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Lea Yekutiel is a breast cancer survivor and the author of the book entitled “Making the Breast of It”. Lea turned her life around 180 degrees by changing her belief system and her attitude. This effort has involved 20 years of studying metaphysics and spirituality to learn what she now practices and teaches every day. After Healing from breast cancer, Lea considers her mastectomy experience to be a gift from God. Today, she helps cancer survivors in Southern California and beyond on their journeys toward recovery, peace, and happiness. Through her inspirational speaking and writing, Lea hopes to help enlighten her audiences and readers to ways of promoting their own health and healing. By the way, the book “Making the Breast of It” is being made into a movie. Lea’s mission is to educate YOU women of many ways how YOU can be proactive about how to keep your breast healthy that can prevent breast cancer by sharing her 25 Breast Health Tips. In order to be able to reach more people with her mission, Lea is also a host of a talk radio show entitled “Waves of Healing”, at www.blogtalkradio.com/Lea-Yekutiel, where she interviews healers, spiritual leaders, health, nutrition and wealth conscious personalities who would introduce you to various simple methods of self-healing without drugs. If you know of any organization who would be interested in education and prevention about breast health, please contact lea at 818-501-5908.
Waves of Healing
Date / Time: 12/8/2009 11:00 PM UTC
Category: Women
Call-in Number: (347) 637-1189
Dr. Alexander Loyd is the founder of The Healing Codes, a company dedicated to natural healing around the world. In the spring of 2001, Dr. Loyd discovered a simple, physical mechanism that eliminates stress in the body. For the next year Dr. Loyd validated this mechanism through Heart Rate Variability tests: the state-of-the-art mainstream medical diagnostic test for measuring stress in the autonomic nervous system. In 86% of cases, stress was virtually eliminated from the body within 20 minutes. Previous to Dr. Loyd's research, six weeks was the least amount of time any treatment had been documented to consistently balance the autonomic nervous system, according to available literature going back 30 years. The significance of this discovery is monumental. The Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta report that up to 80% of all health care dollars are spent on stress related issues. In 1998 Dr. Bruce Lipton, a cellular biologist at Stanford University Medical school, released landmark research indicating that 95% of all physical and non-physical illnesses are the result of stress in the autonomic nervous system. Dr. Lipton explains that stress suppresses the body's immune and healing systems and causes cells to shift into self-protection mode, which over time leads to illness and disease. Dr. Lipton further stated that the result of stress being removed from the body is a return to health. Since 2001, thousands of clients all over the world have reported healing from illness and disease by activating the body's stress release mechanism with The Healing Codes. The treatment is non-invasive, there is nothing to take, and it does not involve diet or exercise. The mechanism is like "a hidden fuse box" in the body. Dr. Loyd has trained 65+ coaches who work with clients over the phone, guiding them through this simple, natural self-treatment. After being healed from ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease) himself and witnessing unprecedented results from this process.
Upcoming Episodes
12/15/2009 11:00 PM UTC - "Why do you say WHEE when you have pain"?
Date / Time: 8/29/2009 10:08 PM UTC
As most of you already know, I am a breast cancer survivor and had a mastectomy.
I had to face this challenge in my life all alone and it has not been an easy task.
When I first diagnosed with breast cancer, I was so ignorant about the subject that I desperately needed some education. Therefore, I was referred to American Cancer Society for support and guidance. What I received was mostly boring statistics and protocols by a facilitator, who was not a breast cancer survivor herself.
During my recovery and still today I constantly run into so many women who are in my situation, but afraid to talk about having breast cancer or mastectomy, because of the fear how men will react to their new condition.
When I realized how many women affected by breast cancer and how dire the situation were, I felt that something has to be done in order to shed some light on the situation. I published my book entitled “Making the Breast of It” with a subtitle “Overcoming Fear of Intimacy After Mastectomy.”
Soon after the book published, I contacted American Cancer Society to let them know about my book and its subject. I requested if we could work together in order to bring the book to the attention of those women who would benefit from reading the book.
Oh, yes! I did get a response from American Cancer Society, telling me that they have their own writer, who is writing about the same exact issue and they do not have a use for my book.
Here are my problems with the American Cancer Society’s writer:
My questions to you are:
I appreciate any of your comments about this issue.
With my unconditional love,
Lea Yekutiel
www.ilovemybreastcancer.com
www.blogtalkradio.com/Lea-Yekutiel
Original Air Date: 8/25/2009 10:00 PM UTC
Date / Time: 8/24/2009 2:56 AM UTC
Dear friends,
On my next radio talk show “Waves of Healing” on 8/25/09 at 3pm PST, I will be interviewing a World renowned Native American Psychic who would take questions from the listeners. If you have any questions please tune in to the live show on 8/25/09 at 3pm PST by login to www.blogtalkradio.com/Lea-Yekutiel. Or you can listen to all of the shows at your convenience time by login to www.blogtalkradio.com/Lea-Yekutiel and listen to archived shows and download it for F R E E.
