Friday, December 13, 2013

The Mystery Known as Depression, Part 9/12


9. DEPRESSION IS REPRESSION ELEVATED TO A HIGHER LEVEL

“Repression” of pain on various levels can begin in the womb at any point during the nine months of gestation, when the neuroinhibitors in the fetal brain work to quell pain. It is mostly established in the last trimester of pregnancy. At that point, the fetus can feel pain and can repress. The deepest most severe repression occurs during fetal life and at birth because it is nearly always a matter of life and death (Anand & Scalzo, 2000). These dangerous situations call for extreme responses from the fetus. Repression during this time then becomes global, or system-wide, and affects every aspect of the fetus’ body and development. It’s easy to sense that kind of early global inhibition in someone because they have a flattened emotionality, having not developed an emotional life before repression set in; and the cause of it happened before they even took their first breath in the world. Incidentally, it can also determine how he functions sexually. He doesn’t have the biochemical equipment to be tenacious, aggressive, assertive, optimistic, or future oriented, or sexually erect. This is because the prototype has a global affect on his entire physiological system and the impotence he felt at birth is an impotence that may assert itself in later years sexually. His whole system veers toward less testosterone, dopamine, glutamate, and noradrenaline, lower serotonin and higher cortisol. This is the material of impotence; it is not just an attitude that we can change in order to be more assertive. We are impotent on the deepest levels of brain function.


Evidence is mounting that those with depression are more likely to develop heart disease. (Freedland & Carney, 2013) Considering that deep depression means deep repression and that means deep pain, the conclusion is not surprising. There are two schools of thought as to why. The first is that the biochemical changes – the release of stress hormones – and autonomic changes occurring during depression affect the heart. The second view is that depression makes people sad and they then neglect their health. I’d opt for the first, only let's go further and say that the very early imprint that makes people depressed also ultimately affects their heart; stress hormones play a role in both conditions. Those who are depressed/repressed may have sporadically higher blood pressure in some cases and if one neglects one's medication a heart attack can ensue. This article notes that one in six adults suffer from depression from time to time. Those who have suffered heart attacks and who were also depressed were four times more likely to die of a heart attack in the following six months. Researchers have found that some depressed patients are in a state of hyper-arousal, and that means more pressure and activation of the heart. Stress hormones speed up the heart. What causes chronic high levels of stress hormones? Largely, it is due to the imprints of trauma.


In this context, researchers have implicated that hormones play a significant role in depression. A 1998 report in Scientific American, titled “The Neurobiology of Depression.” (Nemeroff, 1998) notes that the monoamine norepinephrine (noradrenaline) is low in depression, some thirty percent less than in a normal population. It leads some professionals to think of depression as a “brain disease.” Norepinephrine (a monoamine), by and large, is a stimulating neuronal activator. It is manufactured mainly in circuits that emanate from the locus ceruleus, a brainstem structure. There are projections elsewhere in the brain, particularly, to the limbic system. Because there is not enough of this in depression it may lead to the false conclusion that this deficiency causes depression.

6 comments:

  1. "It is not our idea that affect our feeling ... it is our feeling affecting our thought"!

    What we learn takes not any regard for the consequences... depending on how it is processed forward from the limbic system via the Hippo Campus conveys itself with the neocortex?

    It's not so that we do not want to understand what makes life unbearable! It is like this... sufferings has changed and developed neo cortex in a physiological process of survival... with the consequences... we can not understand our feeling... perceive what life-threatening experiences contain and causes!

    For us to be able to be in the "match" about the human foundation... we must suffer so much while having the good fortune to get to Janovs center... or via janovs books get the ide of how the limbic system via the Hippo campus conveys to the neocortex! It can not be done unless we can perceive the sufferings consequences and thereby "willing" to do something about it!

    If we understand to not perceive the content... a physiological equation containing the science of human foundation... just imagine the result!

    Frank

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  2. Being consciously aware blocked only by our consciousness... just a sentence from being aware... I am in my suffering as being social!?

