Sensitive Teeth – Germanic New Medicine Testimonial

These-Real Life Testimonials were written by people who apply German New Medicine in their daily lives.

Sensitive teeth on the mother/child side. Can a mother want to bite her little girl? This testimonial explains how this is possible.

Dear John,
Shortly before our older daughter’s second birthday, I suddenly started experiencing tooth pain whenever I ate something sweet, cold, or hot. All the left molars in my lower jaw were affected. The pain was especially intense when any of these foods or drinks got stuck between my teeth. At least, that’s how it felt to me.
The conflict was quickly identified. As a right-handed person, it had to be related to either my mother or my children. My mother was ruled out. It had to do with my almost 2-year-old daughter. She’s a gem, and I love her more than anything, but at that time, she was driving me to the brink of despair.
I’m an extremely patient person. I always try to put myself in the shoes of these little humans, showing understanding for all sorts of things. But I had reached a point where I was running out of patience. It was her aggression that was making me increasingly angry over time. But I held myself together. I literally gritted my teeth. And there’s no better way to put it: it was a conflict of not being allowed to bite or crush. The enamel wore down, and my molars became terribly sensitive.
About two weeks later, I happened to meet a friend who’s a dentist. He’s familiar with Germanische Heilkunde (GHK) but wants nothing to do with it because he fears it would force him to completely rethink his worldview. He thinks he’d have to close his practice if he accepted it. I described my symptoms to him and said I suspected I had an enamel defect between my molars. I wanted to get an X-ray and made a bet with him: no matter what the X-ray showed, I’d fix it on my own without him having to do anything. We sealed the bet with a handshake, and two weeks later, I had my appointment with him.
By then, the toothache was gone, which he found hard to believe. He blew cold air on the spots that had been so sensitive just a few weeks earlier. I felt the cold air, but I didn’t jump to the ceiling in pain. The X-ray was flawless. The only thing worth mentioning was some exposed tooth necks on several teeth, both upper and lower. However, the X-ray showed that all the teeth with exposed necks were firmly anchored in the jawbone, meaning there was no osteolysis in the jaw. He attributed the exposed necks without jawbone osteolysis to possible teeth grinding or clenching, where something gets damaged and shifts… Well, I didn’t quite understand his explanation, but I’d be interested in your opinion, John. Could it still be a mechanical issue?
In any case, my lower left molars were no longer sensitive, and the X-ray showed no signs of enamel defects or anything similar. I had resolved this biting conflict.
Between the bet and the appointment, about two weeks passed. During those two weeks, I came across a book that dealt with aggression in young children, among other topics. I’ll briefly outline what my biting conflict really was and how I was able to resolve it:
What really got to me was when my daughter had her tantrums and, in a moment of frustration, hit me or her dad. I realized that it wasn’t the raging itself, as I could usually understand why she was so frustrated. It was my panic about what other people might think if they witnessed it. I was afraid they’d say things like, “Back in our day, a good spanking would’ve fixed that,” or “You have to nip that in the bud, or they’ll walk all over you,” or “A good beating never hurt anyone.”
In short, I wanted to suppress my daughter’s aggression because I—stupidly—was afraid of how others might react. People whose opinions shouldn’t matter at all. I made peace with my daughter. When she got aggressive and lashed out, there was always a reason, and she’s allowed to express herself as long as she doesn’t hurt anyone. Once things calmed down, we’d find a solution, and that was that. Since then, the aggression issue has resolved itself. And so have my toothaches.
Warm regards,

Note by GHK Academy

Another brilliant testimonial! Often, we think we’ve found the conflict, such as the child is raging out. But that’s only part of the truth. If the child is raging out and no one else is around, we tend to overlook it. We usually know why the child is throwing a tantrum. But the real conflict, in this case, was apparently when another person was present. That was the conflict for the mother. In that moment, she would have liked to “bite” her child to calm it down.
If no one else had been present when the child was raging, the mother wouldn’t have suffered a conflict.
Do you see, dear students, how important it is to pinpoint the exact moment of the conflict (DHS)? The DHS is the pivotal point in Germanische Heilkunde.
So, in this specific case, the conflict was “not being allowed to bite her child in the presence of others.”
Therefore, it’s less about changing one’s attitude toward the raging child and more about changing one’s attitude toward others to resolve this conflict.
“Danger recognized, danger averted!” as Dr. Hamer always said. “Screw what others think!” is the solution here.
A tooth enamel defect on the necks of the teeth can’t plausibly be explained by damage from teeth grinding. In that case, the enamel defect would have to appear on the biting surfaces of the teeth.
Well, I feel sorry for the dentists. They might find solace in the fact that dermatologists, urologists, neurologists, etc., are also becoming “extinct specialists.” People are beginning to understand how their bodies work and no longer need a “priest” for that…

Share this article on your social media

Subscribe to our newsletter

You’ll be informed by email when we post new articles and novelties. In every email there is a link to modify or cancel your subscription.