Tag: images

  • Resolving Frozen Grief with Logosynthesis

    François, a big strong man, was still grieving for the loss of his sister, who had died in a traffic accident in France in 1979. For 34 years he had suffered in silence; now it seemed the right time to continue his life’s path. In tears, he told the story of a dramatic week, how a policeman showed up at this front door and delivered the news that would change his life. After the policeman left, François had been in a state of shock. Finally he had found the courage to inform his parents of the death of his sister, first his father, then his mother.

    In the days that followed, he went to France to see his sister’s body and to arrange her transport to his country. When he arrived at the hospital, a nurse advised him he’d better not look at his dead sister: she had been trapped in the car and her body was badly disfigured. He decided not to view the body.

    Here stalled François’s story. His voice had sounded as if the fatal accident had happened yesterday. His grief touched me deeply, and I took the time to let his story sink in. I had to do something, but what? There was so much material that I could begin with, I could help hm process each single event in that traumatic week, but that didn’t seem right. There had to be a single key intervention to end the grief process at once.

    When is the time for a final farewell? After people have seen the dead relative. François had not seen his sister after she passed and hadn’t had an opportunity to say goodbye. The nurse had blocked the grieving process, paradoxically caused by her wish to protect him against reality. Thus there was no picture of this reality: 34 years after her death François remembered his dearly loved sister as a cheerful 24-year-old, full of plans, full of life. On a subconscious level he had a repressed fantasy of what his sister must have looked like when she died in that car wreck that night.

    This was the key to the solution. I gave François the Logosynthesis phrases, which he repeated and gave the time to sink in:

    I retrieve all my energy, bound up in the image of my sister I’ve never seen, and take it back to the right place in my Self.

    I remove all non-me energy related to this image, from all of my cells, from all of my body and my personal space and send it to where it truly belongs.

    I retrieve all my energy, bound up in all my frozen reactions to the image of my sister I’ve never seen, and take it back to the right place in my Self.

    The effect of the sentences was dramatic. Initially he cried softly, tears running down his cheeks. Then he became silent. I asked François what had happened, and with a dull voice he said, “Now I can recognize that my sister is gone.” Now he knew their roads had parted on that day in 1979. He felt a great emptiness. Then he described a small picture of his sister, which he saw up high left in the room, and he pointed to the beams of the attic where we worked.

    Now I gave François the Logosynthesis sentences for this small image. After the second sentence, while the energy of his sister was leaving his personal space, he wept for minutes without holding back, which was heartbreaking. This was the real grief, saying goodbye to a life with his sister. After the third sentence François was quiet again, but this time the silence was different, there was a relief: The agony was over, everything had found a place after 34 years. Now I could talk to him about the fact that every person has their own way of life, that those roads meet, that we go together for a while and then split up. This interpretation seemed to help François to create an order in his experience, and we were able to close the session. In the last minute of the session I had tears in my eyes, too.

    Two days later, François’s wife Nadine told the group that in the morning after the session she had been awake early and had looked at her sleeping husband. In her words, François normally looks like “one of those dogs whose head only seems to consist of folds.” That morning all his wrinkles were gone. François said he had felt reborn.

  • Oliver’s Eyes – Logosynthesis with Metaphors

    Oliver is an older gentleman with extensive experience in Logosynthesis. For the last six months he has suffered from a blind spot in his right eye, in the centre of the retina, the fovea. The ophthalmologist has told him that he cannot see there because of a blood clot sitting behind the fovea. His peripheral view is o.k. The clot can easily be seen as a black spot of 2-3 cm on a large x-ray of the eye, and there is a 40% chance that his left eye could also be affected. Oliver was afraid, as you can imagine.

    I decided to introduce Oliver to the Logosynthesis Simonton protocol, and invited him to think of something this blood clot was like. He immediately associated it with a stain of tomato sauce on a clean white shirt. Since Oliver is always impeccably dressed, this stain generated a 7 on a SUD scale.

    I now gave him the Logosynthesis sentences for ‘this tomato stain on my shirt’. After processing the stain this way, it disappeared from his white shirt and the level of distress triggered by the metaphor went to zero.

    From here I addressed the x-ray photograph of the eye Oliver had seen in the ophthalmologist’s consulting room, which can also be considered a metaphor. I had him say the sentences for the black spot in the centre, and as a result the spot turned pink. After a second cycle this pink form became a thin line, just a contour of the original black spot. A third cycle of the sentences made the thin line disappear completely.

    When I asked him to explore the state of his right eye again, he told me that he could now see a more or less transparent contour of me, whereas before there had just been a black spot. I let him drink water and take a 30 min break in which he took a walk outside to let the process continue. After his return we explored his field of view again. Now it had widened from the left towards the centre. Before, Oliver could only see the book shelves in my consulting room, on the right in his peripheral vision, and he had not even been able to see the flipchart beside my chair. Now he was able to see it.

