THE POWER OF INTERNAL HEALING [2]
POWER OF INTERNAL HEALING MEDICINE INTERNAL HEALING MEDICINE CAN we overcome
stress? If we can, should we? Today psych physiologists are beginning to
formulate models showing that stress, anxiety, and depression influence the body
to create or aggravate mental and physical disorders. Greater stress and anxiety
tend to degenerate the physical body and depress one’s mental outlook on the
world. Are there ways to reverse this process of physic al degeneration while
maximizing the condition under which positive attitudes, beliefs, and life-style
changes can heal the afflicted body and mind? The basic assumption at the root
of current research is that there is both a psychological and a physical
component to all disease. Another common assumption is that individual is able
to exercise a marked degree of will power in the development, aggravation, and
alleviation of these disorders. From these assumptions one might conclude that a
personal psychology or philosophy may have a pronounced effect upon whether a
person maintains a positive attitude regardless of the state of health.
According to Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, estimates concerning
the role of psychological factors in both physical and psychosomatic disorders
range from a conservative 50–70% to full 100%. A basic assumption in the latter
estimate is that all psychological, psychosomatic, and physical disorders are
either caused or aggravated by our individual reaction to stress. According to
this view, illness is often comprised of an interaction of psychological and
physical factors. When we experience stress, the sympathetic division of the
autonomic nervous system [ANC] is activated. This activation can be followed
instruments which measure the galvanic skin response [GSR]. GSR is measured by
introducing a weak current on the surface of the skin and determining the skin’s
resistance to the flow of the electric current. With sympathetic arousal skin
resistance increases, while with parasympathetic relaxation skin resistance
decreases. Following application of a stress, the average individual shows a
brief arousal followed by a relaxation. METAPHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS DURING HEALING
During a metaphysical diagnosis or aura reading, the subject’s compensatory
temperature fluctuations can become quite exaggerating. Such fluctuations are
especially pronounced during the diagnosis of a particular psychic center in
which energy seems to be overly concentrated. In figure2b we see such an
exaggerated reactivity during a diagnosis involving the third psychic center.
During such periods, the subject –and even the one diagnosing –may notice an
uneasiness which results in a tendency to shift about in their chairs. Often
both simultaneously get the feeling that the experiment is too long and “just
when the whole thing will be over, anyway.” In contrast, during metaphysical
healing sessions as depicted in figure 2c, subjects may show much less variation
than during the control sessions represented in figure 2b. Returning again to
our metaphor, the subject may feel like his body has suddenly become like an
excellent sports car that hugs the road as it rounds corners. The subject
experiencing little need for “compensatory steering.” During this period
subjects feel relaxed and content, and following the session, they often report
the feeling of being part of a great cosmic whole. The electromagnetic field
produced by the body can also show changes during metaphysical healing.
Apparently these biopotentials are intimately associated with the regenerative,
growth, and healing process. A remarkable example of the regenerative process of
healing occurs among certain hospital patients who have had broken bones that
would not heal –sometimes for years. These patients have had complete healing
occur in six weeks following the application of a weak direct current on either
side of the break in the bone. In placing the electrodes, the negative pole must
be placed toward the extremity of the bone, and the positive pole toward the
central of the body. If these poles are reversed, calcium is given off from the
bones, preventing the healing of the bones. This pole placement requirement
reflects the natural polarity of the body’s electro magmatic field. Dr. R. O
Becker of Syracuse University noticed that certain amphibians, like the
salamander, develop particular electro magmatic patterns in regenerating limbs.
Similar do not develop in closely related animals, like the frog, which lack the
capacity for spontaneous limb regeneration. When these patterns are artificially
induced in the frog, limb regeneration occurs. Dr. Becker has even observed
partial regeneration in mammals such as the rat. Learning to live with stress
not only helps us to become more resilient in our bodily reactions, it also
provides that extra creative energy which is essential for feeling of
well-being. A person experiencing the anxiety of hypertension tends to respond
more slowly to stress, and tends to stay aroused for longer periods afterwards.
