The issues PLRT aims to resolve are typically categorized into general (day-to-day emotional or personal growth) challenges and critical (deep-seated clinical or psychological) ailments. However, from a critical and scientific standpoint, medical authorities caution that these “resolved” memories are highly controversial and often viewed as psychological constructs rather than literal historical events.
General Issues Solved by PLRT
In a general context, practitioners use PLRT to help clients navigate repetitive personal hurdles, spark self-improvement, and achieve emotional clarity.
Repetitive Behavioral Patterns: Breaking toxic, cyclical habits in careers or lifestyle choices that a person feels powerless to alter.
Unexplained Relationship Dynamics: Resolving intense, immediate friction or deep, unexplainable attachments to specific people or soulmates.
Blocks in Personal Growth: Unlocking creativity, clarifying life purpose, and activating dormant talents or passions.
Existential Anxiety: Alleviating a generalized fear of death or transition by exploring the concept of consciousness continuing beyond physical life.
Unexplained Cultural Affinities: Understanding why an individual feels an intense, innate connection to specific geographical places, historical eras, or languages.
Critical Issues Addressed by PLRT
In more severe cases, PLRT is applied as an alternative or complementary intervention for deep-seated psychosomatic and emotional conditions.
Irrational Phobias and Fears: Resolving debilitating phobias (e.g., fear of heights, drowning, fire, or enclosed spaces) that have no traceable trigger in the current life.
Resistant Emotional Trauma: Addressing deep-rooted grief, anger issues, or feelings of abandonment that standard cognitive behavioral therapies have failed to ease.
Psychosomatic Physical Pain: Alleviating chronic bodily pains—such as unexplained migraines, backaches, or asthma—that medical diagnostics cannot attribute to a physical cause.
Chronic Subconscious Stress: Treating generalized anxiety disorders and complex post-traumatic stress by attempting to process trauma at its perceived “root” source.
Dr Nidhi