    Of course there are many details in this protocol that can only be taught in training, but this may give you an idea how to treat issues that may seem purely ‘physical’. It’s important to think in energy concepts from the beginning, and a blood clot is just one more manifestation of frozen energy.

  • I’m not Good Enough

    Brenda had been involved in a traffic accident a few years ago. She had driven through a yellow traffic light and woken up in the hospital. She had been wounded in the crash and since then suffered from whiplash. She had hit the rearview mirror with her head, suffered a wound to her left leg, and a separated shoulder. The dominant symptom was the pain in her neck, with a SUD level of 6, the scar in her leg hurt as well.

    She applied the Logosynthesis sentences on the memory of touching the rearview mirror and everything else that had touched her. The SUDs for the pain in her neck went from 6 to 3. At this moment a belief showed up: “It shouldn’t have happened.” I gave her the sentences for this belief, with the modified third phrase: “I retrieve all my energy bound up in all my reactions to the fact that it happened.” Brenda then said: “I’m here and it’s over.”

    Then other beliefs showed up: “I didn’t deserve it”, “Whiplash doesn’t go away” and then an older one: “Physically, I’ll always have pain.” The latter one was connected to memories of her father beating her and she said: “The pain always comes.” I gave her the sentences for this belief, and the SUDs went from 3 to 2. Brenda sat more straight now, and started to move her head and neck to free herself from the strain of all those years.  

    Then another belief showed up: “You need pain to be taken care of.” One more round of the Logosynthesis sentences, and the pain was gone: in her neck as well as in her leg. The phrase “Whiplash doesn’t go away” had lost all significance to her. 

  • Resolving Incompetence

    Maggie had a deep belief that she was incompetent. She had been offering counselling sessions for free, even as a child she had been painfully shy, and her mother called her ‘sickly sensitive.’ She hadn’t felt safe in her family growing up, was afraid of others, and felt like an outsider. Her birth had been an ‘accident’ as her parents hadn’t used contraceptives. She had been sexually abused by her father.

    I decided to explore the sexual abuse issue, because neutralising such events can free an enormous amount of life energy.

    Maggy had worked on the issue before, but it was still active. She had scraps of a scene in the bathroom with her father and also remembered that her father had held her head in the toilet bowl. I asked her what was the most disturbing aspect of the abuse. She couldn’t answer that question so I followed my intuition and decided to start with the bathroom scene.

    She reported that she wanted to hide. She felt ashamed and dirty remembering that scene. She saw herself from above, in the bathtub with her father near her. I gave her the first Logosynthesis sentence for the image of these two people, as I always do when a client has an image in which it seems they have left their body. Usually the client will access the experience from the perspective of being inside their body after that first sentence, but that can be very painful.

    This time after the first sentence Maggie had another image, still from outside of herself, of the little girl in the bathtub, but this time closer to her head, and she could see the bathtub as a whole. I gave her the first sentence again. After that she accessed her body experience of the event, and strong abdominal pains came up. She also saw the eyes of her father. I decided to not elicit further details and gave her the sentences for ‘the image of the eyes of my father and everything it represents’. She cried tears of relief. She felt more grounded and felt herself growing in the scene: She became the adult woman she is now, looking at the scene of the little girl and her father. I once again offered her the sentences for this image, and she told me that she felt less tension in her body. She said: “Life doesn’t have to be such an effort.”

    To complete the work, I addressed the second scene, in which her father had held her head in the toilet bowl. Maggie said: “If I think about it, I could kill him.” It was clear that her energy level had been raised by processing the first memory. I asked her if she could process this herself with the help of Logosynthesis, and she confirmed this. She looked great now, gleaming with self-confidence and ready to tackle life’s challenges. There remained not a trace of the timid woman at the beginning of the session.  

    We often see the same stages in the treatment of childhood sexual abuse with Logosynthesis: 

    1. From the interview scraps of an experience show up. This experience often contain images from a perspective in which the client has left their physical body. If the images are too confronting, the subconscious of the client can produce metaphors, like pigs, or rats crawling over or entering the body.

    2. The Logosynthesis sentence 1 for such an image causes the client to access the experience from inside the body, with direct input from their senses. In this case, the first sentence was used twice to get there. Entering the body is often associated with great physical pain, which is the reason why the client left their body in the first place.

    3. At this stage the environment is explored using the senses, and the memories of the sensory input are neutralised with the help of the Logosynthesis sentences. If there is a partial memory, the words ‘and everything this represents’ can be added to the description of the trigger in the sentences. 4. The result is deep relief and a reconnection to the awareness of the adult person in the present.  

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