In my post yesterday, I wrote:
Psychiatry is just the tip of the iceberg. The whole problem has to do with a society that wants to know nothing about existential problems.
This includes the racial right and explains why my posts on the subject don’t get comments, leaving Ben and me talking to ourselves.
But almost everyone knows that it is a calamity to live with a loved one who suffers from a severe mental disorder. Why not try to grasp the new paradigm for understanding disorders? (Well, not so new: some honest mental health professionals have been saying since the 1940s that abusive parents were involved in their children’s disorders.) The fact is that without properly understanding mental disorders, it is impossible to do anything substantial to save either our disordered loved ones, or the madmen who are ethnically self-destroying in the West.
The case of Benjamin, whom I will continue to quote, illustrates the new paradigm. The antidepressants he religiously took were of no use to him because those pills never addressed the root cause of his self-harming behaviour. In my Day of Wrath (DOW) I mention that pre-Hispanic Amerindians practised self-harm, and even Emperor Moctezuma had to ritually self-harm (drawing blood from his ear, for example). The Mayans did it too, even the kings. Given that in Mesoamerican culture self-harm was not only accepted but promoted—in Tenochtitlan children had to self-harm at the elite school, the Calmécac—it should be obvious that the subject needs to be investigated.
I iterate: it is impossible to save the Aryan if psychoses are not fully understood. Yesterday, for example, I watched Disney’s Sleeping Beauty for the umpteenth time. Those were times when Aryans still knew, like Prince Philip, that we must fight for the maiden we met in the forest, “gold of sunshine in her hair; lips that shame the red, red rose…”
What is worth remembering about those healthier times in which the film was released is that Aryan beauty—the 14 words!—was still valued to the extent that its preservation was sought.
My claim is that, although it is universal and not individual, the psychosis that currently covers the West—rampant feminism is nothing more than ethnic suicide for those who practise it—can only be understood through a psychohistorical variant of the trauma model of mental disorders. The Amish don’t suffer from this psychosis, and a female friend of my sister’s, educated in the old-fashioned way (remember what I said in my post yesterday about a very traditionalist priest I met) had nine children in Monterrey.
It is of no use for our goal if I focus exclusively on Mein Kampf today when the white race is suffering from a folie en masse that is annihilating it. The cause of mental disorders should be investigated, far from the medical models that only serve to enrich Big Pharma. Anyone who assimilates the content of DOW—and even better, its more detailed expansion in my trilogy—will understand not only the self-harming Aztecs but also the individual disorders that contemporary Aryans suffer from, such as so-called schizophrenia and others.
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An anecdote I tell in my trilogy: before I was born, my great-aunts made a theatrical adaptation of Sleeping Beauty, and my teenage aunt Blanquita, even younger than in this photograph, was assigned to portray the Princess.