I started on
this principal conjecture seven years ago when no voices in the public sphere
even guessed at this possibility. It is
now turning out to be far more real than I ever expected.
The mind is
capable of retasking our cellular toolkit.
Better it is a serious capability not to be taken lightly. What confuses us is the powerful role of the
subconscious itself. That part of our
consciousness happens to be also conservative as well. Thus it calculates best advantage first.
In the
meantime, anyone facing illness related stress needs to take up the practice of
meditation as a matter of course and learn to create stillness and the implied
mindfulness.
Scientists
Finally Show How Your Thoughts Can Cause Specific Molecular Changes To Your
Genes
With evidence growing that training the mind or
inducing certain modes of consciousness can have positive health effects,
researchers have sought to understand how these practices physically affect the
body. A new study by researchers in Wisconsin, Spain, and France reports the
first evidence of specific molecular changes in the body following a period of
intensive mindfulness practice.
The study investigated the effects of a day of
intensive mindfulness practice in a group of experienced meditators, compared
to a group of untrained control subjects who engaged in quiet non-meditative
activities. After eight hours of mindfulness practice, the meditators showed a
range of genetic and molecular differences, including altered levels of
gene-regulating machinery and reduced levels of pro-inflammatory genes,
which in turn correlated with faster physical recovery from a stressful
situation.
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first
paper that shows rapid alterations in gene expression within subjects
associated with mindfulness meditation practice,” says study author Richard J.
Davidson, founder of the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds and the William
James and Vilas Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
“Most interestingly, the changes were observed in genes that are the current targets of anti-inflammatory and analgesic drugs,” says Perla Kaliman, first author of the article and a researcher at the Institute of Biomedical Research of Barcelona, Spain (IIBB-CSIC-IDIBAPS), where the molecular analyses were conducted.
The study was published in the Journal
Psychoneuroendocrinology.
Mindfulness-based
trainings have shown beneficial effects on inflammatory
disorders in prior clinical studies and are endorsed by the American Heart
Association as a preventative intervention. The new results provide a
possible biological mechanism for therapeutic effects.
Gene Activity Can Change
According To Perception
According to Dr. Bruce Lipton, gene activity
can change on a daily basis. If the perception in your mind is reflected in
the chemistry of your body, and if your nervous system reads and interprets the
environment and then controls the blood’s chemistry, then you can literally
change the fate of your cells by altering your thoughts.
In fact, Dr. Lipton’s research illustrates that
by changing your perception, your mind can alter the activity of your genes and
create over thirty thousand variations of products from each gene. He gives
more detail by saying that the gene programs are contained within the nucleus
of the cell, and you can rewrite those genetic programs through changing your
blood chemistry.
In the simplest terms, this means that we need
to change the way we think if we are to heal cancer. “The function of the mind
is to create coherence between our beliefs and the reality we experience,” Dr.
Lipton said. “What that means is that your mind will adjust the body’s
biology and behavior to fit with your beliefs. If you’ve been told you’ll
die in six months and your mind believes it, you most likely will die in six
months. That’s called the nocebo effect, the result of a negative thought,
which is the opposite of the placebo effect, where healing is mediated by a
positive thought.”
That dynamic points to a three-party system:
there’s the part of you that swears it doesn’t want to die (the conscious
mind), trumped by the part that believes you will (the doctor’s prognosis
mediated by the subconscious mind), which then throws into gear the chemical
reaction (mediated by the brain’s chemistry) to make sure the body conforms to
the dominant belief. (Neuroscience has recognized that the subconscious
controls 95 percent of our lives.)
Now what about the part that doesn’t want to
die–the conscious mind? Isn’t it impacting the body’s chemistry as well? Dr.
Lipton said that it comes down to how the subconscious mind, which contains our
deepest beliefs, has been programmed. It is these beliefs that ultimately cast
the deciding vote.
“It’s a complex situation,” said Dr. Lipton.
