Whenever I have a medically-significant event, I see what German New Medicine (GNM) has to say about it. If you are not familiar with GNM, here’s their official website.
GNM has parted with conventional medical views of diseases and is not recognized in the mainstream. Yet it is deeply rooted in the understanding of developmental biology and how this process reiterates itself when we heal.
I studied developmental biology for a short time during a grad school lab rotation. I was impressed that the fields of cancer research and developmental biology are closely intertwined as they investigate exact same molecular signaling pathways. And it was always a mystery to me why cancer would arise in a specific tissue. What determines the location? Conventional medicine doesn’t have the answer, but GNM does.
According to GNM, a conflict (or a stressful life event) is a starting point of a biological program that later manifests as a very specific symptom or even a medical crisis. The precision with which GNM explains what type of conflict leads to what type of an unfolding biological program and an accompanying medical event is astounding.
GNM is not just about explaining the location of cancer. It’s about understanding how our bodies handle and heal from our conflicts or stressful events. It takes you through what is happening in your body during the conflict-active phase and after conflict resolution.
It is only after the conflict is perceived to be resolved that healing starts. And part of the healing is an acute event, which if severe enough, could result in a medical emergency. The severity of the acute event depends on the severity and duration of the conflict that elicited the biological program.
And while we strive to evolve to the stage where we no longer perceive life as an unending series of conflicts and healing from those conflicts, as long as we are still in a conflict-perception mode, GNM offers a roadmap that helps makes sense of what our bodies are doing and why.
Thank you for the succinct summary! I'm so curious about GNM, and how we can better understand all of our processes, perhaps with that as one tool in a larger toolbelt. How much un-necessary cancer surgery/chemo/radiation could we avoid THEN?