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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Transcript
00:00As I'm telling you, Doctor
00:01The patient, who is calm, has an abnormal reaction.
00:04Not normal
00:08I just want to remember
00:09I'm Mini, what am I doing here?
00:11Believe me, we're trying to find out any information about you.
00:14From the hour of your curse
00:14I don't remember anything
00:16The stray light is not continuous.
00:18Tin tin, you see, you won't see
00:21Mistrons come
00:24Okay, just a second
00:30It's not possible
00:31It's really not possible, I told you, Doctor
00:34Your body memory is like the patient said.
00:36Fighter's memory
00:38What do you mean? Your skills in using this knife.
00:40Officer's skills
00:41Hey ninja
00:46But it's there
00:47Ninja is speaking, Saidi, Doctor
00:49A ninja can do anything
00:50I'm not afraid of smoke.
00:52And faster than landline internet
00:54And then you forgot that we found her dressed in black, black
00:56Yes, and it was written on the garment in Japanese.
00:58You'll get hurt, my son, you'll get hurt
01:02Do you see it?
01:03This guy definitely recruited a secret society
01:04Those who live in the shadows
01:06And he worships the sunrise
01:07Do you think this ninja achieves justice?
01:09And he doesn't eliminate people in cold blood?
01:13Hello?
01:14Come on, technician, the patient has already lost his memory.
01:17He turned out to be a ninja, right?
01:19Are you sure, Fantab?
01:22Okay, great
01:23Thank you
01:24He was killed, right?
01:25Chef came out
01:26Chef Seafood and Italian
01:28Black medicine and taste, and Japanese writing
01:30He took her out while she was celebrating Eid at the sushi restaurant, as they say on the street.
01:33Hassini wants to go under the mat, I don't know why
01:35Something with a cucumber here
01:38Since it's here, don't come for sushi.
01:42And I'm the one who wants it
01:44Because the one who suggested
01:45Anyone who's in Fantab won't be able to have sushi; we don't have teriyaki.
01:49music
01:50music
01:53music
01:55Henzal, viewers, safety for your blessings
01:56Welcome to a new episode of the Al-Dahia program.
01:59The child Henry Lesser revealed the prohibition of the wheel
02:02He bangs his head
02:03Henry is dusting off his clothes
02:04And he continues his day as usual
02:05It happens, my friend, that after a few years, mild episodes of rapid heartbeat begin to appear.
02:10And with time
02:11These attacks are becoming more severe
02:13It arrives, oh Hadith of the Ashnat
02:14These episodes begin to prevent him from living his life normally.
02:18He tries medications left and right.
02:20Nothing is working
02:21Henry, despite his suffering, remained determined to try anything.
02:24In the year 53, a doctor named Hizar visited.
02:26Eliam Scoville will suggest to him
02:28He needs to have surgery.
02:29He will enter with his brain and remove part of the brain lobes.
02:33Including the area of ​​Isma' al-Hussein
02:34Which is the hypercampus
02:35Thank you, my dear. This is a fundamental area in memory formation.
02:38The important thing is that our hero Henry carries out the operation.
02:40What he notices is that the attacks start to decrease significantly.
02:43God is sweet and beautiful
02:44Come on, let's go to the episode, Abu Ahmed, and let's hide it.
02:46Wait, a more difficult problem will start to appear.
02:54He can no longer remember the new people he meets.
02:57Even if he meets her every day
02:59He engages in normal conversations
03:00But after a few minutes he forgets everything he said
03:02Henry, my dear, only has short-term memory.
03:04He retained this memory for 27 years.
03:07He lived until he was 82 years old
03:09All this time, my dear, when he was looking
03:10The mirror was startled because
03:12The last image in his mind was of him as a person
03:14A young man, 27 years old
03:16Henry Azizi's case is considered one of the most important cases
03:19This is probably the most
03:21It will be studied in the field of psychology.
03:23That's the limit today, we're keeping a close eye on his brain.
03:25Why? Because his case revealed revolutionary information to us.
03:27Oh, my dear, we used to think
03:29Memory has only one place.
03:31In the brain, but after it was
03:33Henry investigated this part.
03:34It's very strange that, despite the fact that
03:36He can no longer remember things
03:38However, he is capable of learning skills.
03:40Like what, for example? Like driving and drawing.
03:43So you tell him something, then you ask him about it afterwards.
03:45You find someone who forgets, but then you dream about something.
03:47He does it and you'll find he improves at it.
