Do you believe this to be true for all cancers. I recently had a primary brain tumor removed. Same as former Syracuse punter (circa 2010ish) Rob Long and he is 10 years post op/treaent. Is onviously still very active. I was as well before diagnosis anr doscovery and am currently stationary cycling as I type this lol
I have not looked into brain cancer, specifically.
However, I suspect that all cancers are the same fundemental thing. It's just that one person's poor health will manifest in one way, and another person's poor health will manifest in another way. One person gets brain cancer, while another person gets stomach cancer.
Overall, though, it is widely understood that everybody has "cancer cells" in their body at any given time. It is only diagnosed as "cancer" when the number of cancer cells becomes overwhelming.
Why is that?
Where do these initial cancer cells come from?
It's not magic. There MUST be an explanation. But the modern medical industry has no explanation. They simply say the cells "mutated," but have no explanation for how this happens.
That is not a good explanation, IMO.
What is a good explanation is the idea that someone's body is unhealthy, which is what allows these cells to do what they do.
Autophagy is the body's cleansing process for cells that are not functioning properly. When that process does not work properly, then we should expect that the bad cells will proliferate.
IMO, my explanation is the most likely one for what cancer is and why it happens. I think it applies to all cancers.
Do you believe this to be true for all cancers. I recently had a primary brain tumor removed. Same as former Syracuse punter (circa 2010ish) Rob Long and he is 10 years post op/treaent. Is onviously still very active. I was as well before diagnosis anr doscovery and am currently stationary cycling as I type this lol
I have not looked into brain cancer, specifically.
However, I suspect that all cancers are the same fundemental thing. It's just that one person's poor health will manifest in one way, and another person's poor health will manifest in another way. One person gets brain cancer, while another person gets stomach cancer.
Overall, though, it is widely understood that everybody has "cancer cells" in their body at any given time. It is only diagnosed as "cancer" when the number of cancer cells becomes overwhelming.
Why is that?
Where do these initial cancer cells come from?
It's not magic. There MUST be an explanation. But the modern medical industry has no explanation. They simply say the cells "mutated," but have no explanation for how this happens.
That is not a good explanation, IMO.
What is a good explanation is the idea that someone's body is unhealthy, which is what allows these cells to do what they do.
Autophagy is the body's cleansing process for cells that are not functioning properly. When that process does not work properly, then we should expect that the bad cells will proliferate.
IMO, my explanation is the most likely one for what cancer is and why it happens. I think it applies to all cancers.
You know they probably, more than likely, know