The Therapy Manifesto:
95 Thesis of Holodynamic Therapy
By Victor Vernon Woolf, Ph.D.
New information from various fields of science has changed our thinking
about the nature of the universe and unveiled new discoveries about
consciousness that challenge traditional views of psychology. Quantum
physics is one of the primary contributors to this new information,
along with the science of consciousness, holographics, information
theory, bio-physics, and developmental psychology, to mention a
few. Each has contributed to major shifts in our view of reality
and unveiled that fact that the universe is conscious, part of one,
whole dynamic information system, or “holodynamic”.
These new sciences demonstrate that everything is made of holographic
information “spinners” that are multi-dimensional and hyperspacial.
Everything physical has a “counterpart” in hyperspace. From this
perspective, “mind” is not confined to the human brain or neural
system but manifests throughout the body and is shared with the
universe. Everything and everyone is quantum in nature, driven by
potential and in some context, interconnected. This new view of
reality has profound implications for psychology. As therapists
attempt to come to grips with the new information, we must address
the impact the new discoveries have on our understanding of human
nature and the practical applications the information has in the
practice of therapy.
At the touch of their
fingertips people can access this current information about consciousness
and even find its possible applications to therapy. Therapists are
often hard pressed to keep up to an informed public. This treatise
applies the latest scientific findings to the field of psychotherapy.
For example, therapists can find the latest information on:
- quantum potential fields within our microtubules and their hyperspacial connection
- our hyperspacial “counterpart”- our Full Potential Self
- the holographic nature of consciousness and its applications
to therapy
- microtubules and the central role they play in consciousness
and in therapy
- multi-dimensional holographic memory storage units - “holodynes”
and how they function to control both body and behavior
- how holodynes are inherited, modeled by family and culture,
come from parallel dimensions or form as part of the creative
nature of consciousness
- collective consciousness or “swarm intelligence” and how
this quantum dynamic effects and often controls our psychological
well being
- the fine-grained and gross-grained screens that cover the senses of the human
body and create the holographic matrix controlling perception
and information processing
- frequencies used by holodynes to both send and receive information
thus creating quantum coherence in the body and effecting
multiple dimensions of consciousness
- how to balance and unfold potential as holodynamic beings in
a conscious universe
To date there are at least twenty natural
mechanisms of consciousness that directly relate to therapy. Most
therapy approaches, both in theory and in practice, fall far short
of including all of these aspects of consciousness to therapy.
Therapy provides the opportunity for
people to access their hyperspacial counterpart, their Full Potential
Self. Both in theory and practice it makes good therapeutic sense
to align with one’s hyperspacial counterpart and unfold the fullest
individual potential possible. Therapy is also an opportunity to
transform holodynes and improve the quality of life based upon the
best information available. Science has helped people understand
how holodynes control their screens that control their perception
of reality. By changing the holodynes they can change their experience
of reality. It is possible to transform consciousness both internally
and collectively. Furthermore, it is possible to shift the field
of consciousness hyperspacially and integrate the parallel worlds
of the past and future with the present. Therapists are entrusted
to close the time lapse between these recent discoveries of science
and their applications in the practice of therapy.
I became aware of these implications over 30 years ago and began to
research how these new principles of science could apply to the
theory and practice of therapy. The applications of a holodynamic
view resulted in extra-ordinary therapeutic movement for my clients.
My private therapy sessions generated remarkable life changes and
my therapy processes quickly evolved into short-term, self-directed
procedures.
Applying these principles within the drug abuse population in six cities
resulted in a society that was essentially drug free. When applied
to families of patients in the Utah State Mental Hospital, these
efforts resulted in over 80% drop in the patient load. Similar results
have been achieved with prison populations, among juvenile offenders
and street gangs in Los Angeles. These principles were also applied
in business, churches, and perhaps the most dynamic applications
to date have come from the political arena, working to bring an
end to the cold war and in efforts to transform terrorism in the
Middle East.
Understanding the holodynamic nature of our conscious universe gives people a
view far beyond the linear, diagnostic or mechanistic models of
most past therapies. In order for modern therapy to reach its fullest
potential and meet the demands of an informed public, therapists
must get out of the office and into the streets where people live.
Therapy is needed in the home, the work place and the political
arena. Therapists must become more holodynamic because neither the
individual nor therapy can be isolated from the whole dynamic. The
current “war against terror” is one example where therapeutic input
could potentially influence public response toward transformation
of “cause” rather than striking out against apparent “symptoms”.