03:49Although he might not remember doing it before
03:51Just like you said, my dear, as if
03:53His body possesses a different memory
03:55About the memory we know
03:56As if his body were a repository of memories
03:58Is it from my own self, my dear, that memories are divided for the eye?
04:00Explicit memories are things that are clear and obvious; we remember them consciously.
04:03And we say, "I remember such-and-such event."
04:05These are stored in Al-Hussein roundabout
04:07And also in the frontal lobe of the brain
04:08The frontal cortex usually requires language.
04:11So that we can summon her
04:13Come here, Zakaria, this is a type of memory
04:15The second type of memory is implicit memories.
04:17These are things we don't truly understand.
04:19We perceive it through feelings and reactions.
04:21This will lead to the development of memory studies.
04:23So that it appears in the last 20 years
04:25A new concept, the name of this concept
04:26The body's memory tells you
04:28It's not just the brain that stores your memories.
04:31No, that's your body itself.
04:33He is able to store it, and this will make the matter
04:34I'm much more convinced than I am
04:36He pointed to a specific place and said, "Ah, ah, ah."
04:38This is the flash memory of researcher Thomas Fox.
04:41The body's memory is divided into types, first
04:42It is a type of habit memory.
04:44The habitual body memory is acquired by the body.
04:47By repetition, like driving, for example
04:49Storming things you might
04:50Don't be too conscious while you're doing it
04:52This, my dear, is what we call muscle memory.
04:54And that, my dear, is what we notice in the gym when
04:56For example, we might stop for two exercises and then go back
04:58We train again our muscles that come
05:00It comes faster than if we were still at the beginning
05:02One day we'll have a body, my dear, that will always remember.
05:04The habit, even if years have passed since it, like
05:06For example, you might stop using a car and then easily return to it.
05:08Your body retains the habit even
05:10Your brain is in a deteriorating condition; Alzheimer's patients
05:12For example, you can teach them motor skills
05:15They might not remember, but you'll find
05:16Their levels could improve if they preferred
05:18And train regularly as if the muscles
05:20It folds a memory that doesn't depend on specific regions.
05:22The explicit memory that exists in the brain
05:24And the issue, my dear, is not just about the good things.
05:26In a study conducted on the French
05:28The oven was full for a while
05:30When they were given high calories, they regained the weight.
05:32Much faster than regular ovens
05:34Because, as you say, the fat cell
05:36Retaining state memory
05:38The obesity that existed before
05:40Even if we make a cell denture, it will still remain.
05:42I remember the smuggling period of ten years
05:44I understand, Muhammad
05:46fatty memory
05:47The second type, my dear, is from the body's memory, its name
05:50The memory is Asian
05:51Stationary memory
05:53Our name, when placed in a specific context, evokes automaticity.
05:56Images and impressions are born, as you say.
05:58A feeling of familiarity or strangeness
06:00Based on this feeling
06:02Your body reacts without being conscious.
06:04He put his hand over his nose if he's lying.
06:06Ah, she laughed, so her heart is full.
06:08For example, in one of the experiments, the oven was used to train the animals.
06:10Link a specific location to a specific temperature.
06:12Then he returned them to the same place.
06:14But the temperature became moderate
06:16Notice, my dear, that the bodies of these poor people
06:18Act like he's cold
06:19Increase fat burning and oxygen consumption
06:22Your situation is a need, my dear, in this context of memory.
06:24It doesn't have to be just a place; it could be a time.
06:26And when I breathe, the phenomenon I know is called the anniversary reaction.
06:29It's possible that you will recover from a bad memory.
06:31But the feelings of this haunting memory
06:33It will come and attack you when a similar period comes
06:34For what you were in
06:35For example, I had an accident on my birthday.
06:38My next birthday I'll be feeling nervous
06:40I felt anxious about the incident; how would I understand it?
06:42We find this proverb in a story told by Dr. Peter Levine.
06:45His client, my dear, was resentful of the winter.
06:47Then he remembered that he used to get wet every winter.
06:49He's locked in the house with his toxic mom.
06:51So here, all the people of Shatta are now remembering this awful memory.
06:54Conversely, it can also be a positive experience.
06:56Like, for example, you interact every year on my birthday.
06:59Or at the beginning of the new year
07:00Because the memory is stimulated in the brain and in the part
07:02It's like a case that motivates everything that happened
07:04And all the evidence surrounding him
07:05This happened, when did this happen, and with whom?
07:08The place, the sounds, the smell
07:10Especially if it's a bad memory, so it can haunt you in the future.
07:12It's an Arabic smell or sound.
