Saturday, March 2, 2013

The Chimpanzee Brain

The Chimpanzee Brain

Accepting evolution we know that Homo sapiens are distant relatives of chimpanzees, sharing a common ancestor ape between four to six million years ago. Depending on who you ask and what is being measured we share a figure of 95%+ of our DNA with chimps (some put the figure as high as 98.5%). One of the most significant organs we have inherited is the ape brain and by looking at the chimpanzee brain we can hopefully learn some useful information. However, the human brain operates in significantly different ways and this is what has allowed our rich, diverse culture to develop.

Before discussing the main topic in more detail let me recap on a central thesis that I am exploring in this blog.

The human brain is split between two hemispheres. In our normal waking life both of these hemispheres are engaged but most of us (though not all) are left brain hemisphere dominant (making us, for the most part, rational thinkers capable of reading, writing and speaking). Our right brain hemisphere is engaged when we deal with emotional issues and becomes dominant when we sleep…but also when we meditate (hence my interest in relating this information to the practice of karate and other fighting arts).

Dr Julian Jaynes was the first to put forward the idea that our current left brain hemisphere dominance is perhaps NOT our natural state and that we were all originally right brain hemisphere dominant. We have therefore experienced a shift in hemispherical dominance and Dr Jaynes traces this to at least as early as ancient Greece. Another significant influence on me has been Tony Wright, author of Left in the Dark. Mr Wright traces the origins of this shift in hemispherical dominance back over some 200,000 years, arguing that the change was initiated because of climatic and environmental change in Africa which forced out ancestors to shift from a fruit-based diet (including plants and nuts) to a meat-based diet as lush forestry began to disappear and Africa, once a haven for human life, began to become more and more inhospitable. What Mr Wright would argue therefore is that Dr Jaynes is recording the final stages of the shift to left brain hemisphere dominance (significantly as reading and writing became more and more widespread, both of which are heavily dependent on the utility of the left hemisphere). Another important point to note in passing here is that this process is dynamic and is continuing today (and can be reversed through the practice of meditation, whether static or dynamic, among other methods, again hinting at my interest in relating this process to martial arts).

The human brain then is a product of evolution as is, I will suggest below, its lateralization. Let us briefly consider the story of evolution.

Scientists estimate that humans and chimpanzees split from a common ancestor some four to six million years ago. At this time we were much more apelike that humanlike until Lucy, of the Australopithecus species emerged a little more than three million years ago. The theory behind the appearance of Lucy in Africa is that as deforestation occurred the space between trees widened and prevented our ancestors from swinging from branch to branch in pursuit of food. This forced them to the ground where, walking on all fours, they were easy targets for predators. In response to this our ancestors began to walk upright from tree to tree so as to be able to extend their range of vision and detect potential enemies at a greater distance thereby increasing their chances of survival. From this point on we came to resemble how we look and move today. Homo habilis and Home erectus emerged next around 2.5 million years ago and the two lived side by side. Stone tools began to be used and this period marks the beginning of the Lower Paleolithic. By approximately 1.8 million years ago Homo erectus was looking remarkably like modern humans though with nowhere near the same brain size. Various other sub-types also came and went, but one of the most potentially significant is Homo antecessor which may be a common ancestor of both humans and Neanderthals. Current archaeological evidence indicates Homo sapiens emerged some 200,000 years ago; African Eve, the mother to all mothers currently living today, lived around 150,000 years ago while African Adam, the father to all fathers alive today was around 60,000 to 140,000 years ago.

So, back to the chimpanzee brain.

The human brain (by human I refer to Homo sapiens man) is currently around three times larger than that of a chimpanzee. Both brains however are split between two hemispheres, the right and the left. In the left hemispheres of both brains the area thought to control language is larger than the corresponding area in the opposite hemisphere. Although researchers do not believe chimpanzees possess some kind of language, it is thought that they employ a method of communication that we are currently unable to decipher. Researchers at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center found that chimps predominantly use their right hands when communicating with one another as compared to showing no preference when doing things like wiping their noses. As is popularly known, the left hemisphere controls the right side of the body, including the hand and we as humans shake hands with our right hands (lefties have no real choice other than to comply, though the action is for them unnatural). The fact then that chimps use their right hand for expression reinforces the thesis that the left brain hemisphere is concerned with communication. This suggests that the urge to use the right hand / left hemisphere for communication is a precursor to the development of language, which for most humans also utilizes the left hemisphere (and most humans are right handed).

The chimpanzee brain is sufficiently advanced to allow them to demonstrate a basic ability to use tools and solve problems in certain situations and they are even capable of abstract thought to a limited extent. Chimps have also demonstrated a meager ability to consider a solution to a problem.

That said, apart from seeming to prefer the right hand for methods of communication, most chimps do not have any preference and are found, in non-communicative activities, to be equally right or left handed, or ambidextrous. This indicates, again in non-communicative activities, that the chimpanzee brain does not have the kind of overtly specialized lateralization that the human brain has. For example, a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (vol. 104 no. 43) examined brain activity in humans and chimps while wakeful but resting and found that while both chimps and humans displayed high levels of activity within default mode areas there were differences, including (in chimps) a comparatively lower level of activity in the left-sided cortical areas involved in language and conceptual processing in humans. The researchers conclude that "[These] results raise the possibility that the resting state of chimpanzees involves emotionally laden episodic memory retrieval and some level of mental self-projection, albeit in the absence of language and conceptual processing." Is this more akin to how the human brain once functioned?

The research on right-handedness for communication among chimps does however challenge the notion that we as humans are predominantly right-handed because of tool use. This is an important point that I will return to in the future. Note for now that Dr Jaynes detected shifts from right to left brain hemisphere dominance when reading and writing (communicative activities) were becoming more and more widespread and we moved away from the pictographs used by the Egyptians (art is better appreciated by the right hemisphere). This suggests that language and communication are responsible for, at the very least, reinforcing brain lateralization with an emphasis on the left hemisphere. Of further note is the importance placed on silence while meditating and the idea that eternal spiritual truths cannot be communicated verbally. He who knows does not speak…

Although there are similarities then between a human brain and that of a chimpanzee, one of the most significant differences is the degree of lateralization both employ. We as humans use brains that are far, far more lateralized than that of a chimp (this is also true when compared to other animals and, we can presume, when compared to our common ape ancestor). This raises several points to ponder.

