"THINKING is healing the brain." Use it or lose it. That is common sense now if I say it this way. The stories he tells relate to me.
The 7-year coma will be 15 years in Dec 2017. I am not comatose. "Vegetative" is an open-eye coma. I am vegetative. - Angela
ANGELA RONSON PART 2: CONSCIOUSNESS HEALS THE BRAIN
SPIRITUAL NEUROSCIENCE
Melvin L Morse MD (spiritualscientific.com)
There has a been a quiet brain revolution
going on in neuroscience, in the past ten years, one that will change
everything we know about spirituality and the brain. While the general
public still is mired in the “skeptic vrs believer debate” most
prominently promoted by Michael Shermer (http://www.michaelshermer.com/),
most people are completely unaware that science has already embraced
spirituality. In my opinion, spirituality can no longer be understood
unless practitioners and the general public are willing to understand
the new spiritual neuroscience. As physician Robert Lanza stated (http://www.robertlanza.com/)
in American Scientist in 2007, time, space, and this material reality
are simply tools of the brain to allow our conscious self to interact
with this reality. He states that the current scientific evidence
states that time “reboots” after our brains die (and we then get a new
brain to begin a new life). Obviously science and spirituality has
moved far beyond the tired “skeptic v believer debate” that seems to
still play out in the Wall Street Journal and the major television
networks.
THE CASE OF ANGELA RONSON: NOT YOUR FATHER'S NEUROSCIENCE
Angela Ronson suffered a major AVM bleed
and stroke with massive injury to her entire brain. She was in a coma,
semi-coma, and ultimately the “locked in syndrome” for a total of 7
years. Yet she has made a full neuro-psychiatric recovery, with her
personality and memories basically the same as prior to her massive
brain injury. She speaks, can use her arms and fingers, and is even
starting to walk.
How is this possible? If we knew for sure,
we would also know the answer to the great mystery of the near death
experience, which is: how can patients with near death experiences have
any memories or experiences at all! After all, their brains are dying or
let’s face it, actually dead for a brief period of time. If Robert
Lanza is correct, then consciousness comes first, and somehow being
brushed with the divine and the universal knowledge of cosmic
consciousness (or the Mind of the All) permits the brain to rewire and
heal itself.
When I went to medical school, I was taught
that the brain creates consciousness. Our personality and memories
were thought to be entirely dependent on brain activity. Furthermore,
the brain was thought to not be able to regenerate new brain cells or
heal itself in any ways. We are ominously warned to never drink alcohol
(which I don’t) as each glass of beer could kill off hundreds of brain
cells that could never be replaced.
Then I took an elective with the great Dr.
Montcastle who was removing half a patient’s brain in an operation that
took a few hours. He did this as a last resort to attempt to cure
intractable seizures. I asked him, “well, what about their
personalities, their ability to walk, to talk? Aren’t brain functions
localized to specific areas of the brain?” He laughed merrily and told
me not to believe everything I learned in medical school. Remember, he
reminded me, “half of what you know isn’t true, but unfortunately we
don’t know which half is wrong!”. Dr. Montcastle was one of a now
departed breed of Neurosurgeons who seemingly gleefully removed huge
areas of the brain in an effort to cure it, in defiance of what
Neurology textbooks claimed was true. He would cheerfully laugh “hell,
boy (that was me) what the F*&k do they (Neurologists) know?”.
Dr. Montcastle was correct. As a medical
student I took care of many patients who had an entire half of their
brain removed. They had the same personality, the same memories, and
really lost very little function or skills from their pre-operative
selves. For the most part, you could only tell that they had half their
brain removed by administering sophisticated neuro-psychiatric tests.
Anyone could spend a day with them and be unaware they had had half
their brain removed. Perhaps they walked with a slight limp. Yet this
operation took only a few hours, and astonishingly, somehow it had very
little effect on them.
I later did an elective at the Solomon
Snyder Department of Neuroscience, where much of modern functional
neurogenesis was discovered. Functional neurogenesis means that new
brain cells grow deep within an area of the brain called the
hippocampus, and then migrate to specific areas of the brain where they
are needed. These new brain cells then permit new functions or repair
damaged functions in the brain.
I vividly remember one of the Professors
telling us how disorienting and even scary this concept that the brain
can change itself, was to him. He said that under the old model, we had
every reason to believe that our personality, beliefs, and memories
would remain stable, as long as the brain remained stable. But now, he
said “we are discovering that thinking and experience can actually
change the brain! How unsettling. It seems to invite chaos into our
personalities, emotions, memories and our sense of self.” As Jason
Snyder PhD stated:http://www.functionalneurogenesis.com/blog/about-functional-neurogenesis/jason-snyder/ “what would the general public think if they knew that all human experience is capable of changing the brain?”. [This blog has been archived.]
Dead brains having complex near death
experiences and perceptions of other realities? Human experience and
thoughts alone actually changing the brain? New brain cells
mysteriously growing deep within the brain and knowing where to migrate
to heal the brain? And what about Angela Ronson? Her entire brain
wiped out by a stroke, and seven years later she regains consciousness
and has her same personality and memories? And why does her hair grow
so fast, and what could that have to do with it? What about researcher
Bradley Voytek (http://darb.ketyov.com/)
who titles papers “Cognitive Processes and their effect on Prefrontal
Damage”. He means THINKING is healing the brain. But wait a doggone
minute. I thought the brain caused us to think, how can thinking heal
the brain?
Yaaaaaaaaaaah. This is not the Neuroscience that I was taught at Johns Hopkins.
Yaaaaaaaaaaah. This is not the Neuroscience that I was taught at Johns Hopkins.
(To be continued)
MY BRAIN IS FULL
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