Avoiding Breast Cancer
In this video, Susan Moss spends about 22 minutes speaking on "Avoiding Breast Cancer" at the 44th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
Right. I want to thank Lorraine Rosendahl for organizing this conference. Let's hear it for her. So I like to do it interactive lecture and test your knowledge. It's not pass or fail and just shout out your answers.
I wrote two books. This is survived cancer. Keep Your Breast.
And this is the first book that I wrote about how I heal myself versus Kimberly, who did only medical treatment. She was 34. And guess where she is right now at 38 years old. Forest Lawn.
And this is my follow up book.
Survived Cancer, which tells of people who healed themselves and what they did, some after medical treatment failure and some used my motel program.
So let's start.
OK, here's the math question. I was diagnosed with breast and uterine cancer. OK, I was diagnosed with breast and uterine cancer, two tumors in December 1990.
I decide to heal myself naturally. How long was that?
It's almost twice that.
I've had no recurrence. I'm still on my mouth tap program number two.
Well, OK, that's the answer.
Upon finding the tumors, as the doctor said, those three little words. What are they? Here. Here's the hint. It's not. I love you.
That's close. That's it. See a surgeon.
Watch. Finish. What questions should he have asked me?
Do you have some ideas? Why would you want to have.
OK, the first question they should have asked me, and this is going to make you laugh. Are you happy? I wonder why they don't ask that. I did for my first book. Keep Your Breath. I did two years of research at the UCLA Biomedical Library, and I found this interesting bit in the medical literature. Generally, happy people do not get cancer.
Tour phos disease can be cut out of the body fast.
No disease can be cut out of the body. That's why I wonder why. With cancer and they decide on surgery because it really doesn't work.
True or false?
This is similar. Removing the breast mastectomy is usually a complete cure for breast cancer.
You're right.
OK, this is a multiple choice. Prophylactic or preventative mastectomies are mostly done. For what reason? A gene mutation of BRCA one and BRCA seei two faulty genes. The strong history of family breast cancer.
See cancer phobia. Now, the answer is cancer phobia.
True or false? The history of mastectomy began before anesthetic was invented. Women underwent breast removal while fully conscious.
True, Fanny Burney was a novelist and she underwent and describe what that was like.
Two Air Force William Stewart Hofstad a famous surgeon and then at the radical mastectomy at the end of the eighteen hundreds. His version removed not just the breast, but all the under arm lymph nodes and block TASC pectoral muscles and even broke the