Rumor is dr sigmund (sigismo) hoffman (the felon gang guy) freud, gaslit his Patients, unshrink them

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Joseph Arabasz MD

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Oct 18, 2025, 10:50:06 PM (4 days ago) Oct 18
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Subject- Rumor is dr sigmund (sigismo) hoffman (the felon, possible sextortionist gang guy) freud, gaslit his Patients, unshrink them

Dear 

 "Additionally, an episode of fugue is not characterized as attributable to a psychiatric disorder if it can be related to the ingestion of psychotropic substances, to physical trauma, to a general medical condition, or to dissociative identity disorder, delirium, or dementia. fugues are precipitated by a series of long-term traumatic episodes. It is most commonly observed with childhood victims of sexual abuse who learn over time to dissociate memory of the abuse (dissociative amnesia)

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the freud management style appears to be corrupt, nepotistic gaslit sextortion hustle, same as mr. Emil gold of commerce city, colo

"freud family portrait –  standing left to right: Paula, Anna, an unidentified girl in a white dress, Sigmund, Emmanuel, Rosa, Marie, and their cousin Simon Nathanson; seated left to right: Adolfine, Amalia, an unidentified boy seated on the floor, Alexander in small chair, and Jacob Freud

freud visited America once, 1909, at clark univ.jpg 
"Political and Social Thought," Paul Roazen says-
"There is a well-known irony in the ease and extent of freud's American triumph. For he had the utmost disdain and contempt for American life. "America," he joked, "is a mistake; a gigantic mistake, but a mistake." He denied "hating" America; he merely "regretted" it. His reasons for his difficulties in adjusting to American customs on his trip in 1909 ranged from the absence of public toilets, the quality of the water and the food, to the more common complaints about America--the manners, the sexual hypocrisy, the general lack of culture, the brash wealth."

Rumor is that the only criminally psychotic hustle conartists who embrace freud are the mr. jim f donaldson esq jd, gargoyle etc gangs, for obvious motive



