Neurospeak by Robert Masters PDF
Neurospeak by Robert Masters PDF
Neurospeak by Robert Masters PDF
TRANSFORMS Y O U R B O D Y , W H I L E Y O U R E A D
Robert Masters
O u E S T BOOKS
The 'Hwosophkal Publishing House
Art
Experience
I. Title.
299'.934dc20
94-28357
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 * 94 95 96 97 98 99
This edition is printed on acid-free paper that meets the
American National Standards Institute Z39.48 Standard
CIP
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
ix
xi
W H A T IS NEUROSPEAK?
H o w TO D o THE EXERCISES
7
/1
/5
11
SELF-REGULATING BRAIN W A V E S
12
13
105
47
57
10
Afterword
21
65
71
79
95
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Lx
Acknowledgments
FOREWORD
by Marilyn Ferguson
Foreword
Yukteswar asked, "If I think I am well and that I have regained my former
weight, will it be so?" Lahiri Mahasaya responded, "It is so." At that moment Yukteswar
felt his strength and weight return.
Yogananda summarized the lesson: "Thought is the matrix of all creation,..."
Many philosophers and teachers throughout history have made this point. The power
of thought to create physical effects is at the heart of many spiritual teachings. It
is the basis for hypnosis and a host of therapies. "As a man thinketh, so he is."
"Thoughts are things."
Scientific research bears this out. Our brains and bodies are affected not only
by light and darkness, temperature and humidity, time of day, and sugar highs,
but also by cultural beliefs, holiday blues, prayer, and expectations. Our cognitions
are biochemical events with biochemical consequences. Some of the findings are
remarkable. Elderly men who took part in a Harvard study showed the reversal
of certain indices of aging after a three-day immersion experience in which they
imagined themselves to be twenty years younger.
Our brains respond to images quite literally. Imagined events have a
physical effect. If you imagine hard physical exertion, your heart will begin to race.
Experiments have shown that our inner vision is subject to the same optical illusions
as our outer. Emotions and attitudes can predispose an individual to particular
illnesses. It is well known that certain emotional profiles are likelier than others to
lead to cancer or heart disease. And whereas cancer patients are often unusually
pliable people, women with cervical cancer tend to score higher on measures of
hostility. And among men, hostility and not hard work turns out to be the culprit in
the connection between "Type A" behavior and heart disease.
Inspired by Michael Murphy's compendium of bodily transformations, The
Future of the Body, participants in two year-long experimental programs at Esalen
xii
Foreword
(1992, 1993) were able to envision, affirm, and achieve measurable goals of physical
changean increase in height, for example.
NEUROSPEAK democratizes the process. With this highly original book in
hand, we can literally sense that we have been missing a lot of the action. We become
aware of that mysterious human be-ing Clyde Ford calls "the Sage in the Temple."
Robert Masters has discovered a way to speak to the mind of the body simply and
elegantly so that the reader might experience the vast intelligence that moves us. He
teaches us a respectful tone, a way to approach the Sage. This is important, because
we already have an instinctual knowledge that we can command the body in a crisis
("You can't get sick now!"), but we have not known how to engage it in dialogue.
NEUROSPEAK is like an invitation to the dance. Few experiences are more
uncanny than the personal discovery that the body somehow responds exquisitely
to words, printed as well as spoken. Through the medium of language, kinesthetic
images are evoked. Muscles respond subtly but surely as they are described.
Suggestion leads to image which triggers spontaneous response.
NEUROSPEAK had its genesis in a rich body of prior work. It is the product
of the author's long fascination with human potential and a specific interest in how
our bodies respond to imagined scenes in literature. During the years he has been
developing and refining his therapeutic methods, Bob Masters found the time to
write or co-author twenty-five books, among them The Goddess Sekhmet and the
Way of the Five Bodies, The Varieties of Psychedelic Experience, Mind Games, and
NEUROSPEAK
about rocks, trees, and nature spirits. "And then my interest in mythology expanded
to include Edgar Allan Poe and science fiction and shamanism," he recalls.
Bob joined the Navy at seventeen, an act of rebellion toward his father, who
wanted him to go to West Point. After the Second World War ended, he worked in
Germany during the occupation. He studied at the University of Marburg and then
lived in Paris for a year. He also studied at the Alexander Institute in London.
Around 1947 Masters became intrigued by the ideas of Wilhelm Reich, who
had broken with Sigmund Freud because he had come to believe that orthodox
analysts were limiting themselves. Since neuroses could manifest in the body, Reich
wanted to learn more about how the body dealt with trauma. Reich believed that
psychological health could be achieved by reorganizing the body.
In 1954 Masters found that the body's response to suggestion is dramatically
accelerated by psychedelics, and he began a systematic study of peyote on a weekly
basis, with himself as subject. "I'd studied informally with Jean-Paul Sartre," he recalls
now, "and existentialism had inflicted a lot of ideas I wanted to be rid of. I found the
psychedelics enabled me to maintain a focus of concentration."
He had been preparing himself to become a professor of philosophy. Now the
fascination with literature reasserted itself, and he wanted to be a poet or a novelist
instead. He went to Texarkana, Texas, where he edited a newspaper and wrote some
poetry. He later worked at the Houston Post.
Meeting Milton Erickson rekindled his early interest in hypnosis. However,
he was more interested in the possibility of heightening sensation than he was in
therapy. He had already discovered through psychedelics that in an altered state the
body can respond in seconds. The fact that voluntary responses could be influenced
gave him the idea that involuntary responses might also have open channels. And
here was Erickson, doing just that, creating experimental blindness and deafness in
his hypnosis subjects.
xiv
Foreword
NEUROSPEAK
xvi
Foreword
10
W H A T IS N E U R O S P E A K ?
I t is rare that we ever have truly unique experiences. This little book,
however, will surely provide its readers with experiences whichare unique.
The uniqueness may or may not be in the end the result of any particular
chapter, or of the book as a whole, but lies rather in the fact that significant
bodily changes will be occurring in response to almost every paragraph, in
some cases, to every sentence.
At the conclusion of a chapter or "exercise," the reader may discover
such changes as the following: that one foot or hand moves better than the
other and is also more clearly sensed; that the body has somehow become
a bit looser or taller or more erect; that altered states of consciousness
have been experienced, leading to altered visual and other perceptions of
the environment; and that a variety of changes of different kinds have been
experienced from one exercise to the next.
The reader may or may not have experienced such bodily changes
and altered states of consciousness in the past. However that may be, it is
extremely unlikely that such experiences have ever been repeatedly, and in
detailed and predictable ways, produced just by reading a book. I am not
What
is
Neurospeak?
Most readers will have experiences of this at one point or another in the text,
having those particular experiences for any number of reasons which may
be quite individual and idiosyncratic. The experience will likely be one of
trying to restrain a fairly strong impulse or tendency to carry out objectively
movements just read about. The reader may even discover, all at once, that
she or he is in the process of doing those movements and doing them in a
way that can even approximate the full range of the movements as they are
set forth in the text.
With rare exceptions, no particular described movement is of any great
significance in bringing about the changes intended to occur by the end of
the exercise. Rather, the effects occur predictably as the consequence of
quite a number of different described movements, carefully arranged as to
sequence, and which together have a cumulative effect which produces the
intended outcomegreater shoulder mobility, greater hand sensitivity, better
posture, different sense of self and the world, or whatever the intended
outcome was for a particular exercise.
The "bodygames" you will "play" in this book range from the fairly
simple to the quite complicated. They say a good deal about the body's
capacities for responding to language, even when the suggestibility of the
body has not been enhanced either by means of emotional components or
by the induction of states of consciousness which lie beyond the individual
norm and the cultural reality consensus.
There are states of consciousness and emotional contexts which
increase enormously the body's abilityand tendencyto change in
5
NEUROSPEAK
response to both images and verbal expressions. One can well imagine how
a novelist who understands this process sufficiently could bring about a wide
variety of bodily statesinteracting with emotional states and depth levels
of consciousnessto create experiences of kinds which literature has not
heretofore achieved. Writers have certainly attempted this, but NEUROSPEAK
opens up a way of bringing about a wider range of responses, possibly even
including ones of such profundity as religious and mystical experiences (by,
for example, inducing a state of de-differentiation, loss of ego boundaries,
and a consequent experience of oneness with some larger reality).
Since NEUROSPEAK can demonstrably be usedas it is in this bookto
bring about quite significant changes in the central nervous system, the
muscles, and the skeleton, it seems likely that it can also be used to effect
changes in body organs and may perhaps be able to reach any and all body
parts and processes. Since it does not put its faith in some hypothesized
unconscious knowledge or wisdomas is the case with many hypnotic
proceduresit may have even more specific, predictable, and far-reaching
medical and other therapeutic applications. Research will have to explore the
possibilities for science, just as writers will have to explore the possibilities
for literature.
The foregoing should provide the reader with a preliminary
understanding of what underlies the method called NEUROSPEAK. After
the exercises have been experienced, some further explanation is provided
in the Afterword to elaborate upon what has been said here.
What
is
Neurospeak?
way to a healthier and more efficient use of your body and brings mind and
body into closer coincidenceboth very much to be desired.
You are going to read about many kinds of movements, some of
which you would never ordinarily do, or even think about doing. Then those
movementswhich in fact were done by you at some earlier period of your
lifewill be reintroduced into your movement repertoire. This will happen
because of the micromovements, microsensings, and sensory images which
occur as a result of your reading. Those, in turn, will free up previously
inhibited patterns of cells in the motor cortex of your brain. Then, to the
extent that such disinhibition actually does occur, a "spillover effect" will
also bring about some disinhibition in adjacent areas of your brain, in all
probability freeing up previously blocked abilities to think and to feel.
NEUROSPEAK will also probablyagain, and always, for the truly
conscious and concentrated readerchange and expand somewhat your
self-image, your awareness of yourself as a totality. You may have a stronger
belief in your body's malleability or susceptibility to self-directed or otherdirected change for the better. You will understand and know, at fundamental
levels of your being, that almost nothing about you is truly fixed. When you
know this, and really believe it, then the way is much more open for you
and also the spiritual dimensions of your being. It will further embrace such
components and attributes as intelligence, imagination and will, balance,
creativity, morality, and more. The message of NEUROSPEAK is that just as
words, ideas and images can forge mental and bodily shackles around us,
8
What
Will /
Achieve?
so then knowledgeable use of them can set us freeand free at any level of
our being.
When we speak of "exercise" in the sense of NEUROSPEAK, it should
be understood that we are speaking of approaches which aim at changes of
the kinds just mentioned. Naturally, the human organism also requires for its
health and for its harmony, good nutrition and intelligent application of those
kinds of familiar physical exercises aimed at producing cardiovascular fitness,
strength, and other kinds of fitness, including maintenance of the body at
a desirable weight. Those are the more superficial levels of exercise, but
their importance cannot be overestimated. The more far-reaching changes
that embrace the unified interactions of the body/mind system will always be
more effectively achieved when the body is well fed, well functioning in all its
internal organs, and strong of bone and muscle.
But think, too, of NEUROSPEAK as a kind of bodygame. Allow yourself
experiences of it as a novel way of pleasure and enjoyment, a fun-oriented
approach to unfolding self-knowledge.
Finally, there is much material here to awaken and seize the imagination
of both the scientist and the literary artist. There remain to be discussed and
developed NEUROSPEAK applications in neurology, rehabilitation therapies,
gerontology, psychotherapy and other areas of psychology, psychiatry and
consciousness research, as well as in the writing of fiction and perhaps
poetry. The author eagerly and with much curiosity awaits those kinds of
developments and applications.
NEUROSPEAK
10
H o w T o D o THE EXERCISES
not, as you prefer. If possible, try a chair with arms and a chair without arms
to discover which kind works best for you.
