"Alzheimer's disease" is not actually a disease. The symptoms
that Alzheimer's patients typically display and suffer, essentially, do
not result from "progressive neurodegenerative" biological factors or
defective genes as medical professionals claim. It is very important for
Alzheimer's caregivers to know about the true cause of Alzheimer's.
Money and profit are the main reasons medical professionals insist that Alzheimer's is a "disease" cause by biological factors. Although no solid evidence exists to support such claims, considering the disorder to have a biological cause opens the way for doctors to write expensive psychiatric drug prescriptions and engage in costly treatments.
The cost to taxpayers in America for Alzheimer's care during the next forty years is estimated to be about 420 Trillion Dollars. It is vital that the true cause of Alzheimer's become known. not only are the current treatments expensive, they are misdirected.
The essential cause of Alzheimer's is psychological, not biological.
The causal choices actually began in childhood. The disorder gradually progressed over time because of the person's consistent and ongoing choices to control conscious awareness and keep blocked threatening, disturbing, and embarrassing parent-related and incest-related memories.
It is highly probable that an Alzheimer's patient is an incest survivor, and that many went on to become an abusive parent. Those hidden factors drive the memory issues and common volatile family dynamics.
Memory blocking
The Alzheimer's patient has been choosing to hold negative psychic energies in certain areas of the brain (memory centers). He or she accomplishes the memory blocking subconsciously, usually with little or no conscious awareness of what he or she is doing.
This control and blocking has continued over many decades before physical symptoms or brain deterioration occurs or become obvious. The memory loss is a deliberate and willful refusal to remember past wrong choices and negative experiences that the person does not want to take responsibility for and does not want others to know about.
Over time, the concentrated psychic energies used in blocking can cause physical damage to brain tissue.
Language deterioration
The language difficulties that are another common Alzheimer's symptom occur because of the amount of confusion the person is experiencing in his or her mind. That confusion results primarily from control and manipulation of thoughts and choices to be extremely dishonest about past and present life experience.
Poor judgment
Another symptom that springs from the patient's choices to control truth and perception of personal realities over decades are choices to become forgetful.
Patients do not remember all the facts of a situation. They also are controlling and not perceiving objectively. Therefore, it becomes difficult to make correct judgments and right decisions. All of these choices come from a subconscious intention to be controlling and destructive.
Indifferent attitude
Many Alzheimer's patients feel that they have nothing to live for. They have stopped believing that they will eventually get what they want. Many reach a point where they want to physically die, or die mentally and emotionally.
Destroying image
When patients lose the willingness to hold themselves together, subconsciously, and consciously, they have made a core-level choice to "let themselves go." They no longer are motivated to show or present themselves a certain way, so, in effect, their true colors start coming out.
This is usually when intense anger, violence and other extreme behaviors are expressed. They were there all along, usually reserved for family and those closest, but now they are no longer held in check. There are no more perceived benefits for restraining self. Alzheimer's caregivers know well when this happens.
Inability to function
This appears to be the result of a combination of physical, mental, and emotional states and choices.
As the person's choices to negate his or her responsibility for choices, behavior, and circumstances increase, the physical (brain condition) does deteriorate, but the physical brain deterioration is only a partial cause.
A patient's inability to function can be tricky because many times the Alzheimer's patient is willfully and purposefully refusing to function properly when he or she actually has the ability to do so.
Patients sometimes act confused or helpless in order to get someone to feel sorry for them or do things for them. They may be acting stupid to make a loved one or caretaker angry.
For the most part, Alzheimer's patients are enacting their selfish behavior patterns and are selfishly controlling to the max. They manipulate people and situations for a variety of perverted reasons.
Dishonest
Most are dishonest and hiding many negative truths about themselves and their past situations. This causes confusion. What to say? What not to say? How do I say something to get what I want? What is the best way to get even with a spouse or family member?
Avoidance
They do not want to be responsible for how they got to their current state, so avoidance is another strong Alzheimer's trait. When a person is avoiding a present-time reality, it is very easy to become confused about developing events or what those in the environment are trying to communicate.
Restlessness
Restlessness is generated by nervousness and a deep sense of insecurity.
Most Alzheimer's patients feel that they are losing control, but, in fact, they are controlling to an extreme from a subconscious position. Also, their restless feeling was probably always there.
It was not noticed because of their physical activity (i.e. working and keeping busy).
Many times those activities were driven by nervous energy or an agitation that was not as noticeable as when the person became much less active.
Another reason for restlessness or nervousness is that the person after retirement was interacting with a spouse most of the time and not as able to hide his or her secrets and negativity.
A partner might be plagued by fears that previous extramarital sexual affairs, or the sexual abuse of their child or children might surface.
Variations
The type, severity, sequence, and progression of mental changes among Alzheimer's patients tend to vary widely. This is because each person makes different kinds of choices that produce varied effects. The severity has to do with how much and how strongly the person is selfishly controlling their thoughts and feelings.
In addition, the severity of symptoms is determined by how honest the person is choosing to be, how determined he or she is to mentally self-destruct, how much he or she does not want to be present to situations, and how much personal responsibility one is willing to take for their past and present wrong choices and actions.
