It’s a very difficult job to accomplish a scientific study of relationships. There are so many theories and opinions that in the end, it’s become very difficult to figure out exactly where the truth of relationships lies. Norberto Keppe’s profound science of Analytical Trilogy, however, cuts through the noise and misinformation, the hurt and pain, to lead us to the truth of love and relationships. It is our hope that you will find much valuable consciousness here to help you develop beautiful relationships and truly contribute to helping society.
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Women use men to destroy themselves
Client JS is a 52-year-old woman, very pretty, in great shape and very successful professionally. An antique dealer, she is a self-made woman, a woman who has achieved success as a result of her own efforts. However, she has a history of much unhappiness in her love life.

Just as there are specific hormones associated with anger and envy and fear, likewise there must surely also exist hormones that are characteristic of love that are released when the individual is feeling love.

Literature, the arts and cultural tradition all confirm the idea that suffering begins with love. Even the religious community defends this idea, stating that there are two kinds of love: one is spiritual in its essence marked by God and fraternal love, while the other is a false and sinful love leading to perdition and suffering. Let’s discuss the truth of love today.

When a man admires a woman, he will have the tendency to use sex to destroy this feeling that is too strong to stand. He will want to take her to bed because then he can diminish the strong feeling to a material level where he can handle it. A short extract from one of our Healing Through Consciousness podcast transcripts.

If we consider the situation of our planet, of our children, of our men or parents or any other relationship you care to name where women have influence, we can see that our role has not been that good because we see humanity falling apart.

In this chapter of her impressive book, Women on the Couch, psychoanalyst Claudia B. Pacheco tries to alert the reader to the serious problem of how women contribute to the maintenance and fortification of the power structures. A great deal has already been written about the terrible things that have happened to women down through the ages, but this aspect that Dr. Pacheco raises here has never been treated seriously in the psychological literature.

We see in our psychoanalytical clinic many women that are inverted. They are afraid of giving love, thinking that if they love and if they do good and give good things to other people that somehow they will become poorer. They have the idea that there is something inside and if they give this, they will have to replace it. A short extract from our Thinking with Somebody Else’s Head podcast.
Listen to the original podcast here.

The quest for pleasure leads to dissatisfaction
It’s been said that there are two types of people: those who are obsessed with sensual pleasures and those who are willing to stop “enjoying life” and make the sacrifice to do something good for themselves and others. We generally think of the former as clever bon-vivants, the latter are virtuous fools. Through his psychoanalytical discoveries, Dr. Norberto Keppe has found that the amount of well-being and equilibrium that a person enjoys is inversely proportional to his quest for pleasure.

Podcast on Relationships
We spend our entire lives in them, looking for them, or trying to extricate ourselves from them. Maybe we’ve read lots about them. Certainly we’ve discussed them, agonized over them, rued the day we ever got involved in them and celebrated them when they’re going well. But how much do we really know about the inner workings of … our relationships?

The Strength of the Weaker Sex
Millions were killed senselessly in the Middle Ages. They couldn’t vote for decades. Their bodies sell everything from perfume to piston rings. They’re our mothers and sisters, bosses and colleagues. And maybe soon, presidents. They’ve caused wars, and yet are the biggest champions of peace. And talking about their pathology can get you in some trouble!

Ask them about what’s important to them and they’ll parry your enthusiasm with a nonchalant shrug and a mumbled, “I don’t know.” You can predict it … somewhere between kid-dom and adolescence, your child stops asking inquisitive questions and starts acting like everything you care about and they used to care about is now completely useless.

Oh, the wayward youth of today," parents of all generations have lamented. "They don't care about any of the old values. They're not serious. They can't even spell correctly!" I suppose it's always appeared to the older generation that the young folk are going to hell in a handbasked. But maybe this time, with our increasing dire situation on Earth economically, environmentally and spiritually, it would be worth treating the youth issue more seriously.

Shakespeare saw them sometimes as battlefields, other times as violent, inten se and overpowering. Unrequited, they have left a path of destruction and torment across the pages of novels for centuries.At times, they call forth the best of us, though, inspiring us to self-sacrifice and abnegation of selfish pursuits. And it spite of all the difficulties, no matter how many have been smashed on the rocks, we search for meaningful relationships to the end of our days. But I'm not sure how much we really understand them.

"We strut and fret our hour upon the stage," is how Shakespeare put it. A few centuries later, Andy Warhol was downgrading us to fifteen minutes in the spotlight. And taking that to heart, a few of us propelled ourselves into the fast lane. "We're here for a good time, not a long time," was that creed - and a few of that stripe burned out spectacularly like super-novas.
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