Certain death-producing illnesses are usually traced back to the everyday happenings of one’s lifestyle and emotional trauma has become associated with the roots of Crohn’s disease. This includes, but is not limited to: foods eaten, water and other beverage choices, pollutants we inhale, everyday thoughts that enter our mind, toxins one may be exposed to on a regular basis, including those used to clean up around the house.
Studies have shown that all illnesses originate from repressed traumatic memories from an earlier time in life.Human relationships, notably from a mother to her children, is the basis of all, if any emotional trauma, which can lead to various illnesses later in life, such as Crohn’s disease. When there is pain, it can turn into physical and emotional damage later in life.
These questions come into play and can answer some of the questions about why some people are experienced severe medical conditions such as the inflammation in Crohn’s disease and other medical conditions at such an early age, some as young as 40 or 50 years old.
People are dying as a result of heart diseases, blood diseases, various cancers, autoimmune diseases and the list doesn’t stop there.

Emotional trauma associated with Crohn's Disease
Many people are falling victim of diseases related to the colon. If you have such diseases as Crohn’s disease and have emotional trauma on more than one occasion, you are susceptible.
Doctors say that emotional trauma is the number-one cause deep-rooted that can be associated with Crohn’s disease.
Statistics show that the exact cause of Crohns’s disease has not yet been arrived at, autoimmune and genetic factors are thought to play a role in its beginnings. About 5 per cent of those with Crohn’s disease have one or more affected relatives; the Jewish ancestry also happens to have a high risk factor.
Signs commonly associated with Crohn’s disease are: diarrhea, cramping in the stomach, anorexia, low-grade fever, and it can also be traced back to emotionally-triggered trauma.
The reported cases of Crohn’s disease and the emotional trauma that can come with it has gone up steadily over the past 50 years.