Ci spiace, ma questo articolo è disponibile soltanto in Inglese Americano.
In cooperation with Björn, it is splitted on "Disease is Different" into the sections by organ systems and combined with the real cases of our international testimonial / report archive of the related organ system.
GENERAL SYMPTOMS
High blood pressure (hypertonia, hypertension)
What is high blood pressure? Up until a few years ago, what is now considered “at risk” was still considered perfectly healthy: Until 2008, a blood pressure of 100 + age was okay. Then, the World Health Organization arbitrarily set the borderline value at 140/90. Since then, countless people have been continuously sedated with medications. The consequences: fatigue and the loss of strength, vitality and libido.
According to CM, high blood pressure is a risk factor for diseases of the heart and circulatory systems. This claim is both right and wrong.
It is right, in so far as conflict-active persons with stress-related high blood pressure suffer more often from heart attacks, strokes, and similar illnesses. It is wrong because the guilt lies with the stress and not the high blood pressure. For instance, through territorial-loss conflicts or conflicts stemming from being overwhelmed or outsmarted with regard to the heart.
Comparison: risk factor and oil pressure warning light. Assumption: cars with oil warning lights will have more engine damage than cars without an oil indicator light. This is also both true and false.
> High blood pressure is not a danger to the heart, blood vessels, or brain; however, stress certainly is (= conflicts or triggers).
Possible causes
- Medication, alcohol, and drugs: The rise in blood pressure is based on the sympathicotonic effect. Especially: cortisone, adrenaline, antibiotics, immune suppressants, chemotherapy, etc.
- General sympathicotonia – active conflict: People, who are always “wired,“ and get upset about every little thing. Some are calm on the outside, but still tense on the inside. A lack of serenity = the most common cause of high blood pressure. The body is constantly in a state of alarm > narrowing of the blood vessels, tension in the skeletal muscles > high blood pressure. This is either linked to the situation (momentary stress) or longer lasting conflict activity due to one or more running, active conflicts (see: p.13).
- Smooth vascular musculature: The most common type of high blood pressure in the active phase: constant tension of the vascular musculature. Stress conflict: one believes that they can only get through life with conflict and stress (see: p.175).
- Right heart muscle (myocardium) – Conflict of being overwhelmed or outsmarted during the repair phase crisis: The left part of the heart must pump harder to compensate for the uncoordinated contractions of the right part of the heart > compensatory rise in blood pressure. Comes in sudden attacks (paroxysmal), usually occurring during a resting state (e.g., evenings on the couch). Possibly breathing difficulties due to involvement of the diaphragm (see: p.154ff).
- Kidney parenchyma in the active-phase or during persistent conflict activity: cell degradation (necrosis) in the kidney parenchyma > the organism raises the blood pressure so that the filter function can remain intact = “compensatory hypertonia“ (CM: “renal hypertonia“). The blood pressure sinks to a normal level again when kidney cysts return to normal after about nine months. Up to that point, the cysts help the rest of the kidneys with filtering. In persistent conflict activity, the blood pressure remains high, because the filter tissue that was degraded has not been replaced by new tissue. This is because the repair phase is lacking (see: p.281).
a Example: A man suffers a liquid conflict when his mother drowns in a river. Since then, this river has always been a trigger. Unfortunately, he has to drive across the river every day to go to work = persistent conflict activity – chronic high blood pressure. (Archive B. Eybl)
- Narrowing of the kidney arteries: Persistent conflict according to Dr. Sabbah. One is boiling with anger on the inside and can’t let off steam. The blood pressure receptors in the kidneys incorrectly register low blood pressure > impulse to raise blood pressure > increased blood pressure (possibly paroxysmal), dizziness, morning headaches (see: p.283).
- Thyroid: Raised thyroid hormone-level, during persistent conflict activity. Thyroid hormones make a person sympathicotonic > increased blood pressure, accelerated pulse rate, accelerated metabolism, weight loss (see: p.145f).
- Adrenal cortex with regard to cortisol in the repair phase: excess production of cortisol = CM‘s “Cushing’s syndrome“ (see: p.142).
- Adrenal cortex with regard to aldosterone in the repair phase or in persistent healing: raised aldosterone production = CM‘s “Conn‘s Syndrome“ – falling potassium levels (hypokalemia), high blood pressure, muscle weakness (see: p.142).
- Adrenal medulla in the conflict-active phase: increase in dopamine, noradrenaline, and/or adrenaline production – hyperfunction of the adrenal medulla: sudden attack-like bouts of high blood pressure during stress with accelerated pulse, raised blood sugar levels, sweating, and trembling (see: p.144).
Therapy
According to the causes. Determine the conflict and family conditioning and resolve. Calm down and relax. Disengage from life as much as possible. Reduce activities. “Take your foot off the gas.” Endurance sports, stretching gymnastics, no weight lifting, yoga, vegetable diet, vegetables rich in potassium like spinach, fennel, broccoli, cauliflower, beans, garlic, and many more. It only makes sense to take blood pressure medications in exceptional situations (on a case-by-case basis and only short-term) due to their fundamental pointlessness and the severe side effects (e.g. follow-up conflicts: impotence, lack of drive).
Low blood pressure (hypotonia)
Low blood pressure is, by and large, seen as positive from the perspective of the New Medicine and thus, doesn’t require treatment.
Although, values under 105/65 are often disconcerting: dizziness, black spots in front of the eyes when standing, lack of drive. The following causes come into consideration:
• Side effects from blood pressure lowering medications: Common situation among older people who do everything their doctor tells them.
• Relaxed lifestyle: People who enjoy a generally relaxed lifestyle, free of stress for the most part > low blood pressure – a good sign.
• Withstood stress: A person who has just gotten through a stressful (conflict-active) time. They relax, sleep well = repair phase > temporary low blood pressure (see: p.13).
• Left heart muscle (myocardium) – Conflict of being overwhelmed in persistent repair phase (recurrent conflict): The left half of the heart is weakened and doesn’t pump sufficiently for the greater circulation, while the pulmonary (lung) circulation experiences (unnoticed) higher blood pressure. Main symptom: At rest, usually after stress, one feels their heart “beating in their throat” = repair phase crisis of the heart muscle (see: p.154f).
