T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1549.1 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Loz, this stuff tastes like water! | Wed Sep 25 1991 14:04 | 12 |
| Well, whether these things work in a consistent and explicable way
across the board or not, it's obvious that they work for some people.
Probably because the people want them to work, rather than that they do
work, if you see what I mean.
However, for those that can use them to straighten themselves out,
they're a good thing. I don't think they do what they're claimed to do,
I think they merely act as a catalyst and focussing aid for some
people, and whilst there's nothing mystical in that, the report could
have acknowledged its effectiveness.
Laurie.
|
1549.2 | And what about catalytic converters? ;-) | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Wed Sep 25 1991 14:14 | 22 |
| re: .1 (Laurie)
Very good point. "Acting as a catalyst" is precisely what
*EVERYTHING* is about, I believe. If one "wants" (not consciously,
of course, but on some other level) to die of cancer, for example,
one can't suddenly just have cancer and die...no, they must draw
out some "plausible excuses" (such as exposure to radiation or
asbestos or cigarettes, etc.) and use this as a "Catalyst" towards
their cancer, etc. In other words, the ends become predetermined,
the means follow. The effects PRECEDE the means. The means act
only as a catalytic agent. Our whole life becomes a catalytic
agent towards our "goal" of oneness with our Higher Self. The
game, then, can become one of elegance. Which of all the catalytic
agents do you want to use towards that "goal?" How elegant do
you want to make it? Do you want to use pain, suffering, denial,
despair, agony, sacrifice, etc. etc., as you (humankind or other
lifetimes) always have or do you want to do it differently this
time using joy, pleasure, happiness, ease, laughter, fun, light,
etc., etc?
Frederick
|
1549.3 | Mental practice experience, and Army studies | PRMS00::TSTARK | Shadow dream logic | Wed Sep 25 1991 15:49 | 49 |
| re: .0,
> Subliminal messages was one of a series of training techniques
> evaluated by the council in a study called "In The Mind's Eye." The
> study was undertaken at the request of the Army, which asked the
> council to evaluate the "new age" techniques of enhancing human
> performance.
> Bjork said the committee found a number of widely used techniques
> ineffective.
It might be interesting to know just what 'new age techniques'
they DID find effective in this study. The results of some
prior studies done by the Army were popularized in a book called
'The Warrior's Edge,' which among other things tried to support
telepathy and mental hacksaw blade bending, complete with
mechanical stress charts. Some other stuff, some even stranger,
and some fairly mundane.
> Mental practice, the technique of using the imagination to mentally
> rehearse a physical activity, such as tennis, can help an athletes
> performance if it is used as a supplement to physical practice. But to
> maximize performance in the shortest time, nothing beats physical
> practice. "Imagining yourself hitting a golf ball like Jack Nicklaus is
> less helpful than hitting a bucket of balls,"Bjork said.
I participated in a study of this nature in college, with a simple
throwing skill, a control group, a mental-practice-only group,
a physical-practice group, a group which did both physical-and-mental
practice, and a group which had training in relaxation skills plus
mental practice.
The ranking that resulted after a practice period of several weeks
was mostly unsurprising :
1. Physical and mental practice yielded the best results
2. Physical practice alone yielded the second best results
3. Mental practice alone yielded the third best results
4. The control group was next.
5. The group with relaxation skills and mental practice was
the worst in final testing.
The last one was the only one slightly surprising. The person doing
the research had the theory that mental practice requires small
muscular contractions in order to be effective, and that the relaxation
drills reduced general muscle tone below the level where this could
take place.
kind regards,
todd
|
1549.4 | that wasn't such a good example | HOCUS::FERGUSON | Zappa for President in 92 | Wed Sep 25 1991 21:03 | 11 |
| frederick,
On what level does one "want" to die of cancer? I've known people who
died of cancer who had none of the vices that are supposed to cause it.
I don't think *everything* is about acting as a catalyst. This gets
too close to the "blame the victim" theory of problem-solving in my
opinion.
