Here comes a loooong article—so arm yourselves with patience. Keep in mind right from the start that the person I’m talking about took antibiotics about 9 months ago for a toothache… it’s a detail that will matter later…
A few days ago, my aunt underwent a medical procedure called “extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy,” a procedure that uses shock waves to break kidney stones into very small fragments. You lie on a table where you have to stay completely still for about 30 minutes; a device is attached to your kidney, and this device sends out waves that break up the stones—waves that cause pain, even though you’re told otherwise before the procedure. A lot of pain, stress, money spent, medication before and after, very limited mobility, a very poor appetite... As I sat and analyzed the situation, I sought to find out WHY he went through that ordeal—why do kidney stones form? Isn’t there a conflict there as well? And I’ll tell you what I found in New German Medicine, but until then, here’s a bit about the medical procedure so you can see how far medicine has driven this situation.
Before the procedure (immediately after she was diagnosed with a kidney stone, which had been the source of her pain for several months), my aunt took an expensive medication for two months—on the recommendation of the “professor” who was to perform the procedure—that is intended for weight loss and body sculpting. She was told that, in her case, it was meant to “soften” the stone and make it easier to break up. It didn’t actually “soften” anything; the stone was extremely hard in the end. The package insert didn’t mention kidney stones anywhere—only the elimination of excess water, regulation of blood sugar and fat levels to lose excess weight—but who were we to question it…
The list of pre-procedure medications also included another 4–5 items; I won’t list them here… they were purchased and taken with care…
The procedure lasted over half an hour; it was very painful, and the aftereffects were just as painful—nausea, very painful stabbing sensations in the kidneys, and another round of expensive and unpleasant medications for a long time afterward, along with the recommendation to collect the stones and have them analyzed “to discover the cause of their formation” (HA!!), constant stress that the situation could recur—that the patient could develop new kidney stones at any time—drastic dietary restrictions (no oxalates, salt, and other foods), drastic restrictions on the types of water consumed, the need for constant monitoring of urinary pH and its correction with additional medications...
Is there really no explanation, and can we really do nothing to prevent these painful situations—which, for someone over 70, lead to a drastic deterioration in their quality of life—limitation after limitation, the kitchen table piled high with pills and powders? My aunt was told that it all comes down to some people’s genetic predisposition. So… this big bogeyman called “genetic predisposition” ends up ruling our lives. Is there really nothing we can do? Are we completely at the mercy of fate? Are we just supposed to constantly check our urine pH, and only drink and eat from that limited list of foods, with everything else being completely dangerous for us?
I searched for and read everything I could find in the German medical literature and pieced it all together. Of course, Dr. Hamer has an explanation, and it seems to fit my aunt’s case pretty well. This brings us to the conflicts associated with the renal collecting duct. When a being (whether animal or human) finds itself in a situation where the amount of water and food available to it is limited (or it perceives this to be the case—the conflict may be real or imagined), these tissues increase in volume and thus intensify their functions so that the body can make do with what it has. When the conflict is resolved, the excess tissue is eliminated with the help of bacteria, and the kidney returns to normal. If the bacteria necessary for this decomposition process are no longer present in the body, the excess tissue becomes encapsulated. This way of reacting to an imbalance is not specific to the kidney but applies to all tissues that developed from the same embryonic layer—in this case, the endoderm. The lungs, for example, fall into the same category. I won’t go into too many anatomical details; please look into this on your own.
And what happens when a person no longer has these bacteria in their body? Let me remind you of the sentences with which I began this article—“Keep in mind from the start that the person I’m talking about took antibiotics about 9 months ago for a toothache”... Furthermore, due to stomach problems that have built up over the years, they eat very little and have a limited diet, avoiding sour or fermented foods… that is, those containing good bacteria.
Returning to the collecting tubes, the conflicts that affect them, according to Dr. Hamer’s findings, are known as the “refugee conflict” and include:
- a situation where I’ve run out of money, a job, or food
- I’m all alone in the world (e.g., when I go to a foreign country where I feel abandoned)
- I’m in a situation where I have no help
- I feel abandoned or deserted by everyone
- I’m poorly cared for
- I’m not loved
- I’ve lost everything
After the conflict is resolved, the excess tissue is broken down and eliminated, which explains the normal presence of pus, blood, red blood cells, and proteins in the urine; the urine may be cloudy and have a foul odor.
If the body cannot break down the excess tissue because it no longer has the necessary bacteria, it encapsulates it—that is, it calcifies it and leaves it there as a “reminder.”
And getting back to my aunt—she lives alone, spends a lot of time at home, often feels abandoned, helpless, and lonely, and last year she took antibiotics because she was terrified of a toothache. Do you understand now what’s going on with her kidney stone?
So what should you do? Well, don’t leave your elderly relatives alone if you can help it; go visit them often, ask for their advice and help, make them feel useful, involve them as much as you can in your life… and don’t let them take antibiotics unnecessarily. And yes, the stones will come back if the underlying issue recurs…
And I forgot to add something… the stone was in the left kidney. Taking into account the laterality I’ve been talking about in other articles, the left side for a right-handed mother (like my aunt) is the side of the mother or the children. So my aunt’s conflict was related to all those people in that category…
Hugs and best wishes for good health,
Geo
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https://www.udemy.com/course/new-german-medicine/?referralCode=C36CC2DEF701A1364318

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