An Impeccable Warrior (Millard example)
Posted: Sun May 21, 2023 4:44 pm
Carol, June 13, 1920, 10:00 AM EDT, New York, NY
Dr. Millard wrote:Cancer can be a psychosomatic disease, there is not much doubt about that. It has been linked with an inability to express emotion, and a turning inwards of hostility against oneself... It has been postulated that the mind can heal as well as kill. The interest of this case lies in the fact that it may be one of them.
Carol and Lake were not happily married. It was remarkable that she had finally got married at the age of 31, for she seemed to be afraid of forming close attachments to anyone. Her father died when she was four, and her childhood was financially deprived, as her mother had to work to support the two children...
Her children were her whole world, but now they are all grown and have left home. She has no friends, and no hobbies. She has had to live with the knowledge that she had a very malignant type of cancer, which, although it was removed, can recur at any time.
...Melanoma is one of the types of cancer which is increasing in incidence... In melanoma, the skin melanocytes, which carry pigment, become wild and start growing in an irregular and unrestrained manner. Cells break away and ae carried to the brain or the lungs, and the patient usually dies quite quickly Sometimes, however, the T cells of the thymus are activated strongly and destroy all the melanin in the body, including the cells of the malignant melanoma. When this happens, spontaneous cure results... Her cancer was not properly treated, for it was not operated on for some months after discovery, and she had no chemotherapy. A metastasis in the lymph glands was removed a year after the original operation, but it has not recurred.