By Dietrich Klinghardt, M.D., Ph.D.
All events in life are accurately recorded by the
subconscious. Whether the location of the recording is the brain or consciousness
itself is not relevant for most practical applications. A memory can be
complete and resolved or it can be unresolved. Unresolved memories can
belong to one of two distinctly different categories:
1. The memory is always present - to different degrees
- disturbing, haunting, relentless and painful. It keeps the person from
being present in the moment. These patients are often highly dysfunctional.
Post-Traumatic Stress-Disorder belongs into this category. Dr. Klinghardt
refers to this condition as "Unresolved Psycho-Emotional Trauma". Significantly
traumatic circumstances - usually in late childhood or young adulthood
- are the cause of this condition.
2. The memory is suppressed into the subconscious,
the patient is not aware of all details of the original event and of the
psycho-emotional impact it had and still has. These patients (all of us)
are often fairly functional in life but have specific areas of dysfunction.
Both unresolved psycho-emotional traumas and unresolved
psycho-emotional conflicts are the most common - or only - cause of illness,
chronic pain, accidents, psychological problems, relationship and job-related
problems. The neurophysiology involved is fairly simple:
Researchers have demonstrated that unresolved psycho-emotional
conflicts create a significant bioelectrical disturbance in conflict-specific
areas of the brain. The abnormal signals produce abnormal neuropeptides
and abnormal electrical currents that reach the hypothalamus. From here,
the signals travel in the autonomic nervous system to distinct target
organs, which are - again - conflict specific. Chronic abnormal stimulation
of, for example, the sympathetic fibers that reach the liver, creates
chronic vasoconstriction, abnormal gating phenomena at the ionic channels
of the cell walls and, of course, the presence of abnormal noxious neuropeptides
and leads to chronic illness, pain, and other dysfunctions.
Theoretical Background
The nervous system of the conscious mind is the well-known
and studied motor and sensory nervous system. The nervous system of the
subconscious mind is the autonomic nervous system, the stepchild of modern
medicine. The subconscious is in charge of the survival. It can, however,
not distinguish between real danger and perceived danger. The memorized
snake, that was responsible for an unresolved psycho-emotional conflict
many years back, is as scary to the subconscious as a real snake. Therefore
the subconscious uses the defense mechanisms (the term coined by Freud)
to keep the unresolved psycho-emotional conflict down in the subconscious.
It is the consciousness that will steer the person
again and again in the direction of healing the original traumatic event.
To resolve an unresolved psycho-emotional conflict, it has to be remembered
by the conscious mind, understood, and the coupled response in the autonomic
nervous system has to be disconnected. Dr. Klinghardt calls this process
"un-coupling."
Applied Psycho-Neurobiology is a practical process
of: Having a dialogue with the subconscious mind with the intention to
uncover the unresolved psycho-emotional conflict, Understanding the limiting
beliefs that were formed as an attempt to resolve the unresolved psycho-emotional
conflict and replacing them with freeing beliefs, and Un‚coupling (disconnecting)
the autonomic nervous system from the unresolved psycho-emotional conflict.
The method that consciousness uses to help the person
to deal with an unresolved psycho-emotional conflict is to have the person
repeat the same or similar situations until the person deals "successfully
with the situation." This may or may not happen. When a therapist
helps a patient to identify a repetitive painful theme (such as repetitive
financial crises, repetitive failure in relationships), and helps to uncover
and resolve the underlying unresolved psycho-emotional conflict, the patient's
need to repeat the painful event ceases, the pattern is broken, the patient
is free, and their life changes often immediately and significantly. Chronic
pain and illness follow the same mechanism.
The Four Steps of Healing
1. Diagnosis
To establish the diagnosis that an illness or chronic
condition or psychological problem is caused by an unresolved psycho-emotional
conflict or unresolved psycho-emotional trauma, one has to remember several
elements: the Autonomic nervous system is the peripheral nervous system
of the subconscious mind. If touching an ill part of the body or thinking
of a particular life situation causes an autonomic nervous system stress
signal, the subconscious is involved in the problem. The subconscious
is usually only involved if there is a related unresolved psycho-emotional
conflict or unresolved psycho-emotional trauma. Autonomic nervous system
stress signals can be detected with bio‚feedback equipment or with kinesiological
tests.
APN uses changes in the autonomic nervous system innervated
muscle spindle as an indicator for the state of the autonomic nervous
system. The autonomic nervous system and the test-muscle are our delicate
testing instrument. Researchers have shown for over 30 years that whenever
an unresolved psycho-emotional conflict is activated by a therapeutic
dialogue or procedure, the prefrontal cortex becomes active. Again, muscle
testing can be used to confirm activity in the prefrontal cortex. The
changes after a successful treatment can be confirmed by a new objective
test Heart Rate Variability Testing, which measures the function of the
autonomic nervous system.
2. Dialogue with the subconscious
As explained earlier, the subconscious is afraid of
the content of the unresolved psycho-emotional conflict and avoids exposure.