In addition to having an objective space that is free from distractions,
you should also have a subjective space that is as free as possible from
distractions. Do not read this book when you are too preoccupied with other
matters to give your complete attention to what you are reading. Try to give
yourself plenty of time, so that you will never rush your experience because
you have to get on to something else. Do not undertake to do any reading
just because you feel you ought to do it.
Reading and "doing" the bodygame that is NEUROSPEAK should be
something that you want to do, not something that you feel that you must
do or need to do. It is a matter of well established fact that human beings
learn much better when they are doing what they want to do rather than what
they feel compelled to do, no matter whether that compulsion is interior or
exterior. People learn best of all when learning is pleasurableand doing the
NEUROSPEAK learning can be pleasurable as well as exciting. What you are
doing is novel for you, and you do not know what the outcome will be. The
exercises are brief, potentially quite beneficial, and whatever the end of a
particular chapter of the book will be for you, it will certainly be a surprise.
As you read, be sure that you are mindful enough to continue to sit
comfortably. You should shift your position as little as possible. It is especially
important that you do not cross your legs and feet, or arms and hands. In the
context of doing a NEUROSPEAK exercise, doing so will confuse your nervous
system and prevent your making the responses you should make.
12
How
To Do the
Exercises
NEUROSPEAK
14
How
To Do the
Exercises
10
FROM BRAIN T O FOOT
Now,
as you read, let your feet rest flat-footed on the floor, and
whatever
with clarity, how they make contact with the floor, and whatever else you
may notice. I trust that you did that carefully
any casedo it once again, allowing at least one or two minutes for your
observations.
You must keep your feet about as they are now throughout
the exercise.
Now read on, just reading rather slowly and not bothering to try to
make much sense of what is being said. Just know that one speaks
differently
when addressing the body as compared to addressing the mind, and your
familiarity
you have become accustomed to the differences and have gained some
understanding
of the method, what is said to you may seem strange and even
rather pointless. Just allow for the possibility that a very interesting point will
be made quite clear to you as you proceed.
I would like to remind you now that you have a right foot If it is a
typical, undamaged right foot, it has five toes. There is a right big toe and
then another toe next to that one. Your right foot also has a middle toe and
then a toe that corresponds to a ring finger. Your right foot also has a small
toe. You may or may not know or be able to sense about your right foot
which toe is longest, which toe is next in length, and next in length to that.
But you will very probably know that the small toe of your right foot is the
shortest one and that the big toe of your right foot is so-called because it is
the one that is the largest in circumference. That big toe of your right foot is
rather similar to the thumb of your right hand.
Your right foot resembles a hand in some other ways. For example, to
the rear of the bones of the toes are other bones which go on back through
your foot, and which help to support your right foot and give it flexibility as
you move. Of course, you also have a right heel, and above that a right ankle
that moves when the right foot is walking. There also is movement in your
right ankle if you leave the ball of your right foot and your toes on the floor
and simply raise your right heel.
You can probably raise your right toes all together and lower them.
You can probably raise just your right big toe by itself. You can probably
raise and lower the other four toes together. But, even though it is within
your potential, you probably cannot move all the toes of your right foot in a
differentiated way, similar to the way you are able to move your fingers.
You have seen your right foot many times. You have seen your right
foot from above, from the inside, from the outside, and even from the bottom
16
From
Brain
To
Foot
of your right foot. Your right foot has been with you throughout your life,
and you really ought to know just what it looks like. But do you really know
just what it looks like? Can you, without looking, visualize the toenails of
your right foot, the spaces between your toes, the top of your right foot, your
right ankle, and so on?
When you think about walking, do you really know just how your right
foot moves? Do you come down on the heel of the right foot, then move
along the bottom of the foot, coming up onto the ball of your right foot, and
then the toes of your right foot leaving the floor in succession according to
their lengths? What does it feel like as you put your foot down and walk on
your foot, and pick it up again? Do you usually walk heavily or lightly with
your right foot? Do you have any sense of how your right foot compares with
walking on your other foot?
Do you know that you can just slide your right foot forward and
backward? You can slide your right foot forward and backward many times.
You can do it rather mindlessly, interested only in whether your right foot
does slide forward and backward. Or you can do this movement intending
to use your right foot to learn about the floor or carpet or whatever surface
you are touching. You can also, with that same movement, deliberately use
the surface you are touching to stimulate sensations in the bottom of your
right foot. In fact, the bottom of your right foot, if properly stimulated, can
provide you with real pleasure sensations. The end organs of touch on the
bottom of the feet are some of the most sensitive to be found in a human
body. Most probably, evolution intended this to protect you from injury.
17
NEUROSPEAK
From
Brain
To
Foot
of your
right foot the same as compared to your left foot? If not, what differences do
you sense?
Can you sense the individual toes of your right foot somewhat more
clearly? Does your right foot touch the floor somewhat
differently?
Compare your sensing of your right lower leg with the left one, your
right knee and your left one, your right shoulder and your left one. Compare
the right side of your face with the left side. If you stop reading and close your
eyes for a while, will you find that you are looking to the right? That possibly
your head has turned spontaneously
to the rightpossibly
upper bodyso that your spine has twisted as it does when you twist to the
right and your right shoulder has moved to the rear of the left one? It may be
that you find yourself breathingassuming
there was no
obstructionmore
fully and clearly through your right nostril than through your left nostril.
In a moment, having finished this paragraph,
the room and compare the way the right foot walks with the way the left
foot walksthe contact with the floor, the foot's flexibility, whatever else
you notice.
Do you begin to understand
NEUROSPEAK?
did your right foot feel better, but that your left foot felt worsestiff and
lumpish, among other things. However, it is not true that your left foot is
"worse" than before. Rather, your nervous system is comparing your left foot
as it normally is with the improvements
suffers by comparison.
19
NEUROSPEAK
It is good to allow those differences between the two feet to remain for
a while. That encourages your body to adopt the superior organization
and
to move towards retaining it. It is also possible, as you will learn, to bring
the left footor whatever body part it might bevery quickly to a condition
similar to or identical with the improved part. It is also the case that you can
do the same exercise over again, changing the wording from right to left, or
left to right, as the case may be. Then you will get just the opposite effect
from the one obtained by following the textopposite in the sense that the
opposite side will be the one to gain the benefits.
Do you begin to understand that writing for the body, and addressing
the body, elicits responses very different from those which occur when the
writing, like almost all writing, addresses the mind first of all?
Know and understand that this is only a beginning. As you read
as you learnas
yourself
you learn
in a variety
to respond
of waysdeeper
20
From
of words properly
Brain
To
Foot
addressed.
more
about
changes
of your body is
and
will
beyond
10
MOVEMENTS OF THE SHOULDER AND U P P E R BACK
pay careful attention to your movements and sensations. At the end of the
exercise, you will be asked to take the same actions and to compare your
movements and sensations then with your movements and sensations as you
will observe them in a moment. First, walk around the room and observe the
movements in your shoulders as you walk and how you sense your shoulder
movements. Also notice how your arms move as a result of your shoulder
movements. After that, stand and sense your shoulders, comparing your right
side with your left side. Take your arms back, and then overhead, and then to
the front and down, making circles with your arms from your shoulders and
comparing the ease of sensations of movements in your two shoulders. Then
be seated and compare your awareness of your right and left shoulders, your
right and left feet, the right and left sides of your pelvis, the right and left sides
of your face, and your right and left sides as a whole. Please do that now.
Now sit with your feet flat on the floor, parallel to each other, ten to
twelve inches apart. Try to position the rest of your body symmetrically
retain that symmetrical
and
Your attention is called now to your right shoulder and right upper
back, including your right shoulder blade. If you are able to sense them
clearly, you may sense the top of your shoulder, the front of your shoulder,
the outside of your shoulder, the back of your shoulder, and you may
have some sense of your right shoulder joint and of how your right arm is
attached to the right side of your body. You might also be aware of your right
armpit and at what points your right upper arm is in contact with your right
upper body.
Your right shoulder has many movement possibilities. You can, for
example, move your right shoulder forward. You can move it forward and
bring it back to its starting place, and move it forward and back again. Very
definite sensations accompany those shoulder movements.
Were you to extend your right arm in front of you, you would discover
that you can make a much more extensive forward movement with your right
shoulder than you are able to do when your right hand is resting on your
book, on your desk, on your thigh, or on your chair arm.
You can also move your right shoulder back, return it to its starting
position, and repeat that movement many times. Then there are different,
although somewhat similar sensations as compared to those which occur
when your right shoulder is brought forward. If your right arm is behind you,
then the shoulder movement back becomes much more extensive.
You will probably find that you can do a somewhat larger movement
if you push up from your right shoulder joint, bringing your shoulder closer
to your right ear and towards the ceiling. You can raise your right shoulder,
22
Movements
of the Shoulder
and
Upper
Back
lower it to its starting point, and raise and lower it while observing the
sensations in your right shoulder. Were you to do a number of movements of
your right shoulderforward and back, then up and downfor any length
of time, then you would almost certainly find that your right shoulder would
hang lower than the other one. It would also feel more alive, as if it could
move with greater ease and over a greater distance.
Your right shoulder can also be made to sink lower, and then come
back up to its starting place. It can do this much better if your right arm is
hanging at your side. Again, the sensations in your right shoulder will be
different, although similar to the ones you are aware of when you move your
right shoulder forward, or up, or back.
Now, you can also make circular movements with your right shoulder.
You can move your right shoulder up, and then forward, and then down, and
then back, and then up, and forward, and down, and back, and so oncircling
and circling with your right shoulder. You can make small circles with your
right shoulder, and you can make larger circles with your right shoulder. You
can make slow circles with your right shoulder, and you can make faster
ones. You can make small slow circles with your right shoulder, and you can
make large quick circles with your right shoulder. You can make circles of
different sizes and at different rates of movement.
You can also reverse the direction in which your right shoulder is
circling. You can circle backwards for a while, arid then you can circle forward
for a while, sensing what you are doing with your right shoulder and what
those movements feel like.
23
NEUROSPEAK
You could put the palm of your right hand on the thigh of your right
leg, just a little above the knee. Then you could slide your right hand down
your right leg, pushing with your right shoulder. And you could bring your
right hand back up your leg by pulling with your right shoulder. Pushing and
then pulling with your right shoulder, you could keep moving your right hand
up and down your leg, all the way from your ankle to your hip joint, if you
reach far enough. For that, you would need not only to push and pull from
your right shoulder, but you would also have to allow your body to bend at
the waist, moving forward and backward with your right shoulder.
You could also rest your right hand on top of your right shoulder with
your upper arm at around shoulder height, and then make circles with your
right arm, circling from your right shoulder. You could make all kinds of
circles in this position, clockwise and counterclockwise, slow and fast, large
and smallall kinds of combinations as your right shoulder circles with your
right hand resting on that shoulder.
Also, with your right hand on your right shoulder, you could move
your elbow forward so that your right shoulder rotates in. If you were to put
your hand in your armpit, you would find that you would make a different
shoulder movement and that the shoulder movement would be more towards
the center of your body.
Also, that right shoulder movement towards the center of your body
would grow larger as you placed your hand lower and lower on the right side
of your body, until you finally reached a point of diminishing returns.
Something similar would happen if you placed your right hand on your
24
Movements
of the Shoulder
and
Upper
Back
right shoulder and moved your arm back behind you. Then your shoulder
would move farther and farther back as your hand moved down your body
until, once again, you reached a point of diminishing returns. The right
shoulder movements would become smaller until finally there was almost no
movement back by your shoulder or in your right shoulder blade or in the
upper right side of your back.
Now, you could extend your right arm so that your right hand rests on
the table in front of you, and you could make a light fist with your fingers.
Then you could roll the fist like a wheel to the inside, feeling the rolling
inward of your right shoulder. After that, you could roll the fist towards the
outside of your body, feeling that your right shoulder rotates out. You can
roll your fist from left to right, so that your right shoulder rotates in, and
then out, and back again, experiencing a distinctly different sensation in
your right shoulder and a different movement in your right shoulder than any
previously described.