When and why did the human brain become so heavily lateralized?

Should we take it for granted that it is “normal” for a human to be left brain hemisphere dominant, or should we consider the possibility that this brain dominance is actually the result of a discernible process that, one might even argue, has skewed our consciousness?

If we so desire, what methods are available to us to allow us to experience right brain dominance and what would this feel like?

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Jesus, Mohammed and Zen

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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Magic Mushrooms

Continuing my investigation of psychedelics that produce altered states of consciousness I would like to look now at magic mushrooms. Sacred, hallucinogenic mushrooms belong primarily to the genuses Psilocybe, Panaeolus, and Copelandia. Each has psychoactive compounds: the tryptamine psychedelics psilocin and psilocybin and ingesting these provokes significant perceptual changes. Although the effects from eating are profoundly different, sacred mushrooms can easily be mistaken for regular ones in the wild. The primary means to identifying which are which is that ones containing psilocybin bruise blue when handled.

Psychedelic shrooms have played a part in human culture for at least as long as recorded history. People like Terence McKenna would argue for a much longer period even than that, believing that for as long as humans witnessed animals consuming such food, our ancestors would have copied the behavior (in this way learning what was and was not edible). Cave paintings on the Tassili Plateau in northern Algeria depict humans decorated with mushrooms. Their use was also apparently widespread in Latin America; between 3000 BCE and 1000 BCE temples dedicated to mushroom gods were built and stone icons fashioned in the shape of mushrooms. Their continued use was noted by Spanish colonists when they arrived on the scene. The ritual use of magic mushrooms was then rediscovered by anthropologists in the twentieth century. A key breakthrough came in the 1950s when amateur mycologist Gordon Wasson became interested in the traditional use of mushrooms in Mexico. Wasson was later allowed to participate in a ceremony in 1955 and the following year the active ingredients (psilocybin and psilocin) were isolated and a synthesis technique was developed. The year after Wasson published the first popular article on the psychoactive mushshrooms in Life magazine and soon after the shrooms became part of the psychedelic movement. Recreational and therapeutic use became relatively widespread in the West during the 1960s until 1968 when possession became illegal. In 1970 they were added to the Controlled Substances Act, like DMT, and legitimate research slowed and came to an end from the 1980s for two decades. In recent years however the effects of psilocybin on the brain and mind have begun to be studied again.

Part man - part animal figure decorated with mushrooms.
Tassili Plateau.

Once ingested the psilocybin is broken down into psilocin, which is the most active component of the mushroom. Both psilocybin and psilocin are closely related to DMT. Psilocin is also a close relative of serotonin and its resemblance to this neurotransmitter is responsible for its psychoactive properties. Exactly how these components translate into a psychedelic experience is unknown. One theory is that the different compounds increase activity of the sensorimotor gating system of the brain, which usually suppresses the majority of sensory stimuli from conscious awareness. The conscious mind is therefore bombarded with stimuli that are usually blocked while under the effects of psychoactive mushrooms.

As with ayahuasca, the details of each trip vary from person to person and at different times and settings for the same individual. Basically though the sacred mushrooms will serve as mental amplifiers, whether for good or ill. Visual and auditory alterations, and a combination of the two, are often reported. Along with the hallucinations may be a feeling of euphoria and a heightened awareness of the inner self and possible a sense of understanding the infinite. These results are often preceded with a feeling of anxiety upon consuming the magic mushrooms and once in full effect the subject may experience wildly fluctuating emotional states, not all of which may be good. As with ayahuasca, the subject may report a near-death experience and / or conversations with external, autonomous “alien” entities along with visits to their worlds. Repressed memories may surface (and these can trigger psychological crises). The awareness of time may skew and minutes may seem like days and when the user finishes his trip he may feel that he has finally awoken from a state of sleep. This new awareness seems like the natural, correct one, though this feeling is often lost within 24 hours. Artistic skills may improve along with a desire to express oneself.

A condensed report of a journey on magic mushrooms is as follows:

I went deeper and deeper inside – I traveled through various realms, some of them beautiful, others magical, and others quite scary. It felt kind of like being in a computer game, where you have to figure out a way to go from level to level and there are hidden dangers, distractions, and traps awaiting you everywhere. Finally, I broke through to the top level – and to my amazement, I became simultaneously all the people (and other intelligent beings) who ever lived, are alive, and will ever live in the universe. I realized that there is only one Actor playing all the parts – it is God, and I am him…there is no hell…and God loves every single one of us the way we are…We cannot really die or get hurt and we have potential to awaken to who we really are…I saw how perfect the story is and that everything is fine the way it is…each of us has to work on healing himself or herself. There is no need to suffer or to be unhappy ever again.

Conclusion

As can be seen, ingesting magic mushrooms produces much the same effects as injected DMT (from the experiments conducted by Dr Rick Strassman) and from drinking the sacred brew ayahuasca (which contains DMT). The hallucinogenic effects and the feelings engendered by these sacred mushrooms then compare with altered states of consciousness brought about by diverse practices such as static meditation, dynamic meditation, sleep deprivation, starvation and so on. Magic mushrooms are one way to find communion with the divine.

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Yamaoka Tesshu Zen Warrior
The Origin of Consciousness
Jesus, Mohammed and Zen
Graham Hancock and the Sacred Vine

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Ayahuasca

Ayahuasca is often informally called the Sacred Vine of the Amazon. Despite (or because of) the hallucinogenic properties the brew can engender it is popular in the Upper Amazon area as a valid (and legal) accompaniment to religious ceremonies. It is made from the stem of a jungle vine and in most areas it contains at least one more additive: the leaves of a DMT-containing plant. From the Upper Amazon the tea has spread throughout South America and each country, and each religious group within that locale, has an idiosyncratic approach to the preparation and consumption of ayahuasca, which is the name of both the vine and the finally prepared brew. It was made popular to non-natives by Terence McKenna.

