DWQA QuestionsCategory: KarmaAre delusional thoughts, in whole or in part, a product of cellular memory?
Nicola Staff asked 2 years ago
You are tying together the loose ends here quite nicely, about the involvement of cellular memory and all manner of human complaints and issues of the mind as well as body. Delusional thinking is a product of the conscious mind, largely, as we have shared with you. This is why you can do successful deep subconscious channeling with trauma resolution, and even reason in a way totally beyond the ability of the therapist to engage with a psychotic patient and make any headway in attempting to help them cope and ride herd on their distorted thinking. It is the cellular memory of the brain to get thoughts going on its own that can produce a cascade of false assumptions and get a person into real trouble, because once the thought is created it will often be retained, and then it will be built upon to extend the fabrication, starting from an assumption that is not actually reality. And things will grow from there to create quite a tall tale of presumed beliefs in things to be true that are fantasy and only the product of fear-conditioned cellular memory, because of a traumatic event of some kind to get that initiated. And it may then develop a life of its own, to fester and expand when it is paid attention to. And, again, this is a kind of partnership that takes place where the conscious mind connects to cellular memory to survey the landscape and see what might be brewing, what might be relevant in the moment to focus on, and perhaps gain an update or greater awareness about something they haven't looked at in a while, because this is one of the inner resources accessible to the mind for getting a sense of well-being, or being at risk in some way, or under threat. So all levels of the mind do this, to check on what is happening with the body as well as the subconscious, to what extent it can be reached, and for the deeper part of the subconscious to always be listening to what the upper subconscious and the conscious level of the mind are doing, even if the reverse cannot happen because of the disconnection that is present that plagues humans in their inability to understand themselves fully and know the sources of inner conflict that can put them at war with themselves. This is a hidden source of chronic anxiety and other emotions seeming to come out of nowhere with no rationale. So the key to understanding delusional thinking is to take into account cellular memory as a repository and active launching pad for distortions of thought of all kinds. It is not the conscious mind choosing it. It is the conscious mind simply seeing what cellular memory brings into awareness, and then it can't help but pay attention if the voice is strong and the message urgent, as is often the case with delusions. They are usually about something that has a strongly conditioned response due to the traumatic origin that usually begins this phenomenon in the first place. So, the remnants will be taken seriously and considered to have high strategic importance and safety implications and may become an active obsession, with a total focus on what the cellular memory is producing. And then the person is in real trouble because it is not just like an inner fantasy they can feel badly about for time but then push to the side or suppress to continue a more normal period of time and take care of life needs, and perhaps only indulge the phenomenon in idle moments. Some people become preoccupied to the extent the delusions are all they can focus on because they are so compelling, and the person gets in so deep in honoring them as an important fount of knowledge. So this, indeed, is a key in understanding psychotic thoughts and behaviors of all kinds.