Ovarian Cancer left – Diagnostic Chart
Conflict:
- Conflict of loss (child, parent, husband, friend, even animal) through death or departure.
- Ugly semi-genital conflict with a man (also a very masculine woman)
- for the right-handed person concerning mother or child
- for the left-handed person concerning partner
Idiom:
–
Hamer Focus:
HH in the cerebral medulla of the cerebrum occipital-basal right, in the immediate vicinity of the midbrain
Active phase:
Necrosis in the
conflict-active phase is usually not noticed unless a reduced ovary accidentally falls under a histologist’s microscope. The necroses cause a reduced estrogen production and may cause irregularity of the period, so-called anovulatory abortion, or amenorrhea. In contrast to the cerebral indirect hormonal amenorrhea in a sexual conflict in the cervical relay of the left cerebral hemisphere, we can speak of direct hormonal amenorrhea (cell loss of the interstitial estrogen-producing cell) in the case of naturally also present HH in the cerebral medulla.
Healing:
The necroses are refilled in the pcl-phase, just as in the other mesodermal cerebrum-controlled organs. Since there is practically no capsule of the ovary,
ovarian cysts of different sizes are formed, which are first liquid, later indurating, i.e., filled with hormone-producing mesodermal tissue. These
ovarian cysts, by extension estrogen-producing mesodermal-indurated cysts, were previously erroneously called “
ovarian cancer” again, even “fast-growing
ovarian cancer” because the estrogen-producing mesodermal cells had increased in the initially liquid cyst.
Crisis:
Centralization
Biological Sense:
At the end of the
healing phase and permanent
Increase in estrogen production
- younger appearance
- improved ovulation and the woman then becomes pregnant faster.
Notice:
At the beginning of the
healing phase, the
ovarian cyst grew all over the neighboring organs, which was misinterpreted as “invasive growth.” This was basically only because the large cysts had to supply themselves with blood from the surrounding area. Once their own blood supply (
ovarian cyst artery and vein) is secured, the adhesions detach independently. The cyst forms a firm, hard capsule, so it can be easily removed surgically if it interferes mechanically. The indurated cyst produces sex hormones. A fascinating phenomenon is a so-called endometriosis, which, according to the textbook, always produces estrogen and could not be explained until now. They result from a ruptured
ovarian cyst, which releases the concrete parts that have already grown by then into the abdominal cavity. There they grow, just as we used to think of “metastases.” They form new
ovarian cysts there due to the 9-month cell division spurt inside them.