With this testimonial, everyone will understand how it can be that children can have Chicken Pox Multiple Times?
Here is my new testimonial to share with the GHK community, which will surely help many interested people to better understand the symptoms of chickenpox, even chicken pox multiple times.
Our two sons, ages 4.5 and 12, have already had chickenpox, the little one even twice. The second time was two years ago when he was weaned, his symptoms on his face and the entire upper body were extreme. At that time they tried to make monkeypox socially acceptable. As a result, my wife couldn’t leave the house with our son for 3 weeks without risking a nationwide “monkeypox hysteria”.
According to conventional medicine, our son is supposed to be immune and never get chickenpox again. Doubly immune, in fact.
A few weeks ago, my wife and I decided that we would have to go on a business trip for a few days but we couldn’t possibly take the children with us. Our nanny, who is really loved by both of our sons, agreed to stay in our home for those five days and take care of our sons. For us, it was the first trip without children in 12 years, and for our sons, the first time both parents had been absent.
To avoid conflict for our children, we prepared them a week in advance by advising them that they would only be with the nanny for five days, and they seemed happy about it. The little one was allowed to choose a toy if he didn’t cry for those five days. We were sure that we had prepared everything perfectly.
Our departure was good and without tears. The first night our little one even slept on our nanny’s chest and we talked on the phone every day, everything was fine.
When we got back home at 5 am on a Friday, we didn’t wake anyone up and lay down in the living room for another two hours. When the alarm clock rang two hours later and our 4.5-year-old saw his mother, he just said Oh Mommy and gave her a long hug, but there were no tears, and so he got his promised remote-controlled fire truck with extendable ladder. This Friday, his mother took him to kindergarten and everything was fine.
When we took him home in the evening, we could already see the first spots on his body, but the next day his whole body was covered in chickenpox. Not as bad as when he was weaned, but enough to be officially reported sick to the kindergarten on Monday.
It took ten days for the spots on his face to heal enough for us to take him back to kindergarten. But the last remaining spots did not go unnoticed, so we had to get a certificate from a pediatrician before we were allowed to take him back to kindergarten. It might be that other children would catch it from him, according to the conventional medical opinion, and therefore also the opinion of the kindergarten teacher.
Now everything is fine again, he goes back to kindergarten and is happy about his fire truck. The pediatrician couldn’t explain to us how a child can have Chicken Pox Multiple Times, even though the theory says that he would be immune after the first time. She recommended that we see an immunologist, but of course we didn’t.
I should also mention that our little one is particularly fixated on his mother and he also gets into our bed almost every night to cuddle with mommy.
We don’t think he suffered a new DHS of separation conflict (squamous epithelium) with existential fear (kidney collecting tubes) because we prepared him well in advance precisely to avoid a new DHS, so he could not have been caught on the wrong foot.
His track is when he wakes up at night and his mommy is not in bed next to him.
When he was eight months old, we were invited to a New Year’s party. Of course, he fell asleep and we put him in a bed in a quiet and dark room. At the time, we didn’t immediately realize that he had woken up and was screaming and crying at the top of his lungs for his mommy. It was then that he suffered his separation conflict with existential fear, and it was then that he had chicken pox for the first time. We also attribute his nightly fixation on mom and occasional nightmares to this conflict.
Note from GHK Academy
Thank you for this testimonial. As you correctly write, chicken pox is a separation conflict with the outer skin (squamous epithelium) in the healing phase, and a DHS with the kidney collecting tubules still active, the existential fear or feeling left alone. This fits perfectly into the image of the small child who wakes up alone in a strange bed at night and mom is not there, no matter how much they cry. You don’t need much empathy to put yourself in the panic situation of such a baby. It is understandable that this child is fixated on its mother, especially at night. I also agree with your assessment that the boy had not sufferd a new DHS, but he was on track for the five nights and didn’t sleep very well despite the nanny.
Having children is not always easy, one moment of carelessness, the child suffers a DHS and via tracks is sensitized to this issue for years.
Well observed, thank you very much.