The Cost of Not Forgiving: Changing Our Minds Changes Our Bodies

Dr. Ryke Geerd Hamer of Germany has made one of the most amazing discoveries regarding the cause and cure for cancer. We don’t generally know about Dr. Hamer’s work because he was vilified, victimized, and hounded (all by “legal” means, of course) for having discovered a cure for cancer that did not fall within the narrow paradigm of the modern drugs and surgery medical mafioso model. That’s right, folks. Do you want a firsthand look at the self-righteous viciousness of the military-industrial-petrochemical-medical cartel? Just discover and publicize a “cure for cancer” and you’ll find out quickly!

Cancer, like other major degenerative diseases today, is Big Business. As of this writing, we do not have a medical health care system in the developed world. We have a highly profitable and woefully inadequate disease care system that is entrenched in an outmoded materialist paradigm that the rest of modern science has long since moved beyond. The mounting death statistics from cancer and other degenerative (lifestyle-based) diseases are part of the price we pay for the lack of forgiveness. For more information on Dr. Hamer and the book, The German New Medicine, visit www.newmedicine.ca.

Brain Scans Don't Lie

Dr. Hamer was a practicing physician in a large German hospital. One of his jobs was to administer and read brain scans. His “new medicine” was the result of seeing thousands of brain scans and making certain observations. Something that caught Dr. Hamer’s attention was the occasional appearance of distortions in the scan images that looked like patterns you would see when you dropped a pebble into a clear pond: concentric circles radiating out from a center point, like a target.

At first he assumed that there was something wrong with the equipment, perhaps picking up on some exogenous interference. When Hamer asked the manufacturer of the brain scan equipment if these patterns could indicate a flaw or environmental disturbance, the equipment manufacturer assured him that if the patterns were showing up in the brain scan images, then they were definitely showing something that was occurring in the patient’s brain. They could not be the product of some outside interference.

Ever the curious scientist, Hamer noted that these patterns only appeared in patients who either had a diagnosed cancer, or would be diagnosed with cancer within six months of the scan! He set about doing an epidemiological study, basically checking in with a lot of patients over time, and came up with some other significant correlations. Specifically, Hamer noted that the location of the “energetic lesion,” as he called it, in the brain was correlated with the location or organ in the body where the cancer was or would soon manifest. As he interviewed these patients, he found a further correlation between the location of the brain scan pattern, the location and type of cancer, and a commonly held emotional memory or unresolved emotional conflict in the life of the patient.


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In the patients who were able to recognize the emotional conflict at the root of the pattern and resolve the conflict through recognizing their innocence and mistaken self-blame and guilt, not only did the pattern in the scan resolve itself (disappear), but so did the cancer. Thousands of case studies proved beyond any reasonable doubt that cancer can be cured by a change in one’s thinking!

The medical name for a healing not attributable to medical intervention is a “spontaneous remission.” Medical blindness often pushes aside “miraculous” healings with pompous assertions like “the chemo must have worked!” or “the diagnosis must have been wrong!” just to save face. Yet these “miracles” only represented a simple change of perspective in the mind.

The Conscious Mind Tries To Make Sense of The Changing World Around Us

Hamer’s research and subsequent theory of healing, which he continued working with despite being hounded and often jailed, could be summarized as follows. When there is a completely unexpected trauma (loss of a loved one, severe accident, divorce, etc.), the conscious mind is challenged to provide meaning in its own defense. The unexpected and irrational nature of these traumas represents a major threat to our psychological survival, or at least that of our self-image—the ego.

One job of the conscious mind is to make sense of the changing world around us and enable us to navigate it safely. Yet these anomalous life events have no basis in rationality. They seem to “come out of the blue” like an unwelcomed sucker punch. The mind reels in its attempt to make sense out of the senseless—to make rational the irrational. It does this in order to psychologically survive the trauma with an intact concept of the self (ego).

We also create meaning for our traumatic experiences in our own defense, believing that in doing so we will see the trauma coming next time, and be prepared to avoid it. Giving meaning to our experience is what some say “makes us human” or “conscious, self-reflective beings” rather than beings motivated purely by instinct.

The shortfall here is in our assumption that this “self” of which we are conscious is in fact our real Self. It is not. It is a false self, made up to accommodate our belief in our separate existence. Only when we become truly conscious of our true limitless Self as Divine Creation will we be able to claim we are fully alive, or fully “Hu-man” which can be translated as a “sacred man.”

When Trauma Occurs: From Experience to Rationales & Judgment

The sheer emotional impact of a traumatic event is first registered in the brain non-verbally. It is usually painful, shocking, or upsetting, but as pure primary perception, it is still essentially neutral. It just is without judgment. The conscious, verbal ego-mind, however, is not satisfied to just let the experience “be.” As noted, it must explain to itself the “why” of the event in order to survive intact and prevent a similar event in the future. This is just how our conscious mind and its attachment to time operates in its fear-based and obsessive need for self-protection and security.

When there is no rational explanation for an event, the mind, in its desperate attempt to make sense out of the senseless, will accept a weak or false explanation rather than no explanation at all. It would rather entertain a deception than admit it has no control over events now or in the future. By default, the mind will gravitate to the deep well of unconscious guilt we all carry within for an answer to its conundrum. This is “ontological guilt” or guilt for simply being alive in a seemingly separate state. This guilt is shared by all humans, and is the deep unconscious scar we carry resulting from our desire for and belief in the idea of separation from our Source. It is the commonly held “Big Bang psychosis.”

As our unconscious guilt supplies the “rationale” for the trauma to the satisfaction of the conscious mind and is accepted as the reason for the incident, it becomes “oncological” guilt. The cause of cancer in Hamer’s view and in the broadest sense is the unconscious guilt that may actually be the mental-emotional root of all disease.

