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The patch does not treat or cure suicidal ideation, and it was never designed to. However, it can help resolve some of the underlying causes, one of them being childhood trauma. Many people who have used the patch reported that their urge to self-harm or take their lives, greatly diminished or disappeared.
Yes. We have many success stories in this regard, and the results are permanent. Yet, the remedy was never designed for this purpose.
Trauma can be defined as any emotional or physical upset resulting in the inability to live in the present moment without being overwhelmed by the past. When we use the phrase “childhood trauma,” we mean physical, emotional, and sexual abuse; physical and emotional neglect; and family challenges, including parental: separation, addiction, mental illness, violence, or incarceration.
Yes, it can.
Some of the more common responses would include confusion, difficulty concentrating, anger, irritability, mood swings, anxiety, fear, guilt, shame, self-blame, withdrawing from others, sadness, hopelessness, and feeling of being disconnected or numb.
Unless you are very self-aware, it is likely that those around you will notice changes in you before you do. Some common clues are new insights into yourself, others, and the universe; as well as changes in the way you look at or view things.
Also, when you try to recall a formerly painful event in your past, not only will it be difficult to clearly recall the emotional pain associated with that event, but you will find that there is a sense of peace and closure associated with that event.
Trauma can be viewed as situational imprints, in the sense that every traumatic event leaves a corresponding negative frequency imprint on the unconscious mind. These imprints materially exist as fractured thought forms, which wind up fracturing a person’s soul or true self. These thought forms are frozen in time and space; or you could say: they are “time-stamped” into your unconscious mind.
So, when a present-day event occurs, which reminds you of a past traumatic event, you will find yourself reliving the same exact emotions and feelings you did when that traumatic event first took place. So, in that precise moment, you are truly living in the past, or through the lens of your past.
Trauma imprints are aberrant energy patterns or thought forms. Since thoughts are things and all thoughts are made of material substances, all thoughts vibrate at a certain frequency. The unconscious mind is a reservoir of trauma imprints, creating what I call the “terrain of the unconscious mind.”
This terrain is akin to a blueprint, in that it is an amalgamation of different aberrant frequencies. If you want to change the terrain, you need to first change the frequency of the terrain. Once the frequency changes, so does the terrain. Once the terrain changes, so does a person’s thoughts. And of course, when a person’s thoughts changes, so do their emotions and behavior.
Fractured thought forms (soul splits or fragments) are caused by buried emotional wounds. Fragments are pieces of your soul that have split off when you’ve had an incident that overwhelmed you and you didn’t know how to cope at the time. This occurs to help you function normally in day-to-day life. However, when certain events that are similar to the original trauma that caused the soul split “trigger” you, you may find yourself overreacting. Everyone has experienced this.
This remedy essence helps to bring about a resolution to these buried emotional wounds which have caused the formation of these soul splits or fragments. When these fragments are healed, circumstances in your life will no longer cause those painful reactions, as in PTSD. You’ll be able to respond to those types of situations in a healthy way.
Think about it… if you take a tuning fork and strike it so that it vibrates, and then you take another tuning fork that is perfectly still, and place them close to each other, you will find that in no time, both tuning forks will be vibrating at the same frequency or same musical note. The same thing applies to the unconscious mind. We use high frequency imprints to balance a person and put them in a harmonic state.
Trauma imprints are just the opposite. They vibrate at exceptionally low frequencies; are imbalanced and are not in a harmonic state. Thus, when you take a higher frequency and place it “over” a lower frequency, the lower frequency will change, and begin to vibrate at a higher frequency.
A healthy body resonates at a frequency of 62-68 hertz. When the body’s frequency drops below that, certain symptoms or diseases begin. Moreover, certain thought patterns and emotions within the unconscious mind, have also been shown to vibrate at varying frequencies.
And since the whole terrain of the unconscious mind is simply a matrix of aberrant frequencies, if you change the frequency of the whole terrain by introducing a new harmonic blueprint, you effectively overwrite all the trauma-based imprints in the unconscious mind!
When the terrain of a person’s unconscious mind is vibrating at a higher frequency, so too, will the person, along with his thoughts, emotions, and behavior.
Take hatred for example. Hatred is an extraordinarily strong, low-level frequency or emotion. If a person is filled with hatred, he is naturally a hateful person, and his vibration will be exceptionally low, too.
If a person’s hatred stems from buried trauma, and we overwrite this trauma in the terrain of a person’s unconscious mind, theoretically he can no longer remain a hateful person. Why? Because a person’s thinking and behavior follows the predominant frequency blueprint that resides in the unconscious mind.
When a person uses the patch, he is simply introducing a higher frequency into the terrain of his unconscious mind, so only aberrant frequencies will be affected. If a person is naturally loving, kind, caring, and balanced, the patch will not offer him much benefit.
If you enjoy the struggle or drama, who can say that you’re wrong?
Dissociation is a common trauma response. It is your brain’s attempt to cope with trauma or pain. It is the feeling of being detached from your sense of self, memories, or emotions. For many, dissociation begins as a trauma-coping mechanism in real time—especially when it is ongoing, like sexual abuse. Disconnecting from yourself and your environment can make it feel like the painful event is not happening to you.
But once the brain learns how to dissociate, it often continues to do so long after the traumatic event has passed. For example, someone who is experienced sexual abuse may continue to dissociate during consensual interactions.
The remedy can help by overwriting or erasing the original trauma that is causing a person to disassociate. But there are no guarantees that the brain will immediately adjust once this trauma has been erased. Often, it takes a while for the brain to realize that the threat has passed and that there is no longer any need to disassociate.
Yes, particularly during childhood because it can stunt development, affect self-esteem, shape one’s personality, impact future relationships, and much more.
First off, EMDR (Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing) therapy is highly effective. It deals with specific trauma events. We do not take that approach, because we see trauma as “frequency,” or more to the point: a matrix of aberrant frequencies. Thus, no talk therapy is involved and there is really nothing to “work though,” as the remedy takes care of this for you.
EMDR therapy uses an adaptive information processing model, wherein you are taught to “reprocess” a disturbing memory to help you move past it. Our view is this: if you overwrite the underlying trauma, there is no need to actually “move past it.” Just by virtue of overwriting the trauma, one has effectively moved past it.
Also, EMDR therapy aims to change the way traumatic memories are stored in the brain. So, once the brain properly processes the memory, the patient should be able to remember the traumatic events without experiencing the intense, emotional reactions that usually characterize post-traumatic stress.
The remedy we talk about on our website was never designed to process traumatic memories. Instead, it was designed to overwrite or erase them. Also, contrary to the EMDR approach, we do not believe traumatic memories are stored in the brain. Rather, we believe they are stored in the unconscious mind.
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