“Cause” includes the holodynamics of hyperspacial information fields of
parallel worlds, including the person’s counterpart or Full Potential
Self, along with information from the past and future. In this sense,
holodynamic therapy has a vital role to play in dealing with personal,
family and cultural beliefs. In a world that uses religion as a
part of terrorism and war, our collective beliefs require a therapeutic
touch that reaches beyond the individual, into the field of our
collective consciousness, including business, culture, religion
and government. Therapy has a professional, moral and ethical responsibility
to deal with the whole dynamic of consciousness.
As therapists we are challenged to understand the multiple dimensions
of consciousness including the physics and biology of consciousness,
the impact of our inner body life forms, genetic inheritance of
information and the quantum dynamics of consciousness. Such factors
have direct impact upon consciousness. If therapist expect to function
in any sense as stewards of healthy consciousness for society, we
must be aware of the whole dynamic of consciousness and able to
be consciously “therapeutic” to its benefit.
In this “age of information,” therapists are also faced with the combined
revolutionary changes in telecommunications such as those provided
by the Internet. Availability of information has allowed the public
to throw off the blanket of secrecy that previously covered therapy
practices. Therapy is rapidly loosing its “mystery” and people are
able to glean immense amounts of information from the touch of a
keyboard. New information leads to new expectations, new awareness
and the ability to evaluate the therapist prior to, or during therapy.
Participants are demanding new approaches to therapy as former “patients”
are now becoming “co-participants”, better educated, and more personally
responsible for all aspects of their own mental health.
The result of this exponential flood of new information is creating
a new public consciousness about mental health. It is estimated
that one in five people in America have a “diagnosable” condition
that would benefit from therapy. Yet less than 20% of even this
group ever make contact with a therapist. Add to that, a mobile
world, where people are traveling much of the time and cannot afford
the past “luxury” of an office visit. They want and often demand
immediate, long-distance therapeutic assistance.
In a society where change is the norm, therapy is needed as never before
in history. Therapists are facing a new set of circumstances.
There are new rules. Therapists must adapt so their service can
survive and thrive. The 95 Treatise of Holodynamic Therapy outlines
some of the new sciences, developments and the opportunities they
provide for the practice of more effective therapy. I have included
footnotes and references for further study.
The Therapy Manifesto:
95 Thesis of Holodynamic Therapy
THERAPY HAS A SCIENTIFIC BASIS
1. Therapy is Holodynamic.
In physics there is a web of relationships, called dualities, that indicate everything
is made of dynamic information fields that are all connected to
one another. The world is whole dynamic or holodynamic. Therapy
is concerned with any significant therapeutic information within
the whole dynamic. Therapy is holodynamic.
2. Therapy is Multi-dimensional.
On the outer fringes of research about bigness and smallness, scientists have discovered at least ten dimensions enfolded into physical reality. Until the
last few decades, science and therapy have been based upon a four-dimensional
model of reality wherein we experience depth, width, height and
the passage of time. With the new discoveries comes new understanding
of the multi-dimensional world in which we live. It is a world made
up of hyperspacial counterparts, information spinners, quantum frequencies
and holographic projection from other dimensions. Reality contains
multiple enfolded dimensions of consciousness and therapists
seek to understand how they influence our reality and how they apply
to therapy.
3. The Universe is Conscious.
Consciousness
is one of the enfolded dimensions of reality. Everything
is made of information networks. Consciousness is intimately interwoven
into the fabric of space and time. This means consciousness is also
multi-dimensional. Being a therapist requires that we understand
both the dynamic and universal nature of consciousness and apply
this, as best we can, to the therapy experience. Any aspect of consciousness
could potentially be involved in the circumstances that can benefit
from therapy.
4. Consciousness is Hyperspacial.
Another enfolded dimension of reality is its hyperspacial (faster than the
speed of light) connection. All matter, every subatomic particle,
and every living system, has a hyperspacial “counterpart” that gives form to our physical world. The connection between hyperspace
and the physical world is a scientific fact. They inseparable. Information
flows from hyperspace and it comes in multiple dimensions, multiple
histories, from the past and future. Any dimension can cause disruptions
in the psychological well being of people’s daily lives. Before
we think a thought, our “counter-part” in some hyperspacial, parallel
dimension, has already “pre-computed” our menu of choices. These
hyperspacial dimensions bring into the therapy experience the possibility
of powerful influences from hyperspacial parallel dimensions. It
raises the question as to whether the therapist can help access
these pre-computing information systems, and utilize the information
in the therapy process.
