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German New Medicine Endometriosis: The Conflict Behind Reproductive Tissue

German New Medicine links endometriosis to deep loss and procreation conflicts. Explore the GNM perspective on why endometrial tissue appears outside the uterus.

Michael Brennan10 min read

In short: German New Medicine connects endometriosis to two distinct biological programs — a procreation conflict affecting the uterine lining and a deep loss conflict affecting the ovaries. In the GNM framework, endometriotic tissue found outside the uterus is understood as ovarian cells that have been displaced during the healing phase, not endometrial tissue that migrated on its own.

If you've noticed that your endometriosis symptoms intensified after a miscarriage, worsened during a period of struggling to conceive, or first appeared around the time you lost someone deeply important to you, you've already sensed something that most gynecological explanations completely overlook: your reproductive tissue is responding to something profoundly personal. Not to retrograde menstruation or an immune deficiency, but to a specific experience of loss or threatened procreation that your body is still processing. German New Medicine connects endometriosis to two distinct biological programs — a procreation conflict affecting the uterine lining and a deep loss conflict affecting the ovaries — and the interplay between them maps precisely to the timing, severity, and progression of your symptoms. In this guide, we'll explore how GNM explains endometriosis through the five biological laws, what it says about the tissue origin, and what this means for anyone looking to understand their body at a deeper level.

This content is educational and intended to help you explore German New Medicine concepts. It is not medical advice and should not replace consultation with a licensed healthcare provider.

What Is the GNM Perspective on Endometriosis?

German New Medicine makes a distinction that conventional medicine does not: the tissue found in endometriosis is not uterine endometrium that has migrated — it originates from the ovaries. According to Dr. Hamer's brain scan analyses, women with endometriosis consistently show the Hamer Focus (a ring-shaped formation visible on brain CTs) not in the brainstem area that controls the endometrium, but in the cerebral medulla, specifically in the region that controls the ovaries. This is a critical distinction because it changes the entire understanding of what endometriosis actually is and which biological conflict drives it. In GNM, the condition involves ovarian tissue — not uterine tissue — that has been displaced during healing-phase processes. Understanding this reframe requires knowledge of what German New Medicine teaches about how different brain relays correspond to different organs, germ layers, and conflict themes.

What Biological Conflicts Are Involved?

Endometriosis in GNM involves two distinct biological programs operating on two different tissues, each with its own conflict theme. The first involves the uterine body itself. The endometrium (uterine lining) is endodermal tissue controlled by the brainstem, and it responds to a procreation conflict — the deep biological experience of not being able to conceive, carry, or hold onto a pregnancy. This can be triggered by a miscarriage, an abortion, difficulty getting pregnant, or the fear of losing a pregnancy. It can also be activated by a gender-related conflict — a deeply felt negative experience involving a male figure, such as humiliation, disrespect, or violation. The second, and more directly relevant to endometriosis, involves the ovaries. Ovarian tissue is controlled by the cerebral medulla and responds to a profound loss conflict — the loss of a loved one, a child, a grandchild, or even a beloved pet. These are not abstract emotional concepts but deeply felt biological conflicts that activate measurable programs in specific brain regions.

Consider those two conflict themes in the context of your own life. Have you experienced a loss that still carries a deep emotional charge — a pregnancy that didn't survive, a child you couldn't hold onto, or someone you loved who is no longer here? Or have you carried a persistent fear around conception, fertility, or your ability to become a mother? In GNM, the specific conflict that resonates most strongly often points to which tissue — uterine or ovarian — is driving your symptoms.

Tracing your specific loss or procreation conflict — and the life events that may have activated it — is exactly the kind of personal exploration ChatGNM guides you through. It asks about your timeline, your relationships, and the experiences that were unfolding when your symptoms first appeared.

What Happens to the Uterus During a Procreation Conflict?

