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.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
What Really Counts in Our Development
As I have pointed out, the brain develops into three different systems. I call them the first, second and third lines. The first is brain stem and parts of the archaic limbic system, the second is basically limbic system, including the amygdala, hippocampus and other structures such as the anterior caudate nucleus. Each of these structures (including the striatum) contribute to our general feeling capacity. They are connected to the top level prefrontal cortex to help us be aware of our feelings; this is the area of insights. And they are evolved out of the brainstem that provides the energy and gravity of feelings. The first line is silent and wordless. It grunts, exhibits rage, terror and great physical reactions that are never expressed in words; that is why we need higher levels to provide those words when necessary. But less us not believe that the cognitive level by itself can make any changes--insights. It misses out on the serious sensations that exist on the deepest brain levels.
So we have a basic primitive ineffable level, a higher emotional one and finally, a verbal one. All together they form a fully feeling experience. When we relive events from our childhood there is generally all levels involved.
There is the memory by the third line, then we add the emotion to it in therapy and then allow the punch of the feeling to join in. When we relive events before birth, during gestation, it is a first line experience where there are no words or even tears. When we read a speech too often we lack the emotional level; it remains dry, cognitive and intellectual.
When are born we have most of the brain neurons we will ever need, except for some limbic brain cells that go on developing throughout our lives. Early on the brain is developing networks and circuits where different brain structures are connected to each other. But lack of love and trauma during early childhood seriously affects how the brain develops and what networks there are. The feeling system will recruit aspects of the limbic system into a feeling network. Except when there is little emotion in the environment, when the parents are two stones who do not react much. It affects the brain development of the child. The emotions become stunted. The cognitive level may go on developing but it leaves the emotional level behind. We get brainy people who don’t feel much.
We know from much research that neglect in the first months of life on earth adversely affects brain development; there are later learning problems and relating difficulties. But picture the traumas before birth during gestation; imagine the kind of long lasting damage there will be. This is the kind of damage that affects physical systems, the precursor to heart problems later in life and cancer. Why so? Because the newly forming heart cells (and other cells) are being affected by a mother who is anxious and/or depressed, weakening the baby’s circulatory system. First line damage equals first line reactions. This damage may not be apparent for decades but the beginning vulnerability is already there. It has changed the way that neurons develop and differentiate. There is now a sort of detour going on. And more, there is suppression of those traumas automatically so that each trauma evokes its own repression, and here we may have the beginnings of later cancer. This means that first line repression is heavy and deleterious.
Speaking of cancer, I am hoping to carry out some research to follow up on something we did decades ago. We did a double blind study of Natural Killer (NK) cells which are part of the immune system charged with watching out for newly developing cancer cells in order to kill them. After one year of our therapy there is a significant increase in NK cells. What I want to do with a research team is pierce the tumor take out key cells, multiply them a lot and then re-infuse those extracted cells back into the person’s system slowly over time. If I am not mistaken those infused cells will kill only the tumor cells and nothing else. This will be a lot more efficient than chemo therapy and will only destroy cancer cells, leaving the healthy ones alone. And because NK cells are genetically designed to go wherever there are the bad cells it will be less dangerous and far more effective. All we need right now is the money to do it.
When I discuss the idea of detour it may be exactly what happens in the brain, for there is a migration of neurons from the brain stem up. And when there is trauma those neurons may well take a different route in their development (see the work of Bruce Perry in Texas). This migration is foremost in the earliest months in the womb so that a mother’s smoking or pill-popping alters the migration and brain evolution. One way this happens is that we are born with a certain gene pool but how these genes evolved is due to epigenetics, events impacting genetic development. This determines how the nerve cells evolve, how dense the dendrites are and how they connect with other nerve cells. Dendrites accept the messages from other nerve cells. When they are sparse or less dense we don’t get the full message. A carrying mother’s smoking can alter the baby’s oxygen supply for life. That means breathing problems later on.
So we have an ordered evolution of brain cells from the stem cell area on upward. And each new system appears on a fixed time-line. These systems occur in order so that we can’t speak at 3 months. Brainstem functions include digestion, breathing and blood circulation. If later on there are symptoms in these areas, we need to look at first line events. Did the mother smoke heavily in the first 4 months of pregnancy? If so, there are likely to be serious developmental problems including evidence of mental illness later on. These primitive neurons are there long before the cortical neurons exist, both in evolutionary times and in personal ones. And during gestation and the first months of life on earth they are the most sensitive to environment impacts.
