I think our purpose in life
is to express God.
It’s naturally within us.
When we begin
to unlearn those
emotional states
that drive us to
our lowest denominator
and we begin
to reinvent a new self and
recondition a new self,
we go from being selfish
to being selfless.
Welcome,
blessed viewers to
this week’s edition of
Science and Spirituality
the first in a two-part
series featuring
excerpts of interviews
with respected scientists
regarding how our brain
is connected to spirituality
and self-transformation.
The brain contains
a massive and complex
neural network
with approximately
100 billion nerve cells.
It monitors and regulates
key body functions
such as breathing and
heart rate, receives
sensory information,
manages physical motion
like walking and talking,
and is involved in
reasoning and dreaming.
The major parts of the brain
are the hindbrain, which
has the cerebellum and
brainstem, the midbrain,
and the forebrain which
has the diencephalon
and the cerebrum.
During much of
the modern era,
mainstream science
has avoided focusing
on spirituality in
neurological research.
However, in recent years,
there have been
an increasing number of
studies regarding how
the human brain
functions and reacts
during meditation, prayer,
near death experiences,
and when one is engaged
in focused
constructive thinking.
In a study,
they did these SPECT
(Single Photon Emission
Computed Tomography)
scans, with
Buddhist meditators
and Franciscan nuns,
and that shows
what parts of the brain
get blood flow.
When these Buddhist
monks were at their
most heightened state
of awareness,
they pushed a button.
They took a picture of
blood flow of the brain.
And same with the nuns.
What happened?
Parts of the frontal lobe
became very active.
Parts of parietal lobe
became very active.
And then the right
parietal lobe shut down,
so it got less blood flow.
If you look at nuns
and reverie of prayer,
Buddhist monks
and meditation,
a part of the brain
that turns on is called
the "frontal lobe"
and that is like
the volume control
of the brain.
When the frontal lobe
begins to work properly,
it quiets down
all the other circuits
and the brain
so nothing else
is being processed, but
a single-minded thought.
All of a sudden
they started to experience
altruistic states of
compassion and joy and
inspiration and goodwill.
Brain structures
like the amygdala,
the orbital frontal cortex
and the front of the brain
are also involved
in various aspects
of spiritual experiences
and states.
Many studies have
examined the connection
between faith and healing.
Dr. Larry Dossey,
a physician from the
United States and former
Executive Editor of
the peer-reviewed journal
Alternative Therapies
in Health and Medicine
has said that prayer is
as effective as penicillin
in curing people, but
without the side-effects.
Spiritual concentration
and religious conviction
can change brain activity
and boost the body’s
immune system,
which can lead to
spontaneous remission
of a disease
or the complete healing
of an illness.
In general, it’s been shown
that people
who are more religious
are healthier.
As a clinician,
all the years
I’ve practiced – and
most health professionals
will tell you this –
there is clearly something
about religion
and spiritual experience
that helps people cope.
And basically
will make it easier
for them to deal with
their conditions
and to get better,
or as much as they can.
When we produce
synchronized
coherent patterns,
the immune system
gets very strong.
These monks
they didn’t get sick
because their system
was so integrated and
so orderly that disease
couldn’t live in their body.
The signal
that’s travelling down
the central nervous system
is creating amazing order
that allows the body
to begin to function
in wonderful ways.
We know that
the brain is connected
to all the other
physiological systems
in the body,
like the immune system,
and the endocrine system.
So this means that when
you change something
at the mind level,
for instance a belief,
you will influence
not only the brain,
but all the other
physiological systems
connected, for instance,
the immune system.
Obsessive–compulsive
disorder can be reversed
through mind exercises
and purposefully
shifting the focus of
one’s attention to
physically change the
way the brain functions.
In the bottom
of the front of the brain,
right above the eye sockets,
a part of the brain called
the “orbital frontal cortex”
and this is basically,
among other things,
an error-detection circuitry
in the brain
and it's overactive.
So we were seeing
that people who had
obsessive-compulsive
disorder had an overactive
error-detection circuitry,
but they realized
that the way they were
thinking and feeling
didn't make sense
so this enabled me to say,
“Well, the reason
why you're feeling
like everything is wrong
is because
your brain is sending you
a false message.”
Getting people to
change their perspective,
change their quality
of attention.
Use the impartial spectator,
use full awareness,
to help them understand
that this is their brain
sending them
a false message, and then
when they understand
that it’s their brain
sending a false message,
they can change
the perspective
they take on it.
When
Science and Spirituality
returns, we will continue
to examine
the brain’s role in
spirituality and effecting
self-transformation.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Science and Spirituality
featuring distinguished
scientists speaking about
how the brain
is interrelated with
spirituality and
can be re-mapped to
significantly change our
physical and mental state.
