Fine Line Between Neurological Disorders,Neurodivergence and Mystical Perceptions,Schizophrenia

 I am interested in the fine line between neurological disorders and mystical perceptions. It's found that temporal lobe seizures could lead to mystical experiences. Scientists say that could be a mystical part of the brain.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6664802

 

I am a believer that mystical experiences do exist. I also believe that they can be in synchronicity with temporal lobe seizures.

 

I think that there can be fine line between synchronicity and cause/effect when it comes to physiological activity and perceptual experiences.

 

Some scientists dismiss out of body experiences because they find that brain activity can be monitored during out of body experiences. Out of body experiences can be in synchronicity with brain activity. Who is to say that people aren't coming out of their bodies. What if there is like some type of energy cord that connects their minds to their bodies.

It could also be that a person focuses their mind's eye at different focal points and be so vivid in their visual thinking that it can seem like they are having out of body experiences. I know that I am such a visual thinker, I visualize everything while I am doing it like I am seeing myself in the mirror. It could be my focusing my minds eye on myself. Whenever I focus my eyes on a side of an object, my mind's eye seems to automatically focus on other sides of the object. When I give people massages,I tend to visualize the muscle I am massaging. When I go to a dentist, even though my eyes are closed, I would visualize the instrument in my mouth and the actions that it's doing at the time as well as where its at the time, even visualizing stuff the inside of my mouth,blood,nerves,etc. That's how visual that I am in my thinking. It's just automatic. For a long time,I couldn't understand why books were written about advising how to visualize and imagine things. I thought everybody could visualize and imagine things easily. I thought everybody thinks in pictures like I do. Well...I turned out to be wrong.

 

 

I do wonder if the more visual a person is in his/her thought processes, the more likely he/she could experience out of body experiences.

 

I also wonder if the more visual a person is in his/her thought processes, the more likely he/she could be disoriented and confused.

 

Ronald D. Davis talks about how disorientation/confusion can lead to distorted perceptual experiences that neurodivergents have. He believes that the highly visual,picture thinking of dyslexics makes them use their disorientation to automatically distort their perceptions but also can be used to see things from other perspectives. He believes those things are strongly connected to each other. They are highly imaginative. They could actually have an overactive imagination that leads to the perceptual distortions.

 

This could even apply to people with schizophrenia. Disorientation/confusion is commonly viewed as a symptom of schizophrenia. Schizophrenics have distorted perceptions. Schizophrenics are highly imaginative too. Their schizophrenia can be connected to having an overactive imagination leading to perceptual distortions.

 

 Antipsychotics seemed to be used to harness the imagination of schizophrenics. Maybe the antipsychotics are actually be used to harness their visual thinking.

 

People that believe in the Indigo concept believe that psychiatric medications suppresses the psychic, mystical gifts of Indigos. Maybe the psychiatric medications are harnessing their right hemisphere strengths that include being highly imaginative, visual, nonlinear thought processes.

 

Maybe psychiatric medications..especially antipsychotics can make rightbrained types of people be more leftbrained. The psychiatric medications lead to schizophrenics to be more organized and linear in their thinking.

 

Lower doses of antipsychotics could actually be used to make rightbrained people in general to be more organized and linear in their thought processes.

This can be an ethical problem.....especially if many children are having problems in school because they have strong right hemisphere processes that make it hard for them to learn left hemisphere type ways of teachings as in auditory sequential teaching methods including lecturing. If they are daydreaming a lot in school,and that interferes with their school work, that could be a problem too. What if they are actually doing a lot creativity,art,and other things associated with strong right hemisphere activity? How would the medication impact those activities? That is something to consider. Not everybody is cut out for academics. We could forcing naturally rightbrained children to be leftbrained. Why not incorporate Montessori,Waldorf teaching methods in education institutions including preschool,elementary,jr high,high school,and college? Teaching should reach all learning styles.

 

Ronald D. Davis, talks about focusing mind's eye. He talks about it from his experience as a neurodivergent. He talks about the shifting of the mind's eye and move it to optimum viewpoint for real-world perception can help with disorientation of neurodivergents. Who knows? Maybe that could help with schizophrenics' symptoms too.

Disorientation/confusion also are symptoms of cerebellar-vestibular dysfunction which Dr. Harold N. Levinson believes is root of neurodivergent conditions.


Dr. Harold N. Levinson and Ronald D. Davis seemed to agree on some things about neurodivergent conditions. They both believe that neurodivergent conditions have highly significant overlapping symptoms and comorbid. That's why Dr Levinson refers to the whole neurodivergence as Dyslexic Syndrome, and Ronald D. Davis believes that root of neurodivergent conditions is Dyslexia which he views as a perceptual talent. That's why his first book was called GIFT OF DYSLEXIA.

They both believe that the neurodivergent conditions and disorientation/confusion are strongly connected. The only difference is that Dr. Levinson believes that it stems from cerebellar vestibular dysfunction,and should be treated with antimotion sickness medication. Ronald D. Davis believes that it stems from being a highly visual,picture thinker, and that it can be resolved with mind's eye focus therapy.

  

I believe that cerebellar-vestibular dysfunction can be in synchronicity with neurodivergent conditions and not just cause and effect. It could be one of those " what came first....the chicken or the egg" I believe that it's possible that the neurodivergent person can be ultrasensitive to sensory input to the point that the cerebellar vestibular system is overwhelmed which results in disorientation/confusion. Therefore, cerebellar vestibular problems could actually be the symptoms of hypersensitivity. I am just coming at it from a neurodivergent perspective.

 

Things like Omega 3 fatty acids are not only found to decrease the symptoms of neurodivergence, but also decrease hypersensitivity too. Neurodivergents tend to be hypersensitive any way. Certain vitamins and minerals help with cerebellar vestibular functioning too,and they also can decrease hypersensitivity...especially Vitamin B complex which is known as the stress vitamin. Motion sickness medications are used to treat cerebellar vestibular dysfunction. They could actually decrease hypersensitivity. Motion sickness could stem from hypersensitivity to movements.

 

In psychology text books, I have read that schizophrenics can be hypersensitive and so they can retreat inside themselves for protection. However, this also can be said for people with autism.


 Studies show that Omega 3 fatty acids can help with schizophrenia,bipolar too. Hypersensitivity is very common in people with those psychiatric disorders. Also Vitamin B6 and zinc deficiencies can lead to schizophrenia and bipolar issues. Pyroluria is a condition that pulls Vitamin B6 and zinc out of the system which can lead to schizophrenic,bipolar symptoms.


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