; remember also to listen to their fears. If you find it difficult to bring up the subject, there are children’s books you can get that can give you a place to begin.

How you tell them about your diagnosis, of course, will depend on the ages of your children and their own emotional vulnerability. They must be told very directly that they did not cause the cancer by thoughts, words, anger, dreams, wishes, etc. Your children will also be affected in other ways; you may be gone for a few days in the hospital and will need to rest when you come home; you may be getting daily radiation therapy, which will consume a lot of your time and leave you tired and lethargic afterwards. You may be having treatments that make you violently sick and make you lose your hair as well. Your children need to know that the alteration in your behavior and the decrease in your accessibility to them isn’t happening because you don’t love them or because they’ve been bad and this is their punishment.

Some surgeons encourage patients to bring young children to the examining room with them. It could be very helpful for a daughter in particular to see her mother being examined. If you are being treated with radiation or in a center where your children are permitted to see the treatment areas, it’s a good idea to bring them along once or twice a week. The environments aren’t intimidating and a child who doesn’t know what’s happening to you in the hospital can conjure up awful images of what “those people” are doing to mom.

Breast cancer has particularly complex ramifications for a mother and her daughter. Aside from all the normal fears any child has to deal with, a daughter might worry about whether this will happen to her, too. It’s not a wholly unfounded fear, since there is a genetic component to . You need to reassure your daughter, explain to her that it is not inevitable but as she gets older she should learn about her breasts and be very conscious of the need for monitoring.

Michael Russell

Your Independent guide to breast-cancer.treatment-and-guides.com/ Breast Cancer

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Studies Identify Gene That Causes Breast Cancer

July 31st, 2008 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Recent medical studies by a team of medical scientists have made some great strides in finding the cause of . In a thorough and extensive study of almost 5000 women, where approximately half of them already had , this team has discovered what appears to be a common gene mutation that has about a 60% chance for an increased risk of . This particular gene mutation was seen in about one out of every six women involved in the study.

The medical researchers state that this new discovery of the gene variant is the most important genetic risk factor associated with found in the past 10 years. The gene is called fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (FGFR2), and is important because of its widespread prevalence.

In the course of the study, the medical researchers were watching for changes in the genetic code of the gene. More specifically, they were watching for changes in single nucleotide polymorphisms, also known as SNP’s) that are known to be associated in some way with . The study discovered that women who had a faulty copy of FGFR2 had a 20% higher risk of , and that women who had two faulty copies or altered versions had as much as a 60% likelihood of . Additionally, the study found that one in six women who participated in the study were found to have two altered version of the gene variant.

This further affirms similar research that showed a very similar link between FGFR2 and in women enrolled in the US Nurses Health Study group by an entirely different set of medical researchers.

A statement by David Hunter of the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, who was a contributor to both of these studies, indicates that these findings open up new avenues worthy of being researched to find the cause and cure for , avenues that were previously thought to not be contributing factors.

For more information about breast-cancer-explained.com Breast Cancer please visit our web site at breast-cancer-explained.com breast-cancer-explained.com

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When Oncologists Said Elevated Platelets Count After Chemotherapy Was Good!

July 31st, 2008 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Jenny (not real name), 53 years old, was diagnosed with left in January 2006. A was done followed by . After her first on 22 February 2006, Jenny felt weak with a heavy head. She vomited for three days. Jenny was supposed to have 8 cycles of but after her fourth , she decided to stop totally. This was because of the severe side effects.

On 29 November 2006, we interviewed Jenny. Below is the transcript of our conversation.

Question: Okay, when you did your second, third and fourth chemo, did the doctor know you were on herbs?

Jenny: No. I hinted about taking herbs during my consultation. They said: “No, no, no. Don’t take herbs.” But I took it quietly without their knowledge. After the fourth chemo and it was time for the fifth chemo, I called and informed them that I intended to stop the treatment. I told them that I am a Christian and I believe in God’s . I heard from God to stop the chemo. And I said I wanted to go for herbs. Initially the oncologist said, “Okay, it’s your choice. Do whatever you want. If you have any problems you can come back here.” I accepted that.

Jenny’s Platelet Count Went Up

Jenny: Every few weeks I had my blood test done before this. Every blood test, the blood platelets kept going up. My friends told me through their experiences the blood platelets usually go “down” not “up”. If it is “up” it is not good. Also the red blood cells must go up, white blood cells must go up but the blood platelets must come down. When I saw my blood platelets went up, I asked the oncologist. He told me, “No, it is okay. All must go up. Then your body is responding to the chemo.” So, I was very happy and continued with my second, third and fourth chemo. The platelets went up higher and higher until it exceeded the range. So, for the third and fourth chemo, the platelets already exceeded the range. I asked the oncologist: “The platelet had already exceeded the range! Is it dangerous?” The doctor replied, “No, it’s good! It must go up”.