~ginny
|
1549.5 | Responsibility...big, big word. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:01 | 62 |
| re: .4 (Ginny)
Yes, it *does* sound like "blame the victim." (And this is
where I have a difficult time explaining it...:-{ ) I believe
that all life is predicated on beliefs and feelings (thoughts and
attitudes) therefore all "non-life" must come from the same place
(or a cessation of or a change of...) So if one ends a life,
it must be somehow tied in to these components. HOW one dies is
based on not only these components but on the choices and decisions
that have been made throughout.
Anyway, back at the ranch, let us say one is aging faster than
is comfortable...and life isn't going so great, perhaps. And they
remember their youth or younger days and somehow "yearn" to be young
again. (Okay...to sum up...there are thoughts and feelings here that
'desire' to be young again.) Meanwhile, the body *isn't* young.
It's aged. (Remember, the body is one of four "self" components--
along with intellect, intuition and emotions.) Following the laws
of resonance, the body attempts to comply with these thoughts and
feelings as best it knows how. How did the body respond when one
was young? By producing more cells, by dividing, etc. So, now here
that person is at 57 years of age wanting to be young again and the
body attempts to comply by doing the only thing it was ever "taught"
to do...it's cells divide...but they divide without purpose, without
function, with no game plan, no where to go. And what does this get
called? It gets called cancer. Is this the only way cancer grows?
Of course not. But here is an example of "no vices" producing cancer.
In many cases, it stays this way. But in lots of other cases,
"I want to be young again" isn't acceptable. So, reaching into the
sub-conscious bag of tricks, we remember growing up in a household
of cigarette smokers. Voila! An acceptable belief. Following the
laws of resonance again, the body complies with the belief.
This is massively simplified...I'd probably have to spend a great
deal more time than even Jamie thinks I have to properly present this
"argument."
It isn't blame the victim...it's about taking responsibility.
(As I already brought scorn upon myself in =wn= attempting to express
the distinction between these two concepts, I do not wish to lightly
enter into it here.) There is a major difference. When our
unconscious (or more likely our sub-conscious) mind sets up scenarios
and we are unaware of this, then we can truly claim to be victims...
for we are...we had no awareness. Okay? This is NOT the same as
deliberately, consciously hanging out in an asbestos factory
eating plutonium and challenging nature. But where is the
responsibility? The responsibility is clear in the second case "Well,
you deliberately set that situation up!" In the former case it is
less clear. How much responsibility do you/we take for our
sub-conscious or un-conscious minds? I contend that we take very
little responsibility for them. I *propose* that we need to be
more aware of our sub-conscious (particularly, because it is more
imminent) and un-conscious (where most of our power lies) and check
out what gets stored in there. What beliefs, what attitudes, what
repressed feelings? What happens to these stored thoughts and
feelings? How is the sub-conscious going to use them? Or, if one
is astute enough, they could conceivably by-pass the sub-conscious
and get right to it in the un-conscious mind and really dazzle a
reality (although it isn't likely...too much putrification from the
sub-conscious is more likely to skew the outcome.) So, Ginny,
it comes down to responsibility...not blame. Did I, in these
simplistic explanations, make sense?
Frederick
|
1549.6 | no | HOCUS::FERGUSON | Zappa for President in 92 | Thu Sep 26 1991 16:24 | 5 |
| It makes sense for the example you chose. However, I'm talking about
a friend who was 19 years old when she died of cancer. Your "young
again" explanation isn't valid in this situation.
Ginny
|
1549.7 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Fri Sep 27 1991 04:33 | 66 |
| There seems to be a bit of confusion about the nature of cancer. A
while back wrote a short guide to cancer in layman's language. This may
help clear things up.
Cancer 101.
Your body starts life when the smallest cell in the human body, the
male sperm cell, and the largest, the female egg cell, meet and fuse.
Unlike the rest of the cells in your body each has only half the
genetic code that will be the blueprint used to build you.
