ABSTRACT

Whilst psychological reversal acts as a clear and coherent prohibition on therapeutic progress, the phenomenon known as 'neurological disorganisation' acts to make the process fuzzy and inefficient. The phenomenon of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, a condition that appears to be exacerbated by the current prevalence of ‘energy toxins’ in processed foods and drinks, illustrates some of the difficulties arising from neurological disorganisation. Hyperventilation is a common accompaniment of triple warmer overarousal, resulting in a variety of symptoms, such as palpitations, anxiety, pains or tingling, and a sensation of breathing difficulties. Dr Callahan has described how certain universal early anxieties, such as fear of heights, are normally ‘subsumed’ in the course of development. Many common phobic anxieties are normal and understandable in earlier developmental or evolutionary contexts. Intense separation anxiety, or stranger anxiety, is expected when a young child feels lost and parted from his or her mother. Snake phobias are helpful for survival in contexts where deadly snakes are prevalent.