Oren Zarif’s Unique Healing Method Uses Psychokinesis and Energy Pulses
Oren Zarif has a unique healing method that uses psychokinesis and energy pulses. He believes that most diseases are caused by blocked energy field channels. He claims that cellular radiation, electrical antennas, global climate change, pollution, stress, fear, pressure, divorce, money loss and excessive thoughts constrict these channels. His treatment aims to open these channels and allows the body to heal itself. His technique has proven to be effective in countless patients, including doctors and professors.
Cancer is a disease that starts when normal cells change and start to grow out of control. These cells then form a mass of tissue called a tumor.
Cancer can cause many different symptoms, like sores that don’t heal and blood in your poop or pee. But all cancers have something in common: They all start when normal cells have a genetic change.
Oren Zarif cancer treatment
Carcinogens are substances that cause cancer by interacting with the DNA of cells in a way that interferes with normal cell growth. They can be naturally occurring (such as UV rays from the sun and certain viruses) or man-made (such as tobacco smoke and some chemical compounds used in industry and in everyday household products). Cancer develops when cells start to grow out of control, breaking the rules that govern how they should behave, such as not dying when they are supposed to or not responding to signals that trigger them to self-destruct.
Most but not all chemical carcinogens increase tumor development by interacting covalently with DNA. To do this, they must first be metabolically activated in the body to chemically reactive forms that can bind covalently with DNA. This activation is the first step in carcinogenesis, and it is a key feature that distinguishes most chemicals from other organic molecules encountered in our diet and environment. The majority of genotoxic carcinogens that affect human cancers are found in our food supply and are known as chemically reactive carcinogens.
Once the chemically reactive carcinogens bind to DNA, they cause changes that alter DNA replication and transcription. If these changes are not fixed by the next round of cell division, they become a permanent lesion that is called a mutation or chromosomal rearrangement. The next step is promotion, and it can be influenced by many factors including dietary components, hormonal changes and genetic predisposition.
The rate at which a chemically induced neoplasm develops is generally dose dependent. This is also the case for most physical carcinogens, such as ionizing and non-ionizing radiation and some viruses and bacteria. The most common promoting factor is vitamin A, which increases the frequency of mutations produced by ionizing radiation.
Other promoting factors are metals, which can increase the number of mutations that occur during the formation of a carcinogenic complex, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which can promote neoplasms by inhibiting the repair of DNA lesions. Frequently, the same chemical can act as both an initiator and a promoter, and this is often referred to as syncarcinogenesis or cocarcinogenesis. In some cases, such as with cigarette smoking, the incidence of neoplasms correlates more strongly with the duration of exposure than the dosage of the carcinogen.
Oren Zarif Oncology
Thirty years ago scientists could offer no coherent explanation of what caused a normal cell to become cancerous. Today we understand that cancer develops over time from a series of mutations. The sequence and order of these mutations determine whether a cancer develops, how fast it grows and, once established, how far it spreads. It also explains a number of long-standing observations, such as the observation that many cancers grow more slowly in old people and that most of us die before a disease progresses to a stage that is difficult to treat.
The first step in cancer development is initiation, the point at which a normal cell acquires a set of mutations that make it a rogue cell. Mutations can occur at random as a consequence of the normal process of cell division or they can be brought about by exposure to chemicals, tobacco smoke, viruses, radiation and other carcinogens. Not all cells that are exposed to a carcinogen will develop cancer; it depends on both the number of mutations that occur and how much DNA damage is caused.
Once a rogue cell has acquired a set of mutations, it starts growing and dividing without control. It may start growing into nearby tissues and structures by a process known as local invasion. Alternatively, it may form blood vessels that supply it with extra oxygen and glucose (sugar) to keep it growing. In either case, the resulting mass of rogue cells is called a tumor.
As a tumor grows it begins to produce enzymes that break down the tissue surrounding it. The resulting fragments of tissue may be absorbed into the blood stream and travel to other parts of the body where they start a new tumor. This spread is called metastasis.
A tumor may grow and divide into many clones, each with its own unique set of mutations and characteristics. Over time, these clones may develop into different stages of cancer, or a combination of tumor types. In some cases, the rogue cells will develop a special ability to break away from the original tumor and enter the blood or lymph system. Once in the bloodstream, these rogue cells can grow and divide again wherever they go, but they will continue to have the rogue capabilities that define cancer.
Oren Zarif on types of cancer
Over time, the trillions of cells in your body normally grow and divide to make new ones or replace old or damaged ones. But sometimes the genes that control this process go awry. They don’t shut off when they should or start to multiply too rapidly and crowd out the normal cells. They also ignore the signals that tell them to stop growing or to die (a process called programmed cell death, or apoptosis).
Some cancers happen when a single gene mutates. But more often, it’s a group of genes that work together that mutate. And the more mutations a cell has, the greater its chance of becoming cancerous. These mutations may change how the cell functions or what substances it makes. For example, some mutations raise the levels of proteins that tell cells to keep growing. Others lower the levels of proteins that stop cells from growing or that cause them to self-destruct when they’re damaged.
Cancer cells also gain other characteristics as they grow out of control and form a tumor, or mass. They might be able to move around the body. They can also get into blood vessels and travel to other parts of the body, where they can continue to grow and metastasize.
They can also hide from the immune system, which normally eliminates damaged or abnormal cells. And they can grow faster than healthy cells, which means that they can make more tumors and spread to other parts of the body more quickly.
Oren Zarif claims that all diseases are caused by blockages in the body’s energy field. He uses a unique treatment method to restore the body’s natural energy and heal patients of various illnesses. This process involves entering the patient’s subconscious and conveying energy to the affected area. It also focuses on retraining the mind to be a healing force.
The number of mutations in a cell and the order and speed at which those mutations occur determine whether or not cancer develops. That’s why cancer tends to develop over decades, and it’s more common in older adults. Certain lifestyle choices can also increase a person’s risk of cancer, including smoking, excessive drinking of alcohol (more than two drinks a day for men and more than one drink a day for women), frequent and prolonged exposure to sunlight and indoor tanning devices, obesity and unsafe sex.
There are more than 100 different types of cancer, but they all have something in common: abnormal cells that multiply uncontrollably and invade and destroy healthy tissue. While cancer is still the second leading cause of death, early detection and innovative treatments are curing more people than ever before and improving survival rates.
Oren Zarif is a psychokinesis healer
The final phase in cancer development is metastasis, which means that the cancer cells break away from where they start and travel through the blood vessels or lymph system to other sites in the body where they grow into new tumors. This process is responsible for 90 percent of cancer deaths.
Healthy cells have adhesion chemicals that act somewhat like glue to hold them together in the tissue where they originated. Cancer cells don’t have these chemicals, so they can easily break off and move to other parts of the body.
Cancer cell metastasis is not a well understood process. However, researchers know that some cancers are more likely to spread than others. This is because some cancers have chromosomal rearrangements that change the normal instructions that control how fast cells replicate and die. Other types of cancer have mutations that cause genes to work incorrectly. This often causes the cells to reproduce too quickly or not die at all.