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How to heal Tic Disorders.
How to heal Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder.
The Kuriki method (the first edition in 2007) is a theory about Tourette’s syndrome (tic disorder) and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder to cure these diseases without medication. This theory is based on the author’s inference and interpretation regarding the structure of these diseases. Since it has been written for the psychoanalysts, reading will be difficult for people in general and it might be sometimes read erroneously. Therefore the Kuriki method must presuppose that the patient is treated by a nearby psychoanalyst, and that, between the patient and the Kuriki method, there is always the psychoanalyst. In the broad spectrum of autism spectrum disorders, for some patients, the disappearance of a neurotic bodily symptom can be harmful to their fragile psychological balance. The explosion of emotional catharsis, which has strong repercussions, is done only for three seconds, once a week: beyond this rhythm, it would be an accident caused by negligence, and the psychoanalyst who is inexperienced in emotional catharsis must take responsibility for the temporary mental collapse caused by the accident. Also, to the patient who has weak capacity of logical reasoning, the psychoanalyst must explain well on the violent emotion of revenge caused by the illusory confusion between the person of the traumatic image in his head and the person in the real world.
Cure for Tourette’s syndrome (tic disorder) and OCD without medication;
Introduction.
Disclaimer;
· The theory of the Kuriki method can be understood only in individual reflection of each one of the patients. The area of responsibility of the author ends at the content of the description, and the understanding of the description is an extremely personal question of each one of the patients.
· Just as there are people who cannot understand that all kinds of ordinary materials can sometimes become an allergen that causes hives, there are people who cannot understand the puerility of the trauma of a child. For example, simple cutaneous contact with an adult can be traumatic in the Unconscious, etc., etc.
· There are people who cannot understand, as rudimentary neurology, the clear distinction between the voluntary movements and the involuntary movements.
· If a patient did too strong explosions of emotional catharsis without the assistance of his psychoanalyst, the author would not take all the responsibility for this patient.
· The author of the Kuriki method does not take responsibility for the person who has not read the Kuriki method.
· The joyfulness that the patient finds in the treatment is under the responsibility of his psychoanalyst.
Heal Tourette’s syndrome (tic disorder) and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder with the Kuriki method.
· Disagreeable local physical sensations; for example, the chair seat is too hard, the legs are tired, etc.
· Disagreeable general physical sensations; for example, cold winter wind, etc.
· Physical sensations of the genital area.
When a patient feels any of these disagreeable physical sensations, another disagreeable physical sensation appears as a means of repression. The intentionality in the Conscious is diverted to the second sensation, and the compulsion of an absurd movement or a childish act amplifies itself in the foreground of the Conscious. When the patient figured out this pathological mechanism of KV, deviation of the intentionality in the Conscious, the long-term treatment begins with his psychoanalyst.
How to heal tic disorders.
How to heal Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder.
Theory of Kuriki method.
Cure Tourette’s syndrome (tic disorder) and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.
KV (bodily repression).
neurosis by compulsive KV.
Abreaction with emotional catharsis.
Tic disorder.
While the author had realized the therapeutic theory for the treatment of tic disorder long ago, the process of writing texts in seven languages, sentence by sentence, more intelligible possible, gradually led the theory to clarity of its structure. However, for some readers, tic disorder still seems like an incurable and mysterious disease, and there are parts of the text that may be difficult to understand.
Besides the resistance effect in psychoanalysis, one of the reasons why the Kuriki method is difficult to understand is that it requires the reader to understand a pathological structure, erroneous structure. A paradox that the correct description of an erroneous structure looks like an erroneous description. Some readers who do not recognize that they are trying to understand a morbid structure only in the healthy structure consider the structure of this theory as something erroneous. Secondly, the descriptions of the structure of sick mind cannot be understood scientifically. There is no proof of the theory. The descriptions of the Kuriki method will be read only in imagination of readers, about unknowable things, without scientific intelligibility.
Diagnosis of tic disorder.
When a small child has started to do a tic movement, the parents should read all 50 sections of the Kuriki method before seeing the doctor, even if they do not agree with the view of this theory. Of course, readers have feeling of not agreeing with the Kuriki method even without reading it. ¤Tic disorder is a disease that the Unconscious of the parents “needs” as well as the Unconscious of the child, and the Unconscious will be trying to resist the attempt at cure. The cause of the disease is there, behind this resistance. The resistance of tic disorder will prevent unconsciously the reading of the Kuriki method. Cf. resistance (psychoanalytic term).