This is no more than saying that there are critical windows when the system is the most sensitive. Not being touched at age ten is not going to have the impact if there is no touch right after birth. What this means is that the critical period for the first line is far more malleable than later critical periods. And its impact the greatest, which is why we always need to include this period in any of our studies, and especially in our therapy of patients. This first line is the epoch of longest lasting effects and of the greatest impact in terms of our evolution and brain development. This has been emphasized in a study by Cornell University (Nov, 21, 2007. “Trauma Earlier in Life May Affect Response to Stress Years Later”). During womb-life there is a new organizing framework which determines how the person faces life later on. The brain is “settling in.” And it imprints this frame of reference to guide our lives.
What new research is showing is that those young children who are abused, neglected or otherwise unloved have smaller brains than those who grew up loved. This implies all kinds of associated problems from learning to relating. We and our brains need others; we need attention and love and caring. And we need it during the greatest epoch of our critical window—the first line. That is when there are irreversible imprints with widespread effects. Our lives are in danger when we are unloved; when the mother is heavily depressed or drinks. Institutional children do die when there is no love in the first years of life. So instead of children not being allowed to speak at dinner there must be lively conversations all of the time. They need information and stimulation. They need food for the brain. So just imagine what damage happens to children who are unloved as children, and before that when the critical window is wide open during first line before birth. If we can see the damage done to young children in institutions can we imagine what goes on earlier in the womb when we cannot see the damage? The earlier the damage the more irreversible it becomes. Luckily we have a therapy that goes deep and undoes some of the damage. But with no first line therapy there will never be a cure, not if we ignore the crucial critical window where so much impact exists. There has been an attachment theory around for more than fifty years, but consider the attachment between the baby and the carrying mother where her every mood is transmitted directly to the fetus. When she is anxious so is her baby; when she is depressed so is her baby. And as the pain mounts from womb-life on there will be a greater tendency to shut off the right feeling brain and flee to the left where there is no direct pain.
All I am reiterating is that there is information and research to show that the earlier the impact on the brain the more damaging and long lasting the effects. We must never ignore this period if we want to help our patients.
So we are biologically programmed to produce less killer cells when we are in pain? Tell nature you're a "loser" specimen and she gets the message to kill you off. Ahhh - so cruel and unfair! But can it be denied it works like that? Nature will naturally abort a (seriously) faulty fetus...rather than have the species invest in a broken foundation.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, Art. I'm sure there is a similar therapy against cancer out there, where the immune system is externally boosted somehow to amplify the fight against cancer. I'm going by vague memory but do you know much about this, and can you comment on how your idea is different?
Andrew: There is no doubt that we a deficient in natural Killer cells when we have substantial imprinted pain. My idea for research, if we get the money, is to pierce the tumor in cancer and withdraw affected NK cells, then replicate them and reinfuse back into the system. NK cells whole job is to search out newly formed cancer cells and kill them would go all over the system, I believe and kill cancer cells without harmng other organs. We already did research on NK cells and found they increase to normal after 1 year of our therapy. art
DeleteHi,
DeleteI understand NK cells also attack and destroy bacterial infections and virus, is that true?
I have read up some research on a traditional 'cider vinegar' cure for various stress related maladies. Apparently, some of the constituents in this vinegar fool the blood and digestive system into into a relaxation mode by neutralising the muscle's 'fight or flight' reaction to lactic acid production being dumped into the muscles. Apparently, so the theory goes put forward by the folk scientist Dr Jarvis the blood is more prone to infection in this stress state. This implies that blood alkalinity / acidity could also be a factor in the development of cancer cells.
Dr Jarvis was an interesting man. He became known for curing milking cattle herds of mastitis by giving them buckets of cider vinegar and molasses (which they relished). He also researched traditional farming families that used lots of cider vinegar regularly in their diet and discovered many people still working at extreme physical tasks well into their 80s.
I have recently recovered from a nasty bout of flu which attacked my shoulder muscles and joints so badly I couldn't work. I have been applying hot cider vinegar poultices to my shoulders and the relief is quite marked. It's not just my 'belief' at work.
Dr Jarvis also recommended cider vinegar and honey as a hot drink cure for alcoholism and arthritis.
It makes great salad dressing if nothing else. . .
Paul G.
