Emotions:
What they are,
How they came into being,
&
How to permanently alter or destroy them!


In my work, I discovered exactly what an emotion is, how it comes into being, why the mind uses them, and how to alter or eliminate them altogether.

How We Make Emotions

As we go through our lives, from birth to this very moment, your mind has sought out patterns of recognition.  When it sees or perceives something that it does not recognize, you find yourself at the threshold of a decision that will ultimately be during a new,  first-time situation.  These come to you in basically three ways:
  1. First-Person, wherein you are the one who makes the decision.  This typically happens more as you are an adult.
  2. Second-Person, wherein someone makes a decision which affects you.  This often happens when you are a child, when you are elderly, when you are at work, or when your children are in the care of others.
  3. Third-Person, wherein an environmental shift takes place which affects many people at once, whether it be inclimate weather or commercial airliners flying into tall buildings.
In this situation, a decision is made, there is an outcome, and ultimately, life changes course in some way.  Immediately afterwards, the mind says to itself, "How do I feel at this moment?," captures the entire emotional experience at this moment, and encapsulates it into the storage system.

From now on, anytime you recognize a situational pattern that even partly resembles one of which has been experienced, you immediately FEEL the encapsulated emotion, and this emotion steers your behavior. This is a survival tool of the mind.  

Consider ancient man.  Two guys are out looking for food.  One sees a new berry that looks appealing.  He grabs it, eats it, and dies.  The other guy has a first-time experience, remembers the berries, and feels sick the instant he sees them from now onward, and thus, the emotion saves him over time.

How to Identify Individual Emotions

Once a person is in a subconscious state, ask the person to isolate a particular feeling or emotion, and then ask that person to go back into his or her life memory to that point just before the person had ever felt that feeling.  Ask this person to label this point, "The Beginning," and ask the person to then tell you about what happened to cause them to create this feeling.  In every case, you will find a particular story which will relate the creation of the emotion.

How to Alter or Eliminate an Emotion

Using the label "The Beginning," as noted from this immediately previous section, ask the person to return to "The Beginning" and this time, using that person's imagination, the person is to use their CAILSOM to create an alternative situation and result, one that is based on how he or she would deal with this situation today so as to create a better solution or at least a better feeling about the situation.  Ask the person what happened this time.  Ask the person if they like the feeling better.  If the person relates that they do prefer the new emotional result rather than the original, ask this person to toss the original memory in a garbage can where they will choose to not remember what goes into it, and to replace the entire memory with this new version that this person just invented.  From now on, that emotion will no longer create the results that it once did.

If the person would rather, they can choose to say that, by choice, they choose to believe the event never took place, and thus, can create an alternative event which will create a new logical path.  This is particularly useful for sexual reassignment surgery patients as well as for federal witness protection processes, for one can create an entire lifetime of events that may never have happened, but if the individual believes them to be true, the foundations of belief systems will sustain such beliefs.

Thanks be to science fiction author Philip K. Dick for theorizing this in "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?"  This works perfectly.  Fifty years ahead of the game and he was absolutely right!

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