The first thing that this new single cell animal does is divide, and
this process of division is where the tale of cancer starts too. You
see, the initial part of this process is to make a copy of the genetic
material, the nucleus, that the cell contains. As you sit reading this,
cells in your body are dividing, it is a process that starts shortly
after conception, continues through your life and ends abruptly when
you die.
On a fairly regular basis the copying process does not produce an exact
copy. The reasons for this failure to make a correct copy are legion,
radiation in a spectrum ranging from the visible to gamma, invasion by
a virus which tries to hijack the reproduction system to make copies of
itself, substances that cause your cells to divide more rapidly than
normal and just pure bad luck, are only some of the reasons. Since I
told you that you were at this very moment dividing cells you will by
now have made several faulty copies. Worried? Well don't be.
You see all of these faulty cells fall into one of the following
categories:
1 Totally unviable. Here the cell cannot survive and dies of its own
accord.
2 Viable but not reproducible. This cell can live but is so messed up
that it cannot make copies of itself.
3 Non malignant. This one can reproduce, at the normal rate, and it
tends to produce a tumour that will not invade the surrounding
tissue. These can be dangerous if the tumour is pressing on
something vital, like your brain, but the vast majority of them are
fairly insignificant things, like beauty spots, and we all have
hundreds of them.
4 Malignant but identifiable. In this case the cell produced is so
wrong that your immune system notices and kills it because it does
not recognise it as being part of your body.
5 Malignant and non identifiable. This one is cancer. It looks enough
like you to fool your immune system. Unlike its non malignant
cousin it can divide at a mind boggling rate and worst of all it
breaks up and gets transported all round the body where it sets up
shop making more and more copies of itself.
And there ladies and gentlemen ends the similarity between one cancer
and another. Depending what the original cell was, and the error that
was made in copying gives an almost uncountable number of different
cancers. The medical profession group them as best they can. At this
point I should mention that the diagnosis of cancer is a very tricky
business indeed. Despite what you may think, a pathologist does not
spend the majority of the day dismantling the dead, but rather spends a
good part of it peering down a microscope deciding if the tissue being
scrutinized is malignant or benign. Some look benign and are sneakily
malignant others look very aggressive and will suddenly just die off.
|
1549.8 | Yeah? | AZUR::HALDANE | Typos to the Trade | Fri Sep 27 1991 07:26 | 12 |
| RE: <<< Note 1549.7 by HOO78C::ANDERSON "I despise the use of TLAs!" >>>
> The reasons for this failure to make a correct copy are legion,
> radiation in a spectrum ranging from the visible to gamma, invasion by
> a virus which tries to hijack the reproduction system to make copies of
> itself, substances that cause your cells to divide more rapidly than
> normal and just pure bad luck, are only some of the reasons.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
That sounds more paranormal than scientific!
Delia
|
1549.9 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Fri Sep 27 1991 07:45 | 4 |
| Would the phrase "from no yet established cause" be more to your
liking? I did say that I was using layman's language.
Jamie.
|
1549.10 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Sep 27 1991 12:31 | 17 |
| Jamie,
On what do you base #4 -- the part about cancer being caused by
malignant cells that your body can't recognize?
Is it also not possible that a malignant cell can be identifiable by
your body, but your immune system is so compromised that it cannot
effectively fight it? I believe that this may be closer to the case in
AIDS victims with Kaposi's Sarcoma.
Also, I've read numerous times of studies that have demonstrated that
there is a "cancer personality" profile. These studies suggest that,
among other personality attributes, chronic depression suppresses the
immune reaction enough to make people more prone to cancer, along with
other illnesses.
Mary
|
1549.11 | Yes, that is possible. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Sep 27 1991 13:39 | 20 |
| RE: .10 (Mary)
Jamie's account is substantially correct but incomplete. Incompleteness
is necessary since the subject is quite complex. For example, at least
two independent mutations seem to be necessary to produce malignancy.
He also did not talk about the many transcription error correction
mechanisms. He didn't talk about how cancers spread through the body.
