November 2, 2008
How Else Can I Decrease My Estrogen Naturally
Here’s the question I’ve found in the mail this morning:
They want me to start taking lupron to decrease estrogen after estrogen and progesterone receptor + cancer. Tamoxifen did not work as I am premenopausal. Lupron scares me but i am not sure if it is worth the risks. How else can i decrease my estrogen naturally?
Great question and you will not find an answer strictly within the pharmaceutical world. You have to get to the root of the problem and that is how the pituitary gland works. Treat her right and everything else will slowly start to fall in place. This is a simplified view, of course, but nevertheless, the right one, and it is almost sure to be overlooked by a gynecologist, which will only think in terms of his or her specialistic profession.
You need a remedy that will affect the pituitary gland, and the actual way doesn’t matter:
– it can be herbal,
– it can be homeopathic, or a mixture of both,
– acupuncture or Su Jok,
– Reiki
and so on. If that works, fine.
The more fundamental way would be to see what emotions are whirling in your energy bodies now. Maybe the relationship you are in now needs adjustment, maybe there are monetary problems which ruin everything and your female body reacts the only way it knows how, by disseminating the energy from the emotional level deeper to the body, thus creating illness. A more proper therapy for this level would include Bach flower remedies, for example.
Finally, and this is the only way my services finally enter the picture, if you want to predict what will happen in the future AND start rectifying things and behaviours BEFORE they escalate, you may need a horoscope reading from me. To see a glimpse of how that would look like, you can go to www.DuskoSavic.com to see some videos of mine. If you order the reading, you will actually get such videos for YOUR case, with specific therapies for you both now and in the future and so on.
I am posting this to the blog because the question is very important and will be of use to many other visitors to the site. Thank you for posting it in the first place.
Filed under Astrology, Flower Remedies, Herbal Remedies, Homeopathy, Hormones, Lupron, Medical Astrology, Reiki, Video, Women's Health by Dusko Savic
June 8, 2008
CA-125 Ovarian Cancer Test
Can you have cancer of ovaries if you do not have ovaries? Perhaps, your ovaries were taken out during a hysterectomy and you think you are safe? Then read this post:
Signs of Ovarian Cancer (Even in the Absence of Ovaries)
The authour advocates that you should perform a yearly CA-125 ovarian cancer test, which should be even paid by your insurance (if you live in the USA, that is).
Maybe you should. Or you can ask a medical astrologer to see whether the period for cancer is really due.
Filed under Energy Healing, Links and resources, Medical Astrology, Uterus by Dusko Savic
May 29, 2008
Fight Ovarian Cancer With Motorcycle Ride
Motorcycle ride aims to fight ovarian cancer is about raising public awareness about ovarian cancer. Two men, Rich Whalen and Dave Welsh, organize ROAR Motorcycle Ride for Ovarian Cancer, Welsh said he lost his wife and mother to ovarian cancer in 2006. Welsh started the Vicki Welsh Ovarian Cancer Fund, in memory of his wife, to raise awareness, create recognition of the warning signs and improve screening and early diagnosis.
Welsh has one particular sentence in this article and it is
Also, some women think because they’ve had a hysterectomy, they can’t get the disease. That’s not true, my mother had a hysterectomy and she had ovarian cancer.
I have commented on this blog:
Yes, people should be more aware of the signs of ovarian cancer. It is a little known fact that it can be predicted through the methods od medical astrology, in particular, you can see examples on my site http://www.how-to-avoid-hysterectomy.com.
If you know 55 women (and who doesn’t!), one of them will die from ovarian caner… A horrible thought, and I like it very much that there is an organized effort to spread the knowledge about ovarian cancer to the public.
Having a hysterectomy will not shield from having an ovarian cancer later in life, because even if you cut one organ out, it still exists in the informational (etheric) body in our auras. To reach the etheric body, you need homeopathic remedies with the potency of least CM (a very high potency), and Reiki is also very welcome into the therapeutical mix.
You can also try distant Reiki healing from this page on this very site:
http://www.how-to-avoid-hysterectomy.com/energy-pack.html
Ill or not, or only just so much tired… the Reiki from that page will help, as it has helped jundreds of people already.
Filed under Alternative Medicine by Dusko Savic
February 7, 2008
Why Have Hysterectomy If You Are Healthy!?
What I find fascinating about the World Wide Web is the opportunity to “meet” other people and their destinies. In this case, Mary has got a smear test saying that she has cancer, and a few weeks later, she got another result, stating that she does not have cancer at all. That, however, did not bother her OBGYN, who blandly told her she now must have a hysterectomy. Here is her reaction:
I had to ask. If I have no cancer why would you put me at risk for major surgery for no reason? H was speechless for a moment, then stuttered slightly and said it was the hospital’s standard treatment. Then his mind was back in gear and he said that was down the road and we could talk about the risks involved with surgery versus having to get repeat paps and biopsies for years.
I have to wonder if there is a quota system for hysterectomies. Is there some national population control effort to give hysterectomies to healthy women? I don’t want to sound like a conspiracy theorist but why?
This is exactly how it sounds to me, by the way, except that I can, through medical astrology, tell in advance whether the thing will really develop towards cancer or not. (You would expect the learned doctors to be able to do that, but no, all they operate is based on the actual findings such as smears, Pap tests etc.)
