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- W346474579 abstract "ABSTRACT: This qualitative study focuses on the experience of healing through prenatal and perinatal recall. Interviews were conducted with seven adults who variously attested to having healed conditions of: syncope, phobias, arthritis, asthma, migraines, depression, suicidality, obsessive-compulsion, side pain, and dysfunctional interpersonal patterns. Intentions were to: (a) illuminate the experience, (b) examine the benefits and drawbacks, and (c) underscore the impact of obstetric intervention. Literature Review: Reviewed literature includes research on transcendent, fetal, cellular, and somatic memory/consciousness (within a holonomic paradigm), current repression and false memory debates, hypnosis, breathwork, psychedelic, and primal psychotherapies, somatotropic therapy with infants and children, and obstetric intervention. Method: Existential-phenomenological research methods were used with Hycner's (1982) 15-step analysis for interview data. Two in-depth interviews, a demographics form, and a follow-up question were the instruments used to access data. Results: Data analysis revealed seven individual, two unique, and two general themes. The general themes included: A Range of Intensely Felt, Mostly Negative, Emotional, Physical, or Feeling States, and Transpersonal Experiences, which captured the structural underpinnings of the phenomenon, and were expressed by all seven participants. All seven remembered pre- or perinatal trauma, and subsequent child abuse. Three remembered deleterious effects from obstetric intervention including long-term depression, slowed labor from anesthesia, pain from forceps, and vertigo from inversion at birth. After treatment all co-researchers felt the mitigation of psychological and/or physical conditions they had suffered. Conclusions: Results imply fetal/neonatal memory/consciousness and the need for research into the long and short term effects of obstetric procedures. Trauma occurring during and before parturition may cause life-long physical and/or psychological illness. The resolution of such illness may necessitate intervention at pre- or perinatal levels of memory/consciousness and that the parental relationship and maternal readiness for labor and delivery may be indicators of subsequent traumatic labor and delivery, and/ or child abuse. INTRODUCTION AND SIGNIFICANCE This article examines the birth, gestation, and conception memories of seven adults (participants) who, by virtue of those memory experiences, claimed to have alleviated or cured conditions of: syncope, phobias, arthritis, asthma, migraines, depression, suicidality, obsessivecompulsion, side pain, and dysfunctional interpersonal patterns. The entire study consists of five chapters: 1) Introduction and Significance; 2) Literature Review; 3) Methodology; 4) Results and Discussion; and 5) the Appendix. Since space does not permit me to include the entire work, the following is intended as a synopsis with examples of its salient contents. One of my underlying motivations for conducting a study focused on prenatal and perinatal recall was more than merely suggesting that remembering birth and before is a possibility. After all, thousands have remembered being born. I wanted, rather, to go a step farther, to show that very practical reasons exist for pursuing those memories. secondarily, the study was designed to demonstrate possible long and short term effects of common obstetric intervention. By gathering a group of seven people who claimed to have mitigated serious physical and psychological conditions through prenatal and perinatal recall, and by examining and reporting their experience I believe I have accomplished my goal. LITERATURE REVIEW This review is a survey of the prenatal and perinatal psychological literature, supporting studies, and studies and opinion in contrast. Unfortunately, mainstream psychology sources are virtually devoid of material on this subject. …" @default.
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- W346474579 date "2000-12-01" @default.
- W346474579 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W346474579 title "Healing through Prenatal and Perinatal Memory Recall: A Phenomenological Investigation" @default.
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