Counselling with Spencer Joseph
Covent Garden, London & Online

The Central Channel

The processes of the body and mind need to be aligned through the central channel of the body in order for our potential to emerge.

As I have mentioned in previous blog posts, the brain operates as a dynamic, interactive system much like the musicians in an orchestra. Shifts in brain function and physiological activity may involve, as Nobel prize-winner Roger Sperry has explained, ‘up-down, front-back, or various other organisational changes as well as left-right differences.’

Functions such as reason and imagination actually require the synthesis of complex processing in both hemispheres. The differences between the left and right hemispheres relate to differences in the quality of attention.

The left brain is concerned with closing down to a certainty while the right brain is concerned with opening up to a possibility. One, therefore (the left), aims to reach one correct answer (‘either/or’): the other (the right) is more able to live with ambivalence and the possibility of two apparently incompatible possibilities being true (‘both/and’). Hence, the left side has association with processes such as analysis and structure, while the right side has association with processes such as dreaming and metaphor.

The central channel within the spinal chord opens up through the “midsagittal plane” to separate the brain into right and left hemispheres. When we are present, attentive to what is here and now, then neurological, hormonal and other processes become regulated and energy moves into the central channel of the body. There is balanced activity in the brain, heart and other centres.

Most people are often lost in the delusion of the ever – thinking mind, the addiction to thinking and the imagined past and future. We become present by simply being completely attentive to whatever is here, right now. Anything that is happening right now, just be attentive – to your body or any sensory experience. This is the awakened state of stillness, of quiet observation where thoughts just stop. This is who we are, not our personality or even our body.

To sustain presence you must constantly practice the observation of when you are unconsciously pulled out of the present and into the noise of the mind. Just notice that a thought is just a thought, an emotion is just an emotion, a sensation is just a sensation. Then gently move your attention back into the present and become quiet. My personal experience is that I have had to practice this thousands of times in this lifetime already……to become present when the mind is wandering again into some story or other.

Gradually you become more able to return to the present and drop any reaction to whatever has been triggered inside yourself. Then you gain more capacity to stop taking things personally…..you are already complete within your Self.

This transformation is supported by an individual enquiry into wellbeing and balanced living. This is the integrative life.

Spencer Joseph

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