We have done a study
also with people suffering
from arachnophobia,
spider phobia, and before
starting the therapy,
the patients were not
even able to look at
colored pictures of
spiders in a booklet.
At the end of therapy,
and we use
cognitive reframing,
which is you change
your belief systems
with regard to
the phobogenic stimulus,
the spiders for instance,
then at the end,
all of our patients were
able to hold in their hands
a giant tarantula.
And we scanned them twice,
before and after therapy.
While
we scanned them,
we were showing them
film clips of spiders
in motion.
At first they all
experienced a panic attack,
but at the end of
the therapy, which
lasted only four weeks,
there was no reaction
in the emotional portion
of the brain.
There are cases
of remission of cancer
that are seen when
people use visualization,
mental imagery,
meditation, and various
relaxation techniques.
The informational processes
at the mind level,
for instance, a thought,
can influence brain activity.
“As you think
so shall you become”
is a famous aphorism that
reflects the power of
the mind to shape
who we are as a person,
with thoughts
directly re-shaping
how the brain functions.
If we focus on
a single goal,
our lives can be
fundamentally changed.
The thought,
how you think
is the electrical charge
in the quantum field.
And how you feel
is the magnetic charge
you emanate.
So how you think and feel
creates an
electromagnetic field that
affects every single atom
in your life.
In the movie,
“What the Bleep
Do We Know!?”
what I was saying
most importantly was that,
if I’m going to sit down
and take the time
to emulate the Creator, if
I’m going to be like God,
if I’m going to emulate
the quantum field which
gives life to all things,
if I am going
to express divinity and
I’m going to be a Creator,
I want to know
that my thoughts count
and I want to know that
I some way made contact
with this mind.
So I need a sign to
let me know, great mind,
cosmic mind, that
I’ve been heard by you.
I want you to bring
a signal or a sign to me
in my life in a way
that I could least expect.
The belief that everything
about your mind is
completely determined by
and in fact reducible to
what your brain does,
what's become a slogan;
that is, “The mind is
what the brain does.”
These things can
markedly be influenced
by the neural chemistry
of your brain.
But, and it's a big “but,”
it's also important to
realize that the way you
experience those feelings,
the way you interface
with those thoughts,
the kinds of attention that
you pay to it, being
either mindfully aware or
having sort of a rational,
third person perspective
on it, or being just
gripped by it interfaces
with what your brain
is doing, and how you
focus your attention
can change what
your brain is doing.
If you form an image
in your mind of
how you want to behave,
you can become that, and
on top of that the science
that we’ve done has shown
that you change your brain
in the process
of doing that, so that
the brain actually evolves
to become the image
that you’re portraying.
So this kind of
focus of attention
in some significant way
changes who you are,
changes your
inner chemistry;
so it's powerful stuff.
The fathers
of quantum mechanics
realized about 80 years ago
that the observers could
influence the behavior of
the microphysical system
that they were measuring.
The sub-atomic particles,
if you will.
They now recognize that
human consciousness
can influence
the physical world
at that level.
Neuroplasticity,
the capacity of neurons
to form new
neural pathways and to
reorganize existing ones,
allows the brain
to evolve.
Now great inventors
in history here,
great visionaries
that had genius ideas,
they had the ability to
function neuroplastically.
They had the ability
to have a neuroplastic
brain, which means
in the brain
the sum of the parts
is greater than the whole.
So, they could
learn something
and begin to speculate
and ask questions
and begin to think about
those answers.
For example, (Albert) Einstein,
when he was 12 years old,
he asked himself
this question,
“If I ride my bicycle
at the speed of light, and
I turn my head lights on,
will they go on?”
Now he thought about
that question
every single day of his life.
The fathers
of modern science were
all very spiritual people,
like Newton, Galilei,
Descartes.
But after a few centuries,
scientists thought
that we only needed
mechanical explanations
to understand humans
and the Universe.
So, materialism became
a metaphysical assumption
most scientists now
are afraid to challenge.
Fortunately, there’s
an increasing number
of scientists who
dare to challenge openly
this old notion
of materialism.
Our sincere gratitude
goes to the notable
scientists featured today
for sharing their insights
on the brain, mind
and consciousness.
Please join us
next Monday on
Science and Spirituality
for part two of
our program where
we continue to delve into
the brain’s role in
spirituality and effecting
self-transformation.
For more information
on the scientists
on today’s program,
please visit
the following websites
Dr. Mario Beauregard
Dr. Joe Dispenza
Dr. Brick Johnstone
Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz
Benevolent viewers,
thank you for
your company today on
Science and Spirituality.