07:14Or a place like a hospital, for example, where you find a house
07:16Recalling the physical sensation of this memory
07:18Even the incident or attack
07:20For example, you don't need to remember its date.
07:22Because the body always remembers, and that's because of that, my dear.
07:24The concept of body memory
07:26Everything we go through is stored in the body.
07:28And it turns into a memory, and you might find that
07:30On an independent cell in the immune system
07:32He has a good memory; he remembers the penalties.
07:34Or specific places so that he can
07:36He modifies his response to become stronger or weaker
07:38Based on the memory that he created
07:40And we also see emotional memory
07:41Let's look at someone we love, for example, what is this?
07:44Beautiful memories come back to us, we feel...
07:46By pushing, the body begins to feel safe.
07:48First, we see someone we don't like, we hate them.
07:50The body then creates tension and anger
07:52Unbeknownst to me, Narisu, this is Ahmed. I thought it was him.
07:54Because I need to get rid of her memory, I need to give her a piece of my brain.
07:56Now I need a piece of my body
07:58Unfortunately, my dear, this is bad news.
08:00The xxx will keep following you everywhere
08:02Kon Sabti Aziz Zakirat Al-Jasad Bish means that in
08:04Zakera for members, Manatch, we say that there is evidence
08:06My conclusive scientific knowledge says that there is evidence in a certain place.
08:18A distinction between the roles of the mind and the roles of the body
08:20One difficult thing remains: let me be the people's darling.
08:21Until recently, scientists were separating the mind from the body.
08:24The annual tradition known as Body and Soul
08:26But recent studies are showing signs of strain and a widening gap.
08:28The body, not the brain, is what you're saying.
08:31The body has a role
08:32In the intellectual process
08:34We can say, in one way or another, that it's a mind that thinks through the body.
08:36Because our way of understanding the world
08:38It depends on how the body moves.
08:40And it is affected by the things that happen in its universe.
08:48The organs of the body come from the eye, ear, leg, hand, and senses.
08:53Perception begins with the body itself.
08:55This is a concept that psychology and neuroscience would call
08:57embodied perception
08:58People who suffer from chronic heart disease
09:00Their perception of distances makes them feel longer.
09:02We all know that mental disorders
09:04It can affect the body, but sometimes
09:06The opposite happens; it's a psychological problem.
09:08Its basis is a physical problem.
09:09This means a problem in your body will simply affect your mental health.
09:12It affects your perception of the world around you.
09:14For example, if you have a cognitive impairment
09:16This is when symptoms of depression appear on Heet
09:18Memory weakness
09:20physical need gland
09:21Anemia and vitamin deficiencies, such as vitamin B12 deficiency
09:23It may manifest as depression or confusion
09:26Cardiovascular problems
09:27It can leave its owner in a state of constant fear
09:30Meaning that the body is part of the mind
09:33The mind is part of the body.
09:35That's the difference between them, my dear.
09:36That's not true; the body isn't just a witness.
09:38Silence on the experiences
09:39He hears what is said
09:40No, this is active, going back and forth.
09:42He also stores his memories and recalls them.
09:45Even if the mind has forgotten it
09:46It's clear, my dear, that you feel my words are difficult to understand.
09:49What's wrong with what I'm saying?
09:50I know, my dear, that whoever says this is a stranger.
09:52This information is useful even if it happens
09:54It's because of the sardines inside you.
09:55The sardines who are eating you are telling you this.
09:57In his book The User Illusion, the author says
09:59Our conscious mind tends to incline towards itself.
10:01And he convinces us that he is in control, that he is
10:03Qased does some work, and this is it.
10:05Scholars sometimes call it internal vision.
10:07He tells us the narrative he loves.
10:09The narrative that occurred is not the only one.
10:11Only someone with Access to the language knows.
10:13This hand doesn't know how to speak.
10:14The stomach doesn't know how to talk
10:17The gendarme doesn't know how to speak
10:19A world on the account of the martyr Michael Jazan
10:21He will conduct important experiments on patients with reduced brain function.
10:24We talked about it in our first episode
10:26Your atheist text episode has returned, my dear.
10:27He told Split Brin Patient
10:28International, my dear, their number worldwide
10:3012 Split Patients in the World
10:33These people had undergone surgery
10:35The right hemisphere of the brain is corrupted compared to the left hemisphere.
10:37For example, you'll find that when the right brain does something specific
10:39The northern text is responsible for the language.
