Goobuster - Katerine Dyckmans - E-Book

Goobuster E-Book

Katerine Dyckmans

0,0
19,99 €

-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

When you are interested in my work or hold this book in your hands, you certainly want to know one thing: What sets her apart from others? A very legitimate question. People have often already gone a long way to find healing, to evolve themselves, or simply to age well. When people summarize their thoughts about me, my work or this book, they say that it is the missing element that brings everything together. Most of us have understood some things, misunderstood others, tried some things, let go of many things, and done many things very well. But many of us know and feel that something essential is missing despite all our endeavors.

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB
MOBI

Seitenzahl: 356

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2023

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



GOOBUSTER

Dr. KaDy Peng’s

GOOBUSTER

Dr. KaDy Peng

IMPRESSUM

Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek:

Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über http://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar.

Erste Auflage: Oktober 2023

Copyright © 2023 Katerine Dyckmans

www.goobuster.com

Kia Kahawa Verlagsdienstleistungen

— Korrektorat: Michael Haitel,

— Buchsatz & Coverdesign: Lena Adolph

www.kiakahawa.de

Bildmaterial: Katerine Dyckmans

Textur: Niemand Niemansfrau

Druck und Distribution im Auftrag des Autors:

tredition GmbH, Heinz-Beusen-Stieg 5, 22926 Ahrensburg

ISBN Hardcover: 978-3-384-02855-6

E-Book: 978-3-384-02856-3

“TO ANOTHER, THE SAME BOOK IS ANOTHER”

Otto Ludwig 1813–1865

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Cover

Halbe Titelseite

Titelblatt

Urheberrechte

1. Introduction

2. What Is Goo?

3. The Liver - Unveiling the Secrets of an Underappreciated Organ.

4. The Impact of Eating Under Stress: "How It Affects Your Liver”

Alexis St. Martin, 1822

Tom Littl, 1894:

5. Peristaltic Waves and the Significance of Effective Housekeeping

6. The Small Intestine: The Ruler of the Immune System and the brain-gut axis

7. The Heart Dopamine vs Small Intestine Dopamine

8. Dopamine’s Allies: Exploring the True Essence of Joy

9. Dopamine’s Enemies - Unveiling Rationalization And Showing Up The Essentials

9.1 Fake It, Play It, Ignore It: EXPOSING THE CHAMPIONS Of DISGUISE

9.2 From Tripping To Trouble: Unmasking The Dark Side Of Drugs, Chemicals, And Med Mishaps

9.3 ALCOHOL’S DOPAMINE MASSACRE: AH UHHOly UNION Of VICE AND NEUROTRANSMITTERS

10. Behind The Scenes: Kidney And Adrenal Glands Hold The Key To An Astonishing Hormonal Universe

11.The Vagus Nerve: The Rebel Highway For Information To Reach Its Destination Organ

12. Change Starts Within: Attitude And Intention Are Key Catalysts

13. From Ordinary to Extraordinary: Journeying to the Higher Field with your individual higher force

14. Unleashing the Untamed Power of the Higher Field: Let’s Get Bold and Talk About It!

15. The Power Quihtet: Uhlockihg The Secrets To Physical Health Aho Persohal Growth Through Coghitive, Sehsitive, Spiritual, Aho Empathic Paths!

