
Second Biological Law
Exudation
Exudation is the release of excess fluids — such as edema, pus, mucus, lymph, discharge, or other biological secretions — during the healing phase of a special biological program, especially in PCL B.
Exudation is part of the body's restoration and completion process during the healing phase of a special biological program. In PCL A, immediately after solving a biological conflict in its psyche, fluid accumulates in the organism's relevant brain relay and body tissue as edema. After the epi-crisis, the organism begins PCL B (the "pee-pee phase"), where excess fluid is released, tissue changes consolidate, and the special biological program moves toward completion.
During exudation, the organism flushes out edema, cellular debris, microbial byproducts, and other material produced during tissue repair or breakdown. These fluids leave through whatever passage is available: the skin, mucous membranes, lymphatic system, respiratory passages, urogenital passages, digestive tract, or body cavities.
Common examples of exudation include weeping, crusting, or oozing skin during the healing phase of a separation conflict; mucus or phlegm during the healing of bronchial, sinus, or respiratory epithelium; urogenital discharge during healing of the urinary or reproductive passages; and pus or drainage when bacteria are participating in the repair or breakdown of old mesoderm or new mesoderm tissues. And, of course, higher-volume urination, sometimes with foaming, depending on the level of activity of the kidney collecting tubules and mycobacteria during the healing phase.
Exudation belongs to the healing phase. It indicates that the organism is releasing what accumulated during PCL A and completing the restoration process in PCL B. However, if exudation is alarming (because it's interpreted as infection, deterioration, or worsening illness, for example), this can lead to new attack conflicts, separation conflicts, self-devaluation conflicts and so on and set up complications and deterioration, tracks, hanging healing, and so on.
The amount and character of exudation depends on the tissue involved, the germ layer, the microbes participating in the healing phase, and the conflict mass or load accumulated during the preceding conflict-active phase. A larger or longer biological conflict will usually produce a more significant healing phase, including more noticeable exudation.
Exudation is therefore not random leakage or meaningless discharge. It is a purposeful release process through which the organism clears excess fluid and repair material, consolidates tissue changes, and moves toward the new normotonia established at the completion of PCL B.