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From the author: S-theory Training company Partner The right to be provided for The right to be provided for in one’s needs is the second of the natural rights recognized by the child. We develop this belief in early childhood, stemming from the need to feed; this is the period that Freud designated as the “oral stage” of development. It is at this stage that we find that we are now deprived of our former benefits. The need for food, warmth and care causes a feeling of dissatisfaction, which in turn finds a positive resolution in contact with the mother. The mother at this stage is perceived as the only source of pleasure and satisfaction of basic needs. Having linked the satisfaction of food needs with the resulting pleasure, the child finds in this event a correspondence to the satisfied need. Which in turn leads to the desire to experience this state as often as possible. A relationship is created between the concept of “satisfying my needs” and the pleasure experienced. Growing up and expanding the range of our needs, we continue to transmit to them our primary belief that they all must be satisfied. All this leads to the formation of a stable belief: “since I already exist, then my needs must be satisfied,” especially since this is also reinforced by a feeling of happiness. In the future, we broadcast this right to all spheres of life and perceive it as its natural manifestation..