Andrew, you're right. The therapy is Autologous Immune Enhancement Therapy (AEIT), initially developed in the U.S. in the 1980's and practiced since the 1990's, but routinely only in Japan and now other parts of Asia (e.g., India). Not to be too cynical, but I suspect the lack of huge profits for the pharmaceutical/medical industrial complex relative to chemo- and radiation therapies plays some role in the muted interest in Europe, Australia and the Americas. The therapy involves extracting and culturing immune cells (NK and T lymphocytes) from the peripheral blood and then reinfusing them. Efficacy depends on how advanced the cancer is and varies with the type of cancer; for example, results are generally good with breast cancer and not so good with cervical, oral or throat cancers.
DeleteOne of my jobs to support myself at university many years ago was diener--pathologist's assistant--at a Catholic hospital, which had a residential nunnery whose nuns were the nurses at the hospital. While assisting the Chief Pathologist in an autopsy of a nun of the hospital who had died of breast cancer, he remarked that nuns tended to have an inordinately high rate of breast cancer and rarely cervical cancer, and promiscuous women tended to have a high rate of cervical cancer but less breast cancer. He believed the cervical cancer was related to having sex with a lot of partners, and that the breast cancer was related to a lack of sex and not breast-feeding (read "lack of love" in my view). It was just anecdotal then; now we know that most cervical cancers (and increasingly male oral/throat cancers) derive from the insult of HPV (a virus) infection, spread readily via multiple partners. To me it makes sense that cancers I believe are more directly what I would call "primal" in origin, like breast cancer, are more amenable to AEIT, and where the insult is more in the nature of a chemical one (e.g., benzene exposure) or parasitic (e.g., HPV) our immune systems are more at a loss and AEIT is less effective. In either case, the depressed immune function associated with a heavy burden of primal pain compromises our ability to ward off cancers. And of course, a heavy burden of pain plays a role in secondary factors such as promiscuity and smoking.
Art, I know very little about this area, but I guess I don't see where extracting NK cells directly from a tumor rather than peripherally would make for much of a difference in results, unless you think the NK cells in the tumor have some adaptation the peripheral ones don't.
Page: I am not a specialist so to me the question is not how and where you extract cells, so long as you do. I am convinced it is important. art
DeleteAndrew, these types of experiments have been going on for many years. There has been a lot of hype in the media - such as, "a child full of tumours was cured after receiving ex vivo (grown outside the body) autologous (belonging to the patient as opposed to a donor) natural killer cells."
ReplyDeleteThe hype was good because it got many scientists interested but there are still many problems associated with the quality and activation of the cultured cells.
With a little help, Art will solve these problems soon. Right Art? :D
"We already did research on NK cells and found they increase to normal after 1 year of our therapy."
Wow. I will include that in my 'primal propaganda'.
Richard: I was hoping to do NK research in Texas with cancer patients but we will have to wait for FDA approval. art
DeleteWhat matters is to focus.
ReplyDeleteWhen I read “What Really Counts” in your latest Reflection I enjoy the first paragraphs that describe how a fully feeling experience is shaped as we relive painful events from our childhood, which have become imprinted in our systems and caused depression, panic, anxiety and many other symptoms that made our lives miserable. In your typical simple, natural way you describe the ingenious principles of Primal Therapy. These principles, applied correctly and with neutral guidance allows us to drain the pain out of or subconscious archives, live them in the present and integrate them and liberate us from being controlled by our pain-propelled neuroses.
In the treatments and therapies which I have combined, Primal Therapy has been my “Operating System”. Complementary treatments such as physical integration, diets, etc., have been my “applications” that work in cooperation with my PT/OS. Sometimes the “applications” stimulate the PT/OS but as a rule, no permanent cure occur unless the OS/PT lead to that all levels (3rd, 2nd and 1st lines) in the brain beeing involved.
If I had not started this process 40 years ago, I had probably been dead today, either by committing suicide, had a stroke, heart attack or an asthma attack. Slowly - as I could feel / integrate repressed pain - my life slid over from being controlled by neurotic / unreal needs to be driven by real needs. My need for painkillers such as sugar, cigarettes, work, medication was reduced gradually as my immune system and my vital signs improved eventually and I was free from constant allergy and anxiety / suicide attacks.
You bring up the harm being caused to our physical systems later in life and you mention eg heart problems and cancer being two of humanity’s most common diseases. You describe the first line damages as heavy and deleterious creating an early vulnerbility which, however, only become apparent a few decades later and that also could be the beginning of the development of cancer.
to be continued...
Jan Johnsson
If "insights" came about because of suffering for survival!
ReplyDeleteI mean… if awareness is part of the evolutionary process for survival... then the question is… what is all about?
What benefit do we have of science unless we first get an answer about the cause of the reasons science has become a human phenomenon.
