Ambassador Terry Earthwind Nichols discusses cellular memory, repetitive behavior, and his approach to identifying hidden early memories connected to self-sabotaging patterns.
Overview
Ambassador Terry Earthwind Nichols recalls studying Dr. Sigmund Freud in a high school psychology class and later recognizing the importance of Freud's belief that adult suffering can stem from traumatic events in early childhood.
He explains that Freud struggled to find a consistent method for locating amnesic early childhood trauma through hypnosis. Nichols presents his own work as a method for exploring such memories without hypnosis, NLP, EMDR, EFT, drugs, or psychotropics.
Cellular Memory and Repetitive Behavior
- Why it is important to find the hidden driver beneath self-sabotaging behaviors and suicide ideation.
- What repetitive behavior means beyond a lack of variability in responding.
- A new way of looking at repetitive behaviors and how they can be neutralized.
Presentation Focus
The presentation develops an understanding of what drives self-sabotaging behaviors and why it can be important to find an amnesic memory from early childhood, especially during the pre-language stage.
Participants are introduced to a new definition of repetitive behaviors, including post-traumatic response, suicide ideation, and imposter syndrome.
The session also walks through Nichols' research on bypassing conscious and subconscious synchronization for memory recall.
Biography
In 2009, after standing on the edge of a building perfectly calm and ready to step off, Terry Earthwind Nichols heard a voice saying, "Turn around, I have work for you." When he turned around, no one was there.
A few months later, he created a unique profiling system intended to stop repetitive behaviors.
Ambassador Terry is the creator and Grand Master of Repetitive Behavior Cellular Regression. When he is not training Repetitive Behavior Cellular Regression practitioners, he delivers keynote speeches and participates in interviews online and in person around the world.