There are two reasons why the parents should read this method before seeing the doctor. First, the act of indicating the tic movement of the child can worsen it. The parents should know that the act of seeing the doctor can cause worsening, i.e., there is a possibility of making a transient tic chronic. Second, while a voluntary movement of tic is very easy to recognize, a diagnosis of tic disorder means a very important diagnosis of the presence or absence of dystonia, epilepsy, autism spectrum disorder (syndrome Asperger) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and, of course, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD). The diagnosis of a tic disorder is the diagnosis of the compulsivity of a voluntary movement.
Descriptive expressions of abstract concepts.
The purpose of this method is to cure safely tic disorder and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder in a healthy way without medication. Once understood, the theory is very clear; the author tried to describe it in the most simple possible way. The description of a mental structure is not the description of a real thing. Each one of the psychic functions is an expression that the author used in order to describe the idea of the cure, which could have been described in other ways. Just as electric circuit is often described with water circuit analogy, psychoanalytic words are used so that the author can easily describe the treatment of pathological mind and the readers can easily understand it. Psychoanalytic words do not reveal scientifically the indefinite structure of the human mind.
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.
Tourette’s syndrome and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder are almost the same disease with almost the same symptoms, which are the appearance of a disagreeable bodily sensation and the absolute necessity to do a precisely predetermined bodily, voluntary action, i. e., bodily compulsivity. The difference : a thing external for an Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, the sensation of the localizable presence of a voluntary muscle for a tic disorder.
The disagreeable bodily sensation, which forces an act, is not aching. Although it is an act which is bodily forced, this act is not forced by pain. The disagreeable mental sensation of compulsion is not something like nausea. A patient has to do unwillingly a voluntary movement of tic or an act of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: this movement and this act of neurosis are conscious each time. Unconscious tic movement does not exist. A tic movement never be an involuntary movement. In the Kuriki method, the pathological necessity that forces the Conscious to do a tic movement or an act of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder is named Absolute-Compulsion. The Absolute-Compulsion is a tunnel. An obsession as its entrance, its only exit is to do the bodily act, of which the manner has been precisely predetermined.
The patients with tic disorder are conscious of the compulsive intramuscular sensation in a voluntary muscle.
The patients with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder are conscious of the compulsive physical sensation with an obsession.
This is why, for people who do not have knowledge about neurosis, tic disorder and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder are seen as very different illnesses. The Kuriki method is a way to eliminate this morbid frame of the Absolute Compulsion.
The patients with PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder, who might have Absolute Compulsion, know obviously, too much obviously, the cause of their disease. When a patient with PTSD has a tic disorder or an OCD or both of them, nobody will wonder why. The traumatic events are obvious for the patients with PTSD (accident, etc.) and these objects of repression surpass the capacity of healthy repression.
The object of repression by a nervous tic or by Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder of a small child is generally a repeated daily act that can be considered as a normal and ordinary act. Disagreeable libidinal sensations, for example, genital sensation, nudity of parents, cutaneous contact, etc., could be a very heavy burden for the Unconscious of a little child who is a little bit Asperger.
KV.
The theory of the Kuriki method is the theory of KV. To avoid that a disagreeable bodily thing becomes an object of the Conscious, another disagreeable bodily thing appears and becomes a stronger object of the Conscious ; this mechanism is innate. If a child is under the reign of neurosis, in the Unconscious, the libidinal traumatic image is represented by a libidinal body part, such as the genitals, and this body part will be repressed in the mechanism of KV. KV is a coined word in the Kuriki method, stands for «körperliche Verdrängung». The author would have used an English word, but the word existed already in a completely different domain with a completely different meaning. K is the initial of körperlich, bodily, and V, Verdrängung, repression, and it is not kognitive Verhaltenstherapie at all. This new term is needed to indicate the congenital predisposition that can function as either a tic disorder or an OCD, etc. The treatment of tic disorder and the treatment of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder are the treatment of the compulsivity of neurotic KV, and a tic disorder and an OCD must be able to be treated in the almost same way.
