What perspective are you coming from?
There's an M.D. who is making a big splash about their new book, which discusses what they call "health outliers" -- people who overcame their "incurable" or "terminal" illnesses and were "mysteriously healed."
And if you're coming from the standard medical perspective, as that person is, it makes sense that the people who get good results are "outliers," and that healing is "mysterious" -- because that system is not focusing on creating the conditions that allow for healing to take place.
If the system you're operating within views the people who actually get better as "outliers," and healing as "mysterious"... maybe it's time to examine why that system isn't getting better results.
When you're coming from the perspective of fully knowing of the body's capability to heal... when you're operating in terms of creating the right conditions (for that body, at that time) for healing to take place... these sort of "spontaneous remissions" can happen all the time.
[Confession: I can't stand the term "spontaneous remission." It makes it sound like people just get better out of nowhere, for no reason... a terminology used by a system that lacks the perspective to explain it, simply because it usually occurs outside the context of that system!]
The reality is, the people who get better have created the conditions that have allowed the body to heal.
Most of the time, it's not some one-off "miracle." Most of the time, there is considerable effort, and strategy, involved.
But it's not impossible, and it certainly doesn't need to be mysterious or rare.
It's time for a collective perspective shift!
I know I want to live in a world where people healing from chronic illness are the norm, and not "outliers." Who's with me?