T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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615.1 | | VINO::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Thu Jul 11 1991 16:55 | 15 |
| Wil,
I think there is a lot of truth in what you said. Anyone who has ever
danced or seen Leonard Bernstein conducting Tristan can testify to
that. Related facial expression and bodily gesture and motion enhances
the related emotion and vise versa.
However, I think the theory about obese people is a bit far fetched. I
mean it all depends on the metaphor of "filled with grief", so wallah
the body gets big with the "filling". Does that mean if the common
English metaphor had been "empty of happiness" or "loss of love", the
same body will get thin by "emptying"?
Eugene
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615.2 | | RAGMOP::KOHLBRENNER | | Thu Jul 11 1991 17:59 | 72 |
| RE: .1
Yeah, that's what I mean that one person cannot make
a prediction of what will happen to someone when disaster
strikes, nor can one look at an obese person or a very thin
person and have any idea of what is causing their condition.
But the person who has the condition can benefit by looking
into his own psyche for the clue to his own condition, and
not spending a lot of money and time and effort on surface
level fixes. It takes a "faith in the process" kind of
jump to believe that your body is a manifestation of your
psyche and if you want to change your body, you have to change
your psyche. But I believe in it.
I have been to a number of Robert Bly workshops since the
summer of 1988, and it seems to me that Bly is gaining
weight. Other men agree with my observation. Only Bly
can know why, and I don't have the faintest idea of what
he is "doing about it" if anything.
But I have heard Bly talk a lot about the king archetype
and how the king must be very strong and secure, because
a lot of projections come his way from both friends and
enemies. Bly talks in metaphors and likens the projections
to spears, arrows. I was very angry at him in one workshop.
At one point, he happened to invite the room full of
people (men and women) to get on their
feet and to wander around letting their bodies mime their
feelings. I wandered around the room, carefully drawing
a number of imaginary arrows on an imaginary bow and sending
them into Robert Bly! (I have since regretted this very much.)
Bly has since achieved a kind of king-like stature with a
lot of people (40 weeks on the top of the best-seller list
for a poet/writer who previously published many books whose
printings numbered a few thousand). I know of and have seen
heated arguments at gatherings of men between Bly and some
man in the audience, where it
was evident to all that were present that the guy was working
out old, old stuff around his own father (or other authority
figure) and using Bly as the target of his anger. That is
evident with the men who are willing to let their psyches
hang out there. There are probably hundreds who have sent
psychic arrows his way, as I did, without ever telling him about
it. (Bly and I did have a public, verbal confrontation at the same
conference and later resolved it one on one, so I have a good
feeling about that encounter.)
In any case, he has a kind of king-like stature and a lot
of metaphorical or psychic stuff is coming at him all the
time. Well, he needs to be defensive or he will get
clobbered by all this anger. He needs to have what we
commonly call a "thick skin." And at the same time he
is a poet, who is someone with a great sensitivity, so
it is not as though he has spent his life dealing with
conflict and being "tough."
I have no problem imagining that his weight gain is his
psychic defensiveness manifested in his body. Someone
else may attribute it to eating patterns of being on the
road a lot. To which I would counter, that being on the
road a lot is very stressful, with constant change in the
environment, so that one needs to guard one's core, one's
essence, so that it not get depleted. One needs to build
a little buffer against the constant newness. The body
might well represent that as an extra layer of fat. The body
may NEED to gain weight on the road and eating a rich
dessert may not be a lack of will-power, it is the body
going after what it needs at the command of the psyche.
Wil
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615.3 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | The man with a child in his eyes... | Thu Jul 11 1991 18:59 | 8 |
| Excellent observations, Wil -- another, impish thought occurred to me:
He's gaining weight because his book's selling so well he can finally
*afford* to eat well!
Actually, I lean much more strongly towards your idea of adding bulk
as "psychic armor."
andrew
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615.4 | Exercise worked | GLDOA::KATZ | Follow your conscience | Thu Jul 11 1991 20:01 | 7 |
| To get over grief I figure I had a number of choices, alcohol, drugs,
religon and many more. I consciously chose exercise, not to
extremes but to a different level then I have ever been at. It
has been six months now since I started and I'm still at it. It
worked for me.
-Jim-
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615.5 | expressing psychic exhaustion | RAGMOP::KOHLBRENNER | | Fri Jul 12 1991 09:36 | 38 |
| RE: .4
I've done that and found that it worked for me too, Jim.
