Repression,
Unconscious and Subconscious
Easily Explained.
If you are interested repression, the
subconscious or unconscious, this may be an informative web site for
you. This web site offers a free self help course that involves working
with the subconscious and the conscious and unconscious minds. By reading
this web site, you will learn a theory or metaphor to which most patients
can relate and use in a healing process. Here is how I learned this
theory or descriptive metaphor to explain how the personality and subconscious
were formed. I use this theory to establish rapport and use it extensively
in the treatment of emotional issues.
I was trained in hypnosis and Neruolinguistic
Programming so I worked a lot with peoples subconscious' using finger
responses, a hypnotic technique. In 1993, I was trained to do a new
healing process that involves tapping on acupressure points. While using
my new treatment method with one of my patients, her subconscious, it
turned out, started tickling her under her nose on one of her acupressure
points. This led me to find out that the subconscious could heal from
the inside. I'll give you an outline of the theory before we talk about
repression.
I worked
with many patients with difficult symptoms. From the above insight,
I developed a model of the personality and brain functions. The figure
shows
a metaphor of the personality that has been validated by all of my patients.
The Active Experience is a neural structure that operates on all internal
and external sensory input, the current behavior, learned processes
like, composing and editing of language, and all memories that are elicited
into the active expedience by the content and emotions already active
in the active experience. The
active experience generates all overt and covert behavior.
The dissociation process, the heavy line down the middle, is an learned,
active process that causes the conscious and unconscious split in the
active experience. Since the main personality overlaps the dissociation
process, there are conscious and unconscious parts of the main personality.
The dissociation process is believed to be a process that works both
automatically and voluntarily. In this metaphor or theory, repression
is the voluntary or involuntary use of this dissociation process. An
example of automatic repression is when you don't hear sound when you
are reading or see the hinges when going out a door. Voluntarily repression
is obtained when you can say I never want to think about that again
and you stop thinking about it. Another example is when a recurring
painful experience is forgotten. It is really remembered but the dissociation
process stops it from coming into your conscious experience. On this
site, I develop the distinction between repression or dissociation and
amnesia. Amnesia is not dissociation as you will discover by reading
this site.
The subconscious never goes to sleep. It
can be taught to heal any painful memory in the active experience.
It is possible, then, to communicate with the subconscious and heal
your emotional issues or aspects. This is a very safe and respectful
healing process. In contrast to other clinical treatments, one can obtain
rapport with all your personality and by healing learned pain in a special
way, it is possible to heal even the most devastating trauma without
flooding emotions into the conscious or unconscious mind. The subconscious
can learn to heal all negative memories, beliefs and experiences just
in the course of life.
Click on these links if you are interested in reading more details about
how this was discovered, the theory,
or a overview of the healing process .
If you want to go directly to the Process Healing Course, then click
on Process Healing.
I hope you find this web site interesting and helpful.
(Rev. 11-30-01)
Copyright
© 1997-2002 Garry A. Flint, Ph.D. All
Rights Reserved.