Hi everyone,
I bought the DVDs for the DNRS from retrainingthebrain.com (the website URL changed recently). I did them sincerely and have been practicing an hour a day since and plan to go for the 180 days of practice to complete the rewiring. The practice is not difficult unless my mind wanders, but I do my best each day. Doing it earlier than bedtime seems to help entirely with the mind wandering.
I have to say that I was about 70% or more recovered before I started, and that is from histamine intolerance, multiple chemical sensitivities, and I am naming in my practice adrenal insufficiency and allergy as also resulting from brain miswiring - because it costs nothing and if it helps, great.
There have been noticeable improvements. Even at 12 days, I'm glad I spent the money and effort. I do believe that my brain has been interpreting things as life-threatening and acting accordingly to protect my life. But cat dander, chapstick, and dietary histamines are not, under normal circumstances, life threatening. The problem was not with their existence, but with my reaction to them. I'm using her method to retrain my brain and giving it an honest effort.
Some things I notices were: I am able to stop my thoughts about how these things making me ill. Practicing the steps, I have seen the beginnings of a reaction subside. Coffee, even flavored coffee, tastes better and things smell better in general. I visited a friend and three of her cats came over to say high, one sat in my lap, and I had no reaction. I didn't even remember to change my clothes when I got home. I have had a much lower reaction to dietary histamines and yesterday had a sandwich with tomato slices - more than 10 times what would have made me sick for three days in 2013 - and three hours later I was still breathing freely. I did have problems overnight - was the reaction at 15 hours due to the dietary histamines or something else, like my filthy house? Can't tell. I didn't get up and do the practice - I got up and used meds. Good enough for me at this point. I'm hoping to keep improving over the next 5.5 months.