16. Let's Face It ! Shake Off The Blindfold: Discover A New Way Of Seeing

16.1. DID KURT DIE FROM HEROIN?

16.2. DID TIM DIE FROM AlCOHOl?

16.3. The Frohtmeh Syhdrome. Is The Story Of Hillsohg Church Preacher Carl Lehtz A Tale Of Adultery?

17. What Is Love: Exploring The Hormonal And Physical Dimensions

18. Nutrition On Your Terms: Unleashing The Power Of Intuitive Food Choicesfrom Empty Calories To Powerhouse Nutrients

19. Level Up: The 10 High Skills As Power-Up For The Higher League In The Higher Field

20. Brain-Gut Enemies Exposed: The Detrimental Impact Of Gluten, Gliadin, And Casein

21. The Food Pharmacy: The Secret Of Hioh-Potehtial Food. Ik With The Oood Ahd Out With The Oad.

21.1. The Fabulous Five: The Unstoppable Forges Of The Food Family

21.2. THE DYNAMIC DUO Of THE NINE FRIENDS; FAMIlY’S ROCk-SOlID FOUNDATION

21.3 NO BAND, NO PARTY: WITHOUT THIS 5 BAND MEMBERS, IT’S JUST A SAD GATHERING

21.4. THE FUH-FIllED FIVE: PARTY GEAR THAT BRINGS JOY TO FAMIlY AND FRIEHDS

21.5. MOSt VAlUASlE PlAYER - THE HEAVYWEIGHtS Of NUtRItlON

21.6. Taste Bud Trickster - Food Against Your Well-Being

22. The indescribable wastage of food due to disordered eating habits!

23. Last Words

Goobuster

Cover

Titelblatt

Urheberrechte

1. Introduction

23. Last Words

Goobuster

Cover

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

32

33

34

35

36

37

38

39

40

41

42

43

44

45

46

47

48

49

50

51

52

53

54

55

56

57

58

59

60

61

62

63

64

65

66

67

68

69

70

71

72

73

74

75

76

77

78

79

80

81

82

83

84

85

86

87

88

89

90

91

92

93

94

95

96

97

98

99

100

101

102

103

104

105

106

107

108

109

110

111

112

113

114

115

116

117

118

119

120

121

122

123

124

125

126

127

128

129

130

131

132

133

134

135

137

138

139

140

141

143

144

145

146

147

148

149

150

151

152

153

154

155

156

157

158

159

160

161

162

163

164

165

166

167

168

169

170

171

172

173

174

175

176

177

178

179

180

181

182

183

184

185

186

187

188

189

190

191

192

193

194

195

196

197

198

199

200

201

202

203

204

205

206

207

208

209

210

211

212

213

214

215

216

217

218

219

220

221

222

223

224

225

226

227

228

1. Introduction

Make a long story short

When you are interested in my work or hold this book in your hands, you certainly want to know one thing: What sets her apart from others? A very legitimate question. People have often already gone a long way to find healing, to evolve themselves, or simply to age well. When people summarize their thoughts about me, my work or this book, they say that it is the missing element that brings everything together. Most of us have understood some things, misunderstood others, tried some things, let go of many things, and done many things very well. But many of us know and feel that something essential is missing despite all our endeavors.

My work with people and my refusal to make myself comfortable in medical disciplines has led me on decades-long research and treatment journeys through many countries and universities. Always on the quest to bridge the knowledge gap between the medicine of one country and what the medicine of another country has to offer, leaving no question unanswered. When I discovered good treatment methods, I always asked myself how to make these methods faster and more effective, what is missing to turn them into a good and efficient method. People have often suffered for a long time and suddenly receive diagnoses that turn their whole lives upside down. For explanations like, “Your illness has been present for a long time, so it will also take some time to regenerate” or “make sure to do your mental exercises—and always practice and practice”, people don’t have time anymore.

We require rapid and intricate methods of regeneration, rather than therapists who specialize in just one area. The human body is a complex and interconnected system, requiring an interdisciplinary approach. The separation of this intricate marvel of a body has led us to this challenging situation. The human body necessitates a multidisciplinary strategy to effectively address its needs. By integrating diverse expertise and techniques, we can enhance our comprehension and treatment of the body’s intricate workings. It is crucial to acknowledge the significance of collaboration and holistic approaches when it comes to regenerating our bodies.

There are incredibly good mental or visual exercises, but these exercises lack both the target organ and the support of the organ and the hormone system, as well as all the associated neurotransmitters, to turn a mental or visual exercise into a direct yet lasting fireworks display. The human body is so complex, and each organ has its own cycle, its own injuries, its own damages, and its own negative experiences stored in its cells. The more targeted the information of regeneration is coupled with the individual organ, the faster it can heal.

In transplantation medicine, it has been astonishingly found that during an organ transplant, such as the transplantation of a kidney, liver, or heart from one body to another, the recipient often adopts characteristics and traits of the donor. For example, if the liver of an angry person is transplanted, the organ recipient will become an angry person, although they were never like that before. This concerns a cellular information that is stored firmly in the cells of the organ, detached from the brain or the immune system, in the realm that can be regulated with mental or visual exercises. This extremely important but accidentally finding from transplantation medicine clearly shows how deeply this cellular information are anchored in our organs and how important it is to create good conditions for our regeneration, personal growth and self-improvement. This is also the starting point of my 21-day challenges and the hidden treatments: creating a stable foundation and questioning which mental or visual exercise or method is suitable for each specific organ. It is not only about asking which negative characteristic the person has, but also asking from which organ it originates, where this event has been stored. In reverse, it is also about recognizing which negative emotion the person experiences when the organ is sick. People who participate in my challenges learn to change their perception—what is psychological and what is organic. They recognize which behavioral errors belong to which organ, and in doing so, they can identify organ diseases at a very early stage, not just in emergency situations. They also learn to view people in a more forgiving way.

