We cooked the mushrooms and, as we were starving, we literally "devoured" them. Mushrooms with garlic, polenta... my child finished the mushrooms on his plate and helped himself to a few more spoonfuls, which he ate immediately. We went to bed about four hours later, all well and good.
This morning, the child woke up late, around 10:30, came to my room and lay down next to me for another hour, until 11:30. It was a bit unusual, but I put it down to fatigue from the previous day and didn't worry about it.
When he woke up, he was weak, pale, jaundiced, apathetic, and could barely speak. I asked him if anything hurt—nothing. I asked him if he felt sick, if he felt like vomiting—he said no. We had experienced something similar one evening some time ago when he ate meat late and went to bed immediately—the meat didn't digest properly, and in the morning he woke up just as pale, vomited, and then recovered.
Now nothing... nothing hurt, he said he wasn't sick, but he was pale, weak, apathetic... I was glad he asked for food. He stumbled a couple of times before reaching the table, but managed to eat a slice of bread with some light fish zacusca that we made at home without oil. He asked to go back to bed—I saw him so weak that I got a little worried. I thought it was from the mushrooms, that he hadn't digested them properly because he had eaten a bit too much. I hoped he would vomit, but he didn't want to. I gave him some more water, some milk...
At one point, I felt like I was getting diarrhea—just out of the blue. I didn't know what to do—go to the bathroom or stay with him. He told me he was feeling better, I promised him I'd be back soon to tell stories, I saw him looking a little more lively, and I rushed out to the bathroom. Why diarrhea? Diarrhea (like vomiting) occurs when you receive a "toxic bite," real or imagined, which the body rushes to eliminate. In my case, the sick child was the strong toxic bite I received. The body rushed to eliminate it.
I quickly returned to him and told him stories for about two hours, during which time he drank water and milk. I tried to draw his attention to the story, to make him curious, to see him paying attention. After two hours, the color returned to his cheeks, he wanted to eat, he was visibly better. He ate, then started playing, and almost completely recovered. The whole story lasted about four hours.
Five minutes after seeing him clearly, I was suddenly seized by pain in my leg—the calf of my left leg—the muscle, I would say, I don't know if the bone too. An annoying, dull pain throughout the calf of my leg, I tend to limp a little. How can this be explained?
LATERALITY: The left side: for a right-handed person like me, the left side is the mother-child side; the right side is for partners, people, and even animals that we consider partners. For left-handed people, it's the other way around. How can this be explained, and how can you remember it? A right-handed mother holds her child in her left arm so that her right hand is free. So for me, the feelings on the left refer to my child, my mother, or people or even pets that I consider my children. So... pain on the left must be related to the child, to his earlier situation.
What does muscle pain mean? Devaluation conflict—meaning I don't feel capable of doing something, I didn't manage to do something, I'm not satisfied with how I performed something from a motor skills point of view—I didn't manage to run fast enough somewhere, for example. During the active conflict, muscle necrosis occurs with no pain (at the cellular level, of course, and barely noticeable for a conflict lasting only 4 hours), and in the healing phase (as I was, because my little one was no longer feeling sick and the pain in my leg started as soon as I saw that he was okay), the muscles recover. The pain occurs because the body "tests" the nerve endings in the area to see if everything has been repaired properly. The muscles will be stronger after this "procedure" to allow us to cope better with the given conflict situation next time, i.e., to move faster, to run faster.
In my specific situation, I think it refers either to the fact that I felt I wasn't returning/running fast enough from the bathroom and the sick child was left alone (i.e., a conflict that triggered another conflict), or that I wasn't doing a good enough job of helping him get over his illness faster.
My situation now and what am I doing? Well, what am I doing? I'm writing on my blog and waiting for it to pass :) I'm not taking anything, I'm thinking about something else and waiting for the muscle to get stronger.
Have a nice day, everyone,
Geo
UPDATE: two hours later, my leg was completely fine. The healing phase lasted about as long as the active phase.
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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