Epigenitics - You and Your Mind and Body
Mindpower Fitness Training: Getting Twice as Much From
Your Life
We live in a culture which has for centuries effectively
compartmentalized the multi-faceted character of the human
organism. The unity of personhood has been divided into the
domains of body, mind and spirit, and we have institutionalized a
system of professional guardianship for each domain. We have
relinquished control of our bodies to the tribunal of medical experts
who have become the custodians of body health. We have similarly
allocated other health professionals such as the psychiatrist, the
psychologist and the counselor with a special responsibility for the
care of our minds. Finally, we have in large part, given over the task
of nurturing the human spirit to the priests, gurus, astrologers and
army of self-appointed soothsayers of our times. In short, we have
created institutional structures and vested interest groups which by
their very existence have encouraged us all to participate unwittingly
in self-fragmentation. This institutionalized sense of selffragmentation
is further reinforced by the reductionist orientation of
medical science. The capacity to care for the human body, that is to
say, is represented as a mode of expertise designed to care for a
specific part of the body. As a culture, we thus shift the focus of
expertise from the professionals who are trained to look after the
health of the body as a whole, to professionals who are trained to
understand the anatomy, physiology and chemistry of its specific
parts. Since the body is construed on the model of a machine, the
idea is that the body-doctor is not unlike a sophisticated engineer
who is so overwhelmed by the complexity of how a machine works
as a whole that the only recourse is to know everything one can
about how it works in parts. Specialization is thus born out of the
assumption that the more we know about how the parts of the body
work, the more we know about how it works as a whole and how
best to maintain and restore health to it as a whole. The fact that we
institutionalize ever increasing levels of individual expertise for the
specialization and responsibility of eye, ear, mouth, throat, heart
lungs, stomach, liver, kidneys, genitals, bone, brain and feet, to
name only a few, is testimony to the state of disintegrated self which
confronts us all. This being so, we learn to see ourselves as a body
which somehow manages to house a mind which in turn helps us
occasionally to gain a glimpse of the mechanics of the human body
and perhaps occasionally of a kind of ghostly spirit that enlivens it.
While we thus learn something about how our bodies work
independently of the mind and something about how the mind works
independently of the body, we know very little about the constant
interaction between the two, and thus correspondingly little about
what makes us whole and healthy in our wholeness.
Although there are promising signs of the emergence of a cultural
awakening in which the importance of re-integrating the mind-body
dimensions of human wholeness is affirmed, there are also clear
indications that in at least some contexts the wedge of separation
between body and mind is being driven even deeper. Among the
structured social activities which reflect a firm commitment to mindbody
dualism, none is more puzzling than the current trend of
exercise technology found in the modern gymnasium where people
work mindlessly in the name of improved health and fitness.
Consider, for example, the growing trend of putting trainees on
treadmills, stationary bikes and sundry other pieces of equipment
purposively positioned in front of televisions or videos. Some
stationary bikes and other exercise equipment actually have video
games built right into their controls. Rather than engaging the power
of mind to magnify and extend the impulses associated with physical
development, such machines covertly detach the mind from the
performance of the exercise. The trainee "goes through the motions"
as if the body were a machine, akin to the way in which we might
shut down the motor of a car and put it through a car wash. The
exercise undertaken is something that happens to the body from
outside, rather than undertaken from the inside-out as a process of
human activity filled with consciousness. On the gym model
referred to above, the human body participates in exercise largely by
being passive. The fact that the trainee has a mind is incidental; the
mind's role in exercise is little more than the initiating force required
for its execution.
Given recent development in the psychology of sport, it is
difficult to understand how instructors are so readily seduced by a
strategy which fails to acknowledge the importance of marshaling
the full resources of the mind to maximize the potential effect of
exercise on the body. It is clear that we have a long way to go to
achieve the integration of body and mind, especially within the
arena of human performance. If the role of mind in exercise is as a
spectator, the results of exercise will be less than spectacular. We
will, as it were, always be "looking-on" with interest to discover
what some new piece of exercise equipment, machine or gadget can
do for our bodies. The more the machines can do, just like the more
the health professionals can do to make us healthy, the less we have
to do for ourselves. What this pattern of detachment and projected
responsibility hides, however, is that as we inadvertently create and
participate in such activities we not only have to do less and less for
ourselves, but we unwittingly either directly suppress or fail to
nurture the very self-enabling capacities that ensure that we can do
anything for ourselves. In the end, there is no more destructive
disempowerment than the disablement of the human spirit and the
loss of self-autonomy which enshrines it. In short, as long as one
dissociates the mind from the body, the reliance on an external
authority figure or a novelty machine will prevail.
It is the purpose of this book to redress this imbalance in regard
to the separation of body and mind in the field of exercise. It is a
book which is necessary reading not only for all those who sincerely
desire to extract maximum benefit from the hours they spend
exercising in and out of gyms, but for those who seek to maximize
the power of mind. In what follows, we shall try to demonstrate
unequivocally that there is no faster or more efficient way to
improve exercise outcomes and advance human performance than to
learn how to exercise one's mind as a natural outcome of the ways in
which one exercises one's body.
To achieve this goal we shall first consider the pioneering
research currently being undertaken in the field of mind-body
integration. Our aim will be to help the reader to understand the
nature of the subtle interface of human thought with the physical
properties of human bodies (i.e., neurotransmitters and more
importantly neuropeptides) and of the reciprocal exchange between
them. We shall in turn endeavor to show that the human body is in a
state of constant dynamic and that we are –for the most part–
continuously re-creating ourselves, with enormous potential to
contribute to self-reconstruction and renewal. Before the next year
has passed, each of our bodies will have replaced 98 percent of their
cells. Because we have traditionally regarded the human body as a
machine that has mysteriously learned to think, we are unaware that
what we think makes a difference to the process of self-renewal. To
suggest that we have the power to alter and in a sense to control our
own physiological destiny is indeed a revolutionary way of seeing
things, but it is the view we wish to defend and develop here.
The central burden of the book will be to show that the literal
intersection between mind and matter can be productively exposed
by exploring the relationship between exercise and meditation as a
vehicle for the re-integration of mind and body. Exercise is, we will
argue, a way in which we are directly empowered to renew
ourselves, while meditation and particularly mindfulness, can be
used as a tool to control the actual processes of renewal through
exercise. Research has already shown that athletic performance can
be significantly enhanced if athletes engage in meditation as an
ongoing, regularly scheduled activity. Significant improvements
have been recorded in several athletic activities, notably speed in
field and track events, agility, co-ordination and reaction times1.
Other health benefits associated with meditation are numerous,
including its positive effects on various physiological systems in the
body such as blood cholesterol2. Meditation has also been shown to
be an effective tool for stress reduction3, weight loss4, and in the
reversal of some effects of aging5.
The greater the ability of an individual to integrate mind and
body when exercising, the less volume of training required to
achieve the desired results. One way of conceiving the difference
between exercise which is undertaken mindlessly and exercise
undertaken with meditative mindfulness is helpfully illustrated by an
analogy. Commercially prepared juices are not infrequently watered small volume of undiluted juice may thus be as nutritionally
substantive, if not more so, than double the volume of a diluted
juice. Similarly, with matrix meditative exercise, the activity is what
we call "mind enriched", thus requiring less volume in terms of time
and effort to bring about a specific training outcome.
Although there are several possible definitions of meditation, we
shall for the sake of simplicity, define meditation as the intentional
self-regulation of attention through specific techniques of
consciousness enhancement. In this sense, meditation is neither
contemplation nor rumination in the sense in which we ordinarily
construe our thought process.
The literature on meditation recognizes two major classes of
meditative practice:
(1) concentration meditation and (2) mindfulness meditation6.
Although there are obvious similarities between these two types of
experience, there are also radical differences in the ways in which
each of them focuses attention. The best known and perhaps the
most studied variety of meditative experience is Transcendental
Meditation, otherwise known as TM. It is characteristic of TM to
teach practitioners how to restrict their attention to a single point,
object or mental sound, most often referred to as a "mantra". The
experience of breathing can itself become the object of attention, as
can a designated visual object upon which one's mental gaze is given
for periods of time typically ranging from 20-60 minutes.
Distraction from one's focus upon the object of concentration is
reckoned to be disruptive of the harmonic resonance achieved in the
meditative state.
Mindfulness meditation, also referred to in the literature as
"awareness meditation", utilizes mental attention quite differently
from concentration meditation. Mindfulness is the form of
meditation most applicable to the system of meditative exercise we
shall elaborate in later chapters.
Mindfulness is a variety of meditation originally associated with
the tradition of Theravada Buddhism where it is known as
Sattipatana Vipassana, roughly translated as "Insight Meditation"7.
Mindfulness also has roots in Mahayana Buddhism, in Soto Zen
down to give them more volume, whereas fresh undiluted juice will
have a higher content of pure orange with less liquid volume. A practices8 and in the contemporary writings of J. Krishnamurti 9, in
the writing of Vimila Thakar 10 and others.
The practice of mindfulness utilizes concentration to maintain
full attention from one moment to the next, not on a single object,
but upon a constantly changing field of objects or experiences. In
mindfulness, variations in mental activity are not necessarily to be
regarded as unfortunate distractions, as they are in the context of
concentration meditation. Thus, the technique allows for the
meditative inclusion ultimately of all physical and mental events,
thus making it ideal in its extension to a specific program of exercise
such as the Matrix program to be presented here.
The basic premise of this book is that while exercise is in itself an
effective tool for self-renewal and regeneration, as is meditation, it is
possible to incorporate mindfulness into a system of exercise, so
ideally suited to it, that the result of the synergy represents a whole
new level of body-mind empowerment which far exceeds the
benefits of either exercise or meditation when taken on its own.
What we are calling "Matrix Mindpower" reflects our efforts to
create a system of weight resistance exercise whose rhythmic
patterns of movement are conducive to the application of
mindfulness while the exercise is actually being done. This is the
first meditative program of weight resistance ever devised and we
are wholly confident that it will afford readers a special opportunity
to maximize both their physical and mental potential. Just as
exercise is enhanced by an appropriate mind-set, so–and this is the
point which is often neglected by those who meditate–the power of
mind is enhanced by appropriate exercise of the body. By keeping
the brain well-oxygenated, exercise improves intellectual acuity,
memory functions, mood and alertness.
That we have the power to use our minds to alter significantly the
physiological processes which take place within us and thus control
to some extent our own biological destiny may at first blush appear
to be little more than an indulgence in science fiction. Contrary to
this conservative judgment, however, stands a body of ever
accumulating scientific literature in support of the inherent power of
mind to contribute directly to self-renewal and continuous selfcreation.
To establish our case in favor of the power of body-mind
integration, in the format of meditative exercise, we shall illustrate
the extent to which the science of psychoneuroimmunology
substantiates our claim for the power literally to "shape" what we
are by what we think, as well as what we do. On the view we
espouse in this book, exercise need not be seen simply as something
we do. By bringing the practice of mindfulness to exercise, we
become something we are and were always meant to be–people in
contact with our bodies through mindful interaction with it. While
neuroscientists once construed the nervous system on the model of a
telephone network with electrical message impulses traveling along
nerves not unlike electricity runs through wires, thereby connecting
the switchboard of the brain with the message sites in the body, a far
more interactive model is now emerging. According to the new
model, which we shall examine in greater detail later in the book,
the discoveries in neuroscience, in particular informational
substances, have forced scientists to view the body in an entirely
different way. Instead of viewing the systems of the body as
interrelated, scientists have long held the belief that they were
separate. The discovery of these informational substances (which
allow communication between the brain and the rest of the body)
shattered this old paradigm.
During the 1980's, scientists were puzzled at the research that
revealed neuronal communication beyond synaptic gaps, a
phenomenon made possible by these informational substances. In
the past, neuronal communication was thought to occur only at the
synaptic gap or junction amongst adjacent cells via chemical
messengers called neurotransmitters. Today, however, scientists
believe that these informational substances, in particular the
neuropeptides, are the chemical communicators or messenger
molecules that distribute information from the brain throughout the
organism.11"Thus, neuropeptides and their receptors join the brain,
glands, and immune system in a network of communication between
brain and body, probably representing the biochemical substrate of
emotion.12” This explains in part why the benefits to mind-body
integration are reciprocal. In short, the mind is continuously talking
to the body and the body is continuously talking to the mind via
these informational substances. What is especially interesting about
the discovery of these neuropeptides, in addition to the fact that they
establish two-way channels of communication between thought
processes and physiological ones, is that there are countless different
neuropeptides, many of which can be linked to a particular mental or
"mood" state (i.e., anger, contentment, anxiety, fear). Because these
neuropeptides communicate such information across synapses to
receptor sites, it is believed by some neuroscientists that in essence
every cell is eavesdropping on every thought we think.
As early as 1986, receptors for neuropeptides were discovered to
exist on immune cells known as monocytes13. Unlike many other
neuropeptides, monocytes are not themselves nerve cells but rather
white blood cells. Because these special cells are transported
throughout the body via the circulatory system, they are in
communication with every cell in the body. In this sense, monocytes
can be seen to function as circulating neurons, capable of inundating
the whole human system with chemical awareness of the brain's
thoughts. This being so, it is perhaps unsurprising that a study of
male heart attack victims in an intensive care unit revealed that the
most important factor related to survival was whether the patient
believed that his wife loved him 14.
The exact relationship between neuropeptides and the thoughts
they mediate, is of course enormously complex. Although dozens of
different neuropeptides have been identified, each of which
presumably corresponds to a specific mental state, it would be
misguided, to conclude, for instance, that any mental state--say
schizophrenia–admits of reduction to one specific molecule. What
we regard as a single and isolated mental state may require the
synergy which can only result from the interaction of millions of
molecules and in some cases countless other mental states.
Conversely, any one molecule may have multiple functions. The
adrenal "fight or flight" response is a case in point. While
epinephrine is the circulating hormone for stress, norepinephrine
(functionally the very same chemical) is also the most important
hormone for the consolidation of memory.
Dr. Laura has a BS from Harvard, a Masters from Cambridge, and a Doctorate from Oxford
Comments
-
Epicenitics
Of course, the above is not really epigenetics which has to do with changing the DNA. However, I totally believe we can change the course of our lives and our disease by changing how and what we think. I know that I can affect the progress of my cancer as well as the state of my health by what I do with my Being. I am doing this now. However, if one sticks to the old, worn out false beliefs that most all accept and live by, then you will get the same results that these concepts produce. I post the above because I feel it is extremely important for everyone, but especially those with PCA. Although this is taken from a book centered on exercise, the truths are important in ALL fazes of life. I totally believe that almost all go thru life with no idea of why they are here or who they are. Those with Pca are now given the oportunity to totally examine their past ideas which have never worked, and to look at new ideas and ways of being. This is a time of ultimate change. The world and the USA will never be the same. I say it is time for all to throw out all the old religions, the old way of being, and look for new ways to live. It must be obvious by now that what has been happening is NOT working and NEVER will work. This is the gift of Pca. You have NOTHING to lose.
love, Swami Rakendra
0 -
The book excerpt is a bit long...Rakendra said:Epicenitics
Of course, the above is not really epigenetics which has to do with changing the DNA. However, I totally believe we can change the course of our lives and our disease by changing how and what we think. I know that I can affect the progress of my cancer as well as the state of my health by what I do with my Being. I am doing this now. However, if one sticks to the old, worn out false beliefs that most all accept and live by, then you will get the same results that these concepts produce. I post the above because I feel it is extremely important for everyone, but especially those with PCA. Although this is taken from a book centered on exercise, the truths are important in ALL fazes of life. I totally believe that almost all go thru life with no idea of why they are here or who they are. Those with Pca are now given the oportunity to totally examine their past ideas which have never worked, and to look at new ideas and ways of being. This is a time of ultimate change. The world and the USA will never be the same. I say it is time for all to throw out all the old religions, the old way of being, and look for new ways to live. It must be obvious by now that what has been happening is NOT working and NEVER will work. This is the gift of Pca. You have NOTHING to lose.
love, Swami Rakendra
...for me today. Seems a bit wordy, but that is what books are for sometimes.
My perspective comes from my philosophy and practice. At 64, I am not a child nor am I old. I am a Buddhist by philosophy, my practise is based around the martial art of Taekwondo in which I hold advanced black belt rank. I also draw on the Bushido of the Samurai and the practicality of Suto. I am a university graduate with 4 completed majors and graduate research in 2 of those. I have a very solid background in science. I am currently in a rental cabin in the deep bush of the Adirondacks where my family and I are mountain climbing for a couple of weeks before we return to our home near Detroit. This as I come off of 2 & 1/2 years of Eligard after RP and EBRT.
I am an atheist, I do not believe in "spirit" par ses, nor in gods, demons, angels and the like. I believe that life is like an old - syled printer ribbon - once, then done. The curtain falls, the lights go out and you just stop being aware as the scene fades to black. There are no do-overs or returns. When I refer to "spirit" I mean strength of character, which is strength of mind.
