Sunday, September 9, 2012

Fathers matter more, cognitive therapists less.


Why Fathers Really Matter 

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/09/opinion/sunday/why-fathers-really-matter.html?hpw 


 (Click to access!)


My comment:

Fathers matter more, cognitive therapists less.

There are a couple of reasons why I enjoyed reading your excellent article. You are able to explain and illustrate the application of technical scientific terms like germ  lines, reprogrammed switches and epigenetics. In a clever and understandable way,  you argue that fathers also have to be held accountable, and their germ lines may be as susceptible to poisoning as the women’s. 

Since you often refer to psychiatric and psychological expertise, the deepest insight  you indirectly caused in my mind was the strengthening of my doubts about the myriad of therapies that cognitive psychologists conduct. They try through intellectual reasoning and with the help of painkillers to eliminate depression and anxiety, etc. in all its forms. They rarely succeed in curing their customers but deal with constantly recurring symptoms’ treatment. Through your quoted arguments from DNA and genetic research, clearly the root of the evil is not in the intellectual brain (which is the last part to develop) but has been laid much earlier and is programmed considerably deeper in the the brain and body. The cognitive route to treatment is a dead end, and the patients need dynamic therapies that take into account the process of evolution if they are to get closer to a cure.

I am looking forward to more news from the paradigm shift in the genetic world.


Jan Johnsson


Cognitive Therapy matters less. Primal Therapy matters more.


Through your article, I was made aware of that a traumatic womb life is not only the responsibility of the mother but due to recent biogenetic research the father matters also.

In an earlier comment, I doubted the treatments by cognitive therapists, because the treatments of symptoms lead to a dead end without a cure. So what’s the alternative? Having understood the evolutionary processes that our organisms provide us with, in order to survive, there exists a therapy, Primal Therapy, which under the adequate circumstances can “reverse the evolution” enough to relive pain, which causes (turns the switches on and off) depression, anxiety and many other sufferings. I can refer to a portrait of what this biopsychologic process in our organisms might guide us through.


Jan Johnsson





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