Bruce Lipton:Mind Over Genes
Earlier in my career as a research scientist and medical school
professor, I actively supported the perspective that the human body
was a "biochemical machine ‘programmed’ by its
genes. We scientists believed that our strengths, such as artistic
or intellectual abilities, and our weaknesses, such as cardiovascular
disease, cancer or depression, represented traits that were preprogrammed
into our genes. Hence I perceived life’s attributes and deficits,
as well as our health and our frailties as merely a reflection of
our heredity expression.
Until recently, it was thought that genes were self-actualizing…that
genes could ‘turn themselves on and off.’ Such behavior
is required in order for genes to control biology. Though the power
of genes is still emphasized in current biology courses and textbooks,
a radically new understanding has emerged at the leading edge of
cell science. It is now recognized that the environment, and more
specifically, our perception (interpretation)of the environment,
directly controls the activity of our genes. Environment controls
gene activity through a process known as epigenetic control.
This new perspective of human biology does not view the body as
just a mechanical device, but rather incorporates the role of a
mind and spirit. This breakthrough in biology is fundamental in
all healing for it recognizes that when we change our perception
or beliefs we send totally different messages to our cells and reprogram
their expression. The new-biology reveals why people can have spontaneous
remissions or recover from injuries deemed to be permanent disabilities.
The functional units of life are the individual cells that comprise
our bodies. Though every cell is innately intelligent and can survive
on its own when removed from the body, in the body, each cell foregoes
its individuality and becomes a member of a multicellular community.
The body really represents the cooperative effort of a community
of perhaps fifty trillion single cells. By definition, a community
is an organization of individuals committed to supporting a shared
vision. Consequently, while every cell is a free-living entity,
the body’s community accommodates the wishes and intents of
its ‘central voice,’ a character we perceive as the
mind and spirit.
When the mind perceives that the environment is safe and supportive,
the cells are preoccupied with the growth and maintenance of the
body. In stressful situations, cells forego their normal growth
functions and adopt a defensive ‘protection’ posture.
The body’s energy resources normally used to sustain growth
are diverted to systems that provide protection during periods of
stress. Simply, growth processes are restricted or suspended in
a stressed system. While our systems can accommodate periods of
acute (brief) stress, prolonged or chronic stress is debilitating
for its energy demands interfere with the required maintenance of
the body, and as a consequence, leads to dysfunction and disease.
The principle source of stress is the system’s ‘central
voice,’ the mind. The mind is like the driver of a vehicle.
With good driving skills, a vehicle can be maintained and provide
good performance throughout its life. Bad driving skills generate
most of the wrecks that litter the roadside or are stacked in junkyards.
If we employ good “driving skills” in managing our behaviors
and dealing with our emotions, then we should anticipate a long,
happy and productive life. In contrast, inappropriate behaviors
and dysfunctional emotional management, like a bad driver, stress
the cellular ‘vehicle,’ interfering with its performance
and provoking a breakdown.
Are you a good driver or a bad driver? Before you answer that question,
realize that there are two separate minds that create the body’s
controlling ‘central voice.’ The (self)conscious mind
is the thinking ‘you,’ it is the creative mind that
expresses free-will. Its supporting partner is the subconscious
mind, a super computer loaded with a database of programmed behaviors.
Some programs are derived from genetics, these are our instincts
and they represent nature. However, the vast majority of the subconscious
programs are acquired through our developmental learning experiences,
they represent nurture.
The subconscious mind is not a seat of reasoning or creative consciousness,
it is strictly a stimulus-response device. When an environmental
signal is perceived, the subconscious mind reflexively activates
a previously stored behavioral response…no thinking required.
The subconscious mind is a programmable autopilot that can navigate
the vehicle without the observation or awareness of the pilot—the
conscious mind. When the subconscious autopilot is controlling behavior,
consciousness is free to dream into the future or review the past.
The dual-mind system’s effectiveness is defined by the quality
of the programs carried in the subconscious mind. Essentially, the
person who taught you to drive molds your driving skills. For example,
if you were taught to drive with one foot on the gas and the other
on the brake, no matter how many vehicles you owned, each will inevitably
express premature brake and engine failure.
Similarly,
if our subconscious mind is programmed with inappropriate behavioral
responses to life’s experiences, then our sub-optimum ‘driving
skills’ will contribute to a life of crash and burn experiences.
For example, cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of death,
is directly attributable to behavioral programs that mismanage the
body’s response to stress.
