Naturally Cancer-Free?

Posted on September 17, 2008. Filed under: CoreMatters today |

Our bodies have a natural capacity to protect us from cancer.  After all, if 1 in 4 Westerners die of cancer, then 3 of 4 do not.  Why not?  Their defense mechanisms work.  Really well.  According to Dr. David Servan-Schreiber writing in his new book Anticancer:  A New Way of Life, “The trick is to keep the cells from developing into life-threatening tumors by turning on the body’s cancer-fighting capacities.”

Dr. Servan-Schreiber should know.  He’s had brain cancer.  Twice.  The second time made him particularly curious and he began to investigate our susceptibility to cancers.   He wanted to know if we can enhance our bodies’ natural capacity to protect us from cancer.  Here’s what he found:   small changes can make a big difference.

1.  Add activity to your day.

  • We need 20-30 minutes of physical activity each day.  That’s 7 days a week.
  • Get some sunlight for 20 minutes a day.  We need the Vitamin D.  Otherwise, take 1000IU of vitamin D every day.  Vitamin D is essential to cell construction and maintenance.
  • Practice some method of relaxation and self-centering, like yoga, t’ai chi, meditation.  That could mean just sitting quietly for 10 or 20 minutes to hear your own thoughts and breath.

2.  Avoid some common household products

  • Perchloroethynene (tetrachloroethylene) used in dry cleaning.  Find a dry cleaner that doesn’t use it.  Air out your dry-cleaned garments for several hours before wearing.
  • Alkylphenois containing cleaning products
  • Deodorants and antiperspirants containing aluminum
  • Cosmetics, shampoo, nail polish, etc. with estrogens or placental products, or parabens or phthalates
  • Household pesticides and insecticides
  • Avoid heating foods or liquids in plastic containers made with PVCs, polystyrene or Styrofoam, and throw away any scratched Teflon pans.

3.  Improve your diet.

Details tomorrow!

Make a Comment

Make a Comment: ( 2 so far )

blockquote and a tags work here.

2 Responses to “Naturally Cancer-Free?”

RSS Feed for CoreMatters Comments RSS Feed

Hi all, here’s an article by David Servan-Schreiber that I thought you might like. :)

Exercise against Cancer
By David Servan-Schreiber, MD, PhD,
Author of Anticancer: A New Way of Life

Physical activity, even just walking 30 minutes six times a week, confers a very important protection against cancer, before we get the disease, or during its treatment. Jacqueline discovered this for herself. To her astonishment.

Physical activity acts on many of the biological factors that can slow down cancer growth. It reduces blood sugar and insulin peaks. It reduces fat stores from which common chemicals leak into our body. It reduces estrogen stimulation. And it even stimulates our immune system’s ability to fight disease.

Some hospitals now systematically prescribe exercise along with chemotherapy. Not only to combat cancer directly, but also to reduce the common fatigue that affects most patients under treatment.

Jacqueline was fifty-four when she found out she had a rare cancer of the fallopian tube. Her physician told her frankly that her chances for survival were slim, but that they would try every possible treatment. After surgery she started six months of chemotherapy to limit the risk of metastases. But her oncologist didn’t stop there.

Though some of his colleagues didn’t fully “believe” in it, the scientific data about the importance of exercise seemed compelling to him. “Jacqueline,” he said, “This may be a little hard, but when you begin chemotherapy, you’ll also have to exercise.” He recommended a karate club that specialized in looking after cancer patients.

In the class, the young master pointed out that she was standing bent over, looking down at the floor. Jacqueline examined herself in the mirror and saw that she had taken on the look of a “little old woman.” Standing at her side, the master then demonstrated the striking motions and the traditional shout, the “kaï,” rising from the inner reaches of his body. Jacqueline thought “this isn’t for me!” She had never fought in her life, not even to say “no” to her family or friends, who had long taken advantage of her. But, by the end of the first session, she had pushed and pulled on her body in ways she hadn’t known were possible. She had struck the air with her hands and her feet. She had shouted. She had sensed her strength. The most surprising was that thanks to this physically grueling session, she felt herself perk up.

She persisted through the six cycles of chemotherapy, attending classes twice a week. Her exhaustion was sometimes so great that she had visions of death. On the way to the club, in the subway, she was often nauseated. Or she would have trouble standing up straight. But she didn’t give up. In the end, after each session she was less tired than before it began.

Four and a half years after her initial diagnosis, her oncologist told her she was free of disease. Surviving her type of cancer was extremely rare and meant that the disease had been vanquished. But her new physical relationship to her body had become a way of keeping the disease at bay. Twice a week, in her white kimono, she takes up the posture of combat. She stands straight, her gaze steady. She hears herself saying firmly to the ghost of her cancer, “Let’s have it out,” in case it should have the vaguest thought of returning.

©2008 David Servan-Schreiber, MD, PhD

Author Bio
David Servan-Schreiber, MD, PhD, is a clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and cofounder of the Center for Integrative Medicine. He lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Paris, France. He has been a cancer survivor for 16 years, and is the author of the International Best-Seller Anticancer: A New Way of Life, coming from Viking September 2008.

Clearly, movement is crucial to our health!

If you are under stress–if you are pumping cortisol, norepinephrine, etc–preparing for flight–but you have no where to go, what happens to these hormones?

They pour into your bloodstream to direct your body’s flight, but instead, you sit.

What cellular confusion that must cause! Which is, in my non-medical view, what cancer cells are: cells out of control–confused. So part of your brain wants flight, and the other part says no…

Movement gives those stress hormones their proper outlet. And creates the neural pathways we need to repeat the movement, to direct and use those hormones–correctly.


Where's The Comment Form?

    About

    Finding balance in movement and thought for life

    RSS

    Subscribe Via RSS

    • Subscribe with Bloglines
    • Add your feed to Newsburst from CNET News.com
    • Subscribe in Google Reader
    • Add to My Yahoo!
    • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
    • The latest comments to all posts in RSS
    • Subscribe in Rojo

    Meta

Liked it here?
Why not try sites on the blogroll...