What is Colon Cancer? Why Does It Appear?
COLON CANCER
In traditional medicine, colon cancer is attributed to a “malignant cell” that supposedly appears out of nowhere and begins devouring the body with the intent of consuming it entirely. It may sound absurd, but throughout my years in consultations, I have heard shocking ways in which doctors explain colon cancer to their patients. One was told, “Imagine you have a starving dog inside your body.” Another was told, “Your body has gone crazy and is attacking itself.” Someone else was warned that if those ‘malignant’ cells weren’t removed, they would completely destroy them. And another person was even told that if their tumor kept growing, they would eventually end up “vomiting feces.”
These types of diagnoses are not only brutal but also completely ignorant of the true nature of disease.
If you ask a mechanic what a specific car part is and what it does, they will confidently answer you with certainty. If you inquire about a failure or breakdown, they will logically explain the cause without instilling fear, but rather offering security and solutions. This is how knowledge should be shared—with clarity and confidence.
However, when we ask a doctor what cancer is and why it develops, we get a vastly different response. Instead of receiving a logical explanation, we are met with fear, uncertainty, and even anger. Doctors don’t actually understand the real cause of cancer. Some will simply deliver a lethal diagnosis, others avoid answering out of fear, and some will tell you that no one they know has survived this “evil disease”—blaming it on bad luck or an inexplicable, spontaneous process.
The Perspective of Germanic New Medicine (GNM)
Anyone familiar with Germanic New Medicine (GNM) can confidently answer what cancer is and why it develops. They will tell you that cancer is a Biological Special Program (SBS), with a precise and meaningful function, designed to help the body adapt to extreme situations.
Cancer does not appear randomly. It is triggered by a Biological Conflict Shock—a dramatic, unexpected event that catches a person off guard and is experienced in isolation. During the Active Phase (as defined by GNM), a specific area of the body undergoes an adaptation process to help the individual biologically cope with the situation.
To understand this, we must first recognize that the brain perceives all experiences as real, whether they are physical threats or symbolic conflicts. This means that the body reacts to situations as if they were actual, tangible events.
Making Sense of the Biological Response
Let’s use an analogy:
If you swallow a large piece of food, your stomach will increase acid production to help break it down. If the food remains undigested, your body will generate more acid by increasing the number of stomach cells that produce hydrochloric acid.
Now, imagine a psychological equivalent:
A person “swallows” a situation they cannot process. Let’s say they signed a work contract knowing their boss had the right to give them orders. However, after a month, the boss starts treating them terribly, humiliating them in front of others, and pushing them beyond their limits. They cannot “digest” this situation. Their brain registers this as an unresolved conflict, and the stomach activates a biological program to “digest” the situation by increasing acid production—just as it would for real food.
This adaptation mechanism is not a mistake or a failure; it is a biological necessity.
Think about the times you’ve had acid reflux before an important exam—you couldn’t “digest” the pressure. Or when you’ve had diarrhea after finishing a stressful project—your body released the “waste” of that situation once it was resolved.
Now, let’s apply this logic to the colon:
Why Would a Tumor Appear in the Colon?
First, we need to understand the function of the colon and then find a symbolic analogy to match it.
The colon is the final section of the digestive system, responsible for eliminating what has already been processed, absorbed, and is no longer needed. Its biological function is to remove waste.
A conflict related to the colon would therefore involve something the person has already “processed” but cannot let go of.
🔴 Key Conflict: A person who feels betrayed, cheated, or “screwed over” (a common expression in Spanish meaning “being deceived”).
💡 Biological Response: The colon creates additional cells (a tumor) to help break down and eliminate what the person perceives as “waste” they cannot get rid of emotionally.
Once the situation is fully resolved, the body activates tuberculosis bacteria (TB) to break down the tumor, which then exits through the stool. This is why some people experience bleeding in their feces during the healing phase.
Real Cases of Colon Cancer and Their Biological Meaning
Case 1: The Father’s Betrayal
A man was promised by his father that if he got married, he would receive the family house. Excited, he married his wife and moved in. However, one month later, his father demanded that he leave immediately because his new girlfriend wanted to live there instead.
