An Interview with
JOSEPH CHILTON PEARCE
by
Chris Mercogliano and Kim Debus
JOURNAL OF FAMILY LIFE magazine, Vol. 5 #1 1999
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For nearly half a century Joseph Chilton Pearce, who prefers to
be known simply as Joe, has been probing the mysteries of the human
mind. Author of The Crack in the Cosmic Egg, Exploring the Crack
in the Cosmic Egg, Magical Child, Magical Child Matures, Bond of
Power and Evolution's End, one of his overriding passions remains
the study of what he calls the "unfolding" of intelligence
in children. He is a self-avowed iconoclast, unafraid to speak out
against the myriad ways in which contemporary American culture fails
to nurture the intellectual, emotional and spiritual needs and yearnings
of our young people. Part scholar, part scientist, part mystic,
part itinerant teacher, Joe keeps in close touch with the most brilliant
men and women in each field of inure relevant to his guest. He creates
a unique synthesis of their work and translates the results into
a common language-such a valuable contribution in these days of
increasing scientific specialization. Then Joe travels the world
wide to share his painstakingly gathered wisdom - freely if necessary
- with anyone he feels can make a difference. We were fortunate
enough to catch him by phone at his home in central Virginia.
Chris: Modern neuroscience
has been making some startling discoveries about the human heart.
Can you tell us a bit about them in layman's terms?
Joe: The idea that
we can think with our hearts is no longer just a metaphor, but is,
in fact, a very real phenomenon. We now know this because the combined
research of two or three fields is proving that the heart is the
major center of intelligence in human beings. Molecular biologists
have discovered that the heart is the body's most important endocrine
gland. In response to our experience of the world, it produces and
releases a major hormone, ANF - which stands for Atriol Neuriatic
Factor - that profoundly effects every operation in the limbic structure,
or what we refer to as the "emotional brain." This includes
the hippocampal area where memory and learning take place, and also
the control centers for the entire hormonal system. And neurocardiologist
have found that 60 to 65% of the cells of the heart are actually
neural cells, not muscle cells as was previously believed. They
are identical to the neural cells in the brain, operating through
the same connecting links called ganglia, with the same axonal anddendritic
connections that take place in the brain, as well as through the
very same kinds of neurotransmitters found in the brain.
Quite literally, in other words, there is a "brain" in
the heart, whose ganglia are linked to every major organ in the
body, to the entire muscle spindle system that uniquely enables
humans to express their emotions. About half of the heart's neural
cells are involved in translating information sent to it from all
over the body so that it can keep the body working as one harmonious
whole. And the other half make up a very large, unmediated neural
connection with the emotional brain in our head and carry on a twenty-four-hour-a-day
dialogue between the heart and the brain that we are not even aware
of.
Kim: How does that
work?
Joe: The heart responds
to messages sent to it from the emotional brain, which has been
busy monitoring the interior environment of dynamic states such
as the emotions and the auto-immune system, guiding behavior, and
contributing to our sense of personal identity. The emotional brain
makes a qualitative evaluation of our experience of this world and
sends that information instant-by-instant down to the heart. In
return, the heart exhorts the brain to make the appropriate response.
Of course all of this is on the non-verbal level.
In other words, the responses that the heart makes effect the entire
human system. Meanwhile, biophysicists have discovered that the
heart is also a very powerful electromagnetic generator. It creates
an electromagnetic field that encompasses the body and extends out
anywhere from eight to twelve feet away from it. It is so powerful
that you can take an electrocardiogram reading from as far as three
feet away from the body. The field the heart produces is holographic,
meaning that you can read it from any point on the body and from
any point within the field. No matter how microscopic the sample
is, you can receive the information of the entire field. The intriguing
thing is how profoundly this electromagnetic field effects the brain.
All indications are that it furnishes the whole radio wave spectrum
from which the brain draws its material to create our internal experience
of the world.
Perhaps most importantly, we now know that the radio spectrum of
the heart is profoundly affected by our emotional response to our
world. Our emotional response changes the heart's electromagnetic
spectrum, which is what the brain feeds on. Ultimately, everything
in our lives hinges on our emotional response to specific events.