Here is my comment on Mary’s blog:
Hi
I have read the newer parts of your blog with great interest and I have skimmed through the older parts as well. Yours is a classic story of what happens to the women in the USA. They start having certain gynecological problems and then “down the road” as your doctor has put it, they offer you a hysterectomy. They try to talk you into it, although in majority of cases, there is no real reason to do that. Indeed, if there is no cancer in sight, and you are otherwise healthy, why butcher your own body and expressly, at that?
Mary, there is a long road in front of you, but you have done what is actually needed: you have changed your life, starting with what you eat. That is the most important part of the equation, and now you need to find a modus of alternative treatment that you can apply on yourself, eventually, with low costs involved, and neither should you stop there. The more alternative treatments that you have in your disposal, the better. So, more learning is in order, and then you need to incorporate all that into your everyday life. But all of that is better than being cut for no reason at all!
I wish you all the best and I’ll try return to your blog within a few weeks to see what happens to you next.
Sincerely, Dusko Savic
the author of www.how-to-avoid-hysterectomy.com
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Has something like that happened to you!? Please comment!
Filed under Hysterectomy by Dusko Savic
January 18, 2008
Laugh More, Whine Less, and Hug Your Children a Little Longer
In astrology, the 8th house is about karma, sex and death. In real life, the end of the sexual intercourse is sometimes called “the little death”, as if something is gone, is going away from you and with it, as if you were somehow transformed. The cumulative role of reproductive organs is to inhale and exhale, to receive in and to let out, and what happens when you have hysterectomy — the surgical removal of the uterus — is that you cannot give any more, at least, not as a mother. But what if you already had your children, will it help you to bear easier the thought of forthcoming hysterectomy? Or, the thought of any other life-treathening surgery!?
Here is this beautiful post by Sabrina Prindiville. A mother of five, last winter she was diagnosed with a lump on her thyroid. For two long weeks she waited for the results, only to learn that the tumor is benign. And then, another tumor, which needed a hysterectomy. Touched by the thoughts of death, just when she found out that her 18 year old oldest son and his girlfriend were pregnant… We always know life is fragile, but do our best to conveniently keep forgetting it… until a surgery comes along, or we start thinking how our children would grow without us… or… or… or…
So her hysterectomy taught her to laugh more, whine less and hug her children a little longer. She also found the courage to compete and win a new career position, because it’s change or die, but you’re gonna die anyway one day, so why not change now and grab the life that you were born to and into?
ASTROLOGER’S NOTE
The moment I am writing this, Pluto is on 29.45 Sagittarius, and the moment I read her post, the Moon was on 29.50 Taurus, making as precise an inconjunction with the Pluto as it can be. Inconjunction is the “tweaking” of life that Sabrina went through, because of her reproductive organs (the Moon is the uterus, Pluto is a cut-away tumor, their inconjunction is a surgery such as hysterectomy.) The Moon is exalted in Taurus, where it secures life, and on the last degree of Taurus, the Moon has stopped producing life. Finally, now it is on 0.12 Gemini, the sign of blogs and short writing, so here am I, blogging about a hysterectomy irrevocably (Pluto) changing somebody’s life.
Filed under Astrology, Hysterectomy, Uterus by Dusko Savic
Here is a recent case in India — I’ll quote from the blog post from the Law and Other Things blog
“…the doctor began by conducting a diagnostic laparoscopy but followed it up immediately thereafter, having obtained additional consent only from the patient’s mother (as the patient was still unconscious), with a second and more elaborate treatment procedure (‘laparotomy’) that resulted in removal of the patient’s uterus and ovaries (hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy). [The patient, upset over this fact, refused to pay upon discharge. The doctor sued for recovery of charges and got a favorable ruling from the National Consumers' Commission. The patient appealed in the SC]. The consent form signed by the patient at the very beginning stated that the patient had been informed that the treatment to be undertaken is ‘diagnostic and therapeutic laparoscopy. Laparotomy may be needed’. The outcome of the case turned on the definition of ‘laparotomy’ – the word simply refers to opening the abdomen; so, in this instance, did it also imply consent to remove organs from the patient’s abdomen after it had been opened (as the doctor argued)? The court’s answer was in the negative and it emphasized that if that was indeed the case, the consent form ought to have read “”diagnostic and operative laparoscopy. Laparotomy, hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oopherectomy, if needed.”
It is a real life situation that has plagued many women who wanted their gynecological problems solved, and instead, ended up without their reproductive organs to the end of their days.
It really is in the discretion of the surgeon. The patient is unconscious, and may not be able to undergo another major surgery if the surgeon woke her up just in order to ask her whether she would like to have the foci of cancer, for example, preserved…
Now let’s reverse the situation. The consent only gave permission for some surgery and not for any radical surgery at all and let’s suppose that the surgeon visually found out the masses of cancerous tissue all over the uterus and abdomen? Wouldn’t he be neglecting his duty to cure if he just dully noticed that the patient is soon going to die but what the heck, there is no written consent, so let her wake up and then tell her the situation. Would she still be suing him for not operating properly on her?
The moral of the story is — you never know what will happen. And that is why I am always advocating avoiding hysterectomy if possible, not going for it like it’s a picnic… because it is not!
Filed under Hysterectomy, Laparoscopy, Laparotomy by Dusko Savic



