I try to hit tennis balls against a backboard as often
as I can these days. I get the ball going, hitting it
harder and harder, and moving faster and faster. The
concentration on the ball and moving to meet it is a
clarifying experience. It's a whole body experience,
legs, arms, bending, twisting, reaching, and a very
satisfying sound as the racket hits the ball and the
ball hits the backboard.
When I am having a bad time, it feels to me like my
head is "filling up", as if it is under pressure.
As if too much of my blood is up in my head. But
when I come away from the tennis backboard after
an hour of hard playing, my blood is all in the right
places, and my head feels clear. I can go back to
having sad feelings without feeling like my head is
going to explode.
Rowing on a rowing machine has the same effect.
It's as though my body wanted to express something
and I gave it the opportunity to do it.
Oh, I'm suddenly getting some insight here. My
psyche is exhausted when I am in these bad times.
My body needs to express that exhaustion. And
expressing it is clarifying.
I have a woman friend who swims in the same way.
Friday evenings, after work, she has to swim for
an hour, churning up and down the pool, then she
feels good.
Wil
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615.6 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | the yayness principle | Fri Jul 12 1991 10:58 | 43 |
|
Food is often a way of creating a barrier also, not only "storing" or
stuffing grief.
Food/fat is a way of creating a barrier to intimacy and sexual attention.
Food is also a tool of control ("if I control nothing else in my life I
control at least what goes into my mouth" - this applies for anorexics
a great deal).
I am a believer in the mind/body connection (after having read Joan
Borysenko's "minding the body, mending the mind"). And if you ever
read Desmond Morris' "Manwatching" or "The naked ape" it's obvious that
our bodies convey a great deal about how we feel and what we think.
I feel that if fat is a method of dealing with grief, it does not deal
wtih it openly. Fat could also be said to be dealing with anger. But
instead of releasing these things, it "bottles them up". It is
agression turned inwards and numbed with the tranquilizing affects of
too much food, the soothing of food that we were perhaps once told was
love in an indirect way ("you're such a good boy, have another piece of
apple pie").
What you eat when something is eating you is very vital - finding out
why you eat can help you understand what is going on behind the scenes,
in your head, in your heart.
The expression of small gestures as a way of transmitting psychological
barriers or problems is interesting. Neuro-linguistic programming
suggests that if we smile we will be happy (in highly oversimplified
terms) and I think this takes advantage of the connections between the
mind and the body. The "paths" for our emotions and muscle movements
are so intricately linked that often we do not even realize that we
clench our fists or knit our brows. Posture is often another key for
emotional expression.
It is very difficult sometimes to express emotion, and to have someone
who is available and able to decipher the clues they can read and
enable a person to unravel what is going on inside them (especially if
there is some barrier to understanding it - like denial) sounds really
valuable.
-Jody
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615.7 | | TLE::SOULE | The elephant is wearing quiet clothes. | Fri Jul 12 1991 11:23 | 9 |
| My recent experience might serve as a good example to support this
idea. I have put on a significant amount of weight since the illness
and death of my wife a year and a half ago. I attributed it to the
fact that my new fiancee is an excellent cook, but perhaps there is
more at work here. I also find I need more sleep.
I'd ask for a book title, but I'd probably fall asleep on page 3...
Ben
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615.8 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Fri Jul 12 1991 11:42 | 18 |
| I have a friend (man, ~50) whose father died a few months
ago. I haven't noticed any changes in my friend, but I
met his mother recently. She seemed to me to be a very
attractive woman, in her 70s, I suppose.
Later, in conversation with my friend, I learned that his
mother had lost a lot of weight since his father died.
His mother used to be overweight, and is now what I would
guess is her ideal weight.
I haven't the faintest idea of what that represents. But
I ask myself the question, "What is this woman's body
expressing about her psyche's new condition following the
death of her husband?" Of course, I don't have the
answer, and would not try to guess it. But I'm sure there
is a connection.
Wil
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615.9 | | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Mon Jul 15 1991 13:53 | 19 |
| The concept of food as a defense or response, based on some
psychological need, is pretty standard stuff. But the leap to a
*physiological* connection unrelated to what is consumed and the known
ways bodies react to foods? That seems a bit far-fetched.
After all, we know a lot, for example, about metabolism: that kids who
eat junk food and are fat young, have large fat cells throughout life
as a result, and so are both prone to lifelong obesity, and have more
difficulty losing weight than those who got fat later and simply have
too *many* fat cells. We know also that most people who get older gain
weight -- unless they adjust eating and exercise -- because their
metabolisms slow down. Etc.
This is not to discount the pyschological aspects of food and eating.