Chris: How does this
emerging knowledge apply to children and their healthy development?
Joe: Children's emotional
experience, how they feel about themselves and the world around
them, has a tremendous impact on their growth and development. It's
the foundation on which all learning, memory, health and well-being
are based. When that emotional structure is not stable and positive
for a child, no other developmental process within them will function
fully. Further development will only be compensatory to any deficiencies.
So, the first and foremost thing that must occur, if you want intelligent,
successful and healthy children, is that they must have a positive
emotional experience. There is forty or fifty years worth of research
from places like Harvard University, the University of Arizona's
medical school with people like Schwartz and Russick, and HeartMath
out in California to back this statement up. It all begins with
children feeling unconditionally wanted, accepted and loved. This
is the key to the entire operation. You can have everything else:
a high standard of living, the most expensive school system, the
finest teachers in the world; but if the children are lacking that
initial experience of being unconditionally loved by at least one
person, and if they do not feel safe and secure in their learning
environment, then nothing is going to happen very positively. This
cannot be overstated.
Chris: There would
seem to be a lot of implications here for the way we educate our
children.
Joe: The crux of
the issue of education is that there are only two types of learning;
one is true learning and the other is conditioning. Conditioning
is a fear-filled response by the older, or what we call the "hind,"
or "reptilian" brain. This is the reflexive, survival,
maintenance brain that responds as if threatened. A form of learning
does take place here, but it's conditioned learning and is intimately
associated with the emotional states of hostility, anger and anxiety.
If you want true learning, learning that involves the higher frontal
lobes - the intellectual, creative brain-then again, the emotional
environment must be positive and supportive. This is because at
the first sign of anxiety the brain shifts its functions from the
high, prefrontal lobes to the old defenses of the reptilian brain.
Kim: It looks like
you can make a case that our development is based, perhaps, more
on nurture than on nature.
Joe: The new research
around this issue is quite intriguing. In England, researchers have
come up with the hypothesis that the environment profoundly changes
the genetic structuring within us, that it is the biggest influence
of all on our DNA. There are studies now that show that our genes
are not at all locked into unchanging programs as previously thought,
but in fact are profoundly affected by our environment, particularly
our emotional environment. In the May issue of Science, there was
an article that discussed how the mother's emotional state during
pregnancy determined the direction that evolution would take place
within her developing fetus. Her state of well-being determines
whether fetal brain development concentrates on the frontal loves
or the ancient reptilian brain involved in survival.
This is probably the most explosive information to come along in
quite a while. And this makes perfect sense because the heat is
the first organ to form in the fetus, within ten days after conception,
and it has to be because it furnishes the electromagnetic spectrum
upon which DNA itself depends for its instructions.
Kim: Are you saying
that even after conception our genetic make-up continues to change?
Joe: Absolutely.
And after birth as well, where you continue to see a shift of emphasis
between the reptilian brain and the emotional and cognitive brains.
Not only do you have these shifts occurring during the first eleven
years of life, you also have this huge redundancy of stuff in the
brain. Around the age of eleven or twelve the brain undergoes a
fine tuning and begins to decide what it can get rid of. The brain
begins to shed the excess neural connections in either the ancient
survival brain or in the new intellectual brain. What is removed
depends upon children's life situations at that time. The question
of whether they feel safe and loved, or whether they feel like they
must protect themselves against a hostile world has a profound effect
on the intelligence of the child.
Kim: Okay, so what
about kids who were raised in negative households and who haven't
had that unconditional love? What can we do to reverse this process
and empower them to grow up to be whole persons?
Joe: well, to me,
the whole thing again boils down to the heart. The kids you're speaking
of have been deprived of adequate heart-brain nurturing. They have
been operating in an environment of deep deprivation and the only
thing you can do is to somehow or other provide them with a nurturing
environment where they feel safe and loved and wanted.
I know it sounds too simplistic, but really that's the whole story.
