Trans-Temporal Regression Therapy (TTRT) for Trauma-Related Symptoms: A Neuro-Integrative Exploratory Framework
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and trauma-related anxiety remain major clinical challenges despite the availability of evidence-based psychotherapies.
Contemporary models emphasize dysregulation across neural systems involved in threat processing, contextual memory, autonomic regulation, and emotional control.
At the same time, clinicians frequently encounter patients with persistent fears, symbolic traumatic imagery, and somatic distress that are not fully explained by identifiable autobiographical events.
This article introduces Trans-Temporal Regression Therapy (TTRT) as a neuro-integrative and spiritually informed exploratory framework for such cases.
Its proposed therapeutic effects are consistent with current knowledge on mental imagery, autonomic regulation, and memory reconsolidation.
The article further proposes a layered model of consciousness in which survival-emotional, narrative-cognitive, and integrative-intuitive functions are mapped heuristically onto distributed brain systems.
Finally, the paper examines the hypothesis that some clinically relevant fear patterns may involve trans-biographical or non-local memory-like processes.
This hypothesis is not presented as established fact, but as a testable framework for future investigation.
TTRT is therefore proposed not as a replacement for established trauma therapies, but as an exploratory model for investigating unresolved trauma at the intersection of neuroscience, psychotherapy, and consciousness studies.
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