The organs have a subtle but distinct vocabulary through which they communicate with us. In the early years of my research, I started associating symptoms with specific organs, akin to building a vocabulary list, and delved into deciphering the messages the organs were trying to convey. People who know me are aware that if you tell me, you feel a stabbing pain in the front of your shoulder, I immediately recognize which organ is communicating. If you mention a brief, momentary stitch near your crown, I understand that it signifies a hormone release triggering ovulation, although the adrenal gland might be struggling in the process. To me, this is an early indicator that entering menopause with exhausted adrenal glands may present challenges. Action is needed!

If I cannot classify a symptom, I continue researching until I am able to decipher its meaning. From this, a language has emerged, which I impart to individuals in my challenges or hidden treatments, alongside their complete regeneration, of course understanding what the body is trying to tell us and taking early action. This treasure of knowledge is crucial to pass on. In conventional medicine, our vocabulary is greatly stunted, and we only pay attention to an organ when it says, “Ooops, I’ve hit the wall.” When our children grow up with knowledge about their organs, we equip them well for this world, providing a stable foundation for their personal growth, regardless of the path they choose.

Of course, when we begin to understand the body through organic communication, whether it be through physical symptoms, altered lab values, or psychological symptoms, we quickly see in the people around us where the organic problem areas exactly lie. However, it is a ball that people are less willing to take—if we consider it as an organic disturbance. If we tell someone, ‘Oh my God, you’re extremely restless—can you even sleep? God, you’re annoying!’ then that doesn’t work! What is that person supposed to do with that?

Take sleeping pills? Take Ritalin? So, communication about behavior often ends in chemicals. But if we recognize that in this case, the heart is in an emergency dopamine plan because our adrenal glands are unable to ensure hormone supply, it is a completely different possibility to react and have an impact. That is why throwing balls without judgment is a very important matter.

In psychology, we have been talking for many decades about how relationships are the most important aspect of personal growth. We refer to a pyramid consisting of three parts. The lower part, the foundation, is your relationship with your body and its functions; the middle part is your relationship with the people around you, and the top part is your relationship with yourself, specifically with your subconscious. For now, I am referring to the lower level—our physical body, the roots on which we build. In psychology, we repeat like mantras: You keep your physical body fit with diet, exercise, and good sleep. This might have been true in the 1970s, but today it is absolutely insufficient. Our organs and immune system have suffered significantly, so with the notion of “go to the gym and drink smoothies,” we cannot create a stable foundation.

The heart, liver, spleen, small intestine, colon, kidneys, adrenal glands, lungs, and brain all contribute in their specific ways to the immune system, and before we can even talk about regenerating the immune system, all of these organs must be regenerated first. Otherwise, an intact immune system and a stable mental state is an illusion.

Without a stable foundation, progress and further development become very difficult. Why is the bottom field of the pyramid the largest? It is the most important field, and it should accommodate all of our organs and the immune system. I will later describe this in the book like a shared living space that should harmoniously coexist. We cannot just quickly stroke the head of each resident and rush to the top of the pyramid to enforce mental exercises. That is the wrong and superficial way.

Our organic cellular memory and intergenerational transmissions have a significant impact on our relationships with people close to us. So how do we want to harmonize and improve these relationships if we don’t completely restore the gut-brain axis? The middle parour ort of the pyramid can only change through a stable foundation.

When we lead our relationships with negativity, anger, and judgment due to a disrupted liver; when we hop around like Roberto Benigni at the Oscars with a restless heart, unable to find peace—higher, farther, louder—how can we cultivate harmonious and deep connections? When our weak kidneys make us whiny, lethargic, and devoid of radiance, already annoying our friends; when our congested lungs, which are meant to nourish other organs, especially the kidneys and adrenal glands, become obstacles—there is no long-term prize to be won and how can we motivate ourselves or others when our clogged small intestine can no longer nourish the brain, causing neurotransmitters and hormones to dissipate halfway there? How can we make intuitive decisions when our frontal cortex is not properly fueled—our lives will be consumed by desperate rationality, and our emotions will be presented like bad actors on a theoretical stage.