One month after I stopped the , I went back to him again for a check up. They did a blood test and found that the platelets count was dropping. The red blood cells and the white blood cells were up, but the platelets came down. Seeing this I panicked because the oncologist said the platelet count must go up. Initially, when I entered the room, the oncologist said: “You are doing very well. You are okay.” But as we went through the readings of the blood and came to the part on platelets count, from 600 it dropped to 300, I asked him, “How? Why it dropped so much? Last time you said 600 is good. Now, it has dropped to 300 . What is wrong with this? Is it okay?” Then he said, “Well, you go for herbs. That is why it is like this. You go for organic food, you believe in God’s – that is why it is like that! What organic food you are talking about. What is organic food?” I was very confused. I felt like crying. I had no one to consult.

I went to have another test done at the Wellness Laboratory. Yes, the platelets dropped to half the amount! I enquired from the technician about this drop in platelet count. He told me it was good for me. Eh? I was dumbfounded. There were two opposing views and I didn’t know whom to believe. Then I waited until you (Dr. Teo) came and spoke to you. Then, you clarified that it was good that the platelet count went down.

Question: Your impression was that you were doing badly after the blood test showed a drop in the platelet reading?

Jenny: Yes.

Comment:

With regards to the platelet count, when the oncologist said: It is good. It must go up! The body is responding to the chemo, he was both deadly wrong and also right. He was deadly wrong because a rise in platelet count or thrombocythemia, may cause clotting in blood vessels and abnormal bleeding. Abnormal clotting of the blood is a more common complication than abnormal bleeding. A blood clot can occur in either an artery or less frequently, in a vein. This complication can be very serious if the clot blocks blood flow to an organ, such as the brain (causing a stroke) or heart (causing a heart attack). The oncologist was absolutely right when he said abnormal elevation of platelets was the body’s response to except that it is NOT for good, it could be deadly!

What is real sad about this case is that the oncologist did not tell his patient the truth! He misled her – either deliberately or through sheer ignorance!

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Suspected Colorectal Cancer - No Medical Intervention Please!

July 30th, 2008 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

“I have great respect for western medicine — but for cancer, I don’t have much confidence in western medicine. The end results were not encouraging, in fact many cases ended up in disaster. I wanted to try the herbs. I knew I was not hopeless or helpless.” These were words of Dr. Daniel (not real name), a member of the medical profession.

Daniel came from a family of 11 siblings but currently only two of them (he and his younger brother) are still alive, the rest passed away. Three of his brothers and a sister had cancer.

In September 2003, Daniel started to have “stomach winds.” He lost weight and his bowel habits changed. He brushed off this problem as insignificant and took “deworming” medication, hoping that the problem would go away. Unfortunately the problem became more serious. He came to seek our help in March 2004, and was started on herbs besides changing to a healthy diet. His health improved and he has been on this path for the past three years.

Being medically trained, we find it strange that from the beginning he flatly refused to seek medical help, even declining to go for a colonoscopy or blood test.

On 9 November 2006, we had a frank talk with Dr. Daniel. The following are excerpts of our conversation.

Question: How old are you now?

Answer by Daniel: I am now 75 years plus.

Q: Could you tell us how your problem started?

A: Basically my blood pressure was okay — 120/80 or sometimes 110/70. Both my sugar and cholesterol levels were okay too. Before my retirement (from a government job, heading a division in the health services) I could eat anything I liked. I ate but I did not put on weight. When I was about 70 / 71 years old, I found it a bit hard to sleep. When I was 72 years old (that is 3 years ago), I started to have stomach problem. It was like indigestion and winds. In the beginning the problem was not so bad. On certain days I was alright but on certain days I had winds. My stools were either loose or watery and sometimes foamy.

Q: Any blood?

A: No, blood — so far no blood.

Q: Basically, your bowel movements and habits changed?

A: Yes, before that it was natural although sometimes I had constipation.

Q: How often did you have this stomach winds?

A: From March 2004 onwards the winds became more frequent and that was the time I came to see you. Actually from September 2003, I already started to have winds but it was not so bad, even though it was not like before. In the earlier years I could eat anything I like. I liked to go for hawkers’ food. But in September 2003, my problem started. Before this time I had no problem taking any kind of food — there was no wind problem.

Q: You said at the beginning it was not bad, but in March 2004, it became more serious?

