wow,wow,wow...integral...molto grazia
On Nov 19, 2010, at 1:28 PM, anngwyn wrote:
Hello Thomas !
I have returned to my home computer and the fog of jet lag slowly
lifting....in response to your request that I define entanglement I
offer the following:
My clinical observations indicate that traumas tend to happen on the
anniversary of other traumas, particularly those involving broken
connections and other unfinished business. Now, also, the role of
systemic entanglement in generating repetitive patterns of
accidents, illnesses and other forms of trauma began to become
clearer. Systems seek balance. All members of a system have a right
to belong and imbalances are created when connections are broken,
people are excluded and/or suffer a difficult fate. In the interest
of balance, other members of a system develop often hidden and
unconscious loyalties with these unfortunate others and a tendency
to share a similar fate. Laszlo refers to these bonds as
entanglements. In his view , victims and perpetrators are often
entangled in very strong bonds which influence not only their fate,
but the fate of their descendants.
This systemic view of balance, inevitable bonds of
interconnectedness and networks of fate, put forth by Laszlo,
Boszormenyi-Nagy and Schutzenberger, calls into question the very
nature of reality and also what this means for the nature of human
relationships. The idea that our Universe in an interconnected whole
is not new. a belief in the anima mundi ,or world soul, as a matrix
of embodied meaning has been one of the core premises of ancient
Eastern and shamanic philosophies. In the I Ching or Book of
Changes , one of the oldest books known, one finds a fundamental
belief in kan or " action at a distance" in which different kinds of
things in the Universe resonate with each other.
Reconciling this holism with contemporary Western science, however,
is quite another matter. In the sub-atomic realm, albert Einstein
referred to the way two objects remain connected through time and
space, without communicating in any known way, and long after any
interaction has taken place as " spooky action at a distance". Erwin
Schrodinger, one of the founders of quantum Theory dubbed this
peculiarity entanglement . If we scale this notion of entanglement
up from the sub-atomic scale to the macroscopic realm of human
relationships,repetitive patterns of trauma resulting from
entanglements and broken connections might manifest as fractal-lie
iterations of the same underlying imbalance. If this is true, then
the healing challenge is to search for a path leading toward
resolution for these often hidden forms of imbalance.
For those wanting to know more about the nature of fractal patterns,
my favorite documentary on this subject is now available on you
tube : Fractal Patterns , the colors of infinity.
Warm Regards
Anngwyn
www.acst-international.com
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