In fact, as new stresses are applied there is a tendency to become more and more
aroused, as if ascending an escalator. In time the anxious person is no longer
able to respond, having reached and maintained maximum levels of sympathetic
arousal. In this chronic state, the body’s capacity to remove the high
concentrations of excitatory hormones and the waste products of overactive cells
is impaired and the body begins to deteriorate. THE MEDICAL BENEFITS OF STRESS
In contrast to this condition, a person who regularly practices relaxation,
meditation and psychic energization exercises tends to respond differently. Such
an individual appears to react more quickly to a stressful condition than does
an average person, but he just as quickly relaxes. Thus, during the course of
the day, such an individual can handle more stress than the average person, and
without adversely influencing his health. In other words, he has more
resiliency. Resiliency to life’s many challenges is of obvious benefit. After
all, we need the tension and release of stress for growing and for creating new
realities. In other words, we need stress in order to be creative! Therefore, we
need to develop our ability to be resilient. During the course of metaphysical
healing, additional indicators of autonomic function, such as skin temperature,
can inform us of healing progress. The body has a narrow temperature range in
which it normally functions. The setting of this range is controlled much as a
thermostat controls the temperature within a building. During relaxation or
other activities there is a normal level of reactivity to the body’s thermostat,
which is located in the hypothalamus. The hypothalamus, a centrally located
brain structure associated with the pituitary, acts as the head of both branches
of the ANS. The reactivity to the body thermostat-setting is similar to steering
a car on the highway. We may desire to drive straight down one lane of the
highway, but as the car swings slightly to one side, we adjust by steering a
little to the other side. If we overcompensate to the right or left, we must
steer again –a little to the left or right and so forth. The body’s temperature
control mechanisms work in the same way by compensating a little, up and down,
to keep us on the body thermostat-setting. Learning to live with stress not only
helps us to become more resilient in our bodily reactions; it also provides that
extra creative energy which is essential for feelings of well-being and a sense
of peace profound. EVOKING YOUR CREATIVE POWER When we participate in creative
processes we can explore countless numbers of possible patterns before finally
settling on an idea. Many of us, however, encounter emotional resistance to the
flow of creative possibilities. We demand of our minds an immediate, logical,
finished product that stifles new creative exploration. Most of us do not lack
ideas. What we lack is a rapid and direct means of getting in touch with those
ideas. Is there a magic key for unlocking those secret reservoirs of imaginative
power? One magic key describe by Gabriele Rico is a creative process called
CLUSTERING. A similar process using patterns is termed “mind mapping” by Tony
Buzan. Both techniques use the right brain’s ability to image and synthesize.
Clustering, or “mind mapping,” temporarily suspends the normally dominant left
brain activity that is logical and orderly. It is a non-linear brain-storming
process akin to free association. Invisible ideas become visible, flashing out
in lightning-like associations that allow new patterns of ideas to emerge.
Initially, thinkers accustomed to a logical, step-by-step approach find
clustering unsettling. A frequently made remark is, “This is crazy. Where is
this taking me?” With experience, however, most thinkers eventually discover
that they can explore creative ideas without first knowing the “who, what,
where, why, and when.” They find that creative exploration is a practical,
exciting, and ultimately inspiring adventure. In one Rose+Croix University class
students were introduced to the clustering process. The students drew a circle
in the center of a clean page. In this circle they placed a “seed” or “nuclear”
idea. Then they opened themselves to any thoughts, ideas, images, feelings, or
emotion that this “seed” evoked. Ideas associated with “ letting go” made a
splash in the students’ minds and were quickly jotted down on the paper and
circled, with the circled ideas radiating outward from the “seed” idea like
ripples in a pool. Some associations triggered other associations, and new
circles radiated out from the secondary ideas. These secondary ideas often
spread to yet other associations in a continuous, rapidly expanding ripple
effect. FROM ONE IDEA TO ANOTHER In clustering, each association leads
inevitably to the next with a connection of its own even though the analytical
left brain does not perceive the logic. These sudden subconscious associations
make the connections that create the marvelous complexity of images and their
rich emotional qualities. When captured on paper these associations either
suddenly or gradually reveals new patterns and meanings arising from seeming
chaos. Northrop Frye, the literary critic, observed any principle or idea can
become “a storm center of meanings, sounds and associations radiating out
indefinitely like ripples in a pool.” Students find that clustering is rapid
–the process taking only from two to four minutes to reach new patterns,
meanings, and insights. After the insight arises the student writes a brief
vignette, a thumbnail sketch or cameo, of the insight. Writing the vignette
which expresses the insight is also rapid, often taking another five to ten
minutes. As Fry suggests, clustering is like a thunderstorm: from the gathering
of the clouds with the first ideas, to the clusters falling like a cloudburst,
the lightening-flash insights, the clearing blue sky of the vignette, and
rainbow of the accomplishment –all in perhaps only fifteen minutes. The results
are often surprising, sometimes even awesome. A frequent comment is “It simply
wrote itself!” While human nature resists the unfamiliar and unconventional,
once this resistance to using the clustering approach is overcome, people find
this creative exploration of ideas exciting and surprisingly productive.
Students use the process to take essay exams; businessmen and engineers for
writing memos and reports; writers for developing ideas –the applications are
limitless. The process reveals that each of us possesses latent creative genius
–genius awaiting our release. Clustering can be a magic key for releasing our
imaginative powers within. BRAIN VITALITY AND CREATIVE POWER The brain’s
vitality can remain intact throughout our lives, as long as we keep exercising
it,” states the Vancouver Sun newspaper. “Read, read, read,” says Dr. Amir Soas
of Case Western Reserve University Medical School in Ohio, U.S.A. To retain
brainpower as you age, choose mentally challenging hobbies, study a new
language, and learn to play a musical instrument, or engage in stimulating
conversations. “Anything that stimulates the brain to think,” says Dr. Soas. He
also encourages cutting back TV. “When you watch television, your brain goes
into neutral,” he says. The Sun adds that a healthy brain also needs oxygen
pumped through healthy arteries. Thus, exercise and proper diet, the same things
that help to prevent heart disease and diabetes, also help the brain.
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