379
the brain receive messages?
A. Well, the nervous system might not
be
completely
working, but
some
nerves
are
insulated at only a few weeks old, while
others
are
not
completed
until
adolescence.
1209
We know that babies of
only 8 weeks have been observed moving
to push away a fine hair that touched their
cheek.
1210
We know that babies have
observable and unique facial expressions as
early as 14 weeks.
1211
By all available
evidence, the early fetus is aware of his
environment and is responsive.
Q. The fetus‘ brain is still tiny. How can
it possibly be working properly?
A. Yes, it‘s still only ¼ of its adult
weight!
1212
But, it‘s not like the brain isn‘t
there. Still in the womb at 9 weeks the
head is almost half the length of the
body.
1213
A newborn baby‘s head takes up
¼ of his total body length.
1214
Obviously,
high importance is placed on developing
that mind! Sometimes it‘s more quality than
quantity that counts too. Don‘t forget, we
only use a small amount of our brain
potential anyway.
1215
Just how smart is the
fetus?
It is incorrect to think unborn children
have no ability in higher brain function.
1216
—Dr. Frederick Wirth,
Prenatal Parenting
e mentioned earlier that at 18
weeks a fetus has all the brain
cells he will have for life.
However, when it comes to intelligence,
it‘s not just the number of brain cells that
matters but their connections. So what
connections do they have? You would be
amazed.
There was a study done that compared
the brain cell connections of a 28-week-old
fetus to a 12-year-old boy. In the sample
tissue from the fetus there were 124 million
nerve cell connections. The sample tissue
from the 12-year-old boy showed 354
million.
1217
If you do the math, a 28-week-
old fetus has more than a third of the brain
connections that a 12-year-old has. Pretty
impressive if you consider that he or she
still has 12 weeks left until birth! And
remember, age 12 is when those
connections slow down — your unborn
child at 28 weeks may have a third of your
intelligence! Other investigations have led
some researchers to state that the brain of a
fetus at 33 weeks is relatively the same as
that of a newborn.
1218
Intelligence is not an on/off
switch
Where once it seemed that the mental
development of a baby began at birth, now
it appears that birth could be a relatively
W
380
insignificant event in developmental
terms.
1219
—
―In the Womb‖ National Geographic Society
ne of the most important points
that you should know about your
baby‘s brain development is that it
is happening all the time and a little at a
time.
1220
Imagine if there was a little
intelligence switch at the back of your head
that your parents could just flip when you
were born. It would be kind of novel, I
guess — as long as they didn‘t forget about
it! Fortunately, our Creator did much better
than an on/off switch. We have a built-in
and progressive intelligence mechanism
that is constantly growing and developing.
That means, of course, that there is no
one moment when we suddenly become
intelligent. The process of awareness,
thinking, feeling, memory and logic is just
that — a process.
The brain is made up of different
sections which do different jobs. The parts
that naturally develop first are those
essential for existence — the instinctual
part of our brain that takes care of
remembering to breathe, tell our heart to
beat, our body to stay warm and so on.
Next, the emotional brain develops. The
fetus has not yet developed the reasoning or
analytical brain, but this is normal. We
learn to breathe before we can talk and we
learn to move before we can run. In other
words, all intelligence happens in the most
efficient and practical order and it‘s
progressive.
Your mind exists
throughout your body
The last revolution in neuroscience suggests
that true intelligence and memory — the
very essence of self — are located not just
in the brain but throughout the body.
1221
—Dr. Thomas Verny and Pamela Weintraub
hen we talk about intelligence
some people think that those
cells in your brain are the be-all
and end-all of the topic. But today, new
explorations in science, particularly in
molecular biology, are showing us that our
intelligence isn‘t limited to just the cells in
our head. I know, for some of us this is a
no-brainer.
While the brain is still the central
command point, physically every cell is a
receiving
and
sending
station
for
intelligence. For example, a scientist by the
name of Candace Pert discovered this when
she studied receptors in the human body.
She found that emotions induce certain
chemicals (called neuropeptides) which can
be picked up by different parts of the body.
She found that while most receptors were
located in the brain, they were also spread
throughout the body. Yes, your body cells
O
W
381
are actually designed to respond to
emotions!
1222
Her discovery sheds new
light on the topic and rings true with New
Age concepts of mind-body connection.
Another example of intelligence focused
outside of the brain is cell memory.
1223
One
type of cell that remembers as part of its job
is the immune system. By remembering
viruses, bacteria or other enemies, it is able
to call up the right antibodies and prevent
us from experiencing full-blown symptoms
of the infection.
It‘s a good thing for us that our
intelligence is not isolated to our brain!
The mind exists beyond the
physical body
our brain — and to a lesser degree
each
cell
—
is
biologically
intelligent. But you are more than a
physical being with a physical body. I
believe we have an intelligence that
includes, yet goes beyond, our physical
body.
