Understand one's own disease

 

THE GENITAL SYSTEM


The woman

The UTERUS has three tissues. The uterine cervix (CF2) ulcerates during the first phase of the sexual frustration conflict; but one will only find possible "cancerogene viruses" in the repairing proliferation in the second phase. The mucosa of the uterine body (CF1) responds to an improper sexual conflict, or to a loss/separation conflict of one of the descendants. As far as the uterine fibroma is concerned, it is the second phase in the affection of the unstriped muscle (CF2) of the uterus and it expresses a fertility conflict and hence a conflict from the maternal side of the woman (in contrast with the lover side for the cervix).

The vagina (CF2) is being linked to the cervix with a risk of vicious circle because the inflammation of the second phase refrains from coupling with the partner.

The OVARY comprises two tissues. The germinal tissue (CF1) producing the gametes corresponds to a severe conflict of an affective loss. The interstitial tissue (CF2) is also afflicted by a loss conflict or, in a lesser proportion, by a sexual conflict of a shameful nature, accompanied with the production of a cyst in the second phase.

The uterine tubes (CF1) are linked with a sexual conflict of a dirty colouring. The proliferation in the second phase is one of the principal causes of tube obstruction.

The man

The prostate (CF1) is affected either by a sexual conflict experienced as dirty or devalorising, or by a conflict concerning his descendants or assimilated (children, grand-children, pupils, favourites, etc…). And still, according to the intensity / duration, one will obtain the binary "verdict" of prostatic adenoma or prostatic cancer.

The TESTICLE is analogous to the ovary – from the point of view of lesion and conflict – with its two tissues: the germinal tissue (CF1) and the interstitial tissue (CF2).

Let us also cite here the genital condyloma which are small fleshy tumours located at the vulva or at the penis. Not at all contagious nor pre-cancerous, they are the equivalent of those on the mucosa, the warts seen on the epiderm: second phase of a conflict of loss of an intimate contact, felt on that site of the body .