People have been programmed to believe that they’re victims and that they have
no control. We’re programmed from the start with our mother and father’s
beliefs. So, for instance, when we got sick, we were told by our parents that
we had to go to the doctor because the doctor is the authority concerning our
health. We all got the message throughout childhood that doctors were the
authority on health and that we were victims of bodily forces beyond our
ability to control. The joke, however, is that people often get better while on
the way to the doctor. That’s when the innate ability for self-healing kicks
in, another example of the placebo effect.
Mindfulness Practice
Specifically Affects Regulatory Pathways
The results of Davidson’s study show a
down-regulation of genes that have been implicated in inflammation. The
affected genes include the pro-inflammatory genes RIPK2 and COX2 as well as
several histone deacetylase (HDAC) genes, which regulate the activity of other
genes epigenetically by removing a type of chemical tag. What’s more, the
extent to which some of those genes were downregulated was associated with
faster cortisol recovery to a social stress test involving an impromptu speech
and tasks requiring mental calculations performed in front of an audience and
video camera.
Biologists have suspected for years that some
kind of epigenetic inheritance occurs at the cellular level. The different
kinds of cells in our bodies provide an example. Skin cells and brain cells
have different forms and functions, despite having exactly the same DNA. There
must be mechanisms–other than DNA–that make sure skin cells stay skin cells
when they divide.
Perhaps surprisingly, the researchers say, there
was no difference in the tested genes between the two groups of people at the
start of the study. The observed effects were seen only in the meditators
following mindfulness practice. In addition, several other DNA-modifying genes
showed no differences between groups, suggesting that the mindfulness practice
specifically affected certain regulatory pathways.
The key result is that meditators experienced
genetic changes following mindfulness practice that were not seen in the
non-meditating group after other quiet activities — an outcome providing proof
of principle that mindfulness practice can lead to epigenetic alterations of
the genome.
Previous studies in rodents and in people have
shown dynamic epigenetic responses to physical stimuli such as stress, diet, or
exercise within just a few hours.
“Our genes are quite dynamic in their expression
and these results suggest that the calmness of our mind can actually have a
potential influence on their expression,” Davidson says.
“The regulation of HDACs and inflammatory
pathways may represent some of the mechanisms underlying the therapeutic
potential of mindfulness-based interventions,” Kaliman says. “Our findings set
the foundation for future studies to further assess meditation strategies for
the treatment of chronic inflammatory conditions.”
Subconscious Beliefs Are Key
Too many positive thinkers know that thinking
good thoughts–and reciting affirmations for hours on end–doesn’t always bring
about the results that feel-good books promise.
Dr. Lipton didn’t argue this point, because
positive thoughts come from the conscious mind, while contradictory negative
thoughts are usually programmed in the more powerful subconscious mind.
“The major problem is that people are aware of
their conscious beliefs and behaviors, but not of subconscious beliefs and
behaviors. Most people don’t even acknowledge that their subconscious mind is
at play, when the fact is that the subconscious mind is a million times more
powerful than the conscious mind and that we operate 95 to 99 percent of our
lives from subconscious programs.
“Your subconscious beliefs are working either
for you or against you, but the truth is that you are not controlling your
life, because your subconscious mind supersedes all conscious control. So when
you are trying to heal from a conscious level–citing affirmations and telling
yourself you’re healthy–there may be an invisible subconscious program that’s
sabotaging you.”
The power of the subconscious mind is elegantly
revealed in people expressing multiple personalities. While occupying the
mind-set of one personality, the individual may be severely allergic to
strawberries. Then, in experiencing the mind-set of another personality, he or
she eats them without consequence.
The new science of epigenetics promises that
every person on the planet has the opportunity to become who they really are,
complete with unimaginable power and the ability to operate from, and go for,
the highest possibilities, including healing our bodies and our culture and
living in peace.
Article sources:
wisc.edu
brucelipton.com
ts-si.org
brucelipton.com
ts-si.org
Michael Forrester is a spiritual counselor and
is a practicing motivational speaker for corporations in Japan, Canada and the
United States.
http://www.tunedbody.com/scientists-finally-show-thoughts-can-cause-specific-molecular-changes-genes/
1 comment:
I am grateful that this science is finally catching up with metaphysics, which goes back to the 1800s. We metaphysicians have know this forever!
Post a Comment