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According to Bruce Lipton, a developmental biologist and professor at the New Zealand
College of Chiropractic, science has been on a religious crusade for more than half
a century. At least that’s what the textbooks confess.
Some 60+ years ago a hypothesis emerged that genes control life. Lipton calls this a doctrine
of “predetermination,” meaning that your DNA and your genes are set from birth and
so are you. Your genetic blueprint will determine what you look like, how you’ll develop,
destined diseases, programmed strengths and weaknesses and who you’ll be (nature beats
nurture).
At the time this was hypothesized it seemed humans would be subject to the random expressions
of our DNA, hanging on to a faint hope that a dangerous disease-causing gene would never
come alive, praying that only the best ones would express in us and our children.
<h2>Genetic Control: The Central Dogma</h2> Although it was never scientifically demonstrated,
the notion of genetic control was passed down from the late 1950s to the next generation
and accepted as “a fundamental rule of life,” says Lipton. Ironically, scientists themselves
coined this genetic control theory the central dogma.
One day Lipton got curious and checked out the definition of dogma. Here’s what he
found: dogma is “a belief based on religious persuasion and not scientific fact.”
The scientists had named this scientific theory as not scientific at all, but religiously
persuaded. Fascinating. But of greater interest to Lipton, among others, is the likelihood
that the reverse is actually true. That is, DNA is not the boss of you. Rather than being
a predestined blueprint it’s more like a map of potentialities or, for your DNA reader,
a set of options. Lipton says that you determine what manifests from your DNA based on (drum
roll please) your beliefs. What you believe gives rise to your behavior, choices, lifestyle
and emotions, and these tell your DNA which genes to activate.
<h2>The Power of Emotions</h2> There’s been a buzz about cancer-causing
genes ever since Angelina Jolie decided to undergo a double mastectomy. Breast cancer
had plagued her family line for several generations and she was carrying the gene. Hoping to decrease
her risk potential Jolie had both her breasts removed.
Perhaps Angelina did what she had to do, but researchers are questioning whether we ought
to feel quite so helpless and victim to our own DNA. The idea is ancient, but some fairly
new science is supporting the posit that you and I are not subject to the whims of a willful
or random DNA; but rather, we can choose to empower health or disease. The power lies
in our emotions.
The somewhat infamous Dr. R. G. Hamer is credited with 30 years of research examining the connection
between trauma and cancer. He claims that every case of cancer can be traced back to
some unexpected and traumatic event. The shock and the resulting emotional stress activate
what he calls “an intentional program of nature.” Cancer’s not from outside the
body. It’s not the result of an invader or alien substance. It’s created within
and by the person’s own system according to a mutated program. To heal physically
one must heal the heart/mind because, as he wrote, “psyche, brain and organ are three
levels of the same organism and the course of events on them is always synchronous!”
Lipton also maintains that emotions trigger the expression either of wellness or sickness.
Where Lipton talks about genes Hamer emphasizes “programs.” Over 100 years ago a physician
named Eli Jones left the conventional medical practice, which he found to be more harmful
than helpful, and practiced his own combination of Native American herbology, homeothapy and
other healing methods. After 40 years’ experience studying and treating the disease, Jones claimed
he could cure cancer and authored the book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B009LDVO20/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B009LDVO20&linkCode=as2&tag=lifeforce-20">Cancer
- Its Causes, Symptoms and Treatment</a>. Jones is credited with stating explicitly
that <b>the #1 cause of cancer is stress</b>. <h2>Stress: Avoid It Like Plague</h2>
A couple of years ago a Yale University research team led by Professor Tian Xu concluded that
daily emotional stress causes tumor growth. Recent breakthroughs have astounded researchers
who’ve found that <b>stress opens up “pathways”</b> between mutated cells enabling them to cooperate
in creating the tumor.
So, no stress, no communication pathway; stress, and potential cancer cells can talk.
Scientists at the University of Texas, MD Anderson Cancer Center just released the results
of their study this year entitled, <b>stress</b> <b>triggers</b> signaling pathway that leads
to spread of ovarian cancer.
In short, stress empowers cancer.
Bruce Lipton says this is the new biology that will take you from “victim to master
of your health.” He explains that Epigenetic Control is an emerging science revealing that
humans can either be at the mercy of our genes or use the power of the mind to master them.
Whereas the placebo effect causes “healing through positive thinking,” a lesser known
<span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>“nocebo” effect</strong></span> manifests sickness
or death through negative thoughts and beliefs. In some sense this revelation is good news
because it puts the ball back in our court. It removes the mystery and the seeming randomness
while offering a clear solution: avoid stress like plague and pursue peace. Your life depends
on it. <h2>Healthy Emotions</h2>
Beliefs, stress and emotions are intertwined. If we’re consistently believing that we’ve
been wronged, that somebody owes us, or that we’re not good enough to live in this world,
that belief is going to create corresponding emotions.
Depression weakens the immune system and disrupts circadian rhythms; anger produces stress hormones;
resentment, bitterness and un-forgiveness will literally eat us up inside and empower
stress in our bodies, which then empowers disease.
Donnie Yance is a master herbalist, nutritionist and author of two books including <em><span
style="text-decoration: underline;">Herbal Medicine, Healing & Cancer</span>. </em>Yance
wrote, “…<strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Fear is the great obstacle to
healing</span></strong> and when people have cancer, all of a sudden they’re filled with
fear.” (emphasis mine)
How do we reverse this trend? Hamer believes that emotional healing is key. Lipton says
you must change your beliefs and nurse your emotional state to health. Lipton, Hamer,
Yance, Tian Xu and the crew at MD Anderson all agreed that we’ve got to <b>treat stress
like a disease itself</b>. Oppose both the beliefs and feelings that keep us from realizing
love, joy and peace, which are health-promoting emotions. Maybe it’s something like, if
you’ve experienced trauma, don’t bury it but make it your priority to get help.
Consider it as urgent as treating a terminal illness.
Or, if someone wrongs you, forgive them. If you have resentment, let it go. Don’t waste
time holding grudges that strangle your health. Toxic emotions don’t harm your adversary.
They harm the one hosting them. It doesn’t mean we suddenly condone wrong behavior or
pretend there are no stressors in this world. We just refuse to let them control us...or
make us sick.