giantarticle.com giantarticle.com
Search:    Home -> About Us -> Privacy of Info -> Terms of Use -> Place Your Link -> Submit Article   
   

Online & Board Games

   

Employment & Careers

   

Business & Services

   

Computers & Networking

   

Garden & Home

   

Creative Arts

   

Recreation

   

Technology & Science

   

Investment & Finance

   

Self Enhancement

   

Politics & Government

   

Education & Reference

   

Teens & Children

   

Health & Hygiene

   

News & Media

   

Hotels & Travel

   

Lifestyle & Fashion

   

Healthcare & Medicine

   

Online Shopping

   

Automotive

   

Property & Estate

   

Outdoor & Sports

   

Society & Issues

   

Eating & Drinking

 

  Home –› Health & Hygiene –› Alternative Medicine
   
 

How the Subconscious Reasons When It Communicates With You About Pain Relief

   
Author: Ben Plumb
 

The subconscious is a strange creature. It doesn't know what day it is, and can't add two and two. But it seems to know what may be causing your pain.

The subconscious has no ability to reason inductively, meaning that it can't use reason to take specific observations (for example, "two plus two") and arrive at general conclusions about them (for example, "equals four").

Instead it often uses blind association to arrive at general conclusions, sometimes linking things that make no logical sense. For example, if as a child you burned your hand on the exhaust pipe of a car when a tall man walked by, your subconscious may believe that tall people make exhaust pipes hot.

Yet despite these and other limitations the subconscious maintains subtle mastery over brain chemistry, regulates hundreds of life-giving processes, stores every word you ever heard or read, and orchestrates massive defenses when alien organisms invade your body.

From the General to the Specific

No matter how the subconscious obtains its general conclusions, whether through instinct, genetic programming, blind association, or other means, it does have the ability to apply those conclusions to specific cases. That is, while it can't go from the specific to the general, it does have the ability to do the reverse, to go from the general to the specific.

Said another way, it has the ability to reason deductively. Apparently that level of reasoning is sufficient for it to be able to answer questions about the workings of the body.

For example, it seems to know that in general when joints are out of alignment, nerves tend to get pinched. So when it is asked if a visualization statement about the alignment of joints would help alleviate your pain, it is able to answer Yes or No.

The Role of Visualization Statements

Visualization statements represent the specific language that your subconscious wants you to read back to it to help ease your pain. Theyre simple and are targeted directly at the main factors that could bring you relief.

You can obtain these statements by learning how to communicate directly with your own subconscious mind. The process is straightforward and can be done at home by working with a facilitator over the telephone. You you need no special skills and no previous experience in working with the subconscious.

This approach may be helpful in addressing back pain or pain in other extremities, arthritis pain, fibromyalgia pain, or neuropathic pain (nerve pain).

Engaging the Subconscious

The subconscious is quite powerful. When programmed through the very visualizations that it suggests, it may be able to turn episodes of uncontrolled pain into events over which you have a degree of control.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
How to Obtain Optimal Health
 
Is A Fitness Franchise The Best Business Opportunity For You?
 
Migraine Treatments
 
Our Coenzyme Guide
 
Vitamin supplement for the Atkins Diet
 
Natural HRT Alternatives - Herbal HRT for Menopause and Pre-Menopause
 
Heart Menopause Related Symptoms
 
Get Rid Of A Cold Sore
 
How Kindness Toward Yourself Helps Weight Loss
 
A Tasty Approach to Multivitamins
 
 
 
Home -> Privacy of Info -> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.giantarticle.com All Rights Reserved.