Wednesday 15 August 2018

Awakening Intuition: Using Your Mind-body Network for Insight and Healing by Mona Lisa Schulz




Families don’t just shape our lives; they also shape our bodies.

Receptivity is a function of vulnerability, not a function of power.

The word “emotion” derives from a Latin verb meaning “to move” or “move out”.  This is what our emotions do.  They move us in the direction in which we need to go in life.  They direct us toward health and fulfillment, like love and joy, or they move us away from the wrong tract, like fear and anger.  

If you’re stuck in an emotion, it’s not an emotion anymore.  It’s a problem. Being immobilized by any emotion is unhealthy, because it’s the opposite of what emotion means, which is to move on or out. 

It seems paradoxical, but more of your brain is awake when you’re asleep than when you are in a conscious state.  When you’re awake, only about 10% of your brain is firing at any given time.  But when you’re asleep, the whole thing lights up.

As one scientist defined it, intuition is “the process of reaching accurate conclusions based on inadequate information”. 

In life, if you focus on possibilities, they become probabilities.  

The frontal lobe is our grand censor.  But when we’re asleep, it’s suppressed.

We have other memories besides those in our brains.  Memories and experiences and the emotions associated with them are also encoded systematically in all the tissues and organs of our bodies.  These memories and emotions speak to us not via the rational processes of the brain, but by means of symptoms and disease in our bodily organs. 

Even while your dreams are creating various scenarios for you to pursue, your sleeping body is also trying out various ways to achieve your heart’s desires.  Although most actual movement is suppressed during sleep, the body’s neurons are still firing, often in ways that correspond to the content of your dreams.  So when you walk up to your dream person in your dream, the neurons in your legs are actually firing, and laying down a real neuronal pathway in your brain that you might be able to follow in the waking future.

When you dream, certain areas of your body can communicate information to you about the past or the present.  They send you emotional information about what needs to be changed in your life. 

Memory, in other words, is the experience of an emotion encoded and empatterned in our brains and bodies.  A memory that is unusually happy or pleasant, and not particularly stressful, is usually encoded mostly by way of the hippocampus in the temporal lobe which helps record verbal memory, or memory that can be talked about.  When an experience is painful or traumatizing, however, the hippocampus is unable to encode it because it’s suppressed by stress hormones released by the brain and body.  That’s when the amygdala, another area in the temporal lobe, steps in and takes over, encoding the experiences as a nonverbal memory, or one that can’t be expressed easily in words.  The memory is stored in body memory.  You may not consciously recollect it, but it still lives in your brain and the tissues of your body. 


We are not responsible for our illnesses, but we must be responsive to them.


Fear doesn’t just affect your emotional behavior; it also causes changes in the way your organs behave.


Trauma in the form of experiences such as child abuse, military combat, man-made or natural disasters, witnessing violence, or even lesser emotional and mental trauma increases levels of dissociation.  This means that certain emotions and memories are split off; they lie in the body tissue or areas of the brain we can’t talk about.  If not dealt with properly, they can create disease in the body.


Hearing your intuition really requires little more than simply paying attention, even to seemingly random, insignificant, irrelevant thoughts, ideas, sensations, and emotions.