SEX ADDICTION TREATMENT & EPIGENETIC INHERITANCE
New scientific research exposes a potential way to explain how our parents/grandparents past experiences can be passed to us in positive and negative ways. This research also incorporates inheriting our ancestor’s core trauma wounds.
Basically epigenetics describes a procedure that turns our genes on and off. These changes in the expression of genes are caused by certain base pairs in DNA, (or RNA), being "turned off" or "turned on" again, through chemical reactions. The process works by chemical tags, known as epigenetic marks, attaching to DNA and telling a cell to either use or ignore a particular gene. Some epigenetic tags remain in place as genetic information passes from generation to generation, a process called “epigenetic inheritance”.
Recently experts have witnessed evidence of psychological epigenetics in our heritance; through this new viewpoint offspring may inherit altered psychological traits due to their parents past life experiences (and core trauma wounds).
Epigenetics In Developmental Psychology
Now there is more evidence that epigenetics has an influence on our psyche and in our emotional development. The term "epigenetics" has been used in developmental psychology to describe psychological development as the result of an ongoing, bi-directional interchange between human heredity and our environment.
Erik Erikson’s Work
In the 1960’s psychologist Erik Erikson used the term “epigenetic principle” to incorporate the concept that we develop through an unfolding of our personality in programmed stages, and that our environment and surrounding culture influence how we advancement through these stages. (This now includes our parent’s experiences as well).
According to Erikson, this organic unfolding in relation to our socio-cultural settings is done in 8 stages of psychosocial development, where "progress through each stage is in part determined by our achievement, or lack of achievement, in all the previous stages.
A Deeper Look At Epigenetic Inheritance (EI)
Epigenetic inheritance goes against the idea that inheritance happens only through the DNA code that passes from parent to offspring. It means that our parent's experiences, in the structure of epigenetic tags, can be passed down to future generations.
As eccentric as this may sound, there is little question that epigenetic inheritance is a very real phenomenon. In fact, it explains some strange patterns of inheritance experts have been perplexing over for decades.
How Does Epigenetic Inheritance Negatively Play Out?
Addictions, greed, immaturity, fear, blame, shame, resentments, anger, confusion relationship issues and even suffering can all be negative aspects of our epigenetic Inheritance past down from our parents. One problem with our epigenetic inheritance is this; when we get ‘stuck’ in the negative aspects of our epigenetic inheritance we cease to evolve and to take responsibility for our own actions and our lives. This getting stuck can be explained in Pavlov’s law.
Pavlov’s Law and Epigenetic Inheritance
Pavlov was a scientist in the 1800’s who discovered that behaviors could be triggered by signals. Pavlov tested ringing a bell while simultaneously presenting dogs with food. Before long, the dogs ‘learned’ to salivate to the sound of the bell, without the food. The bell became a ‘trigger’ for the response of salivation. When we get stuck or stop growing/evolving emotionally in a development stage, life can become a serious of emotional reactions to outside stimuli. With this overwhelming triggering our epigenetic inheritance comes out and hold us in a state of unconsciousness (our epigenetic inheritance).
You’ve probably heard the analogy that the mind is like an iceberg. Only about 10% of the total iceberg can be seen above the water. 90% is below and invisible.
The unconscious dimension of the mind is like that 90%, it’s not visible and it never sleeps.
Psychologist Erik Erikson and the 8 Stages of Development
Psychologist Erik Erikson pointed out that we all go through stages of development in our physical (and psychological) life. These stages are generally infant, child, youth, adolescence, teen, young adults, adults, and elders. You will notice that even though there are ages assigned to these stages, everyone is different and some people can appear to stay younger longer (or visa-versa) than others. However, we all go through these stages eventually or die trying…. In physical development we take on the positive and negative genetics of our parents.
Our emotional/psychological development also goes through stages of development, and if we are healthy our emotional development matches our physical development.
Erikson believes that we go through the emotional stages of helplessness and need, formation of personality, fear and suffering, responsibility and acceptance, and finally, peace.
It now appears that because of our epigenetic inheritance our parents/grandparents past experiences can be passed to us in positive and negative ways (and include their past core trauma wounds) this inheritance can end up influencing our emotional development.
Is there a way to transform beyond our negative epigenetic inheritance (and be better than our parents)? Adult emotional development can be accomplished even with the negative aspects of our epigenetic inheritance. In some cases it may take time and psychological treatment to mend the core trauma wounds that are inherently at the root of this dysfunction of emotional development.
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR sex or Love Addiction TREATMENT COUNSELING OR THERAPY anywhere in the world...KEEP READING!