By this time, were you to do these movements, you would definitely
find your right shoulder hanging lower than your left one. In fact, you would
find that your pelvis has sunk lower on your right side, and that your whole
body was tending to tilt to the right.
You would probably find that your head was cocked to the right,
that your spine was curving to the right, and that, therefore, your rib cage
was bending in towards the center of your body on your right side. You
would probably also discover that your right hip joint had moved in such
a way that your right knee was pointing off to the right, along with your
25
NEUROSPEAK
right foot as well, while on your left side, your foot and knee would just be
pointing forward.
In other words, you would discover that your nervous system was
experiencing a very strong bias in favor of your right side. You would find
that your right side felt at once less dense and more alive as compared
to your left side. Especially you would be aware of feelings in your right
shoulder that would probably include sensing down into your right shoulder
joint when it is motionless and also if you were to decide to make circles
or other movements with your right shoulder joint. And this sensing down
into your shoulder on your right side would certainly be something very, very
different from your experience of your shoulder on your left side, were you
to compare the two shoulders as you just sit there.
Now, do notice how you are sitting and whether your nervous system is
manifesting any bias towards your right side? Compare how you sense your
right eye as compared to your left one. Close your eyes to make
othercomparisons.
thatand
The right side of your face as compared to the left side. Your right shoulder
as compared to your left shoulder.
Now, physically,
shoulders and compare. Compare not only your shoulder movements but also
what you sense to be happening in the upper back on your right side and
your left side.
26
Movements
of the Shoulder
and Upper
Back
Next get up and just walk around, comparing your right side with your
left sidefirst of all, how your shoulders and arms move, then whatever else
you notice, including the contact with the floor that is being made by your
right foot and your left foot.
After that, stop and make some large circles overhead with your right
and left arms. Do simultaneous
circles. Do
circles that begin by your arms moving back, and circles that begin by your
arms moving forward.
arms. After that return to your chair, and make any other
you can.
27
NEUROSPEAK
observations
10
REORGANIZING THE B O D Y ' S RELATIONSHIP TO GRAVITY
First,
be as observant
instructed.
as possible
of
your
so that you can compare your present condition with what you
experience when you have completed the exercise. You will observe, first
of all, how you stand and what it feels like. Notice your sensations of the
lengthor heightof your body, the contact of your feet with the floor, how
your upper body feelsincluding
hold your head. Notice whether your head feels erect, so that you look out
towards the horizon rather than down towards the floor or up towards the
ceiling. Try to be aware as well of what you do with your
eyeswhether
they look out towards the horizon, or whether they look down, or up, or
off towards one side. Then, still carefully observing yourself, walk around
and make similar observations,
the weight of your body. Perform those actions now and then return to
your chair.
Now, just as you have done it before, be seated with both of your feet
resting flat on the floor. Your feet should beand should remainparallel
to
and central nervous system. Then, as you have experienced before, your
muscles and skeleton will be able to assimilate the signals which they require
to reorganize involuntarily
If your feet are normal ones, they have toes and bones with joints
inside the toes. At the bottoms of your toes, your foot becomes one fleshy
mass, and inside that mass, there are other, longer bones which extend
through your feet and on back towards your heels. Your heels also have
bones, but bones quite different in appearance from those bones inside your
toes and inside the larger parts of your feet.
Just above your heel, of course, is your ankle. Your ankle has its own
fairly complicated bony structure and, above that, are the long bones of your
lower legs. Those bones and the rest of your lower legs exist between your
ankles and your knees. Those lower legs are much longer than your feet,
extending quite some distance up your body from your ankles to your knees.
Your knees have their own fairly complicated structure and a larger
range of movement than your ankles. In part, this is required because not
only are your legs below your knees quite long, but your legs above your
knees are also quite long. Your legs above your knees, including your thighs,
30
Reorganizing
the Body's
Relationship
to
Gravity
are probably a good bit more sensitive to your touch than your lower legs and
calves are. In fact, if you draw your fingers up the upper part of your legs,
pressing a little into your flesh with your fingernails, you are likely to find that
the sensations are strongerand probably quite a bit more pleasurableas
you move up your thighs towards your pelvis arid your buttocks.
At the front of your body, there is your pubic region, your lower belly
and thenas your consciousness moves up your bodythere is your navel.
To the rear of your navel is the lower segment of your spine. Your spine
proceeds from your tail bone, anchored to your pelvis, on up through your
body, and is composed of many vertebrae of differing sizes. Then, there is
the region you refer to as your waist and, just above that, your ribs.
Hanging somewhat lower than your waist and ribs are your hands and
fingers. They are somewhat similar to your toes and feet, just as your wrists
and your arms have considerable similarity to your ankles and legs. Above
your wrists are what you call your forearms, leading on up to your elbows.
You can doubtless sense that your ribs begin somewhere near the placein
terms of heightwhere your lower arms join your elbows. Then there are
your upper arms and, at the uppermost ends of them, your shoulder joints
and shoulders.
Your ribsand your ribcagesurround much of your upper body,
protecting a number of vital organs. You have many ribs, and as your
consciousness moves up your body towards your chest and your armpits, it
should be possible to feel that your ribs move gently out and in, in concert
with your breathing. If your sensing is accurate, you will experience the
31
NEUROSPEAK
movements of your ribs to some extent in the front of your body, but more
in your sides and in your back.
The chest and breasts are usually rather clearly sensed. Your awareness
of your breasts will be at different levels of your body depending on their
size and shape. Just above your breast bone, and out to the sides, are your
shoulders. You also have shoulder joints, and you may also be aware of your
shoulder blades. Your spine rises even beyond the tops of your shoulders and
up into your neck, up behind your jaw bones and into the base of your skull.
Inside your neck is not only your spine but also your throat, of which
you become aware, if you are not aware of it otherwise, when you are eating
or drinking. At the same time as you are aware of your throat, you are also
likely to be aware of the interior of your mouth and, perhaps, of your jaws.
Your awareness of the interior of your mouth quite likely includes
the floor and the roof of your mouth, the sides of your mouth, your teeth,
and your tongue. Of all the parts of the human body, usually none are
experienced so clearly as are the lips. The lips are sensed with such clarity
because they are involved in activities of very great importance both for
survival and for meeting fundamental and powerful emotional needstaking
in food, communicating with other people through speech, and making love.
You may notice even now as you are reading how clear your own lips are in
your body imageyour body as you are able to sense it.
Above your lips are other parts of your body which are very important.
There is your nose, necessary for breathing and also for your sense of smell.
There are your ears, necessary for your hearing. And there are your eyes,
32
Reorganizing
the Body's
Relationship
to
Gravity
without which you would have no visual knowledge of your world andv also
without which you would have a very different way of imagining and of
remembering.
Because of the great importance of those parts of your body located
in your head, usually your face and your head as a whole are quite clearly
sensed as compared to most other body parts. The remainder of the exterior
of your headyour forehead and those parts of the head that are in most
cases covered with hairare also fairly clearly sensed, but probably not so
clearly as you sense your face. That is partly because the flesh is not very
thick or sensitive as it fits over the exterior of your skull.
Your skull provides a place and protection for the most important
single part of the human bodythe brain. Other parts may be as important for
sustaining life, but no other part is as important for the way your life is lived.
Within your skull, your brainwhich you do not senseis divided into
two hemispheres, each one an enormously complicated structure that is
characterized by constant electrical and chemical activities. Visible from the
top of your brain is the so-called cerebral divide, or corpus collosum. While it
is taught that you cannot sense your brain, nonetheless it is true that when
consciousness is kept focused for a while on the brain space, then there is a
feeling that the brain is being sensed, sometimes quite vividly. Whether the
focus creates an image of the brain, or just why that sensation is experienced,
is not altogether clear.
Your focus on your brain space can be easily maintained when you
have the feeling that your eyes are looking up into your brain space and
33
NEUROSPEAK
circling in that space. You can have the feeling that your eyes are making
horizontal circles, vertical circles, diagonal circles, all kinds of circles, circling
in different directions, in your brain space.
You can also have the sense of breathing up into your brain space.
You can have the feeling of directing your breathing into your brain's left
hemisphere, or into your brain's right hemisphere, or up into and beyond
that cerebral divide between your hemispheres. You can feel that you breathe
up through your brain, up into the top of your skull, and even beyond that.
You can feel that you breathe up through your brain space and into your skull
in such a manner that your skull elongates as you breathe up through it. Or
you can feel that you breathe right up through the top of your skull and that
your breath then extends beyond the top of your skull. Your breath moving
up through your brain and the top of your skull, higher and higher, however
far up through the top of your head and beyond it that you might choose to
breathe. Just allow yourself several seconds to assimilate what has been said
to you.
Now, when you have completed reading this paragraph,
stand and
observe how you stand and compare that with what you experienced before
you began to read through this exercise. Then walk around and compare
what you experience as you walk now with what you experienced when you
observed your walking at the beginning of this chapter of the book. After
that, come back to your chair and read the concluding paragraph.
these observations
34
Reorganizing
now.
the Body's
Relationship
to
Gravity
Make
What did you observe? What about feelings of length or height, and
the way your body was supported, your upper body especially? How did you
hold your head and where did your eyes look? What about feelings of weight,
or lightness, and the kind of contact your feet made with the floor as you
walked? Did your head feel somewhat as if it was floating in space as you
moved? Sometimes it even happens that when the body is experienced as
elevated, the emotions or mood may be experienced as elevated also. Does
any of this describe what you have experienced? What else have you to add?
Walk around a little more if you feel that you may have missed something.
35
NEUROSPEAK
10
A HAND T O TOUCH W I T H / A HAND
T o B E TOUCHED B Y
r\s
NEUROSPEAK
exercise, you are able to sense more clearly and you are able to move more
efficiently whatever part of your body you have been reading
about.
As you
do more of these exercises, it becomes more and more likely that the changes
brought about will be permanent ones, and also that additional benefits will
be realized. The potential for genius-level functioning is present in every
human brain, and it could be actualized if only the brain were sufficiently
and effectively used. Reading this book is not likely to actualize your potential
to such an extent, but it does move you in that direction. The exercises have
the effect of freeing or disinhibiting brain cells "frozen" in your motor cortex.
More of your brain becomes more active, not only in your motor cortex but
also in adjacent parts of your brain which have to do with thinking and
feeling functions.
The effects are cumulative as the "work" progresses. Not only do you
improve the condition of your brain, and use your brain better, but you also
cumulatively
just what it is that you are doing. You then become less awkward,
less
wasteful of your energy resources, and less prone to accidental injury. Your
body becomes less inclined to retain those muscular patterns resulting from
psychological and emotional stress so that, in fact, you are less susceptible
to "being stressed." As your sensing improves and as your use of your body
improves, you will also be considerably
awareness.
Brief as this book is, and despite the fact that it enables you to "work"
beneficiallychange
you. It will open you to the possibility both of a larger awareness and of using
a body with much greater potential for moving, sensing, and experiencing
pleasure than you previously recognized. Then you could go on to develop
those possibilities further and gain still greater
nothing until you have been shown the way, and that is what is happening to
you now as you read and "do" this book.
