View Full Version : Cancer is not a Disease - It's a Survival Mechanism (Book Excerpt)
ktlight
20th April 2011, 10:16
What you are about to read may rock or even dismantle the very foundation of your beliefs about your body, health and healing. The title, Cancer Is Not a Disease, may be unsettling for many, provocative to some, but encouraging for all. This book will serve as a life-altering revelation for those who are sufficiently open-minded to consider the possibility that cancer is not an actual disease. Instead, they will begin to view cancer to be a profoundly elaborate and final attempt by the body to heal itself and stay alive for as long as circumstances permit; circumstances that, as you will discover, are most likely in your control.
It will perhaps astound you to learn that if you are afflicted with any of the root causes of cancer (which constitute the real illness) you would most likely die quickly unless your body actually grew cancer cells. In this work, I propose the understanding that cancer is a healing process that we ought to support, not suppress or fight. I provide evidence that this rather unorthodox approach to healing cancer is far more effective than the methods that involve destroying it.
source
http://www.NaturalNews.com/022578_cancer_body_disease.html
butcherman
20th April 2011, 11:11
thank you, this is a subject dear to my hart, having had testicular cancer in 1987 and 6 months of chemotherapy with platinum based drugs, looking back over the years the cause and effect was defiantly stress and junk food
regards
Butcherman (the one that got away)
bilko
20th April 2011, 12:43
This is quite read, i'm half way through but feel i have to post.
Firstly, thank you for posting this KTlight. I don't know how long this article will stay up but i believe it to be a VERY important one.
I'm about to send it off to my mother who lives in Spain. She started and runs a cancer charity over there. Every time i call her, one of her friends or someone she knows has dropped dead of cancer. She says that its the age but i totally disagree.
If one is wealthy enough to retire to a hot climate, eat good food, get all the sun and make vit D3, swim in the ocean every day etc, then you would have thought that person would be as healthy as a horse. However, ex pats are known for over indulgence in alcohol which does weaken the immune system. Also i believe that too much time on their hands can bring unhealed situations and stresses to the fore again where they are replayed over and over. Guilt and shame and can have a devastating effect if left to fester.
I was told a long time ago that 'cancer is a choice', i can't remember the context of the conversation but i have always believed it to be true.
I have no direct experience with cancer except that my biological mother had a tumor removed and her mother died of pancreatic cancer. My biological father died of a heart disease and diabetes. His father, my grandfather now has cancer. I believe guilt and shame to be major root causes to their afflictions and death. I'll let you read between the lines there.
I have expected cancer or some such devastating disease in myself for the last decade probably through a victim mentality born of childhood abuse and abandonment, stress from active duty in the army and ultimately the solitude i live in where i sometimes find myself powerless to do the most trivial of tasks. I turned 40 the other day and i find myself subconsciously teetering on the precipice of my fate like a pair of scales.
For me i believe cancer is a choice and one i have spent my life deciding upon unwittingly in the past and sometimes positively in recent years. However, partly due to my spiritual strength and partly due to my exercise and forays into healthy regenerative eating habits i have staved off actually making the choice. I believe i have been waiting for an answer, a diagnosis into what ails me in my life and i believe that for some if not most, cancer is that answer. Not to say that we slowly developed it but that cancer is the ultimatum that people like myself have been waiting for. A green flag for the victim to change and start living. Does this make sense?
This may be my only post in this thread and i may have forgotten about it in a few days but i can assure you now that it is one of the most important threads of my life.
I hope you appreciate my candid muse as an outpouring of positive thanks rather than the meddling of a maudlin poster who has never really been around the destruction of cancer.
Thank you
Ian
ktlight
20th April 2011, 14:44
This is quite read, i'm half way through but feel i have to post.
Firstly, thank you for posting this KTlight. I don't know how long this article will stay up but i believe it to be a VERY important one.
I'm about to send it off to my mother who lives in Spain. She started and runs a cancer charity over there. Every time i call her, one of her friends or someone she knows has dropped dead of cancer. She says that its the age but i totally disagree.
If one is wealthy enough to retire to a hot climate, eat good food, get all the sun and make vit D3, swim in the ocean every day etc, then you would have thought that person would be as healthy as a horse. However, ex pats are known for over indulgence in alcohol which does weaken the immune system. Also i believe that too much time on their hands can bring unhealed situations and stresses to the fore again where they are replayed over and over. Guilt and shame and can have a devastating effect if left to fester.
I was told a long time ago that 'cancer is a choice', i can't remember the context of the conversation but i have always believed it to be true.
I have no direct experience with cancer except that my biological mother had a tumor removed and her mother died of pancreatic cancer. My biological father died of a heart disease and diabetes. His father, my grandfather now has cancer. I believe guilt and shame to be major root causes to their afflictions and death. I'll let you read between the lines there.
I have expected cancer or some such devastating disease in myself for the last decade probably through a victim mentality born of childhood abuse and abandonment, stress from active duty in the army and ultimately the solitude i live in where i sometimes find myself powerless to do the most trivial of tasks. I turned 40 the other day and i find myself subconsciously teetering on the precipice of my fate like a pair of scales.
