I don’t think we differ there at all. I don’t subscribe to the dualistic model either. We have long stated that we believe what is being called “conscious” and “subconscious” are actually a unified whole that reflect each other rather than one being more “dominant” than the other. When a person picks up a sword to fight, the sword itself becomes an extension of the body, the entire body becomes both the weapon and its wielder.
And from this perspective, using subliminal audio in a highly transformative manner becomes possible, because the individual can understand that the true nature of the mind – if forced to express this in a polarized manner – is subconscious impulse and conscious direction. Yes, beings rooted in a seemingly dualistic, polarized universe (male and female, hot and cold, etc.), we seem to experience the relationship between conscious and subconscious within that duality (an inner voice speaks to me), and many people often treat the subconscious as a separate function that does not belong to them seeing the subconscious as a function of the self that’s “higher in authority.” And I personally think that comes from a misinterpretation of what Jung said about controlling the subconscious, lest strange things will happen and you’ll call it fate (paraphrasing).
I believe he was referring to awareness and become aware of the role of the subconscious mind, not that the subconscious is inherently more powerful than the conscious mind. After all, one can ideate and imagine all they want, but without conscious action – or the workings of the conscious mind, those subconscious ideas can never come to fruition. It is the union between both that produces results, where the subconscious impulses are consciously guided toward a different outcome, which produces a change within the consciousness of the individual, the Zero Point.
You can be afraid of approaching women, and yet still consciously will it to happen and over time, as your process grows more refined and the individual becomes more confident, better results begin to emerge. The subconscious is not “broken.” It is doing EXACTLY what it’s supposed to do. The fear the individual has of approaching women is not “wrong,” because the trauma that caused that fear is very real. However, through conscious re-engagement with the fear, analysis and questioning (perhaps something about my approach is producing discomfort within them), that subconscious impulse is refined and changed into something new – which then produces favorable results.