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Archive for July, 2011

 

These views suggest that we are not merely receptacles but channels of energy. Life and power is not so much contained in us, it courses through us. Man’s might is not to be measured by the stagnant water of the well, but by the limitless supply from the clouds of heaven…Whether we are to look upon this impulse as cosmic energy, as a life force, or what may be its relation to the Divine immanence in Nature, it is for other investigators to say.

Hadfield (writing in The Psychology of Power)

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Life flows

Life……is essentially a current sent through matter, drawing from it what it can.

Henri Bergson, the French philosopher worked on three major areas of thought – duration, memory, and what he termed “élan vital”  – the vital tendency.

There’s a Life Force – not a “thing”, but real nevertheless.

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I am he as you as you are he as you are me and we are all together.

We’re still in the midst of a highly atomistic society, as Mary Midgley describes so clearly in books like “Science and Poetry” and “The Myths We Live By”. The thrust of human thought has been to separate, divide and reduce. Consequently there’s a popular conception that we are all separate – that there is a “me” inside my head. We have a sense that each of us are as separate as billiard balls. We might bump into each other, impact on each other, but we don’t spill over into each other.

But it’s all changing. There’s a new paradigm, a new way of thinking on the block, and it’s gaining ground fast.

That new paradigm is the irreducibility of reality, the importance of understanding connections, interactions, complexity. There’s a shift in focus from separate entities to between-ness.

“The Empathic Brain” by Christian Keysers [1932594515] gives an interesting insight into how the discovery of mirror neurons has shown us just how wrong the idea of completely separate, skull-bound minds is. Keysers is one of the pioneer researchers working on the discovery and understanding of mirror neurons.

Here are just two points from his book which might change the way you think about the mind, the self and your relationships.

Firstly, Keysers and others have shown that mirror neurons are involved in producing a phenomenon where the pre-motor strip in our brain becomes active in specific ways. When we see someone carrying out an action, our brain prepares to make our bodies carry out the same action. This might even follow through into the action itself. Have you ever noticed how two people well connected in conversation often mirror each others postures or body movements? Little things like touching one ear, or scratching their nose, where one person does it, and the other immediately mimics the same action. If you ask the people concerned about it, it’s likely they’re not even aware that it’s happening. It’s not that the one thinks “Oh she’s scratching the tip of her nose, I think I’ll scratch mine”!

Secondly, an area of the brain known as the “insula” becomes activated when we empathically respond to another’s emotion. This explains why some people can become quite overwhelmed by another’s emotion. In fact we’re not all the same in this regard. The insula of the most highly empathic people becomes much more active than that of the less  empathic. Again this isn’t something we consciously, rationally choose. The activation of the insula by others’ emotions doesn’t seem to be under our control.

Here are a couple of passages from “The Empathic Brain” –

Imagining actions also increases brain activity in the premotor regions involved in executing similar actions……Thus, during both observation and imagination, our brain uses the premotor cortex to mentally re-enact an action without actually moving the body.

 

If we interpret the actions of other individuals through our own motor programs, our own motor programs will have a very strong impact on our perception of other individuals.

 

Empathic people activate their insula very strongly and may be overwhelmed by the vicarious emotions that movies trigger in them. Other people activate their insula only weakly, needing much stronger stimuli to trigger their own feelings.

 

Through shared circuits, the people around us, their actions and their emotions, permeate into many areas of our brain that were formerly the safe harbours of our identity: our motor system and our feelings. The border between individuals becomes permeable, and the social world and the private world intermix. Emotions and actions are contagious. Invisible strings of shared circuits tie our minds together, creating the fabric of an organic system that goes beyond the individual.

The concepts of the mind as embodied and extended  seem very helpful to me. This work on mirror neurons, interestingly, touches on both of these.

 

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A study by Platform 51 claims that one in three women in the UK taken antidepressants in their lifetime. A quarter of those have taken them for over ten years.

Whatever the actual figures, clearly antidepressants are being prescribed for an awful lot of people. Are all those people suffering from a disease called depression? And do the drugs cure them? Dr Clare Gerada seems to think its not a problem and certainly seems to believe the drugs not only work, but they “save lives”.

But doctors’ leaders dismissed the poll as “alarmist”. Dr Clare Gerada, chairman of the Royal College of GPs, said the drugs were a vital treatment. “Antidepressants save lives. In the past GPs have been criticised for being cautious about prescribing them and not prescribing them for long enough or in a high enough dose,” she said.

Maybe I should send Dr Gerada a copy of Irving Kirsch’s excellent summary of the evidence base for antidepressants. I think he makes it very clear that the issue of antidepressant prescribing is a complex one, and that while there is evidence the drugs do help people with the most severe forms of depression, there isn’t the same evidence they help people with mild or moderate depression (that’s most people).

There is a vast over-prescribing of antidepressants. Wouldn’t it be better to construct a health service around good mental health rather than around the prescribing of drugs? Wouldn’t that be more likely to both reduce suffering and to increase resilience and well-being?

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Here’s some suggestions…..

GHH

Centre for Integrative Care Glasgow Homeopathic Hospital

old country bench

Out in the countryside – near Callander

princes st gardens edinburgh

Princes St Gardens, Edinburgh

paris park

Jardin du Luxembourg, Paris

carcassone

In the chateau, Carcassonne

garden

In the garden, Chateau de la Mignarde

barrow

In a wheelbarrow!

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July is the month of rest. I don’t mean by that that you should settle into a hammock and not stir for a month! What I mean, is why not make this a month to consider the importance of rest. Not just physical rest of the kind we consider the opposite of exercise or activity, but the essential part that standing back, stopping, and pausing has in human life.

Consider rest from this point of view – we are reactive creatures. We are continuously bombarded with signals, energies, information. We process it all at lightning speed and instantly, we respond. Our whole systems are created to be instantly responsive. Throughout our lives we create more and more fast feedback loops which are triggered by what we see, what we hear, and, most especially, what we think. Except, we don’t often stop to think.

So, here’s the first way to practice rest this month.
Can you choose not to instantly respond? Can you count to ten next time someone says something you’d find irritating? Can you choose a few moments of silent thought before you speak?
There are two strong mechanisms in the body/mind – reaction, which is experienced as tension; and pause, which is experienced as relaxation. If you spend all day as a reactor, you’ll feel a lot of tension. If you want to feel less tension, you’ll need to stop reacting so automatically.

Here’s a second way. Find twenty minutes every day to sit quietly by yourself and practise some simple meditation. A simple breath awareness exercise will do. If you’ve never meditated before, try this exercise here – it’s the wheel of awareness meditation (narrated by me)

Over the course of this month, let’s think about how to slow down or interrupt the automatic zombie processes, to allow the conscious hero to emerge.

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Together

Stumbled across this in the lane yesterday morning. Caught my attention, then engaged my heart. Thought I’d share it with you, because, well……it set me up for a good day, maybe it’ll do the same for you

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