Realize the Self
1. Trauma and Early Programming From a psychological perspective, we are not born “traumatized,” but we are born highly programmable. A newborn nervous system is: * Extremely sensitive * Dependent on caregivers for regulation * Shaping itself through experience If early needs (safety, attunement, touch, emotional mirroring) are inconsistently met, the nervous system adapts for survival. This adaptation can become trauma. Trauma isn’t just catastrophic events. It’s: * Chronic misattunement * Emotional neglect * Feeling unseen or unsafe * Sudden shock without support The infant brain wires itself around survival patterns: * Hypervigilance * People-pleasing * Dissociation * Emotional suppression These patterns become our subconscious programming. Biologically, we’re wired for attachment and belonging. That makes us programmable through: * Family dynamics * Cultural narratives * Authority structures * Reward/punishment systems Because survival equals connection, we internalize whatever ensures attachment — even if it costs authenticity. So trauma is often not just an event, but a conditioning loop: “If I act this way, I stay safe.” Over time, that loop becomes identity. In many traditions, especially within Hindu and Buddhist philosophy, karma refers to action and consequence — not punishment. Karma can be understood psychologically as: * Repeated unconscious patterns * Emotional reactions on autopilot * Habitual relational dynamics From this perspective: * Trauma creates reactive behavior. * Reactive behavior creates consequences. * Consequences reinforce the original wound. That cycle is karma in motion. You’re not being cosmically punished. You’re running unprocessed emotional imprints. Healing trauma interrupts karma because awareness stops unconscious repetition. The concept of loosh originates from the writings of Robert Monroe. He described it as emotional energy harvested by non-physical beings. In esoteric circles, loosh is often interpreted as: * Emotional intensity * Especially fear, pain, suffering Psychologically (without taking the literal harvesting idea), trauma does generate: * High emotional charge * Reactive energy * Survival stress hormones Unresolved trauma keeps people in: * Fear * Conflict * Scarcity * Drama cycles Whether metaphysical or symbolic, trauma produces energy that keeps systems running — personal and societal systems. The idea of “pendulums” comes from Vadim Zeland and his book series Reality Transurfing. Pendulums are: * Collective thought structures * Emotional fields fed by attention * Social, political, religious, ideological systems They gain strength from: * Emotional charge * Conflict * Polarization Trauma makes people easier to hook into pendulums because: * Dysregulated nervous systems seek certainty * Wounded identities seek belonging * Fear seeks authority Unhealed trauma fuels emotional reactivity. Emotional reactivity feeds pendulums. Here’s the synthesis: 1. Early life → nervous system adapts for survival. 2. Adaptation becomes trauma imprint. 3. Trauma creates unconscious reactive patterns. 4. Reactive patterns generate karmic cycles. 5. Emotional charge feeds collective systems (pendulums). 6. Those systems reinforce trauma narratives. It’s a feedback loop between: * Individual nervous system * Collective structures * Emotional energy Not exactly. We are: * Born vulnerable. * Born dependent. * Born neurologically unfinished. In imperfect systems (which all human systems are), trauma is almost inevitable to some degree. But here’s the key: The same neuroplasticity that allowed trauma programming allows rewiring. Awareness disrupts: * Karma (pattern loops) * Loosh generation (emotional charge) * Pendulum attachment (collective feeding) From both psychology and spirituality, the “way out” looks similar: * Nervous system regulation * Shadow integration * Emotional processing * Conscious response instead of reaction * Reducing emotional excess (less polarity, less drama) When trauma is metabolized: * Karma softens. * Pendulums lose grip. * Emotional energy stabilizes. * Identity becomes less reactive.
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