Whenever in the therapeutic dialogue a question is asked, or a statement
is made, that points in the direction of the unresolved psycho-emotional
conflict, the subconscious sends a stress signal. By monitoring the signals
elicited by the dialogue and steering the questions accordingly, the unresolved
psycho-emotional conflict can be uncovered.
The rule of Three:
To uncover an unresolved psycho-emotional conflict,
one must find
1. The exact time of the original traumatic event,
the age of the person.
2. The circumstances (create an internal picture or
short video-clip of the event).
3. The feeling that was not appropriately expressed
at the time.
3. Uncovering Limiting Beliefs
Our belief systems are the programming of our bio-computer,
from which we create our reality - current, past, and future. If we can
exchange a limiting belief with a freeing expanding one, our reality,
and therefore our life, changes - always for the better. At the time of
traumatic events we are in an altered state, which is the state in which
new beliefs are laid down and incorporated in our already existing belief
systems.
To change our beliefs, we have to be in that identical
state again. This is achieved with the previously mentioned dialogue.
Now the limiting beliefs can be an original traumatic event without having
heart palpitations, trembling, muscle tension. The need to repeat or perpetuate
the painful event is extinguished.
The Unresolved Psycho-Emotional Conflict
For an event to cause an unresolved psycho-emotional
confSlict, several conditions have to be present:
1. The nervous system is in a vulnerable phase.
2. The person is in a situation where it is not safe
to express their feelings. (Example: soldier in combat. He really feels
fear but has to act aggressive)
3. An event happens which is perceived as shocking
and that interrupts the anticipated normal flow of life (example: the
first day of school).
Unfortunately there are very few practitioners who
practice this treatment. I use it in my office and there are probably
a few dozen others in the country who use it, but there is no central
database of practitioners. Another option from a Christian perspective
would be to contact www.theophostic.com
Events That Frequently Leave Behind an Unresolved
Psycho-Emotional Conflict
The intra-uterine period:
- Emotional problems between parents at the time
of conception or later during pregnancy
- Thoughts of abortion
- Attempted abortion
- Feelings of older siblings about the ever-increasing
loss of attention by the mother
- Physiological problems in the womb (mother's smoking,
amalgam fillings, alcohol abuse, illnesses, accidents, medical drugs
- especially psychopharmacological medications taken by mother, malnutrition)
- Being aware of a twin dying ("vanishing twin"),
6-10% of all pregnancies start as twin-pregnancies, less than 2% of
pregnancies end with the birth of twins
- Birth and the time before, during, and after (drugs,
trauma,)
- Post-birth trauma: needle pricks to heel, silver
nitrate in the eyes, cutting the umbilical cord, circumcision and other
invasive procedures often without proper anesthesia.
The early years:
- Birth of younger siblings
- Emotional climate with parents and older siblings
- Weaning the baby (too early, too late, etc . .
.)
- Not breastfeeding
- Traumatic toilet training
- Relationship with babysitter
- Early sexual abuse Drug use by parents
- Physical abuse
- Emotional abuse or abandonment
- Neglect
- Childhood diseases
- Illnesses/hospital stays of a parent
- Relationship to pets, nature, other kids
- Kindergarten
The young years:
- First day in school
- Relationship to teachers and other students
- Moving
- Changing school
- Academic performance
- Athletic performance
- Dealing/becoming conscious of physical impairment
- The locker room
- Relationship with kids of the opposite gender
- Social roles
- Roles in the family
- Abusive parents
Puberty Adolescence:
- Academic/athletic performance
- First romance
- Competition
- Peer groups/peer pressure
- Fights/injuries
- Operations: tonsils, appendix
- Dental interventions - placement of amalgam fillings
(causes shyness, etc . . .)
- Parties/dancing
- Ritual abuse, cults, black magic
- Sports
- Accidents
- Divorce of parents
- Physical/emotional abuse
- First sexual experiences
- Abortion
- Betrayal/broken trust in first deep, often non-sexual
relationship
- Disappointments
- Depression/thoughts of - or attempted ñ suicide
- College/separation from family/friends
- First drug experience
- Academic pressure
The grown-up years:
- They never come
- Relationship problems
- Separation from a loved one
- Broken friendships
- Academic failure
- Divorce
- Death of a loved one
- Financial disasters
- Financial problems
- Failure (job, university, relationship, sports)
- Legal problems (jail, convictions)
- Illnesses (of oneself or loved ones)
- Diagnosis of a serious illness
- Loss of energy
- Loss of sex drive
- Signs of aging
All of these events and circumstances may leave an
Unresolved Psycho-Emotional conflict behind or the patient can negotiate
them successfully (that simply means the person becomes more mature and
stronger because of the way the conflict was negotiated and navigated).
Reading Resources
Family Secrets by John Bradshaw
Love ís Hidden Symmetry by Burt Hillenger