Hope and confidence in the event of vaccination side effects

Hope and confidence in the event of vaccination side effects- 2

Since I published my textbook on diagnosing and treating the side effects of the coronavirus vaccination, I have been asked a lot of questions by those affected. Yesterday I wrote about endotheliitis, an inflammation of the small blood vessels in the body, and then I was asked what the life expectancy would be.

Source: Ralf Tillenburg, Info-medico, 19 October 2025

Such questions touch me deeply. I sense that there is an insane fear in those affected that their lives are melting away more and more and that they will soon have to die. This fear is understandable. I can also sympathise with the despondency that some sufferers feel when they are ill but nobody takes them seriously and they are always pushed into the psycho-corner.

It is certainly not easy to treat people with vaccine damage in such a way that they feel better. I don’t succeed in all cases either. There are always a few stubborn cases where there is simply no improvement.

However, I have found that the attitude of those affected to their illness plays an important role in their recovery. Let me tell you a story that I have actually experienced:

Some time ago, a patient who was completely bedridden and could only get out of bed for very short periods due to his fatigue syndrome made an appointment at my practice. Unfortunately, there is a waiting time of six months in my practice because I am completely overcrowded.

After six months, the time had come and I had a telephone interview with him. He told me that although he was completely bedridden at the time of the appointment, he was almost able to lead a normal life again after six months. And almost without any outside help.

I was totally taken aback and of course asked him how that had happened.

He told me the following:

“You know, I was faced with the decision of despairing and spending the rest of my life in bed or fighting because I wanted to get well again. I decided in favour of fighting. I didn’t want to end up like that. Then I did the following. I stood by the window for 10 seconds, breathing slowly and deeply. I forced myself to hold on for those 10 seconds, even though it was very difficult for me.

After a few days, these 10 seconds became easier for me and I began to extend the time by seconds per day, one second more each day. And to my surprise, it worked. Eventually I was able to stand in front of the window for 30 seconds, breathing slowly and deeply.

And I felt something strange inside me. I had the feeling that my illness was receding from me.

So I continued to do this and then had someone coach me a little, so that my strength increased and I was able to stand for longer and longer periods of time and eventually walk and leave the house. Today I can do some sport again, I can do my daily things and I’m enjoying life again.”

I was flabbergasted.

But it also clearly shows me what the psychoimmunologist Prof Dr Schubert from Austria has said time and again: “Your own body is very, very significantly influenced by your own emotions.”

Positive emotions lead to a significantly better feeling in the body. The messenger substances increase, the immune system improves, you have more strength and stamina. Negative emotions have the exact opposite effect. Strength decreases, the immune system gets worse, you are sick more often when you were otherwise healthy and overall life goes down the drain, as the saying goes.

What am I trying to tell you?

I want to tell you that I am not the only one who can help you to get well, but that you have to do it yourself first and foremost. In fact, I experience time and again in my practice that those patients who come to me and say “I want to fight, I want to get better” manage to do so, while those who say to me “oh, nobody can help me anyway” unfortunately have little success with my therapeutic attempts. That’s a great pity, but I often bite my teeth out with these patients.

So in my opinion, it is infinitely important that you get or already have a positive attitude. I know it’s not easy, because you’ve been through a lot and you feel abandoned by the world, but remember that behind a deep valley there is always a high mountain.

Those of you who take the chance to fight, those of you who say, “Life can’t go on like this, I want to get well again. I’ll do everything I can to make that happen”, you have a great chance and even a much greater chance of getting better than people whose emotions consist only of despair and despondency.

The most important factor in getting well is hope. For this you need confidence, spiritual thoughts, prayers or whatever is available to you in your mental horizon. If you manage to think positively, if you are determined to get well, then all you need from me is a little push and you will succeed.

At any rate, after the experience of 400 vaccination victims in my practice, this is now my firm conviction. I cannot fight against your despondency. But I can work with your hope and help you to get your old life back to a large extent.

There is a powerful force in everyone. If you discover this within yourself, perhaps even have to shake it awake first, if you use this strength to actively work for your health, then you are already halfway back to life.

I wish all those affected that you have or find the strength to get out of the deep valley and back up the high mountain.

Hope and confidence in the event of vaccination side effects- 3

For me, La Sagrada Familia in Barcelona is the most beautiful church in the world.

Incidentally, there is a song about this church by Eric Woolfson entitled “La Sagrada Familia” from the musical Gaudi. You can listen to the song here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yy9Yn4o779Y

The picture above shows a section of the vault. Can you feel the power of this construction? Let it inspire you! © 2023 by Ralf Tillenburg

Article from: 19.10.2025

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