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Playing with the rules, a uranium case

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A man in his fifties presents with multiple complaints. He has had severe asthma for forty years and has seen many specialists because his asthma attacks, which can last up to two days and end in coma, are so severe. He has always been underweight and, like several of his children, suffered from coeliac disease with cramps and diarrhoea. When his bones began breaking constantly and the muscles detached from the bones even after minor accidents, he was found to have severe osteoporosis. He had the sensation of a painful iron band around his chest and could not breathe deeply enough. He became breathless easily and temperature changes were a problem for him, for example the warm air in shop entrances. As a child he had eczema and underwent surgery for phimosis. After a septum operation he experienced severe pain on the left side of his nose, "as if someone were standing on my eye with their foot." He now has emphysema; when it worsens he gets painful cramps in his hands and feet when he stretches out in bed.

He is aware that, because of the many illnesses in his youth, he became accustomed to influencing his situation; he plays with his "victim role." He managed to extend his exam times instead of taking them in the same time as his fellow students. "I liked my disabilities because they allowed me to play with the rules. I arrived late at school, I did what I wanted. But eventually I took responsibility for my health and reduced my medications despite the contrary advice of my doctor and my specialists."

He is a psychologist; he manages various institutions for difficult children. Here too he plays with the rules, for example to ensure he earns enough money to be independent. He goes to church, where he likes to attract attention and cause trouble by standing up and speaking out loudly when the priest says something he does not like. "I am impulsive, but I can control myself. I love extremes." He is very intuitive — he understands situations immediately. He briefly mentions that he glanced at the accounts and immediately found a figure that was incorrect. "I have always considered myself an emotional person, but others see me as a thinker. I am constantly thinking and am creative. I like ideas. I keep to agreements and expect others to do the same."
 

Analysis
His body is progressively wasting away; he has a hereditary disease (coeliac disease) and a bone marrow disorder. The severity of his illness and his playing with the rules point to the Uranium series. Here the body decays, only the mind with its enormous creativity remains. Rules no longer apply to him. His large bulging eyes also indicate Uranium. He was given Uranium 1M.

 
Follow-up
His emphysema improved, the cramps disappeared, and he had fewer bone fractures, which also healed much faster. His coeliac disease healed completely. After the remedy was given his creativity emerged.

Photo:
A bar of highly enriched uranium recovered from the waste of the "Y-12 National Security Complex".
Categories: Cases
Keywords: Asthma, coeliac disease, osteoporosis, genetic disease, bone marrow problems, Uranium series, creativity
Remedy: Uranium

Jan Scholten