This book presents a systemic model of ME CFS.
It does not offer medical advice or scientific diagnosis.
The author describes how energy becomes the limiting factor in all bodily functions.
This book presents a systemic model of ME CFS.
It does not offer medical advice or scientific diagnosis. Instead, it explains how an organism collapses under cumulative burdens and still tries to protect itself.
The author describes how energy becomes the limiting factor in all bodily functions. He shows why the body enters emergency mode, why flexibility and regeneration fail, and why withdrawal and standstill are logical consequences.
The book outlines how toxic loads such as cellular stress, bacterial residues and dimethylmercury can destabilize sensitive cells. It explains why certain cell types cannot be replaced and why avoidance is not weakness but self protection.
The model includes key concepts such as energy collapse, systemic overload, and the logic of inner boundaries.
It is written for readers who want to understand what happens when the body can no longer compensate.
Not a diagnosis, not a therapy, but a clear and accessible framework for understanding ME CFS as a systemic condition.
Eckhard von der Nehrung
Author Biography
Eckhard von der Nehrung is a German nonfiction author and systemic thinker whose work focuses on participation, justice, and sustainable social structures. Known for his concise, resonance‑driven style, he translates complex ideas into clear, accessible models. Living and working remotely on the North Sea coast, he develops frameworks that help readers understand how societies can remain stable and future‑capable in times of fragmentation and change.
ME/CFS systemic overload energy collapse toxic burden cellular instability emergency mode self-protection