Healing Through Prenatal and Perinatal Memory Recall: A Phenomenological Investigation

Author(s): Marquez, Anne.

This qualitative study focuses on the experience of healing through prenatal
and perinatal recall. Interviews were conducted with seven adults who variously attested to having healed
conditions of: syncope, phobias, arthritis, asthma, migraines, depression, suicidality, obsessive-compulsion,
side pain, and dysfunctional interpersonal patterns. Intentions were to: (a) illuminate the experience, (b)
examine the benefits and drawbacks, and (c) underscore the impact of obstetric intervention. Literature Review:
Reviewed literature includes research on transcendent, fetal, cellular, and somatic memory/consciousness
(within a holonomic paradigm), current repression and false memory debates, hypnosis, breathwork,
psychedelic, and primal psychotherapies, somatotropic therapy with infants and children, and obstetric
intervention. Method: Existential-phenomenological research methods were used with Hycner’s (1982) 15-step
analysis for interview data. Two in-depth interviews, a demographics form, and a follow-up question were the
instruments used to access data. Results: Data analysis revealed seven individual, two unique, and two general
themes. The general themes included: “A Range of Intensely Felt, Mostly Negative, Emotional, Physical, or
Feeling States, and Transpersonal Experiences,” which captured the structural underpinnings of the
phenomenon, and were expressed by all seven participants

Citation

Marquez, Anne. (2000). Healing Through Prenatal and Perinatal Memory Recall: A Phenomenological Investigation. Journal of Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Health, 15(2). (Copy this citation)
Scroll to Top