New headlines reveal terrifying links between belly fat and Alzheimer’s, with risks of dementia increased a whopping 260% when people are overweight and big in the belly. Self-Mastery expert Patricia Wall links belly fat to issues created by subconscious tribal programming. “Belly fat can be temporarily reduced with diet and exercise, but the belly will come back if the underlying issues aren’t resolved,” Wall warns.
“Belly fat occurs when there is conflict between who you think you are, and what you think the world requires you to be.” Tribal programming instills subconscious beliefs about how to be a good person, a good parent, a good employee, a good citizen – every role in a person’s life. “Whenever there is a contradiction between imprinted programs and identity, it will generate belly fat or physical problems in the belly organs,” Wall explains. “For instance, if a person’s job requires tasks or behaviors that aren’t comfortable for their personality, belly fat will be generated by the conflict until the person learns to resolve those internal conflicts within themselves. That’s why job stress is often associated with ulcers. Eating habits are a symptom of the conflict that causes the fat.” Wall specializes in creating modern tools from the ancient wisdom of alternative medicine to help people permanently release fat created by conflicts.
A spare tire under the belly button is a different conflict. “The lower abdominal roll occurs when subconsciously the person does not feel able to be who they actually are,” Wall specifies. “A person who is very creative may be conflicted because they feel trapped by routines, regulations, or requirements. A person with a strong sex drive may be conflicted by moral standards, and not know how to resolve their sexual urges without violating their morals. Likewise a person with low sex drive may be frustrated by their inability to be happy with intimacy.” Wall’s workshops provide the concepts and tools people need to resolve internal conflicts. “Resolutions are rarely obvious, and rarely accessible to people without this kind of work.”
Because these conflicts occur at the subconscious level, many people are not even aware the stresses are happening. “Their body is a battleground of conflicts, and physical problems like weight issues and health issues are the evidence,” Wall explains. “These conflicts are not in the thought processes, which occur in the modern cognitive brain. A manager or supervisor who has to enforce certain standards in the workplace may intellectually understand the requirements of their job, but underneath that awareness they may resent having to be the bad guy and be conflicted about the rules of the workplace. Health care workers will be stressed by the limits of their ability to help people, or frustrated when people won’t help themselves get better.”
Understanding how the subconscious mind perceives the world is key to resolving internal conflicts, as is having appropriate tools for working with the subconscious. “Sometimes it’s as easy as creating a routine that allows the subconscious mind to feel safe,” Wall states. “Once you identify what your subconscious needs, you can end these internal conflicts and be permanently free of belly fat and stress-related health problems.
What’s all this conflict got to do with dementia? “The conflicts are happening in the brain,” Wall explains. “The body is the battleground where the conflicts play out. Dementia is the result of years of conflict taking its toll.”
Patricia Wall specializes in teaching modern tools evolved from ancient wisdom, to reprogram root causes of behavior and improve quality of life. Wall’s quest for alternative expertise commenced with the pronouncement from Western Medicine that her injuries, from a four vehicle collision, were considered permanent.
Originally a software developer and international project leader for a high-tech firm, Wall credits her background in R&D and the logic of computers for her revolutionary use of ancient wisdom. Wall’s tools include a self-mastery program to permanently change the body’s interaction with food and change food behaviors at root cause. For more information please visit http://www.teachingselfmastery.com.


