SM MEANING MODULATION SYSTEM (SM-MMS) STRUCTURED SYMBOLIC PREPARATION AND MEANING MODULATION FRAMEWORK; FOR CONEXTUAL THERAPEUTIC ENGAGEMENT
Keywords:
Meaning Modulation System; Symbolic Therapeutics; Contextual Healing; Meaning-Centered Therapy; Therapeutic Symbolism; Open-Label Placebo; Embodied Cognition; Ritual PsychologyAbstract
The SM Meaning Modulation System (SM-MMS) is proposed as a structured meaning-centered and non-pharmacological therapeutic framework designed to operationalize symbolic therapeutic engagement within a standardized clinical methodology. The framework integrates concepts from meaning-making psychology, contextual healing science, placebo and expectancy research, embodied cognition, ritual psychology, narrative medicine, and psychophysiological conditioning. Within this model, symbolic preparations are conceptualized not as pharmacologically active medicines, but as structured therapeutic meaning interfaces intended to reinforce therapeutic narratives, emotional anchoring, expectancy modulation, attentional conditioning, and continuity between therapeutic sessions and daily life engagement. The methodology introduces a standardized symbolic preparation environment termed the Meaning Preparation Unit (MPU), alongside a sequential symbolic preparation architecture consisting of S-Series, M-Series, and SM-Series formulations representing somatic-symbolic, psychological-narrative, and existential-symbolic therapeutic orientations. Nigella sativa is utilized within the framework as a culturally meaningful symbolic referent and therapeutic anchor rather than as a molecular therapeutic agent. The system explicitly rejects claims of energetic transfer, vibrational imprinting, ultra-molecular pharmacology, or molecular therapeutic efficacy beyond measurable thresholds. Instead, the proposed framework emphasizes ethically transparent, open-label, and contextually mediated therapeutic engagement. SM-MMS is intended primarily as an exploratory and adjunctive conceptual framework for integrative meaning-centered clinical practice and is not proposed as a replacement for evidence-based medical or psychiatric treatment.
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