Writing about health is always complicated, especially mental health and in the age of “artificial intelligence”. One of my clients, four years ago, said that by 2026, the most sought-after profession would be psychotherapy, and not of a medical nature. I couldn’t help but believe him because everyone knows that the age we are in now is the age of mental problems, health and well-being. It is the century in which pharmacology is actively ramping up, driving the psyche into a blind corner. It is the century of the pseudo-industry of health, which, unfortunately, pharmacology and the pharma industry will never provide for us.
And so, initially, what is the purpose of this publication? Its purpose is to answer the question about the health of our world, about the zone of psychic perception, and about the crushing tautology, where lies override the perverse meaning and give birth to something new, some super-knowledge, whose placement in the human mind most often produces a total psychosis. To know – you know, but you cannot do anything about it. The modern pharmaceutical industry is doing just that, especially when dealing with mental health problems.
What false postulates are prevalent today?
The first is the ubiquitous postulate about psychosomatics. The psycho-soma-tic, precisely in the plural, has its philosophy of appearance and meaning of existence. If psycho is mental and soma is physical, what they have in common is their ability to regulate. Therefore, psychosomatics is a disturbed regulation of the body and psyche. Our life begins with the regulation formation, first on the level of physiology and then at three months of age physical regulation begins. It is how we live our lives, in qualitative interchanges between the physical and mental systems of regulation.
Initially, disturbance of physical regulation develops into the sensation of pain and then, with time, into some autoimmune process, when the regulative function of both body and mind starts functioning distorted. However, we must remember that this distortion is not our thoughts’ result. Instead, it is the lack of action that should accompany those thoughts. After all, it is the action placed in the motor activity of the human body that brings the tension out of the body to the outside.
Consequently, psychosomatics is a way of interaction between two regulations, the regulation of the physical – from microbiological processes to sensations in the body and the mental – the perception of what is happening, regardless of the format (internal or external).
The second false postulate is that the most incurable diseases appear from the wrong thoughts. My father died of cancer. He was a simple man with half-childish ambitions and the same kind of fantasy-filled, primitive thoughts. However, he always, under all circumstances, loved to live. Exactly to live. He did not delve deeper into understanding life. His life ended in an infinite desire to live and a fear of realizing that this illness was his last frontier. Well, it was unlikely that his thoughts could have triggered the disease. Yes, even assuming those pathogenic thoughts did occur, his last hopes of excruciating IVs and a promise to work to take care of me could not stop the deadly pathogenic process. So, by logic, if you get sick from your thoughts, then heal yourself with them – it doesn’t work.
Another postulate – total diagnosis and prevention. Yes, it’s true. You can pre-empt, but only that which is preemptible. What a pity, but patients are not told about this, because in the pharmaceutical industry everyone has hope, regardless of whether you live or die. Patients have become customers. Even for the right to die, you pay.
Well, we are hostages twice. First, we are guilty of the fact that everyone wants to live. Secondly, we are obliged to buy everything, but as brutal statistics show, we buy this life from the wrong people.
And at this point, the point of uncertainty and hope in our lives, we are completely unprotected.
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