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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 55

The level next in importance is the emotional plane, and lastly comes the physical body. The organism will try to protect its innermost parts by stopping the disorder on more peripheral levels.
This idea of hierarchy is exemplified when we observe the evolution of a disease process within an individual. In the beginning the disease seems to be on the physical level, but if incorrect or suppressive treatment is applied, the disturbance leaves the physical body and proceeds to the innermost part of the human being. Then we start observing disturbances on the mental and emotional planes.
A woman with a vaginal discharge of any origin who applies local suppositories may suppress the discharge, however, she may soon develop more internal problems like insomnia and depression. But as soon as the discharge returns by either correct treatment or by sheer reaction of the defenses of the organism, the insomnia and depression go away. Witnessing such a case, which is frequent in women, we see the internaliza-tion of the disease, which is the "same" only in a different form, and which is more internal and therefore more painful and dangerous. Treatment has pushed the disease further inside and has actually broken the first line of defense that the organism had erected. The suppositories forcibly broke down the defenses, and that is why the organism put up a second line of defense, taking the form of sleeplessness and depression.
Of course, insomnia does not always show up after a vaginal discharge because the reaction will always be individual and will take the form to which each person is predisposed.
These reactions are not the usual side effects of drugs that we all know about, but are the combined inherent weaknesses of the organism that appear under the stress produced by the drugs. Another simple example of this process is the influence of antibiotics upon the ecology (microflora) of the intestines.
"Extended broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy is likely to induce Candida due to disruption of the normal ecologic balance of the intestinal
flora."33
"Antibiotics differ from the other drugs in that they not only exert a therapeutic effect but also alter the ecology of the microflora of the body and the environment. Thus, antibiotic usage conjures up an image of fallout akin to that from a leaking nuclear reactor."24