Perhaps by now you are accustomed to approaching
each exercise by
sitting with your feet flat on the floor, parallel to each other and about ten to
twelve inches apart. You have been requested to sit in such a way that your
movements as you read will be minimal. In the case of the present
chapter,
we have a slight problem that we have not encountered before. You are
going to be reading about your left hand and that reading will effect various
38
A Hand
To Touch
WithIA
Hand
to Be Touched
By
changes in your experience of your left hand and of your left hand's ability to
sense and to move. However, you must also use your hands to hold your book
or at least to turn the pages of your book. Therefore, try to minimize your
awareness
you and allow any awareness of your left hand to be determined as fully as
possible just by the words you are
At the end of this paragraph,
reading.
you should carry out the actions
described. This will provide you with a basis for comparing your hand as it
presently is with your hand as it will be. For a moment now, look at your
hands as they rest parallel to each other with the palms down and lying
in as identical positions as possible. Notice everything
appearance
of your hands and compare them. Then explore your left thigh
and knee with your left hand, noticing what and how you sense. After that,
do the same with your right hand and your right leg and knee. Also use your
left hand to explore your right hand and arm and then your right elbow as
you flex and extend your right arm to enable your left hand to sense your
elbow as it moves. Then use your right hand to sense your left hand and
arm and then your left elbow as it moves. After that, position your hands as
symmetrically
paragraph.
Remember that what we are doing is still unfamiliar
although your brain is certainly learning. Eventually,
to your brain,
become more experienced, it will surely function more quickly. But for now,
as you have been instructed before, it is necessary for you to read slowly and
39
NEUROSPEAK
carefully and to maintain the focus of your consciousness on what you are
reading. Again, it will be helpful if you pause for a second or two at the end
of each sentence, providing a little extra time for the words to sink in and be
acted upon.
Now we are going to discuss in some detail your left hand. That hand
begins at your wrist, and it has bones inside of the hand that extend on up
towards the bottoms or bases of your fingers. The palm of your left hand is
very richly endowed with nerve endings which enable your left hand to touch
with great sensitivity. The top of your left hand is much less sensitive. It is
not required to be as sensitive as your left palm since it is not often used
for touching, either to learn about whatever your left hand is touching or to
provide another body with sensations.
Similarly, the undersides of the fingers of your left hand are more
sensitive than the tops. The insides of your fingers are more sensitive than
the tops of your fingers, but less sensitive than the bottoms. Your left hand
has, of course, five fingers. Or, if you prefer, it has four left fingers and a left
thumb. You can probably sense that your thumb is larger in circumference
than your other fingers are, especially your left small finger. You may also be
able to sense the comparative lengths of the fingers of your left hand and to
sense clearly that your left middle finger is the longest one.
Unless you bring the fingers of your left hand together, there are
spaces between them. The spaces between the fingers on either side of your
middle finger are quite probably almost identical. The space between your
40
A Hand
To Touch
WithIA
Hand
to Be Touched
By
small finger and your left ring finger is probably, however, different from the
space between your left forefinger and your left thumb.
You can easily sense the joints in the fingers of your left hand by
bringing the fingers into a fist and then extending them again, and you could
do this repeatedly, flexing and extending them quickly, and flexing and
extending them slowly. You can also raise and lower your fingers, all of them
at once or separately, as you might do if you were playing a piano with your
left hand and fingers.
Because of the amount of movement regularly done, the left hand of a
pianist is likely to be agile and sensitive. You can doubtless imagine how your
left hand would move if you regularly played the piano as a concert pianist.
Your left hand might also be extremely sensitive, and perhaps also extremely
agile, if you used it regularly to work on other people's bodies as some kinds
of healers do. Your left hand then would touch not only the surface of another
body but would feel down into it, touching far more deeply and completely
than hands ordinarily do. You could have that kind of left hand.
You could begin to have such a sensitive hand by moving it up and
down your left leg and using it to sense as completely as possible your left
leg as you touch it. You could use your left hand to explore your left knee,
trying to touch as completely as possible the bones of your knee with your
left hand. Then, if you would bend and straighten your left leg, you could
sense what was happening in your left knee still more completely.
There are many things you can do which will tend to increase the
sensitivity of your left hand, to make your left hand more vivid in your body
41
NEUROSPEAK
image, and also to improve the functioning of your left hand in a variety of
other ways. Improvement occurs, for example, when consciousness remains
focused on even very simple activities. You can, for example, leave the top
parts of your three middle fingers on the table while you rap on the table
with the heel of your left hand. You might rap with the heel of your left hand
in rhythmic bursts of one and two and three and four raps. Alternatively, you
could leave the heel of your hand on the table and rap with the palm and
fingers of your left hand in rhythmic bursts of one and two and three and
four raps. You could leave the heel of your hand in place and slide the fingers
of your left hand side to side. Or you can leave your fingers in place and slide
the heel and the palm of your left hand side to side. You can also simply slide
your left hand forward and back or you can take the left hand side to side,
sliding it across the table or some other surface. Or you might make circles
on the table with the palm of your hand, circling in a clockwise direction,
and then in a counterclockwise direction. With your left hand, you can make
circles that are small, and you can make circles that are large. You can make
fast circles, and you can make slow circles. You can make all kinds of circles,
with different variations of slow and fast, large and small, clockwise and
counterclockwise, always circling and sensing with your left hand.
You have probably had the experience of leaving your left hand in
very cold water for a while, so that the hand becomes increasingly numb the
longer it stays in the water. Your left hand also knows what hot water feels
like. Your left hand knows what it is like to touch or hold ice. It also knows
what it is like to touch or hold something hot.
42
A Hand
To Touch
WithIA
Hand
to Be Touched
By
Your left hand knows what fur feels likewhat fur feels like to the
palm of your hand and to the back of your hand and what fur feels like
between the fingers of your left hand. Your left hand knows what feathers
feel like, and also what leather feels like, and plain cotton fabric. Your left
hand has probably touched velvet, and it knows what satin feels like, and
also silk. Your left hand knows what it is like to touch the bark of a tree, or
a leaf, or grass. Your left hand knows what sandpaper feels like, and wet
glass, and polished wood. Your left hand can recall what it feels like to shape
itself around pieces of metal. Your left hand knows what it feels like to touch
human flesh and how many different experiences are possible for your left
hand to have just within the context of touching human flesh.
You can use your left hand to learn about the surfaces it is touching,
but you can also use most surfaces to stimulate sensations in your left hand.
Again, your left hand, your palm and the undersides of your fingers are
extremely richly endowed with nerve endings for touching. Because of this
fact, it is also possible to highly stimulate those parts of your left hand, so
that the hand becomes extremely sensitive and also highly energized. It is
that energy in your left hand that another person might experience as heat
if, for example, you were doing healing work. So much energy could be
transmitted by your left hand that the heat would feel almost as if it could
burn your body or someone else's body.
When the situation is appropriate, your left hand can take in, and also
transmit, what will clearly be felt to be sexual energy. The palm of the hand
and the fingers can become so energized as to feel at least mildly orgasmic,
43
NEUROSPEAK
and then your hand could awaken similar sensations in almost any part of
another person's body, when your hand touched that body caressingly.
Once you have experienced such a possibility, you can use other
surfaces to awaken different kinds of sensitivities and different kinds of
energies in your left hand. Whether those are, for example, healing or sexual
energies, or other kinds of energies, your hand can become so sensitized
that it no longer feels quite solid, but rather as if it is composed of particles
of energy flowing or dancing. When your left hand is so energized, the energy
will be experienced throughout your left hand and not just by your palm and
the undersides of your fingers.
When your left hand has achieved that kind of subtlety and sensitization,
then it can truly sense deeply into other bodies, and it can also feed its
energies deeply into other bodies. Your left hand can be like that.
Now, at the end of the next two paragraphs,
following, preferably
awareness
compare your awareness of your left shoulder with your right one and notice
how the left side of your pelvis sits as compared to the right side and how
your left foot is sensed and relates to the floor as compared to your right one.
Then use the palm and undersides of the fingers of your left hand to explore
your left leg and knee. After that, use your right hand to explore your right
leg and knee and compare those two experiences. Also touch and explore
your right hand with your left one, and then use your right hand to touch and
44
A Hand
To Touch
WithIA
Hand
to Be Touched
By
than your left hand does. Your left hand will almost certainly touch in a way
that elicits feelings of refinement and yields more knowledge as compared to
the touching your right hand is able to do. Your right hand exploring your
left hand, however, will touch something that is more subtle than itself.
Let your right elbow rest in the palm of your left hand, and then flex
and extend your right arm, sensing the elbow with your left hand. Then let
your right hand sense your left elbow as you flex and extend your left arm.
Compare those two experiences. After that, get up and walk around and
compare your awareness
Then, use your left hand in other ways to explore further how your hand can
experience what it touches when it has been brought somewhat closer to its
sensitivity
45
potentials.
NEUROSPEAK
10
A TONGUE FOR A L L SEASONS AND A L L REASONS
Once
of chair, and let your feet rest flat on the floor, parallel to each other, about
ten to twelve inches apart. Make as certain as you can that you will not be
interrupted
or otherwise distracted,
concentrated
focus
how much you will benefit from the exercise. Now, when you are asked to do so,
make your observations as instructed so that you can compare your condition
at present with what you sense and do at the conclusion of your work.
First, however, it should be mentioned that it is very common for
the muscles of the tongue
to be habitually
tensed or over-contracted.
Such
consequencesamong
them, the head and neck cannot turn as freely as they should, eye movements
are inhibited and the eyes may become strained, and there is likely to be
some interference with speech and with breathing. In some cases, movements
of the mouth are affected, including proper eating and drinking. Tension in
the tongue may contribute to tension in the jaw, to dental problems, and to
headaches. Even movements of the spine in the upper and lower back may
become impaired as an end result of chronic tension in the tongue.
When the tongue is free, it lies wide and flat in the mouth, and the tip
of the tongue protrudes very slightly between the upper and lower teeth. The
tongue, when sufficiently free, will move in coordination with movements of
the eyes, neck, and head. If the eyes go right, the tongue will go right. If the
head turns right, the tongue will move right, as will the eyes if there is no
inhibition of the eye movements to prevent it. Similarly,
will coordinate with the head and neck in the case of up and down movements
or any other head and neck movements for that matter.
What this kind of coordination
move into
involuntarilyand,
is what happens when the body moves as it ought to. The reason those
movements occur is that the head and eyes will always tend to move in the
direction being thought about or attended to. The muscular movements in the
neck and the eyes may be very small ones, but they are sufficient to produce
the larger movement of the tongue which will bring it into the right or left
side of the mouth, or the roof or floor of the mouth, as
appropriate.
Now, take a minute or two and observe how your tongue is lying
and what it does When you turn your head right and left or just move
48
A Tongue
for
All Seasons
and All
Reasons
your eyes right and left. If your tongue does not move with your head and
eye movements, then not only is your tongue chronically
tensed, but it is
impairing your head and eye movements. If your tongue does move with your
head and eyes, then just hold it fixed in the middle of your mouth and you
will quickly become aware of how this holding strains your eyes and impedes
the turning of your head and neck as you move your head from left to right
and back again a few times.
If your tongue remains in the middle of your mouth when you move
your head and eyes side to side, then try opposing the movements of your
tongue to the movements of your head and eyesyour tongue going left when
your head and eyes go right. This will make you aware of the
interrelationship
between your tongue, your eyes, and the muscles of your neck.
Also observe whether it feels to you as if your tongue lies wide and
flat, whether the tip of your tongue extends a bit into the space between
your upper and lower teeth, and to what extent it seems to you that you
are sensing the whole surface of your tongue, and perhaps beyond the
surface. Turn your head left to right a few times just to get a sense of what
that feels like, how easily it turns, and how quickly it will turn without any
sense of straining or forcing. Now take your tongue from side to side in
your mouth, observing those movements and how they are affected if you
open your mouth slightly, then a little more, and a little more, until you
reach a point when the movements of your tongue are no longer helped
by your mouth being open, but the tongue begins to feel obstructed by the
tensions in your mouth and jaw when you force the opening wider than is
49
NEUROSPEAK
sentences.
A Tongue
for
All Seasons
and All
Reasons
As you were asked to observe, the range and agility of your tongue's
movement capacities may be partly observed by moving it left to right inside
your mouth. If you do that with your mouth closed, the tongue movements
will be small, and you will likely feel that the base of your tongue where the
movements originate is being blocked from making larger movements. Then,
as the mouth is opened more and more, your tongue can move more and
with greater freedom and ease of movementup to the point when strain
is felt in the jaw as it forces the mouth to open wider than is comfortable.