When our inner image and outer image are so far apart that they have nothing to do with each other anymore, then we must start regenerating our organs. Too many answers in psychology, even from exceptional therapists, end with the statement: it’s something you will have to deal with for the rest of your life. The missing link is the organs and their cell storage, which are not easily impressed by psychological tools. If we don’t recognize this difference, we will endlessly tinker with supposed psychological issues that aren’t really there. For me, this is a form of over-psychologization that is completely unnecessary and distracts us from our actual progress and our truly important tasks. But above all, it prevents us from being authentic on a large scale because we create an outward persona that doesn’t actually exist within us.

Without a stable foundation, the lower part of the pyramid, life becomes incredibly difficult and tiresome, and it shouldn’t be that way.

Our time on Earth is limited; let’s appreciate and enjoy it to the fullest.

In my 21-day challenges and hidden treatments, each organ is regenerated one by one, and only in the second step, it is connected with mental or visual exercises to reach the higher field. We can use this field better, more powerfully, and even more magically for ourselves when we do so in good physical conditions. The most important organs for an effective connection with this field are the dopamine-producing organs: the kidneys, adrenal glands, and small intestine. Performing mental or visual exercises with a properly functioning adrenal gland is the fuel to go higher and higher and even higher. The question here is also: If we try to operate in the higher field with mental or visual exercises, but only do so in reserve mode, with a weakened organ system that no longer has the strength for important bodily processes, are we then harming our organs? The answer is clear: Yes. The second aspect is that personal growth and striving forward becomes hard work, and if it becomes hard work, something is going wrong. Development is a strong forward movement that requires strength, posture, and courage, for which we need intact kidneys and adrenal glands to provide us with the physical prerequisites to implement it. The higher field can give us incredible mental resources, but it cannot regenerate our organs. We must do that ourselves for now. Without this regeneration, we will not persevere and will give up. Continuously repeating mental and visual exercises is a sign that the organ in which the cellular information is stored has not been addressed or is too weak to process the information, and the same old story keeps on repeating. We make enormous efforts only to fall back again. Lethargy or lack of motivation or 50 other shades of a low energy level are symptoms of a depleted kidney, and we do not have problems with gaining insights—we have problems with implementation. We stand there, aware of things but still not moving forward. When the kidney is intact, we have the strength to not only move forward but also move forward and upward. When my wonderful English postman runs toward me with a radiant smile in my Swedish garden, he often says, ‘you are half way up and half way down.’ No better way to put it—with the energy of the kidneys and adrenal glands, you run with outstretched arms, saying, ‘Higher field, here I come.’ There is no hard work or constantly practicing—then we find the ease in progressing forward.

Of course, there are many other ways in which we exhaust the kidney, adrenal glands, small intestine, and this complex hormonal system on a daily basis. We discuss this later. One of them is inner restlessness. What does inner restlessness mean? It means that the emergency dopamine system of the heart kicks in because the dopamine systems of the adrenal glands and small intestine are exhausted. The consequences are inner restlessness and/or: sleep disorders, anxiety, panic attacks, high blood pressure, rapid speaking, workaholism, obsession with sports, being too loud, too high, too far, always searching, always running, shining but appearing startled. We overstrain the anterior, short branch of the vagus nerve and the posterior branch that supplies the much more important dopamine system of the kidney and small intestine deteriorates miserably. We cannot live our lives relying solely on the dopamine system of the heart. This creates a huge deficit in other organs that the body can no longer compensate for, and then it will collapse. This is the area where severe diseases begin. That’s why in my challenges, I always start with addressing inner restlessness—that is, treating the heart. Whether your restlessness has been present for 10 years, 20, 30, or since birth, it ultimately doesn’t matter—I need about 5 days and the restlessness is a thing of the past. It is still one of the most important aspects of my work, as inner restlessness and its accompanying symptoms are one of the most common reasons for prescribing psychotropic drugs. We lose our best people over something as trivial as inner restlessness. Tim Bergling did not die from drinking too much. Tim Bergling died from taking too many medications prescribed to him by doctors around the world, in irresponsible amounts, to manage his internal restlessness and extreme adhesions in the small intestine. Tim had been unable to eat without pain for many years. I will write extensively about this in the book. Lisa-Marie Presley just passed away from a blocked small intestine, and Kurt Cobain began self-medicating to alleviate extreme pain in his small intestine that no one could treat. Doctors attempted to alleviate his inner restlessness with Ritalin at the age of four. The combination of inner restlessness and adhesions in the body is very dangerous. Goo is unfortunately not something cute—Goo is something extremely dangerous that has cost the lives of our best people.

