DWQA QuestionsCategory: Subconscious MindIs it true that communication from the deep subconscious is in the form of emotion? Everything from fear to hope? From happiness to sadness?
Nicola Staff asked 3 years ago
This is quite true and this is the true dilemma people face in coping with their emotional life and the discord it brings again and again into their experience. When people have inner conflicts, it is because a part of them is responding to a different reality than they are even aware is taking place. They are thinking consciously about issues and are privy to certain information and facts to back up their reasoned arguments. What is missing is an ability to talk with the deep subconscious that may have a quite different agenda, because it is facing issues and problems the conscious mind is completely unaware of. That is how great the disconnect is. The deep subconscious might be more concerned about what is happening in parallel lifetimes than what is taking place in the current life. When the conscious mind is only focusing on the latter and wanting to solve a seeming problem, their attempts will be futile if the emotions of the person are all stemming from frustrations and a serious emotional response to the struggles going on within the deep subconscious that may revolve around a completely different time and place, a different life altogether. This is hard for people to understand and accept but you are a soul that has journeyed through many lifetimes in many locations. You are not aware of this consciously, but the deep subconscious has access to all the records of all that has happened and is continuing to happen in parallel. This gives it immediacy and the crosstalk among the parallel lifetimes will be influencing the present life through this awareness by the deep subconscious and its emotional reactions to what it sees. There will be many challenges and many sources of stress it is concerned with, and it will trigger emotional reactions and resonance within the body existing in the physical existence of the present lifetime. The problem is the emotions bubbling up from below may be poorly understood and even inexplicable given the conscious perspective of that individual’s day-to-day life. This dichotomy underlies the very common experiences of people who suffer from chronic anxiety or depression without a seeming logical reason for the negative emotion.