One of the more interesting properties of ayahuasca, the tea, is that it is designed to overcome the problem that DMT, the active ingredient, is in fact inactive when taken orally by itself as it is immediately destroyed in the gut and liver. By combining it with harmine, a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI), the DMT is able to cross the blood-brain barrier and begin acting on serotonin receptors in the brain. Quite how the Amazonian Indians came to understand this hundreds of years ago is a mystery.

Users believe that it is the brew itself that is the teacher. Although each session is overlooked by an experienced leader, he is not the teacher, only the guide and supervisor. He will suggest that a simple diet be undertaken leading up to the session accompanied by sexual abstinence. This process itself leads to a mild altered state of consciousness and can bring about lucid dreaming (dreaming while being aware that you are doing so).

The actual experience of taking ayahuasca varies from participant to participant. Set refers to the pre-existing psychological makeup of a user while setting describes the environment the hallucinogenic is taken in. Both affect different subjects in different ways and a change in set or setting can produce profoundly different reactions to the psychedelic in the same user. In addition different strengths of ayahuasca also produce different results from mild to extreme. The experience then is not fixed and not uniformly common to all people.

On the other hand, taking the hallucinogenic with a strong enough potency does allow everyone to enter mysterious altered states of consciousness where a person may confront the great questions and find appropriate answers. It is here that the psychedelic experience can become a sacred one. Other users are seeking answers to questions and issues that are more personal and less universal. For example, perhaps they are experiencing great change in their lives and seek some guidance, or wish to develop their creativity or find a way to examine their own psyche. Others want some kind of healing experience or to overcome a feeling of shame they may have been carrying with them for a considerable length of time. With use those original aims may come to be supplanted with desires that are a little more vague but equally compelling: wanting to go deeper into the psychedelic experience, wanting to let go completely or discovering where anxiety comes from.

Despite the potential for variety among people and the different motivations for wanting to take ayahuasca in the first place, it is nevertheless true that certain motifs are reported again and again by different people at different times and in different situations. A common, and very interesting phenomena, is contact with “alien” beings and visits to worlds of high technology.

One such (condensed) report is from a forty five year old American male, who had the following experience while under the influence of ayahuasca.

In my case my abduction did not take place in the physical world, as we normally know it. It took place on another level…All of a sudden, I was bathed in this white light from above, it felt like antigravity energy that lifted me up and out of my bed, and through the roof…It seemed to separate me in two and life and ethereal duplicate of my body.

I was transported into a room within a ship, very clean, very sterile, well maintained, stainless steel and white, very muted white lighting, full spectrum. I was on a table…I was strapped down by the arms and legs…Right away I felt that my consciousness was being sedated, but whatever it was that was sedating me was not enough. I immediately became conscious of my surroundings and tried to sit up and look around; at that point I became acutely aware of these beings – tall, skinny, kind of lanky, very thin-featured but with a praying mantis head, triangular and very bug like. I got the feeling they were very conscious and technologically advanced…

Around me, around this table were instruments, tools of some kind, probes, strange manipulating instruments…At some point they started adjusting the instruments and moving closer with them. I felt a little fearful but they assured me that it would be OK…I am not sure if they inserted devices or not. I get the feeling they were just looking and checking and taking some small biopsies and some blood and sperm and samples from my gut and bacteria that were in my body. Every time I felt uneasy, they somehow seemed to soothe my brain…I said, “I have to go”. They said, “OK”…I was quickly transported back…and merged back with my self.

The subject was subsequently “abducted” twice more on the same trip. The second abduction was not so comfortable and the subject had to threaten his hosts with violence to force them to control their experiments on him. He described them as looking reptilian with elephant-like, tough grey skin, with very little hair. They had large eyes and stood around 3.5 to 4.5 feet in height. They had little arms and a large, cylindrical body with webbed feet and little claws. In the third abduction the beings were around seven foot tall with “octopus” heads.

More typically, while under the effects of ayahuasca a subject may first see geometrical patterns appearing in front of the inner eye. Using intention these patterns can be penetrated to enter a three- or four-dimensional space of unearthly beauty. I will note in passing here the importance of these geometrical patterns because a strong theory to have emerged is that ancient cave art is, at least in part, a record of such visions…which means our ancestors were experiencing hallucinations in the same manner to us, and this may provide an explanation for the rich tapestry of spiritual and religious life that has come to be a hallmark of human culture. I will return to this subject in more detail in a future article. Hallucinations may also be auditory and tactile and all can be interacted with and navigated through. Having clear intentions about the purpose behind each trip seems to play an important role in the process. In this way repressed memories can surface from as far back, it is held, as in the womb.

This journey into the psyche can turn into one of the most significant events that a subject may experience in his or her life. A session can literally be life-changing and many assert that they receive answers to questions that they posed, hence the view that “The plant told me…” Many find new meaning to their lives, feeling that they are connected to everything. They perceive patterns in creation that they could not before and believe they have accessed dimensions beyond the one we normally consciously experience. Many become more ethical; others more creative. Some find that addictions to alcohol and tobacco, to name two examples, come to an end. Sessions are not always positive. The second of the abduction experiences detailed above indicates that. Users may enter a shadow land – a type of hell in Christian parlance - and confront the darker nature of themselves where the innermost fears are confronted and, hopefully, understood and resolved.

Unfortunately nothing is free. The tea is unanimously described as being vile and an ayahuasca session will most likely see the subject suffering physical ailments ranging from vomiting and diarrhea to extreme bodily weakness to the extent they are unable to summon the energy to move. Others may even faint for a short time. Veteran users may avoid these side effects altogether.

These side effects are held to be a useful part of the ceremony and bestow a great deal of respect, awe and reverence to the brew that is being taken and the process of discovery. The vomiting and diarrhea cleanse the body by detoxifying it while the DMT cleans the psyche. The result is that the subject feels tremendously at peace with himself and his surroundings following a good night of sleep after the ceremony. The expectation of these side-effects quietens people before participation and can even provoke fear among new users.

Conclusion

Despite typically negative views of hallucinogenics in first world industrialized nations, ayahuasca is seen as a valid prop to profound spiritual and religious experiences, and it has been so for a long time before it was discovered by Westerners. Usage consistently leads to the experience of altered states of consciousness (though the details may vary from user to user) and these altered states are comparable to those resulting from meditation (static or dynamic) and even, on occasion, “alien abductions”.