This man had already “swallowed” the idea of the house, digested it, and was enjoying it. When his father took it away unexpectedly, he felt betrayed and deceived. His colon activated a biological program to help him “eliminate” the situation.
Case 2: A Ruined Dream Trip
A woman saved money for years to travel to Europe and visit her pregnant daughter. She and her husband bought their tickets and planned the perfect trip. However, a couple they knew begged them to join, promising they wouldn’t interfere. They reluctantly agreed.
When they arrived, the couple took over their plans, disrupted their time with their daughter, and ruined the experience. She spent the entire trip repeating to her husband: “They screwed up our vacation.”
Once she returned home, she resolved the conflict—the unwanted guests were finally gone. Her body triggered the healing phase, and a tumor in her colon broke down, leading to bleeding in her stool. Unfortunately, she went to the doctor, was diagnosed with colon cancer, and the medical intervention turned a natural healing process into a fearful experience.
Case 3: Family Abandonment
A man had to take his sick mother to the hospital every day, which made him miss work. He asked his siblings for help, but they all refused, claiming they were too busy. He felt betrayed and abandoned, repeating “My siblings screwed me over.”
His colon reacted by creating additional cells to “break down” this distressing situation. Later, when his mother recovered, his body naturally resolved the conflict, and his tumor disappeared. A month later, a medical check-up confirmed that the “cancer” was completely gone.
Final Thoughts
Colon cancer is not random, nor is it an attack by the body against itself. It is a biological response to an intense emotional experience that the person cannot let go of.
Understanding the true biological purpose of disease allows us to remove fear and take control of our health.
💡 Your body is not your enemy—it is always working to help you.
If you have been diagnosed with colon cancer, or if someone you know has, the first thing we need to eliminate is the fear of cancer, because the fatality of cancer only exists in the minds of doctors. You might think, “But I have seen many people die of cancer.” My question to you would be: Are you sure they died of cancer? It is true that many people, after being sentenced with the ghost of cancer, die. However, to explain this in detail, we would need several classes on German New Medicine. To summarize, people end up dying due to repeated relapses into their conflicts, extreme fear, lack of knowledge, and medical protocols that are not only highly invasive but also pure poison—any biologist can confirm this statement. In fact, if you research what chemotherapy is, you will realize that it is pure poison. The chemo-radiotherapy-surgery protocol depletes what little energy a person has left to survive, considering that before all this, they were already very exhausted and simply needed to rest.
Below are some general insights on the embryonic origin of the colon and the biological conflicts that trigger issues according to German New Medicine.

The tissue of the colon (or large intestine) belongs to the endodermal embryonic layer, which is controlled by the brainstem.
This tissue is affected when experiencing a biological conflict (DHS) related to an ugly, indigestible anger—not being able to eliminate something unpleasant, disgusting, vile. A common expression is: “They screwed me over!” or “I felt screwed over!”
During the active phase of this conflict:
What is called a “tumor” begins to grow, and what conventional medicine labels as adenocarcinoma appears.
- Flat-absorbing tumor: Forms to absorb the last available resources, aiming to “endure despite the unpleasant situation that cannot be eliminated” (thickening of the intestinal wall).
- Compact-cauliflower tumor: Forms to secrete more digestive juices and break down an obstruction.
- In the descending colon, a possible occlusion and constipation may appear.
Once the conflict is resolved:
Patients often report experiencing bleeding or cramps (which appear during the crisis or “epicrisis” phase, EC), possible night sweats or fever. This is due to the caseation process with tuberculosis—the degradation of the “tumor” during the healing phase (Pcla).
During the resolution phase, symptoms may include:
- Diarrhea, cramps, occasional bleeding
- Fungal infections, traveler’s diarrhea, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis—where bacteria work to break down the cancerous tumor
In the final stage of healing (Pclb), tissue repair (scarring) takes place.
Is surgery necessary?
In other words, when diagnosed with colon cancer, the body is already in the healing phase of the conflict. The best approach is to simply support the body’s natural repair process (through naturopathy, nutrition, etc.).
A surgical procedure or placement of a colostomy (“artificial anus”) could lead to new conflicts, such as self-devaluation, which could in turn cause other conditions—or what is mistakenly labeled as “metastasis.”

Responses