Body Maps, Brain Maps

“The space around your body out to arms length – what neuroscientists call peripersonal space – is part of you. This is not a metaphor, but a recently discovered physiological fact. Your brain annexes this space to your limbs and body, clothing you in it like an extended, ghostly skin.”

Sandra Blakeslee and her son Matthew have collected the research of leading edge scientists of our times in their book The Body Has A Mind Of Its Own – How Body Maps in Your Brain Help You Do (Almost) Everything Better.

Science now recognizes our self does not end where your skin ends, but suffuses and blends with the world, including other beings. That’s a big breakthrough for scientists but is common knowledge through personal experience and tuned awareness for many non-scientists, especially in the natural health care field.

When you ride a horse with confidence and skill, your body maps and the horse’s body maps are blended in shared space. In your own brain the horse is a part of you. Your brain’s map of your body has expanded to include the horse you are riding so you function together as one body.

Modern equipment can map what your brain registers as you. Your brain faithfully maps your physical structure and also the space beyond your body when you use tools. Hold a walking stick and as far as your brain is concerned, your hand now extends to the tip of that stick. Its length has been incorporated into your personal space. If you were blind, you could feel your way down the street using that walking stick as if your hand was touching the pavement to guide your every step.

The map of your body space is not static. It expands when you put on your coat and shrinks when you take it off. It includes your car when you are behind the wheel driving down the road and is why you can gauge the distance from the curb or a passing car or the how close to travel behind the car in front of you. You don’t logically measure the distance, or rely on visuals alone.

You feel or sense the distance between your self, that means your extended self when in a car, with space to spare so you don’t collide or brush when passing. We engage this awareness when walking through a busy shopping mall and pushing our shopping trolley in front of us.

Your brain has many “maps” of you. Every point on your body, each internal organ and every point in space out to the end of your fingertips is mapped inside your brain. Your ability to sense, move, and act in the physical world arises from a rich network of flexible body maps distributed throughout your brain – maps that grow, shrink, and morph to suit your needs.

When learning a new physical skill your motor map changes, new connections sprout between cells and existing ones strengthen. This process is called plasticity.

Alvaro Pascual-Leone is a professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School and director of the Centre for Noninvasive Brain Stimulation at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. He says, “The brain changes with anything you do, including any thoughts you might have.”

He ran an experiment with volunteers who didn’t play a musical instrument and had never learned to type either. He taught them a five-finger exercise on a piano keyboard connected to a computer and used a metronome to set the pace. The participants practiced for two hours every day for one week.

By the end of one week the muscle map in the brain for each finger had increased. That to me is amazingly fast. Plastic remapping like this occurs when you learn or improve any physical skill.

He had half the group continue to practice for the next four weeks and half stop practicing. In the non-practicing group the finger maps returned to pre-practice size in one week. This brings home the old adage of use it or lose it.

The interesting thing was that the practicing group’s enlarged finger maps also shrank over four weeks even though their performance continued to improve.

Seems a consolidation occurs as your skill level improves, becoming better integrated into your brain’s body maps basic circuitry. With continuing practice you are no longer a novice but have become proficient and can perform automatically without great conscious effort. Your skill is now hard wired and a fundamental part of your being.

All forms of learning create increased new circuitry in the early stages and as the learning advances and mastery develops less circuitry is required to apply the skill and the necessary circuitry is now hard wired. When adding to an existing skill, the original circuitry is reinforced, new circuitry is added in early stages and then pruned once the skill is mastered.

This is how we “grow into ourselves”, extend our ability, develop our potential. It seems there is no limit to how many times we can do this process of growing new circuitry, then consolidating and pruning what is no longer needed once mastered.

The brain registers there are no existing networks for something we are trying to do. But as we make that extra effort, copy what others are doing easily, follow their lead, are guided by their instructions, read, think, process, put into action as we learn, our brain grows extra links to develop multiple options, works out the most efficient ones, then discards the others.

This brain mapping of the new learning reinforces stages of learning:
– Don’t know what we don’t know – Unconscious incompetence
– Do know what we dont know – Conscious incompetence
– Focus and learn till we do know – Conscious competence
– Know and apply without focus – Unconscious competence

We are indeed amazing in our ability to learn and grow physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually. It can be tough going at first but with persistence we can get to mastery. Now science is telling us how we do that. Our brain is designed so we can choose to keep growing all our lives.

Happy learning.
Cheers
Anna McRobert
anna@annamcrobert.com.au

When Self Help Is Not Enough

Many day-today upsets can be readily settled with self-help techniques.  You already know the benefits of consciously breathing deeply to relax and release tension in your body.

So, when something or someone triggers your stress button, breathe out first, and then take a deep breath in, and slowly breathe out to give yourself a few moments, “a breather” between trigger and response.

It’s all too easy to let a reaction kick in just out of habit.   Such a reaction happens without thought, without consideration, so it’s how you handled things in the past stored in your memory banks, and may or may not fit your current situation, that is, the specific outcome you want this time, right now.

Giving yourself that breathing space, between trigger and response.   Adding oxygen to the brain at that crucial moment, will often block the reaction, and allow you to consider for an instant what outcome your want – to vent your dissatisfaction or gain co-operation – and respond rather than react.

A Rehearsal
The Emotional Stress Release Technique, detailed in previous articles, can work very well if you know in advance that you will be seeing someone who presses your buttons.  To recap, before the meeting, place your hand on your forehead, and take yourself through what you usually do, how you react to that person or that situation, what you see, hear, say, and the feelings that go with that, at least three times, till you feel calm or grounded.

Now mentally project yourself to your coming meeting.   Keep your hand across your forehead as you do this to maintain front brain creative thinking.

Take yourself, step by step, through how you want to conduct yourself to gain the outcome you want from the meeting coming up, how you want to feel during and at the end of the encounter.  Make sure you include how you will look, the expression on your face, your posture, what you will see, what you will hear, what you will say, as well as how you will feel.  Repeat this several times till it feels familiar.

This rehearsal will stand you in good stead and may be all you need to overcome anxiety, frustration, uncertainty, disappointment etc.

When You Need More Help
Some issues or situations may need more energy and insight to sort out than you can muster on your own.  This is the time to consult with a professional who can support you in finding your way through to the outcome you choose.

Kinesiology muscle testing can pin point your best choice out of an array of options to match the energy of the problem with the appropriate solution.  And it is your own subconscious that guides you to choose the right fit for yourself.

Sometimes two people are better than one.  Working with a kinesiologist combines your two energies into one field and provides a larger energy field from which to spring.  As soon as another person takes a focused interest in your wellbeing, connects with your world and starts muscle testing, your two fields become integrated for the durations of the testing procedure.  This gives your own energy systems a boost so you can achieve much more than on your own.

Talking through an issue often reduces the stress in the moment but does not necessarily provide a solution.  You can’t live anyone else’s life, neither can you live someone else’s solutions.  You have to find your own.  Your body registers your subconscious activity, and recognizes what is in sync with your need.  Muscle testing guides you to bring this matched solution from the subconscious to consciousness.

And testing the percentage of stress before you begin the stress balancing process and again after, lets you track progress and anchors the improvement into your physical memory as well as in your brain’s mental and emotional memory.

With stress level down, ideally to zero, your energy released from maintaining the stress reaction is now available to use for new thinking, for problem solving, and for taking the action to achieve the outcome you want.

Take charge.  Create the life you want.  Use the self help techniques to keep moving and see a professional when the going gets tough.

Cheers

Anna McRobert
anna@annamcrobert.com.au