• Adrenal cortex in the active phase: reduced cortisol or aldosterone production = CM “Addison’s disease“: fatigue, nausea, brown coloration of the skin (see: p.142).
Therapy
According to the cause. Determine the conflict and family conditioning and resolve. Often no need for treatment.
Due to a general state of vagotonia, people with low blood pressure, as opposed to those with high blood pressure, should show more commitment to life, get more involved, take a stand more often. “Get living!” Tightening up the family arrangement leads to a tightening of the vascular musculature. > Increased blood pressure.
Contrary to those with high blood pressure, people with low blood pressure should practice strength and speed training (muscle and blood vessel tension). (Less endurance training).
Make sure the diet has enough protein. (A purely vegetarian diet lowers blood pressure).
Sleep disorders (insomnia)
Possible causes
• Severe conflict activity (= stress): one or more conflicts can keep someone from being able to relax, even at night. Even though this endless thought usually doesn’t result in anything constructive, one can’t just turn it off. > Restless, light sleep, difficulties falling asleep and sleeping through the night, waking up early in the morning.
Biological function: The individual is kept awake in order to resolve the conflict. > Therapy: resolve the conflict!
• Skeletons in the closet: People who have trouble sleeping often fear coming in contact with their subconscious (repressed feelings, things left unsaid, taboo topics) – in principle, a form of conflict activity. Daytime corresponds with consciousness, night, the subconscious. Also, the fear of death can play a role: “Sleep is death’s little brother.”
> Address the taboo topic with courage, even when it seems very difficult. Come to terms with the reality of death and dying by reading, speaking and laughing about it etc.
• Strong repair phase: sleeping problems can arise even during vagotonia – not only due to the pain (repair) in the night. During the day, one is tired and looks forward to going to bed. However, sleep only seems possible during the second half of the night. During the day, you are tired again (see: p.13). There are two explanations for this phenomenon:
1. Nature wants to protect the vagotonia-weakened individual from being “easy prey“ for predators (animals active at night). Sleeping during the day is safer > People who are in the repair phase should surrender to their fatigue during the day and allow themselves to take frequent “naps.”
2. Nature makes sure that the nightly vagotonia does not
cause an individual, who is already in a state of vagotonia, to fall into “super-vagotonia.“ This could possibly become critical. (Strong vagotonia = strong healing symptoms). Through this natural minimization of sleep, the person is kept in a tolerable vagotonia that is not too deep.
By drinking coffee (or other sympathicotonics) in the evening, we can “outfox“ nature. The body believes it is daytime and gives up the sleep inhibition. > In the repair phase, coffee helps a person to sleep better during the night (= paradox)!
• Breathing disruptions (sleep apnea) at night due to mini right-heart myocardial infarction: A coupling of the muscle of the right heart chamber with the diaphragm causes breathing to “stumble” > sleep disturbances. (See chapters on heart p. 154 and diaphragm p. 256).
• Breathing disruptions (snoring) at night due to a slackening of the soft palate and disrupted air flow, usually occur among the obese. Loud snoring alternates with abnormally long breathing lapses > sleep disorder.
• Hyperfunction of the thyroid, adrenal cortex, or adrenal medulla > increase in sympathetic function > sleep disorders (see corresponding chapter).
Therapy for sleep disorders
• Do enough exercise to make the body tired in the evening. Spend the evening quietly (without TV or computer). Do not eat too late in the evening.
• Always go to bed at the same time and not too late.
• Perform a switch-off ritual: For example, take several deep breaths in bed, review the day, say farewell to the day, and then “switch off.“
• Bach flowers (see p. 59): hornbeam, impatiens, olive; in the active-phase, Star of Bethlehem.
• Place lavender sachets near the head.
• Make sure the feet are warm (foot bath, socks).
• Teas of valerian, melissa, hops, lavender, fennel, etc.
• Hildegard of Bingen: Eat two tablespoons of poppy seeds a day.
• Natural borax internally.
• CBD oil (cannabis oil).
Fatigue (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – CFS)
When fatigue isn’t caused by sleep disorders (see above), the following causes can be considered:
• Medication side effects: blood pressure medication, psychotropic drugs and many more. Often among older people who do everything their doctor tells them.
• Withstood stress: A person who has just gotten through a stressful (conflict-active) time. They relax, sleep well and are nevertheless tired during the day = repair phase (see: p.13). This type of fatigue should last a maximum of 6 months.
• Adrenal cortex: in the active phase: conflict – having deviated from the right path. Reduced cortisol or aldosterone production. Does not necessarily have to be diagnosed as “Addison’s disease” – there are also mild forms. Main symptom: stressed fatigue, poor appetite (see: p.142). > Observe to see which situations cause the fatigue: e.g., the work week.
• Heart muscle (myocardium): chronic conflict of being overwhelmed: fatigue in the sense of having reduced performance (at work, sports) see: p.154.
• Pericardium (heart sac): chronic attack-to-the-heart conflict. > Heart weakness (see: p.161).
Therapy
According to the cause. Determine the conflict, family conditioning and beliefs, resolve.
Overweight, obesity (adiposity)
Possible causes (combinations)
• Obesity through conditioning
• When a child or their ancestors (e.g., parents) have the experience that they will only be loved when they are fat, they will become fat unconsciously. Conditioning through statements like, “You are as skinny as an starving man. Look at your sister, look at how beautiful and full her face is!”
• When a child or their ancestors have the experience that losing weight is dangerous, the person will unconsciously refuse to lose weight even if they would like to: e.g., ancestor had esophagus cancer and died of malnutrition or an ancestor died of starvation, e.g., in a concentration/POW camp.
• The ongoing struggle with obesity and dissatisfaction with one’s own body is usually carried on over generations and always has the same result: e.g., for her whole life, a mother repeats the phrase, “Oh man, I’ve really got a big butt!” Her daughter adapts to this pattern and the corresponding reality materializes – namely, a big butt. When her curves get rounder during puberty or pregnancy, she will think to herself, “My God! Now I’m almost as fat as my mother!” (= multi-generational vicious circle). Through this kind of programming, the Special Program will begin for the corresponding fat cells (see: p. 282f). > “I love my body the way it is – just like my fat mother/father. I may become just like her/him, but I can also become someone different, the person I want to become.”