Coming up next is
Words of Wisdom
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May we all contemplate
within to discover
our true great selves.
When we have
a group of people that can
think compassion,
think peace,
think goodwill
and demonstrate it and
be able to maintain that
state of being where
they’ve memorized it
internally, nothing
in their external world
can move them from it.
When they’re
in a state of being,
they’re more prone
to do things
and think things equal to
that state of being.
Welcome,
blessed viewers to
this week’s edition of
Science and Spirituality,
the conclusion of
a two-part series featuring
excerpts of interviews
with respected scientists
regarding how our brain
is connected to spirituality
and self-transformation.
The brain contains
a massive and complex
neural network
with approximately
100 billion nerve cells.
It monitors and regulates
key body functions
such as breathing and
heart rate, receives
sensory information,
manages physical motion
like walking and talking,
and is involved in
reasoning and dreaming.
The major parts of the brain
are the hindbrain, which
has the cerebellum and
brainstem, the midbrain,
and the forebrain which
has the diencephalon
and the cerebrum.
During much of
the modern era,
mainstream science
has avoided focusing
on spirituality in
neurological research.
However, in recent years,
there have been
an increasing number of
studies regarding how
the human brain
functions and reacts
during meditation, prayer,
near death experiences,
and when one is engaged
in focused
constructive thinking.
(Andrew) Newberg,
the person
who did the studies
of the Buddhist monks
and meditators,
got qualitative descriptors
of what these people
felt like during their
most advanced stages
of meditation.
And they said, “I feel
unconditionally loved.
I do not feel
a sense of the self.
I feel like I am totally
connected to the universe.”
So I would say that is
kind of the overall
spiritual transcendence.
And if you think of
what the term
transcendent means,
it means
to go beyond the self,
which really fits with the
neuropsychological studies.
It has been
well documented
that regular meditation
changes the way
the brain functions.
Thanks to the development
of state-of-the-art tools,
neuroscientists now
better understand the role
of brain.
Some of the many
instruments they use
include rCBF (regional
Cerebral Blood Flow),
real time MRI (Magnetic
Resonance Imaging),
MEG
(Magnetoencephalography),
and improved EEG
(electroencephalography).
In a study,
they did these SPECT
[Single Photon Emission
Computed Tomography]
scans, with
Buddhist meditators
and Franciscan nuns,
and that shows
what parts of the brain
get blood flow.
When these Buddhist
monks were at their
most heightened state
of awareness,
they pushed a button.
They took a picture of
blood flow of the brain.
And same with the nuns.
What happened?
Parts of the frontal lobe
became very active.
Parts of parietal lobe
became very active.
And then the right
parietal lobe shut down,
so it got less blood flow.
Meditation is the process
of knowing yourself,
and understanding
who you are.
Because we have
such a large frontal lobe,
we can observe
our own thoughts,
own actions
and our own behaviors.
And that concept
in neuroscience is called
“meta-cognition.”
A number of
brain imaging studies
show that
patients suffering
from clinical depression
or obsessive compulsive
disorder, when they start
meditating and doing
what we call “meta-cognition”,
which is to take a distance
from your own thoughts,
your own beliefs,
your own emotions,
then it’s possible
to change the functioning
of the brain.
The benefits of
meditation are immense.
Scientific studies
have shown that
practicing meditation
leads to
lowering of heart rate,
chronic pain alleviation,
and erasing
of negative thinking.
A recent study found that
long-time practitioners
have significantly
larger volumes
of the right hippocampus
and increased gray matter
in the right thalamus,
left interior temporal gyrus,
and right orbito-frontal
cortex as compared to
the rest of the population.
Interestingly,
all of these regions
are associated with
control of one’s emotions
and researchers feel that
this may be an explanation
for the emotional stability
seen in those who meditate.
So the process
of meditation requires
unlearning and relearning.
Or what neuroscience
calls “pruning
synaptic connections”
and “sprouting
new connections.”
Because
we can do that,
that allows us to modify
and change our behavior
so that we can do
a better job in life.
You really can change
the way certain
brain structures function,
and brain networks
underlying all sorts of
negative emotional states.
While our daily thoughts
may seem to be
inconsequential,
this is far from the case.
Our thinking literally
has the power
to change our genes.
You have genetically
inherited patterns
of brain activity. There is
no question about that.
That is completely
non-controversial,
but your
genetically inherited
patterns of brain activity
are going to have
very, very large effects
on how you live your life.
However, if you realize
that you can transcend,
you can go beyond those
patterns of brain activity
through the power
of your attention, and
through focusing your
attention more wisely,
you can change the
expression of those genes.
