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Why Would You Say ‘TWR” When You Have Cancer?

  • By Conscious Commerce
  • 30 Mar, 2015
By Daniel Benor, MD
Cancer is a frightening problem to deal with. Even when diagnosed in its earliest stages, there are always anxieties about recurrences. In later stages the treatments of chemotherapy and radiotherapy are debilitating and surgery can be painful and disfiguring. With these problems there are the additional anxieties, worries and pains to deal with, plus the side effects of pain killers and other medications. The treatments can often be more difficult to deal with than the disease.
And then there are the psychological issues of disability, pain, limitations in functions, missing work, needing support plus stressing and distressing other members of the family. Lucky is the person who has support for all of these!
Considering all of these problems, you might be wondering about the title of this article that suggests you might say “TWR” in this situation. Well, TWR is a self-healing method that is absolutely transformative. TWR can relieve pains of all sorts, reduce anxieties, fears and more. TWR is particularly suited for people dealing with cancer:
TWR is easy to use and rapidly effective. You simply alternate taping on the left and right sides of your body while focusing your mind on any issues you want to feel better about. You recite an affirmation that is calming. Within minutes, you will be feeling better.
Better yet, you can install positive thoughts and feelings to replace whatever you’ve released. Your experiences with cancer can become a journey of positive transformation, rather than one of suffering and misery. The TWR method is detailed at paintap.com .
Here are ways that many people report TWR can be of help:
  • Reducing anxieties and worries, transforming them into appropriate concerns
  • Reducing and eliminating pains
  • Helping you sleep
  • Reducing and eliminating side effects of chemotherapy and radiotherapy
  • Dealing with physical, work and social limitations
  • Helping family members and other caregivers deal with their stresses and worries
While this description of how TWR can help you may seem simple, and the TWR method is easy to learn and to use, TWR is actually elegantly simple. TWR is designed so that you can use it for just about any imaginable problem, with equally rapid and profound success.
Composite Example

‘Sharon’ was a 49 year-old, married, high school teacher, mother of three, who was diagnosed with stage three breast cancer. With cancer cells spreading to her lymph nodes, the prognosis for 5-year survival was about 50 percent.

Sharon was devastated. Her son and older daughter were in university and well on their ways to independence. Her 15 year-old daughter, ‘Dana,’ still needed a lot of support, as she had struggled with cognitive challenges all of her life – following a difficult birth. Tom, her husband, worked long hours at his carpentry shop and needed Sharon’s help both in continuing her work to make ends meet and to manage his books and their home and Dana’s special needs.
Sharon had been looking forward to an early retirement to lighten her load and to be more available to support Dana and Tom. Her diagnosis was a severe blow that pushed her to the edge of incapacitating depression.
While her family doctor and oncologist were very encouraging, as her cancer appeared to have spread only to her axillary lymph nodes, Sharon was petrified that she would suffer a long and debilitating illness and would become a burden to her family and then “abandon” them by dying.
Sharon was extremely grateful to the nurse who discussed her chemotherapy with her and suggested she could join a local cancer support group. Not only did Sharon find enormous help from the other people in the group, but they shared many tips on how to deal with her challenges – including surfing the internet to identify further approaches that appealed to her.
Some of the more helpful ones included: asking extended family members for help during the challenging periods of chemotherapy and surgery; changing her diet to include more organic and less processed foods; and scheduling time each day to do something she truly relished doing – just for herself.
On the internet she came across TWR, which proved to be a blessing in varied and often unexpected ways. She was able to eliminate her nausea during chemotherapy; release many of her worries – transforming them into manageable concerns – particularly when sitting in hospital and clinic waiting rooms; had almost no pain with her surgery and did not require pain medications (which she had never tolerated because of many side effects); fell asleep and slept through the night without waking; and was able to give back a significant measure of help to family members and friends who helped her – by teaching them how to do TWR for their own stress and pain issues.
You may reproduce all or parts of this article in your journal, magazine, ezine, blog or other web or paper publication on condition that you credit the source as follows: Copyright © 2013 Daniel J. Benor, MD, ABHM   All rights reserved. Original publication at WholisticHealingResearch.com where you will find many more related articles on this and similar subjects of wholistic healing.
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