ATLAS 14 - NEU / NEW

Page 89

87

The seven-year switch TEXT

Denise Peikert

Allegedly each one of us becomes a new person every seven years: our figures change, as do our hair and personality. How true is this? The seven-year rule cites a convenient interval that seems to fit everything we are discussing: the second dentition when children start school; the desire for offspring around the age of 28; and the fact that, at 35, you suddenly feel much older than a few days earlier. Every seven years, people like to claim, the body changes; some even say it morphs completely, as does one’s hair. The subject is a great source of small talk: innocuous yet plausible. One where you can always ask yourself: is this just a myth, or is it based on science? Let’s begin with the myth. Through the annals of human history, the number seven has always held a special fascination. Those annals obviously include the ancient Greeks. Shortly after the birth of Christ, when the philosopher Philo of Alexandria was opining about life in gene­­ral, his quest for a structure led him to posit seven-year periods. To paraphrase the philo­­so­ pher: the first septennial marked tooth replace­ ment, the second puberty, the third – in men – the growth of facial hair, and the fourth marriage; these were followed by intellectual maturity and the equanimity of old age. “Yet in the tenth septennial,” the philosopher wrote, “it is best to die. At any age beyond that, human beings become frail and useless.” While that last hypothesis is no longer true, the basic idea has survived to this day. Why? Because of Rudolf Steiner. When first postulating his anthro­ posophical world view in the early 20th century, he too approached life through septennials. However, he was less concerned with baby teeth and beard growth and more interested in the evo­lution of the human psyche and char­ acter. Until then, the seven-year theory was just that: a theory seeking to identify general rules that govern a human lifetime. This has most strongly influenced today’s Waldorf philosophy based on Rudolf Steiner. It defines an indivi­d­ ual’s evolution from birth to second dentition, from there to puberty, and from there to matu­ rity. That said, modern Waldorf educators tend to reject a strict septennial dogma.

And now to the medical aspect. If you want to know more about the scientific side of the septennial, you can contact Henning Elsner, Chief Physician at the Lahnhöhne Hospital in Lahnstein, which specializes in psychoso­ matic afflictions. Elsner worked as an internist for many years while adhering to the orthodox school of medicine. Yet, he says, he had always had the feeling that physical ailments were closely related to psychological problems. Today Elsner works largely in the field of ­psychotherapy – and recognizes the septen­ nial rhythm in many of his patients’ biographies. “Certain vital issues simply affect people more during a certain phase of their lives,” he says. In other words, if something unexpected hap­pens around a person’s twenty-first birthday, that could sometimes be the reason be­ hind later struggles with depression and anxiety. “With patients who come to me years later, I often realize that they initially suffered from depression long ago,” says Elsner. He specifically addresses the septennial cycle, asking his patients to respond to questions about phases of their lives. What happened in your first seven years? Do you recall your first sensory experience? Your first teddy bear? Elsner regards this as a therapeutic reconnection with a person’s own life story. The septennials serve here as a compass of sorts, a navigation aid for both therapists and patients that provides signposts through the course of a person’s life. “Quite simply, there are challenges that belong in certain stages – if people realize that, they often experience it as a relief,” Elner has found. That said, anthroposophy is based on assumptions and observations; it can only offer cautious impulses for people to reflect on their lives. Being a philosophy, it is immune to the test of medical proof. Steiner, the founder of the anthroposophical world view, nonetheless ven­tured into scientific waters. He wrote that, over a period of seven to eight years, human beings rejected their physical material and re­newed it. Last but not least, it is time to address the work of the stem-cell and molecular biolo­ gist Jonas Frisén, who teaches at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, one of Europe’s most highly respected medical schools. He says he


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Impressum Imprint

4min
pages 94-96

Neu im Netz New on the Web

3min
pages 92-93

Nachgelesen Update

2min
page 91

The seven-year switch

5min
pages 89-90

The way forward for land transport

4min
pages 83-85

Mach alles neu

5min
pages 86-88

Wo geht es hin im Landverkehr?

3min
pages 80-82

We’re the newbies

5min
pages 75-77

Wir sind die Neuen

5min
pages 73-74

Good answers to questions posed by the pandemic

5min
pages 69-72

Daily Business

1min
pages 78-79

Gute Antworten auf die Fragen der Krise

4min
pages 67-68

Heute schon etwas gelernt?

2min
pages 65-66

Learned anything new today?

2min
page 64

Recharging your batteries

11min
pages 61-63

Over the sea or through the air?

3min
pages 49-51

Die Welt in Orange Orange Network

5min
pages 44-46

Über das Meer oder durch die Luft?

3min
pages 47-48

Den Reservetank füllen

12min
pages 54-60

When does the new get old?

5min
pages 37-38

Mixed feelings

7min
pages 41-43

Was bleibt, was kommt?

10min
pages 8-16

Gemischte Gefühle

6min
pages 39-40

»Die Nachfrage nach EU-Gütern ist unersättlich«

2min
page 22

Comings and goings

9min
pages 17-21

“The demand for EU goods is pretty insatiable”

8min
pages 23-27

Die Zeitung von gestern – Wie lange ist das Neue neu?

5min
pages 35-36
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