Biological Conflict

Short Definition:

A biological conflict is a conflict, within the psyche, between a state one desires to experience and a state one desires not to experience.

Explanation:

The biological conflict forms instantly at the moment of the Dirk Hamer Syndrome (DHS).

A biological conflict is a result of the psyche’s in-the-moment decision that a desired state of survival is in conflict with a desire to avoid an existential threat. This creates a split intention resulting in a fixed or stuck state or identity.

This biological conflict is a conflict between two identities or states within the psyche: the identity or state of the desired experience (technically, the ideal future self), and the identity or state of not experiencing the negative experience (the DHS) again.

At the moment of a biological conflict in the psyche, the brain initiates a meaningful special biological program of nature in the body. This is because the psyche, brain, and body tissues and functions are all a single system.

A biological conflict is not an external event or circumstance. It is the psyche’s interpretation of meaning.

Once formed (at the DHS), the biological conflict activates a precise adaptive pattern involving psyche, brain, and relevant body tissues. This adaptive pattern is the active phase of the special biological program and will continue until the biological conflict is resolved (usually by reconciling the two conflicting states by bringing one or both to consciousness).

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