No Cure Needed
GlobalNewscast
  Reduced Stress & More Satisfaction
 
IF you do not get breast cancer you will not need the cure.
So, why not consider what likely causes breast cancer?
It has been empirically confirmed over decades that hormone therapy for post-menopausal women may increase their tendency to develop breast cancer. In other words, adjustments to hormones can lead to breast cancer.
If adjusting the hormones involved in post-menopausal therapy promotes cancer development, then it follows logically that adjusting other hormones can increase the tendency to develop cancer.
Exercise, stress, and strong emotions impact the glandular system. The secretion of hormones is changed when a women increases her exercise, stress and emotional reactions.
Women's bodily systems functions are based upon hormonal regulation. That is, the quantities, balances, and combinations of hormones secreted by a women's glandular system regulate and control her operating bodily systems.
Therefore, exercise, stress, and strong emotions, by changing her hormonal secretion levels and timings, change bodily systems, including the nervous, digestive, and circulatory systems among others.
If adjusting hormones in post-menopausal women tends to increase cancer's development, it follows that hormonal changes induced by her actions and reactions may also tend to induce cancers.
Women may do well to stop running for the cure and instead evaluate their own lifestyles. Perhaps reducing stress, exercise, and dramatic emotionalizing could decrease a women's tendency to develop breast and other cancers.
And women may start to have more fun and enjoyable lives being feminine ladies. Perhaps trying to fulfill several natural-male roles as well as, too many female roles applies stresses upon women's bodies that they were not designed to handle. The result is cancer, frustration, and inadequacy.
Similar processes apply to men's bodily functions.
 
GlobalNewscast Home