Articles on Primal Therapy, psychogenesis, causes of psychological traumas, brain development, psychotherapies, neuropsychology, neuropsychotherapy. Discussions about causes of anxiety, depression, psychosis, consequences of the birth trauma and life before birth.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
How Can We Not Focus on Very Very Early Life?
I know I am in danger of drowning the fish but with all the new evidence available it seems so obvious that we must go back to those key shaping events at birth and during our womb life.
A recent study found that babies in the womb feel their mother’s anxiety as early as four months in gestation. The baby’s anxiety level rises and falls with the mother’s anxiety cycle. (This is work at the baby charity known as Tommy’s). Anxiety was measured in the mother’s blood as well as in the amniotic fluid (cortisol levels). The fetus/baby was feeling anxious, not as a cerebral event but as a biologic one. And his system is learning to be alert and vigilant; the problem is that this vigilance becomes an imprint that endures a very long time and governs his life.
The fetus is constantly adapting to its environment. When the mother’s system signals danger so does the baby’s. The difference is that the baby’s adaptation is being imprinted on a naïve and innocent system that has no other frame of reference. The mother’s anxiety eventually comes to an end, but that doesn’t mean it ends for the baby. It becomes a biologic memory where the baby is learning to be on the qui vive, always a little too alert and vigilant; hence overreacts later on to the slightest hint of danger. That original fear has burnt a memory into his brain—and becomes the imprint. It is the platform or springboard for later reactions. It makes them excessive or inadequate.
It has been found that the slightest change in the mother’s diet can affect the baby and produce a propensity for later obesity. In animal models it was found that changes in the protein input of the carrying mother significantly changed the weight gain or its lack later on. Obesity being one later result. Again, the baby is learning to adapt to its most important and only environment it knows. The problem is that the adaptation endures and the adult system is always expecting what happened in the womb—via the imprint. The adaptation continues until it becomes maladaptation. It is not a wrong reaction; it is just a reaction to an old event and not appropriate in the present. My definition of neurosis. So he sees food at age thirty and immediately has to eat. Or he sees a frown on someone’s face and immediately becomes anxious. This is known as one-trial learning and is important.
So next time your shrink offers you insight into your unconscious--beware! The only person who has direct and precise access to your history is you. If we try to understand inordinate behavior of any kind, particularly addictions we need to carefully look at life before birth. It is where trauma diminishes development of those inchoate cortical cells that suppress pain; and imprints trauma which constantly agitates us, even when one seems impassive and non-reactive. And when we have a first-line imprint you have a continuous powerful force stimulating us from within. It needs quieting with the strongest drug available because imprints on that level are nearly always life-and-death matters. So if we look into ourselves we can actually see those shaping events from our earliest months. If we are obsessive about food we can bet that mother’s diet while carrying plays a role. Or if we are easily set off with anxiety we can bet that mother carried around a bit load of anxiety herself. The baby was anxious because the mother was, and his system shouts “danger”. Perhaps for the rest of his life.
You know why I am concerned about the Anthony Weiner affair? The life of the baby being carried by his wife is at stake. Her stress level must be enormous and so will be the baby’s, as well. The problem is that his level is imprinted and a constant weight for him. He will have to take drugs just to feel comfortable. How very sad!
Arthur, Please post a citation to the study you are referring to.
ReplyDeleteArt, this article seems to suggest that a fetus will become permanently imprinted when it's mother gets a momentary fright. i doubt nature is that unforgiving. i would expect a normal mother and baby to be more robust than that.
ReplyDeletei think it's more likely that the NEUROTIC mother's CONSTANT low level anxiety is the main cause of the baby's imprint. even after the mother has calmed down, her own imprint will never allow her stress hormones to return all the way to normal. the baby's system adapts slowly to a constant overdose (or underdose if the mother is depressed etc). slowly but surely, the baby will duplicate it's mother's imprint.
the placenta helps to regulate blood supply to the baby, so it might help a little to protect against the blood pressure effects of a sudden fright etc, but it doesn't function as a filter!!! toxins and stress hormones can flow freely from mother to baby. yikes. for this reason, i would advise all mothers to avoid the temptation to smoke "just one cigarette" or "just one glass" etc. because the fetus is something like 20 times more sensitive to toxins than the mother.
Richard: It is not a momentary fright that does it; it is an overwhelming non-integrateable even that does. That makes the imprint. art
ReplyDeleteAnonymous: Here is the reference:http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article1862667.ece
ReplyDeleteAJ.
yes i understand, Art. my comment was poorly written. i'm saying the baby will be imprinted even if the mother is never overtly anxious. if she was traumatised in the past, her stress hormones will be stuck at the wrong set point. she will smile with her friends, but on the inside, the delicate fetus will grow in a toxic environment. the fetus will be overwhelmed.
ReplyDeletebut maybe we can reduce the severity of the baby's imprint. by giving the mother good advice and support, she can reduce some of those toxins.
Hi Richard,
ReplyDeletePerhaps even better is to recognise the very high risk of gestational affect in the neonate and try not to exasperate it further with abusive and neglectful input further compounding the original 1st line problem.
I and many others lived under the delusion that gestation and birth are not important.
If wounds incurred in the womb/birth are denied out of hand then parents and carers are very likely to compound the problem through their childrens' childhoods. After all, we're just lumps of live meat until coerced into humanity aren't we?
I wanted to ask Art what people are like who have gestation and/or birth trauma but subsequently received ample loving care through child-hood into adolescence; I think I've answered my own question though.
Paul G.