The Time Bomb Effect
The unredeemed mental conflict behaves like a time bomb: the patient and his nervous system must be replaced by life circumstances and life experience
Reach a certain level of maturity required for a conflict to be resolved.
Despite the ever-present fear, the patient must be ready and able to welcome and fully feel the feelings that may come up.
For example.B, a toddler is not able to hate someone, even if they have been abused by that person.
20 to 30 years later, however, the now adult is able to feel "hatred" with the now mature nervous system, to take responsibility for it,
To draw consequences, to confront former evildoers, and to deal with them.
Corresponding unredeemed mental conflicts are "parked", so to speak, in deep layers of the subconscious,
until it's time to get them up and process them. The same applies to all strong emotions such as love, passion, anger, hatred, etc.
The conflict reports itself and declares by the appearance of a symptom or disease that it is now ready for treatment.
If the conflict is detected and treated, the symptom disappears, permanently. If it is not recognized and "redeemed", the symptom becomes stronger and stronger,
and the conflict screams louder and louder until the cry, a message, is heard and processed.
This is the reason why often neither conventional medicine nor alternative medicine have great success in the treatment of chronic diseases.
There is no detour around the unredeemed mental conflict. Mild back pain that occurred three weeks ago,
are most likely an old mental conflict that has just matured. If the same patient has unbearable chronic pain two years later,
the conflict with its "owner" has become a little more impatient because he still does not listen.
If this person is now operated on an intervertebral disc, for example, it may be that the pain gets better.
But if, for example, prostate cancer develops two years later, this means: "I, the unredeemed mental conflict, am still here.
This is my last cry for help. If you still don't hear me, I'll give up." Again and again, the unconscious uses the same tactic;
first a whisper "please hear me", then a shout, then a scream. The cry is often the cancers or chronic pain.
From: Lehrbuch der Psycho-Kinesiologie, Dr. Dietrich Klinghardt.
Excursion: The problem with disease gain