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| Affected Children | It has been explored that after abortion can cause depression, obsessions about babies, or eating or sleep disorders in other children in the family. It often happens that a living child identifies with an aborted sibling with predictable, unpleasant symptoms.
Identification with a Dead Person People of the majority of cultures respect dead relatives. In accordance with traditions from all over the world, a disgraced or disregarded dead person will trouble the living, either as an external or internal ghost. An “external ghost” is the common ghost of creepy tales. An “internal ghost” is often called imagination, obsession, possession, or identification with a dead person, depending on education.
The symptoms of Dead Person Identification (DPI) follow systemic rules. Systemic identifications are expected when a family member dies in a manner that creates so much guilt for the family that the topic cannot be discussed or rationalized, and the dead person is disregarded. The most common causes of DPI may be suicide and abortion.
Dead Person Identification (DPI) Symptoms
Chronic sadness and melancholy
May come out to have “psychic” sensitivity
Absorbed with thoughts about cemeteries
Fascination with cemeteries
Absorbed with thoughts death and dying
Fascination with places where people died
May risk life (the absence of fear of death )
May be sterile or stay away from becoming a parent
May fear that own children will die
May have miscarriages and dead children
Other symptoms of spirit possession or dead person identification include anorexia nervosa and different types of addictions.
Two challenges to helping people with DPI are the horror movies that we and our clients have seen as children, and ghost stories that are part of our culture. Unresolved childish fears can grow into a full bloom of terror.
One of the symptoms of dead person identification (or spirit possession) is May appear to have psychic sensitivity. Often people with DPI symptoms precisely describe secret past events and current events elsewhere, and precisely predict future events of previously unknown people.
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