A: From March 2004, the problem became more often. Sometimes, I would have diarrhea for the whole day. Then I was okay for a day or two and then had diarrhea again.

Q: In March 2004, you said you did not feel good — what did you do then?

Wife: He came to see you but the daughter (who is a medical specialist) told him to go for a scope.
A: I talked to my daughter about this problem. She asked me to go for a colonoscopy and see what could be the problem. It could be due to polyps. I did not want to do that. I knew about your herbs, since many people have been coming to see you and it seemed the herbs helped. So I came to see you but I did not tell my daughter about this.

Q: Did you do any blood test?

A: So far, only once. At first my daughter suspected the problem was due to worms because the eosinophil was elevated — which could indicate worm infection. I took deworming medication but the problem persisted. So when I came to see you, you gave me Capsule A, GI 1 and GI 2.

Q: Knowing that you were medically trained and so was your daughter — now that you have encountered a problem like this which is not a good sign — by right, it is good to go for medical treatment, for example a colonoscopy, etc., etc. But you declined to do all these. Tell us frankly and honestly, the reasons why you did not want to go and see the doctors?

A: It was not because I didn’t want to do it. I have heard about your herbal treatment and also some cases of recovery and the results were encouraging. On the other hand, in western medicine for cancer — for other diseases it is different, I have great respect for western medicine — as far as I can see it, so many cases the end results were not encouraging, in fact many cases ended up in disaster, even after going through those treatment like . Because of that I wanted to try the herbs and may be it will work for me.

Q: Before you knew us and had seen what we have done, did you ever believe in the herbs?

A: No, never. I would go for western medicine. But based on my experience with my brothers, they died of cancer. Then, I had a cousin who was a retired matron of a hospital. She too died of cancer after undergoing two operations for her and had . So as for cancer, I didn’t have much confidence in western medicine.

Q: In March 2004, you came to us and were started on the herbs. Now it is November 2006 – it has been 2 years and 8 months now.

Wife: Yes and he is as strong as before.
A: Yes, I feel good. I can now take more kinds of food without any problem. My appetite is better.

Q: Taking every thing together, after being on the herbs for 2 plus years, are you better off or worse off?

A: Yes, I am better off. My stamina is better. I can swim — like breast strokes, even one mile would be no problem.
Wife: He can swim non-stop!
Q: In September 2003, when you started to have this problem, could you swim like that?

A: I could also swim but the stamina was not that good.

Q: What about your weight?

A: It has increased by 1 to 2 pounds since the past two plus years. There was no loss in weight. Between September 2003 and March 2004 (before taking the herbs) I was losing weight, besides my stamina was going down.

Comments: Gurdjieff wrote: “The wise man is not educated, and the educated man is not wise.” This saying seems to be often true in life. It would be wonderful indeed if the educated man is also wise — it makes the world a better place to live in! In this story, Dr. Daniel is an educated man and he is also a wise man — and the result? He made a sensible decision that perhaps had “saved” his life.

Dr. Daniel is schooled in the medical tradition. He was taught that a drug has to undergo a placebo-controlled double blind clinical study before evidence of efficacy is acceptable. Anything short of this requirement is “bunked off” as unacceptable or quackery. Anecdotal evidence, no matter how true and relevant, is never acceptable or taken seriously as evidence. Perhaps such hard-line thinking only belongs to the educated man? For him to defend the “turf” or protect his “rice bowl”?

Dr. Daniel saw for himself what had happened to his loved ones after they had undergone treatment for their cancers using the so-called FDA-approved and “proven” drugs. Yet they died. When his turn came to make a decision about his own treatment, Dr. Daniel did not have confidence in modern medicine! He relied on his own wisdom and saw for himself what was going around him. He said: “I have heard about your herbal treatment and also some cases of recovery and the results were encouraging. On the other hand, in western medicine for cancer – as far as I can see it, for so many cases the end results were not encouraging, in fact many cases ended up in disaster. Because of that I wanted to try the herbs and may be it will work for me.” In short, Dr. Daniel believed in anecdotal evidence.

I read a news report somewhere, sometime ago, about an oncologist in a renowned hospital in the US, who started to advocate complementary therapy for his patients after his wife who had benefited from such unorthodox therapy. Indeed, personal experience makes a wise man. I tend to wonder if those hard-line proponents of this double blind study ever have their own loved ones suffering from cancer. If they do, after the “battle”, I wonder if they ever reflect and question the rationale of what is going on. Is there any wisdom in what is being done? There is a saying: “None are so blind as those who have eyes and see not, and none are so deaf as those who have ears and hear not.”

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