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Schizophrenia - serloco - 11-05-2017

Soooo i discovered that many on this path are led into what many people call schizophrenia. Hearing voices, hallucinations and paranoid delusions often are result. Now its no secret that big pharma does NOT want to cure you. However I have discovered a cure for this ailment. Its cheap and simple and safe. Its a normal vitamin called niacin. Its vitamin B3. It cures depression and bi-polar as well. The word cure is not even in the psychiatric text books for mental illnesses. Its no big surprise as the pharma industry controls medicine. They pend 6 billion a year on advertisements to the doctors alone.


Schizophrenia - Pixie Dust - 11-05-2017

Smile  

I've found a handful of studies just a moment ago supporting what you've said here and in the video you linked.  It's fascinating that a simple solution has been known and yet I've never heard of psychiatrists prescribing niacin.  

The mental health industry isn't out to cure people.  It's a damn shame.  

If anyone wants doi numbers to the peer-reviewed scholarly studies, I can link to some interesting studies if there are other nerds out there interested in this stuff.  Just ask.


Schizophrenia - serloco - 11-05-2017

I was on a psych forum, I do research there and help people cure and cop with illness. I am passing the info around.


Schizophrenia - serloco - 11-05-2017

http://www.doctoryourself.com/hoffer_niacin.html


Schizophrenia - Pixie Dust - 11-05-2017

I'll join you there.  Been looking for a more productive way to spend my time.  Thanks.


Schizophrenia - serloco - 11-05-2017

Oh the forum is called psychcentral. If you want to come.


Schizophrenia - serloco - 11-05-2017

I've had a few episodes myself and I cant wait to try Niacin. They say however that if you have had yoru condition for a long time then it takes longer to cure your condition.


Schizophrenia - serloco - 11-10-2017

So I did loads of research tha big pharma would not have wanted me to do. I found that Ginkgo, Ginseng, and Bacopa work as strong as anti-psychotics, and with no side-effects if taken properly. I ordered them all. I also found vitamins B complex, niacin, C, D, E, and fish oil were excellent and proven effective at reducing and even eliminating the symptoms of the condition. I bought all of them. I feel so great too. No voices, no hallucinations, no split mind fighting me. I feel excellent and ready to take on the world. Not to mention that these vitamins and herbs have a lot of other beneificla properties. Especially with the mind. I am sharp and alert.  Look out!


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

What is a desise?
“Every disease originates from a shock or trauma that cought us completely by surprise.” 


The Missing Information for Helping to Heal Different Types of Mental Illness

The different types of mental illness, like all illness, are not caused by improperly functioning or inferior machinery. As with all other forms of disease, mental illness is an evolved, biologically-appropriate response to a person’s life experience.

We’ll focus unconsciously on our problem night and day until it is resolved. The physical and mental symptoms appear differently only according to the type of life experience that has occurred, whether it has been ongoing or has been solved, and other related factors.
However, in the case of mental illness, the primary physical outcome is not growth of extra tissue somewhere in the body, or a change in the way some body system functions. Instead, mental illnesses involve one or more physical symptoms of extreme hypsersensitivity, psychosis, compulsive behaviour, memory problems, disorientation, or apathy.


1. Extreme hypersensitivity, in one or more of the five senses, leading to an extremely elevated level of sensory awareness, leading to extremely altered perception of reality. This normally results from having the sensory part of both sides of the brain involved at once.
These types of mental illness symptoms include:
paranoia
cacosmia (paranoia about smells)
tinnitis (ringing in the ears)
acrophobia (fear of heights)
auditory hallucinations
tactile defensiveness