In the brain scans he worked with, Dr. Hamer saw the electromagnetic signature of what psychologists call “cognitive dissonance.” You have one perceptual process going on (the raw perception of the incident before interpretation) overlaid by the conceptual choice of why this terrible thing happened. As dictated by guilt, the belief that typically emerges is

“It was my fault. If I were just a better (wife, husband, mother, father, boss, employee, whatever . . . ), this terrible thing would not have happened. I know I am to blame, and although I feel awful with this burden of well-deserved guilt, at least I know what caused the event, and can now try to move on.”

Note the ego-satisfying sense of martyrdom here. Sacrifice is a notion deeply wedded to our unconscious belief that we need to somehow “pay for” our unforgivable sins.

The medical system adds to the deception by pronouncing a “diagnosis” and regarding the “patient” as merely a set of symptoms with a statistically bound destiny and guaranteed low survival rate (assuming the patient agrees to their dismally unsuccessful standard treatments). Do you think telling someone “You have six months to live” might not imprint this belief and create a self-fulfilling prophecy, especially if the pronouncement is made by a white-coated demi-god of the academic medical priesthood?

The self-blaming version of the story imposed over the neutral primary perception creates an energetic “lock-up,” like two oppositely spinning tornadoes locked in a dance of mutual destruction. This event could be described as electromagnetic cognitive dissonance, a condition that blocks the natural energy flow in the brain and shows up as a distinctive pattern in brain scans.

The part of the brain that this “energy lesion” shows up in is part of a critical communication system. The organ or area of the body reliant on this area of the brain to coordinate and inform it is now cut off—exiled from the greater community of cells and organs. Excommunication is a terrible punishment for both humans and the body itself. The belief in separation that fed the guilt in the first place has now become manifest and solidified in the body.

The exiled organ and cells become weak and vulnerable to all kinds of stress and attack, and eventually accept a pattern of disease in order to bring attention to themselves, saying in effect, “Hey, pay attention! Something’s ‘off’ here, and I need you to look into it!” What medicine identifies as causes and risk factors for disease are merely secondary factors or potential predispositions that may never manifest as illness without this emotional level of original cause in place.

Different Strokes for Different Folks

Why is it that two people exposed to the very same risk factors for a disease have completely different outcomes? The verbal brain looks for and is satisfied with simple cause-and-effect relationships within the limits of its own perceptions without any real evidence they are in any way related.

In the cases where Hamer’s patients recognized the irrationality of their self-blaming and guilt over what happened (in some cases, a benefit of time and retrospection) and took themselves ‘off the hook’ the target pattern in the brain simply dissolved, communication was restored, and healing was experienced. This process was proven in thousands of real case studies.

Hamer’s work provides an elegant illustration of the principle that the mind creates the body, not the other way around (as is currently held by the scientific religion of materialism). Hopefully, one day soon, Hamer’s accomplishment will be recognized and we can get on with the true meaning of healing: “becoming whole” again.

The Manifestation of Unresolved Emotional Conflict

Hamer discovered that it can take from five to twenty years for an unresolved emotional conflict to manifest in the form of diagnosable cancer. He also provided the reasoning for why, after standard “poisons and surgery” cancer therapy, that in many cases the cancer returns in about five years, often in a more virulent form. If the cause of disease in the mind is not addressed, the body has no choice but to manifest this cause again even if the diseased tissue is removed.

With standard cancer treatment, you are not considered “cured” until you have been cancer-free for five years following conventional therapy. It is no secret that the barbaric and unscientific approach to cancer in the modern world is more often the cause of death than the disease itself—primarily through the disabling of the immune system.

As noted, diagnosis is too often a self-fulfilling prophecy, proving the power of the mind to create based on its own belief. Iatrogenic disease is the official name for“death by medicine” and has been identified as a top killer in our world today.Source: www.mercola.com.

Sometimes, though, “drugs and surgery” medicine appears to work! Could it be that with or without standard treatment, by recognizing and forgiving (overlooking) the mind’s guilt-based beliefs, the root cause of the disease is addressed inadvertently and the patient heals despite the standard therapy? It is likely that being diagnosed with a potentially life-threatening illness can inspire some to become more introspective and reflective on their life patterns, and to realize how they took on guilt groundlessly without a formal process. No cause, no effect!

Dr. Hamer’s story is just one (albeit concrete) example of how changing our minds changes our bodies and can create miracles of healing. The entire field of mind-body medicine supports this example. But what about the less life-threatening but equally peace-destroying challenges of our lives . . . relationship problems, career issues, addictions? Can these areas and others be as directly affected by a simple change of mind? True Forgiveness offers a means to correct every misperception we have ever had about ourselves as mirrored to us in our day-to-day relationships, and these relationships offer us a road home to the peace, joy, and fullness of being we in truth never left.

Subtitles by InnerSelf

Reprinted with permission from Red Wheel/Weiser LLC.
©2015 by David Ian Cowan. The book is available
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Article Source:

Seeing Beyond Illusions: Freeing Ourselves from Ego, Guilt, and the Belief in Separation by David Ian Cowan.Seeing Beyond Illusions: Freeing Ourselves from Ego, Guilt, and the Belief in Separation
by David Ian Cowan.

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About the Author

David Cowan, author of the InnerSelf.com article: How to Relieve Stress and Live Stress-FreeDavid Ian Cowan is a biofeedback trainer and teacher in spiritual communication and the art of dowsing. He is a counselor, alternative health practitioner and trainer living in Boulder, Colorado. He is also the author of Navigating the Collapse of Time (Weiser Books, 2011) and co-author with Erina Cowan of Dowsing Beyond Duality (Weiser Books, 2013). Visit him at www.bluesunenergetics.net