Then you will once again sense that your tongue movements are limited and
blocked, although for different reasons.
Your tongue can be used to explore the interior of your mouth in many
different ways. For example, your tongue can roam around the roof of your
mouth and discover that the roof of your mouth is quite sensitive to your
tongue's touch and may even be quite ticklish. You may discover that your
tongue has much more space to roam around in as it explores the roof of
your mouth than it has when it is exploring the floor of your mouth.
When your tongue explores the interior of your left cheek, then it
will touch a quite different kind of surface and it will also have quite a lot
of space to explore. Unlike the roof or the floor of your mouth, the sides
of your mouth are much softer and much more yielding. Your left cheek,
for example, is very soft comparatively, and it will easily stretch and yield
as your tongue pushes against its interior. The same is true, of course,
for the right side of your mouth should you choose to explore it with
your tongue.
51
NEUROSPEAK
Your tongue can have quite a rich and varied experience as it explores,
one by one, the backs of your lower teeth. Your tongue can also explore the
tops, the biting edges of your lower teeth. And, one by one, it can explore
the front of your lower teeth, finding that the sensations are very different
depending on whether your tongue is exploring the front, or the back, or the
biting edge surfaces of your teeth.
And it is a significantly different experience to use your tongue to
explore the back of your upper teeth, and then the front of your upper teeth,
exploring your teeth one by one with your tongue, and then taking your
tongue side to side across your upper teeth so that it moves somewhat in the
manner that a wiper moves across a windshield of a car.
You can also move your tongue back and forth, left to right, so that
the bottom of your tongue passes over the biting edge of your lower teeth,
while the top of your tongue simultaneously passes over the biting edge of
your upper teeth.
You can also, simultaneously, explore the inside of your upper lip and
the outside of your upper teeth with your tongue. In the same way, your
tongue can explore the inside of your lower lip and the outside of your lower
teeth, both at the same time. And you can use your tongue to move back and
forth so that it first moves across your upper lip and your upper teeth, then
your lower lip and your lower teeth, making an oval shape as it moves. You
can even do this action in such a way that when your tongue moves left, it
continues on into the left side of your cheek, and when your tongue moves
right, it continues on into the right side of your cheek.
52
A Tongue
for
All Seasons
and All
Reasons
You can draw your tongue back so that the tip of your tongue is some
distance to the rear of your teeth, and you can practice retracting your tongue
and then bringing it forward just to the point where it makes contact with the
backs of your teeth. Or you can take your tongue back as far as it is possible
to do without straining, and then bring it forward so that it extends between
your teeth and between your lips and sticks out visibly in front of you. You
can retract your tongue and extend it in that way many times, taking it back
as far as it will easily go, then pushing it forward as far as it will go without
feeling forced.
You can lengthen and release your tongue quite measurably if you
place the tip of your tongue between your teeth and then bite down on
your tongue very gently. Then push your tongue forward a little bit more
and bite down on it gently again and again and again, each time pushing
your tongue a little further out, then biting down on it gently to mark your
progress. As you continue doing this, repeating the process of extending
your tongue in small increments, you may find that you can take thirty
or forty such little bites before your tongue is as far out of your mouth
as you can push it. Then, as you repeat the process some more, you may
become able to take fifty bites, or sixty, your tongue coming further and
further out of your mouth, as your brain responds to the message it is
receiving by enabling your tongue to lengthen more and more. After you
have continued with these movements for a while, your tongue may in fact
be quite noticeably longer than it was when you began. When you take
it back into your mouth and let it rest there, your tongue may be sensed
53
NEUROSPEAK
to lie flatter and wider. It may also protrude a bit farther between your
teeth than you would want to have it, but it will quickly reorganize to move
back into its proper position, the tip extending just very slightly between
your teeth.
What your tongue feels and how you feel your tongue can vary a great
deal depending upon the orientation and intention you bring to the use of
your tongue. For example, you can use your tongue to sense the surfaces
your tongue is touching, doing this in order to learn about those surfaces,
as your tongue is able by its sensing to reveal to you what those surfaces
are like. But you might also use your tongue with a different intention as you
move it over those same surfaces, and while touching the surfaces in what
will appear to be an almost identical way, have the intention of learning how
your tongue responds to the surfaceslearning not about what your tongue
is touching but rather about your tongue's sensations as it touches.
You can also vary your approach, and thereby your experience, in
some other basic ways. For example, you can deliberately use your tongue
to stimulate sensations in whatever part of your mouth or lips or other body
part your tongue may be touching. Or you can deliberately use whatever parts
your tongue is touching in order to stimulate sensations in your tongue. The
experience will be very different in each caseboth for your tongue and for
what your tongue touches. (Should you touch with your tongue some part of
another person's body, varying just your intentions, it will be the case that
the person's experience as well as your own will be quite different, depending
on what your intention is.)
54
A Tongue
for
All Seasons
and All
Reasons
NEUROSPEAK
Then, if the exercise has been sufficiently successful, you should find
that you only have to turn your head left to right to be aware that your tongue
moves spontaneously with your head. And you may only have to move your
eyes left to right to discover that your tongue moves with your eyes. If your
tongue already was coordinated, then perhaps the quality of the tongue
movements will be recognized by you as being better.
You may even only need to think about something happening at
some distance from the left side of your head to observe that your tongue
spontaneously moves over to the left side of your mouth. You may only have
to imagine something happening well over to your right side in order to
observe that your tongue has moved over towards or into your right cheek,
and you may also find that your tongue moves up and down according to
whether you imagine something happening well above your head or pay
attention to something happening down around or below your feet.
Now, make those observationsf
movements and with where you focus your attention. And notice how clearly
you are aware now of the surfaces of your tongue. Turn your head very
quickly side to side, taking note of how your head is moving. Also, with your
mouth opened short of straining,
whether that movement has improved. Sit quietly, with your eyes closed, and
try to make some further
56
A Tongue
for
All Seasons
observations.
and All
Reasons
As
described to provide you with a basis for recognizing the changes in your
body which have been made by NEUROSPEAK.
average person senses with about equal clarity his or her right and left legs,
right and left armst right and left shoulders, the two sides of the face, and so
on. The body typically is felt as weighing about the same on each side, and
the two sides are experienced also as being about equal in length. That is
what is meant here by
symmetry.
Now, get up and stand with your two feet facing out at equal angles
and your two arms hanging in a similar way. Notice whether your body feels
symmetrical
around and make the same observations. After that, return to your chair,
and in a seated position, scan your body for symmetry.
You should sit, as you usually do, with your two feet parallel to each
other and about ten or twelve inches apart. Maintain that position and also try
to maintain an approximately symmetrical positioning of the rest of your body.
You will probably feel that your two buttocks and the bottoms of your
two feet rest symmetrically
Now I would like to call your attention to the fact that your right foot is
resting on the floor with your right lower leg at approximately a right angle
to your right foot. Your right upper leg is at approximately a right angle to
your right lower leg. And, if you are seated erect, then the right side of your
upper body is at about a right angle to your right upper leg.
You know that you could move your right foot in any number of ways.
You could keep your right heel on the floor and then rap on the floor with the
ball of your right foot. You could rap with the ball of your right foot in bursts
of one and two and three and four raps, or you could rap with your right foot
without any discernible pattern.
Leaving your right heel more or less in place, you could swivel the
front part of your right foot side to side, your right foot all the while keeping
contact with the floor. Or, you could slide your right heel side to side, the
front part of your right foot remaining more or less in place. You could also
move your right ankle in such a way that you could go onto the outside and
then onto the inside of your right foot, and you could do that many times.
You could extend your right leg and, allowing your heel to rest on
the floor, make circles in the air with your right foot. You could also wriggle
58
Learning
Across
the
Hemispheres
your toes. Having extended your leg, you could bring it back towards you
again, using the joint of your right knee. You could flex and extend your
right leg many times, using the muscles that serve to move your leg from the
knee joint.
You could run your right hand up and down your right leg sensing the
front and back and sides of your right leg with your right hand. You could
put your hand in several different kinds of relationship to your right leg.
Your right hand could be used to explore and study your right lower leg,
intending to learn as much about it as possible. You could use your right
hand to stimulate many different kinds of sensations in your right lower leg
and right knee. You could also use your right lower leg and knee to stimulate
sensations in your right hand. And there are other possibilities. It all depends
on the intentions you bring to the sensory mechanisms of your right hand.
Of course, you could do the same with your right upper leg. You could
move your hand over your right thigh, for example, in such a way as to
stimulate strong sensations in the palm of your hand and in the undersides
of your right fingers. You could use the fingers and fingernails of your right
hand to dig into your right upper leg in ways that would stimulate pleasurable
sensations which could be quite intense. You could bend your right arm
at the elbow and then use your right hand to slap your right upper leg or,
perhaps, to rap on it rhythmically in bursts of one and two and three and
four raps.
You could bend your right elbow and then make circles in the air with
your right arm and hand, circling from your elbow. You could also rest your
59
NEUROSPEAK
right hand on the right side of your rib cage and make circles with your
elbow, but this time circling from your right shoulder joint. Or you could
circle from your right shoulder by just extending your right arm out in front
of you and circling, or by extending your right arm overhead and circling
from the shoulder.
You could also, of course, use different parts of the right side of your
body to experience the world outside of yourself. You could touch different
parts of your chair with your right hand, using your hand to learn about the
chair, or using the chair to stimulate sensations in your right hand. You can
press your right leg, or your right arm against parts of the chair, stimulating
sensations in those parts of your right side. You could also simply pay
attention to how your right buttock is resting on your chair and what you
experience as being the position of the right side of your pelvis.
You can explore the interior of the right side of your mouth with your
tongue, gliding your tongue along, rapping with your tongue against the
inside of your cheek, or pushing against your right cheek. You can focus
your breathing on your right nostril, so that you are aware of breathing just
on your right side. Then you may notice movement in your ribs on your right
side and that your right shoulder rises and falls as you inhale and exhale
through the right side of your nose. You can make blinking movements with
your right eyepossibly in rhythmic bursts of one and two and three and
four blinks.
Your consciousness has the ability to move up and down the whole
length of the right side of your body, moving slowly from the bottom of your
60
Learning
Across
the
Hemispheres
right foot all the way up your right side to the top of your head. Then, from
the right side of the top of your head, it can move down over the right side of
your face, sensing the face, and then down the right side of your neck, your
right shoulder, your right upper body and arm and hand, the right side of
your pelvis, your right leg and right foot, and then roam back up and down,
just sensing the right side of your body many times.
After reading this paragraph,
This
time, however, you can begin them while still sitting. Notice, for example,
whether the whole right side of your body feels to you to be lower than the left
sideyour pelvis sinking lower into your chair, your shoulder held lower, your
right foot making a more complete contact with the floor. Pay attention also
to whether you sense your right eye more clearly than your left eye, your right
shoulder more clearly than your left onef your right upper leg more
clearly,
and so on. Then get up and stand and make similar observations. After that,
walk around and once again pay attention to your body's symmetryor,
now is, asymmetrywith
as it
the two sides as well as sensations of weight and length. Walk very quickly
and note if the asymmetry
If you paid close attention, you almost certainly had a quite clear
sensation that your body was longer on the right side. You should have
sensed that it moved more freely on the right side, that it seemed more
energetic and alive, and that your right foot made a better contact with the
floor. There are also many other changes you may have
61
NEUROSPEAK
noticedincluding
closely and just as thoroughly as you can as many differences as you can
between the organization
When you are finished, come back and be seated, and we will take this process
a step further.