A 1992 Gallup Poll reported that 8
Million Americans had a near-death
experience.
1224
Typically
in
these
experiences, the person clinically dies,
becomes aware that they are dead (with
their mind/soul — not physical brain) and
sometimes will have a religious encounter
or "see the light at the end of the tunnel."
Some of the stories have been verified as
true, as there is no way the person who was
dead
could
not
have
watched
a
conversation or seen what was going on in
a closed room on another floor of the
hospital.
This is just one example of how our
intelligence is not simply stored in our
brain. How does all this affect abortion?
1.
The fetus is actually very intelligent.
2.
Intelligence can take many forms.
3.
A completed brain is not required for
awareness to take place.
Reason #87
―There
is
more
to
that
‗pregnancy tissue‘ than you
think!‖
Y
382
Reason #88
We are self-aware
before birth
Self-awareness in the womb
Memory, as it turns out, is not just a matter
of rational or even verbal recall. We also
have a non-verbal, essentially emotional
memory.
1225
—Robin Karr-Morse and Meredith S. Wiley,
Ghosts from The Nursery
ould it amaze you if I said that
the fetus experiences the world
not with his logic but his
emotions? Would it amaze you if I said that
those experiences become stamped upon his
memory body or that some people are able
to recall their births or time in the womb?
If you‘ve read
Reason #87
, you‘re just in
time to move on from our discussion of
―Your mind exists throughout your body‖
and ―The mind exists beyond the physical
body.‖ If you‘ve not looked at it yet, you
might find it helpful.
We take off here, starting to look at the
case put forth by psychologist Arthur
Janov. He believes that the child in the
womb is fully aware of what is going on.
Just, not in an intellectual sense. You see,
the brain structures for emotion develop
long before the structures for rational
thought and logic
.
In other words, we are
―feeling beings long before we are thinking
ones.‖
1226
The same area of the brain that
processes emotion also stores memory.
That‘s why one study technique is to add
emotion when trying to remember facts.
What does this mean for the fetus?
First, experiences are more likely to
have an impression. Being emotional but
not yet logical beings, we are more likely to
accept without judgment our early life
impressions. After the first few months of
development the brain can receive what
Arthur Janov calls imprints.
1227
These pre-
birth imprints are stamped: on the
brainstem (the primeval part of the brain
that develops first) and the limbic system,
which
is
the
part
involved
with
emotions.
1228
(To see how to feed your child
positive imprints, see
Reason #54: You can
begin bonding with your baby now
.)
Secondly, experiences are stored in the
memory. They are gone from your mind
but not erased. Some people believe that
feelings and memories stamped on our
brain at this early age can follow us into our
adult life.
1229
How do we know the fetus has self-
awareness? Well, some people, usually
young children, do remember their birth.
For the rest of us, it seems to take a deeper
therapy like hypnotherapy to uncover the
memories.
W
383
Doctor‘s
experience
—
―I
believe‖
―From my personal experience in
interviewing families who have asked
their toddlers about their births, I
believe that infants do remember their
births.‖
1230
—Dr. Frederick Wirth,
Prenatal Parenting
Spontaneous birth memories sometimes
occur in young children, most usually
around the ages of 2-3, when the child is
just beginning to speak but before 5, when
these memories seem to fade away. The
topic may come up spontaneously, such as
when a new baby brother is on the way.
Indeed, I wonder how many children have
memories but consider them normal and
not worth talking about. Certainly, not all
children remember, and our bodies are
merciful, allowing us to forget the stress of
birth. During birth, high amounts of the
hormone oxytocin act as an ―anesthetic for
the mind,‖ dulling the memories of birth
pain. The stress hormone cortisol also acts
to dull memories.
1231
Children who have
been able to recall their birth describe it in
words like ‗dark‘, ‗tight‘ and ‗wet‘ — which
is accurate from the perspective of the
fetus.
1232
Other descriptions include coming
out through a ‗window‘ for a caesarean
birth or a ‗tunnel‘ for natural birth.
1233
Hypnosis with adults has also produced
birth memories, including ones where
results were matched against a parent‘s
version of the birth events.
1234
Might these memories be real?
Dr. Paul Bick used hypnosis to find the
cause of his client‘s strong anxiety
attacks and hot flashes. The man
recalled a time as a fetus when he got
very frightened and hot. When the
patient‘s mother was questioned about
this, she admitted having tried to abort
the child with hot water baths in the 7
th
month of pregnancy.
1235
If this man was
not reliving these memories, where did
they come from? Certainly, it was not
from his mother!
