Understand one's own disease

 

THE URINARY SYSTEM


The KIDNEY comprises three tissues. The parenchyma (CF2) is affected by a conflict, the DHS of which, being related with the notion of liquid: drowning, inundation, alcoholism, etc… The renal insufficiency of the first phase is compensated by a cyst in the second phase; the cyst will be functional but considered as being one of the forms of renal tumours. The collecting tubes (CF1) correspond to a conflict of dispossession, this having, of course, to be taken in a large sense: the means of existence and more particularly material possession, but also the "destruction of one’s creation". The calyxes and pelvis (CF2) respond to a conflict of territorial marking.

The ureter (CF2) has something in common with the calyx from the conflictual point of view. The painful spasms due to the ulceration of the urinary passages provoke stones whose liberation is even more painful but which only occur after the solution of the conflict. The nephritic colic is its forced complication which might need a surgical therapeutic help.

The BLADDER consists of two tissues. The mucosa (CF2) is also affected by a territorial marking conflict, with a nuance for the woman, who does not find her place within the territory; hence the higher frequency of cystitis in the second phase with her. The sub-mucosa (CF1) produces polyps (non-malignant or malignant) in the first phase being linked to a conflict of something dirty. Examples: a working man working in a dye plant and who feels stained by the smell and the colour of his urine; the individual who feels soiled by the immoral attitude of his partner.