    When we talk about different levels of memories... I can se it as if they are on the same level... they just floating into each other without us discovering the effect of it... can be of an social aceptans for the phenomen... unconscious through effect of a blocking task... some are socially accepted... as professional is... while other symtoms are not!

    What is the difference between a well-established professor and someone who obviously suffers with all the symptoms... a professor who can not even be so logical that he discovers his own suffering in its role of being a professor?

    What does he know about feelings? Something we suppose he should do... but do not... an effect of suffering which are like any other symptoms... a social acceptance as defense... equal to all other symptoms! I mean being professional is like any other symptoms!

    It seems as if we are not suffering in our role of being professional... depending on the social acceptance... but I think we are suffering even more as professionals dependent on the efforts we must do to hold back suffering... that it requires to hold a professional role... requires to be professional in order to hold back suffering... something that anxiety and depression are not accepted to be. So at what level are we suffering?

    So to be "normal"... with the ability to perform analysis to some extent... is not in difference from other symptoms as anxiety and depression etc!

    If we look at the evolutionary development of the neocortex then are the contents of suffering in the same ring with what we are able to perform here and now ... neocortex is the suffering consistency... we manage to just be in tone with what the material world has to offer... offer as a defense against pain!

    Frank.

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  3. Hi Art,
    one of my (rare!!! sensitive) MD: told me several decades ago ,that he had to close his practice
    for several bouts of depression.
    He turned to ECKANKAR after he been practicing T M vor years...

    And the end result(I I do n o t want to be disrespectfull towards him !!) he got a heart attack
    years he died aftter contracting cancer.

    My brothers (I did never ever noticed any such mental state do have heart disease
    (like many grandfathers uncles aunts and the like ... all well adjusted people without
    this mental plague...

    And me... from 4 Years on I suffered and suffered and till now Iam able to train very hard
    at the body gym..

    As always there sems no to be no strict "rule" in matters of Body and Mind disease...?
    Yours emanuel

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  4. An email comment: "I wish to thank you for this series on depression from the bottom of my heart and the top of my mind. It explains 'hard to understand' concepts in simple language and what you say resonates with me deeply. Doubtless you will die without being recognized for the discoveries you have made. Though a few, like me, have been enlightened by your revelations.
    I self primalled my way to conscious living with the help of a close friend after a breakdown when pregnant with my second child during 1984. I live in South Africa, and in those days we were newly married paupers. My husband (now ex-husband) is a born again christian. Through primalling I was able to 'see' myself, and others through a real lens not a false one. I am so grateful for the journey this has taken me on. My middle son lived through the pregnancy, and though there were some developmental problems while he was growing up, he is an extremely emotionally coherent person and has a breadth and depth of mind my first son could not have due to my repressed, depressed state.
    I read 'The Feeling Child' after the birth of my first son followed by 'The Primal Scream'. I am a qualified independent midwife (and later studied a degree in psychology) and practice privately as a midwife. Feeling through primal equipped me with enormous insight into the prenatal period. Couples are starting to come to me for preconceptional counselling and I accompany them through the whole journey, sharing the scientific knowledge about the basic needs of babies, the development of their brain structures and listening when parents share their concerns and questions.
    I do not assist them to 'Primal' as I am not qualified, but when parents need a person to reflect, I am there. It is not change on a grand scale, but a ground level one-on-one connection. Perhaps this is all any of us can do. Certainly for me, small is beautiful. The babies are born calmly, gently and treated respectfully. Witnessing births in this way is such a joy, to both myself and the parents. And I accompany many of the parents on their journey onwards with their youngsters. It is heartening to see children being loved in ways I never was.
    I have often thought of becomig a therapist, but am so busy as a midwife where I am able to touch the beginnings of life, that I have not pursued it further.
    I just wished to thank you for the work you have done over the years, the books you have written and for not giving up despite the lack of encouragement from your global peers. Thank you for the part you have played in my enlightenment.
    "

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    Replies
    1. And my answer:
      You are the reason I write; not the academics. If it changes lives and helps one to get better and live a good life, it is all I ask. So you are most welcome. You must read my Life Before Birth. Art

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