Rob van Overbruggen sets out to provide scientific evidence on which many therapies that make – ‘remarkable claims about mind-body effects’ on the complex cancer question, are based. He states ‘To deny the potential reality of something just because one cannot devise a method of proof is a very narrow and false stance to take.’ – ‘Everything is true unless proven otherwise.’ This gives us more possibilities and widens our view in respect of cancer and its treatment.
The book is 403 pages in length, it has a bibliography of 65 pages – for me this could constitute a tome, something that puts me off. Yet I knew because I happened to be searching for another person whose thoughts and methodologies in respect of mind-body healing powers and possibilities with regard to cancer, and I came across his name and his mention of this book. I knew that for me this book was a ‘must read’ and I was still sceptical. It took me 2 sittings to finish the book, when my attention is captured I will read to the end (my wedding interrupted this read!).
I read and read and I wished (in some ways) that I’d found this book in 2009 when I was diagnosed with a ‘little breast cancer’. However perhaps my decision for surgery was the right one as I am now more than capable of keeping others ‘a-breast’ of the situation.
Rob van Overbruggen’s work confirms what I know and believe (and subsequently some members of the medical profession have confirmed to me) that cancer is indeed inherent in ‘every body’ and as such can develop into a cancerous growth unless we chose to think otherwise. I chose a route in which I subsequently refused medication (not even a painkiller, what for? My mind is connected to my body) nor radiotherapy. I used imagineering, changing my thoughts and language thus enabling others to go with me, to accept my choices and meeting them at their ‘language bus stop.’ Plus I worked on healing an incident from the past. All of this has put where I am currently am, healthy and well.
Healing Psyche now provides me with a whole range of evidence and the knowledge that I am not just some ‘strange woman in the Highlands of Scotland using that ‘funny NLP stuff’’.
I highly recommend this book to others who want to learn more about the evidence that is out there supporting the fact that we can enhance our healing, our progression and our lives when that ‘cancer’ word come along. We can still use conventional methods plus mind power to support those.
Those people who might be sceptical could consider the book and then perhaps even contact some of the other well qualified NLP trainers mentioned in the book and others, or even try some of the things mentioned themselves.
Rob van Overbruggen does by the way call for further research to enhance current therapeutic programs for complementary (and that means working together with) psychological cancer treatment.
Well done!
I still haven’t solved the coins by the way.