Showing posts with label Spirituality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spirituality. Show all posts

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Imagine What It Feels Like to Lose 37 Years of Emotional Baggage...


Jill Taylor was a 37-year-old Harvard-trained brain scientist when a blood vessel exploded in her brain. Through the eyes of a curious scientist, she watched her mind deteriorate whereby she could not walk, talk, read, write, or recall any of her life. Because of her understanding of the brain, her respect for the cells in her body, and an amazing mother, Jill completely recovered.

In My Stroke of Insight, she shares her recommendations for recovery and the insight she gained into the unique functions of the two halves of her brain. When she lost the skills of her left brain, her consciousness shifted away from normal reality where she felt "at one with the universe...."

...Read more here or watch Jill's amazing presentation of her story at TED below:

Sunday, September 21, 2008

What Happens When We Die? The Science of Near Death and OBEs

Last week, Time Magazine did an interesting interview with Dr. Sam Parnia from the Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York on the topic of out of body experiences (OBEs) among patients who were near death (or who actually "died" on the operating table). According to Dr. Parnia, 10 to 20% of patients who have been labeled as "clinically dead" by operating room doctors have reported that, while they were dead on the table, they floated out of their bodies and observed the details of the scene below.

Researchers at the Human Consciousness Project have just launched a 3 year experiment on the biology behind these experiences. The Human Consciousness Project is "an international consortium of multidisciplinary scientists and physicians who have joined forces to research the nature of consciousness and its relationship with the brain, as well as the neuronal processes that mediate and correspond to different facets of consciousness." The Project, composed of doctors and researchers from prestigious medical schools in Canada, the U.K., Holland, Austria, and the United States (including Weill Cornell, the University of Virginia, NYU, and many others) "will conduct the world’s first large-scale scientific study of what happens when we die and the relationship between mind and brain during clinical death."

Out of body experiences (OBEs) are, of course, not a new phenomenon. But until relatively recently they have always been relegated to the realms of occult nonsense, fantasy, and hallucination. Those having the audacity to share such an experience, believing that it actually happened to them, have usually been met with ridicule, disbelief, and disdain by most "normal" people.

Meanwhile, over 50% of Americans believe in things like guardian angels, according to a recent poll by the Baylor University Institute for Studies of Religion. So if most of us believe that angels exist, then why don't we believe that we have the ability to float out of our bodies, fly, and be conscious without functioning brains?

Food for thought.


Some people do believe this, however, and claim that they have been doing it for years, albeit with some trepidation. In Adventures Beyond the Body, William Buhlman offers a step by step guide for intrepid explorers who want to....fly. It's a guide for those who want to experience the world free of the confines of the suits that we wear on a daily basis -- to explore, with a phenomenon called astral projection, the parallel realms and worlds that lie beyond our ordinary reality. And it's all done at night. While your "body" is asleep, "you" can be flying around your house or around the world. It's just a little matter of practice, ability, and will....oh, and maybe a dash of belief.

We shall see if the scientists at the Human Consciousness Project will be able to prove that the mind can live outside of the brain in three years' time. Until then, most of us will have to content ourselves with being grounded, get on with our normal day to day realities, and forego the out of body experience and its accompanying feelings of excitement, terror, and disbelief at what is happening ---unless we read Buhlman's book that is....

....OR unless McCain wins the White House, has his own permanent OBE and leaves us Sarah Palin as president.




--Garrad Bradley
imagineatrium.com

Out-body-experiences, parallell universes, and the continuation of consciousness...all the focus of an exciting, soon to be released fiction novel, "How to Overcome the World," written by Garrad Bradley.

For more information, and to download the free graphic novel preview edition of the novel, visit howtoovercometheworld.com




Tuesday, September 16, 2008

BOOK REVIEW: "Acedia & Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life" by Kathleen Norris

This thoughtfully written part memoir/part meditative essay centers on the idea/term "acedia," a complex and interesting word imbued with layered meanings, which traces its origin back to the early and medieval church texts, in which it is described as a "noonday demon."

Norris, through a series of personal and poignant narratives, defines this timeless concept as a kind of modern-day spiritual torpor characterized by apathy and slothfulness (both on the level of the individual and society). She explores the word by relating it to many facets of her life, in particular to her personal struggles with respect to her marriage (including seeing her husband through illness and subsequently to death) and her writing life, as well as other episodic biographical sketches.

To help clarify and demystify the concept, Norris weaves select etymological and historical accounts of acedia into the fabric of her own personal contemplations on her struggles, while at the same time illustrating the trying nature of coping with this modern-day spiritual indifference and the negative after-effects of it that permeate our culture. In the end, what we get through her search for meaning is the realization of the need for a balancing act. Whether it be through reciting the psalms in silence, or finding a spiritual connection inside an ancient religious text by Evagrius (or a modern-day thinker like Kierkegaard), or through counseling and treatment with or without drugs, the balancing of all of the options one has at his or her disposal in managing acedia or depression is ultimately a personal choice.

Through the various accounts she gives of other people's experiences in dealing with acedia, Norris illustrate how important is is to pick and choose the right support system that works. Religion, psychiatry, and psychology ultimately support this idea of balance, which leaves much room for a broader exploration into this important topic.

Norris' prose is direct and honest. This, along with the inclusion of many insightful quotations from thinkers across the centuries, makes Acedia & Me an enjoyable, worthwhile read.


--Jung Hae Chae
imagineatrium.com


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