During the conflict-active phase of a procreation conflict, the endometrium undergoes cell proliferation. The uterine lining thickens beyond its normal cycle, with the biological purpose of strengthening the environment for implantation of a fertilized egg. In GNM, this is the body's way of increasing the chances of successful conception in response to a procreation threat. If the conflict is prolonged and intense, this growth may be diagnosed as endometrial hyperplasia, uterine polyps, or in more significant cases, endometrial cancer — all of which GNM understands as different degrees of the same biological program. During this phase, there are typically no symptoms at the uterine level. The body is in a stress state (sympathicotonia) with cold extremities, reduced appetite, and sleep disruption, but the uterine changes proceed silently. When the conflict resolves, the healing phase begins — the extra tissue is decomposed by fungi and mycobacteria, which may produce uterine candidiasis with characteristic white discharge and a distinct odor. Heavy menstrual bleeding during healing may indicate that the body is actively clearing the surplus tissue.

How Do the Ovaries Connect to Endometriosis?

This is where GNM's explanation departs most dramatically from conventional understanding. When a woman experiences a profound loss conflict, the ovarian tissue responds with cell necrosis — a loss of tissue — during the conflict-active phase. Estrogen production decreases, periods may become irregular or stop entirely, and fertility can be affected. When the loss conflict resolves, the healing phase begins and the body works to repair the damaged ovarian tissue. An ovarian cyst develops over a period of approximately nine months as the body rebuilds the tissue. This cyst transitions through specific stages: initially it fills with fluid, then after the epileptoid crisis (a brief return to stress-phase symptoms midway through healing) it begins to solidify, and eventually it hardens and integrates into the ovary. The completed cyst actually enhances ovarian function, producing more estrogen than before — which GNM interprets as the biological purpose of strengthening reproductive capacity after a loss. The connection to endometriosis occurs when this healing process is complicated by cyst rupture.

How Does Ovarian Cyst Rupture Lead to Endometriosis?

Endometriosis, according to GNM, develops when an ovarian cyst ruptures before it has completed its hardening process. While the cyst is still in its fluid-filled or semi-liquid phase, it is vulnerable to rupture from physical impact, abdominal pressure, water retention related to concurrent abandonment conflicts (what GNM calls "the Syndrome"), or surgical intervention. When a cyst breaks open, ovarian cells are released into the abdominal cavity. These displaced cells then attach to nearby surfaces — the peritoneum, the outer wall of the uterus, the bowel, or other abdominal organs — where they continue to grow. Because these cells originated from the ovary rather than the endometrium, GNM views what is diagnosed as endometriosis as misidentified ovarian tissue. The so-called "chocolate cysts" — cysts containing dark, tar-like fluid — are understood as ovarian cysts that have accumulated old blood during their development. When repeated loss conflicts occur, multiple cysts may form and rupture at different times, spreading ovarian cells to multiple abdominal sites and creating the widespread pattern often seen in advanced endometriosis.

Think about whether your endometriosis symptoms worsened after a specific event — a surgical procedure, a physical injury, or a period of intense emotional stress that may have coincided with water retention or swelling. In GNM, the cyst rupture that disperses ovarian cells isn't random; it often correlates with a concurrent abandonment conflict or a physical event during a vulnerable stage of healing. The question is whether your body's timeline matches this pattern.

What Role Do Tracks Play in Recurrent Endometriosis Symptoms?

The cyclical, recurring nature of endometriosis symptoms connects to the GNM concept of tracks. At the moment of the original loss conflict, the subconscious records all sensory details of the experience — the people, places, sounds, smells, and emotional dynamics present during the shock. These become tracks that can reactivate the biological program whenever they are encountered again. For a woman who experienced a loss conflict related to a child, tracks might include seeing children of a specific age, visiting the place where the loss occurred, hearing a particular song, or encountering anniversary dates. Each reactivation triggers another cycle of the ovarian program — brief necrosis during the conflict-active moments, followed by healing and potential cyst formation when the trigger passes. This repeated cycling explains both the chronic nature of endometriosis pain and why symptoms may flare in predictable patterns tied to specific life circumstances. Heavy menstrual bleeding (menorrhagia) can also indicate track-related relapses of the uterine procreation program, adding another layer of cyclical symptoms. The track concept explains patterns similarly to how it operates in urinary tract conditions, where subconscious triggers drive recurring symptom cycles.

What Might Your Endometriosis Be Telling You?

Now that you understand how GNM connects endometriosis to loss and procreation conflicts, the next step is looking at your own experience.