Nor about tumor vascularization. And as you implied he simplified the
description so that the immune system seemed helpless rather than
simply having a tough time of it.
By the way -- although much beloved by some psychologists and many
popular writers, the evidence for cancer prone personalities is still
very unclear. One (though not the only) major problem is establishing
that the personality characteristics seen with some (not overwhelming)
regularity in cancer patients pre-dated the diagnosis of cancer -- in
other words, its still very unclear as to whether the "cancer
personality" is a cause or an effect of cancer.
Topher
|
1549.12 | GAS and immune response link substantiated ? | PRMS00::TSTARK | Shadow dream logic | Fri Sep 27 1991 13:51 | 15 |
| re: .11, Cancer mechanisms,
Thanks for the interesting descriptions, Jamie and Topher.
> other words, its still very unclear as to whether the "cancer
> personality" is a cause or an effect of cancer.
However, I believe that a stronger causal link link between
'stress'-related bodily response and depleted immune system
response has been recently substantiated.
How this transfers back to Cancer in particular
is I think less well established.
todd
|
1549.13 | On the money todd | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Sep 27 1991 14:17 | 16 |
| RE: .12 (todd)
> However, I believe that a stronger causal link link between
> 'stress'-related bodily response and depleted immune system
> response has been recently substantiated.
Yes that is true. The medical field concerned with this area is called
psychoimmunology.
> How this transfers back to Cancer in particular
> is I think less well established.
Yes, or most other specific human diseases for which a possible stress
relation has been claimed.
Topher
|
1549.14 | Cancer 301 | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Fri Sep 27 1991 16:14 | 58 |
| re: in general
Hell's bells!! (To coin a phrase.)
There is NO question that mental thoughts and emotional
feelings affect our health (our bodies!) None! The only argument
here is *how much* this is the case. My contention is that
it is 100% (ultimately---and I refer to my "blame the victim"
versus total responsibility explanations.)
Similarly, healing occurs anywhere on a continuum from zero
to 100 based on the amount of spontaneous, self-initiated healing
that the person takes that responsibility for.
Zero is where the person takes none, has zero input...up the scale
we get to the point where the person requiring the healing allows
any old witch doctor or voodoo-ist or whatever to come along...on
further just a little ways is where the person may or may not seek
help but allows these people using drugs and scalpels to work their
stuff (frequently called the AMA)...further along the scale are
those who seek the use of preventative techniques and work with
diets, body workers, etc...further yet are those who are far enough
along that they can tune in to harmonic vibrations of light or sound
or some other source...and the furthest along the path is he/she who
needs no outside interference at all...but relies on total
responsibility, spontaneous healing and health.
People definitely have something to say about their own health.
It is not up to the "gods" or some other source. There is clear,
empirical evidence of this. If the *CAUSE* isn't apparent, means
only that the cause is somewhere deeper and requires more
searching. This is true regardless of the symptoms of non-health.
re: Ginny
It gets very much more difficult to see anything apparent in
certain cases, especially when the people are very young. It is
far easier to speculate and catalog older people. I will say this,
however, and that is that I have a hard enough time looking within
myself trying to figure things out (suppressions or beliefs, etc.)
without attempting to sort out some other person. It is virtually
impossible for most of us to look inside that person with that
kind of certainty or depth. Furthermore, understanding that this
assessment comes not only of the sub-conscious mind but may very
well be a manifestation coming from the un-conscious mind makes it
very, very, very difficult, indeed. There is no way to know that
this lifetime has been karmically set up or not...and what types
of focuses or lessons where in place to be accomplished. Therefore,
someone who is here but 3 years may very well have accomplished
whatever their "purpose" was. OR, perhaps they cut this experience
short to go on to something even more purposeful. IT is too
hard to call, Ginny, too hard to speculate with any authority.
I think that it is enough to realize that conscious choices can
be made to rectify or alter things sufficiently to make an entirely
different reality occur. If others can or cannot or do or do not
is moot or irrelevant. Taking responsibility is primarily about
taking responsibility for oneself. Master that, then move outwards...
