Mastering thoughts for health
TOOWOOMBA researcher Dr Sean Eastwood’s life changed when he made a profound discovery – one he said if he didn’t share, he would have been riddled with guilt on his deathbed.
That discovery was the key to mastering your thoughts and in turn your emotional health.
So Dr Eastwood sat down to pen a book all about the human thought – a 10-step blueprint for the thought process and building blocks for all emotional patterns.
It’s called Logically Accurate, Emotionally Healthy.
“Since 2013, I’ve been researching the work of a now deceased Australian software developer who claimed to have cracked the riddle of ‘true’ artificial intelligence in 1999, based on the premise that human thought is a natural law like gravity,” Dr Eastwood said.
“My contribution is that intelligence is created by a 10step blueprint for the thought process which creates a blueprint for perception which identifies the building blocks of all emotional patterns.”
In 158 pages, Dr Eastwood aims to establish emotional health as a precise science.
He said if the research was understood and applied, it had the potential to “enhance society” in a way that was difficult to comprehend.
“The cornerstone of the science of chemistry is the periodic table – a mathematical model of how the elements interact,” he said.
“What I call it, the Fractal Mindset Blueprint, is a mathematical model for the human thought process that accommodates all forms of physical and energetic medicine – and it’s as easy to learn as playing hopscotch.
“But because everything begins with a thought, a model for the thought process has universal application to every aspect of our daily lives – education, business productivity and profitability, standardising interpersonal communication, the fractal design of nature for example brain waves – the list is endless.”
Dr Eastwood said his book was written for the unborn generations, that they might understand their emotional health better.
“Understanding the thought process means that children will identify healthy emotional patterns in the same way that a poker player recognises a winning card hand,” he said.
“They will have standardised communication through a standardised thought process which will allow them to calibrate their thinking to someone else – similar to playing hopscotch beside someone and mimicking their steps.”
At the end of the day, the book aims to resolve the issues that the general population faces with their emotional health by encouraging them to appreciate the scientific, logical approach.
“The body is a temple, but there are many doors into the temple – all of which have to be monitored for emotional health,” Dr Eastwood said.
“One thing that people need to become more aware of is that the intelligence that runs your mind and body has to express itself through the physical form of your body.”