2. Psychosis, including dissociation, which means a sense of unreality or a feeling of being part of a radically different reality from normal - or of simply disconnecting from the physical world altogether. This results from being directed by the two hemispheres of the cerebral cortex to deal with life situations that call for opposite reactions.
If this occurs during the first seven years of life (including before birth), it will result in developmental arrest for the entire duration that the pair of conflicts continues. Developmental arrest or even regression will recur each time that pair of conflicts recurs.
Types of mental illness that involve psychosis include:
panic disorder/anxiety attacks
out-of-body sensations
mythodepression (racing thoughts that can’t be expressed)
nymphodepression (men or women - thinking about sex constantly)
deep shame
catatonia
anorexia
obsessive thoughts of the afterlife, death, extistentialism


3. Compulsive or uncontrolled behaviour, including addictions, resulting from strong conflicting feelings when the brain responds to two (or more) conflicts by requiring us to undertake conflicting actions.
compulsive behaviours such as extreme neatness
workaholism
rages
bulimia
suicidal thoughts, desires, or efforts
self-mutilation
alcoholism
other addictions


4. Memory problems and blanking out, which result specifically from separation conflicts. This isn’t in itself usually described as one of the types of mental illness, but it plays an important role in several diagnoses of other types of mental illness or mental problems, including multiple personality disorder and Alzheimer’s disease.

5. Disorientation, which results specifically from conflict experiences handled by both the left and the right side of pons of the brainstem.

6. Sociopathy or apathy - a feeling of complete absence of emotion. This results specifically from a pair of conflicts handled by certain positions on either side of the cerebellum (little brain).


Basically, most of the many types of mental illness result from the brain requiring us to respond to two (or more) experiences with opposite or conflicting responses.
Although any animal can (and does) experience mental illness, the phenomenon is far more prevalent in our own species. The reason has to do with the fact that most diagnosed types of mental illnesses result from brain constellations in the cerebral cortex: the wrinkly outer bark of the brain. This part of the brain is what we use to sense and react to our environment.
In humans, the cerebral cortex is extremely large compared to that of most animals. This is because humans are social beings and the most important part of our immediate environment is other people. So our cerebral cortices are often called upon to deal with conflicts that have to do with our territory and threats that occur in our territory.
In other words, many types of mental illness are the result of relationship problems.
We also experience many types of mental illness because civilized life does not provide many opportunities for appropriate resolution of our cortical conflicts. Many of our conflicts can’t legally be handled the way we subconsciously want to handle them - by fighting, for example.
The reason that cerebral cortex conflicts can produce psychosis is that the two hemispheres of the brain respond differently from one another:


Depression
The right side of the cerebral cortex responds to events that are under its “jurisdiction” by becoming contemplative, going within, becoming introverted, and only thinking about the present moment. This is called depression.
Depressive types of mental illness include things like:
depression - inability to get motivated, 
territorial anger, 
feeling too powerful, need to hold back,
feeling everyone wants to take what you have,
inability to express strong feelings or to connect with others, 
feeling insulted/disrespected
Mania
The left half of the cortex of the brain responds to events that are part of its responsibility by taking action, focusing outward, and by rapidly comparing past and future, making quick judgments, and “leaping before you look.” This is called mania.


Manic types of mental illness include things like:
mania - inability to just compose yourself and allow yourself to think up a logical response,
feeling rejected,
inability to hide your feelings from others, 
jumping from one position to another, feeling like you agree with all sides of the story,
feeling like you want what others have 
Nature has evolved many kinds of very complex responses to various kinds of situations, because these responses give us a better chance of survival. What conventional medicine diagnoses as various types of mental illness, the German New Medicine healer sees as a pattern of life experiences to which the human being is responding.
This compassionate viewpoint is the missing piece of the puzzle to finding the cause (and cure) for all types of mental illness.


Schizophrenia - Djete - 11-11-2017

The Missing Information for Helping to Heal Different Types of Mental Illness

The different types of mental illness, like all illness, are not caused by improperly functioning or inferior machinery. As with all other forms of disease, mental illness is an evolved, biologically-appropriate response to a person’s life experience.

