Cerebral infarction – Myocardium
Jeannette is 56 years old and suddenly suffers a brain attack. During this period, she feels cheated by her colleague who plays a nasty trick on her behind her back. She feels rejected and furious. A life story with repeating patterns. Below is the story of Jeannette and Fred as well as the cause, patterns, explanation of a brain attack.
In 2014, I watch Fred (age 54) fall to the ground on the spot. I can’t get it back up. Within fifteen minutes we are at the hospital. A brain scan is taken, the veins are checked, a heart monitor is taken. I get to be in everything. Doctors’ conclusion: there is nothing to see, we cannot observe anything. Very special. This is where my research into the biological cause of cerebral infarction begins. Note that cerebral hemorrhage and Tia are different biological processes. This article is only about cerebral infarction.
With failure on one side of the body, Fred goes to the rehabilitation center to learn to talk, walk and move again. At the rehabilitation center, they have special techniques to get the brain to communicate with certain muscles and body parts again. It is important to take your time with this, because in practice, symptoms usually recover completely after a cerebral infarction.
Themes cerebral infarction
When you lose control of your body, it’s very confronting. Everyone responds to it in their own unique way. Some people panic, others get angry and others go into complete denial. Within HeartConnection, we guide the person in connecting-melting-letting go. This is essential in this recovery phase. What happened in your life? What story does cerebral infarction tell? What emotions, patterns, beliefs are there? During the training you will receive the biological explanation of what and exactly happens in the body that causes one side to fail. It turns out that there are two themes related to cerebral infarction:
It’s too much for me; I can’t take it anymore; I feel overwhelmed.
I feel cheated.
Jeannette’s story
Jeannette is 56 years old and suddenly suffers a brain attack. During this period, she feels cheated by her colleague who plays a nasty trick on her behind her back. She feels rejected and furious. She has tried so hard and she doesn’t feel good enough. Fortunately, she is taking care of herself. She goes to human resources, but unfortunately they do nothing with it. As time passes, her colleague bursts into tears and says she is extremely sorry. Jeannette does not approve of her action, but she is immensely pleased with this expression of regret. Meanwhile, Jeannette decided to take another job. After these two solutions, Jeannette suffers a brain attack.
‘No’
When else has Jeannette experienced underhandedness? As an 11-year-old, she was raped by five or six boys aged 18-19. Jeanette was hiking in the woods with brothers, sisters, cousins, nieces. The older boys bother the little ones and she takes it out on them. Then the boys grab her and her brother is also pushed to the ground. He needed to see everything. Terrible. With broken clothes, she goes back home, to protect the little ones she doesn’t show anything. At home, she tells mother the story. Jeannette wants to report it to the police, but her mother says, “No, we’re not going to do that, it’s already happened and they can’t do anything now.” This “no” repeated itself in her life, just as human resources also said “no. She feels that her good intentions are always punished. Backstabbing also repeats itself in her life. Her father is cheating, her husband is cheating. Her brother needed to see the terrible situation.
Connecting-melting-letting go
Jeannette can’t help it. She feels powerless, sad and hurt. In her life, she regularly feels “it’s too much for me. When she connects with this feeling, she feels a pressure in her chest, nausea in her stomach, the back of her head feels heavy and the back of her body feels like itching. She has pain in the hollows of her face, feels stitches in her back and has difficulty breathing. Jeannette takes a journey of about ten minutes through her body with “it’s too much for me. She stays with her feelings and body; everything is allowed to be there. Over time, she suddenly felt peace. Jeannette receives explanations of her conflicts with emotions, beliefs that repeat with certain events with ages and the patterns from her life. Everything is linked together. This new awareness gives her clarity. She understands the biological process that she goes into solution precisely during the time of rest.
Learn about your body’s biological processes.
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