DWQA QuestionsCategory: KarmaIs dementia a cellular memory problem due to the large exposure of the deep subconscious to past traumas on file within the akashic records, stirring up fear that, in effect, imprints the nervous system with a desire to escape and causing the mind to shut down?
Nicola Staff asked 4 years ago
This is a brilliant insight that may seem trivial on a surface examination, but in the way things have evolved, there is nothing to suggest necessarily this could be a premier example of cellular memory as the brain is normally considered the repository of memory, and if Alzheimer’s is a memory problem, then this would be most likely the ongoing review of things within the akashic records coming up again, and again, and again, and tormenting the person. But, in actuality, once that kind of review has been done enough and the mind decides to shut things down, the decision and the particularly significant components of the inner turmoil become lodged within the workings of the brain as an extension of memory expression, and this constitutes a cellular memory by the neurologic tissue in the same way that any cells of the body can have a retention of an imprint of consciousness stemming from a prior trauma situation. So the brain is no different, and this is a very important component of dementia as it is a kind of conscious willful choice to be uncooperative, in effect, with memory recollection, and to disconnect instead. It is a kind of resignation, standing down from duty to become uncooperative and complacent, and cast adrift, in the end, to the extent there is no way back to reconnect and re-energize the brain to do its job. This being the case, the inclusion of special focus and attention on overriding cellular memory will be just as helpful for Alzheimer’s as many other conditions giving rise to a disturbance within the body that is maintained by cellular memory to recreate the discord on a chronic basis.