Chronic conditions and inflammation-related stress are everywhere right now — and inflammation is becoming our present focus in the daily SRC work. It may stay there for the next few days.
So, think about it.
The body is composed of trillions of cells. These cells are constantly sending, receiving, adapting, repairing, and responding.
Could the electrical environment we live in — wiring, Wi-Fi, screens, devices, notifications, and all the invisible modern “buzz” around us — be stressing our cells out?
I don’t know in the official-medical-lab-coat sense.
But what I do know is that today’s SRC scan registered energetic interference from electrical wiring stress and Wi-Fi exposure.
And there is something else that keeps showing up repeatedly in our scans:
The habit of constant notifications, doomscrolling, persuasive-tech trance, and information diets built on fear and outrage.
In other words, our bodies may be trying to calm down while our phones and internet searches are shouting:
Emergency! Outrage! Fear! Click here! Watch this! Be upset immediately!
This may not be the ideal wellness plan.
Stress related to these patterns may be keeping inflammation-pattern stress in place. If we are trying to clear chronic stress, chronic inflammation, addiction loops, nervous system overload, or emotional exhaustion, we may also need to look at what we are feeding the mind every day.
Because the body is not just digesting food.
It is also digesting information.
And some of the information we consume all day long is basically energetic junk food with panic frosting.
We do have an SRC Pro Tool called The Mediator, which can help work with habits. When I tested for how many Mediator sessions it could take to break this gadget/scrolling habit, the number that came up was 3,308.
That’s right — 3,308 sessions to help break the pattern of keeping ourselves in a trance with all our gadgets.
Hopefully, we will not need all 3,308.
Hopefully, now that our eyes are open, we can begin choosing more actual life: more breathing, more nature, more quiet, more real connection — and a little less scrolling.
Today is day one of running a powerful Mediator command around the pros and cons of breaking the scroll trance — or, said less elegantly, getting off the !@#$ computer and cell phone long enough for the nervous system to remember it lives in a body.
If you’re interested in a copy of the command, let me know.
And just a thought — apparently even the command needs to cut back on screen time.

