Causes of Breast Cancer

What causes breast cancer? Dr Ryke-Geerd Hamer, a famous German doctor who studied the notes of many thousands of cancer patients, was able to identify an “exact” psycho-emotional cause for cancer of the left breast and a separate and distinct psycho-emotional cause for cancer of the right breast. This stressful “emotional” event, that occurs approximately 2 years prior to the onset of detectable breast cancer, is always, in the case of cancer of the left breast: a conflict concerning child, home, or mother and in the case of cancer of the right breast: a conflict with partner or others.
In studying the notes of many thousands of cancer patients, as well as treating and healing many thousands of cancer patients himself, Dr Ryke-Geerd Hamer was able to establish that what causes breast cancer – and indeed all cancers – is a suppression of toxic emotions, particularly anger, hate, resentment and/or grief in response to an “exact” psycho-emotional event. The “exact” psycho-emotional event is different for each type of cancer.
It is this suppression of “toxic emotions” that creates a build-up of internal stress, raising stress hormone cortisol levels. This prolonged and heightened increase of internal stress levels leads to a weakening of the immune system and a chain reaction that causes a wide range of cell changes, leading to cell mutations and the formation of cancer.
To understand in full how stress and the suppression of emotions cause a chain reaction leading to breast cancer at the cellular level, visit the following page: Causes of Cancer.
There are clearly many other factors that contribute and set the stage for breast cancer and other types of cancer to form within the body. These can include poor diet, smoking, viral infections, chemical and radiation exposure, just to name a few, however, breast cancer will NOT develop within your body if you have not suppressed over time emotions of anger, hate, resentment and/or grief.
That is why many people who smoke all their life never go on to develop lung cancer; that is why many woman who are infected with the HPV (Human Papillomavirus) never go on to develop cervical cancer; that is why many people who eat a poor diet all their lives never go on to develop cancer at all, while others who have eaten a healthy balanced diet all their life have gone on to develop cancer and wonder why.
In this article of what causes breast cancer, many women with breast cancer will struggle with the concept that stress causes cancer in the body. Many women will say and rightly so, “Well, everyone experiences highly stressful events in their life, why doesn’t everyone get cancer then?”
The answer to this is simple. Yes, it is true, just about everyone during their lifetime experience one or more highly stressful events. What separates those who get cancer and those who do not get cancer, is one’s ability to cope with and handle the stress surrounding the stressful event. If I experience a loved one dying, which is a highly stressful event, and I allow myself to grieve and feel the pain and I accept “mentally” that this is a natural process of life, then I will be able to let go of the stress around this event in time. If, on the other hand, I experience this stressful event as a deep shock to my psyche, and I am unwilling to acknowledge the deep painful emotions surrounding this loss, then these painful emotions remain trapped inside of me and increase dramatically my internal stress levels. And if the shock to my system is deep enough and I have not dealt with the emotions, then a cancer chain of events at the cellular level will result due to a weakening of my immune system.
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