10:41Explanations and logic
10:43He invents quick excuses
10:45To the right of the text, despite that, my dear
10:47He didn't even know it was happening
10:49This is my dear, they call him a scholar
10:51The illusion of effectiveness
10:53You often do work
10:55You are her destiny, but
10:57Bakhk is skilled at explaining
10:59What she does is
11:01free will
11:02You're putting us and yourself at risk with this talk.
11:05This, my dear, is not my statement; I told you Uber is a known source.
11:07Shipping Representative Information and Opinions
11:09This, my dear, is just talk and these are the cases.
11:11Zay Batura Lana
11:13And the throat is visible
11:14My dear, your situation is laughing at itself and laughing at you.
11:17He takes credit for himself and justifies his actions.
11:19It's not other things, the body is what does them.
11:21It's not like the hand does it by itself or the legs do it by themselves.
11:24No, the right-hand side does it.
11:26It means he explains things
11:28He didn't do it in the same situation as the camel that fell into it.
11:30This official spokesperson will tell you anything
11:32To make you feel, and make yourself feel, that you are in control
11:35It seems, my dear, that your body isn't exercising this control.
11:37But when he faces a situation, he faces it with his entire memory.
11:41The French philosopher Marlowe-Ponty suggested that there are two types of cells in our body.
11:44The body at the present moment
11:45And the one who carries the memory
11:47This, my dear, carries the memory of everything we learned through experience.
11:50My dear, your body doesn't just react to the world in its immediate state.
11:53no
11:53He carries within him a character more fragrant than memories and customs.
11:56Because I am from his lineage, a catalog
11:57Survival isn't just about conscious information.
12:00I mean, if I were to face Qatar right now
12:03She needs the exchange now, I don't feel sorry for her. This is sending the brain and the frontal cortex to think
12:07And we'll go back, my son, and look at the memory files in the Hippo Campus.
12:10I don't know why we're so frustrated; it's in the perineal cortex.
12:13There's no point in talking, there's no time, we're surviving.
12:15Conscious memory is the knowledge of such and such
12:18knowing that
12:19But physical or implicit memory, knowing how
12:22How do we live in the world?
12:24Let me take you, my dear, to a slightly scary place.
12:26What would happen if the memory stored in the body was a scary memory?
12:30She's carrying things much heavier than the present moment she's currently experiencing.
12:33For example, when the brain thinks about this memory
12:35He is emotionally affected and acts according to all this talk.
12:37We have Thrable
12:38But what about the body? How will we deal with it?
12:40Let me introduce you to the British actress, my dear.
12:43Anthony Bernat
12:44My dear, she's a successful and famous actress.
12:46She appeared in famous things like Downton Abbey
12:48But behind all this success lies a terrifying childhood.
12:50A child whose father used to beat her every day
12:52So much beating that she's so thin she knows how to sit still.
12:54All children are afraid of their fathers, or rather, of imaginary children.
12:56This girl's fear when she was young
12:58Her father is killing her by beating her so much
13:00Anthony says she tried to recover
13:02Her whole life was spent beating her.
13:04In her childhood, he began to deceive her, my dear, for other reasons.
13:07From the body's memory
13:08Type of costume for reincarnation
13:10We absorb the behavior and perspectives of others.
13:13And we build with it kinetic and expressive patterns.
13:15That's how we feel the situation.
13:17We see the eyes
13:18Our body begins to react
13:20specific pattern, specific shape
13:21Isn't that how it happens that these patterns can continue with us throughout our lives?
13:24Especially if this happened
13:26The formation period is very important
13:28From very important people
13:29The father and the family
13:30And you, Anthony, my dear, would one moment hit her and the next scold and care for her.
13:33He tells her he's doing this because he loves her.
13:35This makes me, my dear Anthony, have a strange perception.
13:37A distorted perception means love
13:39She will physically express it in order to make friends at school.
13:42She would go and make a movement in their arm.
13:44Her name is Chinese Burns
13:45It's a very banana-like movement because it's simply
13:47I learned from her father that love
13:49Bioswi Al-Adhak
13:50The beloved struck the raisins
13:52There is another type of memory called interactive memory.
13:54These are real experiences I had
14:03It shows on our bodies and in our behavior in social situations.
14:07For example, if Aziz is a fourth child in a violent household
14:08When he grows up and becomes afraid of any discussion, he needs
14:11Even if it wasn't a joke, it was a heated argument.
14:12His body stiffens, his hands sweat, and his eyes avoid gazes.
14:15Antonia is speaking and saying that her personality
14:18And her interactions during her childhood
14:19It was entirely composed of her father's physical abuse.
