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Dr P MacLean's triune model of evolutionary brain development, refers to the earliest and 'deepest' layer of the brain as the reptilian brain, which we also know as the brain stem.

TP, developed by Mr Sean O'Geary, appears to work by 'bridging' energy centres in the body to stimulate access to the reptilian brain. It is thought that this is where we 'store' our earliest (eg. 'in utero' and birthing) traumas, that we 'never' want to revisit and which we keep buried in the deepest recesses of our conciousness.

Having accessed the trauma, and it doesn't matter that neither the therapist or the patient know what it is, it then passes by a process called microgenesis (as described by J. Brown of New York University Medical Center) to the surface of the cortex and diffuses into the earths energy field. Experiments in the USA, using the latest brain scanning technology, seem to show this process in action.
When two rhythms, with nearly the same frequencies, become coupled to each other so that they take on the same rhythm, the phenomenon is known as entrainment.
ie. two or more pendulums swinging in different time will, if left long enough, begin to swing in rhythm. They have become entrained.
When the therapist and patient enter into a similar 'relaxed state' it is possible for their brain waves to become entrained, and even for both individuals to become entrained with the earth's magnetic field. When so entrained it should be possible to influence the origin, or 'quantum unit', of the microgenetic process.

Utilising 'entrainment' is one of the underlying principles of triune processing.
Any hands-on bodyworkers can use TP as part of their usual bodywork protocol. Once trained and experienced the process becomes an automatic part of treatment yet, if wished, can also be performed as a seperate treatment session.

Mr O'Geary has been using TP on all his patients since 1996 and, almost without exception, they have reported how positively their lives have changed, both physically and emotionally.

In TP the changes seem to 'creep up' on the patient usually becoming profound only when established. Often it is family, friends of colleagues who first remark on them, as they are very subtle.
Likewise, the change from illness to health is subtle and, interestingly, often noticed only in retrospect. Patients seem to use the term 'empowered' when describing how they'vechanged.