The Cancer Wisdom Podcast

                     Published: September 20, 2024 Host: Simon Persson

In this episode, I will reveal the emotional causes of leukemia, which no doctor talks about. I will explain in detail what causes this mechanism so that you know what to work on.

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The information is presented for educational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, prescribe treat or cure cancer.This information is not intended as medical advice, please refer to a qualified healthcare professional.

Summary


  • Leukemia is a cancer of the blood cells.
  • The main objective of the bone marrow is to make blood cells.
  • The bone marrow can also start to create white blood cells called leukemia cells.
  • There are two main types of white blood cells in your body: lymphoid cells and myeloid cell.
  • There are two categories of leukemia: acute and chronic.
  • Acute leukemia happens when most of the abnormal blood cells stay premature.
  • Chronic leukemia is when there are some immature cells together with normal cells.
  • There are different types of leukemias.
  • Acute myeloid leukemia is when there's a rapid growth of myeloid cells.
  • Chronic lymphocytic leukemia starts in the cells that become lymphocytes.
  • Lymphocytes are white blood cells that derive from stem cells in the bone marrow.
  • Chronic myeloid leukemia, which occurs in about 9,000 people every year in the U.S.
  • Multiple myeloma starts in the bone marrow and is a growth of plasma cells which are white blood cells.
  • Some common signs of leukemia include: excessive sweating, unintentional weight loss, bruise easily, fatigue or weakness, bone pain, tenderness, enlargement of the spleen or liver, frequent infections, fever, or chills.
  • Cancer patients often felt rejection, abandonment, betrayal, shame, or injustice.
  • Cancer patients are often caring, dutiful, responsible, and hardworking people.
  • The most common toxic emotions that cancer patients suppress are anger, resentment, and hostility.
  • Cancer personalities react more adversely to stress than other people.
  • The German doctor Ryke Geerd Hamer discovered a connection between cancer and unresolved emotional conflicts.
  • Every cancer starts with a painful, acute, traumatic, and isolating shock.
  • Cancer and diseases start in the brain cells.
  • The body activates a particular biological program when you experience some emotional trauma.  
  • Diseases run in two phases: the active conflict phase and the healing stage.
  • Leukemia manifests after a self devaluation conflict  or loss of self worth.
  • A self devaluation conflict may activate when you experience humiliation such as accusations, scoldings or degrading marks.
  • Some people can also experience this when they have physical, sexual, or verbal abuse.
  • This conflict can activate when you have failure at work, school, or in sport.
  • Some kind of disappointment in your relationship as a parent or a partner can also trigger leukemia.
  • It's how we perceive and speak to ourselves that increases our risk of leukemia.
  • Leukemia and blood disorders manifest when you don't have any joy left in your life.
  • Blood disorders are a lack of joy and a lack of circulation of ideas.
  • When you have a white blood cell count that is too high, it indicates an aggressive personality.
  • An anemic person has no joy left and feels discouraged and hopeless.
  • There are four phases in this healing process.
  • In the healing phase, the body restores the bone marrow.
  • In phase two, after three to six weeks, the bone marrow starts to produce large amounts of leucoblasts.
  • Phase three is the end of the leukemia phase, and the production of red blood cells starts to pick up.
  • In the final phase, the last part of the healing phase occurs, and the blood values return to normal.  

How To Heal From Emotional Causes Of Leukemia

1. Download guide to learn nine natural ways to treat leukemia



Discover How To Heal The Emotional Causes Of Leukemia

Download this free guide to learn how to let go of the emotional causes of leukemia and eight other ways you can treat it naturally.

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Episode transcript:

Simon: Emotional trauma can be behind leukemia. In this episode, I will reveal the emotional cause of leukemia, which no doctor talks about. I will explain in detail what causes this mechanism so that you know what to work on.

Intro jingle: Welcome to the Cancer Wisdom podcast. This podcast teaches you how to treat cancer with natural remedies without using toxic treatments. Discover how to take charge of your health and not be a slave to Big Pharma medicine. Here's your host, Simon  Persson.  â€Š

Simon: Leukemia is a cancer of the blood cells. It starts in the bone marrow, a soft tissue inside most bones. The main objective of the bone marrow is to make blood cells. Every day, it produces billions of new blood cells.

But, the bone marrow can also start to create white blood cells called leukemia cells. Over time, leukemia cells can crowd out healthy blood cells. This can lead to serious problems such as anemia, bleeding, and infections.

Leukemia cells can also affect the lymph nodes or other organs and cause swelling or pain. They can impede the function and growth of healthy white blood cells.  

Leukemia cells can also make it harder to fight infections, as normal white blood cells can do. And if they grow too much, they can also affect major organs.

Leukemia cells can also reduce the amount of red blood cells. Red blood cells supply oxygen to the cells. Cancer cells thrive in low-oxygen environments.