These young people need audio-vocal communication, nurturing, play,
body movement, eye contact, sweet sounds and close heat contact
on a physical level. Look at Marianna Caplin's new book that just
came out called Untouched. It's a brilliant, incredibly well-documented
work that ranks right up there with Ashley Montique's classic book
on touch written thirty years ago. It deals with the touch-starved
American child who has never received enough emotional or physical
nurturing. We must understand here that the emotional and physical
are essentially the same. So many American teenagers today have
been deprived of touch and love from the very beginning of their
lives.
Chris: What happens
to them as a result?
Joe: They try to
make up for that lack with all kinds of culturally provided substitutes
that don't satisfy their needs. For the past fifteen years Ann Morrison
in New York State has been working with hard-core teenage criminals
in maximum security prisons, young people between the ages of fifteen
and twenty who are considered by society to be unredeemable. She
laments a how the public doesn't understand ho easily salvageable
they are.
Through storytelling, play acting and a whole series of activities
like that, Ann just wins over these largely uneducated and illiterate
teens. All of a sudden they're reading, they're writing their own
poetry and they're expressing themselves in a variety of ways. She
started out by following her on heart's instincts. With great love,
she sent in and began quietly telling her stories, even though they
had the TVs going and they are doing all of the usual child, noisy,
rambunctious things that teenagers do. And she as able to reach
them because she as offering something that they had never had -
a mother figure, a compassionate woman friend.
As Margaret Mead said, "Art is the language that is the language
of the heart, that is the language of the emotional structure."
Chris: Didn't you
once say that imaginative children are never violent?
Joe: Well, in Sweden
there is a group of doctors who claim this to be true. Their studies
show that children ho have an abundant capacity for creating inner-world
images are never violent. Plus whenever they're faced with violence,
they are able to imagine and implement alternative solutions.
That's what Ann Morrison is giving those young people, the opportunity
to re-fashion their internal worlds, to establish the heart/emotional
brain connection that was never allowed to develop during their
childhood's.
Chris: I think I've
also heard you say that television is the arch-enemy of imagination.
Exactly what is television doing to our children?
Joe: Television literally
prevents neural growth in the developing brains of children. When
young children watch too much, it suppresses the capacity of their
brains to create an internal image of some thing, or some one, or
some event not presented to the sensory system by the environment,
which is the essence of what we call "imagination." Researchers
used to think that it was only the content of the programming that
was negatively affecting children. Now we have ample evidence that
the technology of the device is very harmful in and of itself. In
other words, the simple act of watching television has profoundly
negative effects on the physiology of human beings.
Chris: How so?
Joe: It's a long
story, dating all the way back to the early 1960's when it was discovered
that kids' minds go catatonic in front to the "tube."
This has to do with the way that the brain reacts to radiant light,
which is the light source of television and computer monitors, and
reflected light, which is what brings us the rest of our visual
experience. This is too complicated to go all the way into here,
so let me just say that the brain tends to close down in response
to radiant light sources. We've all seen how hypnotized children
get when they watch television for any length of time.
My biggest concern has to do with the way the television industry
countered this effect by introducing what are known as "startle
effects" into children's programming. A startle effect is anything
that triggers the brain into thinking that there might be an emergency
out there and alerts it to pay special attention to the source of
the disturbance.
Television accomplishes this with sudden and dramatic changes of
intensity of light or sound and a rapid shifting of camera angles.
Eventually, however, the brain starts habituating itself to the
situation, realizing that these are just false alarms, and it starts
to tune out again. As a result, every ten years or so the television
industry has had to up the ante by making the startles bigger and
bigger, until finally what we have are periodic bursts of violent
imagery in children's cartoons and so on, to the point now where
there are an average of sixteen bits of violence every half-hour.
Here the nature of the program content does matter. While the higher
brain, or neocortex, knows that the images on TV aren't real, the
lower, or the "reptilian" brain does not. This means that
when a child views violence on television, the reptilian brain sends
a series of alarm messages up to the emotional brain, which in turn
immediately contacts the heart. The moment the heart receives any
indication of negativity or danger, it drops out of its usual harmonic
mode into an incoherent one, triggering the release of the single
most potent hormone in the human body, known as cortisol. Cortisol
instantly wakes up the brain and causes it to produce trillions
of neural links in order to ready the individual to face the emergency.