We are lost in words for what regards the science of human existence… until now… we have the primal therapies effect… effect beyond words for love and well-being.
Frank
Art,
ReplyDeleteI am nothing... I have tried to be someone... but someone I could never be. I have to start there... to be nothing. I look through my eyes from where everything that then was... then... when I was nothing. No one saw me... nobody wanted me and thats where I am now… as my life is about to begin... begin where it all ended. All scenery falls apart and must do so for me to be who I am... nothing… and I… who wanted so much.
Frank
O dear Frank,
Delete“I am nothing...” – that hurts to read what I felt for the last 2 week.
Doom and gloom – depression – pain from deep down – being abandoned - being not worth the effort.
F… mother.
I hear you, I sensed the same way many times.
Sieglinde
Dr. Janov and all,
ReplyDelete"We must never ignore this period if we want to help our patients.
Research still don't get it, as this article shows:
http://www.dailyrx.com/child-abuse-long-term-results-affected-marriage-and-education.
Maybe Todd Herrenkohl, Ph.D. (http://depts.washington.edu/hiprc/Ourpeople/Affiliate%20Faculty/herrenkohl.html) needs a link to this blog.
On a private note; I'm still in the wheel chair, battling pain from the now and past.
Sieglinde
Sieglinde: Why in a wheelchair? art.
DeleteHi Dr. Janov
DeleteIn my car accident on Sept. 1st, I had an ankle fracture, an open lateral malleolus fracture s/p ORIF, talus fracture s/p ORIF, cuboid fracture, calcaneus fracture and was wheel chair bound until yesterday. Yesterday, after 90 days in the wheel chair, I did my first 5 steps – it hurts like hell! Now it will take about one more month until I build up enough muscles (lost 60% muscles on my right foot/leg) to begin seriously walking again. The removable walking cast will come off on 18. Jan 2013. Maybe in Spring 13, 2 of the 3 screws will come out.
Sieglinde
Hi Art & Sieglinde,
DeleteBusted leg? Car crash?
Sieglinde & Frank, I have still got the influenza virus in me and my arm joints and in my brain. Gradually getting better but it sure has activated the most appalling depression and "recurrence" / resonance from my childhood in boarding schools (and that resonates back to earlier loss and abandonment).
Particularly after returning my daughter back to her mother in my former house.
The sense of utter futility and loss. . . the complete dejection and numbness. . . the total collapse into despair. . . it lasted until I completed my last contract and got paid and then went to collect my daughter again; exactly two weeks later.
I know it's going to happen again, tomorrow when I return my daughter to her mother in my old house. I can feel the same anxiety welling up, the expectation of loss, of loneliness, the expectation of total despair.
It's almost not worth bothering with the relationship with my daughter because the pain is so intense I cannot function and want to die. I'm not going to give up on my daughter though (2 days a fortnight), but I can completely understand why many men do indeed just walk away for ever. . . It's self preservation in the face of predictable, unbearable resonance. . .
Paul G.
Paul: Don't give up man. Life is precious. art
DeleteSielinde: Ayayay I can hardly imagine how painful it is. I wish you a speedy recovery. art
DeleteHi Art,
ReplyDeleteI love the way you tell us "stories". Your way of natural and simple writting.
"The less is more"
"There is nothing more complicated then to make your life simple"
"The ultimate suffistication is simplicity" Leonardo Da Vinci
Nenad
Goddamn Frank. I would say you're making me cry - if only I could cry. "I am nothing." Exactly. I'm worth jackshit. I should never have been born in the first place. I shouldn't even exist, but alas, I do. That's how I feel. I don't belong, I'm an outsider... really, truly an outsider, everywhere I go. A fucking outsider. Well, enough about me. At least I can post about "primal stuff" here, and my comments may or may not get published by Art. Now if I only had the money to do Primal Therapy in the Primal Center, that would be great but it's unlikely. So I'm getting by with pharmaceuticals and alcohol. Oh well, cheers anyway.
ReplyDeleteAnttiJ: Have you thought of applying for a grant? art
DeleteHi, we could try to set up a separate not for profit agency to send people to the clinic.
DeletePaul G.
Art: yes, I'm very interested in a grant. How do I apply for it, exactly? How much is the grant worth? Doesn't the patient still need to pay for a non-insignifant part of the therapy himself? And finance things like living in LA/Santa Monica for the duration of the therapy?
DeleteAnttiJ: Yes but we can help. We do not pay your living expenses. We can help pay for part of your therapy. Get in touch with Marie my office manager at 310 3922003 art
DeletePaul: Good idea. art
Delete