For me i believe cancer is a choice and one i have spent my life deciding upon unwittingly in the past and sometimes positively in recent years. However, partly due to my spiritual strength and partly due to my exercise and forays into healthy regenerative eating habits i have staved off actually making the choice. I believe i have been waiting for an answer, a diagnosis into what ails me in my life and i believe that for some if not most, cancer is that answer. Not to say that we slowly developed it but that cancer is the ultimatum that people like myself have been waiting for. A green flag for the victim to change and start living. Does this make sense?
This may be my only post in this thread and i may have forgotten about it in a few days but i can assure you now that it is one of the most important threads of my life.
I hope you appreciate my candid muse as an outpouring of positive thanks rather than the meddling of a maudlin poster who has never really been around the destruction of cancer.
Thank you
Ian
I just want to say that an adult feeling guilt when remembering a childhood event should not be accepting to feel guilty. Still, forgiveness must happen. An adult remembering something that should not have happened will have to be truly honest with their self before beginning to learn to forgive themselves to release the guilt.
You definitely made the right choice when you got into regenerative eating habits. Stick with it and now, in this moment, forget about choice-making. It is already done.
Thank you for presenting you and for giving me the opportunity for me to be me.
king anthony
20th April 2011, 15:30
What you are about to read may rock or even dismantle the very foundation of your beliefs about your body, health and healing. The title, Cancer Is Not a Disease, may be unsettling for many, provocative to some, but encouraging for all.
I say, cancer is a “weapon/tool” and no one should be dying from it or “most other things”; I speak from firsthand knowledge of this - as I have been with “those” who speak of this and (but for a moment) had in hand proof of this fact. Find comfort if you will, but know these words I speak – believe me not but seek for yourselves the truth.
Shezbeth
20th April 2011, 18:02
Rarely does anyone die from cancer, they die from harmful cancer 'treatments'.
happyexpat
3rd May 2011, 18:37
Thank you for bringing this topic up.
I had cervical cancer "events", 1st time growths removed, 2nd time that awful freeze cone treatment, 3rd time...
It was coming back basically every 3 years. Not anymore.
I took B-17 (Leatril). Was gone within 6 months and has not returned. Only took the minimum dose. If I recall correctly, was one 50mg pill per day. Tried to eat the apricot seeds and chose not to deal with the aftertaste.
I have also used diet and alkaline water to keep my body less acidic.
I definitely think it was a wake-up call for me, and I'm sure my health now and in the long term are far better for making the changes.
The sister-in-law... bad test results... got her B-17 and in 4 months she was fine.
Bridey
3rd May 2011, 18:46
I had a baby girl eight years ago that died "in utero" from cancer. She died from congenital leukemia lymphoma. She wasn't even born before she died from it. My doctors told me they had never seen it before. I have never found a case like mine. I just don't understand how she could develop cancer and die from it all within 39 weeks. I just hope she didn't suffer.
One positive note from it......I went on a quest for knowledge as to why this happened to her. It lead me on a trail of information to eventually "awaken me". So I'm pleased about that.
Lord Sidious
3rd May 2011, 18:58
I had a baby girl eight years ago that died "in utero" from cancer. She died from congenital leukemia lymphoma. She wasn't even born before she died from it. My doctors told me they had never seen it before. I have never found a case like mine. I just don't understand how she could develop cancer and die from it all within 39 weeks. I just hope she didn't suffer.
One positive note from it......I went on a quest for knowledge as to why this happened to her. It lead me on a trail of information to eventually "awaken me". So I'm pleased about that.
My cousin was born with a tumour joining several of her organs.
She is now probably near 30 with her own kids.
Although I am sorry to hear of your loss, she was the reason you are here.
Do not mourn her, thank her for the opportunity she gave you that you accepted.
Make her passing a good thing, draw the positive from it.
Bridey
3rd May 2011, 20:10
Thank-you Lord Sidious, I do. It is the reason why I'm here. Its true. Thanks.
Thank-you ktlight for the article.....very interesting.
dukes4monny
3rd May 2011, 20:33
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Lord sidious that was a very kind thing to say,
Bridey my heart and blessings are with you.
I do have a question though and this may assist others who remain quiet, what was the b17 that worked for you?
Blessings
Ammit
Bridey
3rd May 2011, 21:14
Yes I've seen this before, good vid!! Hemp and "hemp products" are widely available to me. I live in BC! Although oil is hard to come by. I'm a new member and I just love this site. I don't have to "weed" through youtube for good reliable videos anymore. All the weeding has been done for me. I used to waste so much time going through lots of disinformation vids.
Lord Sidious
4th May 2011, 01:10
Lord sidious that was a very kind thing to say,
Bridey my heart and blessings are with you.
I do have a question though and this may assist others who remain quiet, what was the b17 that worked for you?
Blessings
Ammit
I try to relate the truth as I see it to people.
And something like losing a child is a major event, if we don't draw the positive from it, it can be a big negative that can upset the rest of our lives.
ktlight
4th May 2011, 16:35
Lord sidious that was a very kind thing to say,
Bridey my heart and blessings are with you.
I do have a question though and this may assist others who remain quiet, what was the b17 that worked for you?
Blessings
Ammit
I try to relate the truth as I see it to people.
And something like losing a child is a major event, if we don't draw the positive from it, it can be a big negative that can upset the rest of our lives.
Perhaps we should celebrate the short span of life that that soul needed in order to progress. What an honour.
Bridey
5th May 2011, 01:24
Perhaps we should celebrate the short span of life that that soul needed in order to progress. What an honour.
Loved what you just said there, klight! Love it......an honour, definitely....
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