14:22Or, in her words, the child at that time would be
14:24The walking embodiment of the abuse
14:26A child who embodies violence and abuse
14:29Aziza was robbed at the age of ten.
14:31I was diagnosed with ADHD
14:33for him?
14:33Because all the time she wanted to escape by moving
14:35All the time she feels she needs to stay
14:38away
14:38running
14:39Her father, in her imagination, was the cause of this violence.
14:42I feel like he's stalking me all the time
14:43Her body is in a non-terrestrial shape
14:44Want to move
14:45I don't want this to be silenced
14:46He is unable to feel safe
14:47The fifth type remains in somatic memory.
14:49This is the internet's favorite
14:50Trauma
14:51or psychological trauma
14:52Swiss neurologist
14:54Edward Crabbert
14:55He was working with a patient who had a memory problem.
14:57One woman doesn't remember anything that happens to her.
14:59One day, my dear
15:00He greets her
15:00He was hiding the little bear in his hand and remembering this disgusting move
15:03The patient
15:03When she came and greeted me, she was hurt.
15:05She quickly withdrew her hands
15:06But after a few moments
15:07I completely forgot what happened
15:08The next day
15:09When he came, he tried to greet her
15:10She refused to extend her hands
15:11She told him that she felt she didn't want to surrender
15:13But I don't know why
15:13I understand the body's memory, my dear.
15:15At our watch, we understand
15:16One of the most severe psychological disorders
15:19Post-traumatic stress disorder
15:20BTSD
15:21Simply in memory of a pencil case
15:23We don't know how to contain it.
15:24We don't know how to control it.
15:25We don't know how to get over it
15:26Even if people announce the event
15:28The body retains it
15:30Without waiting, this memory might one day invade
15:32mental image
15:33Or the sound of surprise remained
15:34Or it appears in the form of nightmares
15:35Or symptoms like breathing
15:37After years of trying, my dear
15:39Treatment of trauma victims
15:40Scientists have confirmed that trauma memories are stored
15:42And she prepares in a completely different way
15:45About the rest of the memories
15:46Trauma experience
15:48She prefers to sit with the screen in her brain
15:50And in the body
15:51Unfortunately, the body remembers it.
15:53Considering it an ongoing event
15:54According to research
15:55Even if we don't remember the trauma
15:57It remains stored in our bodies
15:58Joanna is trapped
15:59So you really can, my dear
16:00Someone who has lost consciousness
16:02If he was subjected to a certain type of violence
16:03Or a specific violation
16:05Or for a specific trauma
16:06But his body is still living it
16:07I still remember her
16:08That's why in American psychology
16:10Trauma is defined as any experience
16:12It causes intense fear
16:13or strong feelings
16:14It is enough that it has a long-term negative effect
16:17This can happen because of one very violent event.
16:19Or a recurring event or an event that proceeds quietly
16:23In a long, ongoing suffering
16:25Other possible factors include things like parental absence.
16:27Your parents are in your life
16:29But they are absent
16:30Absent from your needs
16:31They are absent from paying attention to you
16:33Not all of them, my dear, start by storing the memory itself.
16:35I suspect that trauma occurs
16:36The brain recognizes that this is a determination of the existence of the body I am in.
16:39Here the brain completely negates consciousness.
16:41Everyone, you're on the front lines
16:42Awareness said
16:42What is this nonsense?
16:44A body is dying, sir.
16:45We're still sitting here thinking, reflecting, and analyzing.
16:47The voluntary nervous system begins
16:49So, what are you saying to me?
16:50I'm going to start working
16:51He starts working
16:52Adrenaline release stimulates muscles.
16:55Cortisol is increased to raise blood sugar, so it remains stronger.
16:58This is the fight-or-flight response.
17:00Fire or Flight
17:01My dear, this makes us... at certain times
17:03We are trying to find pictures of heroes
17:04You die from an Arab system or escape from a danger that occurs quickly
17:06Or you can do a quick reflex yourself
17:09You don't know why it's happening.
17:10And we, my dear, are the complete opposite.
17:11If nothing makes your body stiffen
17:13You can neither speak nor move
17:14Your body feels like it's being squeezed
17:16If, for example, this happens in an incident of harassment and rape
17:18This is an instinctive response called
17:20Tonic iMobility
17:22We'll find some pregnant women entering it when they feel restricted
17:24He sensed danger
17:25Of course, my dear, it's not a traumatic event that causes PTSD.