As it has been explained to you, there are advantages
in leaving the
side "worked on" in its altered and improved condition. Your nervous system,
if reasonably
inclined to seek pleasure and to avoid pain. Thus, when one side of your body
has been enabled to feel better and to move better, your nervous system will
want to preserve that more pleasurable
to observe the more pleasurable
on one side of the body quickly over to the other side. In the case of
NEUROSPEAK,
transference
Learning
Across
the
Hemispheres
One final time, as you are sitting there, take note of any present
asymmetry.
Now, consider the fact that you could pick up your left foot, your left
leg crossing over your right leg, so that your left foot rests on the outside of
your right foot. Then you could take your left foot back to its starting place
and then cross your left leg behind your right leg, so that the front of your
left ankle makes contact with the back of your right ankle. Then you could
use your left leg to pick up your right leg. After that, you could return your
left leg to its original position.
You could also interlace the fingers of your left hand with the fingers
of your right hand in such a way that your left thumb is on top of your right
thumb. Then you could separate your hands and interlace them once again,
but this time with your right thumb on top of your left thumb. You could
also, having separated your hands, place your left wrist on top of your right
wrist, and you could place your right wrist on top of your left wrist, and you
could repeat that movement any number of times. Finally, you could place
your right hand on your left shoulder. Keeping it there, you could place your
left hand on your right shoulder. Then you could bring your elbows up to
shoulder height and bring them down again, keeping your right hand on
your left shoulder, and your left hand on your right shoulder. You could do
that several times, raising and lowering your arms with your hands on your
shoulders, and then you could just allow your hands to rest as they normally
would be.
63
NEUROSPEAK
Now, notice how you are sitting, and if you have become more
symmetrical.
do
you feel that anything else is better than it was at the start of the exercise?
Has the transference
restored both sides of your body to the state that prevailed before one side
was altered? The "work" that altered one side of your body took quite a
long time to accomplish. Notice
64
Learning
Across
the
how quickly
symmetry.
Hemispheres
and easily
your
brain
has
10
EXPLORING A L T E R E D STATES
I his NEUROSPEAK
you have done up to now. In this case, what we seek to achieve is not the
alteration of one or a few parts or functions, but rather a more generalized
experience extending throughout your
time we are finished, that you are exploring altered states of consciousness
and also a level of muscular and other types of relaxation quite recognizably
different from your condition at the present time.
When you get to the end of this paragraph,
environment and whether you feel relaxed or not. Notice how you are moving
and whatever else you are able to identify with respect to your present way of
being as you just move around the room. After that, be seated as described
beforethe same kind of chair, the same arrangement
Alter your position as little as possible while you read the text. Remember the
importance of focusing your consciousness and remember that since the text
is addressing your brain directly, you need to read rather slowly and very
carefully, allowing a brief pause between the sentences, so that your body
can assimilate what you are reading and organize itself accordingly.
Expect
then return to
Exploring
Altered
States
down to your left knee, back up to the nose and down to the right knee,
and continue to alternate directing the breathing to your left knee and your
right knee.
Your breathing can simply move up and down through your upper body
only, so that the breathing passes in and out through the top of your head
at one end, and in and out between your legs at the other endbreathing
in through the crotch so that the breathing passes up along your spine into
your head, and then out of the top of your head and back down again.
The breathing can be done so that it feels as if it is done just between
your navel and your throat, passing up and down, back and forth, just
between your navel and your throat.
You can have the feeling of breathing in and out between your legs,
and breathing up into your left shoulder and back down again. You can
breathe back and forth between the shoulder and the space between the
legs. You can breathe alternately in and out of the left shoulder, and in and
out of the right shoulder, your breath passing through your body, and in and
out between your legs, as you direct it to happen iri that way.
The breathing can be kept in the lower part of your head, between
your chin and your eyes. You can direct it in and out of your left ear, and in
and out of your right ear, passing through your face to your nose and back
again. The breathing can also be directed towards the forehead, breathing
into the forehead arid then having the feeling that the breath passes in and
out through your forehead. You can do this and have the feeling that your
breath projects, like a column of some very subtle matter out in front of your
67
NEUROSPEAK
forehead, and then with your breath, you can draw it back in and then send
it out again.
Some of the most powerful changes are likely to occur when you direct
your breath up into your brain space. This can be done by directing your
breathing through your two nostrils individually, so that you are directing
one column of breath into your brain's left hemisphere and, simultaneously,
the other column of breath into your brain's right hemisphere.
Or the experience can be of just one column of breath moving in and
out of your brain space, so that the brain space pulses, or expands and
contracts. With that kind of breathing, it is possible to feel that your brain
space becomes considerably larger as your breathing continues.
If the breathing is deliberately directed up into the top of your brain
and on up into the skull beyond your brain, then it is possible to feel that
your brain space expands, but by elongatingbecoming longer. Your breath
can go out through the top of your head and then come back down through
the top of your head, passing in and out in a column that goes higher and
higher as your breathing continues.
And should you breathe up and in and out of your brain space, it can
be done in such a way that you alternate expanding the length of your brain
space and the circumference of your brain space. With that kind of breathing,
a person can begin to get a sense of the actual physical presence of the brain
and the brain space or, at least, to have a feeling that the brain is being
sensed, especially as the breathing passes in and out through the sides and
through the top of your head.
68
Exploring
Altered
States
whole.
Pause for a
take note of how you feelyour state of consciousness, whether you are
relaxed, your relationship
to your environment,
notice. Then get up and walk around making the same kinds of observations.
Notice whether you stand as before or differently,
state of relaxation, and in what ways your experience of your body, yourself,
and your world, may differ from your experience before you read these few
pages. After that, be seated and just read the concluding
paragraph.
NEUROSPEAK
Then, when you have really explored your experiences so that you can recall
them vividly, get up and walk around rather briskly for a minute or two.
You may discover that you begin moving into a state of increasing
alertness
and wakefulness. Examine that state, too, and then try to be aware of how it
gradually
70
Exploring
merges with a condition that feels more like your normal state.
Altered
States
10
SELF-REGULATING BRAIN W A V E S
r\s
usual, be seated with both feet flat on the floor and parallel
and
different
alpha
and
delta
alpha
an
exercise like this one is intended to exert the same kind of beneficial effect
on the part focused onin this case, your brainas on any other part or
functions of the body upon which the focus of consciousness is maintained
for a sufficient amount of time.
You are generally aware of where your brain is within your skull. You
probably know that your brain has two hemispheresa left hemisphere and
a right hemisphere. Consciousness can be focused in the space where your
brain's left hemisphere is, or it can be focused where your brain's right
hemisphere is.
It is possible to direct your breathing so that you feel that you are
breathing into your brain's left hemisphere. You could do this for a while
and, as you do, you are likely to discover that your awareness of your left
hemisphere is quite different from your awareness of the right side of your
brain. You can also breathe into the right hemisphere of your brain for a
while, doing so many times, and then the apparent sensations on the right
side will probably resemble those you experienced when you breathed up
into the left side of your brain.
Remember just to read and not to engage voluntarily in the movements
described in the text. You will undoubtedly experience in yourself a tendency
or impulse to engage in these movements, but again, do not perform the
movements voluntarily. Now you can also breathe towards the back of your
brain, and you can breathe towards the base of your brain in the back, or you
can breathe towards the middle of your brain in the back, or you can breathe
towards the top of your brain in the back. You can breathe towards the back
of your brain in such a way that you feel that your skull elongates in the back.
You then can breathe forward through your brain and into your forehead,
and then back again. You can breathe to the back of your skull, and you can
breathe to the front of your skull, so that your skull elongates in the front as
72
Self-Regulating
Brain
Waves
well as in the back as you breathe back and forth, finding as you do so that
you feel that your brain also elongates to the front and to the back.
Your feeling of breathing through your brain is very effective in helping
you to maintain your focus on your brain. Moreover, as you maintain that
focus, you really will have a feeling that you sense not only the surface of your
brain but also the interior of your brain, as you direct your breath through
it. When you breathe into the back of your brain and into the back of your
skull, the longer you continue to do so, the more you will feel that your brain
as well as your skull elongates in the back. At first, it may feel as if it is only
your skull that elongates as you direct your breathing through your brain and
into your skull. However, as that sensation becomes more vivid, your feeling
that your brain is also being reshaped by your breathing becomes more clear.
You can not only breathe up into the top of your head, past the top of your
brain, creating a sense of elongation of your brain in your skull at the top
of your head, but there are other interesting ways that you can create some
novel sensations up there in your brain space.
You can, for example, breathe with your left nostril into your brain's
left hemisphere, while simultaneously breathing through your right nostril up
into your brain's right hemisphere. You can do this in such a way that you
feel that your brain and your skull elongate out to the left on your left side
and, at the same time, elongate out to the right on your right side. Then,
when you exhale, your brain and your skull can move back in, so that you
feel the two sides to be as they were before you inhaled into the left and
the right sides of your brain. In other words, by doing this, you can create a
73
NEUROSPEAK
sense of pulsations in your brain, your brain expanding out as you inhale,
moving back in as you exhale, moving out as you inhale, and so ongentle
pulsations of your brain, pulsings experienced by you as very clear sensations
of movements of your brain and of your skull.
Similarly, you can breathe up into both hemispheres of your brain,
and beyond that up into your skull, again feeling that your skull elongates,
but this time in upward and outward directions. That movement of your
breathing up and down through your brain can bring your brain very clearly
into focus again, can create again the feeling of pulsations.
After you have breathed into your brain for a while longer, breathing
now backward and forward through your brain and then breathing up and
down through your brain, you can stop directing your breathing
to your
brain. In fact, just forget about your breathing. Then you might find that,
even without your directed breathing, your consciousness remains well
focused on (or in) your brain and that you have what seems a quite clear
sensory impression of the exterior of your brain, of your brain resting there
within your skull, and perhaps even a sense of feeling below your brain's
surface into your brain and a sense of some kind of physical activity going on
in your brain.
Once your consciousness is focused on your brain's processes, feeling
them or just trying to feel them, then an even stronger image of your brain
may appear within your field of consciousness. Then, if you pause for a while
and do not try to do or experience anything, it may be that you will have
a sense of your brain just quietly floating there in your consciousnessan
74
Self-Regulating
Brain
Waves
experience that some kinds of meditation practices have to work very hard
to achieve.
Pause for at least ten seconds before going on to the next
paragraph.
You can also have the experience of feeling that you are exploring
your brain space with your eyes, directing your eye movements into your
brain space. You can look up into your left hemisphere and let your eyes
roam around it. Then you can look up into your right hemisphere and let your
eyes explore that side. You can also explore the entirety of your brain space,
circling with your eyes at different levels of your brain space.
Within that space, you can make diagonal circles, some circles slanting
to the left, and some circles slanting to the right. You can make vertical
circles with your eyes, and you can make horizontal circles with your eyes in
your brain space. You can make fairly quick circles with your eyes in your
brain space, and you can make slower and slower circles, circling at different
levels in your brain space. You can circle very slowly in the middle, making
the largest horizontal circles you have room for, and then you can let those
circles become slower and slower until your eyes come to rest. Your eye
movements stop. Then you may have the feeling that your eyes are resting
somewhere inside your brain and that, except for your awareness of your
eyes and your brain, your consciousness has no other contents no thoughts,
no images, just quiet and tranquility. Just close your eyes and self-observe
for a while.
75
NEUROSPEAK
Now, you may or you may not know that your brain produces various
kinds of electrical phenomena, including those easily measurable brain waves
called alpha, beta, delta and theta. Alpha waves are the predominant waves
of meditation. When the brain is producing mainly alpha waves, then there
is a sense of relaxation and serenity. Delta waves, on the other hand, are
the waves of sleep. When the brain begins to produce significant quantities
of delta waves, then the person becomes drowsy and, if the delta activity
continues, simply goes to sleep.