- Chronic conflict of the active kidney collecting tubules: the most common cause by far. Refugee conflict: Fluid deposits, everything with caloric content is retained in order to get through the “lean times” > weight gain while eating very little. Few calories are needed. Dark urine, usually raised creatinine and uric acid values; fluid is also removed from the stool > hard stool, constipation. By filling up their body, a person creates reserves. Left alone, they effectively protect themselves in this way from cold or further emotional disappointments, injuries, attacks (protective armor) (see: p.277).
- Fatty tissue: Conflict of feeling unattractive at the particular bodily locations > persistent repair > excess fatty tissue in the “problem zones“ > formation of fatty tissue, cellulite (p. 183). The obese/unattractive condition can also be a part of a (usually unconscious) protective strategy: When someone is fat, they will be “left alone” by the opposite sex. This means that they are less likely to experience sexual violence. E.g., when ancestors or the person themselves were the victim(s) of sexual assault or abuse.
- Alpha-islet cells (pancreas): Fear-disgust or resistance conflict, chronic conflict-active phase > reduced function > constant low blood sugar (CM: “hypoglycemia, hyperinsulinemia“) > constant hunger due to low blood sugar levels, craving for sweets, “hunger attacks“ > weight gain (see: p.272).
- Liver: Early childhood starvation conflicts lead to a loss of “feeling full“ or satiated. Later the person doesn‘t know when they have had enough. (See: p.263)
- Thyroid Gland: Chunk conflict (see explanations p. 15, 16) of being too slow, persistent repair of the resulting condition > low production of thyroxine = thyroid insufficiency. (In CM, hyperthyroidism, myxedema, possibly Hashimoto’s thyroiditis“) > slowed metabolism – less energy is used up > weight gain (see: p.145).
- Adrenal cortex: Conflict of having gotten on the wrong track, persistent repair > increased cortisol production = adrenal hyperfunction (CM: “Cushing‘s disease“) “moon-face;“ the symptoms are similar to long-term cortisone intake. (See: p.142)
- Lack of mobility: If the balance between energy intake (eating) and energy consumption (movement) get out of kilter, the excess is stored in the form of fat. The body‘s need for mobility and a variety of motion is not met > regular exercise, sports, etc.
- Malnutrition: Low-fiber, “dead,“ cheap, mass-produced food (white flour, sugar, margarine, soft drinks, etc.) makes you fat and sick with the same amount of calories. > Nutritional switch to “living food,“ prepared with love.
- Aspartame: People want to become or stay slender with these zero calorie artificial sweeteners. However, if they knew that aspartame is given to livestock to fatten the animals up (it makes them hungry) and that it causes brain and nerve damage, they wouldn‘t touch it. Alternative: Stevia.
- Low fat foods: People wanting to lose weight are making a mistake if they believe that these will help. Valuable fats (e.g., butter, cold-pressed oils) don’t make us fat.
- Side effects of medication: Cortisone, anti-depressants, tranquilizers (neuroleptics), “the pill“ (chemical birth control), blood pressure medicines (beta blockers), insulin and more. > Go through your medications and weigh the risks and benefits. Perhaps you can reduce the dosage or cut them out altogether (“medication vacation“).
Therapy
According to the causes described above:
Recognize the entanglements and the thought patterns and throw them overboard. Be sure to “nurse” your new way of thinking on a daily basis, so it becomes anchored in your subconscious.
Anton Styger’s morning ritual: You stand naked in front of the mirror, observe your body and say:
“Thank you (body) for being such a beautiful enclosure for my soul. Thank you letting me live inside you. You are strong, beautiful and I like you just the way you are. You and I will stay healthy until the end!” Afterward, clothe your body in divine, white light.
Underweight, lack of appetite, eating disorders (anorexia)
Put simply: The desire to eat is equivalent to the desire for life. Those who don’t want to eat anymore will waste away. Possible causes:
• Conflict activity: Lack of appetite and the weight loss resulting from this problem are classic signs of an active conflict (see: p.13). Proper nutrition isn’t a concern, because the person has other things to worry about. Further symptoms: restless thoughts, poor sleep, cold hands (see: p. 9ff). Constant conflict activity saps a person’s will (cachexia). One is thin and tense, but this is rarely fatal. The most common examples of cachexia that can end in death: people suffering from diagnosis shock (completely giving up) or the last days of a long life (one stops eating because they want to go). > Resolving the conflict .
• Underweight through conditioning
• I will only be loved if I am thin – can lead to eating disorders (e.g., anorexia): “Don’t eat so much or you will soon be as fat and ugly as Aunt Tracy!”
• People with anorexia feel drawn by death. The cause can often be found in the family system. The unconscious pattern is often, “Better me than you.” (Someone becomes severely ill and the person wants to sacrifice their own life in the place of the other’s). Also, “I will follow you.” (E.g., someone has died and the person feels guilty because they are allowed to go on living).
• Perfectionism “My body has to be perfect.”
• Purity: One wants to be pure and spotless like a virgin. One doesn’t want to defile themselves with food/bad nutrition.
> Recognize the situation and break out of these patterns/habits.
• Stomach mucosa: Active territorial-anger conflict. One is especially nauseous in the morning, one has little appetite in general and loses weight. Usually accompanied by stomach pains, acid indigestion (see: p.233). > Resolve the conflict.
• Intestinal mucosa: Chronic chunk conflict (see: p.245, 253) > chronic bowel inflammation (enteritis) with tendency of diarrhea (Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis). One has an appetite, but can’t “digest” much of it. Bad nutrition conversion > weight loss > resolve the chronic conflict.
Chronic Hypothermia (Subnormal Body Temperature)
Here, we are not addressing hypothermia due to cold, but a “persistent state” of low body temperature (from 36.5 °C/97.7 °F and lower). The hypothalamus is responsible for the regulation of the body’s core temperature.
In general, we can say that a lack of warmth is due to reduced metabolism. Little warmth means little energy, vitality, and quality of life.
Possible causes
• Persistent conflicts (see p. 24) cool people down, extracting energy and vitality. E.g., a persistent “I can’t do it” conflict regarding the hip can also cool someone down.
Not only will the arthritic joint (p. 354) feel cold, but the person’s core temperature will also drop somewhat.
