Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men and one of the deadliest. In this episode, I'm going to talk about the emotional cause of prostate cancer. Learn how stress can lead to prostate cancer and how to reverse it.
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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
- Prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer that develops in men.
- Prostate cancer develops when cells in the prostate start to grow in an uncontrolled way.
- One of the contributing factors to cancer is stressful conflicts and emotional baggage.
- Every cancer has a distinct conflict shock.
- Diseases run in two phases: the active conflict phase, which activates when we experience shock, and the healing phase, which begins the moment we resolve the conflict.
- Some symptoms occur at the disease stage, and others when you heal.
- Every conflict shock is unique for the individual.
- Our particular disease depends on our beliefs, values, or vulnerabilities.
- Prostate cancer is because of sexual frustration, sexual rejection, or an ugly conflict with a female.
- Prostate cancer develops as a result of the continuing conflict.
- You need to deal with the emotional conflicts and resolve them to stop the tumor growth.
- During the conflict resolution, fungi or microbacteria, such as TB bacteria remove the cells that's no longer needed.
How To Improve Prostate Cancer
1. Download The Prostate Cancer Healing Protocol
Resources:
 Simon: Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men and one of the deadliest. In this episode, I'm going to talk about the emotional cause of prostate cancer. Learn how stress can lead to prostate cancer and how to reverse it.
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.
Simon: Prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer that develops in men. The prostate gland is a walnut-sized gland that only men have. It sits underneath the bladder and surrounds the urethra.
The urethra is the tube men urinate and ejaculate through. The prostate's main job is to produce semen, the fluid that carries sperm. To grow and develop, the prostate needs the male hormone testosterone.
Prostate cancer develops when cells in the prostate start to grow in an uncontrolled way. It often starts slowly and may never cause any real problems.
However, in later stages, some symptoms of prostate cancer might include frequent urination, finding it difficult to urinate, or discomfort when urinating. Or you might find blood in the urine or semen.
Or there can be pain in the lower back, upper thighs, or hips. These symptoms may not mean that you have prostate cancer, but if you experience any of these, you might need to see your doctor.
One of the contributing factors to cancer is stressful conflicts and emotional baggage. So, in this podcast, I have talked about the emotional cause of cancer, and I have mentioned Dr. Hamer's fantastic discovery about the link between stress and cancer.
So, in 1979, Dr. Hamer's oldest son, Dirk, was murdered. A few months later, he was diagnosed with testicular cancer, but he had never been really ill in his whole life.
So, he wondered if his cancer had to do with the tragic loss of his son. During this time, Dr. Hamer worked at a cancer clinic in Munich, Germany.
He talked to his cancer patients all the time, and he wanted to find out if they had experienced any emotional shock before they got cancer.
By talking to his cancer patients, he discovered that they had an unexpected shock before their diagnosis. Hamer took his research a step further by doing brain scans of his patients, and when he looked at the CT scans and compared it with the patient's medical records and history, he found something astounding.
And that changed our understanding of the cause of diseases. So, what he discovered was that a particular area of the brain controlled a specific organ.
So, he could see on his CT scan that a particular area activated in the brain when you had a specific disease or cancer. What Dr. Hamer discovered was that each conflict shock affects a unique part of the brain that then relays it to the organ.
Every cancer has a distinct conflict shock. So, for example, Dr. Hamer noticed that lung cancer patients had a death fright conflict, often as a result of a diagnosis shock, and the same part of their brain activated.
Breast cancer patients had a separation conflict. Cervical cancer patients had a sexual conflict. Each cancer type activated a specific part of the brain and relayed it to the organ, and it was consistent with what they had experienced.
Dr. Hamer found a pattern in each cancer type. He found that diseases run in two phases. First, we have the active conflict phase that activates when we have the shock, and the moment that we resolve the conflict, we enter the healing phase. And it's often in this state that the tumor stops growing and decomposes.
Some symptoms occur at the disease stage, and others when you heal. Cancer is not really a disease but rather a biological conflict. Our bodies go into fight or flight mode if we experience immediate danger. And the danger causes a specific physiological response.
Animals also experience biological conflicts when an opponent attacks them. They might feel distressed when they separate from a mate or offspring. Or they can experience stress if they lose their nest or territory.
And like other species, we humans respond to unexpected distress biologically rather than intellectually. Biological threats might include anger in the territory, worries in the nest, abandonment by the pack, separation from a mate, loss of an offspring, and more. The difference between humans and animals is that humans can think.
We can start to worry about different stuff and the body can't see the difference between a thought or a real situation. For us, an offending remark can cause an attack conflict, or an undesirable move can create a territorial loss struggle.
If we lose our income, then that can trigger starvation conflict, and sexual friction can happen when our partner sleeps with someone else.