The treatment of a tic disorder or an Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder is the treatment of the libidinity of a neurotic KV, and a tic disorder and an Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder should be able to be treated in the same way. If the patient has a tic disorder and an OCD, the symptoms of these two diseases disappear at the same time by the treatment. The autistic mechanism of KV can cause also Body-Focused Repetitive Behavior (such as Trichotillomania, Onychophagia, etc.) and panic disorder (hobophobia), etc. The Kuriki method is the theory of KV. It is a method to eliminate the compulsivity from the KV congenital. After the treatment with emotional catharsis, the KV of the patient will have no compulsivity any more. The KV will only repress temporary disagreeable sensations such as fatigue, and will no longer constitute the repression that persists regarding libidinal sensation.
The Kuriki method considers that neurosis consists of two layers: the upper layer and the lower layer. The lower layer is represssed hypertrophied mass of disagreeable emotion, (pathogenic nucleus). The upper layer is KV, (the bodily mechanism of repression for disagreeable bodily sensations). In the structure of neurosis, the existence of the lower layer is repressed by the existence of the upper layer. The upper layer, which represses the lower layer, is in a state of neurosis: the symptoms. Neurosis is a pathological means of repression. In autism spectrum disorder, the mass of emotion, which has only very little spontaneous volatilization, will be in a state of hypertrophy in the mechanical hermeticity.
Regarding the event which had been repeated daily, the patient with Tourette syndrome or Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder must understand that his disagreeable judgment has been made in the Unconscious by his own congenital predisposition and not by the act itself of the family member.
(Of course, it would be completely out of the question, if there were an adult family member who showed his or her genital parts to a small child every day, or who touched sexually the body of a small child every day, etc. The Kuriki method does not mention about these criminal acts.)
Neurosis used to be called «hysteria» at the time of Sigmund Freud, Georges Gille de la Tourette, Jean-Martin Charcot, Eugen Bleuler, Pierre Janet, etc. The symptoms of neurosis are bodily symptoms : the structure of this disease is based on hypotheses within the combined realm of the body and the unconscious.
Freud could not cure tic disorder:
Freud used the word “repression”, a psychoanalytic term, in a narrow sense. In the theoretical structure of the Unconscious, Freudian repression is a function of the Ego to avoid the conflict between the Ego and the Id, and also the conflict between the Ego and the Super-ego. Since the formation of Freudian Super-ego is at the age of five, it cannot be a component of the structure of tic disorder, which starts often at the age of three. In the Unconscious of a child of three years, there is no opposition between the Super-ego and the Id, and theoretically the Ego is not necessary: so Freudian repression, which is a function of the Ego, is not a component of the structure of tic disorder. For Freud, neurosis is a phenomenon of regression to the fixation in very early childhood, and the regression of the patient who is currently a very small children of three years old is not theoretically valid. In Freudian repression, the repressed things are dramatic: it is literature.
The Kuriki method.
In the Kuriki method, the definition of the word “repression” is broad. Repression is a function of the Unconscious not to select the objects that should not be selected in the mental activity of the Conscious. Repression is a function of the Unconscious, with KV of Asperger, not only to block the Conscience to feel the physical sensation which the Conscious does not want to feel, but also to block the Conscious to feel the emotion which the Conscious does not want to feel. The object of the Conscious is selected by the function of repression, which is in a pathological state. The predisposition to tic disorder of a small child is a kind of abnormality in the repression mechanism, and the specificity of the trauma, which is repressed by his tic, is not the cause of the disease, because KV as an autistic predisposition to tic disorder is genetic, therefore congenital. The presence of a mechanism of hysteria is a congenital predisposition, and more significant than the content of the trauma. As long as the child has the mechanism of hysteria, and when he has no disagreeable sentiment, any disagreeable thing can become a trauma for him. The mechanism of repression must be running constantly, all day long. The hysterical symptom of tic disorder, which is a bodily sensation with an obsession, is a means of repression; i.e., « the appearance of the compulsive physical sensation » is a mechanism of repression.
The object of repression.
– The normal tic of Asperger (incurable): The object of repression is a disagreeable physical sensation such as fatigue. There is no absolute compulsivity.
– The tic disorder as a neurosis: The object of repression in the upper layer is a libidinal genital sensation. The object of repression in the lower layer is the mass of disagreeable emotions in the Unconscious.
– The treatment consists of extracting the object of repression (the mass of emotions) and is achieved through gradual emotional catharsis, against the hermetic nature of the autistic tendency.
Summary Introduction 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 [pdf] [Appendix; A classical therapy for panic disorder and phobia] [Donate to the author]