The progression of mental changes can vary widely because each person is enacting his or her own particular psychological patterns. All of these factors, many subconscious, play an important role in how Alzheimer's manifests in an individual.
The loss of mental functions is primarily the result of a lifetime of denial and irresponsibility. The loss of physical functions (when genuine and not affected) seems to be the result of brain deterioration, but much depends on the willingness of the patient to live and be actually alive in a positive way. The way a person deteriorates and how fast has everything to do with his or her psychological state.
Someone in a nursing home, largely, has given over the responsibility for his or her life to others. Nursing home patients have a great desire to be taken care of, and many act out destructive behavior patterns (the reason so many are sedated). A person making those kinds of choices becomes a likely candidate for and Alzheimer's diagnoses.
Turning it down
Although Alzheimer's is not curable or reversible, there are ways a person can alleviate symptoms and suffering.
Essentially, the condition develops after decades of being set on a controlled destructive course. Only the Alzheimer's patient's right choices to reverse that course can positively affect the condition. Many elderly people have curtailed their negative reactions and behavior because they did not want to be put in a nursing home or be hospitalized.
Statistics show that one third of all diagnosed and hospitalized schizophrenics, suddenly and mysteriously "spontaneously recover" and are subsequently released.
It seems obvious to me that on a subconscious level, just as they subconsciously pulled a "switch" that resulted in an onset of their schizophrenic symptoms, those schizophrenic patients who "spontaneously recovered," did not want to be where they found themselves and made the choices they knew would lead to their release from the medical facility.
So they pulled a different kind of switch and voila, no more crazy symptoms.
Alzheimer's patients are different because their choices and actions have led to physical brain deterioration, which makes self-curing highly improbable. However, with a sincere change of heart, many could make choices that would make whatever time they have left much more positive for them and the Alzheimer's caregivers around them.
Unless we get to accept the true cause of Alzheimer's, costs and pain will keep escalating. []
Money and profit are the main reasons medical professionals insist that Alzheimer's is a "disease" cause by biological factors. Although no solid evidence exists to support such claims, considering the disorder to have a biological cause opens the way for doctors to write expensive psychiatric drug prescriptions and engage in costly treatments.
The cost to taxpayers in America for Alzheimer's care during the next forty years is estimated to be about 420 Trillion Dollars. It is vital that the true cause of Alzheimer's become known. not only are the current treatments expensive, they are misdirected.
The essential cause of Alzheimer's is psychological, not biological.
The causal choices actually began in childhood. The disorder gradually progressed over time because of the person's consistent and ongoing choices to control conscious awareness and keep blocked threatening, disturbing, and embarrassing parent-related and incest-related memories.
It is highly probable that an Alzheimer's patient is an incest survivor, and that many went on to become an abusive parent. Those hidden factors drive the memory issues and common volatile family dynamics.
Memory blocking
The Alzheimer's patient has been choosing to hold negative psychic energies in certain areas of the brain (memory centers). He or she accomplishes the memory blocking subconsciously, usually with little or no conscious awareness of what he or she is doing.
This control and blocking has continued over many decades before physical symptoms or brain deterioration occurs or become obvious. The memory loss is a deliberate and willful refusal to remember past wrong choices and negative experiences that the person does not want to take responsibility for and does not want others to know about.
Over time, the concentrated psychic energies used in blocking can cause physical damage to brain tissue.
Language deterioration
The language difficulties that are another common Alzheimer's symptom occur because of the amount of confusion the person is experiencing in his or her mind. That confusion results primarily from control and manipulation of thoughts and choices to be extremely dishonest about past and present life experience.
Poor judgment
Another symptom that springs from the patient's choices to control truth and perception of personal realities over decades are choices to become forgetful.
Patients do not remember all the facts of a situation. They also are controlling and not perceiving objectively. Therefore, it becomes difficult to make correct judgments and right decisions. All of these choices come from a subconscious intention to be controlling and destructive.
Indifferent attitude
Many Alzheimer's patients feel that they have nothing to live for. They have stopped believing that they will eventually get what they want. Many reach a point where they want to physically die, or die mentally and emotionally.
Destroying image
When patients lose the willingness to hold themselves together, subconsciously, and consciously, they have made a core-level choice to "let themselves go." They no longer are motivated to show or present themselves a certain way, so, in effect, their true colors start coming out.
This is usually when intense anger, violence and other extreme behaviors are expressed. They were there all along, usually reserved for family and those closest, but now they are no longer held in check. There are no more perceived benefits for restraining self. Alzheimer's caregivers know well when this happens.
Inability to function
This appears to be the result of a combination of physical, mental, and emotional states and choices.
As the person's choices to negate his or her responsibility for choices, behavior, and circumstances increase, the physical (brain condition) does deteriorate, but the physical brain deterioration is only a partial cause.
A patient's inability to function can be tricky because many times the Alzheimer's patient is willfully and purposefully refusing to function properly when he or she actually has the ability to do so.
Patients sometimes act confused or helpless in order to get someone to feel sorry for them or do things for them. They may be acting stupid to make a loved one or caretaker angry.