Emma Eckstein (1865–1924) was an Austrian author. She was "one of Sigmund Freud's most important patients and, for a short period of time around 1897, became a psychoanalyst herself".[1] She has been described as "the first woman analyst", who became "both colleague and patient" for Freud.[2] As analyst, while working mainly in the area of sexual and social hygiene, she also explored how 'daydreams, those "parasitic plants", invaded the life of young girls'.[3]
Ernest Jones placed her with such figures as Lou Andreas-Salomé and Joan Riviere as a "type of woman, of a more intellectual and perhaps masculine cast ... [who] played a part in his life, accessory to his male friends though of a finer calibre."[4]
Life
Emma Eckstein was born in Vienna on 28 January 1865 to a well-known bourgeois family with close connections to Freud: one of her brothers was Gustav Eckstein (1875–1916), a social democrat and associate of Karl Kautsky, the leader of the Socialist Party; and a sister, Therese Schlesinger, a socialist, was one of the first women members of parliament.[5] Another brother, Friedrich, appears (anonymously) in Freud's Civilization and its Discontents as a 'friend of mine, whose insatiable craving for knowledge has led him to make the most unusual experiments', including 'the practices of yoga...He sees in them a physiological basis, as it were, for much of the wisdom of mysticism'.[6][7]
Eckstein was active in the Viennese women's movement, collaborating with Dokumente der Frauen and Neues Frauenleben.[8]
After an operation in 1910, however, Eckstein took to her couch, and remained a partial invalid until she died on 30 July 1924 of a cerebral hemorrhage.[7]
Analysis
When she was 27, she went to Freud, seeking treatment for vague symptoms including stomach ailments and slight depression related to menstruation. Freud diagnosed Eckstein as suffering from hysteria and believed that she masturbated to excess; masturbation in those days was considered dangerous to mental health. Her 'treatment lasted something in the region of three years – one of the most protracted and detailed of Freud's early cases'.[5]
In her analysis, Emma Eckstein "supplied Freud with the material that would allow him to theorize hysteric symptomology...taught Freud about 'the no-man's land between fantasy and memory, resonating with sadistic acts and fantasies of a former historical epoch'."[9] She told Freud that “On two occasions, when she was a child of eight, she had gone into a shop to buy some sweets and the shopkeeper had grabbed at her genitals through her clothes. In spite of this first experience she had gone to the shop a second time, after which she stopped away. Afterwards she reproached herself for having gone a second time [...] And in fact a 'bad conscience' by which she was oppressed could be traced back to this experience.”[10] Her "eager collaboration in her analysis gave Freud much precious material...contributed substantial changes and fundamental new elements to his theories: the wish theory of psychosis and dream; the transferential reconstruction of her early pleasures...fantastic scenes from her inner life."[11] In particular, Freud's theory of deferred action owed much to "Emma Eckstein's twinned scenes in shops.... 'Now this case is typical of repression in hysteria. We invariably find that a memory has been repressed which has only become a trauma through deferred action'."[12]
Surgery
Freud was at the time under the influence of his friend and collaborator Wilhelm Fliess, an ear, nose, and throat specialist. Fliess, whom Freud had called "the Kepler of biology", had developed theories today considered pseudoscientific, including the belief that sexual problems were linked to the nose by a supposed nasogenital connection. Fliess had been treating "nasal reflex neurosis" by cauterizing the inside of the nose under local anesthesia. Fliess conjectured that if temporary cauterization was useful, surgery would yield more permanent results. He began operating on the noses of patients he diagnosed with the disorder, including Eckstein and Freud.
His surgery proved disastrous, resulting in profuse, recurrent nasal bleeding; Fliess had left a half-metre of gauze in Eckstein's nasal cavity, the subsequent removal of which left her permanently disfigured. Though aware of Fliess's culpability, Freud fled from the remedial surgery in horror, he could only bring himself to delicately intimate in his correspondence to Fliess the nature of his disastrous role and in subsequent letters maintained a tactful silence on the matter or else returned to the face-saving topic of Eckstein's hysteria. Freud ultimately reasserted his full confidence in Fliess's competence, making Eckstein responsible for the catastrophe by concluding that her post-operative haemorrhages were "wish-bleedings", caused by her hysterical longing for the affection of others.[13][14][15][16][17][18]
Guilt over the episode has been identified as contributing to the dream of Irma's injection in The Interpretation of Dreams: "Max Schur grasped right away the significance of the episode to the 'Irma' dream...in his paper on the specimen dream."[19]
Seduction theory
Eckstein is also associated with Freud's seduction theory. In 1897, Freud cites her analytic findings to Fliess as support for his "so-called seduction theory, the claim that all neuroses are the consequences of an adult's, usually a father's, sexual abuse of a child".[20] Eckstein wrote that "Freud deliberately treated his patient in such a manner as not to give her the slightest hint of what would emerge from the unconscious and in the process obtained from her...the identical scenes with the father".[21]
Jeffrey Masson in his assault on Freud's abandonment of the seduction theory makes much of Eckstein's role, linking Freud's "abandonment" of her position with respect to the Fliess surgery to his "abandonment" of her evidence for the paternal etiology of neurosis: for the idea that "all neurotic patients ... had been sexually abused by one parent or the other".[22]
Yet while few (since Schur) would dissent that in regard to the failed surgery "Freud's evasiveness is blatant.... Freud was eager to protect Fliess from the obvious charge of careless, almost fatal malpractice",[23] there is at the same time much to suggest that "as far as the seduction theory is concerned, Eckstein is a red herring ... no more relevant than Freud's other patients. The fact that Masson lavishes so much attention on her...[is that] Emma Eckstein is for him a woman whom Freud and Fliess abused. She is thus the prototypical psychoanalytic victim ... this symbolic function".[24]
-the raging freudian debate. Wars against Freud

contends that Freud took most of his ideas from Darwin

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Jacob Kolloman Freud (04/01/1815- 10/23/1896) born at Tysmenytsia, Galicia, Ukraine, was the father of sigmund freud
Jacob Freud was the son of schlomo freud and pepi, nee hoffman.
schlomo freud and pepi hoffman
dr. eduard "hofmann" (1837-97) was freud's examiner in the final examination after completing his studies at the University of Vienna (1873-1881)

the freud management style appears to be corrupt, nepotistic gaslit hustle

"freud family portrait –  standing left to right: Paula, Anna, an unidentified girl in a white dress, Sigmund, Emmanuel, Rosa, Marie, and their cousin Simon Nathanson; seated left to right: Adolfine, Amalia, an unidentified boy seated on the floor, Alexander in small chair, and Jacob Freud

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Emma Eckstein (1865-1924).jpg
freud family portrait.jpg
freud visited America once, 1909, at clark univ.jpg
freud, sigmund statue at clark univ.jpg
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