“Infantile Epileptic Spasms Syndrome” – also known as ”Salaam Convulsions” – occurs in newborns and usually resolves by the age of five.
What the cause and the usually “miraculous” healing are, this story explains in accordance of Germanische Heilkunde.
Our daughter started having “Salaam convulsions” when she was 7 months old. “Infantile Epileptic Spasms Syndrome”, also known as „Salaam convulsions“ in german known as BNS which is the abbreviation for „Blitz-Nick-Salaam“. The term describes a seizure disorder in which the child is subjected to uncontrolled muscle spasms. The clinical picture describes lightning-like sudden bending movements of the head and torso (blitz nicken/lightning-nod), as well as a circular bringing together of the arms in front of the face. The latter is similar to the oriental greeting and therefore gave rise to the term „Salaam“.
These (blitz-nicken/lightning-nod-)Salaam convulsions occur in volleys and a series can contain up to over 60 convulsions.
Our daughter always had 4-5 seizures with a series of 20 to 30 cramps per day. At her peak, she was having over 160 BNS seizures per day while on the medication. The convulsions occurred while she was fully conscious. Since the medications administered did not bring any improvement and the side effects increased with each new medication, we wanted to taper them off. However, the doctors did not agree with this. We therefore agreed on the ketogenic diet as the next treatment attempt, for which the medication had to be tapered off. The ketogenic diet was also unsuccessful. After completing this new experiment, our daughter did not receive any further conventional or alternative medicine. And what happened?
Her seizures became fewer and even disappeared completely around the age of 5. Why?
The epileptic replays what happened to him. The DHS must have had something to do with the muscle groups affected by the BNS spasm.
If a child wants to get off an adult’s arm, but the adult doesn’t let him or her, he or she will wriggle downwards like an eel, assuming the exact position of BNS spasms. The DHS must have struck my daughter the moment she was taken away from her mother by a doctor immediately after birth and given medical care behind closed doors in another room for 20 minutes. She couldn’t free herself from the doctor’s grip. That was their DHS!
It doesn’t matter that the doctor meant well. All that is relevant for that developement is the child’s feelings.
The result of this was that her physical development lagged behind in the first few months of life.
For example, she couldn’t support herself or turn. She would just lay flat on her stomach. During this time, the pediatrician discovered that the chest muscles were too weak. It is clear that she was in the active phase of a motor conflict and the progressive paralysis of the affected muscle groups made it impossible for her to turn and support herself.
However, she was able to resolve their conflict. How, I don’t know.
Around the seventh month the BNS seizures started. And with the seizures the innervation of the muscles came back. She began to support herself and turn, quickly caught up with the motor deficit and learned to walk according to her age.
But why did her convulsions only stop at the age of five? And that without medication, therapies or other experimental remedies? Because of the tracks.
Try grabbing a one-year-old child under the armpits and lifting him up, and try the same thing with a five-year-old. The children simply get bigger and heavier. The armpit grip is the track that was programmed into the DHS for her. This track is of course activated more often in a toddler than in a 4-year-old. At some point you can no longer lift the child at all. No further tracks, no further cramps. Germanische Heilkunde is clear and logical. It’s fascinating what Dr. Hamer discovered.
Comment by GHK Academy, with kind approval.
Source: https://t.me/derhelseherGHinter
Werner von der Mühle is the author of the fascinating book series “Gesetze der Freiheit” (“Laws of Freedom”), in which he illuminates and tells the stories of key figures in European and Germanic culture, their documented lives and their medical histories in the sense of Germanische Heilkunde.