Then, as soon as the heart gets the message that the coast is clear,
another hormone is released to dissolve all of the new neural pathways
that weren't used to make a quick, adaptive reaction to the perceived
threat. The trouble with current-day children's television programming
is that there's never any letdown, and the brain of the average
American child, who has watched 5000 to 6000 hours by the age of
five of six, is suffering a great deal of confusion as a result.
The massive over-stimulus from TV is causing the brain to maladapt
in ways previously thought impossible. It is literally breaking
down on all levels off neural development.
Kim: can you give
us any specific examples?
Joe: I'll give you
a couple. The German Psychological Institute has conducted a twenty-year
study of 4000 children per year, children who have watched the average
5000 to 6000 hours of television by the age of six. Researchers
found that twenty years ago young people could distinguish between
360 different shadings of a single color category like red or blue.
Today it's down to about 130. That's over a 2/3 loss of their ability
to detect shadings of color. Now, this is strictly a neuro-cognitive
breakdown. The most serious change they uncovered was a breakdown
of the brain's ability to cross index its whole kinesthetic/sensory
system. That is, more and more children's sensory systems are acting
as isolated components in the brain and less and less as coordinated
whole gestalts.
When they placed the young test subject in a natural environment
that had no high-density stimuli, such as come from television,
they grew very anxiety-ridden, bored and tended toward violence.
The final disturbing finding of the German study is that there has
been over the same twenty-year period, a 20% reduction in the children's
awareness of their natural environment. This fits right in with
Marcia Mikulac's studies in the 80s on evolution, where she discovered
a 20 to 285% reduction in American children's ability to bring in
environmental sensory signal as opposed to that of children from
pre-literate, non-technological societies. So, the German studies
back up what we've already known about the desensitization of children
who are exposed to the inappropriate stimuli from sources such as
television, rock music and computers.
Chris: Jerry Mander
pointed out in his book on television that when television was first
introduced it was advertised as this wonderful, democratic technology
that would make everybody's life better and serve as an educational
tool available free of charge to all. And the American culture of
the fifties bought this fantasy lock, stock and barrel. So how about
computers in the 90s?
Joe: Well, computers
fall into essentially the same category. Here's one example that
demonstrates how they can have the same debilitating effects on
the mind that television has. Researchers took a single page from
a fourth grade level textbook that had explanatory writing and a
couple of diagrams or pictures on it and asked three groups of people
to review the information. Group A was given the piece of paper
itself to study. Group B was shown a movie of the page, and group
C viewed it on a television screen - which is exactly the same as
a computer monitor. Twenty minutes later they tested them on their
comprehension and retention of the material. Group A, who held a
paper copy in their hands, averaged a retention level of 85%. Those
who saw it on the movie screen had a retention level of between
25 to 30%, and those who studied it on the TV monitor had a retention
and comprehension level between 3 and 5%. When they mixed the groups
up and tested them again with different pages from the book, in
every case the retention and comprehension was identical.
This again has to do with how the brain is constructed and the
way it responds to radiant light rather than reflected light as
a source of information. And it should make us pause to consider,
but it won't.
Chris: Why?
Joe: I attended a
computer conference at the University of California at Berkeley
during which twenty-one of us from all over the world spent four
days discussing the computers-in-education issue. At that very time
the State of California had a 500-million-dollar bill pending for
a pilot project of K-12 computerized education. They asked me to
come and speak to any legislators who would listen and give them
a report on what we had discovered during those four days at Berkeley.
The woman engineering this, who at the time was head of the Republican
strategy department, was fired for asking me to come and speak.
It just goes to show you how much money and power is involved.
Kim: But, so many
occupations these days involve computers. How do we teach young
people what they need to know about computers without relying on
them too much?