Alcohol and health. Good for you, bad for you. Back and forth the debate rages. Some studies indicate that moderate drinking improves health and extends life (particularly in terms of heart health), whereas other studies indicate it may be implicated in an increased risk of breast cancer for women -- one of the leading causes of cancer death in women around the world. In recent years, there's been some focus on what women can do to decrease their risk of breast cancer -- such as breastfeeding and eating a good diet. But one thing they've been consistently urged to do is stop drinking alcohol. And now new studies may reinforce that conclusion, while at the same time helping shed some light on exactly how alcohol affects the body and raises the risk of breast cancer.
According to findings presented last week at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research, in San Diego, alcohol, consumed even in small amounts, may significantly increase the risk of breast cancer -- particularly estrogen-receptor/progesterone-receptor positive breast cancer. Further, the findings are supported by a second study that found an association between breast cancer risk and two genes involved in alcohol metabolism.
Alcohol and estrogen/progesterone receptor based breast cancers The first study followed more than 184,000 postmenopausal women for an average of seven years. Those who had less than one drink a day had a 7 percent increased risk of breast cancer compared to those who did not drink at all. Women who drank one to two drinks a day had a 32 percent increased risk, and those who had three or more glasses of alcohol a day had up to a 51 percent increased risk. The risk was seen mostly in those 70 percent of tumors classified as estrogen receptor- and progesterone receptor-positive. The researchers suspect that alcohol may have an effect on breast cancer via an effect on estrogen in the body.
The risk was similar whether women consumed beer, wine, or hard liquor. Alcohol consumption in any form was the common denominator. What the exact mechanism is that might lead to this increase in cancer is not known. It is suspected that in some forms of breast cancer, malignant cells have receptors that render them sensitive to hormones such as estrogen. These tumors referred to by doctors as being estrogen-receptor/progesterone-receptor positive (ER+/PR+) breast cancers.
And in fact the study found that alcohol specifically increased the risk most for ER+/PR+ tumors -- the most common type of breast cancer in postmenopausal women. In normal circumstances, when women reach menopause, levels of both estrogen and progesterone in their bodies fall precipitously, which, according to the medical establishment, should lead to fewer of these tumors. But the study found that post-menopausal women actually had higher rates of these hormone-responsive tumors if they drank alcohol. And the more they drank, the higher the risk. As I stated earlier, the study found that drinking less than one serving of alcohol a day still resulted in a 7% increase of risk for the ER+/PR+ types of breast cancer. And drinking as much as three servings of alcohol per day vaulted your risk upwards to 51%.
It is important to note that in women with estrogen-receptor negative, progesterone- receptor negative (ER-/PR-) tumors, there appeared to be no link between drinking and breast cancer.
The question of course arises, "Why would drinking alcohol raise the risk of hormone- fueled tumors regardless of receptor sites?" As I mentioned earlier, the answer seems to be that alcohol interferes with estrogen metabolism, which in turn increases the risk of hormone-sensitive breast cancer. We will talk more about this later, but for now, let's take a look at the second study I mentioned.
Second study will be emailed to you next week.
With all my love,
Lea Yekutiel http://www.ilovemybreastcancer.com http://www.blogtalkradio.com/Lea-Yekutiel http://www.wordpress.com/breastcancernmastectomy
P.S. Please feel f*ree to forward this ezine to anybody who may benefit from its content.
P.P.S. Here is the link for the short and sweet life changing video http://www.knowthatonething.com/the-magic-of-true-love/
Love and Light! Lea
Original Air Date: 8/18/2009 10:00 PM UTC
Original Air Date: 8/11/2009 10:00 PM UTC
Date / Time: 8/10/2009 11:25 PM UTC
Date / Time: 8/5/2009 11:47 PM UTC
Gut feelings earn their name from the place in the body where they make themselves known. A pang in your gut when you may be doing the wrong thing, or a vibrant zing when your body approves, can guide you reliably at times when logic fails. Sometimes, when logic prevails, we ignore our gut and live to regret it, understanding later that a rational approach is only one way of determining what is going on in a situation and how we should react. Our gut resides in the neighborhood of our solar plexus and the third chakra just above your belly button. When it is functioning well, we can trust its guidance and adjust our actions accordingly. Many of us have a tendency to hold in this area of our bodies. We may take shallow breaths that never reach this vital nexus that is the source of our empowerment. It is in this place that we find the courage to act, to reach out into the world and create change. When our power center is out of balance, we are timid and out of sync, wishing we had said something we were only able to phrase later when we were alone; wishing we had acted on an opportunity we didn’t see until it was past. In order to utilize your power center, you may want to focus your attention on it more regularly and make time to care for it. You can begin right now by taking a deep breath into your belly. On the exhale, pull your navel in toward your spine so as to empty out completely before taking another deep breath into your belly. When you empty completely, you release stagnant energy and create more space to be filled with fresh, nourishing breath. The more you practice this simple, cleansing exercise, the more clear and communicative your gut feelings will be and the more comfortable you will feel acting on them. Reprinted from DailyOM- Inspirational thoughts for a happy, healthy and fulfilling day. Register for free at www.dailyom.com With unconditional love, Lea Yekutiel www.ilovemybreastcancer.com www.blogtalkradio.com/Lea-Yekutiel
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