Mar 7, 2019

Legal Help For Veterans | ~ Study suggests that listening to brainwaves may help reduce PTSD symptoms ~ | Blogger: [👌'There are three ways of doing things: the right way, the wrong way, and the Army way.'🎖️] .. Oh wauv!... Good luck with getting approval from FDA (FDA approves ketamine-based nasal spray to treat extreme depression. The first antidepressant drug in decades to operate in a completely new way, acting within hours not weeks, as with current medications. The spray, esketamine, will come with a black box warning – the administration’s strongest, which cautions about the potential for sedation, attention, judgement, and cognitive issues, with the potential for both abuse and suicidal thoughts) ... PTSD can hit both military personnel as well as civilians.. All over the world, many soldiers return with psychological scars, often diagnosed as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, a severe mental condition. It affects 3.5 per cent of military personnel. PTSD can also affect civilians victims of brutality, rape, accident or crime. Even witnessing an assault or robbery can precipitate symptoms. Such trauma produces reactions of fear, anger and shock. In most people the symptoms fade away with time but in PTSD, the symptoms persist for more than a month, become stronger over time and prevent the person from leading a normal life...😮 But there's actually many great studies and trials for assisting Veterans with PTSD out there, by the "right way" of Sound Healing, Mindfulness-based Therapies and Binaural Beats Healing With Delta Brainwaves etc. etc... By the "wrong way", since post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is typically treated with medication or psycho- therapy and the "Army way": A major study done by the RAND Corporation shows, that 2.3 million American veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are simply ticking time bombs... 🐇Alice in wonderland and through the holistic looking glass: (One person’s brain waves can actually synchronize to another person’s heart) - When a tuning fork is struck, it will vibrate at a certain frequency and emit a certain sound. When a second tuning fork is held near the first, it will start to vibrate along with at the same frequency as well and emit the same sound. This a simple and observable demonstration of how energy and vibration influence the universe. Our emotions are energy and since different emotions are simply different vibrations of energy, emotions can entrain each other. That’s how our emotions influence each other, and how your feelings are changed from moment to moment by people or the environment. Did you know that the electromagnetic signal produced by your heart is registered in the brain waves of people around you?... Whether you prepare yourself for light-body activation with insights from verified rainbow-body reports by David Wilcock's Ascension Mystery School or Goddess Vortex with Cobra, you need to understand, we're all connected and so is the stars. By entering in the new documentary “Above Majestic.”: The story goes that the Atom bomb in 1945 got the attention of aliens through the telephone wires of the cosmic web. That energy blast was so powerful, it affected the other planets and stars in the universe, by representing it as brainwaves, buzzing sounds from electric signals, would be the living cosmos... Anyway, you need to understand it, by watching the movie... 📯PS: Now that NASA have admitted to spraying lethal chemtrails into our atmosphere - saying that lithium being sprayed into the Earths ionosphere helps to treat people with manic depression or bi-polar disorder. Perhaps NOW, you understand the military might and their cousins, the medical-industrial complex, to keeps us dumb down and depressed and sick on a level, never seen before in the repeating history of 3D Matrix of illusion... |


RDR™ - Therapeutic Sounds 
Treating PTSD with Mindfulness-based Trauma Therapy
Military stress
One person’s brain waves can actually synchronize to another person’s heart

FEBRUARY 02, 2018

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is typically treated with medication or psychotherapy. However, conventional methods do not always work for all veterans, which is why researchers are constantly trying to develop novel forms of treatment. A study at the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina found that allowing PTSD patients to listen to their brain activity helped reduced symptoms like anxiety, insomnia and depressive mood.

Researchers used a noninvasive technology known as high-resolution, relational, resonance-based, electroencephalic mirroring (HIRREM). It consists of a system that uses scalp sensors to read the electrical signals in a patient’s brain. Computer software algorithms then turn the readings into audio frequencies that are played back in almost real time.

The process allows patients to hear their own brainwaves. The brain essentially makes an immediate connection between its own patterns and the sound. Upon detecting any irregularities, it adjusts into a quiet, balanced pattern, thereby helping to reduce PTSD symptoms.

Lead study author Charles H. Tegeler, a neurology professor at the Wake Forest School of Medicine, said the findings were promising. However, more research was needed as the study used a small sample size of 18 people that included veterans and current service members with PTSD. In addition, the placebo effect might have influenced the outcome as subjects were told about the process beforehand. In the future, the researchers hope to seek the Food and Drug Administration’s approval to use the brainwave technology to treat PTSD.

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