Put simply and clearly, the epileptoid crisis is the climax of the healing process. It is short-lived—sometimes lasting a few hours, sometimes no more than a minute—but it must be taken seriously and understood, because it can be fatal when the conflict has lasted more than 9 months.
Let’s break it down step by step.
1. Step 1—the active conflict phase—when imbalances occur in the body, we wear ourselves out, we get stressed, things don’t go our way, and we go through various psychological shocks. Generally, this phase isn’t accompanied by pain. There are only a few minor exceptions, such as an ear infection or tonsillitis. We suffer one shock after another without even realizing it. If these shocks were accompanied by pain, at least we’d become aware of them and learn to stop them. Unfortunately, we only realize it when it’s too late.
Step 2—resolving the conflict—is achieved by becoming aware of the problem, with the passage of time, through various events that put things in our lives in order, or with the help of homeopathic or flower remedies. From that moment on, the healing phase begins.
Step 3—the first half of the healing phase—is usually accompanied by pain. This is actually when the body’s balance is restored: tissue regrows, repairs itself, is replaced with stronger cells, or breaks down where there was cell growth that is no longer needed. This is when we consider ourselves to be “sick.” In fact, we are in the healing phase because we have just overcome the problem.
Step 4—the epiletoid/epileptic/epicrisis occurs in the middle or at the peak of the healing process, when the body is running at full speed to repair and rebalance the tissues. It manifests through various symptoms, usually severe, that are related to the type of tissue affected. These can include headaches, nausea, severe pain in the affected area, asthma attacks, and can even lead to strokes or heart attacks. If you’re reading this blog on a laptop, on the right-hand side you’ll find several useful resources, including a PDF book by Dr. Hamer. The epicrisis is also described there, starting on page 17 and then for each tissue type individually. The epicrisis can be fatal when the conflict has lasted more than 9 months because the body is so out of balance that healing is far too taxing. Sometimes it’s better not to resolve the conflict at all.
Step 5 — If the conflict does not recur, the second half of the healing phase begins, a much gentler process with less intense pain.
And now my example: following an energy release session based on the emotion code, I worked through the childhood abandonment trauma I experienced when my parents left me with my grandparents in the countryside for several years. A few hours after the session, I began to experience fairly severe pain (6–7 out of 10) in my jaw, on the left side—my mother’s side, according to my lateralization. For four nights, I couldn’t sleep because of the pain unless I took Algocalmin. I felt the pain deep in the bone; it wasn’t a specific tooth but rather an area, which means that when I was left with my grandparents, my feeling toward my mother was one of being unable to bite her out of anger for what she had decided to do. Now I know the situation; I understand why she chose what she did—it wasn’t up to her—but at one year old, I didn’t know that. A clear conflict of devaluation related to my inability to bite. And the pain was worse in the evening and at night when my body stopped its daily activities and had the time and resources to focus on healing.
Once that was resolved, the bone began to heal and started to hurt.
After the fourth night, around 6 a.m., when the Algocalmin had worn off, I was struck by such excruciating pain that I literally didn’t know how to keep from screaming in agony and waking the boys. A terrible pain in the area of my upper teeth, on the left side. The whole thing lasted at most one minute, no more. I had given up all hope of getting any sleep; I was just thinking with dread about how I was going to get through the day ahead.
After a minute, the pain had subsided almost completely; I could hardly feel any pain at all, just a slight discomfort. I couldn’t believe it. I hadn’t done anything during that whole time—I hadn’t taken any pills, I’d just been writhing in bed in pain. There’s still a slight discomfort that I’m feeling even now, a day later. That means I have about two more days of this slight discomfort to “endure,” and then I’ll be fully healed. I say “endure” in a figurative sense because I hardly feel anything anymore. After those terrible pains, everything has calmed down.
I hope you understand how this crisis works. If you had a brief conflict, you won’t even feel it. If the conflict lasted longer, it will be more unpleasant, and you’ll experience symptoms related to the type of conflict. You won’t feel an asthma attack if the conflict didn’t affect your lungs, and so on. What you’ll feel during the crisis is strictly related to the affected tissue.
And one more detail… after the crisis, you may urinate more frequently. During the first phase of healing, the body tends to retain water to protect the affected tissue while it repairs itself. After the crisis, those water deposits are eliminated.
The second example—an acquaintance of mine who complains of kidney pain and traces of blood in her urine, as shown by lab tests.
Conflict experienced—the feeling of being alone, abandoned; conflict related to the feeling of “being left behind”; conflict related to the feeling of “not being cared for” or “being poorly cared for”; conflict related to “the feeling of being in the desert” (without water); conflict related to the feeling of “having lost everything,” conflict related to the feeling of “not being loved.”
Affected tissue—the renal collecting duct
The medical summary mentions kidney pain and possibly blood, pus, and protein in the urine.
Read Dr. Hamer’s book, and I wish everyone good health and all the best,
Geo
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