You may notice that there are some very characteristic eye movements
which accompany your respective responses to the instructions that your
brain will produce either delta waves, waves of sleep, or alpha waves, brain
waves of relaxation. It may happen that as soon as there is any suggestion
that your brain will produce delta waves, and even before any mention has
been made of drowsiness, you will definitely feel your eyelids moving down
as you move them when closing your eyes. That tendency to close your eyes
is, of course, appropriate when you are producing brain waves associated
with sleep.
On the other hand, the eye movements you are likely to experience
when your brain is producing alpha waves, or when it is about to produce
alpha waves, brain waves of meditation and deep relaxation, are movements
appropriate to those states of consciousness, just as the tendency of your
eyes to close is appropriate when your brain is in quest of drowsiness
and sleep. With alpha waves, your eyes can be felt to relax. It is easy,
with a little practice, to feel your eyes relaxing when you or someone
76
Self-Regulating
Brain
Waves
or both, then it is almost certainly true that there have also been changes in
the kinds of brain waves you are producing.
To repeat, your focus on your brain can enable you to gain some
measure of control over alpha, delta, and other brain waves. Your brain
becomes increasingly responsive to suggestions about what kinds of brain
waves it is going to produce. Then, if the verbal suggestion is given that
your brain produce alpha waves, a state of relaxation will be experienced.
Then if you suggest that your brain begin to produce delta waves, a state of
drowsiness may very quickly result. After that, you can use the suggestions
to explore the relaxed alpha state for a while and then the drowsy delta state
for a while, going back and forth between those two states. To maintain the
capacity, other movements should not be made.
77
NEUROSPEAK
results. Having continued with that suggestion and those observations for a
while, then suggest to your brain that it produce delta
waves of drowsiness,
and observe what happens. Move every now and then back and forth between
those two states, and notice whether it seems to you that as a result of your
reading, your brain is willing to produce particular
to your instructions, at least to some extent.
78
Self-Regulating
Brain
Waves
10
INTEGRATING THE W O R L D S OF THE SENSES
of a particular
occurring
balanced
and approximately
awareness
and imbalance
who does not falsify his or her world by bringing to bear upon it only one or
two senses at a time, thereby diluting and distorting the reality
In other words, some parts of reality are overemphasized,
underemphasized,
experienced.
altogether.
That is what happens to the external world when the senses are
that there is a diminished acuity of both seeing and hearing, along with
whatever other sensations happen to be available.
you will almost certainly find that you vivify whatever other sense you then
focus on.
It does not matter
consideration.
slightly
and in concert is a
Integrating
the Worlds
of the
Senses
of what he
or she would perceive if able to utilize the sensory, intellectual, and other
capacities a human being is equipped to use.
Now, add to this a fact that is recognized by almost all the world's
major spiritual disciplinesthat
awake in only the most minimal way, bearing a much closer resemblance to
the notion of a somnambulist,
movements are
dictated by the contents of his or her dream, so the normal person's mental
life is governed primarily
by the involuntary
which arise out of the unconscious mind to play themselves out in the arena
of the pale and disfigured "reality" perceived through the confused and
unbalanced haze of the senses.
Focus, if you will, on this book you are reading. What is it that you
sense about the book primarily? Assuming that you are holding the book,
you are probably touching a page or pages of the book and possibly also the
binding of the book and its cover. As you hold the book, you may also be
touching a table or desk on which the book is resting. Since you are reading,
you also are looking at the book. In order to read it, you must have some
81
NEUROSPEAK
awareness that the words you are reading have been typeset in black ink on
a page that, apart from the ink, is more or less white.
You are touching the book, and you are looking at the book, and in
order to read it you must also be moving so that your kinesthetic sense is
also involved in this process. If you have any awareness of that, then you may
know whether it is only your eyes that are moving across the page and down
the page, or whether there is also some kind of side to side or up and down
movement of your head resulting from movements in your neck as you turn
your head and raise it and lower it, however slightly.
While it is not a part of your reading experience, there are almost
certainly sounds of some sort which intrude into your awareness as you read.
You might also be conscious of odors reaching you, and you might even be
conscious of some kind of taste sensations in your mouth, or possibly you
are just conscious of wetness in your mouth.
Of what are you conscious primarily? Are you more conscious of
touching the book, or of looking at the book, or of the movements your
body is making as you read the book? And what of your awareness of sound,
smell, taste, and any other sensations such as wetness or dryness, heat or
cold? If you were to construct a hierarchy of sensations, ranging from those
sensations of which you are most conscious down to those sensations of
which you are least conscious, in what order would you place them?
Do you know whether you were, in fact, aware of all these different
sensations before they were brought to your attention? If not, do you know
of which sensations you were conscious as you sat there reading before the
82
Integrating
the Worlds
of the
Senses
Now, however, you know in advance what you are being asked to do. You are
being asked to take note of your tactile experiences, your visual experiences,
83
NEUROSPEAK
olfactory
how, for example, your attempt to observe them affects your reading, your
comprehension of what you are reading, and possibly also the organization
of your body. For instance, as you endeavor to keep track of your basic
sensory experiences, does that effort lead you to interrupt your
breathing,
tighten your shoulders, introduce tension into your neck, or otherwise make
yourself more tense at the muscular level? Do you have any awareness,
as
observations,
several times.
Integrating
the Worlds
of the
Senses
than
you did in previous instances. You will be asked to make some others, now
and then, as we continue. At the end of this paragraph,
walk around the room, trying to note as completely as possible whatever you
take in with your senses. Also endeavor to note whether you are more aware
of your movements, of what you are seeing, of what you are hearing, or
perhaps, of some other kind of sensory awareness. Again make a
hierarchy,
grading your senses in terms of the intensity of your awareness as you moved
around the room. Of what kind of sensing were you most aware, of what kind
next most aware, and so on? Please do the walking and self-observing now,
after which return to your chair, your book, and your reading.
As you read, it is called to your attention again that your reading and
your experience here and now has several componentsprincipally, visual,
tactile, and kinesthetic, any others having only a marginal significance. Or
such should be the casealthough unwelcome noises in your environment
might prove to loom larger.
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Given what we have done up until now, you are almost certainly aware
of the contact your hands and fingers are making with your book. You
are almost certainly visually aware of the pages of the book, including the
lightness of the page and the darkness of the print. Unless your awareness
has ceased to benefit from what you have been reading, you should also
be aware of movement sensationsnot just of the larger hand and arm
movements which occur as you turn pages or perhaps re-position your
book, but also of eye movements and, possibly, head movements, or even
upper back and shoulder movements. If your eyes move freely, it should
not be necessary to move your head in order to read. However, if your eye
movements are constricted, then you may have to move your head, your eyes
riding around in your head like passengers. If your neck movements also are
very inhibited, then you may even need to move other parts of your spine
and upper body in order to read back and forth across a page.
In fact, it is rare that a person has much awareness of eye or head
movements while reading. And, unless there is some discomfort, there may
be almost no awareness of the parts of the body not immediately involved in
the action of reading, as the eyes and the head and the hands and the arms
are involved.
In the case of a truly healthy person, "healthy" including a reasonably
complete body image and self-awareness, the person would know just as
much about what all the other parts of her or his body were doing as about
the eyes and head and hands and arms which were immediately involved.
In your case, as you have been reading, it is unlikely that you had any
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sufficient awareness of what your feet and legs were doing, how your pelvis
was organized, what you were doing with your shoulders, how you were
breathing, whether your body was more or less symmetrical, and so on.
Unless some part of you is in pain, your awareness probably included very
little of yourself, except for your head and your hands and, even then, you
probably had very little sense of what you were doing.
Do not confuse such insufficient self-awareness with "good
concentration." Your awareness would almost certainly be no better if
you were just sitting there doing nothing. Really good concentration coexists
with a healthy self-awareness. You will comprehend more, not less, when you
know what you are doing. That is true in part because, when you do not know,
you are almost certainly using your body badly and creating some measure
of discomfort which, while it may not enter consciousness, nonetheless is a
distraction for your brain and nervous system.
This is not to say that there is no need to use one or two senses so
completely that the use of your other senses is greatly minimized. The point
is that the choice to do so should be within the field of your awareness
and that the choice to emphasize the role of one or more senses should
be appropriate to the situation or to your objectives. The person who fully
commands his or her senses will have the ability to determine to what extent
any particular sense is going to be used or not used. That would include what
is sometimes called in psychology "negative hallucination"that is, the ability
not to see, or hear, or otherwise sense what is objectively thereto eliminate
any sensory impression so that for practical purposes, it does not exist at all.
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Integrating
the Worlds
of the
Senses
image of that pet will probably eclipse very largely your visual impressions of
your environment.
It is also true that your focus upon some limited part of your
environment will cause you to see what you focus upon in a very different
way than you are seeing other parts of your environment which could be
equally accessible to your vision. What occurs is not just that the vision is
focused, but that there is an exclusion from awareness of what is readily
accessible to vision. The choice not to see, or only barely to see parts of
what the visual sense is perceiving may be the consequence of a conscious
or unconscious choice. It is easy, at any moment, to look at a whole group of
objects, observing each one with approximately equal acuity, and then just to
focus on one of those objects and observe that the others fade into relative
obscurity or even nonexistence.
Any one of the senses can be used in this wayalways providing that the
stimulus is not so intense as to take away the option of selective awareness.
Under ordinary circumstances, for example, we will not ignore an object that
is sharp enough to penetrate the flesh or hot enough to burn it. (That is not
to say that we lack the potential to exclude even very extreme sensationssome people can so disassociate from pain that they can undergo surgical
procedures without anesthesia and with very little discomfort.) Similarly, but
within a lesser range on the continuum of our sensory potentials, we regularly
sense, or fail to sense, the stimuli presented to us.
For example, you can move the sensitive palm of your hand up and
down over a surface like the arm of your chair or over some other part
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of your chair or desk or table, and you can elect to create quite strong
sensations in your hand by so doing. Alternatively, you can use your hand
in what will appear to be the same way, but greatly diminish the sensations
in your handeither by largely ignoring them, or by touching something
else with your other hand and attending mostly to that hand's sensations, or
by focusing on one of your other senses, and so on. You can increase your
hand's sensations by, for example, closing your eyes, and you could do the
same by plugging your ears so that the sense of sound offers little or no
competition to your sense of touch.
Your hands, as they hold the book you are reading, receive a number
of different tactile sensationsfrom the pages of the book, from the edges
of the cover of the book, from the jacket of the book, and so on. Those
sensations, if you allow them to do so, can very largely fill your awareness.
However, suppose you are reading about what it feels like to be immersed
in very hot water, to run your fingers through the fur of some animal, to pick
up something very cold like a large piece of ice, taking hold of it with both
hands, or to have your body massaged with oil. Or you might be reading
about trying to hold a squirming fish in your hands, or to examine with
your hands the tusk of an elephant, or to feel the hot sand of a beach
beneath your back while the sun warms the rest of your body. To what
extent, as you read about these things, will you remain aware of your hands
holding the book and the sensations you had when you were just thinking
about the contact of your hands with the book? Surely there will have
been some shift in your awareness as you are readingjust as your visual
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awareness shifted from the black print on the book's white pages when
you were reading about armies marching and about mountain peaks and
waterfalls.
As you are reading, your tactile and visual experiences, as it has just
been demonstrated, are only partly determined by the book you hold and
look at. Even more, they may be determined by the content of what you are
reading and by the visual and tactile images called forth by what you are
reading and, as you have probably observed, the images can rather easily
occupy your consciousness more fully than your sensory impressions, at least
under certain circumstances.
As you read, you are probably aware of at least some sounds in the
room around you. Some minimal sounds will be made as you turn your
book's pages and as, from time to time, you adjust the position of your
book, picking it up and putting it down on the surface of your desk or table.
However, most sounds of which you are aware are probably coming from
some other sourcea source inside of your room or a source outside of your
room that is sufficiently powerful that the sounds are able to come into your
room. Those sounds might be from inside the building where you are, or they
might be coming from the outsidestreet noises, for example.
