🧠 Menstruation and the Misunderstood Biological Clock of Women: An Untapped Advantage

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Does a Regular Cycle Mean Health?

There is a great deal of confusion around what it means to have a “regular” menstrual cycle. Bleeding every 20, 25, or 35 days does not mean a woman’s body is functioning optimally. The female body is biologically programmed to synchronize with the 28-day lunar calendar. Just as it would be strange for the moon to complete its cycle in fewer or more than 28 days, it is also a sign of imbalance for a woman’s cycle to deviate from this pattern.

Ideally, a woman ovulates every 28 days, starting around age 13 (and yes — if it starts earlier or later, we’re also looking at one or more active biological conflicts). If ovulation doesn’t occur at this rhythm, something is interrupting the body’s organic processes. The body simply does not perceive optimal conditions for pregnancy and therefore alters or halts the cycle.

The Brain as a Hormonal Regulator

Thanks to Dr. Hamer’s biological laws, we understand that the brain relay that regulates ovulation and menstruation is located in the left temporal lobe. This same relay also controls estrogen absorption, the vagina, cervix, and coronary veins.

This tells us that behind an irregular cycle, there may be biological conflicts related to sexuality, relationship dynamics, or sexual frustration. When a woman feels rejected, abandoned, or dissatisfied with her partner, the body responds by halting ovulation. Why? Because during the active phase of a sexual conflict, a right-handed woman in hormonal balance (and a left-handed woman in hormonal imbalance) will experience reduced estrogen absorption, making her less feminine — just as occurs in menopause, when taking contraceptive pills, using an IUD, or any chemical disruptor of hormonal balance.

As a result, the woman’s behavior changes: she becomes obsessive, manic, and chronically anxious. This shift makes her more competitive or confrontational with her partner. In this masculinized state, her brain’s objective is to recover what was lost: a sexual partner (if lost due to infidelity), to find a new one (if she has none), or to escape a frustrating sexual relationship.

Coronary Veins and Emotional Context

Coronary veins symbolically participate in the need to eliminate a toxic or frustrating situation. If arteries nourish, veins cleanse. A woman in a frustrating relationship may wish to free herself — not just sexually, but emotionally, economically, or psychologically.

This is why women with deep frustrations often experience frequent tachycardia. It’s not the heart itself — it’s the coronary veins, affected by the sexual conflict.

Example: A teenage girl is rejected in her first romantic experience, or a young girl grows up witnessing her father abuse her mother. There may be no sexual contact involved, but it still creates a symbolic sexual separation conflict.

The Body as a Compass

A woman may say, “I’m regular every 20 days” or “every 35,” but if it’s not 28 days, something is off. Her body is signaling an unresolved conflict.

If a woman enters and exits a sexual conflict several times in one month, she may menstruate multiple times. Each time the conflict is resolved, even temporarily, menstruation returns — followed by a new cycle.

Biology Doesn’t Lie

The body responds logically to conflict. If there’s an unresolved sexual frustration, ovulation halts, estrogen drops, and the woman shifts into a more active, obsessive, confrontational state as a survival mechanism.

A woman with low estrogen is more equipped to act than to nurture or contain. This is observable in menopause, where hormonal decline facilitates a more independent, assertive behavior.

Biological Shock (DHS)

⚡ A DHS (Dirk Hamer Syndrome) is a biological shock lived as:

  • Intense
  • Unexpected
  • Dramatic
  • In isolation
  • With no immediate solution

🧠 This event imprints itself simultaneously in 3 levels:

  • The Psyche (emotional experience)
  • The Brain (conflict location)
  • The Organ (activation of a biological program)

The brain doesn’t think — it acts. If an external resolution is not possible, the body activates an internal one by adapting or modifying an organ to try to resolve the situation — without understanding that most times, the person chooses not to solve the issue.

Clinical Cases of Ovulation Loss

  • Ovarian necrosis (due to loss or a “dirty” semi-genital conflict): often unnoticed unless revealed by histopathology. The ovary appears shrunken and inactive, reducing estrogen production and leading to amenorrhea, anovulation, or irregular cycles.
  • Cervical and portio vaginalis ulcers (due to sexual frustration or conflict): associated with ongoing sexual conflict.
  • Amenorrhea: absence of menstruation due to prolonged conflict.
  • Right-handed woman (or left-handed in hormonal imbalance): sexual conflict or frustration from inability to find or maintain a partner.

Signs of Hormonal Imbalance:

  • Changes in femininity and libido
  • Desire for independence and personal space
  • Altered sleep patterns
  • Low energy

The body speaks when the woman is silent. Menstruation is a powerful internal compass to detect active or resolved conflicts.

The good news: once the conflict is resolved, the body returns to its original biological rhythm.


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I hope this information serves you.

Thanks for reading,
Gaston Vargas

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