
Inferiority is the feeling that one is inferior to others. This sense of inferiority varies from person to person, including appearance, grades, physical strength, personality, relationships, and social status.
And people with a sense of inferiority may have a habit of excessive comparison.
When a person with a sense of inferiority says, “I am not as good at studying as that other person,” people say, “Then why don’t you just try to eliminate that sense of inferiority!”
But this feeling of inferiority is also caused by inflammation, which is a traumatic stress.
So when the inflammation causes cognitive function to deteriorate and we think, “I have to study,” we can’t stop playing games that are completely different from studying due to misbehavior (doing things we shouldn’t be doing).
Interestingly, the person thinks that because he/her has a comparative habit, he/her is stuck feeling inferior and miserable because he compares himself/herself to other excellent people who can study.
But what is actually happening is cognitive agnosia (inability to recognize objects or people’s faces), which prevents him/her from recognizing superior people, and he/she turns his/her attention to those who cannot study as well as he/she can and compares himself/herself with them, and he/she feels no need to make the effort to study because he/she feels secure.
When they try to make an effort, the inflammation of their traumatic stress causes pinpoint agnosia, and they can only recognize people who have lower grades than them, which makes them feel strangely secure and unable to make an effort. In addition, executive dysfunction has also occurred, so they are unable to do anything that would resolve their feelings of inferiority, because they are unable to take planned actions to achieve their goals.
If you were to resolve your sense of inferiority, you could look to someone you admire and imitate them.
But with traumatic stress, you can’t do that, and you can only recognize people who are lower than you before you know it, even though you intend to feel inferior by comparison and try to resolve your inferiority complex. And the result is a cycle of disappointment and even more feelings of inferiority that make the inflammation worse.
The easiest way to understand this is inferiority in appearance.
The more inferior you feel about your appearance, the more you will not stop ruining the appearance of those who are inferior to you. When you are ruining your appearance, your peripheral immune cells become active and attack something that is not your enemy as “the enemy,” and you are hurting yourself even more under the surface.
People with a strong sense of inferiority tend to think of themselves as “competitive,” but that is because their peripheral immune cells become active and regard things that are not their enemies as “enemies. The comparative habit is a way of making all kinds of people the object of comparison, because the autoimmune system runs amok and makes “everyone an enemy”.
But when it comes time to resolve the inferiority complex, agnosia occurs, so it is difficult to get rid of the inferiority complex.
The source of this traumatic stress of inferiority may be an artificial miscarriage, miscarriage, stillbirth, or bereavement before the person was born (as written in the narrative).
The parent compares the child to a child who is not here, saying, “If only that child had been born.
The comparison leads to latent chronic inflammation that becomes traumatic stress from the perception of “unwanted child”.
Of course, it can also be a traumatic stress if the comparison is made between siblings or even neighbors, but if it is accompanied by “death,” it is more likely to become a traumatic stress and chronic inflammation. If the “death” is hidden, it remains as a traumatic stress that even the person himself cannot recognize, making it difficult to break out of the loop of inferiority complex.
This traumatic stress causes the person to regard all comparisons around him or her as “enemies.
Then, you let the inflammation become even worse by blaming yourself and damaging yourself through autoimmunity as a result of the comparison, which is a cycle that makes the inflammation even worse.
When you are comparing yourself to others, you realize, “Oh! My autoimmunity is out of control, and I’m treating myself as an enemy,” the chronic inflammation is cured.
When the chronic inflammation is healed, the cognitive function returns to its original state, you can do what you really want to do, and you are freed from the feeling of inferiority. Once you realize that your ruining of others was your autoimmune system running amok, you will be freed from chronic inflammation and return to your true self.