But internal restlessness is also for itself a dangerous sign of a system in collapse. The dopamine system in the heart is an emergency system but is frequently used and therefore overused by musicians and actors. It is used for stage fright and overall stage presence, which is completely legitimate. However, if there is no longer any balance to regenerate the dopamine system of the adrenal glands and the small intestine, the ship starts to sink. This leads to extreme fatigue that can only be masked by extreme restlessness. For most people, the artist appears full of energy on stage, so many of them continue performing until they collapse because the lack of energy and emptiness underneath is unbearable. It is important to educate people about the fatal confusion between internal restlessness and energy.

Knowing how to regenerate all the organs and use them powerfully to eliminate all old and new phlegm and goo is one of the greatest gifts that my research has brought.

Especially in the small intestine, colon, brain, lungs, and in all vessels, it significantly impairs our immune system. If the past few years have taught us anything, it is this: we always have to be prepared for attacks on our bodies. However, a congested body is not prepared—it is a time bomb. It can be bacteria, daily chemical attacks from the environment, or food contaminants. It could be the electrical radiation we are increasingly exposed to. It could also be serious illnesses, caused for example by viruses. Equally important are all the attacks of the past decades that have accumulated in our bodies and now massively burden our immune system, the gut-brain axis, and the associated organs. As if this wasn’t already enough, we further block the cells of our bodies with unprocessed feelings of lack from childhood, with repression, and with intergenerational transfers—old behavioral patterns that our parents already struggled with. As a result, our organs can only cleanse, excrete, regenerate, or relearn with great difficulty and effort. Everyone wants to optimize themselves, utilize their potentials, and personally develop or even transform themselves. But like this—in these organic and mental states? A medicine that has divided itself into far too many specialized fields and lost sight of the bigger picture is gaining more and more dominance. A medicine that undoubtedly achieves great things in the emergency sector, but not in the sector before that. So why do we quickly relinquish responsibility for the foundation of our well-being and progress? Because we no longer trust our bodies. But what do we mean when we say we can no longer trust our bodies? By trust, we actually mean reliability. Our bodies are no longer reliable. They are overwhelmed—which is why immunological, neurological, hormonal, gastroenterological, and psychological diseases, cancer and autoimmune diseases have an easy time.

Medical research has been observing this development for a long time, and it is not new that we cannot help many sick, mentally ill, and immunocompromised people to regain a reliable state of health. Being able to trust and rely on our bodies is the essence of self-determination and attitude. When we no longer have this self-determination, we seek control externally. Control through technology, through scheduling, through predictability—we want to dominate, out of pure fear. However, with all these measures, we suppress our basic need for vitality. Vitality and joy are the building blocks for our dopamine-serotonin chain reactions, without which regeneration of the immune system is difficult. In recent years, however, we have been forcefully shown: We cannot control everything, some things are uncontrollable. In addition to everything we have accumulated in our organs over the years, COVID-19 has now been added. This was and is not a lung disease, but a vascular disease that led and still leads to various damages in the capillary system of the circulatory system, the blood vessels, and the organs. Antibodies, whether present, acquired, or given, could inhibit the entry of entire coronaviruses into cells, but led to the toxic effects of cell adhesion. The effect is called “fusion from without” (FFWO), and I would rather call it “adhesion” of body cells. Fortunately, my years of research have already been focused on exactly this topic: adhesions in all organs of the gut-brain axis and the associated blood vessels.

Many singers, opera singers, but also actors who contact me report about the thick secretions that irritate their singing and lead to fatigue of the respiratory muscles. That is terrible enough, but that is only the thick secretion, phlegm or goo that we can see. However, the body is full of thick secretions in places that we cannot see, and these are usually the more dangerous ones. The deposits, phlegm, or goo that we feel in the lungs or throughout the respiratory tract are just a dangerous sign that the entire body is no longer able to eliminate. This issue is never only specific to the lungs and therefore must be treated throughout the entire organ system.