We’ll focus unconsciously on our problem night and day until it is resolved. The physical and mental symptoms appear differently only according to the type of life experience that has occurred, whether it has been ongoing or has been solved, and other related factors.
However, in the case of mental illness, the primary physical outcome is not growth of extra tissue somewhere in the body, or a change in the way some body system functions. Instead, mental illnesses involve one or more physical symptoms of extreme hypsersensitivity, psychosis, compulsive behaviour, memory problems, disorientation, or apathy.


1. Extreme hypersensitivity, in one or more of the five senses, leading to an extremely elevated level of sensory awareness, leading to extremely altered perception of reality. This normally results from having the sensory part of both sides of the brain involved at once.
These types of mental illness symptoms include:
paranoia
cacosmia (paranoia about smells)
tinnitis (ringing in the ears)
acrophobia (fear of heights)
auditory hallucinations
tactile defensiveness


2. Psychosis, including dissociation, which means a sense of unreality or a feeling of being part of a radically different reality from normal - or of simply disconnecting from the physical world altogether. This results from being directed by the two hemispheres of the cerebral cortex to deal with life situations that call for opposite reactions.
If this occurs during the first seven years of life (including before birth), it will result in developmental arrest for the entire duration that the pair of conflicts continues. Developmental arrest or even regression will recur each time that pair of conflicts recurs.
Types of mental illness that involve psychosis include:
panic disorder/anxiety attacks
out-of-body sensations
mythodepression (racing thoughts that can’t be expressed)
nymphodepression (men or women - thinking about sex constantly)
deep shame
catatonia
anorexia
obsessive thoughts of the afterlife, death, extistentialism


3. Compulsive or uncontrolled behaviour, including addictions, resulting from strong conflicting feelings when the brain responds to two (or more) conflicts by requiring us to undertake conflicting actions.
compulsive behaviours such as extreme neatness
workaholism
rages
bulimia
suicidal thoughts, desires, or efforts
self-mutilation
alcoholism
other addictions


4. Memory problems and blanking out, which result specifically from separation conflicts. This isn’t in itself usually described as one of the types of mental illness, but it plays an important role in several diagnoses of other types of mental illness or mental problems, including multiple personality disorder and Alzheimer’s disease.

5. Disorientation, which results specifically from conflict experiences handled by both the left and the right side of pons of the brainstem.

6. Sociopathy or apathy - a feeling of complete absence of emotion. This results specifically from a pair of conflicts handled by certain positions on either side of the cerebellum (little brain).


Basically, most of the many types of mental illness result from the brain requiring us to respond to two (or more) experiences with opposite or conflicting responses.
Although any animal can (and does) experience mental illness, the phenomenon is far more prevalent in our own species. The reason has to do with the fact that most diagnosed types of mental illnesses result from brain constellations in the cerebral cortex: the wrinkly outer bark of the brain. This part of the brain is what we use to sense and react to our environment.
In humans, the cerebral cortex is extremely large compared to that of most animals. This is because humans are social beings and the most important part of our immediate environment is other people. So our cerebral cortices are often called upon to deal with conflicts that have to do with our territory and threats that occur in our territory.
In other words, many types of mental illness are the result of relationship problems.
We also experience many types of mental illness because civilized life does not provide many opportunities for appropriate resolution of our cortical conflicts. Many of our conflicts can’t legally be handled the way we subconsciously want to handle them - by fighting, for example.
The reason that cerebral cortex conflicts can produce psychosis is that the two hemispheres of the brain respond differently from one another:


Depression
The right side of the cerebral cortex responds to events that are under its “jurisdiction” by becoming contemplative, going within, becoming introverted, and only thinking about the present moment. This is called depression.
Depressive types of mental illness include things like:
depression - inability to get motivated, 
territorial anger, 
feeling too powerful, need to hold back,
feeling everyone wants to take what you have,
inability to express strong feelings or to connect with others, 
feeling insulted/disrespected
Mania
The left half of the cortex of the brain responds to events that are part of its responsibility by taking action, focusing outward, and by rapidly comparing past and future, making quick judgments, and “leaping before you look.” This is called mania.