(or at least start with self.)
Frederick
|
1549.15 | | POCUS::FERGUSON | Zappa for President in 92 | Sat Sep 28 1991 01:59 | 3 |
| Okay -- I see what you're saying. However, it seems to me that
tripping and falling out a window would be a lot more efficient than
giving yourself cancer.
|
1549.16 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Mon Sep 30 1991 10:46 | 26 |
| I agree that my explanation was over simplistic, this was deliberate as
I was attempting to write something that could be easily read and
understood by everyone.
Yes Mary you are correct there are opportunistic cancers just as there
are other opportunistic diseases. But there also are cancers that will
still grow in someone with a fully functional immune system. The immune
system cannot distinguish between these cancer cells and the normal
body cells.
However the point that I tried to stress and seems to have been
completely missed is there is no one disease called cancer. It is a
collection of vastly diverse diseases that all respond differently to
treatment.
People accept the statement that someone died from cancer. However if
someone died from inflammation you would find it more difficult to
believe. You would require the specific form of inflammation that did
the killing, meningitis or pneumonia would make a more satisfactory
diagnosis. Yet the range of diseases covered by the term cancer is as
great as those covered by inflammation.
Thus I doubt that there will ever be one single cure for cancer.
Jamie.
|
1549.17 | Case histories? | UTRTSC::MACKRILL | At her shrine, music ever devine | Mon Sep 30 1991 10:51 | 11 |
| Hi Fred,
Do you know of anyone personally,who follows the Lazaris/YCYOR path who
has ended up with a terminal desease? How succesful has their fight
been against it, given their possible altered state of mind/reality?
Have they published their conclusions?
Genuinely interested,
-Brian
|
1549.18 | And I just came from three days with Lazaris! YES!! | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Mon Sep 30 1991 14:02 | 59 |
| re: .15 (Ginny)
Yes, you are absolutely correct! This is where it all gets
interesting...and this is where our own individual uniqueness comes
into play. If you can imagine a huge grid with lines in all
directions, you can get a sense of what this comes down to. While
it may be true that jumping out a window would be more elegant,
lots and lots of other variables are "tugging" on this particular
"line in the grid." This line gets skewed, impacted, bounced around
and intersects with other lines from other beliefs, attitudes,
feelings, etc. and therefore winds up at "point death" with a
completely different coloration or composition than that of the
person for whom the window would have sufficed.
It might be interesting to do a study of the people in a
tragedy to see how the ones who survived compare to the ones that
didn't (e.g., the air crash in Iowa last year.) It would be
interesting to know the spiritual beliefs and life attitudes and
"psychological profiles" of the two groups...
re: 17 (Brian)
I personally only met one person at the Lazaris workshops who
had a terminal disease (that immediately comes to mind...I'll
think about it and see what else pops up...) That individual was
the brother of a woman friend of mine, who started coming to
workshops about four years ago or so. I met him, sat next to him
one time, then noticed his absense. I learned later that he had
had AIDS and had died just two months or so after I last saw him
(he didn't look unhealthy to me...this was about three years ago.)
I also talked to a very good friend of his sister's who told me that
Tom had simply given up. He didn't want to fight it...he consciously
(and he had personally talked to Lazaris about it) decided that he'd
"cut his losses" in this lifetime and was willing to make another go
of it in another lifetime. My understanding is that Tom died quickly,
with dignity, with awareness of his choices...and that he died quite
peacefully. This, too, by the way, can be a viable alternative in
the "create your own reality" scenario.
Whoops! Just remembered another one. Actually, this man
*started* to listen to Lazaris *after* developing a severe brain
tumor. The tumors were so bad he was having seizures but refused
to have surgery. Dana, my girlfriend at the time, was so concerned
for him that when she had the (valuable) opportunity to talk with
Lazaris, she asked him for advice for this man. Lazaris told her
that he should get the surgery...that there would be time to work
it out later. He did, he has...he has totally changed his high
tech life, moved to L.A., goes to Lazaris workshops and I don't know
what else. I cannot honestly tell you or anyone how much
responsibility he has taken on or accepted.