For many years, I have been pointing out that these adhesions and old deposits, are responsible for almost all of our serious illnesses, so I am several years ahead of this problem. In my 21-day challenges and the Hidden Treatments, the goal has always been and now even more so: to regenerate the organs and enable them to transport away adhesions and old deposits.

Whether one survives or not, whether one overcomes an illness, or a poor mental state is always a question of a functioning immune system and a gut-brain axis that can initiate all necessary processes. A gut-brain axis that provides all necessary hormones, neurotransmitters, and peptides against

attacks is a prerequisite for getting older in a healthy and fearless way. Because whether a person is fatally or restrictively ill has not necessarily something to do with their age. One out of four intensive care beds is occupied by a terminally ill cancer patient, with all age groups represented. Even young people and children nowadays die from diseases that only older people died from decades ago. Surviving serious diseases is primarily a matter of intact and reliable immune defense and not a specific age. But the goal is not just to “not get sick” as we get older. It is to be fit, powerful, healthy, joyful, in a constantly evolving process.

When you ask people, whether they are 50, 60, 70 years old, what their internal age is, they all say pretty consistently 38 years old. I will explain why later. We are satisfied if our organs and immune system correspond to the age of 38—no matter how old we actually are. That is the goal in my challenges, to physically bring people back to this age. You might be wondering what about younger people. Even 25-year-olds often have the physical condition of 60-year-olds today, so 38 is always a very realistic goal. In my hidden treatments, I was just treating a young artist with her 6-week-old baby. It wasn’t sleeping, experiencing pain and cramps, and exhibiting the first psychological and neurological symptoms. The baby had deposits in the small intestine that I used to only find in 60-year-olds years ago. So, what age are the organs of a 3-month-old baby then? It’s safe to say that nowadays the condition of the organs is no longer age appropriate.

Ideally, we should have a functioning immune system whose task it is to correct the body. Our immune system can balance out all disease-causing states on its own with the help of the gut-brain axis and all organs. But that is clearly our biggest problem. We no longer have a functioning immune system. So, we are not well-prepared.

However, we all have the opportunity to change our perception of ourselves, the world and our environment. We are not slaves to our genes. Each of us is the ruler of genetic activity. We can all influence genetics and change them. So, do not give up the power of self-determination to doctors who come up with sentences like, “In your case, it is genetic.” You can follow a doctor’s advice if it seems reasonable to you. However, you must not leave your life to a medical authority, otherwise, you will become a victim twice. If you want to work with the gut-brain axis and with the immune system as a medical professional, you have to study across disciplines. You have to include neurology, psychology, gastroenterology, endocrinology, nephrology, rheumatology, and oncology in your knowledge. No department can even come close to covering all of that. In addition, it should have a name that cannot be pronounced, like neuropsychoendocrinogastroneuroimmunologist. Sorry, what?

I knew early on that I had to take an unusual path to acquire the knowledge needed and not become dependent on the pharmaceutical industry. In the early 1980s, I left a country that no longer exists today. I was still under fire and left an unjust system. Just to become a pawn of the pharmaceutical industry? To shoot people with chemical weapons just because medicine has knowledge gaps? No! The knowledge had to lie somewhere else. So, I embarked on a long journey that is still not over, out of all comfort zones, into the exploration of the gut-brain axis, the brain, and the incredible areas we can explore when our organs are healed, and our hormonal system begins to guide us.

I began with a psychology study to quickly recognize its rather narrow limits. Ultimately, even Freud was already on the trail of neurotransmitters with his cocaine experiments, but then it didn’t go any further. After that, I turned to holistic, biological, and holistic psychology. It became clear to me that the physical aspect, specifically the neurological and gastroenterological aspects, are much bigger in psychology than admitted at the time—and still today. However, the medical boundaries in Germany were too tight, the researchers too confined, and the results of researching the gut-brain axis were accordingly scarce or almost non-existent. Therefore, I was driven to explore the world in search of countries that were ahead. I was looking for countries and treatment methods that could compensate for our gaps in knowledge and establish connections so that we could make more powerful use of our knowledge in the fight against our alarmingly progressing diseases. But also, to renew the underground knowledge of prevention.

