What people describe as “quantum jumps” are immediate rewrites of subconscious programming. These shifts allow people to experience the world in ways that were previously inaccessible..
How Subconscious Reprogramming Alters Perception
Shifts in perception can be engineered and implemented nearly instantly. Applied Subconscious Science documents this process through the analysis and refinement of subconscious cognitive systems. When reprogramming protocols are implemented, they produce measurable changes in perception, emotion, behavior, and cognitive functioning. These changes occur through subconscious access points, where structured internal experience transforms perception into immediate lived reality.
Cognitive Engineering™ is research driven scientific methodology within this field. It is non clinical and operates as a human systems engineering model. This work was designed to restore full cognitive functioning in individuals whose minds were previously under debilitating distress. Individuals regain coherent linear thought, reliable memory access, focus, and functional emotional control.
In cases involving major depression or suicidal ideation, negative thought patterns transform into positive constructive thinking. From the first session, the mind operates as an integrated system. These changes are immediate, functional, and enduring. Across five years of application, no individual has reported regression.
The work directly engages the subconscious systems that determine how a person thinks, processes information, regulates emotion, and experiences reality. Each session is structured around the individual’s explicit description of how they want their mind to function. The process establishes a functional subconscious state aligned with that outcome. Once accessed, the individual thinks clearly, processes information normally, and experiences emotional stability as their default operating condition.
Case Illustration: Reagan
Restoration of Functional Cognitive Access Following Acquired Brain Injury
Reagan experienced two separate brain injuries caused by motor vehicle accidents at different points in life. The first occurred at age ten, when he was struck by a car in a hit and run incident while on foot. This injury produced complete amnesia for all memory prior to the accident. He did not recognize his parents or siblings and had to relearn basic knowledge and social orientation from that point forward.
In his early thirties, Reagan experienced a second motor vehicle accident. After this injury, he experienced severe disruption to short term cognitive functioning. Information failed to consolidate into usable memory. Thought became disorganized. Speech slowed. Comprehension deteriorated. Emotional regulation collapsed. He was diagnosed with major depression and lived with persistent physical pain, migraines, and diffuse cognitive impairment. Daily functioning became increasingly restricted despite extensive engagement with medical specialists and therapeutic interventions.
When Reagan presented for Applied Subconscious Science work, six years had passed since the second injury without recognizable cognitive improvement. His central concern was not emotional distress alone, but the inability of his mind to function coherently. He described an absence of structure in thought, unreliable memory formation, and loss of cognitive continuity. When asked to rate his cognitive functioning on a ten point scale, with ten representing full clarity, Reagan rated himself at one. Frequent pauses mid sentence occurred as he tried to capture what he was attempting to explain. Complete breakdowns while speaking were common, along with an inability to sustain coherent mental sequences.
The working hypothesis held that Reagan’s cognitive disruption reflected impaired access rather than erasure of stored experience. Evaluation focused on whether functional cognitive states associated with integrated awareness remained available beneath the disruption.
Session Outcome and Long-Term Cognitive Stability
During a single structured session, Reagan engaged a cognitive configuration that permitted continuity of perception and temporal awareness. Within this state, he accessed detailed experiential material associated with periods of his life that had previously been unreachable. He articulated coherent sequences of events, sensory detail, and contextual awareness with precision. These experiences emerged spontaneously and showed internal consistency.
Functional cognitive access returned immediately following the session. Over the subsequent days, improvement continued rapidly. Within one week, Reagan could study and comprehend complex material, articulate detailed understanding, and sustain levels of focus and conceptual integration that he stated exceeded any cognitive functioning he had previously experienced.
Follow-up conducted across the ensuing months and extending over several years confirms that this level of cognitive access and functional stability has remained consistently available. He no longer requires medication for depression or pain and functions independently with cognitive stability.
Importantly, Reagan did not regain exhaustive autobiographical memory prior to age ten. What returned was not total recall, but functional access to cognition sufficient for a coherent, stable, and productive life. His mind now operates normally within present time demands, allowing learning, planning, communication, and emotional regulation.
This case supports a clear distinction between cognitive capacity and cognitive access. Severe disruption following brain injury may involve obstruction of access pathways rather than loss of underlying cognitive records. When correct access conditions are established, functional cognition can re emerge without gradual retraining or compensatory strategies.
Case Illustration: Jim
Immediate Emotional Stabilization With Session Limited Cognitive Access Following Diagnosed Brain Injury
Jim was involved in a motor vehicle accident and was diagnosed with brain injury. After the accident, he experienced severe impairment in short term memory. His long term memory remained fully intact.
Newly acquired information could not be retained beyond approximately fifteen minutes. Information faded before it could be reused or referenced. This limitation affected daily functioning and professional identity. Jim was a businessman and a musician. Music was his greatest passion. After the injury, he could no longer create new music because he could not retain what he had just played. Musical ideas disappeared before they could be developed or written down.