Manic types of mental illness include things like:
mania - inability to just compose yourself and allow yourself to think up a logical response,
feeling rejected,
inability to hide your feelings from others, 
jumping from one position to another, feeling like you agree with all sides of the story,
feeling like you want what others have 
Nature has evolved many kinds of very complex responses to various kinds of situations, because these responses give us a better chance of survival. What conventional medicine diagnoses as various types of mental illness, the German New Medicine healer sees as a pattern of life experiences to which the human being is responding.
This compassionate viewpoint is the missing piece of the puzzle to finding the cause (and cure) for all types of mental illness.


Schizophrenia - Djete - 11-11-2017

What is an illness?
“Every disease originates from a shock or trauma that catches us completely by surprise.”


The Missing Information for Helping to Heal Different Types of Mental Illness

The different types of mental illness, like all illness, are not caused by improperly functioning or inferior machinery. As with all other forms of disease, mental illness is an evolved, biologically-appropriate response to a person’s life experience.

We’ll focus unconsciously on our problem night and day until it is resolved. The physical and mental symptoms appear differently only according to the type of life experience that has occurred, whether it has been ongoing or has been solved, and other related factors.
However, in the case of mental illness, the primary physical outcome is not growth of extra tissue somewhere in the body, or a change in the way some body system functions. Instead, mental illnesses involve one or more physical symptoms of extreme hypsersensitivity, psychosis, compulsive behaviour, memory problems, disorientation, or apathy.


1. Extreme hypersensitivity, in one or more of the five senses, leading to an extremely elevated level of sensory awareness, leading to extremely altered perception of reality. This normally results from having the sensory part of both sides of the brain involved at once.
These types of mental illness symptoms include:
paranoia
cacosmia (paranoia about smells)
tinnitis (ringing in the ears)
acrophobia (fear of heights)
auditory hallucinations
tactile defensiveness


2. Psychosis, including dissociation, which means a sense of unreality or a feeling of being part of a radically different reality from normal - or of simply disconnecting from the physical world altogether. This results from being directed by the two hemispheres of the cerebral cortex to deal with life situations that call for opposite reactions.
If this occurs during the first seven years of life (including before birth), it will result in developmental arrest for the entire duration that the pair of conflicts continues. Developmental arrest or even regression will recur each time that pair of conflicts recurs.
Types of mental illness that involve psychosis include:
panic disorder/anxiety attacks
out-of-body sensations
mythodepression (racing thoughts that can’t be expressed)
nymphodepression (men or women - thinking about sex constantly)
deep shame
catatonia
anorexia
obsessive thoughts of the afterlife, death, extistentialism


3. Compulsive or uncontrolled behaviour, including addictions, resulting from strong conflicting feelings when the brain responds to two (or more) conflicts by requiring us to undertake conflicting actions.
compulsive behaviours such as extreme neatness
workaholism
rages
bulimia
suicidal thoughts, desires, or efforts
self-mutilation
alcoholism
other addictions


4. Memory problems and blanking out, which result specifically from separation conflicts. This isn’t in itself usually described as one of the types of mental illness, but it plays an important role in several diagnoses of other types of mental illness or mental problems, including multiple personality disorder and Alzheimer’s disease.

5. Disorientation, which results specifically from conflict experiences handled by both the left and the right side of pons of the brainstem.

6. Sociopathy or apathy - a feeling of complete absence of emotion. This results specifically from a pair of conflicts handled by certain positions on either side of the cerebellum (little brain).