I didn’t want to start treating people until all the gaps were uncovered and closed. For me, it was always important to have no uncertainty in any area. I always want to know exactly where the cause of their illness or disorder lies with each of my patients. This spirit of research is a prerequisite for leading people to healing. I never wanted to find myself in a situation where I had to prescribe medication simply because I didn’t know the cause of an illness.

So, my first path led me to the USA. This country produces many very open-minded scientists, researchers, and doctors with extensive knowledge. Interdisciplinary work was already possible there in the early nineties. As a scientist, you had the freedom to change and push boundaries.

But even in America, very little was taught about the immune system during studies. Research on the gut-brain axis, the body-mind connection, or the brain-gut axis was also outside the normal fields. But there was and still is high regard, respect, and openness in this country for those of us who go beyond the limits in medicine.

This openness also leads to a greater variety of alternative medicine options being offered and used in America and Canada nowadays, with a sense of naturalness.

In America, even people who are not involved in medicine know that, for example, gluten is bad for the adrenal glands. However, we are far from that understanding in Europe. Nevertheless, people lack the understanding of why this is the case.

In my treatments, I strive to address this gap in understanding of the body. I am not just a practitioner, but also a translator of the language of organs—a language that, once realized, is actually quite simple and easy to understand. After all, why would your body communicate with you in a complex or encrypted way?

Without understanding the underlying context, it ultimately leads to the same knowledge gaps that I encountered at the beginning of my journey. I also observed that the adrenal glands struggle immensely with gluten. If 10 out of 10 patients react, then I need to find out why.

Only through this approach can we establish the connections and embed knowledge into the subconscious, enabling individuals to make informed decisions about their own health. If we do it without knowledge, it becomes a form of cleverness without true understanding or rural wisdom.

Conventional medicine, of course, does not venture into the realm of this cleverness. However, it is not a solution to simply say that there is no connection between the adrenal glands and gluten when 10 out of 10 people react. If we want to find that connection, we need to deviate from the conventional path and seek out individuals who recognize the link to the immune system.

I had the opportunity to meet Bruce Lipton, a great biologist and stem cell researcher who always emphasizes the 100% power of the gut-brain axis to heal the immune system. He also explains that we need to free ourselves from the beliefs of conventional medicine that are bound to biochemistry and genetics. But where are the appropriate methods to implement this knowledge?

I had the privilege of studying with Dr. Kalle Reichelt from the University of Oslo, who already pointed out the connection between psychological and neurological disorders and the small intestine in the early 1990s. His test results regarding epilepsy and nutrition were already the subject of scientific debates at neurological congresses like the one in San Marco in the mid-of the eighty’s. But did anything change?

I lived in China for six years, studied Chinese medicine, and worked as a doctor in various hospitals. China, with its outstanding knowledge of the organs and its incredible herbal knowledge, stumbles over its cultural obstacles and does not develop further. The strict separation of female and male disorders in treatment and the dispensing of herbs is long outdated. Doctors put themselves above the patients and do not speak or only speak very little with them. You cannot develop the knowledge of cell information and the organs and their connection to the brain if you neither look nor listen—because the individual patient simply does not interest the doctor. As a result, important information for further development escapes Chinese medicine. The Chinese have indeed found access to the physical healing and regeneration of cells and organs, an incredible treasure. But what then? Then they don’t know what to do with the cell information. They mechanically recite knowledge found thousands of years ago and do not link it to the latest research. They have found access to the small intestine, the gut, and all the organs involved in digestion such as the liver, spleen, kidneys, and lungs. However, they categorize this knowledge just like conventional medicine into drawers with labels in specialized Chinese instead of Latin. They assign numbers to acupuncture points and sort them into tables— leaving much uncertainty among traditional practitioners. A representative of the Dalai Lama, who tried to translate the book on Tibetan medicine, explained to me that Tibetan and Chinese medicine are like mathematics and can actually be easily explained in tables. With this basic approach, it is not possible in any medicine system in the world to heal people.

My study of Chinese pharmacology in Chongqing alone lasted two years. An incredible gift. But most of us are not Chinese, and I have explored great Chinese herbal formulas that are not suitable or not sufficiently researched for non-Chinese. So, I started bringing these formulas to a new and modern level without simplifying them, quite the opposite. Some formulas, like the one for dissolving solid deposits (Goo), I had to develop anew because this type of phlegm does not exist in Chinese medicine.

