Using the
power of biological biofeedback, our brain and nervous system quickly
learns highly complex processes:
When you were just a tiny baby,
you began the road to walking by rolling over in your crib. You were
soon up on your hands and knees, rocking to and fro. In no time at
all, you were crawling around the den, quickly finding the edge of
the coffee table, and pulling yourself up. Then, to your parents delight,
you tentatively put one foot in front of the other as someone held
your hands high in the air. Finally, the big day: You mustered the
courage to let go of everything and everybody and took your first
step! From that day forward, there was no stopping you. You were all
over the house, running from room to room, getting into all kinds
of mischief.
When you got your first bike, one of your parents probably
helped by holding the bike upright and running along side as you turned
the pedals. You glanced down to see where your hands and feet were,
then up to see where you were going, all the while trying to keep
the handle bars straight so you wouldn't crash into something. In
spite of having to learn so many unfamiliar and complex tasks all
at once, you quickly coordinated everything you needed to do, and
off you went on your own. In just a few hours, you had gone from walking
to riding. You now whistled merrily along, waving to all your friends
as you pedaled by.
Everyone physically
and mentally able learns many complex tasks in his or her life. And,
instruction manuals are not necessary. Billions of people have learned
to walk and millions can ride a bike, for example, yet the local library
has no "how-to" books on walking or ride a bike. The reason for this
absence is that it isn't "you" that learns these new tasks: It is
your brain. All you needed was the desire to learn it, and the willingness
to go through the motions.
Our
brain is very smart. It quickly learns what it needs to do for us
to live our life. And, whatever our brain learns and practices becomes
an integral part of who and what we are. We walk from room to room
with no conscious thought, absent mindedly stick food into our mouth
as we read a magazine, and, even if we haven't ridden for years, we
can probably hop on a bike, and, with a few wobbles, be riding as
well as before. Unless damaged by drugs, toxins, physical or emotional
trauma, or some disease process, our brain never forgets what we need
to know: It remembers for a lifetime.
But, as we have all experienced, day-to-day
stresses can cause our brain to go into overload, causing various
systems to become compromised, even spin out of control. Examples
include severe headaches and low back, neck, and shoulder pain from
chronic muscle tension, chronic digestive and bowel problems as the
brain and body internalize gnawing stress, depression or anxiety can
come from an over or under aroused autonomic nervous system (the "fight
or flight versus relaxation" response), and, if the immune system
turns on itself, allergies and autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid
arthritis can occur. When our brain/body rebels from the stresses
of our hectic world, we may discover that we have little or no idea
of how to alleviate the discomfort. The reason for this lack of direction
is a lack of detection: It was our brain/body that learned how to
control and manage these internal functions. "We" (our conscious "self")
probably don't have the knowledge, the "insider information," to take
conscious control and change what is going on inside our body.
The discovery and development of "instrumented"
(computer assisted) biofeedback gives us the power to work with our
brain/body so it can re-learn what it learned in years past. When
a sensor or electrode is placed on an appropriate location on our
body and plugged into an appropriate electronic biofeedback device,
we can use the built-in tones, lights, or meter to make us aware of
what is going on inside our body. Using this information, we can work
directly with our brain to change our internal terrain. By learning
to raise our hand temperature with Temperature Biofeedback Training,
for example, we can learn to calm an over-aroused and out of control
nervous system to relieve migraine headaches, lower blood pressure,
and better manage stress, and EMG (muscle) Biofeedback allows us to
learn to manage tension headaches and calm various stress-related
neck and shoulder pains. With the appropriate technology and proper
instruction, these changes are remarkably quick and easy for most
to learn: Mastery is usually accomplished in just a few sessions.
Once we learn self-regulation with
instrumented biofeedback, we can usually recreate the experience years
later without the biofeedback device. We have better life tools with
which to deal with the negative effects of stress-related discomforts.
We
are truly "learning machines." Our nervous system senses what is going
on in the environment -- the brain quickly processes and analyzes the
new information -- nerve cells fire and connect into performance circuits
-- we can function and respond to what is going on in the world. This
is "biological" biofeedback defined: Information in -- process and
integrate -- respond and interact.