So, when we experience a specific emotional struggle, it activates a particular biological response. But it's not the situation that causes the shock but rather our interpretation of it.
Every conflict shock is unique for the individual. So, it's our interpretation of what happened that later manifests our specific disease. So, what one person can experience as a separation conflict could be entirely different from another person.
For a third person, the stress is minor and doesn't cause any problems. Our particular disease depends on our beliefs, values, or vulnerabilities.
Cancer patients often experience isolation in childhood. They might have felt rejection, abandonment, betrayal, shame, and injustice, and they often suppress these feelings.
Cancer manifests after they suppress these feelings and reach their emotional limit. So, this emotional limit happens when they experience a traumatic shock. A traumatic shock is something unexpected that causes a lot of stress at the moment.
For example, when you hear that your son got killed in a car accident, which you wouldn't expect to hear if he lived a very healthy life and was really careful.
Prostate cancer is not a genetic weakness but rather a biological response. This natural response assists an individual during a time of unexpected traumatic distress. It's the center of the brainstem that controls the prostate gland.
According to Dr. Hamer, the biological conflict linked to the prostate gland has to do with procreation. A man can suffer a procreation conflict when he's unable to have children due to erectile dysfunction or infertility. It also includes his partner's inability to conceive, such as female infertility.
Males can also experience this conflict when their offspring don't reproduce because of homosexual orientation, staying childless by choice, miscarriages, or abortions. Prostate cancer can also manifest because of a mating conflict or sexual conflict.
In the human world, not being able to mate or not being allowed to mate translates into sexual rejection and feeling sexually unwanted. So, this conflict activates through the loss of a sexual mate or through sexual rivalry or the fight over a female.
A man can fear that his sexual mate is attracted to another man, and that can trigger this conflict when he discovers that she's sleeping with your best friend.
This conflict can cause a lot of distress because she goes to the competitor who is younger or has more potential. Prostate cancer can also happen when there's a gender conflict experienced as an ugly conflict with a female.
For example, this can happen when a man can be dominated, controlled, or humiliated by a woman, such as a dominant wife or mother, or degraded by a female authority, such as a supervisor, judge, lawyer, doctor, or police officer. And there's a more toxic view of males since the feminist movement.
Now, we talk about toxic masculinity. We, as men, learned that it's bad to be masculine. And we hear from our school and other women that we are bad and that every problem in the world is because of males.
Women also get custody of their children, and many female judges can punish the man by forcing him to pay his ex-wife and ruin his life.
So that can make it more likely that we have more prostate cancer now than ever before. Many prostate cancer cases are because of an ugly divorce, custody battles, or emotional or financial abuse by ex-wives.
Prostate-related conflicts have to do with maleness itself and being looked down on as a man, lover, husband, or the provider of the family. Prostate cancer is because of sexual frustration, sexual rejection, or an ugly conflict with a female.
So he wants to be the alpha and the male and can't tolerate the rejection by a female partner. The prostate then instantly responds to the conflict, and then it will enlarge to produce more seminal fluid.
The biological purpose of creating additional cells is to increase the amount of semen. The body does that to improve the chance of impregnating a female once a sexual mate becomes available. But doctors see this natural biological process as prostate cancer.
Prostate cancer develops as a result of the continuing conflict. If the cell division exceeds a certain limit, conventional medicine considers the cancer as malignant.
When animals experience a biological conflict, they often let go of it after the event. If you look at ducks, for example, they flap their wings when there's a conflict with another duck, and they use it to release this negative energy. Then they don't bother about it anymore. You never see a duck reflect on the situation.
Humans keep the conflict alive in our thoughts. Then, we reenact the situation over and over again. And when we reenact the negativity that caused the prostate cancer, we keep this cancer growing because we never stop the conflict inside ourselves.
You need to deal with the emotional conflicts and resolve them to stop the tumor growth. So during the conflict resolution, fungi or microbacteria, such as TB bacteria remove the cells that's no longer needed.
The discharge produced during the cell breakdown excrete through the urethra. The urine becomes cloudy and can also be mixed with blood.
You can also experience night sweats during the healing process. After the healing phase, the prostate gland regains its normal size and the PSA level returns to normal. But if you have reoccurring conflict shocks, the PSA level fluctuates up and down in synchronicity with the reactivated conflict.
According to Hamer, if the tumor blocks the urethra and you don't have the bacteria to break it down, you need surgery.
But if you don't destroy your bacteria and you resolve the conflict, everything reverses. You can sleep again. Your appetite returns, or you regain your weight.
If you want to learn how to heal the emotional cause of prostate cancer, you can download the prostate cancer healing protocol. And you also get additional tips on how to eat right or use better habits to deal with prostate cancer.
Thanks for listening, and I'll see you in the next episode.