17:28Every situation is different from person to person.
17:30And what happened to the second
17:31For example, Antonia's way of dealing with her father's trauma
17:34She developed
17:35She had eating problems that persisted for years as compensation for her hunger for the love she never received from her father.
17:40Factors that influence the occurrence of PTSD
17:42The body, during a shock, needs to end its response.
17:45He wants to run away
17:46The actual truce, if it doesn't happen
17:48The body usually recovers from the shock.
17:50But the problem does happen, my dear, and my dear, all at once.
17:53If our captain reacts to the body
17:55For example, accident victims whose movement is restricted
17:58Or sometimes, depending on what the man who wrote it said.
18:01Give them sedatives
18:02Here, according to the book
18:04And I expected you to know, just like I told you.
18:06The tension that didn't dissipate
18:07It starts to accumulate in the body
18:09Over time, muscle pain and physical symptoms develop.
18:12It is stored in the nervous system as inexhaustible energy.
18:15And my dear, the nervous system prefers to be stuck on this moment.
18:17Until it becomes part of the body's memory
18:20There will remain a grateful threat that has not ended.
18:22They didn't get a solution
18:24They didn't get Kuluger
18:25In the body, it always remains in a state of taking
18:27Excessive alertness accompanied by tension
18:28They said, "The body is waiting for anything bad to happen."
18:30Did you notice, my dear, the memory storage?
18:32It doesn't pass through the conscious mind
18:33Taribah means
18:34In the book The Body Keeps Score, the author conducts a study using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
18:38To monitor brain activity in a breastfeeding mother
18:41He sees their brains as they revisit their traumatic and painful memories.
18:45And here, my dear, she has a strange need.
18:47The areas of the brain responsible for language and logical thinking
18:51Her activity stopped as they relived those horrible memories.
18:54This might be because when trauma occurs, a difference arises between you and your senses.
18:59He might be looking absentmindedly or lost in thought.
19:01It can lead to severe conditions such as loss of sensation in the body.
19:05So that we feel something, so that we don't suffer more than this.
19:07There's something, my dear, called detachment during trauma.
19:11This, my dear, prevents the integration of memories into explicit memory.
19:14The memory that schools love
19:16This is a psychological mechanism that follows this distressing memory from your consciousness.
19:20I'm telling you, don't be ignorant, why the awareness?
19:21I am miraculously Muskap
19:22My dear, unfortunately, I will keep your body in blind spots.
19:25blind spots
19:26Here you go, my dear, this physical memory appears as a flashback.
19:29Or memories of the harvest
19:30Never a complete story
19:31Shock time
19:32You are not a conscious, dependent human being.
19:34The one who solves and thinks
19:35You remained a body trying to succeed
19:37You trampled on the backs of survival
19:38Everything was shut down
19:40survival moon
19:41Dr. Janina Fischer agrees with this statement.
19:43We don't remember the trauma in the areas of narrative memory.
19:46Which is located in the left part of our brain
19:48It is only the body that remembers her.
19:50The painful memory, as you say, my dear
19:52It is encoded as a physical-emotional state
19:55Not like a story, not a story
19:57And we do this
19:57Because it's instinctively safe for us
19:59Another problem, my dear
20:00In physical memory
20:01It's not in chronological order.
20:04The conscious mind
20:05For example, if a similar incident occurred two or three years ago
20:07In certain circumstances
20:08What we are experiencing now is something different.
20:10no
20:10We have, as we said
20:11A layer that exists all the time
20:12habit layer
20:13Hiba Badi
20:14That's why Antonia will be speaking when she's almost forty years old.
20:16About memories she had
20:17He worked for two years
20:18And she still remembers it to this day.
20:20And this, my dear
20:20We have reached a very, very important point.
20:22It's very common on Twitter
20:23needs
20:25This
20:25It remains a trigger linked to the traumatic event.
20:29Our hands are an effective instinctive response
20:30This is something that corrects physical memory
20:32Even if you're using different types of skewers, for example
20:34Why? Because physical memories
20:36It's not so much about being recovered as it is about being stimulated.
20:39As I told you, my dear
20:41These symptoms appear in the body
20:43It might show in your habitual way
20:44In the way you breathe
20:45In the way you sleep
20:46For example, if someone is always angry
20:48He himself will learn to control his anger.
20:50He hides it
20:50It will adapt to any situation
20:52He will try to satisfy the desires of those around him.
20:54No matter how difficult
20:55Whatever it is, it is unreasonable
20:57Why? Because he's scared.
