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Image 1 depicts a normal ratio
of wave frequencies according to databases. Image 2 is a scan
at the outset of treatment of a patient diagnosed with generalized
anxiety disorder (GAD).The profile is typical for patients
diagnosed with GAD. Images 3 through 5 are taken over the
course of 12 sessions during a 4-week period using the stimulation
of acupoints (while anxiety-provoking imagery was activated)
as the treatment. A decrease in the intensity and frequency
of GAD symptoms correlated with shifts toward normal levels
of wave frequency ratios in the cortex. The pattern shown
in these images was typical for GAD patients in the South American study
who responded positively to the stimulation of acupoints.
These images were provided to Energy Psychology Interactive
by Joaquín Andrade,
DISCUSSION
As the wave frequencies
shifted toward normal levels (from red to blue) in the central
and front areas of the brain, the symptoms of anxiety decreased
in both their intensity and their frequency. Similar sequences
of images and symptom reduction were also typical of other
patients with generalized anxiety disorder who received energy-based
treatments.
Patients who were successfully
treated with what has been the standard therapy for generalized
anxiety disorder (Cognitive Behavior Therapy, combined with
medication as needed), showed a similar progression in their
brain scans during the pilot study in South America discussed
below. But it took more sessions to achieve the improvements.
And more importantly, on one-year follow-up, the brain wave
ratios following the Cognitive Behavior Therapy protocol were
more likely to have returned to their pre-treatment levels
than they were for the patients who received the energy treatments.
An interesting tangent
from this study was in the comparison between patients whose
primary treatment was anti-anxiety medication and patients
whose primary treatment involved stimulating energy points
while holding anxiety-provoking images. Both groups enjoyed
a reduction of symptoms. But the brain scans for the medication
group did not show noticeable changes in the wave patterns,
even though the symptoms of anxiety were reduced while the
drug was being taken. This suggests that the medication was
suppressing the symptoms without addressing the underlying
wave frequency imbalances.
An Hypothesis
Early impressions from brain imaging studies,
such as the study from which the above images are derived,
support the following hypothesis:
Stimulating specific electrically inductive
points on the skin while simultaneously activating an anxiety-provoking
image changes the neurological connections to the amygdala
and other brain structures in a manner that reduces the
anxious response to that image.
This hypothesis is also supported by three
empirically demonstrated principles (citations can be found
in Energy Psychology Interactive):
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Bringing a troubling image or memory to
mind makes it temporarily responsive to interventions
that alter the stress-activating circuitry in the amygdala
and other brain structures (neural plasticity, a la Joseph
LeDoux).
-
A study from Harvard
Medical School showed that stimulating specific acupoints
can send signals that deactivate areas of the brain that
are involved with the experience of fear and pain.
-
Brain wave patterns
that are markers of generalized anxiety and other mental
disorders have been identified, and as you have seen,
at least one early study suggests that stimulating acupoints
while bringing anxiety-provoking images to mind changes
these brain wave patterns.
These principles work in concert so that stimulating
certain electrically inductive points while an anxiety-evoking
image has been activated sends signals that normalize the
affected wave patterns, as illustrated in the above brain
scans.
Andrades and Feinberg's
full report
Return
to Emotional Freedom
ENERGY PSYCHOLOGY INTERACTIVE
Rapid Interventions for Lasting
Change
Order
Energy Psychology Interactive
http://www.energypsychologyinteractive.com/
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