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Brain wave synchronization during HR and BPM similar to Energy Healer and telepathic patient outcome

Facilitated Communication (FC) remains controversial and still has more detractors than enthusiasts. However, this fascinating energetic relationship between the facilitator and the non-verbal autistic person is a mysterious and misunderstood connection that has benefits beyond mere communication. FC is a complicated process with many interesting components that require open dialogue and further research. As an experienced facilitator and energy worker with a deep interest and appreciation for the autistic people I work with, I want to generate much more interest in open discussion and study of this anomaly.

In FC, the facilitator provides hand or arm support to the non-verbal autistic person while writing. Once this support is provided, the autistic individual suddenly demonstrates never-before-seen areas of competence. It is an alarming phenomenon that leaves both parents and caregivers spellbound. Most advocates of the process suggest that the facilitator provides both motor and emotional support. They insist that the information that is typed comes solely from the typist himself. Rather, detractors say the information comes from the facilitator, who unknowingly moves the typist’s hand to the appropriate letters. On the other hand, when the typist presses the keys without physical support, many consider that he does so independently. Neither the proponents nor the detractors of the process address the fact that the facilitator is still sitting next to the person typing, usually with an intense focus on the keyboard, and that without the presence and focus of the facilitator, the typist loses control. thread of his thoughts. The question is: why is the presence and focus of the facilitator necessary? How do you help the typist maintain his train of thought? Some suggest it has to do with emotional support. I don’t pretend to know why it helps, but I know it shouldn’t be ignored.

My theory is that HR has an energy component. I suggest that the typist synchronize his brain wave rhythms with those of the facilitator. As he does this, the typist appears to become more balanced, organized, and down-to-earth than he was before establishing a resonance. The relationship can be compared to coupled oscillators, which begin to move in unison after a certain amount of time. A different analogy is that of binaural beats, two separate sounds that form a new frequency produced by combining the two. An EEG connection between the facilitator and the typist could test whether this hypothesis has merit.

I also suggest that the dynamic link between facilitator and typist is similar to that between an energy healer and a patient. The healer emanates a high vibration. In response, the patient raises his own vibrational frequency to match that of the healer and in the process heals himself. In facilitation, I feel that the typist and facilitator are also matching vibrational frequencies. But in this case, I suspect that it is the typist who is lowering his frequency to meet or mix with the brain waves and body rhythms of the facilitator. In doing so, it establishes and amplifies a telepathic resonance.

This synchronization of brain waves and body rhythms would explain the changes in the focus and behavior of the non-verbal typist involved in FC. Establishing a telepathic resonance is a vital part of the process. Once the typist and facilitator are in sync, the facilitator can foster connection by systematically slowing down their brain waves and body rhythms. The facilitator’s relaxed and compassionate intention and approach helps the typist produce longer and slower brain waves, closer to the vibration of the earth.

For example, today I had lunch with a friend with severe autism who was very excited and disorganized. As we sat at the restaurant table, she started screaming and hugging. I sat across from her and encouraged her to put her feet on mine. In the process, we form a resonance. I did this initially by matching his enthusiasm and then reducing my energy by making my mind go blank and feeling calming waves of energy cascading down my spine. Within minutes, she was calm, balanced, and organized enough to eat. If he hadn’t responded, he would have taken her for a walk. The purpose would have been to get it back in sync with my brain waves and body rhythm so that I could relax. When asked about the process, she wrote the following, with facilitated support: “It helps me feel very firm and secure, as if my head is more connected to my body.”

The so-called independent autistic typist needs a more energetic approach than the one who receives physical assistance. The facilitator’s approach allows the typist’s brain waves to slow down. Due to this synchronization effect, the disorganized system of the typist is balanced. This energetic relationship and brain wave timing can support multiple areas of learning, not just dialogue. Motor planning activities and coping skills for daily living can be learned more effectively when the facilitator and the disorganized system of the autistic person are aligned. The autistic person feels more secure and balanced, down to earth and protected by his partner than when he is energetically alone.

Dr. John Zimmerman, founder and president of the former Bio-Electro-Magnetism Institute in Reno, Nevada, was quoted in Life Technology News (2008) reporting that spiritual, psychic and energetic healers of all kinds around the world often connect with the Schumann Resonance. , or 7.8-8 Hz alpha rhythm. Therefore, the left and right hemispheres of your brains are balanced. During the healing process, the patient’s brain waves also go into alpha and are synchronized in phase with the healer’s balanced brain waves, linking the patient to the pulses of the Earth’s magnetic field.

I suggest that the facilitator, such as the spiritual, psychic or energetic healer, can also connect with the Schumann Resonance. By matching the brain wave frequency of the facilitator, the typist also enters the alpha state, which helps him balance the left and right hemispheres of his brain. The facilitator connects the typist by connecting him to the earth’s vibrational magnetic field, which in turn makes him more comfortable. This process can be encouraged by taking nature walks, spending time on the beach, or listening to ocean waves, other sounds of nature, or recordings of the Schumann Resonance. All of these grounding activities help produce longer and slower brain wave patterns.

Both process belief and actual aptitude differ among facilitators with respect to their coupling with typists. This is evident from the fact that the communicative output between different facilitators and the same typist may differ.

In Life Technology News (2008), researcher Maxwell Cade discovered, while using a computerized EEG power spectrum analyzer, that unique and complex brain wave patterns found only in advanced spiritual and energetic healers became prominent in energy waves. brain of patients during the healing process.

I believe that facilitators may be receiving these complex brain wave patterns from the typist once they have learned to remove their mental limitations and truly listen. In my own experience, these complex wave patterns have resulted in better interdimensional and spiritual communication and perception. In other words, the facilitator’s perspective begins to expand through close contact and telepathic fusion with the autistic individual. This alignment with complex wave patterns differs from the use of HR to slow down the brain waves of the autistic person in order to increase their body balance. Both are important and can be practiced on their own or simultaneously, depending on the interest, understanding, and skill of the facilitator. Perhaps these complex brain waves could be identified by the EEG power spectrum analyzer mentioned above, thus helping us to understand the mystical aspects of the HR process that is frequently reported.

The extent of the typist’s ability to communicate depends on the knowledge base and vocabulary of the facilitator. For example, by pairing the typist with a good facilitator who is also a mathematician, the typist is likely to be proficient in mathematics. On the other hand, when combined with a facilitator with limited mathematical understanding, the typist cannot perform at the same mathematical level. Does this imply that the facilitator’s lack of knowledge creates a disadvantage? And does this interference affect the timing of the brain waves and prevent the typist from continuing? An EEG from both the facilitator and the typist could help us understand the effect of interference.

During FC, the typist can be highly suggestible. The facilitator should be aware of this possibility and treat sensitive information accordingly.

I have barely touched the energy of the FC. The Rapid Indication Method (RPM) and facilitated communication share the same telepathic and energetic component. In regards to this, there is much to analyze and explore on a deeper level. Until then, I suggest that the facilitator listen carefully, focus on the task at hand, wait for competence from the autistic individual, let go of limiting beliefs, and in the process watch as the person they are serving becomes happier and happier. balanced. It is best not to worry about the source of the communication, that is, whether the facilitator or autistic partner accesses the information. That varies and changes for a multitude of reasons, and it is this that desperately needs more open dialogue and study.

Life Technology ™ News. (2008). Retrieved from http://lifetechnologynews.blogspot.com/2008/08/healing-technologies.html

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