As The Truth About Cancer’s Ultimate Live Symposium progressed, attendees were continually exposed to an ignored component of cancer formation as well as its elimination. The importance of negotiating the emotional component of cancer was continually brought up by nearly every presenter at the conference citing it as an integral component of the complete healing of the disease. Society is currently in the process of consciously moving forward from the dark ages of medicine. Listening to the speakers hammer home the ideals of forgiveness, laughter, love and support spotlighted the need for individuals to take a hard look at their long-held traumas, untrue thought patterns and false stories about themselves.
How embedded is this trauma? During the midday roundtable comprising the who’s who of the alternative medical and health community, a question was posed to Dr. Tony Jimenez M.D. A viewer watching the lifestream asked, "How do you address emotional trauma in a five year old child with a brain tumor?" Dr. Jimenez told the person to look to the parents and described how often we inherit generational trauma and/or unresolved emotional issues from our parents. Dr. Rashid Buttar, in his five pillars of detoxification, urged the audience that psychological, social and emotion trauma were keys to assisting the back to equilibrium.
Raw emotions could be seen everywhere as most of the audience and presenters had lost loved ones to humanity's generational battle against this unbalanced state we call cancer. Speakers asked audience members to stand up or raise hands if they have or have had cancer…only a few were left in their seats during most talks.
Halfway trough the day, an unexpected event took place away from the cameras and the lights of the main stage. Many of the speakers alluded to the idea that we are in a war for health freedom and against the suppression of the truth about cancer. An Iraq war veteran attending the conference quietly pulled Truth About Cancer’s creator and host Ty Bollinger aside. The veteran proceeded to present Bollinger with his Medal of Honor he received during the Iraq war. The symbolic gesture was recognized publicly at the VIP speakers dinner that night. Bollinger took the stage to explain to the speakers and guests what had happened earlier that day. He asked the Iraq veteran, who was in attendance, to stand. A sustained, standing ovation was directed at the veteran who appeared unfazed as he stared stoically at Bollinger, still on stage, and gave him a uninterrupted military salute which he held until the applause subsided.
It was the Flexner report of 1910 that signaled the beginning of the end for natural, alternative medicines and healing modalities. That same report simultaneously divorced medical practice and thinking away from the important and immeasurable pillars of intuition, energy and spirit. Interestingly, it was legendary creator Nikola Tesla who, in the time leading up to the Flexner report, famously stated, “If you want to know the secrets of the universe think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.” The spirit of Tesla was alive and well as multiple speakers stressed the importance of not only the patient’s intuition and spiritual healing, but also the intuitive, spiritual and frequency-based gifts that are once again being discovered and utilized by true healers. An overall feeling of excitement and empowerment echoed throughout the event as the realization began to root with many that cancer is conquerable. For brief moments, the framework of a new healing paradigm could be seen by some amidst the hard work ahead that still needed to be done.
Despite the empowerment attendees gained, there are some hard truths and generational challenges that we collectively face. It was Health Nut News creator and journalist Erin Elizabeth who urged the crowd to “be brave” and continue to speak the truth as shestood in the foreground of a large collage of the images of doctor’s who had passed away unexpectedly within that past year. Dr. Andrew Wakefield’s presentation described humanity’s path forward akin to either a comedy or a tragedy as we collectively write the final chapters of our medical dark ages for better or worse.
Our challenges are individual, yet it is each of these struggles, victories, losses and lessons that bind us together as one family moving towards a better world where cancer ceases to exist, or at least ceases to be synonymous with fear and disempowerment.
How embedded is this trauma? During the midday roundtable comprising the who’s who of the alternative medical and health community, a question was posed to Dr. Tony Jimenez M.D. A viewer watching the lifestream asked, "How do you address emotional trauma in a five year old child with a brain tumor?" Dr. Jimenez told the person to look to the parents and described how often we inherit generational trauma and/or unresolved emotional issues from our parents. Dr. Rashid Buttar, in his five pillars of detoxification, urged the audience that psychological, social and emotion trauma were keys to assisting the back to equilibrium.
Raw emotions could be seen everywhere as most of the audience and presenters had lost loved ones to humanity's generational battle against this unbalanced state we call cancer. Speakers asked audience members to stand up or raise hands if they have or have had cancer…only a few were left in their seats during most talks.
Halfway trough the day, an unexpected event took place away from the cameras and the lights of the main stage. Many of the speakers alluded to the idea that we are in a war for health freedom and against the suppression of the truth about cancer. An Iraq war veteran attending the conference quietly pulled Truth About Cancer’s creator and host Ty Bollinger aside. The veteran proceeded to present Bollinger with his Medal of Honor he received during the Iraq war. The symbolic gesture was recognized publicly at the VIP speakers dinner that night. Bollinger took the stage to explain to the speakers and guests what had happened earlier that day. He asked the Iraq veteran, who was in attendance, to stand. A sustained, standing ovation was directed at the veteran who appeared unfazed as he stared stoically at Bollinger, still on stage, and gave him a uninterrupted military salute which he held until the applause subsided.
It was the Flexner report of 1910 that signaled the beginning of the end for natural, alternative medicines and healing modalities. That same report simultaneously divorced medical practice and thinking away from the important and immeasurable pillars of intuition, energy and spirit. Interestingly, it was legendary creator Nikola Tesla who, in the time leading up to the Flexner report, famously stated, “If you want to know the secrets of the universe think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.” The spirit of Tesla was alive and well as multiple speakers stressed the importance of not only the patient’s intuition and spiritual healing, but also the intuitive, spiritual and frequency-based gifts that are once again being discovered and utilized by true healers. An overall feeling of excitement and empowerment echoed throughout the event as the realization began to root with many that cancer is conquerable. For brief moments, the framework of a new healing paradigm could be seen by some amidst the hard work ahead that still needed to be done.
Despite the empowerment attendees gained, there are some hard truths and generational challenges that we collectively face. It was Health Nut News creator and journalist Erin Elizabeth who urged the crowd to “be brave” and continue to speak the truth as shestood in the foreground of a large collage of the images of doctor’s who had passed away unexpectedly within that past year. Dr. Andrew Wakefield’s presentation described humanity’s path forward akin to either a comedy or a tragedy as we collectively write the final chapters of our medical dark ages for better or worse.
Our challenges are individual, yet it is each of these struggles, victories, losses and lessons that bind us together as one family moving towards a better world where cancer ceases to exist, or at least ceases to be synonymous with fear and disempowerment.