Alongside the memory impairment, Jim experienced constant suicidal thoughts. These thoughts were persistent and intrusive. He described them as deeply concerning. They did not fluctuate with mood or circumstance.
Baseline Documentation and Session Tasks
Before the session, Jim completed specific preparatory tasks designed to document baseline functioning. He recorded a video describing, in his own words, the problems he struggled with and how they affected his life. He spoke openly about his inability to retain new information and the impact this had on his sense of self, motivation, and desire to live.
A physical journal was used to document specific experiences over two days. Each entry required concrete details, including time, location, clothing, sensory detail, and context. Certain entries were recorded on video while he wrote, without reviewing the footage afterward.
Additional tasks required Jim to video document external observations while narrating what he was seeing. Later, he wrote those observations into his journal by listening only to the audio recording, not the video.
Music formed the final task. Jim recorded himself playing freely. If a passage felt complete or meaningful, he listened to the audio and wrote the music onto sheet paper. He deliberately engaged imagination and documented his internal experience afterward.
These tasks directly depended on short term memory retention. At baseline, continuity could not be maintained long enough to complete them successfully.
During a single structured session using Cognitive Engineering™, Jim entered a functional cognitive state in which short term access became available.
Within this state, he described recent experiences with complete clarity. He accurately recalled the experiences recorded in his journal and on video. Precision and continuity were present without hesitation.
Details never spoken aloud during recording also became accessible. He described what he was wearing at the time and referenced observations absent from the original narration.
Following the session, Jim entered complete post session isolation. This condition is required. No conversation occurs and no material is reviewed until the following day. The isolation allows the internal system to settle without external cognitive interference.
Most notably, the persistent suicidal thoughts ceased. Jim reported their immediate absence. This change was absolute and did not fluctuate.
Short term cognitive access remained limited to the session itself. After the session ended, baseline short term memory impairment returned. Recall showed slight improvement, but not to the degree that allowed functional retention comparable to what occurred during the session.
Follow up extending over three years confirmed that suicidal thoughts did not return. Jim reported sustained positive thinking, renewed motivation to enjoy life, and emotional stability. Ongoing migraines became significantly more manageable. These outcomes remained consistent despite continued short term memory limitation.
Jim and I both believed that ongoing litigation related to his accident played a significant role in limiting full cognitive recalibration. This factor was absent in Reagan’s case. I intend to continue working with Jim once litigation is complete.
Jim’s case demonstrates a clear separation between cognitive access and emotional regulation. Short term cognitive access emerged only within the structured session and did not persist afterward. Emotional stabilization occurred immediately and remained durable across long term follow up.
Within Applied Subconscious Science, this distinction is critical. Emotional regulation and cognitive access can respond differently under the same conditions. In Jim’s case, emotional systems recalibrated in a way that endured, while cognitive access remained constrained by unresolved external conditions.
This case supports the observation that sustained cognitive recalibration may require resolution of external constraints, while emotional stabilization can persist independently once established.
Comparative Case Synthesis
The cases of Reagan and Jim demonstrate both shared mechanisms and critical divergence in outcome under Cognitive Engineering™.
Both individuals presented with diagnosed brain injury and severe disruption to normal cognitive functioning. In both cases, engagement of a structured internal state produced immediate access to capacities otherwise unavailable under baseline conditions. In Reagan’s case, access to functional cognition emerged and stabilized beyond the session. In Jim’s case, access to short term memory emerged during the session but did not persist afterward.
Despite this divergence, both cases showed immediate emotional recalibration. In Reagan, emotional regulation stabilized alongside restored cognitive access. In Jim, emotional stabilization occurred independently of sustained cognitive change. Persistent suicidal thoughts ceased immediately and did not return, despite continued limitation in short term memory retention.
The primary distinction between the cases was the presence of unresolved external constraints. Reagan was not engaged in ongoing litigation. Jim was. Both Jim and the engineer identified this factor as a likely limitation on full cognitive recalibration. This distinction suggests that cognitive access may remain state dependent when external pressures require protective or unresolved configurations, while emotional systems may recalibrate and remain stable once established.
Taken together, these cases support a systems level distinction between emotional regulation and cognitive access. Emotional stabilization can become durable without sustained cognitive change, while full cognitive recalibration may require resolution of external conditions that constrain system level integration.
These observations do not constitute generalizable claims. They establish a bounded, testable distinction that invites further study under controlled conditions.
This article defines Applied Subconscious Science and introduces Cognitive Engineering™ as its foundational methodology. It operates as a research-driven human systems engineering model. Documented observations and additional contextual material are presented on their respective pages. This work is non-clinical and does not diagnose or treat medical or psychological conditions. Individuals are encouraged to maintain all existing medical and psychological support as appropriate.


