About two weeks ago, we decided to go shopping in town. We live in the countryside in a fairly quiet area, 30 km from town. Our child spends the day in the yard, outdoors. We don't live on the main road, and he sees bicycles on the street, sometimes a car, rarely a tractor or minibus, all beyond the fence. His peaceful environment is rarely disturbed. We go for walks with the dogs in the fields and visit neighbors.
As my husband had the day off on St. Mary's Day, on Monday, August 14, we decided to go for a trip to the supermarket in town. We don't buy much food because we don't find anything edible there, we are used to vegetables from the garden and dairy products from our neighbors, but sometimes you still need a plate, a box of jars, a set of socks, or a pot. So, I say, let's take the child out into the world to see people and let's wander around the store. Sometimes I miss going on a trip... rarely, but it happens.
No sooner said than done. We got in the car, Dad stopped at the hardware store to get some PPR pipes, technical stuff, and whatever else he needed for the heating system, which was being serviced for winter, while I stayed at Carrefour with the kid. We needed to get some plates, a collar for the new puppy, a garden chair for the kid, and various other things.
While Dad was getting pipes and other new stuff, we took a tour of the store, a total stroll—about an hour—an hour and a half. Luckily, when he came to "pick us up," we were close to the cash registers. We returned home, everything fine and dandy.
The next day, boom, the kid had a runny nose. Not badly, his nose wasn't blocked, but it was visibly runny and you could hear it when he breathed. After an hour or two, the "cold" was gone. It came and went just like that. Before I knew about the biological laws, I would have said that he caught a virus in the store, or that it was from the air conditioning, or that he caught a draft in the car.
The real explanation - in the wild, animals sniff when they arrive in a new environment to see if they are safe. In this phase (also called active conflict), there is a cellular increase in the nasal mucosa, which allows for more efficient sniffing. Once the animal has determined that everything is okay, the extra cells die, the cell growth breaks down, and the dreaded mucus appears... that is, those cells are eliminated (conflict resolution phase). Whether we accept it or not, the same process occurs in humans. Children in particular experience this: the younger they are, the more intensely they "sniff." When the conflict is resolved, that is, when they realize that there are no dangers in their environment, the mucus appears. Any new environment, new situation, or new person can trigger a sniffing conflict in a child. And... mucus has nothing to do with coughing or fever. They are SEPARATE TISSUES and DIFFERENT CONFLICTS. So, my child sniffed intensely while we were at Carrefour, and the next day he had mucus, and that was pretty much the cold.
Good health to all,
Geo
Books to explore on the subject of new german medicine:
- German New Medicine Experiences in Practice: An introduction to the medical discoveries of Dr. Ryke Geerd Hamer Dr. Katherine
- German New Medicine: An Introduction to Understanding the Mind-Body Connection and Healing Naturally
- The Psychic Roots of Disease: A New Medicine (Color Edition)
- The German New Medicine Healing HandBook: The Ultimate Self-Healing Manual Based on Dr. Hamer’s German New Medicine Principles
- Compendium of the 5 Biological Laws: Signs and Symptoms:German New Medicine (5 Biological Laws and New Germanic Medicine)
- Discovering THE GERMAN NEW MEDICINE: A revolutionaryapproach to health and well-being
- Hamer's Laws: Origin and Course of All Diseases
- The German New Medicine at your fingertips: Dr. Hamer's revolutionary discovery for a healthy life without fear of disease
- The FiveBiological Laws of Nature: A New Medicine (Color Edition)

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