Childhood and the pregnancy period are very important in the development of your mind and your future health. Some of the most influential programming of the subconscious mind occurs during the project-sense.
We owe our knowledge of the Project-Sense to Marc Frechet.
Marc Frechet was a brilliant, French psychologist and researcher, who discovered the project-Sense. Unfortunately, he passed away in 1997.
The period of time known as the project-sense is the period before you were conceived (nine months), pregnancy(nine months), delivery and when you were baby (until around 27 months old).
In short, the project-sense is the entire time around your birth.
During that time, the child is recording information through the parents that prepares itself for the journey through life. It’s important to realize that perceptions acquired during the project-sens become the fundamental subconscious programs that shape our life.
The brain is being programmed and it's quite common for a propensity - or pre-program - to be set during this time. This pre-programming paves the way for the program in later life. Everything that happened to you from well before your birth until today affects your present life.
When a baby is in the womb, it constantly draws on the information in times of stress. It learns how to deal with each stress it comes upon through stresses previously experienced - primarily through parents, relatives and ancestors.
In addition, children retain everything that happens during pregnancy and often take an adverse situation experienced by the parents, personally.
During delivery there is much stress, both physical and psychological. This is felt by everyone - the mother, father, obstetrician and the child, itself. The baby takes in all the activity around it, particularly the anxiety of its own parents.
All experiences are stored in the brain, even though you may not able to ‘remember’ them. The brain will use our past experiences to find the best solution for a current situation - which is usually a very efficient and useful way to work.
The Project-Sense asserts that the child expresses the parent’s stress
Sometimes we don’t immediately find the answers we are looking for to explain the cause. But this doesn’t mean that we are wrong merely that we have not yet asked the right questions or found the right answers.
Touchdown! That's a really cool way of putting it!