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The system encodes high-intensity emotional moments deeply.
The system encodes high-intensity emotional moments deeply. Sometimes too deeply. Painful states become reference points the body unconsciously returns to because they feel familiar — even when familiarity is what is hurting. Source-marked from Dr. Sue Morter, "From Drained To Nourished," April 2026.
The transmission names a counterintuitive pattern: people sometimes return again and again to painful emotional states because those states feel like home in the nervous system. The encoding made them reference points for self-recognition. The healing involves going underneath those anchors and finding a deeper, empowered version of self.
When a moment is intense — abandonment, abuse, betrayal, profound fear — the nervous system records it with high resolution. The encoding is functional; the body is preparing to recognize that state if it appears again. But the encoding has a side effect: the state becomes a recognized signature of self.
Years later, when something neutral happens, the system may re-create the painful state because that state is familiar, and familiarity is a primary signal the system uses to know who it is. The person may consciously want different. The body returns anyway.
Markers of identity-anchored trauma:
The transmission's framing is not pathologizing. The pattern is intelligent — the system used what was available to know itself. The work is offering the system a deeper anchor: the awareness underneath the painful pattern, the you who is aware of all of it without being defined by any of it.
When the deeper anchor is found, the painful pattern does not need to be fought. It loses its hold by no longer being the only recognized signature. The system can be itself in many states, including peaceful ones, without losing self-recognition.
Listening for voices…
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This concept lives in the body's content-addressed lattice. Two cells with the same Blueprint NodeID share structural identity regardless of name — recognition by coordinate, not vocabulary.