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Linguigenetic Theory (LEIT): Language as an Epigenetic Environment
LEIT (Linguistic–Epigenetic Inheritance Theory) argues that repeated language patterns can function as chronic stress inputs that shape trauma biology through epigenetic regulation. Over generations, families may transmit both the communication patterns and the biological sensitivities those patterns reinforce, reframing “hereditary mental illness” as a dual inheritance loop.
Mint Achanaiyakul
8 hours ago6 min read


The Innate Coherence Theory (ICT)
The Innate Coherence Theory explains why the mind instinctively detects when something feels “off.” It proposes an inborn grammar of coherence that organizes perception, emotion, and meaning into a stable sense of reality. When trauma or media conditioning rewrites that grammar, dissonance becomes the correction signal that points back to truth.
Mint Achanaiyakul
Feb 235 min read


The Duality of Neural Programming (DNP) and the Bipolar Spectrum
DNP reframes the bipolar spectrum as oscillation between two native circuits: Love–Life coherence and Sex–Death arousal captured by trauma and media. The model links shifts to brain rhythms (alpha vs beta control bursts), reward and stress dynamics, and symbolic conditioning—proposing ethical, testable research and clinical implications.
Mint Achanaiyakul
Feb 169 min read


The Duality of Neural Programming (DNP)
The Duality of Neural Programming (DNP) proposes two built-in circuits of consciousness: the Love–Life Circuit (coherence) and the Sex–Death Circuit (compulsion). It reframes trauma, addiction, and bipolar extremes as circuit imbalance and outlines testable links between neural rhythm, moral polarity, and media conditioning.
Mint Achanaiyakul
Feb 96 min read
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