Of course you know the treatment method I recommend click here!
http://theliberatormethod.com/Welcome.html
New scientific research exposes a potential way to explain how our parents/grandparents past experiences can be passed to us in positive and negative ways. This research also incorporates inheriting our ancestor’s core trauma wounds.
Basically epigenetics describes a procedure that turns our genes on and off. These changes in the expression of genes are caused by certain base pairs in DNA, (or RNA), being "turned off" or "turned on" again, through chemical reactions. The process works by chemical tags, known as epigenetic marks, attaching to DNA and telling a cell to either use or ignore a particular gene. Some epigenetic tags remain in place as genetic information passes from generation to generation, a process called “epigenetic inheritance”.
Recently experts have witnessed evidence of psychological epigenetics in our heritance; through this new viewpoint offspring may inherit altered psychological traits due to their parents past life experiences (and core trauma wounds).
Epigenetics In Developmental Psychology
Now there is more evidence that epigenetics has an influence on our psyche and in our emotional development. The term "epigenetics" has been used in developmental psychology to describe psychological development as the result of an ongoing, bi-directional interchange between human heredity and our environment.
Erik Erikson’s Work
In the 1960’s psychologist Erik Erikson used the term “epigenetic principle” to incorporate the concept that we develop through an unfolding of our personality in programmed stages, and that our environment and surrounding culture influence how we advancement through these stages. (This now includes our parent’s experiences as well).
According to Erikson, this organic unfolding in relation to our socio-cultural settings is done in 8 stages of psychosocial development, where "progress through each stage is in part determined by our achievement, or lack of achievement, in all the previous stages.
A Deeper Look At Epigenetic Inheritance (EI)
Epigenetic inheritance goes against the idea that inheritance happens only through the DNA code that passes from parent to offspring. It means that our parent's experiences, in the structure of epigenetic tags, can be passed down to future generations.
As eccentric as this may sound, there is little question that epigenetic inheritance is a very real phenomenon. In fact, it explains some strange patterns of inheritance experts have been perplexing over for decades.
How Does Epigenetic Inheritance Negatively Play Out?
Addictions, greed, immaturity, fear, blame, shame, resentments, anger, confusion relationship issues and even suffering can all be negative aspects of our epigenetic Inheritance past down from our parents. One problem with our epigenetic inheritance is this; when we get ‘stuck’ in the negative aspects of our epigenetic inheritance we cease to evolve and to take responsibility for our own actions and our lives. This getting stuck can be explained in Pavlov’s law.
Pavlov’s Law and Epigenetic Inheritance
Pavlov was a scientist in the 1800’s who discovered that behaviors could be triggered by signals. Pavlov tested ringing a bell while simultaneously presenting dogs with food. Before long, the dogs ‘learned’ to salivate to the sound of the bell, without the food. The bell became a ‘trigger’ for the response of salivation. When we get stuck or stop growing/evolving emotionally in a development stage, life can become a serious of emotional reactions to outside stimuli. With this overwhelming triggering our epigenetic inheritance comes out and hold us in a state of unconsciousness (our epigenetic inheritance).
You’ve probably heard the analogy that the mind is like an iceberg. Only about 10% of the total iceberg can be seen above the water. 90% is below and invisible.
The unconscious dimension of the mind is like that 90%, it’s not visible and it never sleeps.
Psychologist Erik Erikson and the 8 Stages of Development
Psychologist Erik Erikson pointed out that we all go through stages of development in our physical (and psychological) life. These stages are generally infant, child, youth, adolescence, teen, young adults, adults, and elders. You will notice that even though there are ages assigned to these stages, everyone is different and some people can appear to stay younger longer (or visa-versa) than others. However, we all go through these stages eventually or die trying…. In physical development we take on the positive and negative genetics of our parents.
Our emotional/psychological development also goes through stages of development, and if we are healthy our emotional development matches our physical development.
Erikson believes that we go through the emotional stages of helplessness and need, formation of personality, fear and suffering, responsibility and acceptance, and finally, peace.
It now appears that because of our epigenetic inheritance our parents/grandparents past experiences can be passed to us in positive and negative ways (and include their past core trauma wounds) this inheritance can end up influencing our emotional development.
Is there a way to transform beyond our negative epigenetic inheritance (and be better than our parents)? Adult emotional development can be accomplished even with the negative aspects of our epigenetic inheritance. In some cases it may take time and psychological treatment to mend the core trauma wounds that are inherently at the root of this dysfunction of emotional development.
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR sex or Love Addiction TREATMENT COUNSELING OR THERAPY anywhere in the world...KEEP READING!
Of course you know the treatment method I recommend click here!
http://theliberatormethod.com/Welcome.html