Quantum Science Approach to EmRes® in the Vital Energy Body

This article explores emotional resolution through the lens of quantum psychology, interoception, viscerosomatic sensing, Ayurveda, and the vital energy body. It presents an alternative framework for understanding emotional hyperarousal, trauma responses, and mental health challenges.


A Quantum Psychology Perspective on Emotional Resolution

The article presents a quantum psychology view of emotional resolution, where consciousness, body sensations, feelings, and awareness are discussed as part of the human emotional experience. It introduces viscerosomatic quieting as an approach that may support emotional regulation alongside conventional care.


Understanding the Body’s Response to Emotional Stress

The article discusses how traumatic experiences, emotional shock, mood extremes, delusions, or hallucinations may involve hyperaroused emotional patterns held in the body-mind.

It explains how later stimuli may retrigger those patterns through memory, body sensations, and interoceptive cues.


Working With Feelings as Body-Based Sensations

A central theme of the article is the role of awareness in recognizing how emotional triggers appear as physical sensations in the body. These may include sensations such as vibration, tingling, temperature changes, tightness, tension, pressure, or stagnation.

Awareness

Recognizing what is happening in the body

Interoception

Sensing internal body cues

Emotional Regulation

Allowing emotional patterns to shift


How EmRes® Is Discussed in the Article

The article describes EmRes® as a process that uses interoceptive awareness for viscerosomatic quieting. It explains that a trained EmRes® practitioner guides a client to feel bodily sensations connected to an emotional trigger, without needing to access the original trauma or memory directly.


A Single-Subject Case Study

The article describes the research as a quantitative, single-subject case study. The study involved a 52-year-old American woman with a mixed clinical diagnosis of bipolar Type II depressive disorder and/or schizoaffective disorder. The client self-reported symptoms weekly over a 16-week period, with meetings held twice a week through livestream video.

16 Weeks

Recognizing what is happening in the body

Single-Subject

Sensing internal body cues

Twice Weekly

Allowing emotional patterns to shift

Self-Reported

Allowing emotional patterns to shift


Reported Changes Over the Study Period

At the end of the 16-week study period, the article reports improvements including a lapse of hallucinations, reduced paranoia around co-workers, renewed interest in life, improved socialization, and greater willingness to participate in self-care practices. The article also notes that the client’s mental health challenges were ongoing.

Reduced Emotional Intensity

Reported decrease in some symptoms

Improved Socialization

Renewed engagement with others

Greater Self-Awareness

Improved ability to distinguish thoughts and events

Ongoing Challenges

Continued need for care and support


Read the Full Article

The full article includes the author background, theoretical framework, literature references, research methodology, emotional resolution approach, results, discussion, summary, and bibliography.