When
Science and Spirituality
returns, we will continue
to examine
the brain’s role in
spirituality and effecting
self-transformation.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
You can see
that everything
we were saying here about
how focused attention
changes your brain
is very compatible with that,
because you’re basically
forming a view of the self,
you are, through prayer
and meditation,
coming to see
what God wants you to be.
Welcome back to
Science and Spirituality
featuring distinguished
scientists speaking about
how the brain
is interrelated with
spirituality and
can be re-mapped to
significantly change our
physical and mental state.
Some habits
are deeply ingrained and
imprinted in our brains
and thus become
even more entrenched
as we grow older.
If we do not focus
our attention,
or deeply concentrate,
on changing
an unwanted trait
that we have, scientists
such as Dr. Bruce Lipton,
who is an expert
in cell biology,
say these habits
stay with us permanently.
From before birth
to two years of age,
a child will express
predominately
delta activity,
which is very low
frequency brain activity.
When we express that,
we're essentially sleeping
or not being conscious.
It doesn't mean
the child's unconscious.
The child is totally present
but not engaged in
what's going on.
It seeing, observing it
and downloading it, but
doesn't like (to) interfere
with the download.
Doesn't say, "Gee,
that was a good behavior.
That was bad behavior.”
It just watches you
and learns the behavior.
It's not being consciously
involved in the learning.
Sub-consciousness
is not consciousness.
Consciousness
is creative.
Sub-consciousness
are tapes.
Where did you
get the tapes?
Oh, your subconscious
was programmed
before birth up
through six years of age
without you
even being involved.
You learned tapes
about how to live.
After you get past six,
this development of the
pre-frontal cortex region
here, which is where
our central source
of consciousness comes
from, self-consciousness,
self-reflection is
an add-on really.
And as a matter of fact
it's an option.
A lot of people in this world
don't even use
consciousness.
The reason is,
you don't need it.
Once
you learn the program,
it's just repetition.
When you are
not paying attention to
your own consciousness,
you are playing tapes
that are not even yours.
And you don’t even see it.
Because
the sub-consciousness
works in-perceptively,
it’s so fast that
it doesn’t even
engage consciousness.
You see, every time
we have a thought
we make a chemical.
So if we have
a great thought or, if have
an unlimited thought,
we make chemicals
that make us feel great
or feel unlimited.
If we have
negative thoughts or self-
depreciating thoughts,
we make chemicals
that make us feel
negative or unworthy.
So this immaterial thing
called thought fires a set
of circuits in the brain
that produces a chemical
to signal the body for us
to feel exactly the way
we’re just thinking.
The moment we feel
the way we think, we begin
to think the way we feel,
which produces more
chemicals for us to think
This creates a big loop.)
the way we feel.
And this loop, the cycle
of thinking and feeling,
and feeling and thinking
creates what I call
a state of being
and it’s the cycle
of thinking and feeling,
and feeling and thinking
over time that begins
to condition the body
to memorize that
emotional state better
than the conscious mind.
The power of thought
can affect the brain
to such a degree
that if one’s thoughts
are continually
not on a constructive level,
it and the entire bodily
system can be affected
in a very negative way.
By contrast,
if our thoughts and attitude
are positive,
our brain reacts differently
and our body is healthier
and outlook on life
is sunnier.
We live in two states
of mind: we live
in survival or creation.
When we live
in those states of anger
or aggression or hatred
or judgment or fear,
anxiety or insecurity
or pain or suffering
or depression,
it’s those chemicals
that are created
from the chemicals
of stress or survival
that activate
those states of mind.
It’s the redundancy
of those chemicals or
the chemicals that push
the genetic buttons that
begin to cause disease.
If you’re thinking and
feeling has been negative
for the last twenty years,
your mind may be
thinking positively, but
your body is remembering
being negative.
Ninety percent of
who we are by the time
we’re 35 years old is sitting
in a subconscious set
of programs.
Automatic programs
that operate without
our conscious mind.
So here’s the 10 percent
of your conscious mind
wanting to change
against 90 percent
of who we’ve become
as a personality.
So we have to learn
how to get into
the operating system.
It takes going past
the analytical mind
to be able to do that.
And that takes practice.
Our sincere gratitude goes
to the notable scientists
featured today
for sharing their insights
on the brain, mind
and consciousness.
We wish all of them
success in their further
study of the brain and
how self-transformation
and spiritual experience
are related
to this fantastic organ.
For more information
on the scientists
on today’s program,
please visit
the following websites
Dr. Mario Beauregard
Dr. Joe Dispenza
Dr. Brick Johnstone
Dr. Bruce Lipton
Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz
Thank you,
intelligent viewers,
for your company
on today’s episode of
Science and Spirituality.
Coming up next is
Words of Wisdom
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May our planet always be
united by love and grace.