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Three wise men and one mystery: how Biodecoding added a fourth chapter to psychology


Psychology used to be like a map of the world before the age of geographical discoveries.

Monsters were drawn in the margins, and in the centre — a human being lost between reason and emotions.

Freud, Adler and Jung were the three explorers who laid the first milestones.

Each of them saw a different piece of the human landscape.

But it was Biodecoding that showed how these worlds connect.


Freud — the past that never sleeps

It started with Freud, a man who took a candle and descended into the basement of the human psyche.

There, amid dust, shame and strange dreams, he discovered something he called the unconscious.

According to him, our reactions today are an echo of old wounds.

So he carried in his pocket the belief that ‘a person is what has happened to them’.

That is why so many of us still look for the causes of suffering in the past.

In our parents, in our childhood, in a lack of attention, in a wounded ego.

It is a path into the depths — valuable, but sometimes ending in a dead end:

because you can analyse your wounds your whole life and never really process them.

Freud left us a mirror, but without a handle.


Adler — the future that calls

And then came Adler, Freud's somewhat rebellious student, and said:

‘Enough of this rummaging in the ashes. Man is not only history, he is also direction.’

Adler looked in the opposite direction — towards the goal, the meaning, the future.

He claimed that it is not trauma that drives us, but longing.

Not pain, but the need for belonging, meaning and purpose.

He reminded us that people can build themselves from dreams, not just scars.

His approach was like opening a window in a stuffy therapy room.

Instead of asking ‘what was done to you?’, he asked: ‘Where do you want to go?’


Jung — the depth that connects everything

And then Jung appeared — a philosopher, a dreamer and a bit of an alchemist.

He was not satisfied with either the past or the future.

He went even deeper — to a place where our stories intertwine with the history of all humanity.

He discovered the collective unconscious, full of archetypes, symbols and dreams that we all know, even though no one taught them to us.

He understood that a person is not just to be ‘fixed’ — they are to integrate.

To become whole.

In his eyes, life is not therapy, but a journey of initiation.

And every crisis is not a punishment, but a call to awakening.


And then came Total Biology/Biodecoding — and with a smile, it brought them all together

Because Biodecoding is, in a sense, the child of these three — but with its own soul.

It does not contradict any of them, but instead adds a third dimension to their two-dimensional maps.

From Freud, it is understood that the past leaves traces.

From Adler — awareness of purpose, meaning and direction.

From Jung, a fascination with symbolism and depth.

But it adds something that none of them fully captured: the body.

In Biodecoding, the body is not a ‘vehicle of the soul,’ but its living interpreter.

It speaks when the mind is at a standstill.

It remembers when we have forgotten.

It teaches when we only read.


Our body – Freud with humour, Adler with hope and Jung with poetry

When your stomach hurts, Freud whispers, ‘See what you haven't emotionally digested.’

Adler adds, ‘Think about where you're running to and whether it's really your path.’

And Jung will smile and murmur, ‘Check what this pain symbolises in your journey to yourself.’

And Biodecoding?

It will simply help you listen to all of this at once —

without fear, without labels, without diagnoses.

Because your body is not your enemy.

It is your best interpreter.

Sometimes it speaks subtly, like Jung's poetry.

Sometimes brutally, like a letter from Freud.

But it always speaks with a love that Adler would not deny.


Why did the world choose Freud over Jung and Adler?

Because it is easier to build a system around what does not work than around what might work.

It is easier to ‘fix’ than to learn to listen.

That is why our contemporary psychology has grown on diagnoses, disorders and deficits.

There is no room for meaning, for the body, for mystery.

And yet, a human being is not a mechanism.

You cannot ‘fix’ them like a washing machine.

A human being is a symphony — sometimes in major, sometimes in minor.

And only when you allow yourself to hear every sound — even the false ones — do you become whole.


Bio-decoding — the art of returning to yourself

In Bio-decoding, we don't ask, ‘What's wrong with me?’

We ask: ‘Why is my body doing what it is doing?’

This question changes everything.

Because instead of fighting the symptom, you start listening to its language.

Instead of looking for blame, you discover meaning.

Instead of being a ‘patient,’ you become an explorer.

And then something softens.

The pain loses its accusatory tone.

The symptom ceases to be the enemy.

And you — you cease to be the victim of the story you have been repeating.


Freud looked back, Adler looked forward, Jung looked deep.

And Biodecoding — looks inside, through the body, towards life.

It is not a religion, not a therapy, not a philosophy.

It is a language through which the soul converses with biology.

Sometimes in tears, sometimes in laughter, and sometimes in pain, which suddenly turns out to be a letter from yourself.

And that is precisely its beauty.

Because Biodecoding does not say ‘fix yourself’.

It says: ‘understand why you protect yourself so beautifully.’

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