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Yamaoka Tesshu Zen Warrior
The Origin of Consciousness
Jesus, Mohammed and Zen
Graham Hancock and the Sacred Vine

Return to the top of Ayahuasca.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Litany of the Way

From training in the Way comes strength
From strength comes will
From will comes faith
From faith comes honor
From honor comes respect
From respect comes training in the Way

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Body Weight Exercises for the Upper Body

Body Weight Exercises for the Upper Body

Simple, easy (in theory!) to perform and sympathetic to the wallet (no gym fees!) and the joints, body weight exercises are all you need to get ripped. You can use straight sets (say 10 reps per exercise or whatever you can manage), pyramid sets (say 3 sets of 5, 10 and finally 15 reps) or reverse pyramid sets (15, 10 then 5 reps). Take an adequate break between each set, drink plenty of water and be sure to replenish your salt loss after your workout. Aim to perform these exercises 2-3 times a week interspersed with aerobic work for big gains. Warm up and stretch to cool down.

So, onto 10 body weight exercises for the upper body. These are great for getting a pump in your arms, shoulders and chest.

1. Standard Push-up. Actually, there are plenty of variations to the ‘standard’ push up (stay tuned for a future article!) but here we will stick to the absolute basics. Support your upper body weight with your arms extended, body held rigid and balanced on the balls of your feet. Bend your arms and lower your body slowly to the floor until your chest touches the ground. Then push yourself back up to your starting position.

Difficult? Try balancing on your knees rather than the balls of your feet. And if that is still difficult do the push ups vertically by standing up and leaning your arms against a wall while they support your body weight and press into and away from your support.

2. Dips. If you have a dip bar all well and good but you don’t need one. Instead you can dip on the edge of your bath tub, a chair or a table. Just make sure your hands are not going to slip once the sweat starts dripping!

Start with your back to your dip bar and lower yourself so you are supporting your weight with your extended arms. Keep your legs out in front of you as straight as possible and maintain an erect upper body. Slowly bend your arms lowering your upper body towards the ground. Once your upper arms are parallel to the floor raise yourself again for one rep.

The further away your feet are placed from you, the harder the exercise will be.

3. Judo Push-up. Starting position is similar to the standard push-up but have your hips pulled further back thereby taking your upper body weight away from being directly resting on your arms. Next dip your chin down to the floor, scraping just above the ground. Your upper body and hips should follow through; as they do so raise your chin from its lowest point. Once your hips have almost reached your hands pull them up and then back again to the starting position.

4. Step Up Push-up. Adopt the starting position for the standard push-up but make sure that directly in front of you is a raised platform of some kind (like a stairway step or a step aerobics platform). Bring your right hand up onto the platform followed by your left. Make sure your body weight is over your arms at all times to keep the exercise effective. From the step return your right hand to its original position followed by the left. For the second rep start with the left hand and repeat the pattern in reverse.

5. Donkey Kicks. Start in a position similar to the stand push-up but with more of your weight over your supporting arms. Bring your legs back, bending them. From this position pull your legs up and thrust them out behind you while your full body weight is supported on your arms. Pay particular attention to making sure your hands are not going to slip in this position. Once your feet return to the ground repeat the pattern.

After a successful career in the NFL Herschel Walker, in his late-forties, turned to professional MMA. Walker is a proponent of body weight exercises.

6. Arm Switches. Again, start in a push-up position. This time though raise one of your arms up and to your side so your weight is now balanced on one arm only. From the position push up on your supporting arm and as you do so switch arms so your body weight comes to rest on the opposite arm.

7. Shoulder Extensions. Stand upright with your arms held to your sides parallel to the floor. Extend your fingertips and then slowly circle them forward moving your entire arm in a small, tight circle as you do so. Set a time limit for this rather than attempting a fixed number of repetitions.

8. Side to Side Push-up. Starting in the standard push-up position lower your body weight to the side over one of your hands while continuing to support yourself (though to a lesser extent) with the opposite arm. From the lowered position push yourself up to the original starting position (in the center) then repeat to the opposite side.

9. Pull-ups. You really need something secure for this one. Grip the bar above you with both hands and pull yourself off the floor with arms still extended straight. From this starting position pull yourself up until your chin is parallel with the bar then lower yourself slowly.

10. Elevated Push-up. Once you have mastered the standard push-up increase the difficulty by elevating your legs thereby putting more stress on your shoulders, chest and arms. Simply repeat the standard push-up but with your legs resting on a raised platform. This could be a stair (minimal elevation) or you could perform a hand stand against a wall and dip down (maximum elevation).

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Monday, February 18, 2013

The Pineal Gland

If we identify DMT as the software, then the pineal gland we can label the hardware. DMT is the endogenous hallucinogenic that research appears to find is responsible for enabling people to enter an altered state of consciousness complete with “spiritual” visions and a sense of wonder and communion with something greater and beyond the individual. This research though has been dependent on external injections of DMT made to subjects via IV. The theory put forward by Dr Rick Strassman, the foremost expert on the subject, is that it is the pineal gland that produces excess amounts of endogenous DMT during times of great relaxation and stress, leading to the experience of mystical states.

This tiny gland, about the size of the nail on your little finger, is situated in the middle of the brain and vaguely shaped as a pine cone (hence the name though it is properly termed the epiphysis). Properly speaking, it is not a gland but is in fact the remains of (literally) a third eye that once protruded from the top of our heads before retreating into the skull as evolution worked its magic. Nowadays however, it is still referred to as being a third eye, but in the mystical sense of an inner eye that can perceive different spiritual realms. Is this the source of the blinding white light that mystics through the ages say accompany enlightenment (literally meaning “to see the light”)? (Note that some anthropologists believe the origin of the term enlightenment is related to ancient sun worship…to see the sun was to see the light). Spiritualists would argue that this enlightenment is the cumulative result of specific training designed to move consciousness progressively through ever higher levels of awareness and energy centers (called, among other names, chakras). The final destination is the center of the crown of the head, the area where the pineal gland would once have been located. According to the Taoists for example, it is from this point that an Immortal would experience his chi (energy) exploding from his skull to unite with the energy of the larger universe.

