A Prototypical Cancer Personality

    In  his  book:  When  The  Body  Says   NODr.  Gabor  Mate  M.D.surmises  it this way.  There are three distinct types of  people in this    world,  Type  A  Individuals  are  seen  as  robust,  angry,  tense,  fast, aggressive, in – control  and  more  prone  to  heart disease. Whereas        Type B represent the balanced, moderate human being who can  feel          and express emotions without being driven and losing themselves in uncontrolled emotional out burst.

     On  The  Other Hand:  Type C  individuals  may  resemble Type B,          since  both  may  appear easy going  and  pleasant,  however,  Type B         will easily express anger,   fear,  sadness and other emotions.  Type C individuals suppresses  or  regress negatively charged emotion while struggling to maintain a strong  and happy  façade. 

     Cancer patients….  to a significantly statistically degree are more        likely to demonstrate  the  following traits: the element of  denial and repression of  anger and of  other negative emotions, and the external appearance of  a “nice”  or  “good”  person  with a suppression of  any reaction that might offend another person thereby avoiding conflict.

      While  it  can not  be  said  any  personality  trait  causes  cancer,       certain personality features definitely increases the risk because they generate physiological stress. Repression with the inability to say  No       and a lack  of  awareness  of  one’s anger,  makes  it  much more likely          for  a  person  to  find themselves in a situation  where there emotions           are ignored,  unexpressed  and gentleness exploited.

      Those situations  are stress inducing,  whether  or  not the person               is conscious  of  being  stressed.  Repeated  and  multiplied  throughout         the  years  of  disrupting human homeostatis  and  the immune system.          It  is  this  stress:  that undermines a body’s physiological balance and  immune defenses  predisposing the person  to this dis-ease, or thereby reducing the resistance to it.

    Physiological  stress,  is  the  link  between  personality traits  and                 dis-ease. Certain traits — otherwise known as coping styles — magnify         the  “risk  of  illness”  by increasing the likelihood of  “chronic  stress.”     Common to them all — is a diminished capacity  for any,  all emotional communication. Emotional experiences are translated into potentially damaging biological events.

     When human beings  are prevented   from  learning how to express        their true  feelings  effectively.  That  learning occurs — or  fails to occur   during childhood.  Thereby,  the way in which people are  force to grow        up will shape their relationships with their own body, psyche and other people.  This is an important distinction  between  an inherent response      and characteristic to the environment that ensures our survival.

      As people grow older,  others will resent them  and that person will             be disliked   for  what  is a desperate response  for  emotional deprivation.    When ask the  following question: as a child, you  felt sad, upset or angry; was there anyone you could talk to ~ even when what triggered it was the cause of  that  negative emotion?  Dr.  Mate stated,  in the quarter century    of  practicing medicine  he never heard anyone with cancer respond with  “yes”  to  that  question.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qf92l7FPyKo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVaH6SQEmcg

http://antianxietywaves.com/

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