Life without celiac disease

D. suffered from celiac disease, a sensitivity to gluten, to such a degree that even if there were very small remnants of gluten, she would suffer from severe stomach pains, digestive problems and swelling of the stomach (8 cm).

She came to me for treatment. Celiac has a number of relevant conflicts, one of which is traumas related to bread. In Western medicine, there is no treatment for celiac disease other than avoiding gluten, which is very burdensome on human life. It turns out that Sh. is named after a grandmother who was in the Holocaust and who had many conflicts with bread.. Her grandmother received a bread allowance and was responsible for distributing bread to her children and the whole family.

Because her husband fled from the Nazis, he hid in the attic, so she had to set aside bread for him from the allowance, and basically withhold it from her children, her mother, and herself. In addition, she was forced to have sex with the Nazis in exchange for an extra portion of bread. Another conflict is that her mother died of malnutrition ("I killed my mother") It is clear that in D's and the family's genes there are many conflicts and traumas related to bread, therefore her body rejects gluten, because it is dangerous for her. When D was named after her grandmother, biologically it means that she must resolve the conflicts that her grandmother faced. D was open to receiving these ideas and agreed to Jar the conflict immediately, also because she is also doing awareness work with herself. After one treatment, the celiac disease disappeared and D. can eat bread freely and without side effects. Even so, she said she would consider whether to eat bread for nutritional reasons.

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