Trancendance from a scientific perspective?

Posted on 29th April 2008 by unwindmy in Hypnosis, Insights, Journal, Science, Zen

Now that I have achieved many of the goals I set out for myself over the last six months or so, I thought about what was next. The answer came to me when I was casually surfing the Internet one evening.  I came accross a course to train to be a practicing hypnotherapist, nlp practitioner and also gain a certificate in stress management.

This last weekend was my first weekend on the course.

On day1, the trainer did a class induction which I found to be very interesting, as I saw a great similarity in the way he did the relaxation technique to the tai chi micro-cosmic orbit. They were basically the same thing!?

I continuously see similarities in all forms of therapies, all spiritual books, all the concepts of personal growth be it being a lowly pickup artist, top entrepreneur in training, all the way through to becoming a spiritualist, or tai chi master. The similarities I see are to do mostly with a learned model of acceptance. This model can be applied either mentally, physically or both. In the case of spirituality, desired states are brought about by total body/spirit/mind acceptance. It is not surprising that all therapies involve a system of release, but I find myself asking the question - Why does the brain not have the ability to self regulate in this area?

To effectively answer this question is well beyond my current scope of knowledge, but we have to start somewhere…

When studying articles of brain waves, I came across this article, where:

“the Dalai Lama said. Could it work the other way around? That is, in addition to the brain giving rise to thoughts and hopes and beliefs and emotions that add up to this thing we call the mind, maybe the mind also acts back on the brain to cause physical changes in the very matter that created it. If so, then pure thought would change the brain’s activity, its circuits or even its structure.”

http://www.dalailama.com/news.112.htm

I am certainly with him in that the brain can essentially rewire itself, but to what extent?

And if the wiring of the brain denotes a change in perspective, where are the limits to the perspectives that we can experience?

It has long been a desire of mine to begin to study EEG and the field of neurofeedback. I see this as the next possible step when my course is over.  A recent product that I have been watching eagerly is the OCZ Neural Impulse Activator. I’m am not interested in its use as a games device, but as a desktop replacement and research device.

Which led me back here:

http://uazu.net/OE/

Here it is stated that “One person also reports that frequencies at the other end of the spectrum, i.e. high frequencies above beta frequencies, can be associated with lightening-fast reactions and ’slowing down time’.”

Now, for some reason I find this somewhat confusing. The talk is of speeding up brainwaves results in a slow down of time, but anybody who has read any Eckhart Tolle, or practiced meditation knows that time slows when the number of thoughts are reduced. This is what the spiritual experience is all about.

How I understand this is as follows:

When the frequency of brain waves moves high into the gamma range, increased brain activity is possible. To the untrained mind this results in increased noise, and thus increased thoughts. To the trained mind, somehow the ability to filter traffic is in place. This means that the higher speed of thought combined with the ability to filter out thoughts creates higher brain function.

Having studied Krishnamurti, who states that time is the product of thought, it could be deduced that this trained filtering ability is the cause of the experience of transcendence.

Perhaps the experience of transcendence, is actually the mind utilising the higher brain function so as to rapidly flip from one thought to another, and so experience seeing all things at once?

This would be where Einsteins relativity would come in to play. I feel that all of these ideas are intrinsically linked. I just don’t know how.

Thoughts on freeing the mind.

Posted on 14th March 2008 by unwindmy in Dreams, Healing, Hypnosis, Insights, Reiki, Zen

I was just reading this post - http://zentransformation.blogspot.com/2008/03/zen-nimbus-fusion.html

Ciaran’s explanation of Dark Nimbus sounds alot like bi-polar disorder. They appear linked in that a person is damaged in such a way as to being unable to find or hold onto a sense of purpose.

According to modern psychology, the mind is seperated into the concious and the subconscious. The conscious is said to deal primarily with thought, and the subconcious with emotions. I don’t rate psychology at all, but it is functional as a way of talking about the way I see things - so I’ll use it.

The short circuiting that he describes is the process of distraction that allows a person to see beyond conscious thought and access the subconscious. I have been studying hypnosis lately, and this short circuiting is similar to what a hypnotherapist does when he works on a patient. This is why a hypnotherapist begins his session by asking the patient to imagine themself in a specific location. It is a distraction of all the senses, so that everyday thought processes don’t interfere with the work he is about to do.

The subconscious of the modern man is a whole smorgasbord of conflicting emotions. The key in all this lies in using Zen, hypnotherapy, dreams or any other way of accessing the subconscious mind and seeing the emotional knots that exist there.

In my opinion, purpose isn’t something that you have. It is something that you are. Once a sufficient amount of emotional knots have become untied, then purpose begins to seep into the conscious.

This is the process that I have undertaken:

1. Break through the negative thought patterns.
See that something other than the ego exists.
Dismantle the ego to a sufficient (and more permanent) level.

2. Distract the concious mind.
Access the subconscious and allow the emotion to bubble to the surface.
Discover the traumatic experience associated with that emotion.
Using the concious mind as a tool, rewrite the memory so that the pain is allowed to disappate.