The gland is unique. Although it is not in fact a part of the brain and is only situated in that area, other brain sites are mirrored and it has been a mystery for at least a couple of thousand years why this should not be so for the pineal gland. Though its original role is known (as a real third eye) it remains unclear why evolution would have determined its retreat into our brain area and what role it currently serves us. The gland itself has a hollow interior filled with a watery fluid and receives tremendous blood flow second only to the kidneys.

History tells us that the pineal gland was first identified by Herophilus, a third century B.C. Greek physician contemporary with Alexander the Great with other notable early commentators including Pythagoras and Plato. However it seems that the serpent headdresses seen in ancient Egyptian art points to the pineal with the snake symbolizing esoteric knowledge. The red dot still adorning the center of foreheads of Hindus today is also believed to indicate the third eye. Given the fascination that our ancient ancestors, across many cultures, had with the pineal gland we should not be surprised to find that it featured in sacred art and architecture all over the world and the accompanying pictures below will support this assertion.

Another interesting speculation is the importance ancient cultures placed on sacred mountains that were believed to have been the first land to emerge from the primordial sea during the separation of Heaven and Earth. The Sumerians maintained this tradition, as did the Babylonians who went further and held that this sacred mountain was also the axis mundi, the axis that the world moves around. These massive features were also representative of the pineal gland. While the physical mountain is held to be the point where the spiritual meets the physical, the theory of Dr Rick Strassman (see below) is that the pineal gland is where our life force (the spiritual) enters our body (the physical).

Along with the Greeks, another key philosopher to bring further attention to this strange gland was none other than Descartes. Descartes held that it was only possible to hold one thought at a time. Where did these solitary thoughts arise from? Perhaps the pineal gland, the only single organ in the brain? He further believed that thoughts flowed from the gland into and through cerebrospinal fluid (though the existence of this fluid was unknown at that time) and thus throughout the brain. The famous philosopher went further than this though and argued that the pineal was the bridge between the spiritual and the physical, with the two phenomena affecting one another directly in the gland.

We find a mix of these ideas represented throughout history.

The ancient Egyptians had the Benben stone which was further represented as the apex of each pyramid (themselves representative, quite possibly among many other things, of the sacred mountain). This is most commonly seen nowadays on the one dollar bill used in the United States. The picture depicts a pyramid (the sacred mountain) capped with a Benben stone (representing the pineal gland) which itself encompasses an eye (remember that the pineal was once literally a third eye but for centuries has been understood to be a spiritual gateway to perceiving other realities).

Benben stone

One dollar bill

In Hinduism the Shiva lingam has been the subject of all kinds of interpretations, the most obvious that it is a phallic symbol. Professor Wendy Doniger notes that some Hindu texts understand the lingam to be a pillar of light or as a symbol of God. Though the design of the lingam does vary from one artisan to the next, there are cases of the lingam being shaped as a pinecone.

Lingam

Representations of Shiva are also very interesting. As you can see in the picture, Shiva sports a pinecone-like hairstyle, has a fully opened third eye and has the kundalini serpents writhing around his neck.

Lord Shiva

In ancient Greece there was the Omphalos stone, kept at the Oracle at Delphi, and also shaped like a pine cone. The Greeks believed that Apollo resided within the stone and that oracles could contact him…again demonstrating the idea of the physical realm meeting the spiritual realm. Of further interest is that omphalos means “the center of the earth” and also “navel”. In many Asian martial traditions emphasis is placed on developing power and coordination in the lower abdominal area (the tanden in Japanese) around which all techniques flow. Also the area located just below the navel is where many elementary breathing exercises want to center attention and draw breath into. From here this energy is raised up through the body before exiting the top of the head.

The Omphalos Stone

In ancient Rome there was the baetyl stone, also shaped somewhat like a pine cone and also associated with oracles and prophesy. Again drawing parallels with the one dollar bill in the US, both the Omphalos and baetyl stones appeared on coins of the periods.

Baetyl Stone

That Rome regarded the pineal gland as being something special was further confirmed when they placed a giant bronze statue of a pine cone in the Court of the Pine Cone in the Vatican (which also features ancient Egyptian symbolism and hieroglyphs) and also adorned the staff of the pope, as well as certain of his apparel, with pine cone imagery. According to Catholic orthodoxy the Pope is the mediator between God and his followers (the spiritual and the physical).

Court of the Pine Cone

The light of the body is the eye: if therefore your eye be single, your whole body shall be full of light.
-- Matthew 6:22

Note that the Pope is wearing a hat and a cape clasp while carrying a staff that are all adorned with the pine cone

Returning to the work of Dr Rick Strassman, his hypothesis connecting the pineal gland to DMT was: Does the pineal gland produce psychedelic amounts of DMT at extraordinary times in our lives?

Some of these “extraordinary times” would include when our individual “life force” enters our fetal body: does it pass through the pineal and trigger the first rush of DMT? Later, at actual birth, does the pineal release more DMT? Fast forward an entire lifetime and as we experience the change to death, does the life force flow through the pineal, thereby releasing another flood of the psychedelic molecule? In between these two extremes we may also experience deep meditation, psychosis and near-death experiences. Undoubtedly the pineal contains the necessary building blocks to manufacture DMT. Plus the pineal can make beta-carbolines; compounds that markedly enhance the effects of DMT.

Marduk (Nimrod) holding a pine cone

Birth, near-death and death experiences are all highly stressful events that generate huge quantities of stress-related hormones, including adrenaline and noradrenaline, both of which are pineal-stimulating.

Science tells us that DMT is present in newborn animals and it is supposed it would therefore also be present in human babies (and mothers may also be experienced heightened floods of DMT). Vaginal delivery in particular is believed to set in motion DMT release, followed, in terms of intensity, by anesthetized delivery and finally Cesarean. In support of this is an observation made by Dr Stanislav Grof, an LSD psychotherapist, who says that much of what takes place during psychedelic therapy sessions is a reenactment of the birth process. Grof has found that those born by Cesarean are less able to let go during psychedelic therapy than those born vaginally. Possibly this is because of psychedelic levels of DMT being present during normal birth.

Bacchus, Roman god of drunkenness and revelry holding a pine cone tipped staff

Near-death experiences (NDEs) are high impact psychological experiences often accompanied by psychedelic experiences and like birth, this may be because of a hugely increased flood of stress hormones stimulating DMT production.