When did your symptoms first appear — or when did they get significantly worse? Look for a specific event involving loss or procreation. A miscarriage, the death of a loved one, a difficult fertility journey, or the end of a relationship with someone you deeply cherished. The onset of endometriosis often aligns precisely with one of these experiences.

Have you experienced a profound loss that still carries emotional weight? This could be the loss of a child, a pregnancy, a parent, a partner, or even a beloved animal companion. In GNM, the depth of the loss — not its "objective" severity — determines the intensity of the ovarian program. A loss that others might minimize can still register as a profound biological shock.

Have you struggled with fertility, pregnancy fears, or a sense that motherhood is threatened? The uterine procreation conflict doesn't require an actual pregnancy loss. The fear of not being able to conceive, pressure from family or partners about having children, or a deep sense of inadequacy around reproduction can activate the same biological program.

Do your symptoms flare around specific people, dates, or situations? Anniversary dates, encounters with pregnant women, visits to particular places, or contact with certain family members may be tracks — subconscious triggers that reactivate the loss or procreation program and produce another cycle of symptoms.

Which side is more affected? For right-handed women, left-sided ovarian symptoms often connect to a mother-child bond or the loss of a child, while right-sided symptoms may relate to a partner. This reverses for left-handed women.

These are exactly the kinds of questions ChatGNM walks you through — but tailored to your specific answers, your timing, and the losses and procreation experiences in your life. This same kind of reflective exploration applies across GNM topics, from digestive concerns to thyroid conditions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does GNM claim that endometriosis is caused by emotions?

GNM does not frame it as emotions "causing" a disease. Instead, it describes a specific biological program that activates in response to a deeply felt conflict experience — particularly a profound loss conflict affecting the ovaries. The tissue changes follow a predictable pattern governed by the biological laws, with the emotional experience serving as the trigger for the program rather than a vague "emotional cause."

Why does GNM say endometriosis tissue comes from the ovaries, not the uterus?

Dr. Hamer's brain scan analyses showed that women with endometriosis had Hamer Focus formations in the cerebral medulla (the brain area controlling the ovaries), not in the brainstem (which controls the endometrium). GNM interprets endometriosis as displaced ovarian cells from ruptured cysts rather than migrated uterine lining, which also explains why conventional medicine has never been able to confirm how endometrial tissue supposedly travels from the uterus to distant abdominal locations.

Can understanding GNM change how someone approaches endometriosis treatment?

GNM is an educational framework, not a treatment protocol. It does not recommend for or against any medical intervention. However, understanding the biological conflict themes involved may offer additional context for someone exploring all dimensions of their condition. Decisions about surgery, hormonal therapy, pain management, or any other treatment should be made with a qualified healthcare provider.

Key Takeaways

  • German New Medicine connects endometriosis to two biological programs: a procreation conflict affecting the uterine lining and a profound loss conflict affecting the ovaries.
  • GNM distinguishes endometriosis tissue as displaced ovarian cells (from ruptured cysts during healing), not uterine endometrium that has migrated — a distinction supported by brain scan analyses showing activity in the cerebral medulla rather than the brainstem.
  • During the conflict-active phase of a loss conflict, the ovaries undergo tissue necrosis with reduced estrogen. During healing, ovarian cysts form to rebuild the tissue over approximately nine months.
  • Cyst rupture — from physical impact, water retention, or surgery — can release ovarian cells into the abdominal cavity, where they attach and grow, creating what is diagnosed as endometriosis.
  • Tracks (subconscious triggers recorded during the original conflict) explain the cyclical, recurring nature of symptoms by reactivating the biological program repeatedly.
  • The uterine procreation conflict produces cell proliferation in the endometrium during stress, followed by decomposition by fungi during healing — which may produce discharge and heavy bleeding.
  • Self-reflection around themes of loss, fertility, and deeply felt personal experiences may offer additional context alongside medical care.
  • GNM is an educational framework and does not replace professional medical care.

Sources

Wondering which loss or procreation conflict is behind your endometriosis?

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This content is educational and intended to help you explore German New Medicine concepts. It is not medical advice and should not replace consultation with a licensed healthcare provider.