Brain (Brain Relay, Nervous System)

Short Definition:

A brain relay is the specific part of the brain that mediates between a particular biological conflict and its corresponding organ/tissue during the course of a special biological program.

Explanation:

Every organ and tissue in the body corresponds to a precise relay in the brainstem, cerebellum, cerebral medulla, or cerebral cortex.

The brain, psyche, and organs/tissues are really a single information processing system. In an analogy to a computer system, the psyche is the software and operating system, the organs/tissues are the hardware, and the brain and nervous system are the motherboard and circuitry.

When the psyche forms a biological conflict, the relevant brain relay becomes active, which produces the Hamer Focus visible on a brain CT scan. CT scans of the brain are extremely helpful in understanding which special biological programs are producing an individual’s symptoms.

During the conflict-active phase, the sphere of heightened electrochemical activity (the Hamer Focus) within the relevant brain relay will display cell loss until the biological conflict is resolved in the psyche.

During healing, the same brain relay will undergo swelling and “repair” (replenishment with glia cells). This swelling, and, if there are many conflict relapses, the extensive glial cells, are what conventional medicine would diagnose as a “brain tumour.”

Related Terms: