One Breath

I breathe my first breath & I wonder,
I breathe in the breath of my Mother
I breathe in the breath of my Father,
Breathing deeply & quietly I wonder

  

I breathe in the breath of a butterfly,
I share it with my sister & brother,
Breathing in and out with a dragonfly,
I giggle & smile & remember!

  

I breathe in & out with the butterfly,
I breathe with the trees & the flowers,
I giggle & smile & remember!
It's just ONE Breath - we share it with each other!

  

Then, we honor each breath and treat it with care as
We honor Mother Earth and the breath she shares,
Now everyone sings & we honor each other and know
Its just ONE Breath and we share it with each other!

  

I breathe in with the stroke of a butterfly’s wing, and out with the wag of a tail.  I breathe in with a snake and out with an elephant and I think that’s the breath of a whale I can smell!

 

As I wag my tail with the butterfly’s wings, I breathe in and out with my Mother ...
 
 

John West
June 2021

Community of Practice to Raise Consciousness

Listen. Are you breathing just a little and calling it a life? --Mary Oliver

We are creating a ongoing community of breath based practices to raise our consciousness as we heal our body and mind.

Featured Topic: Raising Human Consciousness

Where and when?
You can learn to practice these life skills by joining our meetups from the comfort of your homes on Zoom; details follow:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/97573056064
Meeting ID: 975 7305 6064

Day of the week and time: Mondays from 7:00pm to 8:30pm (EDT).

References:
Breathing Miracles Into Being: The Linda Scotson Technique: http://www.dailygood.org/story/2559/breathing-miracles-into-being-the-linda-scotson-technique-awakin-call-editors/

Article in the Guardian: Are breathing techniques good for your health? https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2020/jul/12/are-breathing-techniques-good-for-your-health?CMP=share_btn_link

Breathing Happiness: https://youtu.be/Uvli7NBUfY4
The science of cells that never get old: https://youtu.be/2wseM6wWd74

Wim Hof, The Iceman Cometh | HUMAN Limits: https://youtu.be/q6XKcsm3dKs

Want a Better Workout? Just Breathe: https://nyti.ms/2E68LBf
Breathe. Exhale. Repeat: The Benefits of Controlled Breathing: https://nyti.ms/2ekot2Z

Breathing for Your Better Health: https://www.wsj.com/articles/breathing-for-your-better-health-1422311283?reflink=share_mobilewebshare

If Your Anxiety Makes It Hard to Breathe, Here's What a Therapist Says to Do: http://a.msn.com/0E/en-ca/BB15pCww?ocid=scu2

Community Development

When we promote the technique of deep breathing at the community level, it leads to individuals who are at peace within. Peace within leads to peace without. Indivdual wellness leads to community wellness. Individual behaviour leads to crime free community. Individuals with learning ability creates communities with awareness and prosperity.

All communities need to invest to gain these benefits is to create a culture of deep diaphragmatic breathing.

And this is not a big investmen considering the potential benefits!

Self Development

SHEN Centre for Health and Wellness is focused on a simple technique the regular use of which helps an individual up regulate our neurological control for self development, self management, general health and wellness including physical health, mental health, learning ability, social behaviour and achievement. The technique has the potential of helping us achieve any life goal we set for ourselves, It costs no money, has no side effects and needs no prerecquisites. Anybody can use it. It promises benefits all around.

All it needs is some investment in time and attention on a regular daily basis.

The technique is deep diaphragmatic breathing.

What is wrong with our ordinary breathing?

Ordinary breathing makes for ordinary lives and quality breathing makes for quality lives!

Breathe Deep for Health and Wellness

There is a form of breathing that occurs naturally in mammals in a relaxed state. It can be described as deep, diaphragmatic abdominal or rhythmic breathing.

Human beings are no exception to this natural breathing rhythm. Just notice how the abdomen of a baby rises on inhalation and falls as on exhalation as it lies on its back relaxed.

Ever present stresses and strains of life make us lose this natural relaxed rhythm and adopt a habit of shallow chest breathing. This habit of breathing becomes our ordinary breath.

Breath is vital to life. Deep diaphragmatic breath is quality breath. Ordinary breath leads to ordinary lives and quality breath leads to quality lives. Ordinary breathing may sustain life, quality breath also enhances it.

Human brain: (a) the brain stem that runs autonomic body mind behavior, and (b) the neocortex which runs our thought process and volitional behavior.

Ordinary breathing is one of the many autonomous processes that sustain life. In addition, there are autonomous mental processes that drive reactive behavior. All autonomous body mind processes, including ordinary breathing, are run by the brain stem in accordance with our emotional states.

In addition to the brain stem, mammalian brain, human included, has another part called the neocortex. The role of the neocortex is to run volitional acts and behavior. Relaxed breathing, which occurs in mammals in the absence of an external threat, is a volitional act run by the neocortex.

Fundamental requirement of acting volitionally is being aware and knowing that something specific needs to be and can be done. Thus, awareness, consciousness, knowledge, thinking, discerning, considering alternatives, deciding, willing, the generation of a volitional response to an external stimulus etc. are all the functions of the neocortex. In addition, the neo-cortex is the seat of higher emotions of selfless love and compassion whereas the limbic brain is limited to base self-centered emotions that function largely in an autonomous manner.

Of all the mammals, human beings have the most developed neocortex. Human condition is such that we let this valuable resource sit idle and unused for the simple reason that we can survive letting the limbic brain run our lives autonomously. We must volitionally train our brains to use the thinking neocortex. We can practice volitional relaxed breathing for this purpose at any time of the day or night. Breathing is the only normally autonomic life process that we can at times run volitionally.

There is ample evidence to show that engaging in volitional deep diaphragmatic breathing rhythm for as little as 15-20 minutes can lead to quality lives:

  1. It is the most efficient way to supply abundant oxygen to the body to enhance physical health,

  2. It calms the nerves and balances related hormones for better physical and mental health,

  3. It requires the neocortex to continuously attend to breathing, thus increasing the duration of deep diaphragmatic breathing amounts to an increased attention span;

  4. Training of the neocortex to pay attention to breathing also trains it to pay attention in general including our behavior making it thoughtful,

  5. Training of the neocortex to pay attention to breathing also trains it to pay attention to the working of our own minds increasing emotional intelligence self-awareness and acceptance of the others,

  6. Training of the neocortex to pay attention to breathing also trains it to pay attention and solve life problems such as poverty, habits, addictions, relationships etc.,

  7. Involvement of the neocortex in regular practice of deep breathing opens our minds to higher emotions of selfless love and compassion, and

  8. It makes us the master of our own lives rather than being swept away in the tide of autonomic mind body behavior.

    Link for training videos: http://spiritualeducation.org/library/LearningResources/tyb_videos

Cultivate Compassion Naturally

Note: pdf version of this article can be downloaded here 

"I have learned from experience that the greater part of our happiness or misery depends on our dispositions and not on our circumstances." 

~~Martha Washington

Introduction

The process of cultivation starts with the preparation of the ground, planting the seed and then nurturing the sapling that sprout to become a full grown plant and then a tree. But the cultivation of compassion is different than cultivation of produce.

Is it similar to the cultivation of the taste of honey? That is easy. All you need is exposure to it; the first experience. The result is always sweet and pleasant. But you cannot have too much honey or your mouth is too sweet too much of the time. You get tired of it. You may also develop diabetes.

Is it then similar to the cultivation of the taste of beer? The first experience of beer is invariably that of bitterness. If you do not turn away from beer after the first experience and try it again, you may start liking it. If you do not like it the second time also, you may start liking it the third time. There is a good probability that you will never return to tasting beer if you do not like it the first time, or the second time, or the third time. When you start liking it, you want to drink it over and over; the pleasantness of the resulting feeling pulls you towards it again and again. If you are not careful and lack the discipline to moderate the consumption of beer, its transitory high accompanied by an unpleasant hangover and its destructively addictiveness which starts to hurt and hurt you real bad. Then you wish that you had never tasted it.

Cultivating compassion is the cultivation of the taste of compassion. It is both like and unlike cultivation of the taste of honey and beer. The first experience may be sweet like that of honey or it may be bitter like that of beer.

If the first taste is and pleasant and sweet like that of honey, you want to keep experiencing it over and over. The taste of compassion, unlike that of honey, stays sweet and pleasant for ever without the unpleasantness of being too sweet. And it does not cause diabetes. It is unlike that of honey in its negative long term effects.

The first taste of compassion can be bitter like that of beer. Being compassionate is accompanied by a feeling of self-sacrifice. It is also accompanied by a feeling of self-fulfillment. Overall taste of bitterness or sweetness depends upon the relativity of the two feelings. Once power of the resulting feeling of self-fulfillment is tasted, you are hooked to it. You want to repeat that feeling forever and ever. Compassion is addictive like beer in its high but without its being transitory, hangovers and destructiveness.

Honey and beer are things. What is compassion? Compassion is a heartfelt feeling that seeks expression. Love too is a heartfelt feeling. Love and compassion are compatriots: perhaps one leads to the other. They both result from an implicit feeling of connectedness or oneness through a common ground of the parties involved. Universal love and compassion results from the feeling of connectedness and oneness of all beings in the universe through an explicit realization of the common ground of the universe. What and where is the heart where they originate?

To examine this question, let us look at what is a human being and how (s)he functions. It is generally understood that we humans are an integrated whole comprising of a large number of principles starting from the extremely subtle imperceptibles within to the perceptible gross body without. For the sake of understanding, we group the large number of principles in three categories of body on the concrete and macro scale exterior, spirit in the causal subtlest core, and mind as the neither gross nor subtle micro scale in the middle. The gross body is perceptible to everyone, the mind is visible to our own selves only and the spirit is invisible to everyone including ourselves. Some of us don’t believe in the spirit; whether you believe in the spirit or not is immaterial to the current discussion.

The grouping of principles called the mind is further classified into the sensory faculty located immediately on the interior of the body, next comes the set of principles called the ego, and then comes that of the intellect located just around the outside of the spiritual core. The subtlety of the integrated whole and each of the five groups of principles increases progressively from the body on the outside to the spiritual core within although each one with five discreet names may give the impression of being homogenous through their respective extents.

Let us now examine their functions in running our behavior in the outside world. Our body has got five organs of cognition and five of action. The sensory faculty is the inner driver of both perception and action. It is comprised of five senses of cognition and five of action. The cognitive senses take the information from the external organs of perception to the mind within. This input of information is called a stimulus. We are built in a way that we have to respond to every stimulus. Howsoever, our mind process this information, it creates a response which is signaled outward by our active senses to the external organs of action for execution. The sensory faculty thus communicates and liaises between our inner and the outer.

Interaction between the outer and the inner worlds is well recognized as the role of our sensory faculty. However, it has another important role which is generally overlooked. Our mind is not only responsible for running our behaviour in the outside world, it also is responsible for running our inner physiological and psychological functions that not only support our lives on a 24/7 basis, but also comprise our lives:

  1. On the physiological side, the sensory faculty is responsible for communicating the information about the state of our physiology to the control centre of the body (our brain) and the motor signals from the control centre to various physiological organs to keep them running well in order to sustain the body. We generally overlook crediting the sensory faculty for this inner working of our life support systems to keep us alive day in and day out.

  2. On the psychological side, our memory is an important source of sensory traffic. Our sense experience of the external world leave their impressions in the memory. The impressions may be of pleasantness, unpleasantness, or of fear. The storehouse of impressions lead to sensory traffic in the following three ways:

  3. If an impression happens to be pleasant, the urge to repeat and relive the associated experience sends the signal of a phantom stimulus through the sensory faculty seeking a response. If the conditions are favourable, the repetition of the experience materializes otherwise the urge remains unfulfilled and we keep on hankering for it. In its unfulfilled state, it keeps generating phantom stimulus signals repeatedly untilled quieted temporarily by a brief satiation.

  4. If an impression happens to be unpleasant, the urge to avoid the associated experience keeps on sending phantom warning signal through the sensory faculty of a real or imaginary threat of the associated experience or its likes. Such urges define our revulsions which become nightmares preventing sleep at night.

  5. We are all afraid of death; death is our biggest fear. Survive we must. In addition to the threats to survival, we are afraid of getting what we want to avoid, and not getting what we want to get. Our fears keep generating phantom stimulus signals through our sensory faculty seeking responses in terms of avoidance of hostile and threatening situations.

The sensory faculty communicates directly with our ego which receives the outer and the inner stimulus information. What is the ego? It is the storehouse of all the experiential logic developed from our prior stimuli and responses in running our life in the exterior as well as the interior world. Based upon this experience, the ego determines the actions to be taken in response to external as well as internal stimuli.

Beyond the ego lies our intellectual faculty the purpose of which is to be aware, to be conscious, know, deliberate, consider in general, consider alternatives, consider related issues, consider consequences, think, discern, determine, decide and will a response appropriate to the stimulus in it’s the prevailing context.

 Those who believe in the spirit think that it is our root cause, our causal principle at the core of our very being. It decides the nature of our being, the shape of our mind, body and our predispositions when we begin our lives. It also is considered to be the source of our intuitions and ideas which we cannot credit our mind. Everyone including those who believe or do not believe in spirit, are capable to choose how to behave, whether to think before we act or run with the flow of nature and let things happen.  This article is about our disposition and capacity to make such choices.

Let us now consider the nature and characteristics of the various faculties.

  1. The sensory faculty in general transmits the stimulus information to the ego. In some particular cases, it may by itself decide a response and send it back to the inner or the outer world for action. These responses are called reflex responses.

  2. The ego examines the stimulus for an associated immediacy or urgency. There may at times be emergencies associated with a stimulus such as threats to our very survival. If the stimulus requires and immediate response, the ego generates it by itself and sends it back to the outer or inner origin of the stimulus. It can do so because it has instantaneous access to a part of the database of prior experience, stored in conscious layers of the memory, to determine the response. No deliberation is involved in this response. Such a response is instantaneous and is classified as reactive, instinctive or emotional. If the speed of the incoming stimuli is high, ego has no time to involve the intellect in deliberating as response, because the intellect cannot act fast enough. In such a case, the situation demands that the intellect lies unused and waiting to be called upon to act. In such situations, the work load of the sensory faculty and the ego is too high to seek help from the intellect. The resulting responses are then quick and dirty.

    Because the intellect is not involved, we do not become aware of the stimuli received and the responses generated. We do things of in a state of unawareness. The behaviour of which we have no awareness is be classified as autonomous in contrast to its opposite which may be called conscious, volitional, willed or premeditated. Whether something that happened just happened or was premeditated has a big bearing in our criminal justice.

  3. When the ego decides that a stimulus does not demand an instantaneous response, it is sent to the intellect for deliberation to generate a conscious and considered response. The response is passed to the ego to be passed down to the sensory faculty to communicate to the active organs for implementation. The deliberation of the intellect may be based upon the database of prior experience stored in the fast retrievable conscious memory, or the slower sub-conscious or the slowest unconscious memory depending upon the degree of urgency required.

  4. It must be pointed out the body and each human faculty enjoys a degree of freedom. The will arrived at the level of the intellect if not binding upon the ego. The ego may accept it as such or negotiate reconsideration by the intellect. The same principle of freedom applies at the level of the sensory faculty and also the body.

  5. Those who believe in spirit may think that the spirit is the source of ideas totally unrelated with any of prior experiences. Our prior experiences guide us in the determination of our behaviour. The memory of some of those experiences lie in the instantaneously accessible surface of our memory banks, some in the not that instantaneous inner layers, and some buried deep down in the unconscious layers hard to access without appreciable focused search. What guides our response in a situation we never ever experience before? Those who believe in the spirit may say that it guides in such situations. Those who do not may say that there is nothing that have not experienced at some time or the other in our biological existence. Isn’t life an unbroken chain of biological existence from the time life started on this planet? We do not really know and understand the whole story of life and resort to belief when things get too subtle.

It is relevant to relate the psycho or psycho-spiritual structure of being human with the modern neurophysiological structure.

In today’s scientific understanding, our central nervous system is the physiological correlate of our mind with the Individual faculties of the mind having their physiological correlates in the central nervous system.

The function of sensory faculty is performed by the nerves. Nerves are of two types: the sensory nerves and the motor nerves. The sensory nerves perform the function of the cognitive senses in sending information to the brain and the motor nerves perform the function of the active senses in taking the response signals from the brain to their destination, muscles for behavior in the external world and inner organs of the body to run inner physiological or psychological functions.

Some of the information and response signals are somatic while the others are autonomic requiring somatic and autonomic nerves. Somatic responses are generated by our brain in answer to our stimuli from the external world of which we are generally aware. The autonomic responses are generated in by the brain in answer to the information sent from our inner world by our life support organs in our body or our conscious or sub-conscious memory of past experiences. We are completely unaware of the physiological stimuli to which our brain must respond in order to exercise proper control on our life support systems for us to survive. We may be partially conscious or unaware of the phantom stimuli originating from our memory. Our behavior in the external world is determined by the flow of signals in our somatic nerves and the survival of our body depends upon the flow of signals through our autonomic nervous system.

The autonomic nervous system have two divisions, one is called sympathetic and the other is called parasympathetic. The sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system is activated when immediacy and urgency are required to run things at a fast clip and the parasympathetic division is activated to calm things down when time is not of essence.

Let us now turn our attention to the structure of the brain. The brain exercises control over our external and internal behavior using two of its functional regions.

One such region is called the limbic brain which is located on top of the spine to which the nerves directly connect. There are various anatomic parts included in the limbic system the most important of which are the two amygalae. The limbic system in general and the amygdale in particular are responsible to deal with time sensitive emotional and instinctive stimuli requiring immediate and urgent responses.

The other significant region of the brain is called the neo-cortex. The function of the neo-cortex is intellectual in nature to think, know, understand, consider, discern and decide. This is a slow acting function needed only when immediacy and urgency of time is not an issue. Consciousness, mindfulness, awareness, sense perception, language, love and compassion are also in the domain of the neo-cortex. Only mammals have the neo-cortex and it is present in the human brain in its most developed form. A characteristic of female mammals is to nurse their offspring with milk produced by their mammary glands out of love for the new born.

The nerves wisely connect to the limbic brain where the motor nerves terminate while the sensory nerves connect through it to the neo-cortex so the limbic brain can respond before the neo-cortex. At times the limbic brain responds even before the neo-cortex becomes aware of the incoming stimuli. Termination of the motor nerves at the limbic brain enables it to negotiate the response generated by the neo-cortex with a power to veto the considered response generated by it by failing to transmit the response to the motor nerves.

Thus the limbic brain acts as the physiological correlate of the ego and the neo-cortex that of the faculty of the intellect. The slow intellectual activity of the neo-cortex necessarily slows our behavior down by activating the parasympathetic division of our autonomic system and reducing the activity of the sympathetic branch. On the other hand, fast instinctive and emotional activity of the limbic brain increases the activity of the sympathetic division of the autonomous nervous system and decreases that of the parasympathetic. The activity of the limbic brain is associated with the activity of the sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system and that of the neo-cortex with the parasympathetic division.

Human condition is such that we are by and large predisposed to connect with our limbic brain much more than to the neo-cortex. Our sensory load of rapid stimuli demanding quick response keeps the limbic and sympathetic activity at a high level with accompanying reduction of the parasympathetic activity. This is so primarily because of the relationship of the limbic brain with the inner stimuli from the instinctive autonomous physiological life support functions and our hankerings, revulsions and fears resulting from our pleasant, unpleasant and painful experiences in the physical world.

What is the problem if we have a high limbic activity resulting in high sympathetic activity? High sympathetic activity is what stresses us out. On the other hand, involvement of the neo-cortex increases the parasympathetic activity and has a calming effect which reduces the stress. Both the feelings of stress and of calm are biochemical in nature: sympathetic activity causes the release of stress hormones in our bodies and parasympathetic activity causes the release of rest and digest hormones. These chemicals accumulate in our bodies and their relative proportion determines how the neurons in our brains connect which decides our predisposition to behave thoughtfully using our neo-cortex or in an autonomic fashion using our neo-cortex.

The brain is not the final authority that decides our behavior because we can decide to alter the neural circuits which predispose it in its choice of the limbic brain or the neo-cortex in response generation. It was once considered that the neural circuits once developed were there forever. Modern research has conclusively shown that brain circuits are not hard wired but modifiable by altering the hormonal chemistry of our bloodstream. And we can train our brains to do that. Thus our brains can reprogram themselves if we so wish. Neurophysiology does not attempt to answer the question of who, what and where that “Real I” is that can have the brain reprogram itself. 

Each one of us has seven endocrine glands located along the spine; six are common to men and women and one different. These glands secrete specific hormones and the mix of the different hormones define the neural circuitry that the brain uses to generate responses to different stimuli.

Simply speaking, two types of hormones are relevant in the current context, the first type are what keep us engaged in quick and dirty mindless activity, commonly called stress hormones and the other that keep us calm and collected, called rest and digest hormones. The relative proportion of the two expressed as a ratio, stress hormones/rest and digest hormones, is significant in determining how the neural circuitry predisposes a brain to respond. Generally speaking, if this ratio is low, time is of less importance and the neo-cortex is likely to be involved in generating a thoughtful response. On the contrary, if the ratio is high, the limbic brain generates a quick response without any thought being given to it.

This predisposition can of course be over-ridden by the activity of the nerves system. If the brain is predisposed to take it easy and an urgent situation causes high activity of the sympathetic sensory nerves, the limbic system will jump into action to generate a fast response through the sympathetic motor nerves. On the contrary, if the brain is predisposed to respond quickly and the stimulus is not of any urgency, the sensory signal will flow through the parasympathetic nerves, the limbic brain will step aside and the neo-cortex will be permitted to generate a considered response and send it through the parasympathetic motor nerves.

How then can we choose to have the program reprogram rewire its neural circuitry for a considered behavior? The best answer seems to be that we take the time to train the brain to use the neo-cortex in running the activity that it has runs any way on a 24/7 basis. What is that activity? Our life support system has to run 24/7. We have to breathe, our blood has to circulate in our arteries and veins, the heart has to beat, food has to metabolize, etc. These activities generate a lot of nervous traffic and the brain has to continuously deal with it. The faster the speed of these autonomic activities, the more the sensory load and more the limbic activity and the more the activity of the sympathetic nerves. On the contrary, the slower the speed of these autonomic activities, the lesser the sensory load and the more the activity of the parasympathetic ones.

Activity of the sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system is known to cause the endocrine system of glands to tip the hormonal balance in favor of stress hormones by increasing their secretion. On the other hand, the activity of the parasympathetic division is known to cause the secretion of the rest and digest hormones. This understanding leads to a strategy of consciously training the brain to program itself for a predisposition of neo-cortical involvement in running conscious behavior. The strategy lies in conscious practice of running a normally autonomic life support function at a rate less than its ordinary rate.

Breathing is an essential life support function running 24/7 that lends itself to be used in the suggested manner. It can be used by itself or as a part of your daily meditation. This is perhaps the reason that ancient wisdom traditions worldwide use slow and rhythmic breathing in a posture conducive to maximizing the lung capacity as the physiological base of meditation.

Conscious focus on a subject of thought involves the use of the neo-cortex. If the focus is uninterrupted by any internal and external distractions, the limbic activity is eliminated except for the autonomic body functions which must go on to sustain life. We can learn even to minimize the limbic requirements of the autonomic body functions if we combine with focus on an object of thought a practice of regulated deep breathing; breathing normally being an autonomic body function run by our limbic brain, including it in our conscious regulation further reduces the limbic activity. It is the activity of the limbic brain excluding that of the neocortex that keeps the nervous system in a state of excessive sympathetic agitation typical of our human condition which keeps us fragmented.

Our ancient seers prescribed this heritage of a comprehensive strategy to deal with our human condition of selfishness that keeps us fragmented. They experientially understood the connection of the body and the mind and used the body to transform the mind by attenuating the ego. The limbic brain being the physiological correlate of the ego, attenuating the ego amounts to decreasing the activity of the limbic brain to give the neocortex a chance in participate in life. Attenuating the ego unlocks the mind opening it up for undistracted one pointedness which completely silences the ego (activity of the neo-cortex in the state of cessation of the limbic brain). Maintenance of the state of one pointedness leads further to silencing of even the neocortex (intellect) amounting to a complete inner silence in which one experiences the total mystery of the unthinkable Absolute, the boundless fountain of love and compassion.

Upregulating Neurological Control of the Mind-Body: A Conceptual Model

Underlying Observations:

This model is based upon the following observations:

  • Body and mind comprise an integrated system requiring an integrated approach to the problem of human condition,

  • The brain is the controller of all life processes working through the body-mind system,

  • The brain exercises its control by responding to every sensory input it receives whether the input originates from within the body-mind complex or outside in the external world,

  • In general, an autonomic input in the unconscious or subconscious domain generates an autonomic response while only an input in the conscious domain can elicit a conscious response,

  • As any controller, the brain can be overwhelmed by the demands of the processes it controls,

  • Human brain is structured to permit self-regulation of the control demands of the mind-body processes consisting of three mutually dependent types:

    1. Autonomic life support processes in the unconscious domain running 24/7,

    2. Life related mental processes in the sub-conscious domain such as worry, anxiety, fear, phobias, complexes, likes, wants, dislikes, cravings, longings, habits, addictions, aversions, hatreds, etc. that creep up on us 24/7 minus periods, such as of deep sleep and one-pointed focus, which continually keep getting rarer and briefer, and

    3. Activities in the conscious domain arising out of conscious life involvement during waking state.

  • Mind is capable of entertaining only one conscious activity at a time,

  • Sub-conscious can move into the conscious and become volitional when our will connects with it,

  • Sub-conscious processes permit conscious control only when they move into consciousness,

  • Control demands of the sub-conscious and unconscious domains may be lumped together in an ‘inner autonomous’ group as they generally increase and decrease together with the exception of the digestion system the demands of which decrease when those of others increase and vice versa,

  • High inner autonomic demands can only accommodate low volitional commitments without overloading the nervous system,

  • Of the autonomic life support processes running 24/7, only breathing lends itself to conscious control,

  • Volume of the inner autonomous demands is much higher than that of the volitional ones,

  • Although the autonomous inner demands do not ordinarily lend themselves to conscious control, their volume makes it incumbent on us to limit their volume to prevent overwhelming the brain,

  • Autonomous demands are handled by the fast acting limbic part of the brain while the volitional ones by the slow acting neo-cortex,

  • High activity of the limbic brain results in high activity of the sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system in relation to that of the parasympathetic division,

  • An imbalance in the activity of the sympathetic division of the autonomous nervous system over the parasympathetic overloads the brain and adversely affects the immune system,

  • Repeated overloading of the brain sets in motion a run-away cycle (Figure 1) of adjusting the hormonal mix to rewire the brain to meet higher and higher demands,

Figure 1: The diagram on the left shows how high inner demand generated by the unconscious and sub-conscious body-mind processes positions the brain to be revved up for meeting continued high demands. On the other hand, the diagram on the right shows how such demands lowered by the practice of conscious deep breathing or one pointed focus on a chosen subject results in predisposing the brain for meeting low demands. It is easier to engage in predominantly physical deep breathing then engaging the mind in one pointed focus.

  • The brain restructured to meet continuously high demands deals with all inputs, whether of the autonomic or volitional nature, at high speeds stressing the body-mind beyond its coping capacity,

  • Continuously stressed body-mind leads to poor physical and mental health, bad behaviour and poor intellectual and learning abilities with consequential social and economic repercussions,

  • The original disposition of our body-mind depends upon the neurological structure of the brain at birth inherited genetically from the parents and environmentally from the time of conception onwards,

  • Upregulation of the neurological control of life processes begins with a conscious reduction of the inner autonomous demands of the body-mind using breath as their only available handle,

  • Regulating respiration is noted to regulate all inner autonomous processes of the body-mind affecting our conscious disposition,

  • Volitionally slowing the rate of breathing increases the activity of the parasympathetic division of the autonomic over that of the sympathetic reversing the reactive disposition of the brain caused by the high activity of the sympathetic division of the autonomic over that of the parasympathetic,

  • High activity of the sympathetic division of the autonomic over that of the parasympathetic makes for quick, reflexive, reactive and unconsidered response for all stimuli including those originating from the external world, and

  • Conscious regulation of the inner autonomic demands also modulates those originating consciously in our own volition.

  • Figure 2 diagrammatically shows the practical application of the conceptual model.

Figure 2: Graphical depiction of the practical application of the conceptual model for self-regulating neurological control of the mind-body complex for health, wellness, learning and intellectual ability.

Self-Regulation and Personality Types

If we quantify control demands broadly as high and low, we can have four possible combinations of the two groups of them. Each of the four combinations broadly defines a personality type into which we can move with the subject self-regulation. In this regard, we must keep in mind that individuals in the same class can be markedly different from each other.

  1. Low Autonomic and Low Volitional: We may be born with this kind of disposition or somehow develop it later. Individuals with this dispensation lack any significant ambition. Laziness and sloth set in and life becomes listless and self-centered without significant volitional involvement with others and the environment. Self- centeredness prevents human connection with others in the environment. Slow deep and diaphragmatic breathing for a few minutes a day can open the thought process to the higher perception of mutual connections and dependence.

  2. High Autonomic and Low Volitional: This combination is the most common human condition.  Inner autonomous demands keep us aroused to an extent that there is little physical energy, psychic energy or clarity of thought left for successful life involvement. Our brains react primarily instinctively or reactively rather than respond with consideration. Expectations are generally unmet making us frustrated, unhappy, and unhealthy. The most direct way to help this human condition is to engage in slow deep and diaphragmatic breathing for a few minutes every day to develop the habit of slow and rhythmic breathing. Once such a habit is established, one can respond to the volitional demands more effectively. 

  3. Low Autonomic and High Volitional: This is the most desirable combination typical of high achievers. Such human beings generally are calm and considerate. They live in the moment without being bothered by the sub-conscious mind. The result if efficiency and success in whatever they undertake. Brazenness and carelessness can follow in the wake of success if care is not exercised with preventive measures. One needs to keep practicing deep breathing as a measure to prevent the lapse into the less desirable combination of autonomic and the volitional.

  4. High Autonomic and High Volitional: This is the least desirable and highest risk combination. It is unsustainable as it is most likely to keep the brain revved up overloading the nervous system. Life is taken over by limbic control to the virtual elimination of the intellectual function of the neo-cortex.

Harnessing the Iceberg

"Ideas we don't know we have, have us".

Psychologist James Hillman

"Wholeness -- a state in which consciousness and the unconscious work together in harmony."

Psychologist Daryl Sharp

Figure-1 shows human mind as an iceberg which psychology aptly uses as a metaphor for it. The iceberg floats in the ocean with only a small part visible above the surface with the rest partially visible or invisible below it. The visible part above the surface of the ocean represents the conscious part of mind. The part partially visible immediately below the surface represents the sub-conscious part and the totally invisible bottom part of the iceberg deep below the surface represents the unconscious part of mind.Two sets of red arrows in red represent  interactivity back and forth between two pairs of adjoining contents of mind.

Content of human mind exists in three interacting parts: conscious, subconscious and unconscious. Only a small part of it is conscious with the rest divided into subconscious and unconscious. Parts of the subconscious content randomly move into conscious and conscious content moves into subconscious domain. Similarly parts of the unconscious move into subconsciopus and vice versa.

As noted above, ordinarily in waking and dreaming states there is a degree of ongoing interactivity between the conscious and the subconscious, and the subconscious and the unconsciousness parts of mind.  Some content of the conscious moves into the subconscious and that of the subconscious into the conscious. Similarly, some content of the subconscious keeps moving into the unconscious and that of the unconscious into the subconscious. We cannot excercise any control on this interactivity. Anything can pop into and out of our consciousness randomly at any given time making it difficult to pay attention to a specific subject for a significant amount of time. For this reason, mind is compared with a monkey that keeps jumping incessantly from one branch to another.

Whatever happens in our bodies or whatever we do in the external world begins with a conscious or subconscious perception in the mind. Our mind is the controller of our bodies and our behaviour in life. Brain is its physiological correlate. All controllers including our brains work with a feedback loop. When the controller perceives the need to do something, it does that in response to the perception and when it perceives that it has done enough of it, it stops.

A unit of perception is called a stimulus. We must do something in response to it. We may react or respond. We simply are built in that way, there must be a reaction or a response to acknowledge every stimulus whether it is in conscious or subconscious domain. Sensory nerves transmit the stimulus to the brain and motor nerves transmit our reaction or response to the appropriate parts of the body to acknowledge it. If the stimulus is subconscious, our reaction is also subconscious and immediate: without any conscious consideration or thought. If the stimulus is in conscious domain, we may react subconsciously or respond with conscious consideration. The term reaction is used to indicate subconscious activity and response for the conscious.

Various body functions such as beating of the heart, breathing, metabolism, etc. run 24/7 to sustain life. All of them must work autonomously or unconsciously all the time we are alive. They generally do not lend themselves to conscious control. The only exception to this rule is breathing which ordinarily runs unconsciously but can be run under our conscious control.

Heart pulsation is a typical example of a body function which works only in an autonomous or unconscious manner. When our brains receive a subconscious signal about the availability of oxygenated blood to be pumped, it reacts subconsciously in sending a motor signal to the heart muscle to pulse. All the cardiac pulsations happen autonomously without the possibility of our direct and conscious interference.

On the other hand, consider breathing; when the brain receives a subconscious signal through the sensory nerves about inadequate oxygen and excessive carbon dioxide in the lungs, it is a stimulus for it to subconsciously react with a motor signal for the lungs and associated muscles to breathe out. When the brain subconsciously perceives that the lungs do not have enough air in them, we subconsciously react to it by breathing in. When we decide to run the breathing function consciously, the stimuli to breathe in and to breathe out are in conscious domain and so are the responses.

We just examined physical survival related activities of our mind within; let us now look at life in the external world and related mental processes. We spend much of our time dealing with subconscious feelings broadly classified as (1) likes, wants, desires, cravings, longings, habits, addictions, etc., (2) dislikes,  aversions, hatreds, etc., (3) fears, worry, anxiety, phobias, obsessions and the like, and (4) complexes, feelings of finitude, helplessness and inadequaccies, depression, anger etc. These subconscious feelings seem never to leave us alone as they creep up on us almost 24/7. In addition, we need to look after involvements in the conscious domain during waking states. These involvements include business, professions, duties that we take on ourselves, school, learning, leisure, sports, family pursuits etc.

Thus, our mind true to its metaphor of the iceberg spends most of its energy in dealing with the unconscious and the subconscious pursuits which because of the immediacy, urgency and unpredictability of its nature takes precedence over the conscious pursuits which to an extent are subject to planning and procrastination.

Which kind of pursuits should we prefer to engage in for full, healthy, successful and meaningful life? The obvious answer to this question is that we should attend to the conscious ones. Will that work?

The answer to this question becomes obvious if we ask this question, "What kind of stimuli then are critical for full, healthy, successful and meaningful life?" Isn't it obvious that we should first manage the unconscious, then the subconscious and finally attend to the conscious if we want to ensure success? Failing to do so is risking confrontation with the interests of the unconscious and the subconscious parts of the mind represented by the submerged part of the glacier which is humongous in comparison with the visible part representing the conscious. Submerged glaciers are known to be responsible for many a shipwreck.

Figure-2 shows stage 1 of deliberate deep breathing which adds another channel of interactivity, shown in gold, from the conscious to the unconscious, from the unconscious to the subconscious and then back to the conscious. This channel tends to replace the interactivity of the ordinary mind shown in red.

Ordinarily breathing is an autonomic process running 24/7 in the control of our unconscious mind in accordance with our emotional state of which we hardly are aware. Deliberate deep diaphragmatic breathing run by our conscious mind puts it in control of the unconscious. The unconscious mind under the influence of the conscious interacts with the subconscious mind which so influenced then interacts with the conscious preventing random thoughts of the subconscious from  popping into consciousness. Figure 2 shows this channel of interactivity superimposed by deep breathing in gold. This initially superimposed channel gradually replaces the ordinary channel of interactivity.

Figure-3 shows stage 2 of the practice of deep breathing. Notice how the channel of mental interactivity imposed by deliberate deep breathing gradually becomes the dominant channel reducing the extent of the ordinary channel shown by two sets of arrows. The reduction in the intensity of the color of these arrows from Figure-2 to Figure-3 is intended to indicate this reduction.

The reduction or elimination of stray thoughts from conscious mind reduces or eliminates related nervous traffic calming the nervous system. Calmer nerves help us to pay attention and think in a focused way to learn, solve our life problems and adjust our behaviour in the community and family in addition to prevent physical and mental disorders.

Figure-4 shows stage 3 of deep breathing. Notice complete elimination of one set of arrows of ordinary mental interactivity and a significant dimming of the other. At this stage of the practice of deep breathing, random consciousness of the subconscious is totally eliminated.

Regular practice of deep breathing for a few minutes a day over a period of time changes our disposition from reactive to thoughtfulness. In addition, it makes us healthier, happier and in harmony with the family, community and the environment.

Figure-5 shows stage 4 of deep breathing. Notice how we can sustain the elimination of random popping into consciousness of the content of the subconscious mind with reduced mental and physical effort of deep breathing.

Regular practice of deep breathing is a self management tool the use of which up regulates our control system for health, happiness and oneness.

Figure-6 shows stage 5 of deep breathing. Notice how we can sustain the elimination of random popping into consciousness of the content of the subconscious mind with even further reduced mental and physical effort of deep breathing. At this stage, deep breathing is well established as a habit.

 

Figure-7 shows the ultimate achievable with the practice of deep breathing. This presents an ideal for which to strive. There is no effort of deep breathing and no content of the conscious mind. Here one just is in the realization that it is not just brain or mind that runs the process of breathing that keeps us alive. That something, although unseen, is the real animator of me, you and the whole universe.