Hi Ellie, > As Schopenhauer said, "All truth passes through > three stages: First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. > Third, it is accepted as being self-evident." Just because some guy somewhere said something, doesn't mean the thing has to make any sense. Same as the valor and discretion thing. Some of the dumbest statements ever uttered have been presented in beautiful, flowery language. > I am uncomfortable with the suggestion that I 'make up' something. It's > insulting, suggests dishonesty on my part, sounds like anger misdirected > at me, and suggests your need for more recovery. "You need more recovery" and "You're still too toxic" and "You're not enlightened yet" and "You're not speaking from your authentic self" and "You're not On Purpose" and "In Denial" and "Misdirected Anger" and all that other trendy New Age language. With a special twist ("Detox") for the diet-obsessed crowd. Just another way of saying "I'm above you." > Pedaphilia acting out is a sex addiction, obsession with food > a food addiction---these fade away when one recovers from the basic > addicition of codependency. Ellie, attributing every psychological problem to an "addiction of codependency" doesn't make any sense at all. Whew! is THAT ever a wildly simplistic summary of human nuttiness! What about a person who's got an addiction to monasteries - they've got to visit a new one every week or they can't sleep at night and become suicidal - all because of some quirky occurence in their long forgotten past? Who would you say that THIS unhappy person is "codependent" on? By the way, "co-dependent" is now out of fashion. It was all over the bookshelves about six years ago, but is now viewed as old-hat in the pop-psychology crowds. > If the toxicosis in the brain (caused by the > underlying addiction of codependecny) is not cleared out, the nervous > system cannot daily detoxify the periphery and prevent cancer. Ellie, I think you're onto something in your ideas about clearing out the brain (or the body - or the whole brain/body - or whatever the heck it is) of its pent-up tensions and memories of old problems that keep clogging up the works. And I think that your hunch that there is a biochemical basis to all this is compelling. It makes sense, and seems to be consistent with many other things that are known about the biology of complex organisms. I wish you would just stick to this important idea - think of ways to research it in a much more rigorous fashion - and ways to demonstrate and communicate its usefulness that would make it both capture the interest of the scientific community as well as the skeptical (and highly "b.s."-sensitive) public. That would be a great contribution, in my opinion. I think you only discredit your theory (and yourself) by wandering off into foolishness like the codependency thing, or by jumping to shocking conclusions such as you have in your paragraph above (where the nervous system "daily" detoxifies the "periphery" and can "prevent cancer"). > Probably the whole human race is (or was) codependent. The WHOLE human race, Ellie? Now I KNOW you don't think hunter-gatherer tribes of 2 million years ago were codependent. DO you? Love Liza