Are you a good driver or a bad driver? The answer is difficult for
in our conscious creative mind we may consider ourselves as good
drivers, however self-sabotaging or limiting behavioral programs
in our subconscious unobservedly undermine our efforts. We are generally
consciously unaware of our fundamental perceptions or beliefs about
life. The reason is that the prenatal and neonatal brain is predominately
operating in delta and theta EEG frequencies through the first six
years of our lives.
This
low level of brain activity is referred to as the hypnogogic state.
While in this hypnotic trance, a child does not have to be actively
coached by its parents for they obtain their behavioral programs
simply by observing their parents, siblings, peers and teachers.
Did your early developmental experiences provide you with good models
of behavior to use in the unfoldment of your own life?
During the first six years of life a child unconsciously acquires
the behavioral repertoire needed to become a functional member of
society. In addition, a child’s subconscious mind also downloads
beliefs relating to self. When a parent tells a young child it is
stupid, undeserving or any other negative trait, this too is downloaded
as a ‘fact’ into the youngster’s subconscious
mind. These acquired beliefs constitute the ‘central voice’
that controls the fate of the body’s cellular community. While
the conscious mind may hold one’s self in high regard, the
more powerful unconscious mind may simultaneously engage in self-destructive
behavior.
The insidious part of the autopilot mechanism is that subconscious
behaviors are programmed to engage without the control of, or the
observation by, the conscious self. Since most of our behaviors
are under the control of the subconscious mind, we rarely observe
them or much less know that they are even engaged. While your conscious
mind perceives you are a good driver, the unconscious mind that
has its hands on the wheel most of the time, may be driving you
down the road to ruin.
We have been led to believe that by using will power, we can override
the negative programs of our subconscious mind. Unfortunately, to
do that, you really have to emphasize the word ‘power,’
for one must keep a constant vigil on one’s own behavior.
The moment you lapse in consciousness, the subconscious mind will
automatically engage and play its previously recorded experience-based
programs.
The subconscious mind is really a tape player. There is no observing
entity in the subconscious mind reviewing the behavioral tapes.
Consequently, there is no discernment as to whether a subconscious
behavioral program is good or bad…they are just tapes. The
subconscious is strictly a playback machine, perceived stimuli engage
preprogrammed behaviors. In fact, people upon seeing their own subconscious
programs play out frequently say something like, “That guy
just pushed my buttons!”
In contrast to the power of the conscious mind, the subconscious
mind is a million times more powerful an information processor.
Also, as neuroscientists emphasize, the conscious mind provides
5% or less of the cognitive activity during the day. Ninety-five
to ninety-nine percent of our behavior is directly derived from
the subconscious. Hence the use of the word ‘power’
in the concept of will power, it takes significant effort for the
conscious mind to keep tabs on the subconscious behavior. Positive
thinking is primarily effective if the subconscious supports the
conscious intention.
The problem with trying to reprogram the subconscious is that we
fail to realize it is playing behavioral ‘tapes.’ To
understand why conscious awareness does not readily change subconscious
programs, consider this instructive analogy: I provide you with
a cassette tape and you put it into your player and push the play
button. As the tape plays the program, you realize that you do not
like it. So, you yell at the tape player to change the program,
you ask it to play something different.
After
awhile of not getting a response, you yell louder and get angrier
at the tape player because of the lack of a response to your request.
Then when it seems hopeless, you beseech God to help you change
the program. The point is simple, no matter how much you yell at
the tape player it will not change the program. To change a tape,
you have to push the record button and then rerecord the program
incorporating the desired changes.
There are two ways out of the problem. Firstly, we can become more
conscious, and rely less on automated subconscious programs. By
being fully conscious, we become the masters of our fates rather
than the ‘victims’ of our programs. This path is similar
to Buddhist mindfulness. Secondly, we can use a variety of new energy
psychology modalities that enable a rapid and profound reprogramming
of limiting subconscious beliefs.
These
new energy modalities provide the ability to rewrite limiting perceptions
(beliefs) and self-sabotaging behaviors using processes that are
mechanistically similar to pushing the record program on the subconscious
mind’s tape player. With conscious awareness, one can actively
transform the character of their lives into ones filled with love,
health and prosperity. The use of these new modalities provides
a key to personal growth and transformation. A variety of energy
psychology modalities, such as Psych-K, Holographic Repatterning
and BodyTalk, are among the variety of programs that can be found
on the web.
|