You may have heard that you remember absolutely everything that ever happened to you, whether or not you are conscious of this. Actually your everyday working memory is but a fraction of all the memory of your whole existence. How can that be you might ask?
Very simply the full memory of all that has ever happened to you is held by your subconscious mind and by your physical body. Any given physical disease represents the containment of a select band of memory - past hurts, experiences, associated beliefs and feelings on a specific life theme.
Here are two real life examples of this.
1) ‘Agnes’ – a woman in her 60s with very painful, deformed arthritic hands - She despaired of being able to play the piano or paint in her retirement. She was even unable to hold her husband’s hand when they walked together.
When guided into her emotional story, she reviewed a very stressful time in her life when she had to move her parents out of the home they loved into a care facility. Agnes felt so sad for her parents for she knew how much it distressed them to leave their home. She uncovered a visual memory of sweeping the driveway of leaves in preparation for the sale of her parents’ home and feeling sad and guilty for her part in moving her parents.
At the same time she became aware of thinking how much her father would have loved to be doing the raking and taking care of the garden. All the stress of this period – the sadness and guilt she felt – became focused on the work she was doing with her hands.
With accessing this memory, expressing and releasing the associated buried thoughts and feelings, Agnes went on to heal the arthritis in her hands.
2) ‘Mary’ - a woman in her 50s who was suffering more than 10 years of pain, poor sleep, lack of energy and low mood of fibromyalgia. She struggled to run a home-based business, keep house, and look after her family.
The fibromyalgia began following a shocking revelation in her family and a period of stress and discord. As one of the eldest, she suddenly found herself no longer held in high regard by her other siblings for the position she took in the matter. She felt ostracized, very hurt and powerless.
However, the really deep pain of her ‘fall from grace’ was being held in her subconscious as a memory too painful to experience consciously. Until she explored and got the impact of this ‘fall from grace’, she was not able to regain her health. Bringing awareness to this memory and a related pattern that she had not resolved from childhood, in just a few months she made a full recovery from years of misery.
In the above examples each woman experienced a surge of peak stress in her life. As in these two examples, in every case of disease the brain responds instantaneously in the following ways:
i) absorbs the intense shock of the experience into the subconscious and stores the memory there out of the person’s full awareness. Thus the person is protected from taking on the full impact of the trauma.
Should one live the full impact consciously, one is at risk of being overwhelmed and unable to eat, sleep and pay attention to his/her surroundings. In that state the individual would not survive beyond 3 or 4 weeks. His or her life is threatened. The primary function of the brain is to ensure survival so some action must be taken.
ii) manages the intense level of stress by altering the operation of a small area or focus of brain cells to run a disease or illness pattern in the body– such as migraine, fibromyalgia, MS, diabetes, cancer, infections. The severity of the disease is proportional to the degree of intensity of the stress energy.

As a result of the above actions of the brain, only a very small fraction of the brain and body are concerned with containing the stress energy. The rest of the brain and body is free to function normally to ensure the survival of the individual for as long as possible and to give time for alternative solutions to clear the stress energy to be found.
Disease is the ultimate survival strategy of the brain. It alerts the person that some aspect of his/her life, that is not part of their conscious memory, needs attention. Until the person is able to resolve the stress or conflict involved, disease contains the stress energy and supports survival.
Disease represents a band of memory for which the individual is blank – has no conscious awareness. Just as there are dark bands in the picture above, there are bands of unconsciousness in a person’s psyche.
Whenever you have a disease, illness, or an upset, begin to be curious about what was going on in your life before. What were you most distressed about? What were your thoughts and feelings? What were you believing? This process of mind-body awareness can lead to release of the original stress and healing.
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Important – Although I am a physician, the views expressed in this article are not representative of mainstream Western Medicine. If you have diagnosis of disease, be sure to also seek medical advice and care.
Want to use this article in your ezine or website? You can, as long as you include this complete acknowledgment with it- Dr. Nelie Johnson is a family physician and facilitator for healing – inspiring and guiding people to tap into their own healing potential. She is a contributing author to a bestselling book and provides seminars, workshops, and private consultations.
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