For the most part, Alzheimer's patients are enacting their selfish behavior patterns and are selfishly controlling to the max. They manipulate people and situations for a variety of perverted reasons.
Dishonest
Most are dishonest and hiding many negative truths about themselves and their past situations. This causes confusion. What to say? What not to say? How do I say something to get what I want? What is the best way to get even with a spouse or family member?
Avoidance
They do not want to be responsible for how they got to their current state, so avoidance is another strong Alzheimer's trait. When a person is avoiding a present-time reality, it is very easy to become confused about developing events or what those in the environment are trying to communicate.
Restlessness
Restlessness is generated by nervousness and a deep sense of insecurity.
Most Alzheimer's patients feel that they are losing control, but, in fact, they are controlling to an extreme from a subconscious position. Also, their restless feeling was probably always there.
It was not noticed because of their physical activity (i.e. working and keeping busy).
Many times those activities were driven by nervous energy or an agitation that was not as noticeable as when the person became much less active.
Another reason for restlessness or nervousness is that the person after retirement was interacting with a spouse most of the time and not as able to hide his or her secrets and negativity.
A partner might be plagued by fears that previous extramarital sexual affairs, or the sexual abuse of their child or children might surface.
Variations
The type, severity, sequence, and progression of mental changes among Alzheimer's patients tend to vary widely. This is because each person makes different kinds of choices that produce varied effects. The severity has to do with how much and how strongly the person is selfishly controlling their thoughts and feelings.
In addition, the severity of symptoms is determined by how honest the person is choosing to be, how determined he or she is to mentally self-destruct, how much he or she does not want to be present to situations, and how much personal responsibility one is willing to take for their past and present wrong choices and actions.
The progression of mental changes can vary widely because each person is enacting his or her own particular psychological patterns. All of these factors, many subconscious, play an important role in how Alzheimer's manifests in an individual.
The loss of mental functions is primarily the result of a lifetime of denial and irresponsibility. The loss of physical functions (when genuine and not affected) seems to be the result of brain deterioration, but much depends on the willingness of the patient to live and be actually alive in a positive way. The way a person deteriorates and how fast has everything to do with his or her psychological state.
Someone in a nursing home, largely, has given over the responsibility for his or her life to others. Nursing home patients have a great desire to be taken care of, and many act out destructive behavior patterns (the reason so many are sedated). A person making those kinds of choices becomes a likely candidate for and Alzheimer's diagnoses.
Turning it down
Although Alzheimer's is not curable or reversible, there are ways a person can alleviate symptoms and suffering.
Essentially, the condition develops after decades of being set on a controlled destructive course. Only the Alzheimer's patient's right choices to reverse that course can positively affect the condition. Many elderly people have curtailed their negative reactions and behavior because they did not want to be put in a nursing home or be hospitalized.
Statistics show that one third of all diagnosed and hospitalized schizophrenics, suddenly and mysteriously "spontaneously recover" and are subsequently released.
It seems obvious to me that on a subconscious level, just as they subconsciously pulled a "switch" that resulted in an onset of their schizophrenic symptoms, those schizophrenic patients who "spontaneously recovered," did not want to be where they found themselves and made the choices they knew would lead to their release from the medical facility.
So they pulled a different kind of switch and voila, no more crazy symptoms.
Alzheimer's patients are different because their choices and actions have led to physical brain deterioration, which makes self-curing highly improbable. However, with a sincere change of heart, many could make choices that would make whatever time they have left much more positive for them and the Alzheimer's caregivers around them.
Unless we get to accept the true cause of Alzheimer's, costs and pain will keep escalating. []
Neil Mastellone, working with his co-researcher Jean Mastellone,
has been actively investigating the causes of negative human behavior.
Their combined research findings are groundbreaking and tend to challenge popular and most medically accepted views of the subconscious, human behavior, baby psychology, and child, teen, and adult disorders and dysfunctions.
A Website containing their research findings on Alzheimer's is being built.
For information about a disorder that manifests early in life, visit [http://www.autismwegetreal.com/]
For truly new perspectives and insights about the psychological dimensions of our humanity, our most influential relationships, and the roots of our earliest reactions which are the roots of our disorders and dysfunctional behavior patterns, visit [http://www.babyparentwegetreal.com/]
Their informational Websites contain thought-provoking and meaningful Articles, Case Studies, and reasonably priced eBooks.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Neil_Mastellone
Their combined research findings are groundbreaking and tend to challenge popular and most medically accepted views of the subconscious, human behavior, baby psychology, and child, teen, and adult disorders and dysfunctions.
A Website containing their research findings on Alzheimer's is being built.
For information about a disorder that manifests early in life, visit [http://www.autismwegetreal.com/]
For truly new perspectives and insights about the psychological dimensions of our humanity, our most influential relationships, and the roots of our earliest reactions which are the roots of our disorders and dysfunctional behavior patterns, visit [http://www.babyparentwegetreal.com/]
Their informational Websites contain thought-provoking and meaningful Articles, Case Studies, and reasonably priced eBooks.
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