There are two main types of white blood cells in your body: lymphoid cells and myeloid cells. So, leukemia can happen in either type. There are two categories of leukemia: acute and chronic. The major difference is how fast it develops and gets worse.

Acute leukemia happens when most of the abnormal blood cells stay premature. They can't carry out normal functions and worsen fast. Chronic leukemia is when there are some immature cells together with normal cells. So that means it gets bad but slower.

There are different types of leukemias. Acute lymphocytic leukemia is the most common one in children. But it can also affect adults.

Immature lymphoid cells grow fast in the blood, which affects about 6,000 people per year in the U.S. Acute myeloid leukemia is when there's a rapid growth of myeloid cells.

They can occur in both adults and children. And chronic lymphocytic leukemia starts in the cells that become lymphocytes. Lymphocytes are white blood cells that derive from stem cells in the bone marrow.

It's not the lymph nodes that produce them, but they migrate from the bone marrow via the lymph fluid to the lymph nodes. And then we have chronic myeloid leukemia, which occurs in about 9,000 people every year in the U.S.

And finally, multiple myeloma starts in the bone marrow and is a growth of plasma cells which are white blood cells. So leukemia is the most common childhood cancer, but it appears more in adults. Blood cancer is a bit more prevalent in men than women.

Some common signs of leukemia include excessive sweating, or you can have unintentional weight loss. Some people also experience swollen lymph nodes or have red spots on the skin.

One common sign of leukemia is when you bruise easily. Other can be fatigue or weakness, bone pain and tenderness. Some people also have an enlargement of the spleen or liver. Leukemia can also cause frequent infections,  fever, or chills.  

Not many people talk about the effect of stress on the development of cancer. When the body and mind are in a state of balance and unity, you experience good health.

When you have cancer, there's emotional trauma behind it. So, I've studied cancer patients and have found out that they often have difficult relationships with their parents.

They often felt rejection, abandonment, betrayal, shame, or injustice. When they suppress these feelings and reach their emotional limit, they develop cancer.

So, cancer patients are often caring, dutiful, responsible, and hardworking people. They have a strong tendency to carry out other people's burdens and can also worry about others.

The most common toxic emotions that they suppress are anger, resentment, and hostility. Because of this emotional trauma stored in their body, they react more adversely to stress than other people.

The most remarkable discovery about the cause of stress or emotional problems and cancer was the German doctor Ryke Geerd Hamer. He is the founder of German New Medicine. 

He discovered a connection between cancer and unresolved emotional conflicts. He worked at a hospital in Munich, Germany, and was able to talk to and do C.T. scans of thousands of cancer patients.

And his research led him to discover how emotional trauma affects the brain. So he called these psycho-emotional traumas Hamer Herds. According to Hamer, every cancer starts with a painful, acute, traumatic, and isolating shock.

Once you experience an extremely stressful conflict and trauma, it impacts the body in a particular way. Cancer and diseases start in the brain cells, and every part of the brain is connected to a specific organ.

When Hamer interviewed leukemia patients, he discovered that the same spot in the brain lit up, and they experienced the same kind of inner conflict. The traumatic event that triggers cancer growth is often beyond the patient's control.

People with cancer often overreact to most difficulties in life and feel stressed out, and it's this hypersensitivity to life's events that makes one more receptive to cancer.

So, according to Hamer, the body activates a particular biological program when you experience some emotional trauma.  

These biological programs help the organs resolve the conflict. But the problem is that our body can't see the difference between a thought and a real situation.

So therefore these programs can activate when you think about a problem and you can keep this traumatic event alive with your thoughts.  

So therefore these programs may activate when you think about the problem. The subconscious mind analyzes the situation and then decides what program to run.  

And your symptoms reveal how it deciphers the situation. What kind of cancer we get has to do with our past experiences, social conditioning, values, and beliefs.

And they affect the interpretation of the situation. Two people can have the same stressful event happening, but if they interpret the situation differently, they get two types of cancer.

Dr. Hamer also discovered that diseases run in two phases. First, we have the active conflict phase, that activates the moment we have the shock. And it's often in this stage that cancer grows. And the moment we resolve the conflict, we enter the healing stage.

According to Dr. Hamer, leukemia manifests after a self devaluation conflict  or loss of self worth. So, this biological conflict affects the bones, joints and bone marrow, and the cartilage,  tendons and ligaments relate to a light self devaluation conflict.

A self devaluation conflict may activate when you experience humiliation such as accusations, scoldings or degrading marks. Some people can also experience this when they have physical, sexual, or verbal abuse.

This conflict can activate when you have failure at work, school, or in sport. Or there can be some kind of disappointment in your relationship as a parent or a partner.

Some people can also develop leukemia when they believe they have a poor intellect, are not that artistic, or have poor athletic performances. This biological problem can also activate when you have a lot of feelings of shame and guilt.

Some examples can be a loss of status or unemployment. It can also be when you feel useless because of retirement, illness, injuries, or old age.