Obviously when it comes to death there is not a great deal of information to go on. When precisely to we die? When we stop breathing? When brain activity stops? Many ancient spiritual traditions maintain strict guidelines regarding when a body can and cannot be moved or buried and we have to question why there is an effort to avoid possibly disturbing residual, post-death (if we deem ourselves to in fact be dead) consciousness. As our pineal gland decomposes, does this have any influence on any existing consciousness? Are we still producing DMT and experiencing its effects despite being clinically dead? Remember, although the pineal gland is located within the brain mass, it is not part of the brain. It is feasible that though there is no longer any brain activity there is still DMT having an active effect on our consciousness.

Angkor Wat profusely designed with pine cone symbols

The Tibetan Buddhist Book of the Dead holds that it takes forty-nine days for the soul of someone recently dead to reincarnate in a new physical body. The unborn embryo in the womb of the mother takes forty-nine days to develop the pineal gland…and forty-nine days is when the fetus splits between male or female gender. Of course, this is all supposition, but nevertheless there are plenty of traditions that argue for some kind of survival of consciousness beyond physical death followed, in some religions, by some form of reincarnation. Near-death experiences, if they are in fact an accurate prelude of actual death, certainly suggest this to be true.

In summary, one theory put forward by Dr Rick Strassman is that at death stress hormones are released that stimulate the production of DMT in the pineal gland and this opens our awareness to another realm beyond the physical. Though our bodies may cease to function, consciousness of a sort remains in a disembodied state for forty-nine days in this other realm. After seven weeks consciousness returns to a new body via the newly formed pineal gland and a surge of DMT “turns on” consciousness of the physical realm once more (albeit in the womb of our mother) and the first effect of this is the differentiation of our gender.

Staff of Osiris decorated with a pine cone

Summary

Consider that much of this information is highly speculative. There is no actual proof that the pineal gland is able to grant access to alternative dimensions, nor that such dimensions even exist in the first place. That said, there does seem to be considerable proof that something happens when we are experiencing extreme stress (such as the near-death phenomena) or extreme relaxation (when we are engaged in high level meditation) or when we imbibe hallucinogenic drugs (or if we are suffering from psychosis). The precise details vary from person to person but still commonalities can be found (serpents, as an example, are often seen in altered states of consciousness). What is also apparent is that ancient cultures regarded the pineal gland as being crucial in this process and the work of Dr Rick Strassman introducing DMT into his subjects suggests that the importance of the pineal may have been known hundreds and even thousands of years ago.

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

What is an Altered State of Consciousness?

What is an Altered State of Consciousness?

Before I look at answering the question what is an altered state of consciousness, it worth first establishing how such a state can be entered.

The most common controlled methods include static meditation, dynamic meditation or the use of hallucinogenic drugs. Static meditation is the classic form of meditating while sitting, standing or lying down. This can be done in silence or while chanting or reciting some mantra. The precise number of forms this can take are innumerable but some common ones may include mirror or candle meditation. Dynamic meditation involves the repetitive execution of a pattern of movements usually over an extended period of time. This can be as simple as jogging but a common shamanic form is ritualistic dancing. Of course, martial arts practice is also a form of dynamic meditation. Hallucinogenic drugs have become vilified in the West but in other parts of the world a rich shamanic tradition has been preserved and imbibing psychedelic drugs is considered a valid and useful religious / spiritual practice. The most famous is ayahuasca, a brew used in South America. Other paths to altering consciousness may include sleep deprivation and prolonged fasting among others.

An altered state of consciousness may also be entered into during a Near Death Experience (NDE) or during supposed cases of alien abduction. We may also have an experience when very sick (when the body is weak and under stress). Arguably we are also experiencing an altered state while dreaming. Precisely how we spontaneously step out of reality into a perception of a different reality is unknown, but a strong suggestion is through an increased level of the endogenous hallucinogenic DMT entering the pineal gland. Another is through shifts in brain hemisphere dominance from the left (rational) to the right (non-rational).

So, moving on to the question what is an altered state of consciousness, we find that the answer is different for different people at different times and in different circumstances. Two people could take ayahuasca for example at different times in different places and have very different experiences. In fact the same person may use the same method to enter an altered state in a different setting and also have a very different experience. However, using a wide variety of data from different sources, we can establish certain common experiences.

In his book Inner Paths to Outer Space Dr Rick Strassman identifies the following commonalities between people taking hallucinogens. Although he is talking specifically about the use of psychedelic drugs, these features are common to all who enter an altered state of consciousness using any of the means I have highlighted above.

An important point to note is that although I am describing each effect in isolation, often the subject will experience several or even all of the following states simultaneously. So, in no particular order...

Visual changes in perception may include a visible, buzzing, vibrating field around physical objects and a melting of the boundaries of those objects allowing them to seem to merge. Objects may be magnified or become diminutive. Color intensity may change. Different colors may even generate different auditory impressions. True hallucinations may also appear: the subject may see things that are simply not there using normal perception. These objects may be seen whether the eyes are or are not open. A common feature of the experience is seeing geometric swirls and it is in part for this reason that a credible explanation for ancient cave art expressing hallucinogen trips has been put forward as these shapes are a common feature of such art. Images may also become very complex and include such subjects as living creatures, machinery and landscapes. Ultimately a bright white light may also be seen, the sign of enlightenment according to various mystical traditions.

Sounds may also vary from more mellow to painfully harsh. Subjects in an altered state of consciousness may even “see” sounds. Unaccounted for voices may also be heard. On occasions, others may be in a state of functional deafness, unable to hear anything at all.

Tactile and gravitational senses can also be affected. One of the most famous feelings is that of disassociation of the consciousness from the body (an out of body experience). Other people become hypersensitive to inner and outer physical stimuli.

Emotional variation can similarly swing from one extreme end of the spectrum to the next. Some may experience abject terror, while others may have a feeling of complete and utter bliss. Very rapid emotional shifts, for no apparent reason, are also common, from joy to sadness, anger to calm, hate to love. At other times all emotions may be missing; others may be fully empathic towards another person, whether real or imagined, or even nonhuman entities such as animals, plants and rocks.