5. Reality is Holographic.
A hologram is a three dimensional image imprinted upon a two dimensional
page. The holographic principle demonstrates that a complex information
system, with a p-brane with more dimensions than another, can project
itself upon a less complex, lower p-brane reality. When scientists
apply this holographic principle to black holes, two more dimensions
or reality become evident making it possible to understand the flow
of information into and out of black holes. Without this holographic
understanding we would not be able to explain things like black
holes. Likewise, many aspects of the complex nature of human consciousness
can be explained more clearly when the holographic principle is
applied to consciousness. Understanding the holographic nature of
consciousness is essential in the therapy process.
6. Holodynes and the Power to Cause.
The application of the holographic principle to the dimensions of consciousness
reveals the enfolded dimension of holodynes. Holodynes are
holographic images stored within the water media of our microtubules.
These multi-dimensional information systems turn out to be self-organizing,
self-perpetuating and have developed the power to cause. Holodynes
are, in fact, responsible for most human behavior. They can experience
growth, have stages of development, can communicate, and can be
transformed. They are also quantum in nature. Dealing with the dimension
of holodynes is central to the therapy process.
7. Consciousness is Quantum.
Another enfolded dimension of consciousness is its quantum nature. Quantum
physics is recognized as the most accurate and comprehensive science
ever devised. It is responsible for over 40% of all new inventions,
got us to the moon and made possible the harnessing of atomic power.
One of the discoveries of quantum physicists is that consciousness
is quantum in nature and this fact has profound implications for
therapy. From a quantum view, life emerges from a quantum potential
field and influences various holodynes via quantum frequencies.
Life, for example, is about unfolding potential. Since therapy is
about life, therapy is about unfolding potential and therapy deals
with quantum dynamics.
The Multiple Dimentions Of Therapy
8. The Full Potential Self - our Counterpart in Hyperspace.
Every particle, like a photon, has a “counterpart” in hyperspace. Likewise people have
a counterpart in hyperspace. In the quantum dimension, this “potential
self” and each person on earth are inseparably connected. The physical
person is a holographic projection of its fullest potential self
(called “The Full Potential Self”) and referred to as “pre-computing
spinner networks of information systems in hyperspace”. From this
view of reality, each person and each situation in which we find
ourselves, is “driven by potential”. All personal choice is pre-computed
in hyperspace so accessing the Full Potential Self is not only helpful
but is vital to the therapy process.
9. Therapy embraces multi-dimensional definitions of “self”
or holodynes.
The
holodynamic definition of “Self” includes not only that Self that
exists in spacetime but also the hyperspacial counterpart or the
Full Potential Self. It also includes those definitions of self
that come from various other information systems. These information
systems organize into “holodynes” that have the power to cause things
to happen. Addressing any thing less than the entire system diminishes
the individual and thus diminishes the effectiveness of therapy.
People can sense when they are experienced “as they are” and they
trust the therapist to be responsive to that reality. In therapy
the introduction of the Full Potential Self can produce extra-ordinary
therapeutic movement. Holodynes that attempt to impose their own
self-definitions can be transformed. Since all information systems
are created equal, all definitions of self contain potential that
seeks manifestation. Therapy is the process of transforming and
integrating the various definitions of self from holodynes so their
potential can be aligned with that of the Full Potential Self.
10. The “primary reference” for individual therapy is personal
potential.
The Full Potential Self is the
primary reference for individual therapy. The full Potential Self
is “pre-computing in hyperspace” each set of circumstances for the
individual. This includes those holodynes that are causing behavioral
problems in a person’s life. Holodynes causing problems are immature.
They want to grow up, to reach their potential. The challenge of
therapy is for the individual to tap into the menu of options from
the Full Potential Self and chose to unfold the potential of their
holodynes. This process, of potentializing holodynes, permits the
field of information within the dimension of personal well-being,
to be transformed and aligned with the Full Potential Self. The
primary reference for personal therapy is the identification of
personal potential. Once identified, this potential can be unfolded
and this is therapy.
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Manifesto: 95 Treatise of Holodynamic Therapy is
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