Sea Shell of Your Heart



As my journey through solutions to how to ‘package’ mental wellness continues, the questions of how to approach the unexplainable seems to be growing. Dean Radin Ph.d, author of Consciousness and the Observer Effect has some ‘hard facts’ that ‘scholars’ thirst for. The example of meditation, a peaceful state is convincing.
What if, we could take the realms of these possibilities to further expand beyond, to examine pieces of measurement in the realms of states that trauma evoke, what if there could be solutions based awareness that focuses on the mind, rather than the brain.
It seems that ‘mindfulness’ is a popular subject, and the observers offer specific and certain therapies addressing ‘disorders’. However, still very much based in an individualized ‘discipline’ (‘behaviour’ modification) format. This limited process could be viewed as actually hindering further possibilities for the quality of consciousness for the installation of each guide of practice.
Perhaps, to imagine that there could be humans have never had a connection in any sense to another human, however, can immediately recognize another’s dysfunctional/altered state of consciousness. They could both have similar traumatic events that have created an ongoing realm of observation that would be unidentifiable, yet the cause of a shared sub conscious response (negative or positive) to one another. To ask further questions on sourcing ways to engage the positive effects of cohesive conscience could lead to a wider ranged, deeper based, applications towards the fields of management of mental wellness.
Heather Ann Jarman