Observation: Emaciated people (people with persistent conflicts) are more in need of warmth than others.
Biological meaning: With a reduced metabolism and subnormal temperature, the individual can survive longer (energy saving mode). Analogy: Hibernating animals lower their temperature to get through the long winter months without food.
Therapy: Determine the conflict cause, conditioning, and beliefs. “Wake up from your hibernation and tackle solutions. Life reawakens in the spring.”
• Someone who can’t get excited/happy anymore, can’t love anymore, who is only “cool” and reserved, cools out in a literal sense. In contrast to these “coldblooded” types, there are also the “hotblooded” ones.
Therapy: “Jump into life, show emotions. Turn up the heat for a change!” (See Therapy for low blood pressure p. 81.)
• Lack of exercise: Movement generates heat. The fact that we shiver when we are cold clearly demonstrates this biological function. The shivering stops when we generate enough activity.
Therapy: “Get out and get some exercise in nature.”
• Alcohol or prescription drug (ab)use (blood pressure sinkers, psychopharma and many more) > Scrutinize all drugs for their risk/benefit!
• The endocrine glands are responsible for hypothyroidism on the organ level:
Hypothyroidism or Hashimoto’s see p. 147.
Adrenocortical-hypofunction see p. 142.)
Ovarian hypofunction (conflict-active phase), p. 293.
Testicular hypofunction (conflict-active phase), see p. 311.
Remedies for subnormal body temperatures
• Exercise (especially strength and cardio training).
• Sunbathing or, in winter, solarium.
• Sauna, redlight/infrared sauna, steam bath, hot springs.
• Warming foods such as: mugwort, ginger, cinnamon, rosemary, garlic, beet, red lentils, oats, and many more.
• Sheep‘s wool socks, sheep’s wool underwear, red clothing.
Fever
The normal body temperature for humans is around 37 °C/98.6 °F.
We speak of fever at temperatures over 38.2 °C/100.8 °F.
In natural medicine, fever has always been seen as something positive – as a cleansing process.
With the increased temperature, waste products (metabolic waste products, cell debris, toxins) leave our body through sweat, feces, urine, mucus, and our breath.
From the point of view of the 5BLN, fever is also a welcome sign of healing and means that the body is recovering from previous overstrain – it is now cleansing and regenerating itself (see: 2nd Law of Nature p. 13).
• Low fevers or slightly elevated (subfebrile) temperatures are generally attributed to the endoderm. I.e., when any endodermal organ area goes into resolution, excess tissue is broken down by fungi or bacteria into pus. The result: mild fever.
• Medium-high fever comes from mesodermal tissue processes.
• High fever comes from ectodermal tissue processes and indicates that cells are being built up/restored through an increased metabolism.
The aforementioned is a somewhat theoretical classification, because if, e.g., a territorial-fear conflict (affected organ: bronchia/ectoderm) is only partially resolved, only a mild fever develops.
What to do for a mild fever?
If someone’s general condition is good, you can “promote” a mild fever > help the body to become even warmer:
• Bed rest, well covered, possibly use a hot water bottle
• Drinking hot tea according to the need (e.g., sage, elderflower, lime blossom, willow bark)
• Applying warming essential oils (e.g., ginger, bergamot, sage, cinnamon bark)
• Inhaling hot steam (if the respiratory tract is affected)
• Warm, partial or full baths
• Infrared sauna/steam bath
• Avoid the sun
What to do for a high fever?
Some people have a high fever and still maintain cardiovascular/circulatory stability. > In this case, fever reduction is not necessary.
However, if the fever becomes alarmingly high/stressful (e.g., over 40 °C/104 °F), heat should be dissipated.
• In my experience, cold head compresses are better than calf compresses (possibly use both), because by cooling the head, you also lower the excess pressure on the brain (symptom: headache).
• Natural, fever-reducing measures: drinking diluted apple vinegar, vinegar calf compresses
• Cool drinks, e.g., water with lemon juice
• In adults, acetylsalicylic acid (ASA, aspirin) or paracetamol (the latter in suppository form for babies or children, if necessary) have an antipyretic (fever-reducing) effect.
Ibuprofen (anti-inflammatory) is useful if “flu” pains predominate.
• Caution: The sudden onset of fever over 40 °C/104 °F with severe abdominal pain could indicate, e.g., a ruptured appendix or intestine and should receive immediate medical attention.
• Headache during a fever episode is normal and indicative of a space-occupying edema in the brain (see p. 67).
• With heavy sweating (fluid loss) and absence (seizure) states, be sure to replace lost fluids (due to the risk of dehydration).
• Avoid the sun. Fever and headache after a day in the sun are indicative of sunstroke (see p. xxx).
• Febrile convulsions are disturbing, but something positive in principle, because they indicate that a motor conflict is also being resolved in the course of the fever (= healing crisis of the musculature, see p. 377).
Colds, flu infections (influenza, viral bird and swine flu)
According to the 4. Law of Nature, no diseases are communicated from outside of the body. With this conviction, you can relax and don’t have to worry about the various strains of the flu. CM makes an unnecessary distinction between “a dangerous, real flu” (= influenza or viral flus) and a “harmless flu-like infection.”
Seen from our perspective, we only pay attention to the symptoms (see below).
Why influenza epidemics usually occur during or at the end of winter:
1. In the winter half of the year, there is a predominant “parasympathetic tailwind.” I.e. nature uses this time for regeneration and healing (see also: p. 71).
2. Why flu outbreaks usually sweep through the population during or at the end of winter: Most people are discomforted by cold or the cold times of the year.
For our ancestors, the winter was often a threat and at least, a time of privation – this conditioning is embedded in our subconscious. > Cold (name “the common cold”) = conflict or conflict triggers.
The end of the winter = repair phase with the common symptoms as follows:
• Pain in the limbs = self-esteem conflict – repair phase (see p. 352).
• Sniffles = stinking conflict or scent conflict – repair phase (see p. 188).
• Inflammation of the throat = conflict of not wanting to swallow something, wanting to spit it out – repair phase (see: p.217).
• Inflammation of the larynx = shock-fright or speechlessness conflict – repair phase (see: p.193).