20:58You might find, for example, that he sits in a Steve-like manner.
21:00In a rigid way
21:01He might have physical resistance
21:03He runs, dances, or moves smoothly
21:05It's as if his body is afraid of his vitality.
21:08So now, my dear, I feel
21:09If I shut it in your face
21:10And the length of your body's memory will never decrease.
21:12They keep saying that she is a child
21:13natural
21:14She felt she was powerless
21:15Maybe because at the time she was taking her father's beating
21:18Without her having any feelings
21:20She can do it, but it's not possible.
21:22Depending on her thinking, upbringing, and physical abilities
21:26She responds in any way
21:28Or prevent this violence in any way possible.
21:30Her body simply records everything in its memory.
21:32But in her words, only one thing changes
21:34Just as you recognized the pain and your body preferred it, remembering it from your childhood
21:38You can understand that recovering from it is your responsibility.
21:40The surprising thing here is that the body's memory itself
21:43The first step towards recovery remains
21:45The idea that your body immediately expresses trauma
21:47Tehakoun is very revolutionary in diagnosis and treatment.
21:49The processor here no longer relies on anything but
21:51Based on the stories she tells, but Berketz with the patient's body
21:54The body reveals how it tells the story of what this patient has experienced.
21:58Some people, for example, are consoled after ADHD
21:59I don't remember the trauma she experienced.
22:01This is one of the reasons why we say they have ADHD
22:04In the book Body Remembers
22:06He says that even if the trauma didn't cause any damage
22:08Direct physical pain that is trapped in the body
22:10So the dust creates the functions of the organs
22:12This might, for example, manifest as rapid fatigue.
22:14Or stress, difficulty sleeping and concentrating
22:17Therefore, treatment for shock must go beyond
22:19Traditional psychotherapy
22:20For example, cognitive behavioral therapy
22:22CBT
22:24At the event, my dear, the therapist will help you.
22:27Your eyes will help you
22:28It helps you to notice and pay attention to your thoughts and behavior.
22:30When your body recovers from the shock
22:32He sees the story you're telling about yourself
22:34And he sees how it connects with your way of thinking
22:36And this can help you change
22:38Formulating your ideas
22:40This, my dear, is sometimes called downward therapy.
22:42From top to bottom
22:43It treats the brain through thoughts
22:45And she hopes it will repair the rest of the body.
22:47It's important that you talk about and connect your painful feelings to the terrible events that happened.
22:51And it settles in your mind that you are a person who adapts
22:53He needs to take care of his wounds.
22:54This process is done and it is put down
22:56In its temporal context, meaning that this is something that happened
22:59In the past, and you are in the present.
23:00In the future, my dear, this technique
23:02Sometimes it might succeed, but
23:04So remember, my dear, in the case of trauma, as we discussed.
23:06Sometimes it's difficult to activate logical reasoning.
23:09The body itself has a problem here.
23:10The role of physical therapy begins below.
23:12Beyond the physical manifestations of trauma
23:15In the opinion of Dr. Mander Kolk
23:16It could be a guide to recovery through physical therapy
23:18He understands the impact of the shock on the body.
23:20It creates a connection between the body and the brain.
23:22The first thing that happens, my dear, is that we try
23:24We call it putting language into what happens in our bodies
23:26Are you experiencing tension in your muscles or abdomen?
23:28Or you feel a difference inside you
23:30We also try to name the happy or comfortable feelings
23:32It's like my muscles are relaxed or my chest is open.
23:34This trains the dandruff
23:36The logical frontal lobe.
23:38It communicates with the body gradually
23:40And this happens, my dear, not just once or twice.
23:42This happens over months of treatment.
23:44We train, how we sit, what positions you have with us
23:46How do we breathe? What do we feel?
23:48When someone we love touches us deeply in our minds
23:50In a small area called the insular cortex
23:52And this, my dear, is what some people see.
23:54It is the golden key to understanding
23:56The relationship between the brain and the body
23:58Why the body and feelings? Because for her
24:00Two harsh jobs, the body and what happens inside you
24:02Regulating emotions
24:04In a study in the Journal of Comparative Neurology
24:06They found that the link between
24:08The signals coming from the body and the consciousness that descended from the brain
24:10It regulates emotions and the body's response.
24:12Now your body wants to release emotions
24:14Let him release it with a deep sigh.
24:16His tears trembled, let it go, it's normal.
24:18If you feel that your body wants to move in a certain way
24:20Or, my reaction is to try to do it
24:22The slow, deliberate movement of Dr. Peter Levine
24:24This is considered a continuation of the survival response.
