Diabetes – Hypoglycemia and Pancreas – Pancreas
Diabetes, generations of our ancestors have survived. This has led to programs of mistrust, fighting and resistance to authority, among others. Our subconscious retains these programs. Read the comprehensive biological and symbolic explanation of diabetes and hypoglycemia below. Through the work of HeartConnection, Marjolein and Yasmin's mother, among others, have been healed.
The islets of Langerhans are part of the pancreas (pancreas), where they produce hormonal substances. The islets of Langerhans contain different types of cells. Alpha cells produce glucagon; beta cells make insulin. These cells affect diabetes and hyperglycemia. Alpha cells deal with fear-walking conflict, this is female. The beta cells represent resistance-conflict, male conflict.
Female anxiety-walking – Hyperglycemia
In an anxiety-walking conflict, your blood sugar goes down; you then get a need for sugar to maintain blood sugar. We also call this hyperglycemia. You may also suffer from binge eating, unable to stop eating. This is a way to maintain blood sugar levels. In doing so, you create energy to resolve the fear-walking conflict as quickly as possible.
What happens after a fear-walking conflict breakdown?
Immediately after a fear-walking attack, a biological process follows in the body. Alpha cell function is impaired and glucagon production decreases. This leads to reduced blood sugar levels: under-sugarization (hypoglycemia). You then get more cravings for sweet. With intense, prolonged conflict, symptoms such as cold sweats, shivering, pale skin, the feeling of flabby legs, difficulty concentrating and consciousness and possibly headaches occur. From the ectodermal germplasm, we call this function change.
Two-phase fear-walking conflict
- Conflict active phase alpha cells in the pancreas
- Restriction of alpha cell function.
- Glucagon center. Glucagon production decreases, lowered blood sugar levels
- Undersugarization (hypoglycemia)
- Craving for sweet!
- With intense prolonged conflict: cold sweat; shivering; pale skin; feeling of limp legs; difficulty concentrating and consciousness possibly headache.
Biological Meaningfulness Fear-walking conflict: Glucagon drop gives blood sugar drop, therefore craving for sweet. By eating more energy to resolve or cope with your conflict. After conflict is resolved, the recovery phase follows:
- 1st PCL Recovery Phase: Slow normalization of blood sugar levels
- Epi-crisis : Temporary sharp drop in blood sugar levels. Note: dextrose!
- 2nd PCL Slow rise in glucose. There will be balance.
- Right-handed woman and left-handed man.
Examples fear-walking conflict:
- Someone experiences fear, disgust or tremendous terror
- Dislikes include:
- Arguing
- Stench from such things as sweat, wound, mouth, toilet and the like
- Wound, e.g. after an accident, mutilation, smelly wound
- Treatment, e.g. chemotherapy
- Sexual unwanted contact
- Animals, e.g. spiders, (bats) mice, rats, snakes
- Having to eat food, for example, a child who had to eat something
- Seeing someone crash
- Finding someone dead
- Rape, sexual assault
- Seeing something disgusting
- Experiencing something disgusting
Example: a woman was raped on her wedding night. Later, she is harassed by the neighbor. Her child develops diabetes. When blood sugar goes down, you want to avoid biology authority. There comes a need for sugar to find sweetness. Sugar is sweet, sweet, soft.
Example: everyone goes on a school trip, parents have no money and boy cannot go. The boy is ashamed and to avoid being noticed he chooses to be a good sweet man who never says no. To survive situations, he chooses to be sweet (sweet).
Male Resistance-resistance conflict – Diabetes
If someone has experienced a resistance conflict, blood sugar goes up, giving you energy to resolve the conflict as quickly as possible. With the help of elevated blood sugar, you can better defend yourself. To do so, nature provides additional energy (glucose). A prolonged resistance-conflict with prolonged high blood sugar-creates biological diabetes. A person with diabetes has difficulty with authority, is distrustful and always ready to fight. Biologically, there is no difference between Diabetes 1 and 2, they have the same conflict content: in general, the person feels excluded.
What happens after a resistance-resistance conflict impact?
Immediately after a stroke, a biological process follows in the body: insulin production in beta cells is reduced, raising the level of glucose (blood sugar) in the blood. Less insulin is released into the blood and blood sugar levels rise (hyperglycemia). When sugar levels are high, glucose is separated through the urine. Hence the name “diabetes mellitus” = honey-sweet flow.
Two-phase resistance-resistance-conflict
- Conflict active phase beta cells in the pancreas
- Insulin production in the beta cells decreased, causing increased glucose (blood sugar) levels in the blood.
- Less insulin is released into the blood -> Rise in blood sugar levels (hyperglycemia).
- When sugar levels are high, glucose is separated via urine.
- Hence name ‘diabetes mellitus’ = honeyed flow!
Biological Sense: Resisting takes a lot of muscle power. Defense means muscle activity. With the help of elevated blood sugar levels, the individual can better defend himself. To do so, nature provides additional energy (glucose). After conflict is resolved, the recovery phase follows:
- 1st PCL Slow decrease of glucose in the blood, stabilization of insulin production occurs.
- Epi-crisis: temporary sharp drop in insulin, increase in blood sugar.
- 2nd PCL Stabilization insulin. Balance arises.
Examples of resistance-resistance:
- Defending yourself against someone or something.
- Male response to threat: attack, defend, fight.
- Ending the conflict with force. This requires more energy, thus increased sugar consumption.
- You feel forced or compelled to do something
- You have to do something you don’t want to do, among other things:
- To nursery or school
- Going to court to divorce / apply for alimony
- Resisting (false) accusations
- War Situations
- The men who fought in Indonesia
- Sexual abuse
- Accusation justified and/or unjustified
- Lawsuits
- Prison
- You are excluded
- Being set apart as a baby, for example, a crying baby put in the barn or basement.