• Bird, swine, and other new influenzas are campaigns staged by the World Health Organization. The above symptoms can become dangerous illnesses or epidemics through conventional therapeutics such as Tamiflu, Relenza (chemotherapies that blocks a cell’s ability to metabolize), vaccinations, and above all, through mass fear hypnosis.
I can’t judge if you can rule out every infection. It is possible that infectious germs or parasites that cause sickness could actually arise in a completely polluted environment.
How do the thousands of “flu deaths” (echoed by the media) happen every year? The number of deaths in the summer half-year are subtracted from the number of deaths in the winter half-year. (Seriously!)
Corona, COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2
Corona, as a new disease, does not exist from our point of view. Fever, cough, aching limbs, colds, etc. used to be classified as colds/flu (see above) – today they are classified as corona. Severe or fatal lung diseases (see chapter Lung p. 197) have always existed.
I was privileged enough to accompany a “corona patient” who resolved a territorial dispute with her daughter-in-law, came down with severe bronchitis, and recovered without medication.
Another was in intensive medical care for severe dehydration and was also considered a “corona case” because of a positive PCR test.
SARS-CoV-2 has never been isolated, and its pathogenic properties have never been demonstrated (this applies to all so-called viruses).
Koch’s postulates (correct pathogen detection) have never been fulfilled in any scientific publication on COVID-19. The alleged genetic sequence of the virus was calculated by Dr. Drosten on a computer (so-called “alignment”) – and all the tests that have been implemented worldwide are based on this. The result of a PCR test can be controlled at will by adjusting the so-called Ct value (cycle threshold = number of doublings), but not only that: The PCR method itself is unsuitable for diagnosis. Kary Mullis, the inventor, repeatedly stressed this fact.
Unfortunately, this is exactly what is being practiced worldwide. Since the majority of “corona positives” are healthy, a new term was created: “asymptomatic patients.” For the first time in medical history, healthy people are being turned into sick people!
Why did so many people die of corona in 2020?
1. Systematic relabeling of the cause of death was applied in almost all countries worldwide.
“The flu, cancer, and old age became corona.”
The counting method in 2020: If someone had a positive test result within the last 4 weeks of their life, they were considered to have died of corona.
a A nurse told me about a woman who had jumped out of a window. At the hospital, they could not save her life. This suicide was classified as a corona death.
A 90-year-old woman died in a hospital: The doctor approached the dead woman’s son and asked if he would agree to have COVID-19 entered as the cause of death on the death certificate – they could “bill it better.”
2. Overtreatment according to WHO recommendations: 1 g hydroxychloroquine (antimalarial and antirheumatic drug)/day, remdesivir (antiviral), blood thinners, cortisone, premature intubation. This protocol was used for treatment worldwide (e.g., Bergamo, Italy).
Excess mortality?
In the pandemic year 2020, no more people died (adjusted for the effects of the aging population) than in previous years. Excess mortality began in 2021, with the start of the vaccination campaign.
“Vaccination is the 4th wave.”
The vaccination does not provide protection (like all other vaccinations), rather, is incomparably more dangerous: The artificial RNA contained in it leads to sickness/death/infertility in many. The graphene nanoparticles (atomic carbon) also probably serve as a kind of 5G antenna.
“Not taking the vaccine is the true test of maturity!”
Hospital germs (MRSA)
We designate a group of staphylococcus bacteria that doesn’t respond to antibiotics anymore as hospital germs because these germs have developed a resistance. From our view, this is unfortunate, because the (sometimes necessary) antibiotic option for attenuating an intense repair phase often no longer works.
The decisive factor is still: infections arise from within. This means: without germs introduced from the outside.
The standard situation: Someone receives a routine operation, e.g., on their knee. Despite being thoroughly disinfected, their knee becomes purulent within a day or several days following the OP. This is easily explained from the perspective of the New Medicine: this affects people who have a conflict with the operation itself, who fear that something will go wrong, fear a lengthy recuperation phase or fear the pain afterward. Simply put: they are OP conflict-active.
If the patient sees that everything went well after the OP (which is usually the case), their optimism returns = beginning of the repair phase. Their body now builds or breaks down tissue in a meaningful way, depending on which SBS has started. > Fever, infection (e.g. of the knee), blood sedimentation, elevated white blood cell counts, etc. The diagnosis is “MRSA.”
> “After I decide to go through with a procedure/an operation I trust in the fact that, with God’s help, everything will turn out all right and everything will soon be back to normal.”
Tick bite
A tick bite is nothing bad and not a reason to go to the doctor. Anyone who lives close to nature will come into contact with ticks all the time.
According to Ingmar Bieda‘s experience, ticks are biocatalysts that accelerate SBSs. They are only attracted to people or animals that are predominantly conflict active. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTtuifiBmAs) The following animal case study confirms this assumption:
a From the beginning, the older female cat was afraid of the young, temperamental male cat who had recently joined the household. In spring and summer, she regularly had several ticks. One day the male cat died. The older cat now enjoyed the peace and felt visibly at ease. From that time onwards, she has only very rarely had a tick. (Archive B. Eybl)
Therapy
If you want, you can wait until the tick falls off by itself > a kind of bio-acupuncture. Most of us, however, want to get rid of the tick quickly:
Gently grasp the head with your fingernails or tweezers and slowly pull it out. If the head or the biting apparatus should tear off – no problem, the local inflammation will then last a little longer. If you are very particular, you can apply coconut or black cumin oil to the area after removal.
Can I get Lyme disease from a tick bite? Yes, if the tick bite coincides with the resolution of a separation conflict (see below).
Can I get meningitis/tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) from a tick bite? No (see below).
Is the tick vaccination useful? No, because it does not protect against TBE and not against Lyme disease anyway. For basic information on vaccinations, see: p. 70.
Meningitis (encephalomeningitis, TBE), Sunstroke
According to CM, meningitis is a viral or bacterial infection of the brain linings (meninges) and encephalomeningitis is an inflammation of the brain and spinal cord and their meninges. The primary symptoms are a strong headache and stiff neck; the stiffness of the neck points to a healing cervical spine.
The acute symptoms of TBE are similar to those of sunstroke and are due to increased intracranial pressure:
severe headache, dizziness, nausea, photophobia, and neck stiffness (meningismus).
