Saturday, February 28, 2015

Why Am I Banging On About Womb Life?


I am sometimes accused of too much emphasis on the trauma of birth and/or life experience in the womb. So let me explain why this is so.  My conclusions are based on almost fifty years of clinical observation now added to by hundreds of scientific articles in major journals.  It is not that these article “prove” my point, but that when joined with science helps add weight to it all.  We should pay close attention if we want to understand ourselves and our families.

One of the key articles supporting my position is by at least twenty authors including the well-known scientist in Canada, Michael Meaney.  (“Antenatal Maternal Anxiety Predicts Variations in Neural Structures Implicated in anxiety Disorders in Newborns.”  Anne Rifkin-Graboi et al.  J. of American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Soon to be published).

Among other things the authors wanted to find out the effects of maternal anxiety in carrying mothers on the fetus/baby.  

One thing they wanted to know was how this anxiety affected the white matter of the brain, consisting heavily on nerve fibers, their myelin sheaths and their connections.  So what were some of the effects?  “Children were classified with fearfulness and social withdrawal.  This predicted risk factors for anxiety disorders.”  And Anxious, carrying mothers resulted in stress reactivity in offspring and affected the changes in neurotransmitter functioning such as norepinephrine.  That also dysregulated cortisol production (stress hormones).  And this high cortisol level can cross the placenta and affect all kinds of processes including many of the neurotransmitters.

It altered uterine blood flow that directly affected brain development of the fetus.    We begin to see how massive the effects are of maternal anxiety.  There are many changes in the limbic system and the relationship of the neo-cortex and various feeling sites.  And there is diminished control on feeling states.  There is less corticol control, in general which predicts behavioral problems later on.  And the crucible of all this begins early on in womb-life.  There is really no free way out of all this.  Giving a mother calming drugs produces all sorts of corollary problems.  We need to extirpate some of the latent pain stored deep in the brain, before pregnancy.  Otherwise, we get later distress when the child is temporarily removed from his mother; separation anxiety.  This becomes a child who cannot sit still, cannot concentrate and fidgets, is restless and has to keep on the move as the imprint is compounded by later traumas.  This is how it all starts and builds from there.

Without going more deeply into limbic structures, there are adverse effects on them (especially the insula and amgydala), which impairs integration of feeling with higher levels.  Some of the current anti-anxiety medication works on these limbic areas to produce a calming effect.

What the study found, which is not my experience, is that is that produced inhibition of behaviors.  I have found the opposite; early anxiety drives external behavior, not inhibits it.  But it does adversely affect information processing;  complex thinking is diminished.  This may be due to  decreased/slowed overall brain development.

What all this is about is something I wrote about 30 years ago: the prototype; the crucible that structures later abilities and malfunctions.  These are the formative experiences that channel our thinking, emoting and behavior for the years to come.  They determine how well be learn or don’t learn.  We must pay attention here and that is why I go on about it.  They are absolutely formative of who we later become.

There is a related study on white matter (Brain white-matter changes seen in children who experience (early) neglect.”  Jan 26, 20015.  The MAMA Network Journals).
It isn’t just anxiety that is the culprit here.  Neglect and indifference also play a major role.  Again, white matter is part of the crime.  Children who grew up in a Romanian institution show “compromised brain development.”  It is not just that this seemingly ephemera happening affected how the brain develops, but it has far-reaching effects throughout development.  Just ignoring a baby for a protracted period can adversely affect his brain.

The point of most of these kind of studies is that brain development depends heavily on experience.  Sometimes it can be seen as physical brain impairment; other times it shows up as brain dysfunction; a not-so obvious event.  Things do get better if the child is placed in a loving home, but in my view there can be a residue of impairment,”Dyslexia, cross dominance, confused thinking, “etc.  It is not obvious but what I see in some adopted children is often some subtle kind of brain affliction.  This is not even to mention limbic dysfunction and difficulty in controlling and sorting out feelings.  And what amazes me is that something like neglect, this vaporish behavior, without physical substance can do such physical damage.  And why? Because love is like that. It is an energy field; feelings travel and have an effect. They change brains and alter our physical development.  And interestingly, even the physical connection between the two hemispheres of the brain is affect by neglect.

I seriously doubt that all these impairing effects can be fully reversed when I child is placed in a loving home. There seems to be a lingering residue.  Better to grow up in a loving home than to play catch-up.  Then our brains can find equilibrium, balance and normality.