Sometimes this biological program can activate when there's a loss of a person who made you feel appreciated and needed.

It's how we perceive and speak to ourselves that increases our risk of leukemia. Thoughts such as, "I'm a failure; I will never succeed," are a major cause of this conflict shock.

 Children and the elderly are more prone to suffer from this internal struggle. During the conflict-active phase, you may experience anemia, which is a low count of red blood cells, or there can be leucopenia when there's a low count of white blood cells.

Another common effect of the conflict-active phase is thrombocytopenia, when there's a low platelet count. I have a relative who got a leukemia diagnosis.

He has the common patterns of a cancer patient. He wants to do everything for everyone, is part of many groups, and has a lot of responsibilities.

He's responsible for the economy of the family and during the economic recession, he wasn't able to provide as much money to his family as before. And that made him feel bad about himself.

He also does too much for other people and grew up with a lot of siblings and maybe he didn't get the attention from his parents.

I found a really interesting video clip about a doctor who worked in a children's hospital. I've tried to find this video clip again, but I couldn't locate it anymore.

Anyways, in this video clip, this doctor told the children to draw about their feelings or life. And he gave one example where there was a little girl that drew a painting  about her family.

In one corner, her siblings and parents were happy and enjoyed themselves. And then, in the other corner, the girl drew herself where she was alone and cried. The doctor discovered that this girl felt rejected and ignored by her parents.

So this shows that these kind of feelings can happen in kids, not just adults. So maybe her parents worked a lot and maybe liked her siblings better than her and that might have caused this feeling of worthlessness inside this girl.

So what these parents have to do is to give her more love and attention and make her feel that she's valuable to them.  
I also looked at other people who are into holistic medicine. One famous name is Louise Hay. She was interested in finding the emotional causes of different diseases.

I read the book You Can Heal Your Life, and in the last section, Louise Hay explains the different emotional causes of various diseases. In this book, she says that leukemia and blood disorders manifest when you don't have any joy left in your life.

Leukemia is "brutally killing of inspiration. What is the use?" Blood disorders are a lack of joy and a lack of circulation of ideas.

It means that you feel worthless about yourself and don't know what you want to do with your life. There's no inspiration or spark, and you don't really feel why you're on earth.

Lise Bourbeau is another author who explored the emotional connection to blood disorders. She wrote a book called Your Body Is Telling You To Love Yourself.

Lise says in her book, that white blood cell problems signify difficulty in standing up for yourself. So, when you have a white blood cell count that is too high, it indicates an aggressive personality.

You are too quick to take offense. You need to realize that you don't need to work hard for others to love you. You also need to stop seeking others' love and find it from within. If you suffer from anemia, you need to shape your life the way you want without depending on others.

So, according to your Lise, in metaphysical terms, blood represents the love of life. An anemic person has no joy left and feels discouraged and hopeless. They have lost touch with their needs and desires.

So, you have to become conscious of the negative thoughts that are pushing your joy away from you. You need to address the emotional conflict so that your body goes into the healing phase.

You need to work on why you feel worthless. Is it your job, your relationships, or other things? So, one great way is to look at your relationship with your parents and try to heal it.
You can also try to find a purpose in your life so that you have something to look forward to.  

According to Dr. Hamer, in the healing phase, there are certain things that happen. In the healing phase, the body restores the bone marrow. It also increases the blood cell production again. There are four phases in this healing process.

When you reach phase one, the blood values for all blood cells and platelets are still low. And then, in phase two, after three to six weeks, the bone marrow starts to produce large amounts of leucoblasts.

Leucoblasts are white blood cells that support the repairment of the bone. It's a positive sign that you have resolved the self-devaluation conflict. In phase two, there's also a production of erythrocytes, which are red blood cells.

Then, you reach phase three, which is the end of the leukemia phase, and the production of red blood cells starts to pick up. The body still rejects a large number of new blood cells. Some of the cells are not able to be oxygen carriers.

So for a short time, the production of erythroblasts and leucoblast occurs together. And in the final phase, the last part of the healing phase occurs, and the blood values return to normal.   

This progress is essential for the production of thrombocytes and their blood clotting ability. Iron is an essential element for blood production, and when there's a rapid creation of erythrocytes, the body requires more iron than usual.

Therefore, it's important that you consume plant foods that have a lot of iron, such as spinach. I have created the guide, the Leukemia Healing Protocol.  

This guide teaches you nine natural remedies you can use against leukemia. I will provide the link to this guide in the description box below. Thank you for listening to this podcast, and I'll see you in the next one.  

Other episodes:

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About the Show

The Cancer Wisdom Podcast teaches you how to treat cancer with natural remedies without using toxic treatments.

Discover how to take charge of your health and not be a slave to Big Pharma medicine.

Your host:

Simon Persson


Simon Persson is a holistic cancer blogger passionate about natural health remedies. When he is not blogging, he enjoys nature, cooking, sports, and learning about the latest gadgets on the market.

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