“Beyond The Diagnosis” on BrightU: How sadness, dehydration and a blocked fascia create cancer
- On Day 8 of “Beyond The Diagnosis,” Garry Lineham argues cancer is not primarily genetic or toxic but a physical manifestation of unresolved emotional sadness combined with a dehydrated and compressed body.
- He explains that fascial compression from prolonged sitting disrupts the piezoelectric effect, blocking the body’s internal light production.
- Lineham insists vitamin D is a hormone activated by light frequencies, not a supplement to be taken in pill form.
- He warns that no technology can fully substitute for nature and external therapies only treat symptoms if the underlying causes are ignored.
- The episode concludes that healing requires addressing emotional trauma, chronic dehydration and physical immobility rather than relying on symptom-focused treatments.
Brighteon University is streaming an episode a day of “Beyond The Diagnosis” by Jonathan Otto on May 9 to 20, and a replay of all 12 episodes on May 21 to 25. Register here to uncover a carefully built case against the narrative that chronic disease—from autism and autoimmune collapse to cancer and neurological decay—is a mystery or simply bad luck.
On Day 8, slated for May 16, host Jonathan Otto features health expert Garry Lineham who delivers a provocative exposé to both conventional and alternative medicine: Cancer is not primarily a genetic or toxic event, but a physical manifestation of unresolved emotional sadness combined with a dehydrated, compressed body.
Lineham argues that even advanced therapies like red light technology, while effective, risk becoming mere symptom-treating tools if they ignore what he calls the core trinity that lights the fuse for disease.
“There’s an emotion that’s sadness,” Lineham states. “So you take away your cancer with a light, or with a technology or even with a surgery, or however you want to do it, allopathically or whatever, if you don’t deal with the source of it, it’s going to come back and that’s why people get secondary, third cancers.”
According to Lineham, the body must have specific preconditions for cancer to develop: Dehydration creates an acidic base and fascial compression, caused by sedentary, chair-bound modern lifestyles, blocks the body’s natural ability to generate light and energy internally.
Fascial compression and internal light
Lineham explains that when fascia becomes compressed and rotated through prolonged sitting and lack of movement, it disrupts a critical biological process known as the piezoelectric effect, the body’s natural ability to create light.
“You said light therapy, we know that works,” Lineham says. “So when you compress and rotate fascia, you create a piezoelectric or light transference in the fascia. So the fascia itself, the body itself, creates light.”
As noted by BrightU.AI‘s Enoch, light therapy is a medical treatment that involves exposure to specific wavelengths of artificial light, primarily used to treat circadian rhythm disorders like seasonal affective disorder (SAD). It works by stimulating the brain’s production of serotonin and regulating the sleep-wake cycle, effectively improving mood and energy levels.
This revelation challenges the assumption that external light therapies, however beneficial, are the primary solution. Lineham insists that restoring the body’s own internal light production through fascial release is even more powerful.
“What’s more powerful is to just actually create the flow in the fascia,” he says. “You can put supplements, you can put therapy, you can do anything you want to the body, but what causes the body to fail is stress, dehydration and compression.”
Lineham points to modern society’s fundamental flaw: we no longer move in ways that maintain health. Even regular walking, he argues, is insufficient. “Movement is required for life to be maintained,” Lineham stated. “And the less we move, the shorter our life is going to be. And our current society today is that we walk on flat surfaces, we don’t move very much, our shoulders tighten up, which means that our chests tighten up and we start breathing literally from our chest.”
He draws a direct line from sitting in chairs to impaired lung function: “I’m sitting in a chair right now, which means that it’s constricting, right now, my lower rib cage. And if you sit in a chair and you constrict your lower rib cage, your lungs aren’t going to expand in the bottom of your lungs, where you actually deliver all the oxygen into your tissue.”
Vitamin D as hormone, not supplement
Lineham also challenges conventional wisdom about vitamin D, which he insists is a hormone activated by specific light frequencies—not something to be taken in pill form. “Most people think of vitamin D as a supplement,” Lineham said.
“Vitamin D is a hormone and that hormone is activated by light. And taking a supplement to get vitamin D, yes, you can boost your levels, but that’s actually not the way to do it; it’s actually to activate that hormone through the frequency that your body responds to, so that hormone releases,” he continued.
He credits his daily regimen of red light therapy, UVA and UVB exposure, combined with time in natural sunlight without sunscreen, for maintaining optimal vitamin D levels without any supplementation. While acknowledging the value of light therapy and other technologies, Lineham issues a stark warning: technology can never fully substitute for nature.
“All technology that works resembles something in nature,” he explained. “There is no substitute, long-term. There is no technology, long-term, that is going to substitute you doing the right things. And technology is to help us when we’re not capable of doing the right things, but if we depend upon technology even to do the right things, it will fail over a period of time. You can emulate nature, but you cannot replicate the effects of nature.”
Lineham’s message reframes the entire approach to healing: instead of chasing high-tech cures, individuals must address the foundational issues of emotional trauma, chronic dehydration and physical immobility.
“Everybody wants to fix a problem, but what they’re doing is fixing this symptom of a problem,” Lineham says. “All health that I see today, including the origin of practices and ancient practices, they’re being delivered to fix a symptom. It’s cascading series and at the origin of it is you have to be able to move well, sleep well and you have to have good water, you have to have good light and if you have that with good oxygen and clean oxygen, you’ll be successful.”
The episode serves as both a critique of modern medicine’s symptom-focused approach and a roadmap for those willing to go deeper, addressing not just what ails the body, but why the conditions for disease were created in the first place.
Want to learn more?
The series is streaming for a limited time. This is your front-row seat to the conversations medicine has been designed to avoid. If you want to view the series at your own pace, you can purchase the “Beyond The Diagnosis” gold premium package here.
Upon purchase, you will get instant and unlimited access to all 12 episodes of the series, 12 bonus episodes, full-length interviews with all 60+ experts, free autoimmune health assessment including a 1-on-1 consultation with a specialized health advisor, four live group coaching sessions with Jonathan Otto, two live masterclasses, nine “Beyond the Diagnosis” eBooks, five-part mini-series titled “The Nervous System Reset: Nature’s Way to Reverse Chronic Illness” and more.
Watch the trailer for “Beyond The Diagnosis” by Jonathan Otto.
This video is from the BrightU channel on Brighteon.com.
Sources include:
BrighteonUniversity.com 1
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BrightU.com
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