Happy 3-2-1 Monday
Here are 3 traits most physicians overlook, 2 illnesses that often pave the way for cancer, and 1 hidden truth about why the medical system likes to treat rather than prevent cancer.
3 traits seen in most cancer patients that physicians overlook
It’s not what you eat that causes cancer, but what eats you. Cancer was never even on their radar. And yet, what often emerged was a deep emotional trigger—an unresolved pain, stress, or inner conflict—that quietly weakened their resilience. These hidden struggles often formed the silent backdrop against which cancer developed in the coming months or years
Most cancer-causing factors are preventable—but not measurable. In medical schools, we are taught that genetic factors account for only about 10% of cancers. That means the vast majority—over 90% arises from factors that are preventable, yet difficult to measure. What are they?
Ignoring the cancer-causing factors of the mind. While medical science focuses heavily on physical risk factors, we often neglect the subtle but equally powerful “cancers of the mind". There are seven common mental patterns that act like toxins: complainers, cancellers, casualties, critics, commanders, competitors, and controllers.
2 Illnesses that often pave the way for cancer:
Untreated mental health conditions such as depression, bipolar disorder, PTSD, or borderline personality disorder are still shrouded in stigma, even in today’s world.
Autoimmune illnesses like rheumatoid arthritis (RA), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), or inflammatory bowel disease often rely on heavy immunosuppressant medications.
1 Hidden truth about why they like to treat cancer rather than prevent it
The reality is that the current medical system thrives on disease, not health. Take breast cancer, for example—the leading cause of cancer deaths in women today. If I were to build a hospital dedicated solely to breast cancer patients, it could become a lifelong revenue stream. I could create entire departments dedicated to: breast cancer surgery, oncology, radiation therapy, chemotherapy infusion, plastic reconstruction, counseling services, even patient transport and hair-care centers for life after chemo. Each unit would generate income, ensuring steady profits for the institution and its staff. But notice what happens here, the focus quietly shifts away from prevention and root causes to sustain income and grow business revenues. Cancer, in this model, becomes less a disease to be eliminated and more an industry to be maintained.
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10 Most Common Traits among Cancer Patients
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