Again, it is the case that your book might provide you with images of
sound which will occupy your consciousness to an even greater extent than
do the other kinds of sounds just mentioned. Consider, for instance, that
you might be reading about the sounds of different kinds of bells. You might
be reading about small bells tinkling or you might be reading about large
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bells tolling in the distance. You might be asked to stop for a little while and
consider the sound of the tolling of those bells.
You might be reading about the sounds of an opera, or a symphony,
or the voice of a country music singer. You might be reading about sirens
wailing, the clapping of thunder, the sound of a motorcycle, or of a saw cutting
through a tree trunk. You might be reading about the sound of heavy rain
falling on a sheet metal roof, or of the rustling of leaves as the wind blows.
It is likely that, as you read about these sounds, they will call forth
auditory images that will compete with your awareness of any sounds about
you, and also compete with any visual, or tactile, or other sensory awareness
you had.
Now, it is quite possible not to have to choose between sensory stimuli
and sensory images. There is no reason why you cannot walk along a beach
with a keen awareness of the sun on your body and of the sand beneath your
feet, the water up around your ankles, sensing clearly how you pick up your
feet, bending your knees and swinging your arms as you listen to the sound
of the water and also to the honking of horns and to a band that is marching
down a street near the beach.
You can certainly be aware of how you are sitting in your chair, and
that you are holding your book, and that you are looking at the pages of your
book, and that there are sounds around you in the room.
You can know very well what it would be like to stick your hand in a
bucket of warm water and to stir the water with your hand while sensing the
movements in your arm, while you listened at the same time to music on
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your radio and, in the background, were also aware of other sounds coming
from your television set. At the same time, there could be smells from your
kitchen, and you could be chewing on a piece of steak or munching on a
cracker. You could munch and smell and listen and stir and feel the heat all
at once, more or less equally.
You can get up and walk around the room, and you can feel your
feet touching the floor, and you can feel your legs moving, and you can
look at the room around you, and you can listen to the sounds around you,
so that at the same time, and without difficulty, you can be sensing your
body's movements, you can be listening to the sounds in the room, you can
be looking at what is in the room, and if there is something to smell, then
you can also be aware of that. If you are eating, then you could also taste
what it is you are eating, and you could do those things all at once and
without difficulty. In fact, you might discover that you are seeing more than
you saw when you walked around this same room a while ago. At the same
time, you may very well be hearing more, while being more aware of your
movements and more aware of the contact of your feet with the floor. You
notice especially whether the objects in the room stand forth individually
and with greater singularity than when you looked at them before. Probably
then your perceptions tended to lump everything more or less together. Does
seeing each thing in its particularity remind you of what you experienced as
a child, when everything was relatively new and you were, therefore, much
more aware of the different parts which together made up the whole of your
world at any given moment?
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Now get up and walk around and take note of what, in fact, you do
observe. Which of your senses did you find to be heightened? Did you feel
that you were more aware of whatever
you find that you were sensing your movements more clearly and perhaps,
in fact, that you moved more as you might imagine a primitive person or an
animal might movemore lithely and with a greater simultaneous
both of your body and of its environment.
awareness
and observe carefully how your experience differs from your experience of
walking around the room when you were asked to do it before
achieve a better integrated and more harmonious kind of sensory
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reading to
functioning.
10
NEUROSPEAK AND PSYCHOPHYSICAL M E T H O D
Neurospeak
and Psychophysical
Method
in response to the exercises you have just been reading and experiencing.
We have demonstrated, at a scientific level, some facts about the mind-body
interrelationship which have never before been presented in this way. When
such a demonstration can be made, then it must be made! I have suggested
that the future of writtenas distinguished from spokenNEUROSPEAK
may lie more in the province of literature than of medicine and psychology.
However that may be, anyone who has read this far should not need any
further convincing as to the uniqueness of the experience.
As the effects of written NEUROSPEAK will be exceeded by the effects
of spoken NEUROSPEAK, the effects of an identical or comparable exercise
will be still greater if the movements are also consciously imagedthat is,
imagined with an imagination which includes images of the appropriate
kinesthetic and tactile sensations. Beyond that, the exercise will become still
more effectivebringing about still greater changesif it is done with actual,
objective movements, and not just with subjective, imaged movements. In
some instances, the greatest effects of all can be obtained by means of a
blending of objective movements and subjective images within the context
of appropriately altered states of consciousness. There can indeed be no
question of any system of exercise realizing its potential for changing
human
attempted.
NEUROSPEAK
Neurospeak
and Psychophysical
Method
towards the ceiling and then down towards the floor. Try to remember any
other responses that you made.
Now, I am going to describe to you identical and very similar
movements, only this time you should physically do the movements you are
reading about.
At the end of this paragraph,
the front and down, comparing the range and ease of movement in your two
arms and shoulders. Make the circles moving your arms together, and then
alternating
awareness of your right and left shoulders, your right and left feet, the right
and left sides of your pelvis, the right and left sides of your face, and your right
and left sides as a whole. Please get up and make those observations
Having returned to your chair, sit as you did when doing
now.
NEUROSPEAK.
Let your feet be flat on the floor, parallel to each other, ten to twelve inches
apart. Position the rest of your body as symmetrically
try to retain that symmetrical
right shoulder. This time you will work with your left shoulder. First of all
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just note how clearly you are able to sense it the top, the front, the outside
of your shoulder, the back, and whatever else you can sense. Then take
a moment to compare that sensing with what you sense about your right
shoulderremembering,
forward
and you
are physically doing the movements. Tfl/ce your left shoulder forward
fcr/ng /t
again,
c/c, a/id do that a number of times before reading on. There should
closely.
Then put your left arm behind you, and take your shoulder back as far as it
will go, return it to its starting position, and do that movement also at least
ten times.
Now, let your left forearm rest on your chair arm (or, perhaps, on your
left thigh), and push up from your left shoulder joint so that you bring your
left $houlder closer to your left ear and also closer to the ceiling. When you
bring your left shoulder down, let it go just as low as it will go. Try
arranging
yourself so that your left arm can hang at your side, and then bring your left
shoulder as high as you can raise it, let it sink as far as you can lower it, and
do a number of those movements. When you have finished, let your hand rest
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Neurospeak
and Psychophysical
Method
on your chair arm or on your leg, and notice whether your left shoulder now
hangs somewhat lower than your right one. Also compare the clarity with
which you sense your left shoulder and your right one.
Now, your left hand resting on the top of your thigh, make
circular
movements with your left shoulder. You can take your left shoulder up, and
then forward, and then down, and then back. Continue circling like that with
your left shoulder.
Make some small circles with your left shoulder and, when you have
done a number of those, make larger circles with your left shoulder. Make a
number of slow circles with your left shoulder, and then make faster ones.
Try doing small slow circles with your left shoulder and then, after a while,
make large quick circles with your left shoulder. Make circles of different
sizes and at different rates of movement.
You should also reverse the direction in which your left shoulder
is circling. You can circle backwards
forward for a while, sensing as completely as possible what you are doing
with your left shoulder and what those movements feel like.
Now put the palm of your left hand on top of the thigh of your left
legf just a little above your knee. Now, pushing and pulling from your left
shoulder, take your left hand down your leg and then bring it back up your
leg. Do not bend your elbow, but keep the movement in your left shoulder.
Now rest your left hand on top of your left shoulder with your upper
arm at about shoulder height, and then make circles with your left arm,
circling from your left shoulder. From that position, make different kinds of
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NEUROSPEAK
circlesclockwise
and counterclockwise,
kinds of combinations as your left shoulder circles with your left hand resting
on your shoulder.
Also with your left hand on your left shoulder, bring your elbow out
in front of your body so that your left shoulder rotates in. Then put your
left hand in your left armpit and bring your elbow forward.
find you are making a different shoulder movement, so that the shoulder
moves more towards the center of your body. Observe that same movement
when you place your hand lower down on the left side of your body, and then
keep placing your hand lower until the shoulder movement becomes quite
restricted.
Something similar will happen if you place your left hand on your left
shoulder and take your arm back behind you. Then your hand can move
farther and farther down your body until, once again, you reach a point of
diminishing returns, and there is almost no movement back by your shoulder,
or in your left shoulder blade, or in the upper left side of your back.
Now, extend your left arm so that your left hand rests on the table in
front of you, and make a light fist with your fingers. Then just roll the fist
like a wheel to the inside, and sense the rolling inward of your left shoulder.
When you have done that, then roll the fist towards the outside of your body,
sensing that your left shoulder rotates out. Then just roll your fist from left
to right, so that your left shoulder rotates in and out, and notice that the
sensations in your left shoulder are very different than the other ones you
have been experiencing.
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and Psychophysical
Method
Put your left hand on your chair arm or your thigh, and circle with
your shoulder forward,
very large
quick circles. After you have done some of these, reverse the direction of
your circling. Compare those circlesand
sensationswith
earlier.
Stop. Just sit and notice now whether your left shoulder hangs lower
than your right one. Notice also whether your pelvis has sunk lower on your
left side, so that your whole body is tending to tilt left.
Take note of where your eyes are looking, and whether, perhaps, your
head has cocked to the left, so that your spine is curving to the left, and that
therefore your rib cage is bending in towards the center of your body on your
left side, while it has lengthened on your right side.
Sense your body as a whole, comparing your left side with your right
side. You will want to try sensing and comparing with your eyes closed as
well as with your eyes opened. Observe whether your left side feels more
alive, and especially compare the feelings in your left shoulder with feelings
in your right shoulder. Try to feel that you can sense down into your left
shoulder joint, as compared to the awareness
shoulder.
Also, compare your sensing of your left eye with your right eye, the
left side of your face with the right side, the left side of your lips with
the right side. Circle as quickly as you can with both shoulders and notice
the movements not only in your shoulders but in your left upper back as
compared to your right upper back.
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comparing
your left side with your right sidefirst of all, how your shoulders and arms
move, then whatever else you notice, such as the contact your left foot makes
with the floor as compared with the contact made by your right foot. Then
stop and make some large circles overhead with your left and right arms.
Do simultaneous
by first taking your arms back, and some circles by first taking your arms
forward. Then simply stand and compare your two shoulders and arms. After
that, return to your chair and make any other observations you can make.
Finally, compare
psychophysical
the difference
to apply to those body parts and functions which are susceptible to voluntary
controls. That is true even when exercising while seated in a chair and reading
a book. NEUROSPEAK
NEUROSPEAK
can be of great value when there is an inability to carry out functions which
would ordinarily
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be voluntary.
and Psychophysical
Method
AFTERWORD
functioning. In other words, images are used to affect directly the physical
body, or the sensory images are experienced in terms of an entirely imaged
body, also eventually bringing about changes in the physical (body/mind).
3) NEUROSPEAK: The use of the spoken or written word alone to
bring about various psychophysical changes. NEUROSPEAK, like the other
components, can also be used in combination with the others.
4) ALTERED STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS: The use of altered states to
affect the outcome of MOVEMENT WORK, IMAGE WORK, or NEUROSPEAK.
Those different components can be used to induce and deepen the altered
states, or the altered states can be induced by other means. Particular states
of consciousness are used to make most effective the application of the other
components.
Those four elements together constitute the basics of the MASTERS
TECHNIQUE or PSYCHOPHYSICAL METHOD. They thus differentiate it from
any other existing system or method and provide a clear-cut organization
that can be used easily and effectively for teaching purposes as well as for
explaining what the Method is and how it works.
ONE-ON-ONE BODYWORK: The Method can be taught verbally to groups
of almost any size, usually limited only by available space. It includes as well,
however, a system of bodywork that is an extension, intensification, and
amplification of the verbally directed work. It is particularly well-suited to both
physical and mental health complaints of kinds which call for psychophysical
re-education rather than for medical treatment. As the late Tom Hanna
observed, in the case of problems typically brought to physicians, this
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Afterword
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