Guest guest Posted August 9, 2004 Report Share Posted August 9, 2004 In a message dated 8/9/04 7:22:43 PM Eastern Daylight Time, moonbeam@... writes: > Do not use your anger to fight cancer. Use your intelligence, not you > anger. > Everybody is different. For some people, mustering their anger, instead of stuffing it inside is vital to their recovery. The best thing is to do emotional release work and get rid of the anger but if that is not an option, some cancer patients do well with imagery that harnesses their anger (stirs it and puts it to positive use) and attacks the tumor. Some people imagine a machete cutting up the tumor...others might see other " aggressive " images that attack and destroy the cancer. It can be followed by imagining a white healing light. Unexpressed anger is a strain on the immune system and needs to be addressed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2004 Report Share Posted August 9, 2004 In einer eMail vom 10.08.04 01:22:38 (MEZ) - Mitteleurop. Sommerzeit schreibt moonbeam@...: > > from my experience there is as connection with several diseases and > anger. > The waste products of the disease may cause that anger. > moonbeam, as far as I learned this is known to be the case with diphtheria and tonsillitis. There might well be many more diseases alike, that I do not know of. Best, Katharina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2004 Report Share Posted August 9, 2004 sounds good thankx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2004 Report Share Posted August 9, 2004 > In a message dated 8/9/04 7:22:43 PM Eastern Daylight Time, > moonbeam@e... writes: > > > > Do not use your anger to fight cancer. Use your intelligence, not you > > anger. > > > > Everybody is different. For some people, mustering their anger, instead of > stuffing it inside is vital to their recovery. Traditional Chinese medicine holds the view that repressed emotions are actually stored in various organs of the body, and anger is supposed to be stored in the Liver (meaning not only the organ but the whole organ-function-meridian system, including the liver, pancreas, and all their metabolic activities). Considering the importance of liver cleansing many " alternative " approaches to cancer seem to agree on, it makes sense that repressed anger, yet another all-pervasive, ubiquitous systemic " toxin, " needs to be released from the body instead of being pushed deeper. Anger is mediated by neurotransmitters that are actually tissue-toxic and carcinogenic, and the longer they are allowed to circulate in the system instead of being promptly metabolized and removed, the more damage they will do. Repressing anger without giving it any outlets is one of the most toxic things a human being can do to herself. Of course free expression of " justified " anger is not something that will meet with any support in the society (the opposite is true), so alternative venues must be sought. This is a rather major issue far as I'm concerned, but I wanted to mention just one venue that might be worth exploring. In qigong practice, some of the " cleansing " physical movements are accompanied by visualizing anger in one's liver area, " scooping it out " with your hands and " returning it to the outer elements " or, alternatively, " throwing it in the enemy's face! " (I'm pretty sure many cancer patients could think of a good samaritan or two they'd encountered at a hospital, e.g., who could serve the immedate purpose of an imaginary partner of this visualization quite nicely). The same move, taken to the extreme and executed in actual combat, is employed in martial arts based on qigong, and I can attest to its power and efficiency... But even if the actual enemy is only visualized, it is still a tangibly cleansing intervention... your can feel your " pool " of anger going down -- while your accidental partner has to deal with a big splash of cortisol and adrenaline in his or her face... serves them right, some of them at least... if only in your mind's eye! If I were to design a comprehensive approach to the healing of cancer, I would try to include qigong in the program. Elena Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2004 Report Share Posted August 9, 2004 In a message dated 8/10/2004 3:38:15 AM Eastern Daylight Time, TVA12082208@... writes: > from my experience there is as connection with several diseases and > anger. > The waste products of the disease may cause that anger. > moonbeam, as far as I learned this is known to be the case with diphtheria and tonsillitis. There might well be many more diseases alike, that I do not know of. Best, Katharina .. .. >>> See the work of Hildegaard de Bingen, her work on medicine. 11th century. mjh http://foxhillfarm.us/FireBasil/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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