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Enlightenment Via Our Own Intention?
by Christian Opitz
Bhagavan emphazises helplessness, that we cannot change on our
own. What about the idea that we can create our own reality through
intention?
All human beings are born as emotional beings, without the ability
to form conscious intentions. The main portion of neurological pathways
in the brain is built in the first three months of life, long before
an intentional mind is formed. Various schools of developmental
psychology agree that 90% of our psychological patterns are developed
in the first years of life, when direct emotional experience without
a rational perspective or intention is the dominant life experience.
So whatever conscious intentions we formulate later in life to create
change, these are always coming from a deeper unconscious resource.
All our conscious intentions are fueled by largely unconscious motivations
and those motivations cannot be changed through intention. Unconscious
motivations are the storehouse of trauma, of limiting ideas about
life, of self-sabotage and they came into existence long before
we ever could formulate goals and intentions. Therefore no amount
of intention can ever change that deeper part of our psyche that
determines our life experience much more then the surface of conscious
thoughts.
If I am aware of limiting concepts in my mind or trauma in my
unconscious, why can I not change these things, for example through
positive affirmations?
According to renowned cellular biologist Bruce Lipton, the conscious
mind can process 2000 bits of information per second. The unconscious
however is processing four billion bits per second. That is a two
million to one ratio. If you want to change an unconscious belief
or limitation through conscious affirmation, it is like arguing
with two million people who are convinced that you are wrong. You
might as well try to reverse a tidal wave by shooting at it with
a water pistol. Another important factor is also the motivation
for using affirmations or any other modality to change. For example,
if a person feels like a loser in life and then wants to change
that feeling by repeating affirmations of success, the very desire
to do so comes from unconscious wounds that where also at the root
of blocking success, not from a free conscious choice independent
of these wounds. The attempt to change the problem always comes
from the problem and is thus an extension of it, not the way to
a solution. The brain center associated with deep emotional motivations
in the unconscious is the limbic system and the center associated
with volition is the frontal cortex. New research form Germany suggests
that the limbic system constantly feeds input into the frontal cortex,
but there is very little input coming back. This shows how unconscious
feelings influence our conscious mind, but the conscious mind is
not capable of influencing unconscious feelings.
But I read about studies that show that people can for example
improve skills like shooting a basketball just thorugh visualisation
wihtout actually practicing the skill. Does this not prove the power
of the mind to create change?
One study showed that people who only visualized successful basketball
free throw shooting improved by 23% over six weeks, whereas people
actually practicing free throw shooting improves by 24%. This study
is often cited by those who promote the idea that the mind can be
used to change human life. But what did the people in that study
actually change? A simple mechanical skill of the sensomotoric nervous
system that was competely irrelevant to their happiness or inner
freedom. Such a mechanical skill is indeed easy to change with conscious
intention. Changing one's fundamental life experience, how we feel
about ourselves and life, what traumas we carry and live out, these
are infinitely more complex than shooting a basketball. Changing
who we are and what life is in our perception cannot be changed
by the conscious mind. The conscious mind is itself a sub-reality
of our life experience, and a relatively small one compared to the
unconscious and various genetic and collective factors. As such,
the conscious mind is powerless to change the greater reality of
which it is only a part.
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