24:26The one that got stuck to the body because of the shock
24:28As we said, it's a survival response.
24:30It's not complete, and these feelings might be released.
24:32Symbolically, for example, you could write a message
24:34And Dr. Bandarjool cut it
24:35The person who wrote this book has a badge score.
24:37Opening a treatment center for people at the beginning of their lives
24:40Don't mess with them or play with them in that way
24:42What any child needs to feel safe in their body
24:44The Al-Alaq Center was like a large stadium
24:46Pool swings
24:47Games that feel childish, their purpose
24:50The person regains the language of communication
24:52Tani with his body because the load is heavy
24:54And the abuse is when a person abandons and withdraws.
24:56He owns his body, but he possesses it.
24:58They don't live inside; they feel an uncomfortable feeling if someone
25:00They touched them or saw themselves moving (video)
25:02It's possible that their own bodies can be programmed
25:04Repulsive bodies, action games, these
25:06With things like therapeutic massage, it helps them
25:08They are rebuilding their trust.
25:10In their bodies, the body undergoes experiences
25:12This contradicts what the trumpet tells him.
25:14Also, the main exercises
25:15It can be very helpful in treatment
25:17Yoga and meditation help to relieve stress.
25:20The symptoms are because it combines easy movement
25:22And deep breathing that energizes
25:24parasympathetic nervous system
25:26The one who is standing up deeply is in the opposite position.
25:28Fighter Flight D, you're not in danger, calm down.
25:29They also found that activities like prayer
25:31It reduces these symptoms
25:33Because it also creates a state of contemplation
25:35And relaxation, in addition to that, of course
25:38The spiritual and faith-based aspects of it
25:39And if your body reverts to a traumatic memory from the past
25:42Exercises like ground training will help you
25:44Touch something with a distinct texture or smell it
25:46A certain smell in the brain
25:47It will focus on new sensory cues
25:50Which can connect you to the present you are in
25:52For example, mindful walking
25:54Walk slowly and concentrate on each step.
25:56This helps you organize your nervous system.
25:58Also, in the expression of art, like a drawing
26:00Or writing, because art does
26:02The right hemisphere of the brain that can store
26:04Images and sensory memory
26:05Art can express emotions
26:08Those stored in the body, apart from language
26:10And then you can watch the Caravaggio episode.
26:12In the end, my dear, the body's memory tells us
26:14The body protects itself, and it protects you.
26:16Here he says, "I won't take a risk, I'll stay."
26:18In the usual area, I want to save him.
26:21Actually, this could be good news.
26:22Because it means that inside our bodies
26:24Our bodies have tremendous capabilities
26:26He's limiting it to make it easier for us.
26:28And perhaps this is what we need, to empathize.
26:30With ourselves and with our bodies, and we give them
26:32The time and understanding we need
26:34The process takes time, the body prefers
26:36Complemented by the model he knows about the world
26:38And we will act accordingly as long as we haven't updated.
26:40This is the model and therefore we must update
26:42This is the model and we integrate it
26:44With the reality that we are safe in
26:46Because it's wrong, very wrong, that we
26:48Our body behaves as if there is
26:50A disaster, and in reality, there is nothing
26:52The advantage, my dear, is that Xan is alive.
26:54You change and learn over time
26:56Imagine your body as a grassy field next to your house
26:58Everything you walk in this field
27:00A clear path begins to emerge
27:02Because of the many things he's been doing, it starts to happen over time.
27:04This source is used because it is the easiest.
27:06The fastest and what I'm used to, and everything
27:08The more you walk in it, the more features become apparent.
27:10The path was clear and steady, exactly that.
27:12My dear, the body's memory with repetition
27:14The easiest path is taking shape inside us
27:16It is true that the source is now clear
27:18We're used to it, but that doesn't prevent
27:20This source could change if
27:22We walked more slowly and thoughtfully
27:24We will try to be more effective.
27:26We are exploring new ways
27:28What we can feel in front
27:30Inside our bodies, which I consider Dr. Bankol
27:32The most important moment for anyone who has experienced trauma
27:34The moment the body arrives
27:36Forward, this will be a moment of victory.
27:37Not because our bodies have forgotten what they went through, but
27:40Because we taught him how to deal with it
27:42With her memory decreasing
27:43That's it, my dear. Finally, let's look at the previous cases.
27:46You'll see the upcoming cases; they'll be more informed about the sources.
27:47We subscribe to the builders on YouTube

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