DWQA QuestionsCategory: Subconscious ChannelingDo we need to specify that DSMR sessions be done during sleep, or is that already being done routinely?
Nicola Staff asked 5 months ago
This is already being done routinely. You can review the wording of your protocol to see if there is an advantage in making this clearer among the requests. This would be helpful from the standpoint of educating the present practitioners and eventually, the world, about the unique aspects of the DSMR process and its capability to take place behind the scenes in a highly efficient and also effective fashion. After all, during the sleep interval, the other levels of the mind are fully accessible to interact with and carry out DSMR sessions to resolve important issues that cannot be helped in any other way. While the conscious mind will not be participating, that is not a loss because the conscious mind is the least important level of the mind with regard to the reservoir of past trauma recorded in the archives and accessible only to the deep subconscious. You are wondering about the accessibility of the delusional beliefs of those with mental illness that are within conscious awareness and thus would seemingly be off limits during sleep, so that only a waking session with a client using the DSMR process could get at their faulty thinking and delusional mindset. But that is not actually the case, because all of the inner beliefs giving rise to the delusions are stored in the subconscious and cellular consciousness and those levels are fully available and can be worked with during the sleep interval, so nothing is being missed here. This shows the tremendous potential of the process to achieve a fundamental shift in thinking for the mentally ill that will be a game changer. All that is needed is enough sessions to make the needed changes. While that can take a considerable length of time, there is no other way to achieve such progress. What is needed is the proper request from the human side by an advocate seeking the betterment of those sufferers, to speak on their behalf and arrange the healing work to be carried out.