Books

The Celle Seminars – Page 204

(M.P.): I read the Bible once a day. Let’s just say that I like to keep in touch with it, not to forget it. But it’s not like frequently praying, like everyday. It doesn’t become a pattern.
(G.V): Do you pray out of habit?
(M.P.): No.
(G.V): You pray when you feel like it, is that what you are saying? (M.P.): Yes.
(G.V.): But religion is something that comforts you.
(M.P.): It reassures me, makes me feel safe. We have a point to fix on, to cling to.
(G.V.): Difficult questions, huh?
(M.P.): Yes.
(G.V.): Do you cry when you pray?
(M.P.):No, I don’t.
(G.V.): Do you consider yourself to be a person who never cries, or a person who cries easily?
(M.P.): It goes together with my disease I think, because if I have these crises or really horrible pains, then I just can’t stop crying. I cry because of the pains and the problems that I have at that moment. Most of the time I’m under psychological stress.

LIVE

(G.V.): Do you see how easily the information comes? He knows that he cries a lot, especially when he has something to complain about: crying during pain. If this were Aurum, he would not talk about praying in this way, instead he would have said that when he is in pain he doesn’t want to cry, he’d rather do something else, like jump out the window. The same disease can need Aurum, but then the reaction is quite different. In this the reaction is crying. Don’t consider it necessarily a symptom when someone tells you that they pray, because turning to prayer as a relief and comfort is natural in times of difficulties and pain such as