I have heard lots and lots of stories...almost every workshop
I hear another...but I personally have not known "terminal disease"
friends who attend and attend regularly. Most of my friends that
go to Lazaris workshops are intending to live to very advanced old
age...and from appearances, are on the way. My feeling is that most
of us have processed so much that the likelihood of terminal diseases
is far, far less likely.
Frederick
|
1549.19 | Reading recommendation | CGVAX2::PAINTER | | Mon Sep 30 1991 17:51 | 7 |
|
For a superb book written by a cancer surgeon on the relationship of
mind, body and spirit, read:
"Love, Medicine and Miracles", by Bernie Siegel
Cindy
|
1549.20 | Getting back to the main topic ... | STORIE::KALLIS | Pumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift | Mon Oct 21 1991 17:23 | 37 |
| Re .0:
> Washington- Self-help tapes with soothing sounds and messages
>for the subconscious mind have been snapped up by Americans, but
>researchers say the recordings have no proven value.
> ...
>"We conclude that there is neither theoretical foundation nor
>experimental evidence to support claims that subliminal self-help
>audio tapes enhance human performance," the report said...
> ...
>"We find such claims unwarranted from both a theoretical and empirical
>standppoint,"said Robert A. Bjork, chairman of the National Research
>Council study committee on the issue and professor at the University of
>California at Los Angeles. "Research on some tapes shows that their
>embedded messages are below the level of subliminal perception."
I've selected three passages to make a point. The first two passages talk about
subliminal tapes in general. The third concludes that from an "emperical
standpoint" (meaning experimental) such claims are unwarranted; and, that
research on "some" tapes shows that the embedded messages are below the noise
level.
Tapes, according to the story, clain to
> ... cause people to lose weight, stop smoking, quit drinking, think
>more creatively, make friends, reduce pain, improve vision, cure acne,
>conquer fears, project astrally and become better bowlers.
Now did the experimenters really try to use the tapes for all of the above?
What was the sample size? How many cases of acne did they try to cure?
Was the bowling self-help tape designed for candlepin or tenpin bowling?
I bring this up to make a point: it's dangerous to extrapolate results.
I wonder which ones that were at the level of subliminal perception were
singled out for further study.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1549.21 | | FORTY2::CADWALLADER | Rifle butts to crush you down... | Tue Oct 22 1991 07:20 | 12 |
|
> > ... cause people to lose weight, stop smoking, quit drinking, think
> >more creatively, make friends, reduce pain, improve vision, cure acne,
> >conquer fears, project astrally and become better bowlers.
>
>Now did the experimenters really try to use the tapes for all of the above?
If a researcher needed to lose weight, stop smoking, quit drinking, think more
creatively, make friends, reduce pain, improve vision, cure acne *and* conquer
fears I'd say he was an *unlucky* guy! :-)
- JIM CAD*
|
1549.22 | What an attractive group | DWOVAX::STARK | Priorities confuse the mind | Tue Oct 22 1991 10:51 | 15 |
| re: .21,
If a researcher needed to lose weight, stop smoking, quit drinking, think more
creatively, make friends, reduce pain, improve vision, cure acne *and* conquer
fears I'd say he was an *unlucky* guy! :-)
Yes, in addition to the logical and statistical fallacies
mentioned by Steve, there is the question of the 'biased
sample.'
I'd say that if you took a group of pimpled phobic astigmatic obese
alcoholic chain smoking antisocial dullards with chronic pain,
that the results are likely to vary from that of a group with
clear skin.
todd
|
1549.23 | Ho hohohoho....!!! | FORTY2::CADWALLADER | Rifle butts to crush you down... | Tue Oct 22 1991 13:14 | 3 |
| RE: -1
:-))))))
|