On the contrary, it is to be skeptical of a vague kind of pop pschology
that could obscure simpler or more realistic understandings of our
bodies and how they relate to our pscyches.
Kit
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615.10 | Interesting stuff... | AKOV06::DCARR | Sixty people DIDN'T trash my house! ;-) | Mon Jul 15 1991 15:14 | 25 |
| I, too, believe in the mind/body connection... I have also recently
had some acupuncture treatment, and read a few books on the subject,
and, Wil, you might be interested to know that there is a GREAT deal of
synergy between the thoughts in .0 and standard acupunture theory.
Basically, acupunture (or acupressure, or even massage) deals with the
imbalance of bodily energy. I had treatment for neck and shoulder pain
that resulted from falling on icy cement stairs months earlier. It was
explained to me that your body stores energy in your muscle tissues; and
things such as stress can cause too much energy to be created. Also,
stress energy tends to collect in the weakest areas of your body's
muscular system. Acupunture involves treating these energy imbalances
(in my case, releasing the excess energy that was stored in my weakened
muscle tissues, that was the result of too much stress).
To me, it seems like this is very similar to .0, that speaks of
'psychic' energy being stored (and displayed) in body language... The
treatment of 'releasing' this energy is of course analogous to the
acupuncturist inserting needles in the affected muscle tissues...
I wonder if some day we can truly understand our minds and bodies
enough that we can all treat ourselves with simple, basic techniques
such as meditation, simple massage, and therapy such as this...
Dave
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615.11 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Jul 15 1991 16:16 | 19 |
| RE: .9
Kit, I thought I was careful to say that there is
no denying the link between food, metabolism, and weight.
I don't think Mindell is saying that the body can gain
weight without it taking in more energy than it puts
out. Weight gain or weight loss is not "dreamed up"
without an adjustment to the food/exercise/metabolism
system to make it possible.
The question is: why is the body taking in more food,
or why is it expending less energy, or why is the food
that is being taken not being used as efficiently as
before?
Mindell is saying the body is responding to (mirroring,
or dreaming, or fighting) the psyche, that's all.
Wil
|
615.12 | | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Tue Jul 16 1991 11:26 | 27 |
| Re: .11
Wil, with respect to your point below:
> The question is: why is the body taking in more food,
> or why is it expending less energy, or why is the food
> that is being taken not being used as efficiently as
> before?
Isn't the answer simply that:
1. the body is taking in more food because
the person is feeding him or herself more
2. the body is expending less energy because "lifestyle" (yuck) has
changed (amount of exercise, types of food, etc)
3. Food is not being used as efficiently because, for example,
metabolism has slowed (standard, with age)
Etc.
Now, as to what motivates the person to do this (particularly the first
two items), psychology has much to say. Why denigrate the straight
forward and obvious answer, and replace with the esoteric and fanciful?
Kit
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615.13 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Tue Jul 16 1991 11:51 | 42 |
| RE: .12
> Isn't the answer simply that:
> 1. the body is taking in more food because
> the person is feeding him or herself more
> 2. the body is expending less energy because "lifestyle" (yuck) has
> changed (amount of exercise, types of food, etc)
> 3. Food is not being used as efficiently because, for example,
> metabolism has slowed (standard, with age)
> Now, as to what motivates the person to do this (particularly the first
> two items), psychology has much to say. Why denigrate the straight
> forward and obvious answer, and replace with the esoteric and fanciful?
It may simply be semantics, Kit, but I think we don't see the
links between body, psyche and mind the same way. Here's my take
on the different ways that we see the links:
I am saying that there is an UNconscious link between the psyche
and the body, that the mind may know nothing about, and even if
it does know about it, it may not be able to change it.
I think that you are saying that
1) the person consciously eats more or less, possibly
because s/he is motivated by the psyche to do that.
2) the person consciously changes lifestyle (without
changing eating habits) possibly because s/he is
motivated by the psyche to do that.
3) the person's metabolism slows with age (because the
mechanism is wearing out?)
I think you are saying that the first two are the result of
the mind's decision, urged on by the psyche in some cases,
and the third is a result of the wearing out of the body.
Does that sound right to you?
Wil
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615.14 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | divided sky...the wind blows high | Tue Jul 16 1991 12:49 | 25 |
|
I very strongly feel there are impetuses (impeti?) behind weight loss
and gain that have little to do with physical food intake and exercise.
I feel that there is another component to weight loss and gain that
many people don't take into account - attitude. If there is something
you are getting from being the weight you are, or if your psyche will
obtain something it needs from gaining or losing weight, that is what
you will do.