Basically, most of the many types of mental illness result from the brain requiring us to respond to two (or more) experiences with opposite or conflicting responses.
Although any animal can (and does) experience mental illness, the phenomenon is far more prevalent in our own species. The reason has to do with the fact that most diagnosed types of mental illnesses result from brain constellations in the cerebral cortex: the wrinkly outer bark of the brain. This part of the brain is what we use to sense and react to our environment.
In humans, the cerebral cortex is extremely large compared to that of most animals. This is because humans are social beings and the most important part of our immediate environment is other people. So our cerebral cortices are often called upon to deal with conflicts that have to do with our territory and threats that occur in our territory.
In other words, many types of mental illness are the result of relationship problems.
We also experience many types of mental illness because civilized life does not provide many opportunities for appropriate resolution of our cortical conflicts. Many of our conflicts can’t legally be handled the way we subconsciously want to handle them - by fighting, for example.
The reason that cerebral cortex conflicts can produce psychosis is that the two hemispheres of the brain respond differently from one another:


Depression
The right side of the cerebral cortex responds to events that are under its “jurisdiction” by becoming contemplative, going within, becoming introverted, and only thinking about the present moment. This is called depression.
Depressive types of mental illness include things like:
depression - inability to get motivated, 
territorial anger, 
feeling too powerful, need to hold back,
feeling everyone wants to take what you have,
inability to express strong feelings or to connect with others, 
feeling insulted/disrespected
Mania
The left half of the cortex of the brain responds to events that are part of its responsibility by taking action, focusing outward, and by rapidly comparing past and future, making quick judgments, and “leaping before you look.” This is called mania.


Manic types of mental illness include things like:
mania - inability to just compose yourself and allow yourself to think up a logical response,
feeling rejected,
inability to hide your feelings from others, 
jumping from one position to another, feeling like you agree with all sides of the story,
feeling like you want what others have 
Nature has evolved many kinds of very complex responses to various kinds of situations, because these responses give us a better chance of survival. What conventional medicine diagnoses as various types of mental illness, the German New Medicine healer sees as a pattern of life experiences to which the human being is responding.
This compassionate viewpoint is the missing piece of the puzzle to finding the cause (and cure) for all types of mental illness.


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

How do i post a longer reply :S?


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

Oh i did..sorry


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

no worries Smile. Interesting post. I deleted the duplicate one and will also delete these two above "How do i post a longer reply :S?" & "Oh i did..sorry" (along with this short notification for your benefit). I am not aware of a post length limit.


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

Thanks, when on tapatalk app i can see only the last two paragraphs but when on browser, everything is shown ... delete this aswell x


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

It is good, I find, to give references when quoting. I found that you are quoting (ex-)Dr. Hamer and talk about as you mentioned the German New Medicine.

“Every disease originates from a shock or trauma that catches us completely by surprise.” (ex-)Dr. Hamer

I am not disputing this as I subscribe to a shamanic view which is somewhat similar in effect. I wonder if Dr. Hamer went into why certain beings are born with illnesses (how do illnesses come to be in beings that did not almost start to live yet? - beings that we could think have not developed the capacity to be caught by surprise). 

How does he approach healing shocks and traumas?


Schizophrenia - Djete - 11-11-2017

At the end of my (whole) post there is a reference (?)


“<The term “track” is one that comes up often in my GNM consultations. Tracks are subconscious reminders of the dhs (trauma) that will reopen the original biological program (disease.)

The challenge with any German New Medicine session is to properly address these reminders that can delay a complete healing.

At the moment of the conflict-shock, the psyche is wide open and processing billions of bits of information. What we need to understand is that at the time a person may have experienced a shock the psyche will actually record whatever stimuli were in the environment at that moment in time.

So how do we inactivate any given track response?

By unearthing the original biological conflict and understanding how the presence of the track, in whatever form, was a part of that snapshot-in-time, so it is released by the psyche and no longer triggers the response.
So, in practical application how successful are we with deactivating the tracks? Well, that all depends. If the issue at hand is relatively ‘fresh’ it can be simple to ascertain the original conflict and associated tracks. If the issue has been longstanding for decades, we may have dozens upon dozens of tracks that have built up due to recurring relapse, presenting challenges. The individuals willingness to become mindful and plays a role as well.

Unless these subconscious reminders are made conscious, a vicious cycle ensues.

These stimuli or reminders need to be made conscious otherwise a vicious cycle ensues.