I understand that my case of acinar adenocarcinoma was initiated by the flipping of several epigenetic 'switches' on a key subset of genes, this due to my exposure to lead and/or arsenic. I understand the method to the treatment profferred by the medical professionals I have consulted in order to assist me in fighting this disease. The logic is sound, the techniques have been proven, though I am aware that there is a possibility that a few rougue/refractory cancer stem cells may not be killed by the treatments and I may have to face this cancer again in the future.
I have never stopped my daily TKD pattern practice, I still run my 50 miles a week, lift weights, play very hard with my Labrador and do not shirk from very hard work. I follow a very healthy diet and avoid consuming anything that may be toxic or harmful to me. I mediatate daily and frequently. I make a point of deeply appreciating my life and all that are in it. I cherish my family, freinds, work, home, toys and all that is around me. I love a lot and am loved in return. I still got acinar adenocarcinoma because none of this is effective at directly combatting that cancer.
I am aware that my medical professional's reccommendations were/are based on thier observations of my overall health and the threat that the cancer presents to my life, health and well - being. I possess no mind-body separation or perception of same. I understand that others may believe/feel differently, I have no problem with that at all. I applaud any persons efforts to improve their health and well being, but for me, at any rate, I must additionaly take advantage of the tremendous progress that 'modern medicine' has made in dealing with this particular medical problem and am happy as a clam at high tide that there are a bunch of really educated people who have dedicated thier entire lives to the study and treatment of prostate cancer so I have a statistically greater chance of surviving this disease.
By analogy, the garage I take my car to has a brake specialist, an oil & fluid specialist, an electrical systems specialist etc, but together they do a great job of keeping my car running, even if they are specailists individually. Same for my doctors. It is my responsability to take in the 'big picture' for both my car and my body.
It is a great advantage to be fit and healthy, but if you step on a tack, you must either remove it or tolerate its presence in your flesh regardless of how superb your physical condition. I would remove it myself, though each of us must make that choice for ourselves.
0 -
RakendraRakendra said:Epicenitics
Of course, the above is not really epigenetics which has to do with changing the DNA. However, I totally believe we can change the course of our lives and our disease by changing how and what we think. I know that I can affect the progress of my cancer as well as the state of my health by what I do with my Being. I am doing this now. However, if one sticks to the old, worn out false beliefs that most all accept and live by, then you will get the same results that these concepts produce. I post the above because I feel it is extremely important for everyone, but especially those with PCA. Although this is taken from a book centered on exercise, the truths are important in ALL fazes of life. I totally believe that almost all go thru life with no idea of why they are here or who they are. Those with Pca are now given the oportunity to totally examine their past ideas which have never worked, and to look at new ideas and ways of being. This is a time of ultimate change. The world and the USA will never be the same. I say it is time for all to throw out all the old religions, the old way of being, and look for new ways to live. It must be obvious by now that what has been happening is NOT working and NEVER will work. This is the gift of Pca. You have NOTHING to lose.
love, Swami Rakendra
Please summarize in a paragraph or two.
Thanks!
0
Discussion Boards
- All Discussion Boards
- 6 CSN Information
- 6 Welcome to CSN
- 121.8K Cancer specific
- 2.8K Anal Cancer
- 446 Bladder Cancer
- 309 Bone Cancers
- 1.6K Brain Cancer
- 28.5K Breast Cancer
- 397 Childhood Cancers
- 27.9K Colorectal Cancer
- 4.6K Esophageal Cancer
- 1.2K Gynecological Cancers (other than ovarian and uterine)
- 13K Head and Neck Cancer
- 6.4K Kidney Cancer
- 671 Leukemia
- 792 Liver Cancer
- 4.1K Lung Cancer
- 5.1K Lymphoma (Hodgkin and Non-Hodgkin)
- 237 Multiple Myeloma
- 7.1K Ovarian Cancer
- 61 Pancreatic Cancer
- 487 Peritoneal Cancer
- 5.5K Prostate Cancer
- 1.2K Rare and Other Cancers
- 539 Sarcoma
- 730 Skin Cancer
- 653 Stomach Cancer
- 191 Testicular Cancer
- 1.5K Thyroid Cancer
- 5.8K Uterine/Endometrial Cancer
- 6.3K Lifestyle Discussion Boards