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CONFLICTS

Diabetes Male
A resistance conflict is a strong opposition
against a person (parent, stepparent, sibling,
relative, spouse, teacher, colleague,
supervisor, doctor), against a situation (at
work, at home, at school, in a relationship),
against an institution (school, church,
hospital, government, political regime),
against decisions made over one’s head, or
being forced to do something against one's
will. Children suffer the conflict at an early
age, when they resist daycare, kindergarten,
or school, or when they strongly oppose what
they are told to do.
Diabetes Female

A fear-disgust conflict is a fright coupled


with disgust regarding a situation or a person.
The conflict can be brought on, for example,
by revolting sexual experiences (sexual
abuse, unwanted sexual practices, violent
sex) or distress involving blood, feces, urine,
or vomit. Being frightened of a drunk family
member could provoke a fear-disgust conflict
with the smell of alcohol as a potential track.
Children suffer the conflict when they have to
eat “disgusting” food.
In line with evolutionary reasoning, territorial
conflicts, sexual conflicts, and separation conflictsare
the primary conflict themes associated with organs
of ectodermal origin, controlled from the sensory, pre-
motor sensory and post-sensory cortex. 
Periferal neuritis and Skin Trouble

severe separation conflict.

In comparison to the separation
conflict related to the skin, the conflict linked
to the periosteal nerves is experienced as
more dramatic, even as brutal or cruel.
Depending on the exact conflict situation, the
separation might be associated with the arms
(not being able to hold a beloved person of a
pet), hands (a loved one slipped away), legs
and ankles (wanting to push someone away),
or feet (a separation from the familiar ground
through an unexpected move). The periosteal
nerves lining the eye socket correlate to a
visual separation conflict (having lost sight of
someone). Like with the epidermis, the
conflict also corresponds to wanting to
separate from a person.
NOTE: The separation conflict related to the periosteal nerves only
refers to a separation from a person or from an animal such as a pet but
not to objects (jewelry, car, house) or a separation, let’s say, from a
home (see territorial loss conflict).
A territorial loss conflict [Proste and Heart coronary artries.]

The biological conflict linked to the coronary arteries is a male territorial


loss conflict or a female sexual conflict, depending on a person’s gender,
laterality, and hormone status.

A territorial loss conflict is experienced through the loss of the private


domain (a home because of an unexpected move or a divorce, the
confiscation of a property, fire, flooding) or a threat to the safety of the
place where one lives. Assets of the “territory” that are of personal value
such as a car, jewelry, a private collection, stocks, investments, a license, an
immigrant status, or a club membership also fall into this category. The loss
of the professional domain could occur through the loss of a business,
bankruptcy, the loss of a workplace because of layoffs, a merger, a transfer,
or an early retirement due to illness or cut-backs. Not being able to continue
pursuing a hobby (playing a musical instrument, painting, writing,
gardening, a sports activity) can be perceived as a territorial loss. The
conflict also refers to the loss of the intellectual domain, for instance, to
the loss of one’s skills as a result of an accident, or, literally, to the loss of
the intellectual property (research results, confidential data, patents, trade
secrets). The loss of a member of the territory (parent, spouse, partner,
child, a pet, friend, colleague, client, customer) because of an argument or a
separation can prompt the conflict. Men suffer territorial loss conflicts when
they lose a sexual mate. The male territorial loss conflict is the equivalent to
the female sexual conflict (the brain relays of the corresponding organs,
namely of the coronary arteries and the cervix, are positioned exactly across
from each other in the cerebral cortex).  

NOTE: If a man is at an age where he can no longer have a territorial loss


conflict due to a low testosterone status, a mating conflict (loss of a sexual
mate, sexual rejection, sexual frustration) affects more likely
the prostate rather than the coronary arteries. This explains why prostate-
related symptoms (elevated PSA, prostate hyperplasia) are more common in
older men
Uterus Cancers
SEXUAL CONFLICT
The biological conflict linked to the cervix mucosa is a sexual
conflict or mating conflict(meaning, in biological terms, that
reproduction is at stake). In comparison, the conflict associated
with the uterus is foremost about “implantation”.  In males, the
sexual or mating conflict corresponds to the coronary veins (with
a low testosterone status) or to the prostate (when the
testosterone status is in the normal range).

A sexual conflict refers to any distress concerning sexuality.


This includes painful (first-time) sex, sexual abuse, sexual
harassment, unwanted sexual practices, sexual rejection, feeling
sexually unwanted, a lack of sexual activity because of an
unexpected separation or loss of a mate. Offensive pornography,
finding out that the partner or spouse is sleeping with someone
else, or interruptions during sexual intercourse can trigger the
conflict. As a result of early sexualization, girls experience
nowadays the conflict at a very young age. Tubal ligation (“tied
tubes”), the use of an IUD, or taking contraceptives to prevent a
pregnancy might invoke a sexual conflict on a subtle psycho-
biological level.

NOTE: If a woman has a low estrogen status, for example after


menopause, she is no longer able to experience a mating conflict
in biological terms. She will, therefore, respond to sexual distress
more likely with the uterus. This explains, why according
to epidemiological studies, 90% of women with uterus cancer are
over 50 years of age.

The cartilage, tendons, and ligaments correlate to a light


self-devaluation conflict.
Cervical spodilosis , any bone or cartilage.
In line with evolutionary reasoning, self-devaluation conflicts are the primary
conflict theme associated with cerebral medulla-controlled organs deriving from
the new mesoderm.

A generalized self-devaluation conflict concerns the whole person. The


conflict is experienced, for example, through humiliation (accusations,
scoldings, derogatory remarks), abuse (physical, sexual, verbal), failure (at
work, at school, in sports, in a relationship, as a parent or partner), a poor
performance (intellectual, artistic, athletic), or feelings of shame and guilt. The
loss of a status, the loss of a workplace, retirement, illness or injuries (“I am
out of commission”), aging (“I am not as good as I used to”, “I am getting old
and useless”) or the loss of a person, who made one feel appreciated and
needed, are other conflict scenarios. The way we perceive ourselves or speak to
ourselves (“I am a failure”, “I will never succeed”) create mental predispositions
for generalized self-devaluation conflicts. Children and the elderly are more
vulnerable to suffer the conflict.

A localized self-devaluation conflict (see localization) relates to a specific


part of the body. A poor artistic or athletic performance, for example,
corresponds to the hands or legs. A self-devaluation conflict brought on by a
cancer diagnosis (colon cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer), a negative
prognosis (“You won’t be able to walk again!”), the removal of an organ
(mastectomy), or continuous localized pain correlates to the nearest bone or
joint. In comparison, a moderate self-devaluation conflict would involve the
closest lymph node or muscle.

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