Joe: At that four-day
symposium at Berkeley we concluded that everything hinges on age
appropriateness. One professor from MIT made the passionate plea
that we must encourage children to develop the ability to think
first, and then give them the computer. After that the sky's the
limit. But if you introduce the computer before the child's thought
processes are worked out, then you have disaster in the making.
This is because, as Piaget pointed out, the first twelve years of
life are spent putting into place the structures of knowledge that
enable young people to grasp abstract, metaphoric, symbolic types
of information. The capacity for abstract thinking developed as
a result of the natural concrete processes that have been going
on for millions of years. The danger here is that the computer,
which operates by the same artificial, cathode-ray-tube technology
as the television, will interrupt that development.
Chris: TV and computers
aside, I get the sense from a lot of young people I know that they
feel something is missing from their lives. Have you noticed this
in your travels?
Joe: I've often talked
about three important characteristics of all teenagers. The first
is a feeling they have of great expectation that something tremendous
is supposed to happen in their lives around the age of fifteen or
sixteen. The second is the feeling that some greatness exists within
them. The third is a longing that is so intense it can never be
assuaged. And so at this point teenagers begin looking for models
of who they can be, someone to help them define and put that deep
longing into perspective. And what do they get? They get MTV, they
get rock stars, they get all of the rest of the trash in movies
and on television.
Kim: This is the
stage of life when many other cultures encourage spiritual growth
through things like coming-of-age and rights-of-passage rituals.
Do you think the absence of these in our culture is one of our downfalls?
Joe: Certainly, but
the things you're speaking of are vehemently blocked by our society
because they're not economically viable. They can't be given a dollar
value. Young people looking for something of meaning and substance
out there have a terrible time finding what they're seeking because
they are locked into our cultural system. Look into Ralph Nader
and Linda Coco's new book on the corporate exploitation of children.
It's a bomb shell. For instance, when Ralph Nader approached Bob
Pittman, who invented MTV, and asked him if he realized the profound
influence they were having on fourteen year olds, the guy leaned
back and said, "Ralph, we don't influence fourteen-year-olds,
we own them."
Today there are actually entrepreneurs in the marketplace selling
programs to corporations detailing how to exploit the child mind!
In other words, we are totally set up right now as a consumer society,
and changing that fact would literally threaten our economy. I don't
think you can change this reality on any large-scale basis. You
can only try to work around the edges and hope to reach one individual
at a time. No one's going to change the overall system. All we can
do is appeal to parents who have ears to hear and who are willing
to take the risk of getting their children out of this madness and
protect them against it.
Chris: What advice
would you give to individual parents of teenagers about how they
can help them to pursue their deepest desires?
Joe: Well, first
of all a great many teenagers have no idea what their desires are
because they haven't been given the opportunity to find out. So,
we can start by helping them to identify their desires.
Next, we can start being more proactive rather than reactionary.
Most of the crises that are occurring in our young people today
are arbitrary, that is they're created by the culture itself. Instead
of spending millions of dollars trying to fix what's wrong with
teens we should invest in educating people to be good parents, to
love and nurture their babies and young children so they don't have
huge problems later on. The first four years of life are the most
important. In Sweden, new mothers are given three years of maternity
leave. It used to be one, and now they've upped it to three so that
mothers can stay home with their children. And they're giving fathers
a one-year leave of absence with full pay so that both mother and
father can be with their child for the first critical year. So when
you ask what can we do with our teenagers, I say we can begin by
preventing the damage right from the very beginning.
Kim: So you think
there's hope for us?
Joe: There are some
extraordinary things happening right now, in little pockets all
over the world, examples of true coherency in a massively incoherent
system. And when this global economy nightmare we've unleashed finally
self-destructs - as I think it has to -these small pockets of coherent
intelligence will then manifest themselves and provide the impetus
and the wisdom for the changes necessary to create a world in which
children can reach their full potential. I am very optimistic about
this.
http://www.appliedmeditation.org/The_Heart/articles_joseph_chilton_pearce.shtml
Our constant curiosity
is key
to watching what’s being created.
~ David Moorhead |