Mental faculties may also change. The thought process may speed up or slow down. Personal or philosophical insights may be had; others may find all thought shut down and be unable to process information. Opposites can be united, while divisions in previously apparent unity may be recognized. The sense of reality itself may also be changed. Some supposed hallucinations may feel “more real than real”. Information can also be gleaned from such innocuous objects as a flower or a cloud. Beings and entities can sometimes communicate with the subject.

Finally subjects in an altered state of consciousness can also become more sensitive to the people around them. People often become easier to be swayed or influenced by others. Non-verbal communication is also better understood.

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

What Body Fat Percentage for Abs?

What Body Fat Percentage for Abs?

Working to develop your abs is only half the battle in making sure you look ripped. The other side of the story is the amount of cardio you do and the diet you follow. Strengthening and developing your abdominal muscles while skipping cardio and / or following an unhealthy diet will of course make you stronger, but it won't lead you to getting an impressive, cut figure.

What you need to aim to do in your training and with your diet is lower your body fat percentage. This is not as simple as just losing weight. Reducing the total number of pounds you weigh can be achieved by lowering your body fat OR your musculature (or both together). In your training you need to be working to reduce your body fat while maintaining or increasing your musculature.

So, what target body fat percentage do you need for your abs to show? The first thing is to make sure that you have been training your abs. If there is no muscle there, no amount of cardio or strict dieting is going to reveal something that doesn’t exist in the first place.

The second thing to understand is the your target body fat percentage will vary if you are a man or a woman. Men on average have a lower body fat percentage then women who carry more fat in their breasts and buttocks. The average for men is 18-24%; for women it is 25-31%. Any more than this and you are fast tracking towards obesity. Part of this percentage includes what is known as essential fat. This is the minimum required amount for you body (and mind) to stay healthy and function normally. For men that figure is 2-5%; for women 10-13%. Lowering your body fat percentage for prolonged periods of time can be very dangerous to your health (Bruce Lee was down to 1% at the time of his death, thought to be a contributing factor to weakening his body). Top athletes and fitness models only hit very low body fat percentage figures for short periods of time (such as when they compete) while usually walking around several kilograms (of fat) heavier. Even then, they are competing within the range of minimal essential fat.

So, what body fat percentage do you need for cut abs? For men you want to be looking at getting down to around 10%. Women should aim for around 17%. These figures are intended as guidelines only. Some people will be naturally lean in their stomach areas while others will find they easily put on weight in that area.

As far as actually measuring your body fat does, this is notoriously difficult and different test methods may well produce different results. Given this make sure that you are frequently checking your progress in the mirror to see if you are developing. Also, considering that muscle weighs more than fat, it should be understood that it is possible to gain weight overall (through developing muscle) while at the same time lowering your fat level and becoming leaner.

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Friday, February 1, 2013

DMT

N, N-dimehtyltryptamine, or DMT, is the so-called “spirit” molecule as identified by the leading researcher on the subject Dr Rick Strassman. This molecule seems to provide our consciousness access to an altered state filled with bizarre visions, thoughts and feelings. It seems, in short, to open up access to realms way beyond our imagination.

As powerful as DMT is (with the result that it is illegal and very heavily controlled even for research purposes) what is as surprising as the visions it provokes is that it is found naturally occurring throughout the plant and animal kingdoms. It is a part of the normal makeup of a regular human, as well as being found in flowers, barks, roots, mushrooms and so on. It is, literally, almost everywhere you look.

That said, DMT is most abundant in Latin America, among the plants that are used – and have been used for thousands of years - by the shamans in the area. Arguably the most famous method of ingestion of DMT is through ayahuasca, a traditional (and vile) beverage believed to help predict the future and allow contact with dead ancestors.

R. Manske, a Canadian scientist, discovered how to make DMT in the first half of the twentieth century. At the time he was unaware of its existence as a naturally occurring substance found in the human body. However, there was very little interest in it or any other psychedelic drugs. This changed in the early 1950s when LSD and serotonin were discovered. A new breed of scientist was very interested in psychedelics and using them to investigate human consciousness. Chemists began searching for the active ingredients of barks, leaves and seeds. Science developed and it was discovered that DMT was a constituent of plants that produced psychedelic effects, though it was then unknown if DMT itself was psychoactive.

The next development was an unexpected, but crucial step. Hungarian researcher Stephen Szara wanted to experiment with LSD. Living as he did behind the iron curtain he was blocked from receiving any of the drug from the West. Unperturbed he synthesized some DMT in his lab in 1955. Immediately he began to experiment only to find that his chemical was ineffective. He surmised that there must be a mechanism in the gut that breaks down DMT as quickly as it is swallowed…and he was correct. Part of the story that is so amazing is how shamans in South America were able to understand this and formulate a response thousands of years ago to allow DMT to be taken orally in one form or another (the ayahuasca brew being the most popular). Szara began experimenting on himself with an injected psychedelic and after on members of a study group.

Szara had this to say about his experience “….The hallucinations consisted of moving, brilliantly colored oriental motifs, and later I saw wonderful scenes altering very rapidly….My emotional state was elevated sometimes up to euphoria. My consciousness was completely filled by hallucinations, and my attention was firmly bound to them…”

One of his test subjects, a male physician, reported that “The whole world is brilliant….The whole room is filled with spirits….I feel exactly as if I were flying….I have the feeling that this is above everything, above the earth.”

A female physician noted “How simple everything is….In front of me are two quiet, sunlit Gods….I think they are welcoming me into this new world….I am finally at home….Dangerous game; it would be so easy not to return. I am faintly aware that I am a doctor, but this is not important; family ties, studies, plans, and memories are very remote from me. Only this world is important; I am free and utterly alone.”

Szara eventually made his way from Hungary to the United States, via Berlin, where he began working at the National Institute of Health before moving onto the National Institute on Drug Abuse before his retirement.

The subculture that had developed to experiment with psychedelic drugs starting using DMT. But not all the trips were pleasant. William Burroughs, author of The Naked Lunch was an early user and one of his friends was reduced to becoming like a “writhing, wriggling reptile.” LSD remained the hallucinogenic of choice; the trip from DMT was commonly regarded as being intense (one way or the other) and short lived.