A large part of my work and research was therefore to find out which elements and methods of foreign healing arts we can use powerfully for ourselves and then develop them further with our own knowledge. Thus I realized that if we want to successfully treat people, we need to free ourselves from stereotypical thinking. From the stereotypes of conventional and Chinese medicine, but also from the stereotypes of medical specialization such as neurology, psychology or gastroenterology. The big question is: What happens between these stereotypes? What is the connection between disciplines and boxed-in mentality? What is it that we lack?

This is precisely the area of the gut-brain axis and the immune system. This is the gray area not covered by mainstream medicine. This is where myths arise out of ignorance. For example, in Chinese medicine, where there is no immune system, just as there is no spleen, which is only a metaphor. But even in Western medicine, we spew nonsense about vitamin C as a helper of the immune system and consider the spleen as a whim of nature. The appendix is unimportant, the tonsils are removed, and the small intestine, oh my, you can’t fit a camera in there, so we still insufficiently understand it.

However, we have immense residues deposited in our bodies, such as food leftovers, environmental toxins, and metabolic waste, and now also adhesions from spike proteins from vaccines. Originally, all this waste was supposed to be temporarily stored, but our gut-brain axis can no longer dissolve this blockage.

First and foremost, we accumulate deposits in our bodies, and after years of storage, the cells mutate and become cancer or other serious diseases. Protein deposits in the brain are responsible for almost all of our severe neurological, psychological, and gastroenterological diseases. Diseases such as Parkinson’s, MS, ALS, Epilepsy, Schizophrenia, and many more. The small intestine has many tasks that it can no longer handle, such as regenerating the nervous system, the lymphatic system, but also food breakdown and distribution. Under what circumstances can it regain its ability to perform these tasks?

The fact that in autoimmune diseases the body attacks its own defenses is outdated knowledge. However, medications that align with this old understanding are still being used. Immunosuppressants, which completely shut down the immune system, are employed, leaving it incapable of defending the body. It’s not surprising then that, under the leadership of epidemiologist Kari Hemminki in Sweden, we were able to demonstrate the interaction between autoimmune diseases, the gut-brain axis, and cancer. We have shown that these wrongly administered medications for autoimmune diseases greatly increase the risk of developing cancer. The use of medications that suppress the immune system for years has been shown to hinder the adequate fight against tumor cells as well.

To have a healthy immune system, we need to consider how deposits and unrelated cell information can be removed from the body. Then we need to ask ourselves how to avoid new deposits and keep our bodies clean, intact, and reliable. Can changing our attitude and mindset also change the signals that enter and function within our cells? How much influence do we have?

We have enough evidence that positive thinking promotes health, but it’s not just about that. It is about understanding what negative thinking, stored in every cell, can do—thinking patterns that may have been inherited from our parents and now become self-perpetuating, making us tyrants of our own lives. How can we eliminate and reprogram all of that, so that we don’t find ourselves spiraling into anger or trying to mask unwanted negativity and anger with false sweetness?

What does all this have to do with nutrition? It’s not just about omitting certain nutrients; it’s about understanding what is necessary. Which foods are absolutely vital for the body to carry out its processes and facilitate healing? All of this was part of my years-long research. I wanted to develop a method that physically and psychologically regenerates and prepares the body for higher functions, with the aim of starting on the physical level and minimizing the psychological aspect.

We have an internal team of organs that need to be regenerated and nourished. This also means that food plays a significant role in optimizing our organs. Knowing which organs require certain nutrients, as well as which foods strain weakened organs, is essential. Understanding how long it takes for food to be processed and returned from the small intestine, the duration of peristaltic waves, and the ideal interval between meals is crucial. Some foods provide minimal benefit compared to the effort the small intestine has to put into processing them. This knowledge is a valuable gift because, through my work with people during the 21-day challenges, I have been able to observe the food processing and its impact on the body. These insights would have been impossible to gain in a typical clinical setting.

How can you stimulate both branches of the vagus nerve, which connects, nourishes, and regenerates our organs? Once the cells are renewed and deposits are eliminated, with a highly vagal tone and the ability to effortlessly harness your adrenal dopamine system, only a very small space remains for psychotherapy.