Physiological mechanisms of bodily blockage: When estrogen encounters modern industrial pollution

2026-04-14

Once obesity develops in any part of your body, it tends to spread, causing water retention in fat cells, toxin buildup, and preventing the body from eliminating waste products. Obesity occurs when women ingest or produce high levels of estrogen, which helps eliminate waste from vital organs. Simultaneously, while this increased estrogen is eliminating waste, we are consuming chemically processed and unprocessed foods, as well as ingesting nicotine, alcohol, and caffeine.

The body is inherently incapable of processing these non-nutritive substances; it doesn't know how to handle them. While the liver can remove a certain amount of hormones from the blood, keeping it relatively clean, it cannot manage the surge in estrogen, nor can it withstand the onslaught of large amounts of toxic food and substances daily. No biological mechanism can eliminate the vast amounts of residual waste and the pollution that harms our bodies every day.

The body needs to process two types of waste: water-soluble and oil-soluble. The kidneys process the former, while the liver processes the latter. If all the waste entering our bodies had to be processed by the liver, we would become seriously ill due to liver problems. This is precisely why women are protected by a biological mechanism that transports waste to more remote areas. This is the main reason why the "victims" of obesity experience almost no unusual symptoms during the course of the disease.

Therefore, they don't realize obesity is developing until those pesky bulges appear, at which point they become aware of it. Naturally, they suffer more during treatment. But often, obese women feel no different from other women because hormones protect us, but they don't protect men. Patricia Davis says, "Obesity does act as a natural shield for those who can regenerate toxins. Many toxins are trapped in fat cells, but this is far better than them accumulating in the liver, kidneys, or arteries."

She pointed out, "Obesity is a condition caused by the invasion of toxic waste products into the cells of subcutaneous adipose tissue... Weak blood circulation and an inefficient lymphatic system are hidden dangers contributing to this disease. Women who work in sedentary jobs or have a sedentary lifestyle are most susceptible to this disease if they do not exercise regularly." Davis said another reason is eating foods with high levels of toxins-tea, coffee, beef and lamb, animal fats, and foods containing food colorings, spices, and chemical emulsions.

When the body has high toxin levels and poor circulation, obesity symptoms will develop. In the affected area, circulation deteriorates further, so the blood cannot adequately deliver the oxygen needed for life to the cells, and toxins accumulate inside the cells because the blood cannot remove them in time. The lymphatic system also becomes overworked and unable to effectively drain cellular fluid, thus halting circulation throughout the affected area. Now that we understand the causes of obesity, the next step is to address this condition.