Cure for Tourette’s syndrome (tic disorder) and OCD without medication §50

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. 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
§50

 

In this final section of the Kuriki method, the author writes a very important thing; that is here the Kuriki method is complete. The Kuriki method is no more developing. There will be no element to be added by someone else. So if a reader has read all 49 sections, and understood each section, it means that he or she has understood 100% the Kuriki method. For the rest, the individual bodily understanding of each patient by the patient himself.
· Distinction between the innate KV for the repression of physical discomfort only and the compulsive KV in neurosis.
· Quantitative understanding of the abreaction effect.

In the psychic activities of a child, the intuitive recognition of something may not be conscious as a concept. It can only be felt as something different from the normal state, and he has no precise concept of this strangeness.

A child a little bit Asperger tends to repress the aversion to the nudity of an adult person and cutaneous contact, an adult person must therefore be careful. ¤On the other hand, a child’s trauma can be events which are natural and banal, and Tourette’s syndrome (tic disorders) can be a way of repressing experiences of orgasm or dry orgasm in the Unconscious, for example.
¤

Q. E. D.