- You are not allowed to eat with them; the child is set apart.
- A child who regularly receives punishment.
- You have to be ready for battle and combat.
- You must be ready to attack your predator: the attack is always lurking, your body provides high blood sugar. Quickly energy available for a possible fight. Action!
- You fight rejection and dishonesty
- You are rejected by behavior of his family
- You are disinherited and fall out of the family
- Diabetes: cutting something in half in the home
The word diabetes comes from diameter (cuts something in half) and beith (house in Hebrew). Diabetes can represent conflict with the family, with separation in the home or loss of contact in the family: the family is cut in two.
A person with diabetes may also experience family rejection, feeling separate from the rest of the family. For example, someone is sent to boarding school. Persuasion: “It’s disgusting what they do to me, everyone else lives at home and I get left out.”
- Click here for more information two-phase, the biological process.
- Islets of Langerhans – hormones – alpha beta islets color red (ectoderm) see image below:
Research the family stories
For generations, our ancestors have survived. This has led to programs of mistrust, fighting and resistance to authority, among others. Our subconscious retains these programs. Therefore, look for diabetes in your family tree and for conflict entries in your (for) parents that are related to it.
Ron’s story
Ron’s mother was bedridden and long-suffering; she was tired of life for many years. Euthanasia did not work out the official way. For Ron, this suffering was no longer bearable. He chose to euthanize his mother on his own initiative, along with a volunteer from the Free Life Foundation. He ends up in a police cell for a few days and doesn’t understand any of this. After all, Ron had helped his mother, he thinks. In the cell, he is treated like a criminal, disrespectfully. After a year of litigation, Ron is acquitted. Attorney fees are high and he experiences continuous stress. Ron experiences all of this as hugely unfair, because it was precisely his desire to help his mother. He gets diabetes. Fortunately, he understands his body and the story of diabetes.
Marjolein’s story
Both of my grandmothers had diabetes and injected insulin. Grandmother on my father’s side passes away at the time my Life Blueprint (you learn during the trainings) begins. Mother of mother was naughty, sneaking ice cream together, but of course my mother was on to everything. Grandma was not allowed sugar and was a sweet tooth. Her husband was an aggressive dominant man and Grandma chose sweetness, she was no match for him. She was separated from her true love (diameter) as a young woman. When I was in mom’s belly (3 months fetus), grandma took too many pills after receiving a disgusting letter from her second daughter and his husband. In their eyes, she was a bad mother and worthless wife. At age 30, I develop diabetes. This programming started in my Life Blueprint. The number three/thirty comes back to Grandma’s suicide attempt when my mother was three months pregnant with me. The number thirty, the age when I developed diabetes, is also reflected in 2 x 15: at fifteen, my father stepped out of life. This I experienced as very frightening and disgusting. In addition, I discovered, that I had evidently adopted from him the theme of resistance, which my father lived his whole life.
These themes are the biological cause of diabetes. In your subconscious there are programs connected to each other. Thus, illnesses may manifest later in life, even though the trauma occurred earlier in your life. You may also have experienced trauma in your sixth month of pregnancy. This theme may manifest again at age six, 12, 18, and so on. Thus, your life is like a program played every time. Everything is connected and is programmed. By understanding, connecting and releasing this, you heal from illness. Like I was cured of diabetes.
Diabetes: the story of Yasmin
Yasmin (age 42) asks her question during HeartConnection 1 about her mother’s and father’s diabetes.
Female and male sugar conflict
I explain that female sugar conflict has to do with fear-walking and honor male sugar conflict with resistance. In female conflict, blood sugar levels go down and sugar (food) is needed to resolve the situation. In male conflict, blood sugar actually goes up to “fight. Looking at the word diabetes, dia means “separated” and betes means “home. Separated from home. Both of Yasmin’s parents were separated from their home in Morocco.
Disgust at marriage
Yasmin explains that her mother was reluctantly married off when she was 15; her mother came after her with a cane. She came to a poor in-law she was disgusted with. She was disgusted with Yasmin’s father, in-laws and poverty. It was a terrible situation.
Aggression in father
Grandpa, father of father, had to fight against the Spaniards and had to kill several soldiers to stay alive himself. Yasmin’s father went to the Netherlands in the 1960s, mother stayed behind with the children in Morocco. In the 1980s, they all go to Holland together. This does not go well: father starts fighting his wife and children, he becomes aggressive.
Yasmin is pleased with this explanation and her own answers, “It’s exactly right, my mother always has a hypo and my father a hyper.” Yasmin attends HeartConnection Training. After some time, I learn that her father has died and her mother is no longer diabetic.
Diabetes questions:
- What are you struggling with?
- Are you living in fear?
- Would you like to protect yourself better?
- Do you feel powerless over a person or situation?
- Have you ever had a shocking experience with a feeling of great resistance/resistance or fear/walking?
- Do you want to run away from something but can’t escape?
- Where and when do you feel resistance?
- Do you feel resistance in certain situations?
- Do you feel like you have to defend yourself to certain people?
- Have you had an experience that has left you feeling disgusted, disgusted and fearful?
Hypoglycemia questions:
- See also diabetes questions, plus additional questions:
- Do you feel vulnerable in certain situations? Where and when?
- In what situation do you feel resistance? How and why?
- In what situation do you feel powerless?
- Want to part with something, but don’t know how?
- Are you often on your guard? Do you often look around (is the coast clear)?
- Do you want to want to protect yourself from something or someone?
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