I've read through all of this but I'm a little confused.
What I can say however is that I have the gut feeling that usually conscious mind and subconscious mind are programmed in a way to oppose each other.
When watching cinema or following Freudian psychology it becomes quite apparent that, consciously, no one wants the woman on the silver screen to be raped or the evil guy to win, subconsciously this might be different.
I'm not sure how 'true' our subconscious really is. In fact it seems to be a term that describes both a most powerful entity that draws upon the collective mind and a most weak entity that can be suckered into by anything suggesting.
Maybe it is exactly that tension that needs to be resolved.
Asteram, I would gladly hear your opinion on this on my thread about Symbolism
http://www.projectavalon.net/forum/s...ead.php?t=9990
Here, however, I would suggest a message that aligns the subconscious with the conscious. How to do that, I'm not sure yet. One would have to write into the subconscious a string that looks for a positive outcome, and then confirm it with the string sent to the conscious.
A few examples that might lead somewhere:
1. "The Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes" (don't do a google image search on this if your guts aren't stable, however it's remarkable piece of film, that I haven't been able to watch completely)
This phrase is a direct translations of the word 'autopsy'. I think it encapsulates the awake state of mind. Subconsciously it draws upon the action of seeing, consciously it draws upon self-empowerment and a setting right of vision.
2. Without as within, you.
This phrase goes a little more poetic, it's been heard before, but the sudden break might give it some focus that the subconscious didn't expect, thus the sentence is memorised because it's an 'odd one out'.
Mind however, that we would rather have a visual or symbolic message that isn't encumbered by translations.