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JAMP
Jungian Advanced Motor Processing

Jungian Advanced Motor Processing  (JAMP) is a psychological health treatment created by Dr. Lahab Al-Samarrai in May of 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. Jungian Advanced Motor Processing® (JAMP) has promising results for the relief of chronic pain as well as trauma.

Concept

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Jungian Advanced Motor Processing (JAMP) is based on Carl Jung's idea from the early 1900’s that trauma causes the mind to splinter images of the past. It needs reintegration for the individual to heal. [1]

Development

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JAMP was created in 2020 by Dr. Lahab Al-Samarrai, during the COVID pandemic. The revolutionary thought behind the JAMP treatment is the speed at which the client is able to attune to past trauma and have full resolution of symptoms such as anger, sadness, numbness, confusion, worry, fear, negativity, disbelief, rage, anxiety, minimisation (psychology), denial, pain, revulsion, guilt (emotion), shame, betrayal, withdrawal, embarrassment, jealousy, despair, self-blame, doubt, revenge, brain fog ,discomfort, dissociation (psychology), traumatic memories, complex trauma, post-traumatic stress disorder, complex PTSD, anxiety, body image, stress , pessimism, self-hatred, panic attacks, panic disorder, sexual assault, childhood abuse, childhood sexual abuse, phobias, body dysmorphic disorder, eating disorders, flashbacks, dissociative disorders, psychosomatic disorders, auto-immune disorders, depressive symptoms, sleep disturbances, self-esteem and self-defeating behaviors. [2]

Unlike eye movement desensitization and reprocessing's lengthy treatment, clients experiencing JAMP typically have full resolution within 4-16 sessions (depending on the extent of the trauma and the number of traumas). Where typical talk therapy could take up to ten years for healing, JAMP can do it in record time.  With JAMP, clients can finally break free from their old narratives and become who they were always meant to be within a matter of months, not years. [3]

Treatment

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The treatment addresses what Carl Jung termed “the complexes,” which are created in the psyche and live in the body as a defensive response to a traumatic experience. [1] These complexes typically trap an individual over time into a dysfunctional and defensive response whenever any triggered experience activates them. Activated complexes drain energy from the ego of the individual, leaving one feeling emptiness, anger, and an overall sense of anxiety or fear, causing the client to behave in maladaptive ways. [4]

JAMP®  is an advanced treatment that works within the complexes to help release and integrate splinter images and emotional shards from past conflicts. [5] The psyche stores these images after our natural defence mechanisms have dissociated them. In a 90-minute treatment using advanced hypnotic techniques with bilateral visual and auditory elements, the emotional fragments held in the complexes can be released, processed, and integrated within the individual.  

Once these fragmented images and emotional shards (pieces of feeling states) are released from the complexes, they integrate in the psyche as a symbol of the event and can then move into the long-term memory where they are filed away as experiences.

The process in which we interact and receive information with our environment is as follows: it starts as a stimulus that elicits an emotion/reaction that is then transformed into a feeling. The feeling then becomes a thought that is transformed into a symbol. The symbol is then integrated into the psyche. Traumatic events follow a similar path where an emotion, such as fear or rage, or any other stimulus (for example, a sound or image during trauma) is dissociated in the complexes because the traumatic experience is so terrifying that our psyche splits off the event to protect us. [6] [1]

JAMP helps reintegrate what was once raw, painful, unintegrated, emotionally triggering, and disturbing material. The integration process starts a deep change in the individual’s psyche, a process of integration and healing, which Jung called “Individuation.” JAMP creates a feeling of safety in the mind and presence in the body. These new feelings allow the client to experience inner harmony and begin to heal.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Makar, A. B.; McMartin, K. E.; Palese, M.; Tephly, T. R. (June 1975). "Formate assay in body fluids: application in methanol poisoning". Biochemical Medicine. 13 (2): 117–126. doi:10.1016/0006-2944(75)90147-7. ISSN 0006-2944. PMID 1.
  2. ^ Bose, K. S.; Sarma, R. H. (1975-10-27). "Delineation of the intimate details of the backbone conformation of pyridine nucleotide coenzymes in aqueous solution". Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 66 (4): 1173–1179. doi:10.1016/0006-291x(75)90482-9. ISSN 1090-2104. PMID 2.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference :1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Wiesmann, U. N.; DiDonato, S.; Herschkowitz, N. N. (1975-10-27). "Effect of chloroquine on cultured fibroblasts: release of lysosomal hydrolases and inhibition of their uptake". Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 66 (4): 1338–1343. doi:10.1016/0006-291x(75)90506-9. ISSN 1090-2104. PMID 4.
  5. ^ Smith, R. J.; Bryant, R. G. (1975-10-27). "Metal substitutions incarbonic anhydrase: a halide ion probe study". Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 66 (4): 1281–1286. doi:10.1016/0006-291x(75)90498-2. ISSN 0006-291X. PMID 3.
  6. ^ Wiesmann, U. N.; DiDonato, S.; Herschkowitz, N. N. (1975-10-27). "Effect of chloroquine on cultured fibroblasts: release of lysosomal hydrolases and inhibition of their uptake". Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 66 (4): 1338–1343. doi:10.1016/0006-291x(75)90506-9. ISSN 1090-2104. PMID 4.