What are the methods that might be used by medical doctors, psychiatrists, or mental health professionals in the treatment of one’s psychic attacks? Coaches and counselors who are limited to the generic treatment of psychic attacks due to the limitation of their training and restriction to practicing solely in the 3rd dimension.
What Not to Do
1 Talk Them Out of It
I advise against this, as an Olympian Life Coach and Interdimensional Coach, I think this approach is so counterproductive to the personal and spiritual growth of the individual. Talk therapists tend to lean toward taking them out of it, trying to convince the client that their concerns are falderal.
If there is anything I have learned in my years of working intimately with people in various stages of personal and spiritual growth, it is,
So much more is possible than you might think
at first glance at any concern or situation. And one thing is guaranteed,
If you refuse to entertain it, you will never know
if this person’s concerns have any merit. Being willing to walk along with a client on his or her journey, has opened my eyes in so many ways.
Even worse than talking them out of it,
2 Medicating it Away
No doubt, this is an option. People who are haunted by energies not identifiable and treatable by other methods can be given pharmaceutical drugs that will turn off the patient’s ability to perceive anything energetically, a sort of modern-day lobotomy.
The tendency of victims of psychic attacks is to self-medicate to cope with the negative energetic overwhelm. They may entertain addictive substances or behaviors to quell the discomfort that accompanies psychic attacks. As the frequency and intensity build, any attempts to use these methods to relieve the pressure building in one’s holistic sphere fail.
Educated and somewhat aware coaches and counselors may use some of these methods to help someone who needs psychic protection.
3 State-breaking
When a client seems to be obsessed with his or her psychic attack, it is up to the coach or client to interrupt the current pattern of behavior by offering new patterns of thought that run contrary to the negative energy they are experiencing.
Not in a manner to suggest that the client may not be under psychic attack but to minimalize the client’s potential to add more negative energy to the attack by obsessing over the energetic intrusion, which is a common response to such a fright.
For those who cast spells and curses, they count on the obsession of the victim adding so much energy to their spell or curse that eventually overpowers the will of the victim.
So, it’s up to the coach or counselor to lessen the efficacy of the psychic attack by any means possible, within reason and without compromising their relationship with the client. Some are better at this than others.
If the frantic state of mind can be broken, further rational steps can be taken, such as
4 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
This is a method of interacting with the victim to challenge their state of mind. Many approaches are included, some contrasting. For instance, one Cognitive Behavioral Therapist might entertain the patient’s point of view, strengthening it and encouraging their individuality, and another might reject their point of view as madness and will encourage them to progress toward what would be perceived as “normal.”
In either case, the goal is to reduce the negative impact of the psychic attack by talking through and rationalizing and minimalizing experiences, so that the patient can better manage their attacks as distractions. CBTs may work in cooperation with doctors and/or psychiatrists who can prescribe medications that can help to manage problematic symptoms.
Clients who have already attempted to self-medicate are prone to welcome this approach to reducing the impact of psychic attack symptoms.
5 Life Balancing
Coaches of all kinds are adept at helping others achieve some degree of life balance. This is a process of reviewing the client’s personal values and using a method such as the Wheel of Life, to balance the client’s life, which is more often than not, imbalanced.
This is a cognitive effort of achieving life balance which may be intense enough to distract the subject from the effects of the psychic attack, and encouraging this person to focus intensely on other areas of his or her life, may lessen the effects of the attacks enough to help them maintain enough cognitive ability to logically deal with the negative energy without letting it take over his or her life.
6 Be in the Now
This is an approach to promoting dissociation. By getting the client to dissociate from anything that is not, “in the now,” and leaving it behind as remembered, if necessary, but unimportant “now,” and therefore ineffectual.
It is interesting that a mental health condition called “Dissociative Disorder” might be used as a treatment modality for victims of psychic attacks.
Though there is value in practicing disconnection from things in life that might be troubling us, not disrespecting Eckhart Tolle’s Power of Now, it never ceases to amaze me to what extent we will practice hypocrisy in an effort to help someone else who is suffering.
7 Grounding
Grounding is an established method of creating a state of solidarity in all the various areas of a person’s life, and their personal values, unifying them, and aligning them with the planet earth. This is an effective and borderline metaphysical methodology yet can be very effective in bringing a client back around to reality.
Grounding can also be problematic in that if an actual psychic attack and the negative energy present as the grounding process is enacted, it can also be solidified into the life of the client through the grounding process.
Yes, there is a remote chance that a patient might not be under psychic attack. I don’t know if I would trust the perception of someone who has no concept of the supernatural to make that decision for me.
Misdiagnosing the source or existence of a psychic attack can cause much greater problems for this person down the road.
Don’t They Work?
Do these processes work? Yes, in the short term.
This seems adequate enough for most practitioners in the medical and mental health communities. The practitioner gets to charge for their services, and the patient gladly pays for the temporary relief. The practitioner feels as though he or she has done the patient a favor, and the gratitude expressed by the client confirms the expertise of the practitioner.
But just because one has been successful in distracting the patient from the psychic attack, or through sleight-of-hand made the energy appear to be invisible, does not offer any psychic protection. The client has not learned any form of psychic self-defense and therefore no way to block negative energy when they are under spiritual attack or require protection from bad energy.