Obviously if you eat 14 pizzas a day you'll gain weight and if you eat
3 water chestnuts a day you will lose weight. But go beyond the
obvious.
Your body knows more than you think it does. I think that's why
visualization is very powerful in changing your health, and your life.
If you can envision it, you can open all the gates inside to enable you
to become whatever you wish (be it lighter, stronger, healthier, more
free of cancer, etc.). There was a seminar I took at HCHP called "ways
to wellness" which used many different techniques, including
visualization, to reduce dis-ease in the body (whatever that dis-ease
was, compulsion, panic attacks, cancer, chronic pain, etc....).
-Jody
|
615.15 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Jul 16 1991 13:17 | 22 |
| There is entire note file where you can see people working to make
the perfect body. Many folks do not have the subliminal message that
their carrying emotional baggage with them. Many just enjoy working out
and making inprovements on what 'God' has given them.
A statement from 'Pumping Iron' Arnold S. remarked something to a
statement of that if you were to take a bunch of men from all walks of
life and strip them to their skivies and place them in a room, you
would not know the rich men from the poor. You would notice the
sucessful man from the others for he has a good physic, has a good
attutide about him that might be found with those with the sucess of
money. But they would not have a farthing to their name. Interesting
observation in leu of sucess and what your body is saying to you and
the world.
The note file mentioned is: SELECT::FLEX, it is about body building.
It is about the struggles that the common man faces to become better
than he is. Even Arnold started of in the iron game with a chicken
brest chest as he made coments to in a book that I had read about him.
George
|
615.16 | | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Tue Jul 16 1991 14:02 | 14 |
| Wil --
I think in many cases it is indeed an unconscious connection. My point
is that whatever the mechanism (unconscious, conscious or a
combination) or the motivation (the problem, emotion, viewpoint,
whatever) that triggers the change in eating habits or lifestyle, the
reason for the change is physiological and not mysterious. In
describing this man's theories, you seem to be saying that there is
some *direct* unconscious link between the psyche and the physiology,
that a person can gain weight simply by a change in the psychological
state, rather than by altered behavior that *results from* a change in
that state.
Kit
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615.17 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Tue Jul 16 1991 14:18 | 1 |
| I agree, Kit. - Wil
|
615.18 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | divided sky...the wind blows high | Wed Jul 17 1991 10:01 | 21 |
| re: .16
> some *direct* unconscious link between the psyche and the physiology,
> that a person can gain weight simply by a change in the psychological
> state, rather than by altered behavior that *results from* a change in
> that state.
I think this is possible, actually. I found myself losing weight once
I was comfortable doing so only AFTER my mindset changed. I had for a
year or two been changing eating habits and working out, but it took
the change in my psychological state to prepare my body (to give the
green light) to weight loss. Perhaps I was unconsciously eating a
little less, or working out a little more, but it didn't feel that way
to me.
The mind is amazing and complex.
-Jody
|
615.19 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Just workin' my Path | Wed Jul 17 1991 10:34 | 43 |
|
> you seem to be saying that there is
> some *direct* unconscious link between the psyche and the physiology,
> that a person can gain weight simply by a change in the psychological
> state, rather than by altered behavior that *results from* a change in
> that state.
I too agree that this may be possible, going on what I've read.
The effects that our minds (our self-talk, visualisation, conscious
or unconscious) has *directly* on our real, physical body is
only just beginning to be understood. I found the idea of thought
influencing the physical world an alien idea at first as I was used to
thinking of my physical body as a "real" thing - measurable, touchable,
quantifiable - and thoughts as being somehow "unreal" - that is, not
having concrete effect because they couldn't be weighed and measured.
It has been reported that people can lose weight by visualising
switching their metabolismup to Turbo Rate. This produced physically
measurable effects which showed that their basic tick-over level
had gone up....
I also take your point that these things can work indirectly.
For example, if you visualise yourself looking wonderful and you
affirm to yourself that you will only be attracted to foods that
will move you towards that image then you will probably find yourself
eating stuff that has less calories and that, too, will obviously
speed you towards your goal.
But there is a direct mental effect too. IMO.
Btw, I have struggled for years with my weight. The reason was
largely that, as I shed layers, I'd come up against the reasons why
I'd put them on in the first place. That extra padding was serving
me in a very real way, and as I never worked those issues I just
used to put the weight back on - sabotage my own exercise programmes,
binge, somehow get back to a more "comfortable" place.
Only now have I stopped fighting myself about food, and I'm learning
to love my body and appreciate the way it's coped and adapted to help and
protect me from my personal pain.
'gail
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