There is a related study from the University of Cologne, Germany (Novel form of experience-dependent plasticity in the adult brain revealed. Feb. 6, 20015).  Essentially, what they are finding is that experience can reorganize connectivity in the brain, in particular, the limbic structures such as the hippocampus.  Thus, I assume that life in the womb can give us a leg up on how well our emotional brain functions, how well we remember and how good is our thinking processes.  Neural stem cells in this area can regenerate over a lifetime so that the hippocampus goes on and on intact.  And I believe this depends on not too much trauma.
And when we have a good gestation, birth and infancy there is a stronger liaison between the top level thinking and lower level feeling.  We are connected.  In short what takes place in the brain early on depends on our experience.  Deprivation of our basic need is not good for our connectivity later on, and that means our fluid interaction to our feelings many be impaired.  The brain is quite fluid, it seems, and when we treat it well it comes back to guide and help us.

8 comments:

  1. Sometimes, before I knew about birth trauma, and that I had gone through it, I sometimes felt like something was wrong, but it wasn't. Now I know....it must be faced. Among other people in the world who were born "normal" , one must at least try to get a feel, of what went on, what is going on. Life now is so messed up at times, a lot more people now are just plain nasty, so much bulliness out there among the young people (and some older ones also), and then with the economy (one almost has to think about how the value of the dollar may just one day soon, disappear and we will all be scrambling around for something solid to hold onto; like gold or silver). It's almost like also with the birth trauma, in many aspects of life now, the slate should be at least improved upon or it will be "wiped out" and not "wiped clean". With what goes on, possibly the person having gone through birth trauma, faces that fact, and believes the articles and what is being said about it....they just might have a chance in this world. One tries not to become upset with what goes on, It's bad enough reading about birth trauma, and that is , like I said , just one aspect of what to think about now. Life used to be so much simpler, and I know I cannot change what goes on, but I can help myself just knowing about birth trauma. For the person who has gone through birth trauma, it is good for them to review many times what went on and to read articles about it. It is not because that person is stupid....but possible their attention strays too much. At least with these articles , it shows that someone cares if someones family is not right in the area at times.

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  2. I really hate to say this, but, many , many times, the quality of youth and also adults (personality-wise) just isn't as good as it used to be. With that going on, (sometimes the poor quality) it is good to have these articles and all the research that is being done on birth trauma.

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  3. Sure being in a loving family helps. It seems like I was alway reminded, that in some way, even if it was small, that there was something wrong, some reason why I just couldn't be with people other than family. I was always made to feel that "something was wrong" and of course people change when they got older, but as I got older, my family wouldn't let me forget how I was and looking back, I don't have as many "hang-up" but it helps to know that "something is wrong", and not to go through life like one is "so normal" because one can get really damaged. I was never, ever treated differently or babied, but realized that I was never meant to be a "jet-setter" (ha,ha),. Then later in life, I was told I went through birth trauma, which explains a lot.....and I do feel better , somewhat knowing this...so I don't have to go through life blindly trying to reach for something that I can't obtain, unless I receive primal therapy. So I am thankful for my family, and I do remember. They know how weak I can be, but they also know I"m not. What it comes down to, is that receiving primal therapy is the answer.

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  4. Also my life!

    I just saw a man who did everything to hide himself... it through a reaction of hideous shame... all what he would have been able to experience through the beautiful woman's attention was lost. What a pain to experience... what a loneliness... a loneliness in "hell mazes". Hell mazes a place for experiences about why! If we further believe that a quiet whimpering of a memory... an experience of causation is enough so we have not been to the place where an outcry took place.

    Frank

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    1. Hi Frank & All,

      Off topic but not:
      A BBC Documentary in 4 parts available on BBC I player, (leading up to the election) "What Britain Wants"; some one to love. Presented by Fergal Keane. In the program he says the word love many times and points out that loneliness makes us ill.

      Loneliness makes us ill. . .

      Paul G.

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    2. Hello Paul,
      Loneliness made ​​us terribly bad when we were vulnerable ... now ... loneliness is necessary in cases of memories to have room for what they once were . Selected loneliness is a place to "grow " into the experience when we need it .
      Frank

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  5. Part two,

    For you as a "happy" to be able to hide his shyness with social gambit shall only know about your own falsehood... no... not against others... against yourself... facing your own life!......

    Frank

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