As the name “early summer meningitis” suggests, the disease usually occurs in early summer. In my opinion, the correct correlation of early summer with intense sunlight, was unfortunately abandoned (probably for profit) in favor of the correlation of early summer with ticks (according to Dr. Loibner).
Conflict | If meningitis occurs without extreme sun exposure to head/neck: disfigurement conflict (see p. 341) or moral-intellectual self-esteem conflict (see: p. 362). |
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Phase | Repair phase: The healing cranial bone or meninges builds tissue fluid, which lifts the linings of the brain (meninges) and presses them inwards toward the brain > strong headache. |
Note | The dramatic experience of a, sometimes even fatal, meningitis or meningoencephalitis is probably caused by extreme sun exposure + intensive repair phase of cranial bone/spine (see p. 362) + syndrome (see p. 277). |
Therapy | The conflict is resolved. Support the repair phase. See repair phase at the brain level, p. 67. |
Lyme disease (lyme borreliosis)
In our view, the ring-shaped reddening of the skin attributed to Lyme disease is a separation conflict in the repair phase. With or without the tick bite – both are possible. The joint and nervous symptoms are mistakenly attributed to a tick bite. The reddening is a reaction to the introduction of foreign protein by the insect. In any case, a repair phase infection.
The screw-formed bacteria (spirochetes) don’t have anything to do with the illness. This is also exactly what the medical medium Anthony William asserts and he wonders why the therapists and their patients jump on the spirochetes train without any critical deliberation.
I observed a patient with the typical ring-shaped reddening of the skin on their shoulder following a very small tick bite.
Three weeks later, just as described in CM, massive bone pains set in, emerging from the very spot where she had been bitten and they spread over her whole body. The patient was not afraid of ticks or infections (in other words, no fear conflicts).
The interesting thing is, just before that, she had made a huge step forward regarding her self-esteem. This involved her elderly father, who for the first time, had opened up to her. The patient healed her borreliosis with natural remedies (teasel, oregano, anise, agrimony), but for the first two weeks she required painkillers (antirheumatics).
Another patient also had borreliosis without any demonstrable insect bite; two important people in his life had died three weeks prior (= separation conflict, p. 332). When he overcame it, he contracted borreliosis on his right (partner) hip (= repair phase).
Something else that argues against it being an infection: Why has there never been any direct proof of Borrelia found in those affected? Many homeopaths believe that borreliosis is a result of vaccinations (vaccine damage). > For this reason, always determine the cause: Was there a vaccination before the onset of the symptoms? Were any antibiotics or other serious drugs administered?
Therapy
Cardin tincture internally, mugwort (active ingredient artemisinin) as a tea. Diluted essential oil applied externally to the affected area.
CM‘s antibiotic therapy is not useful from my point of view: Clinical studies show that longer-term antibiotic treatments do not necessarily relieve the symptoms and may even worsen the patient‘s situation.
Loss of consciousness, prolonged unconsciousness (absence seizures)
According to the 5 Biological Laws of Nature, sudden losses of consciousness, often lasting only a few seconds, are the repair phase crises for separation, territorial or motor conflicts (epilepsy). If they occur regularly, the conflict is persistent. If the absence represents the main symptom – which isn’t the rule – the following (additional) conflict aspect is present:
Conflict | The situation is unbearable, one wishes to blank it out/to “teleport” themselves/would like to disappear. |
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Example | • A 10-year-old girl has short, recurring absences at school. Cause: Her father is self-employed and is constantly taking on new projects. It’s all too much for him. He would like to “make himself scarce.” His daughter is carrying it for him and is making the family aware of the issue. (Archive B. Eybl) |
Bio. function | Protection from an overwhelming reality. Escape to another “little world”where everything is quiet and peaceful. |
Therapy | Determine and resolve the conflict, triggers and causal conditioning. |
Depression, burnout syndrome
Depression + burnout are sometimes identical, sometimes not.
From the view of family energies
• When a child (we are all the children of our parents) can’t stand their parents anymore, they become sad/depressed. Someone who only takes what they want from their parents doesn’t take them as a whole. Those who despise them cut themselves off from their power completely.
> “You are my only father and the best one for me. Thank you.”
> “You are my only mother and the best one for me. Thank you.”
• Some are depressed because their mothers or fathers were also. Depression is a part of our “basic psychological equipment” (see chapter on conditioning p. 27). Here, you can also speak of solidarity.
> „“I don’t have to carry this burden. I’ll leave it with my dear mother/father.”
• A secret death-wish may lie behind depression.
Motto 1: “Better me than you.” A child is helpless with regard to a beloved family member and thinks that they can take over their fate for them.
> Be humble and recognize that no one has the right to intervene in the fate of another in this way.
Motto 2: “I will follow you.” A child believes that it’s unjust that they are allowed to go on living while another family member must die.
> “I’ll stay a while and then I’ll come too.”
• Depression as an unconscious strategy: 1). Get recognition (sympathy). 2) Take revenge – e.g., take revenge on mother.
Social view, many people in social occupations (e.g., companies, schools or hospitals) suffer from this because the system strictly limits their personal creativity. They feel they are running around like proverbial hamsters in a wheel, having no time for themselves and losing their energy, motivation and enjoyment of life.
Spiritual view: When we leave our prescribed path of development, don’t follow our inner calling and only “function,” living life from the outside, our life will have no meaning. Cut off from the divine flow of energy, we will be tired, unsatisfied and empty.
> What is the meaning of (my) life? What sustains my happiness? This is the path I will follow!
View from the 5 Biological Laws of Nature
Depression is usually the result of a territorial conflict or a territorial constellation (see: p.388).
Sometimes a cerebellum constellation can cause depression: One feels listless and empty (see: p.387).
> Determine the conflicts and conditioning and resolve it.
Usually, someone goes through months and years of conflict activity until their reserves are used up. Then, the body pulls the emergency brake. Seen in this way, burnout is the (last) protective reaction. What happens after that depends on whether the person makes any significant change in their life. If they stay on the same path, they will remain sympathicotonic and permanently stressed, possibly with regenerating phases in between. In this case, no change can be expected.