It’s sometime just a subtle feeling, a fleeting thought or nuance that releases the conflict.

Since I figured that out, I’ve been fine. It still can ocassionally sneak in, but I nip it in the bud. GNM is in my opinion 100% accurate and precise – it’s just these damn tracks! ;’) >”

Links

http://www.newmedicineonline.com/relapse-tracks-gnm/
https://www.newmedicineonline.com/the-f ... -medicine/
http://learninggnm.com/SBS/documents/fi ... gical_Laws


Schizophrenia - Pixie Dust - 11-11-2017

Yes, I agree there should be citations in that opinionated perspective.  Doesn't need to be APA style either.  Just make an effort to cite so that you avoid being yet another keyboard warrior.  

Thanks.

Edit: I see references, but they're not actual studies. Be careful about basing opinions on websites. Usually people base opinions on peer reviewed studies, but I guess you chose not to. That's fine, it's just not an educated opinion. For people like me, it's just a comical opinion. Fortunately, most here aren't like me so you're safe.

Go forth and perpetuate your misinformation with enthusiasm.


Schizophrenia - Djete - 11-11-2017

INTRA-UTERINE CONFLICTS

Based on his comprehensive research, Dr. Hamer has established that the symptoms of Down syndrome result from biological conflict shocks suffered by the fetus in the course of the embryonic development, specifically during the first trimester of pregnancy.

In the human psyche, “hearing conflicts” correlate to age-old biological codes signalizing potential dangers or threats. During pregnancy a fetus can suffer biological conflicts just as much as any newborn, infant, child, or adult. Intra-uterine "hearing conflicts" can be caused by ear-piercing music, lawn mowers, noisy machines such as drilling tools held close to the belly, constant loud street noise particularly from trucks, motor cycles and car racing, or noise from saws or jack hammers, as in Anna's case. Yelling and screaming in the immediate environment can also provoke the conflict. In the womb, any such noises are perceived particularly loudly because the fluid in the amniotic sac is a much stronger sound conductor than air is.

Naturally, every child is different, which is why loud noises do not automatically cause “hearing conflicts” or any other conflicts per se in every unborn child. Some are more sensitive than others. If conflicts should occur however, it is the subjective experience that determines what symptoms manifest as a result of the particular shock. This explains why each child with Down syndrome has its own set of symptoms.

Research into fetal development leaves little doubt that during gestation a fetus feels and behaves no differently from a newborn. This includes the response of the fetus to noise. Pregnant women often feel a jerk or sudden kick from the fetus following a sudden loud noise, like a door slam for example. Thus the sound the fetus hears in the uterus during ultrasound procedures might well be far more harmful than we think. Dr. Fatemi of the Mayo Foundation's Ultrasound Research Laboratory in Rochester, Minnesota, discovered that during ultrasound exams, the “fetuses are actually in an agitated state due to the loud noises they are hearing”, and that “ultrasound vibrations sound like the high tones of a piano, at about the same volume as an approaching subway train.” (Ultra Hearing Fetus ACF NEWSOURCE)

Since it is conventionally assumed that a woman's risk of having a child with Down syndrome rises sharply after 35 years of age, older mothers tend to undergo more ultrasound exams than women who are younger. Repetitive ultrasound procedures might therefore be the real reason why women of this age group are more likely to give birth to a Down syndrome child.

Together with hearing conflicts, a fetus can suffer one or several additional biological conflicts.

For example:

Motor conflicts. The fetus can perceive loud noises, including the ultrasound noise, as a threat, experienced as “not being able to escape” and “feeling stuck”, resulting in muscle atrophy and motor paralysis. Anna, for example, had a clumsy gait and often fell, because of the partial paralysis of both legs.

