Dr Christiane Northrup has some interesting insights
into the emotional and energetic issues associated with
ovarian cancer. Whilst it is impossible to generalize
emotional and energetic responses, she highlights the issue
of rage in ovarian cancers. She describes the ovaries as
being 'female balls' which means they relate to an active
participation in the world in a way that expresses our
unique creative potential, as women, on an individual
basis.
She says: "...we as women must be open to the uniqueness
of our creations and their own energies and impulses,
without trying to force them into predetermined forms. Our
ability to yield to our creativity, to acknowledge
that we cannot control it with our intellects, is the key
to understanding ovarian power." (p187, Women's Bodies,
Women's Wisdom)
She relates the issue of rage as deriving from being in
an abusive relationship - not necessarily physically
abusive, though of course this could be the case. And it
may not necessarily be a personal or intimate relationship.
It could be with work, societal, or even spiritual. But it
embodies a way of relating and dealing with something or
someone, where the woman involved feels controlled by the
situation and does not believe in her ability to change it,
or herself. It is a denial of her innate power and
self-sovereignty. A denial of a woman's innate dignity,
creativity, spirituality, and complexity.
Interestingly, Dr Northrup notes that ovarian cancer is
linked to a diet high in fat and dairy food. Dairy products
in Oriental medicine, are associated with the liver
meridian. Meridians are energy conduits, and though they
have a specific anatomy, they are not equated necessarily
with the organs of the same name, as understood in
conventional western medicine. The emotion associated with
a liver meridian that is out of balance, is rage and
anger.
Oriental medicine believes that diseases start in our
energetic body first, and then progress to the physical
body. And certainly not all women who have a high fat and
high dairy diet develop ovarian cancer. Dr Northrup
suggests that women take care of their ovaries and uterus
by reclaiming and expressing whatever this deep creative
energy is for them. She suggests taking the time to do this
daily.
A recent scientific study has also found that drinking
two cups or more of tea a day can reduce the risk of
ovarian cancer by 46%. This study was done in Sweden over a
15 year period. Sweden is a country where there is a higher
risk of ovarian cancer, as are other countries with a high
dairy consumption (Denmark and Switzerland).
References:
http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/news/ng.asp?id=64537
Dr Christiane Northrup, Women's Bodies, Women's Wisdom
(Piatkus, 1995)