It would be wiser for them to sit down and make an honest analysis of their life before making genuine, but often painful changes; just putting an end to stagnation can be a relief in itself. Every SBS has two phases and, after the conflict activity, there comes a long phase of regeneration (repair phase). On one hand, this brings us a hopeful perspective on the future. On the other hand, vagotonia takes its toll: chronic fatigue, tiredness, exhaustion, various illnesses and pain. That said, I also know of cases where only the repair phase – the time following a long period of overdoing it – is seen as burnout.
For this reason, we as therapists must be careful: The patient can be in chronic conflict activity, in a longer repair phase or in a condition in between.
> Locate the situation and change it as necessary.
Further causes
• Side effects of medication: High blood pressure medications dampen spirits and lower energy levels. When psychological drugs are taken over long periods, they can have the same effect as the symptoms for which they were proscribed.
> Reduce/stop taking (“medication vacation”).
• Sleep disorders can increase depression (see above).
Therapy for burnout, depression
• An understanding of the 5 Biological Laws of Nature is good, but a little more is needed to overcome depression: above all, the readiness to make internal and external changes, the will to continue making personal development and the making or strengthening one’s connection “above.”
• Two tips for this direction: “Be thankful for everything that life has given you up to this point!” “Do good things for others!”
• Depressed people often concentrate too much on themselves and feel like a victim.
Through giving, someone can break out of this role. Giving makes you happy. Whoever gives the gift of happiness will also be happy themselves.
- MMS (see p. 68)
• CBD oil (cannabis oil).
• Lavender tea.
• Linseed oil (omega-3).
- Maca powder (5 g = 1 tablespoon/day), yam powder.
- St. John‘s wort.
- Nutmeg powder.
- Vitamin B, linseed oil.
- Colloidal gold.
- For people over 45: natural (= nature identical) as hormones, e.g., as according to Dr. Lee, Dr. Platt and Dr. Lenard.
- Communion with God and contact with nature (sun, wind, water, forests, mountains).
- Regular exercise in the fresh air.
- Be grateful for everything. Morning ritual by Styger (p. 83).
- Natural, alkaline nutrition, clean water.
- Minimize electro-smog (smartphone, cordless phone, etc.).
Allergies, Intolerances, Hypersensitivity Reactions
Every allergy, every intolerance has a cause. Determining and resolving these conflict causes is a rewarding task – as healing without cortisone and antihistamines shows us. In searching for the conflict, you almost always find what you are looking for in the life of the individual or in the lives of their ancestors (see: conditioning, p. 27).
Always remember: “Nothing comes from nothing!”
To understand allergies, you must understand tracks (please refer to p. 25). Essentially, an allergy indicates that a conflict is “persistent” and is being activated again and again by a track (pollen, sun, wheat, etc.).
If an allergy is compounded by histamine intolerance, there is an additional “being-on-alert conflict” going on (see p. 167). For the relevant laboratory values for histamine and diamine oxidase, see p. 46.
In cases of anaphylactic shock, there was a risk of death during the original conflict. For a detailed description, see p. 189.
The most important questions for determining the cause:
When did the symptoms start (triggered before)? Vaccinations (see p. 70) are often at the root of allergies. Therefore, question: Was the vaccination administered promptly? (If yes, it is possible that both the vaccination and the conflict were the triggers). Which organ is affected (e.g., skin > separation conflict, nasal mucosa > stink or being-on-alert conflict, conjunctiva > visual separation conflict)? What was stressing me out in my life during this time (partner, friends, relatives, boss, workplace, home, etc.)? What happened in my life during that time? Complaints stronger in winter or summer (indication of the time of the conflict)? Better during vacations (indication of conflict in everyday life)? Complaints getting better in the last weeks (indication of a gentle conflict resolution)? Getting worse (indication of the conflict situation being aggravated)?
Family: Do the mother/father have allergies? Am I more similar in nature to my mother or my father (find out whether the conflict resonates with the mother’s or father’s line)? Birth position (with the help of Family Waltzes I-III, find out which ancestor’s “baggage” is being carried, see p. 30)? Work out parallels of this ancestor to your own life, life themes, and to the allergy’s specific conflict theme.
When the trigger and the deeper cause are determined, the solutions often arise by themselves. See: possible therapies p. 52ff).
Pollen Allergy
A woman in her 50s developed a pollen allergy (birch, alder, grasses), including histamine intolerance, 12 years ago.
In spring, she regularly needs antihistamines for shortness of breath and eye drops for swollen eyes. In her conversation with her 5BLN therapist, it turns out that the allergy arose at that time from quarreling with her partner (and her boss at the same time), who was unpredictable and choleric (= classic “being-on-alert conflict,” p. 167).
The patient: “Since our session, I have not taken a single tablet. Sometimes I use eye drops in the morning, but that is all, and I can’t believe it.”
Note: The conflict happened at a time when the pollen count was high. For the subconscious, from that point on, pollen had been a warning signal and the woman returned to this “track” every spring.
The puzzle was solved in an “A-ha!” moment during her therapy. Sometimes, the solution can be quite simple. (Archive B. Eybl)
For another example of a pollen allergy, see p. 189.
Fruit intolerance
A 40-year-old mother of two has suffered from gastrointestinal issues since she was 23. She experiences her allergic reactions particularly after eating fruit. The following comes to light: When she was 23 and still living at home, she dropped out of college against her parents’ will. At the dinner table, there were constant arguments over this. There was always a large fruit bowl on the table = indigestible anger conflict affecting the intestines. Trigger – fruit. (Archive B. Eybl)
Nut Allergy
From the therapist Alexandra Kuttin, Austria: A mother came to me and told me that she was very worried about her 4-year-old son’s extreme nut allergy. He reacts allergically to the slightest traces of nuts, and he already had to go to hospital intensive care unit twice due to shortness of breath.
I asked the mother if there had been a shocking experience during her pregnancy. She told me that her father had been killed in an accident – an extreme shock. During her pregnancy, she was mainly eating nuts.
Note: The unborn felt a territorial-fear conflict together with the mother (bronchial tubes, cf. p. 200) – the nuts became a track. Tracks serve as a warning signal: “Nuts – Watch out now; something bad could happen again.” What is interesting is that the mother wasn’t the one who developed the nut allergy, but her son. Children do this out of their love for their parents.
For another example of a nut allergy, see p. 132.
