Lee Bracker | Completing the injury experience to remove pain trauma memory @leebracker4562 | Uploaded August 2016 | Updated October 2024, 20 minutes ago.
Unless the pain or injury event is complete, a person may never fully heal at the injury site. Typically when this condition exists, the injury occurred where the victim was knocked unconscious, under anesthetic or completely put under for surgery, and the holding onto the ouch with the head moving up and down not performed. Whether it be a month or 7 decades, when performed, the pain trauma memory that resides at the injury location on the body is removed and the brain connects for an exchange of injury information that leads toward a more full healing. The brain does not remember the event, but the body does even when unconscious.
Unless the pain or injury event is complete, a person may never fully heal at the injury site. Typically when this condition exists, the injury occurred where the victim was knocked unconscious, under anesthetic or completely put under for surgery, and the holding onto the ouch with the head moving up and down not performed. Whether it be a month or 7 decades, when performed, the pain trauma memory that resides at the injury location on the body is removed and the brain connects for an exchange of injury information that leads toward a more full healing. The brain does not remember the event, but the body does even when unconscious.