Diagnosed aug 2021 with invasive lobular carcinoma. Estrogen/progesterone highly positive, her2 -, spread to 3/21 nodes (i believe following biopsy). No genetic risk factors (they tested anyway), jabbed as a kid and a few flu shots and last jab in 2014 dtap(before I knew), exercise daily for over 20 years, healthy diet, overall very healthy. 6 living kids, 4 known losses. Live in agricultural area with summer flyover of crop dusters, and only other known chemical exposures would have been hair perms from like age 7-29, 2-3x/year.
Consider the circumstances in the months leading up to your diagnosis and let me know if the following diagnosis resonates with events in your life:
Conflict/Cause: In biological terms, the female breast is synonymous for caring and nurturing. The biological conflict linked to the breast glands is, therefore, a nest-worry conflict concerning the well-being of a loved one (including a pet) or worries about the “nest” itself (distress regarding a woman’s home or workplace). The breast glands also correspond to an argument conflict. Typically, the argument (with a partner, one of the children, a parent, a friend) has a “worry”-aspect.
Biological Purpose: of the cell increase is to enhance the function of the breast glands in order to have more milk available when a nest-member is in need (female mammals also nurse the adult males in the event of an emergency). Even if a woman is not breastfeeding at the time or is no longer of childbearing age, her breasts still respond to a worry conflict in this biologically meaningful manner.
Jan 2019, 17 week loss, Feb 2021 early miscarriage. Surrounded by lots of stress obviously. Interesting theory for sure. As MDs will tell you the invasive lobular carcinoma is difficult to detect and most women have had it for at least 10 years at diagnosis.
I'd look more at the worry/argument aspect of this explanation. The miscarriage which could spark a "loss conflict" would have resulted in ovarian cancer, as the cell proliferation in your ovaries has the biological purpose of making you more attractive and fertile in order to conceive another child.
A 10-year period is hard to account for and recall. Did you get multiple opinions from different histologists at different times? I only ask because sometimes they declare "malignant" when in fact the tissue had stopped proliferating. If you had two opinions and both came back as malignant, then the worry/argument conflict you had running was still active at that time. In other words, it is something you had not yet resolved. And in fact, it may still be unresolved now as we speak, if you're still receiving conventional treatment.
Sometimes you have to really step back, relax and allow the answer for some of these things to arise in your awareness. Often times we bury certain situations from our day-to-day awareness. And these can also be tricky as women, especially mothers, are biologically-wired to worry, especially for their children. But the key here is an ongoing worry that you've had for a long period of time that was at least active up until the time of your diagnosis, and perhaps still ongoing.
If the worry/argument situation doesn't jump straight to mind now, drop it into your inner-self and simply ask for clarity (from God/Jesus/Holy-Spirit if you're a Christian - from the universe if not - or from whatever higher power you believe in) when the time is right for you. It may take days/weeks even months for something to bubble up. It's a very individual situation. Just look for a long-running, nagging worry you've had surrounding someone you love that is either still unresolved or was only recently resolved (after your diagnosis).
Diagnosed aug 2021 with invasive lobular carcinoma. Estrogen/progesterone highly positive, her2 -, spread to 3/21 nodes (i believe following biopsy). No genetic risk factors (they tested anyway), jabbed as a kid and a few flu shots and last jab in 2014 dtap(before I knew), exercise daily for over 20 years, healthy diet, overall very healthy. 6 living kids, 4 known losses. Live in agricultural area with summer flyover of crop dusters, and only other known chemical exposures would have been hair perms from like age 7-29, 2-3x/year.
Consider the circumstances in the months leading up to your diagnosis and let me know if the following diagnosis resonates with events in your life:
Conflict/Cause: In biological terms, the female breast is synonymous for caring and nurturing. The biological conflict linked to the breast glands is, therefore, a nest-worry conflict concerning the well-being of a loved one (including a pet) or worries about the “nest” itself (distress regarding a woman’s home or workplace). The breast glands also correspond to an argument conflict. Typically, the argument (with a partner, one of the children, a parent, a friend) has a “worry”-aspect.
Biological Purpose: of the cell increase is to enhance the function of the breast glands in order to have more milk available when a nest-member is in need (female mammals also nurse the adult males in the event of an emergency). Even if a woman is not breastfeeding at the time or is no longer of childbearing age, her breasts still respond to a worry conflict in this biologically meaningful manner.
Jan 2019, 17 week loss, Feb 2021 early miscarriage. Surrounded by lots of stress obviously. Interesting theory for sure. As MDs will tell you the invasive lobular carcinoma is difficult to detect and most women have had it for at least 10 years at diagnosis.
I'd look more at the worry/argument aspect of this explanation. The miscarriage which could spark a "loss conflict" would have resulted in ovarian cancer, as the cell proliferation in your ovaries has the biological purpose of making you more attractive and fertile in order to conceive another child.
A 10-year period is hard to account for and recall. Did you get multiple opinions from different histologists at different times? I only ask because sometimes they declare "malignant" when in fact the tissue had stopped proliferating. If you had two opinions and both came back as malignant, then the worry/argument conflict you had running was still active at that time. In other words, it is something you had not yet resolved. And in fact, it may still be unresolved now as we speak, if you're still receiving conventional treatment.
Sometimes you have to really step back, relax and allow the answer for some of these things to arise in your awareness. Often times we bury certain situations from our day-to-day awareness. And these can also be tricky as women, especially mothers, are biologically-wired to worry, especially for their children. But the key here is an ongoing worry that you've had for a long period of time that was at least active up until the time of your diagnosis, and perhaps still ongoing.
If the worry/argument situation doesn't jump straight to mind now, drop it into your inner-self and simply ask for clarity (from God/Jesus/Holy-Spirit if you're a Christian - from the universe if not - or from whatever higher power you believe in) when the time is right for you. It may take days/weeks even months for something to bubble up. It's a very individual situation. Just look for a long-running, nagging worry you've had surrounding someone you love that is either still unresolved or was only recently resolved (after your diagnosis).
I'll think on it thanks for your thoughts on the matter.