Zucchini Allergy
A woman in her 30s has had a zucchini allergy for three years with abdominal cramps, bloating, and diarrhea.
Conflict: She read an article that a man died after eating a homegrown zucchini. Since she also eats homegrown zucchini, she suddenly became afraid of them. Her body translated this fear into a morsel conflict, “not being able to get rid of the morsel,” and activated her intestinal motor function (see p. 243) to get the supposed poison to leave her body quickly. Therapy: Realize that the man in the article probably died from another reason or it was probably just a fake article. (Summarized from www.disease-is-different/reports/5bl-report-archive/)
Pepper Allergy
The client has had a pepper allergy since childhood, i.e., for more than 40 years. Whenever there is black pepper in her food, she always gets diarrhea. We found the cause by chance: In her childhood, her mother always served salad from their own garden. Since it was full of aphids, her mother seasoned it with pepper to hide the bugs. At one point, the girl noticed the aphids. She perceived the situation as a conflict: “wanting to get rid of the harmful morsel,” (see: intestinal musculature p. 243).
Therapy: Have her wash some lettuce and make sure it is free of aphids before seasoning it vigorously with pepper. While eating, she should maintain a positive attitude and enjoy the salad with pepper. The result: Her 40-year-old pepper allergy was instantly gone. (Summarized from www.disease-is-different/reports/5bl-report-archive/)
Salad Allergy
A 62-year-old woman reported: “From an early age, lamb’s lettuce (corn salad) gave me severe constipation. One leaf was enough – it was like there was a toxin in it that paralyzed my intestines.
I would have liked to have eaten lamb’s lettuce very much, but I had to avoid it. The only thing that came to mind thinking about the cause: I was like mother! My mother has the same problem.
I was aware of this fact, but I never realized the opportunity it presented me. At the time, I just resigned myself to the fact that lamb’s lettuce had the same effect on me as well.
Last week, when I was harvesting our lamb’s lettuce, I realized once again that I had a deep connection with my mother; I didn’t know the cause, but I knew the effect. This time, however (for the first time), I felt a deep connection with my mother along the lines of: If you are miserable eating lamb’s lettuce, I shouldn’t have to be miserable too. Then I told her in my mind: The lamb’s lettuce-constipation issue is yours alone; it has nothing to do with me. I give it back to you completely.
That evening I ate a small amount of lamb’s lettuce mixed with other greens, and the next day I ate a whole plate to my heart’s content. And what happened? Nothing, no constipation. Another umbilical cord cut. (Archive B. Eybl)
Wine Allergy, affecting the nasal mucosa, see p. 190.
Flour Allergy, affecting the skin, see p. 335.
Mold allergy
A student lives for a year in a small cottage. It is poorly heated; the walls are partly moldy. One day, a big argument with his best friend takes place in this house. Stink conflict: “I can’t stand this guy anymore.” Here, the mold spores in the damp rooms become the trigger. From this point on, the patient was allergic to mold and/or damp rooms. (Archive B. Eybl)
Dust Allergy, see p. 62 (Asthma) and p. 190 (Nose).
Heat Allergy
The second-born (see Family Waltzes p. 30) cannot tolerate sun on her head her whole life – she immediately gets migraines. Sauna/heat is also problematic. Her sister has the same symptoms in a milder form (= indication of an ancestral theme).
Shocking events in the sunshine cannot be found throughout the woman’s whole life.
So, I asked about migraines, head injuries, and sunstroke among her maternal ancestors (because she is the second born). Lo and behold, her uncle died of sunstroke at 17 – a massive trauma for her grandparents and an unhealed family tragedy. Because the grandparents could not accept their son’s early death, (in keeping with the 2nd generation rhythm of the family waltz) the sun-head issue is thrust upon their grandchildren. As therapy, I suggest experiencing the grandparent’s pain once again and then sending divine love into the situation. I have her keep telling herself, “What happened to my uncle in the sun can’t happen to me because I can always protect myself.” (Archive B. Eybl)
Sun Allergy, see three examples affecting the skin, p. 335.
Cat and Dog Allergies
A boy has been allergic to cats and dogs for seven years. Conflict: Their cat kept disappearing from home. He regularly experienced this as a visual separation conflict (see conjunctivitis p. 102). Therapy: He realizes that their first cat was a stray, but their current one is very well-behaved and doesn’t stray. Immediately afterwards, he put the cat to the test and cuddled with his face buried in the cat’s fur. Result: The allergy was resolved.
(Summarized from www.disease-is-different/reports/5bl-report-archive/)
For another example of a cat allergy (asthma), see p. 203.
Down syndrome (trisomy 21) affected children
Down syndrome is a chromosomal disorder in which three instead of two copies of chromosome 21 are present. It appears more often in children born to older women.
New Medicine’s view: Unfortunately, reliable statements about the cause of the conflict still cannot be made. Nevertheless, the old adage, “Nothing comes from nothing,” still applies.
Dr. Hamer reported on a Down syndrome child in his Golden Book, vol. 2, p. 445. Here, a hearing conflict and a motor conflict were identified as the cause:
During the pregnancy, the mother suffered from massive jackhammer noise in her office. After the birth, it was noticed that the child was extremely sensitive to noise and this is why Dr. Hamer recommended that absolute quiet be the most important measure taken. The child developed excellently up to the present and in the meantime had finished high school. If trisomy was still present is unknown.
What commonly plays a role among women who have late pregnancies is the mother’s doubt with regard to the child’s health. These fears increase with the age of the mother – especially among those who are “well informed” by conventional medicine as opposed to younger, “happy-go-lucky” women.
➜ A pregnant woman sees another woman with a disabled child on the street and thinks to herself: “My God, what a tragic fate. Hopefully my child won’t be like that.”
It is possible that these fearful ideas materialize and create exactly that which was feared most.
> I remain confident and I look forward to my child. I will make myself comfortable and avoid noise (including ultrasound).
Ancestor view: Disabilities can sometimes be explained by the family chronology (see: p.27, family waltzes p. 30).
Spiritual view: My observations lead me to believe that parents/families that move forward positively with their child’s disability receive a special radiant power, comparable to a lighthouse. It appears that these families win something: Through their child, they get an understanding of what life is really all about.
All experience reports on the organ system “General Symptoms” from the International Report Archive:
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