Separation conflicts. Since in gestation, an unborn child is unable to differentiate between 'harmless' noises, such as chain saws or jack hammers, and noises which pose potential danger to himself or to his mother, the fetus can suffer an extreme fear of separation from the mother, particularly when the overwhelming noise drowns out the comforting sound of her heart beat. Separation conflicts involve either the periosteum (skin that covers the bones) causing sensory paralysis (numbness) at the location where the separation was experienced, or the epidermis, resulting in neurodermatitis and other skin disorders.

Existence conflicts involving the kidney collecting tubules and the nerves that control the eye muscles. The latter cause the eye(s) to wander laterally. This is why Anna was born with strabismus extropia, her left eye tending to pull outwards.

Scare-Fright conflicts affecting the bronchi or the larynx, including the speech centre that controls the ability to speak.

If the umbilical cord is wrapped around the neck, the baby can suffer a “fear of suffocation”. This specific type of conflict involves the goblet cells of the bronchi. In embryology, goblet cells are considered residual intestinal cells. During growth and development of the respiratory system, the (endodermal) lung alveoli cells, created to process oxygen, form from the endodermal cells of the intestinal mucosa. The function of the goblet cells is to produce fluid in the bronchi, equivalent to the production of digestive juices in the intestines. Just as the intestinal cells proliferate with a biological conflict related to a “food morsel”, the goblet islet cells immediately increase in number in response to the shock of not getting enough air. The biological purpose of the additional goblet cells is to increase the fluid production in the bronchi so that the “air morsel” can be more quickly “digested”. During the healing phase, the goblet cells are broken down with the help of TB bacteria. However, if the healing process is continuously interrupted by conflict relapses, this causes mucoviscidosis in the bronchi or so-called cystic fibrosis. The same can occur when the umbilical cord is cut too early, because the lungs of the newborn need a certain amount of time to get used to independent breathing.

A common conflict triggered during a difficult delivery or by the way the newborn is handled, is a territorial anger conflict, involving the bile ducts of the liver with hepatitis in the healing phase.

http://learninggnm.com/SBS/documents/un ... eases.html


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

Djete can you give an example? An example of a 'track' and an example how one can tackle/properly address/deactivate/heal that.

An example of "unearthing the original biological conflict and understanding how the presence of the track, in whatever form, was a part of that snapshot-in-time, so it is released by the psyche and no longer triggers the response."

an example of "subconscious reminders... made conscious"

thnx.


Schizophrenia - Pixie Dust - 11-11-2017

I'm curious when he'll begin talking about the antivaxers.


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

watergaze wroteBig Grinjete can you give an example? An example of a 'track' and an example how one can tackle/properly address/deactivate/heal that.

An example of "unearthing the original biological conflict and understanding how the presence of the track, in whatever form, was a part of that snapshot-in-time, so it is released by the psyche and no longer triggers the response."

an example of "subconscious reminders... made conscious"

thnx. 
Example? Of how?
Well by assuming responsibility for oneself, the whole being, for conciouss, unconciouss and superconciouss and voila! A süper human, a German! Big Grin


Schizophrenia - Djete - 11-11-2017

watergaze wroteBig Grinjete can you give an example? An example of a 'track' and an example how one can tackle/properly address/deactivate/heal that.

An example of "unearthing the original biological conflict and understanding how the presence of the track, in whatever form, was a part of that snapshot-in-time, so it is released by the psyche and no longer triggers the response."

an example of "subconscious reminders... made conscious"

thnx. 
Example? Of how?
Well by assuming responsibility for oneself, the whole being, for conciouss, unconciouss and superconciouss and voila! A süper human, a German! Big Grin


Schizophrenia - watergaze - 11-11-2017

I mean a concrete example. Say someone has a specific illness, like panic attacks. or something simpler if that is too complex. I guess the method became famous for treating cancer so maybe an example of that. Or just say someone's knees hurt regularly without having hurt them physically. 
In this example what is the track? how can it be tackled? What could the original biological conflict be? etc.


Schizophrenia - Djete - 11-11-2017

http://learninggnm.com/SBS/documents/ki ... flict.html i love this Big Grin about feeling like a fish out of water