The primacy of LSD was challenged when researchers discovered DMT in the brains of mice and rats. The scientists then established how the bodies of these animals made the psychedelic. The next question was obvious: Did DMT exist in the human body? In 1965 a German research team published in Nature magazine that it had isolated DMT from human blood. In 1972 Julius Axelrod reported finding it in human brain tissue. Other researchers found it in other fluids, such as urine. Next the pathways by which the human body made the psychedelic were identified.

Thus, and of huge significance, DMT was recognized as the first endogenous human psychedelic. That is, it was the first psychedelic compound found to be produced in the human body.

A startling question now follows, and one to which I will return in the future, but I offer it here for your own meditations.

Why had Nature / the Universe / God / evolution seen fit to create a body capable of producing a powerful psychedelic compound?

There is no clear answer to this but I am inclined to agree with Dr Rick Strassman, the foremost authority on DMT research, that the psychedelic is a “spirit molecule” intended to allow us to establish visionary contact with a realm beyond the normal and beyond the confines of time and space.

Psychiatry on the other hand explains the existence of this hallucinogen as being, perhaps, the cause of mental illness. Scientists hoped to find a way to block the effects thereby preventing mental illness.

All this research started to come to an end though in 1970 when DMT, along with other psychedelics, were placed in a highly restricted legal category. By the end of the 1970s all research was stopped until Dr Rick Strassman began a new investigation.

In effect DMT affects receptor sites for serotonin throughout the body, but of most interest are those receptors in the brain which are involved in mood, perception and thought. Of even more interest is that the brain seems to desire the psychedelic. Usually the brain works hard to keep out other drugs and chemicals by erecting a blood-brain barrier. In this way the brain can be highly selective as to what it uses for energy: glucose only. So here is the curious thing: the brain is very, very careful in selecting what it absorbs, only taking in what is vital to allow it to function in an optimal manner. So why, as Japanese scientists discovered in the second half of the twentieth century, does the brain allow a psychedelic into its realm? As far as we know, no other psychedelic is permitted to cross the blood-brain barrier. Furthermore, DMT is used almost immediately by the brain. It is as if the psychedelic is necessary for normal brain functioning.

And when the brain receives more than enough the subject begins to experience various hallucinations.

One of the ways to overload the brain with DMT is to take it in via IV. But the drug is endogenous; it is created within the body naturally. And from time to time the body is capable, all by itself, of creating an excess amount of the psychedelic leading to various visions and emotions. Indeed, it seems that the body can in fact be trained (through meditation and asceticism) to produce an above average amount, thereby allowing a subject to induce the hallucinatory trip.

Ayahuasca being prepared.

Users of DMT maintain that its use allows them to accept the coexistence of opposites (such as life and death), grants them the knowledge that consciousness continues after physical death, and leaves them with the certitude that all things are connected (with the glue being love). The psychedelic also allows users to “visit” other realms that appear more real than our current reality and which may be populated by elves or aliens. These other realms however may not always be peaceful and could be, to use Christian concepts, described as hell. A trip then is not without its dangers.

The medium between DMT and consciousness seems to be the pineal gland, which I will discuss in more detail in a future article.

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Ancient Origins of the Mysteries of the Martial Arts

The ancient origins of the mysteries of the martial arts is, more than anything, what this site is dedicated to exploring and unearthing. This topic absorbs an enormous amount of my time and energy and is a subject I have been studying in detail for almost 20 years at the time of writing.

To me the various combative systems from around the world exist, simultaneously, on several different levels of interpretation. Most obviously they exist as fighting methods. More esoterically they are also methods of self-cultivation and dynamic meditation leading a practitioner to deep spiritual truths that transcend time and space. Martial arts can also be used for developing a high level of fitness and health, developing better concentration, as pure dynamic art forms comparable to dance or gymnastics, or as a key to unlocking social awareness. Karate, Kung Fu, Tae Kwon Do and so on can all be used to achieve one or more of these ends, and others besides. I would argue that there is no “correct” interpretation and I personally have little time for those that argue (insist) for a uni-dimensional approach. There may have been a time in the past when the arts existed as purely utilitarian forms of combat that had little or no use outside of a battlefield but to limit ourselves to such an interpretation nowadays is to ignore a long history that has recognized that the arts are more than fighting methods. In any case, the chances of most of us ever being on a battlefield are virtually non-existent.

As I write this I just turned 41 less than a month ago. I am getting close to reaching my thirtieth anniversary involved in the practice of budo and Karate in particular. Though I still train twice a day for up to 4 hours, I have children and I have been living in Japan now for around 15 years (one of the safest countries in the world), and I simply don't see enough 'real life' violence to be particularly concerned about it. Like many in Japan, I do not train in martial arts out of fear for my personal safety (or that of my family). Quite frankly, I also think that training for a fight that will probably never happen is a waste of time and energy (and money!).

Have ancient shamanic vision dances for up to 24 hours inspired the practice of shugyo, or extreme ascetic training?

What continues to attract me to my practice and push me along a path of research and writing that may not seem to be immediately connected to martial arts is my fascination with the 'deeper' aspects of the arts. I believe that in the various combative forms we practice lie - sometimes hidden, sometimes not, sometimes commercialized - traces of a much earlier wisdom that was more readily accessible and acknowledged. I believe that talk of concepts like chi or ki can be traced back tens of thousand of years ago to shamanism; that breathing techniques and correct body posture can open access to the pineal gland so that we may experience visions that are directly comparable to the art of the Lascaux Caves in France and that found in the Tassili mountain range in the Sahara. I believe that Zen and associated ascetic meditative practices restore contact with the right brain hemisphere, a contact and understanding that has been declining for the last 40,000 years or so. In short I believe the martial arts are both physical AND spiritual practices and this, primarily, is what this site seeks to uncover.

I will allow time to reveal the full extent of my research, but for anyone looking to get a bit of an insight right now, check out my interview with Tony Wright, author of Left in the Dark and my notes on The Origin of Consciousness and My Stroke of Insight, which retells the experience of Dr Jill Bolte Taylor over a period of hours while she knowingly suffered a stroke during which she experienced numerous shifts between right and left brain hemisphere dominance.

We are not physical beings having a spiritual experience but spiritual beings having a physical experience

Pierre Teilhard

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