As far as being in the womb, an adult
under hypnosis recalled his impressions as a
fetus:
―Inside it was quiet and warm and
comfortable. Dark. Nobody to bother me. I
was happy with the way it was. Then it all
happened pretty fast…something was
happening and I knew there wasn‘t a whole
lot I could do about it.‖
1236
If this all sounds too advanced to be
true, just remember that a fetus does have
memory! In fact, we read in
Reason #55
how your newborn baby prefers the voice
384
of his mother, a familiar tune played in
pregnancy and maybe even his mother‘s
pregnancy food tastes.
Perhaps he is more aware than we
think!
We existed even before this
Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting:
The Soul that rises with us, our life's
Star,
Hath had elsewhere its setting,
And cometh from afar:
Not in entire forgetfulness,
And not in utter nakedness,
But trailing clouds of glory do we
come
From God, who is our home.
—Williama
Wordsworth,
―Intimations
of
Immortality‖
he idea that we existed prior to
conception is not foreign. Many
ancient
cultures
and
peoples
believed that there was another world that
our spirits not only went to at death, but
that we came from. I found out that as
many as 18 religions, 25 ancient and
modern cultures, 53 native North American
peoples, 20 African tribal groups, 28
Australian tribes and 21 peoples in other
areas not mentioned held a belief in pre-
existence.
1237
Now that‘s a lot!
It gets you thinking. If it‘s been around
that long and in so many separate cultures,
could it represent an eternal truth? Perhaps.
You likely have your own opinion on
this and I will not try to change it, but let
me at least share my thoughts on the topic.
For those readers who are strictly
Christian in their view, you may be
interested to know that Jewish tradition
also supports pre-existence, at least parts
that I saw.
1238
And of course, Jesus himself
attended Jewish religious events and
worshipped at Jewish temples, so I don‘t
suppose he opposed their beliefs too
drastically. In fact when, according with
accepted beliefs, his disciples asked him if a
certain man was born blind because of his
sins or the sins of his parents, Jesus did not
rebuke them or correct their suggestion of
pre-existence (John 9:2). Instead, he simply
says this was so God‘s works could be
fulfilled, and proceeded to heal the man.
After Jesus left us, his message spread
far and wide, and many followers from
many walks of life interpreted his message
all in their own way and interpretation.
Some earlier groups of Christians, such as
Essenes,
believed
in
pre-existence.
However, as history shows, the most
powerful group prevails. In 543 A.D. the
Roman emperor and a select group of
bishops condemned pre-existence.
1239
Those
followers who disagreed with that point of
view became labeled heretics and were
ignored, ostracized, or persecuted, until
T
385
barely anything of the belief remained in
modern Christianity.
In my research I did find that the
Catholic tradition still contains a reference
to pre-existence in this verse from their
expanded version of the Bible:
I was a boy of happy disposition, I had
received a good soul as my lot, or rather,
being good, I had entered an undefiled
body;
—Wisdom of Solomon 8:19-20 (NJB)
I also found that the Mormons hold it as
one of their teachings:
―Prior to life on earth we lived as spirits
in a premortal world.‖
1240
―We were instructed and prepared for
earth life in the premortal world.‖
1241
―In the premortal world God knew each
of us individually before we were born into
mortality.‖
1242
The Bible also contains some references
which we‘ll talk about in a moment.
When we think about existing before
conception we are not talking about these
physical bodies. Obviously they haven‘t
been around for that long. But what about
our true nature, our spiritual nature? Since
our nature is spiritual and our source is God
(Gn. 1:26), then we not only are destined to
return to Him but we must have come from
Him (Jn. 3:6, Eccl. 12:7). Indeed, in order to
be strangers and foreigners to the world we
must have come from someplace else (1 Pt.
2: 11; Heb. 11:13). In order to be reconciled
to God we must have had a past
relationship that existed beforehand. (2
Cor. 5:18-20) We are children of God, heirs
of God. (Rom. 8:16-17; Acts. 17:28) What is
so outrageous about the possibility that God
made us his children before our current
life? Even some Bible verses can be
interpreted as such:
Where were we when God promised
this? God was not surely promising himself.
… the hope of eternal life, which God,
who does not lie, promised before the
beginning of time…
—Titus 1:2
God chose us before the creation of the
world.
For he chose us in him before the
creation of the world to be holy and
blameless in his sight.
—Ephesians 1:4
We were known to God and set aside by
Him long before our earthly existence.
Before I formed you in the womb I
knew you, before you were born I set you
apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the
nations.
—Jeremiah 1:5
Who were these sons of God and were
386
you among them?
1243
Where were you when I laid the earth's
foundation? ...while all the morning stars
sang together and all the sons of God
shouted for joy?
—Job 38: 4, 7
1244
Did you know?
―In the short space of Christ‘s mission
and the next six hundred years, over
eight hundred references to pre-
existence can be found in the early
Christian and Jewish texts alone, with
more in the Greek writings.‖
1245
—Sarah Hinze,
Coming from the Light
Dostları ilə paylaş: |