This book is not medical advice. It is a radical shift in how you understand health, illness, and personal responsibility. In How to Kill Cancer Cells in 33 Days, Gabriel Nicolaev — CyGuru presents a bold, integrative perspective on cancer and chronic illness, exploring how emotional stress, lifestyle imbalance, microbiome disruption, identity collapse, and long-term internal pressure can shape the body’s internal environment. Rather than focusing on fear, statistics, or false promises, this book invites readers to understand terrain — the emotional, energetic, and lifestyle conditions in which health or illness develops — and how conscious change at these levels can support wellbeing alongside professional medical care. Inside this book, you will explore: • Why long-term emotional stress and suppressed feelings affect the body • How identity, self-neglect, and chronic survival mode weaken resilience • The role of the microbiome, parasites, and internal balance in overall health • How lifestyle, emotional awareness, and nervous system regulation matter • The concept of frequency, coherence, and personal responsibility in wellbeing • The 33-Day Nicolaev Protocol, a structured framework focused on emotional clarity, lifestyle reset, inner awareness, and identity transformation • The Karmogram™, a self-reflection system designed to identify recurring emotional and behavioral patterns • A long-term lifestyle model focused on stability, self-respect, and emotional intelligence This book does not ask you to reject medicine. It does not promise cures or guaranteed outcomes. It asks a deeper question: What if health is not something you chase — but something you become? Written for readers interested in holistic wellbeing, mind–body awareness, emotional intelligence, and integrative health perspectives, this book is designed to complement — not replace — professional medical guidance. If you are ready to explore health beyond symptoms, take responsibility for your inner environment, and build a life based on clarity, balance, and self-respect, this book offers a powerful framework for reflection and change. This is not about fighting disease. It is about changing the environment in which health exists.