liveonearth (
liveonearth) wrote2008-05-28 07:17 am
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Entry tags:
- brain,
- core,
- dopamine,
- emotion,
- meditation,
- movies,
- nervous system,
- neurotransmitters,
- pain,
- ptsd,
- religion,
- spine,
- spirit,
- stress,
- yoga
Synthesis Tangents
Practiced yoga at the school this morning. Was up before 6am. Mind is going. I believe that there is a biological link between the strength of the core and the experience of BEING. Notice how all the really brilliant, centered people all sit up so straight? Walk so tall? Having a strong core and an aligned spine links, I think, into our limbic systems, into the most primitive part of our brains. Walking resets the emotions. Terry male says I have an overactive amygdala which is what causes me to have religious experiences. Brons says the amygdala is all about fear and aversion, anxiety, fear conditioning, antinociception and autonomic adjustments. Religious experiences, fear and aversion. I wonder where awe falls into that mix.
More later on pain and pain suppression pathways in the brain!
Yoga helps to prepare me for meditation. It gets the kinks out so that I can actually sit, fold my legs and sit up straight and strong. Having my spine straight makes a big difference in my ability to focus. Mind you, straight doesn't mean straight, it means naturally, optimally curved with no vertebrae out of alignment. The spine to the midbrain to the limbic system: there are reasons why this works. I am trying to grasp it. Understanding and execution may happen at the same time.
At the other end of the spectrum, there's PTSD (Brons version). The cingulate decides of a stimulus is worth responding to, it serves as a judge and selects certain signals to emphasize, and deletes the others. When a person has excess norepinephrine (NE), which I presume from the notes is the case with PTSD sufferers, the excess NE (produced by the locus ceruleus which is predominantly sympathetic in nature) DAMPENS THE ACTIVITY OF THE CINGULATE. Ie, it shuts down one's filter that decides if a stimulus is important or not. A stimulus can then cause an uncontrolled autonomic and arousal response: it can matter too much, and cause one's heart to race. This is exactly what I experience. This is why I cannot sit through very frightening or violent movies. My body gets so ramped up that I absolutely must either fight or flee, and I choose to flee. I have walked out of so many movies that other people can sit right through, doesn't bother them a bit. But if I stay for a whole movie of that nature, my sleep will be disturbed, and I will not calm down for an entire day. It is unpleasant, and so I do not do it. But I wonder how I can treat excess NE? Perhaps meditation will help.
More later on pain and pain suppression pathways in the brain!
Yoga helps to prepare me for meditation. It gets the kinks out so that I can actually sit, fold my legs and sit up straight and strong. Having my spine straight makes a big difference in my ability to focus. Mind you, straight doesn't mean straight, it means naturally, optimally curved with no vertebrae out of alignment. The spine to the midbrain to the limbic system: there are reasons why this works. I am trying to grasp it. Understanding and execution may happen at the same time.
At the other end of the spectrum, there's PTSD (Brons version). The cingulate decides of a stimulus is worth responding to, it serves as a judge and selects certain signals to emphasize, and deletes the others. When a person has excess norepinephrine (NE), which I presume from the notes is the case with PTSD sufferers, the excess NE (produced by the locus ceruleus which is predominantly sympathetic in nature) DAMPENS THE ACTIVITY OF THE CINGULATE. Ie, it shuts down one's filter that decides if a stimulus is important or not. A stimulus can then cause an uncontrolled autonomic and arousal response: it can matter too much, and cause one's heart to race. This is exactly what I experience. This is why I cannot sit through very frightening or violent movies. My body gets so ramped up that I absolutely must either fight or flee, and I choose to flee. I have walked out of so many movies that other people can sit right through, doesn't bother them a bit. But if I stay for a whole movie of that nature, my sleep will be disturbed, and I will not calm down for an entire day. It is unpleasant, and so I do not do it. But I wonder how I can treat excess NE? Perhaps meditation will help.
no subject
I've been working on my core strength as well. After three kids, and not much core strength to begin with, it is a challenge to just sit and stand correctly. I really have lost my core in so many ways :(. Your words made sense to me.
I do my daily walk for about a half an hour through uneven terrain a little more slowly, with good posture. I do it like I have a book on my head. Is this a good idea in your experience? Maybe I should do sun salutes again every day again. The convalecence from my gallbladder surgery didn't help at all! I was sort of lopsided for a while!
New icon. Me getting down with the bi-polar bear. Can I hear a woot woot?
no subject
I think the book on the head walking is a good idea. Titties up! Belly in. All that. I hope you're recovering well .... a strong core is a good project at any time in life, methinks. And walking is a good way to warm it up and keep it going. So good on ya.