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When an animal
flees danger, it makes massive instantaneous choices from
multitudes of options. It is an intuitive pattern
recognition process, an automatic subconscious drive,
which continually searches for viable choices for
survival. Its search activities, from the
supplementary/premotor motor areas and the basal ganglia,
burden your mind, particularly when you hold huge
responsibilities. When you have many problems needing
answers, the secret is to leave it to James, your
chauffeur, who manages this drive, to take you there.
LET JAMES, YOUR CHAUFFEUR, TAKE YOU THERE
The
intuitive process. You took James for granted.
Actually, he was not very well known. But, recently, with
a new view of the mind, James became an important member
of the cast. In this view, the mind was like a lightning
streak, racing through many neural regions, surging
through from input to output, within just 20
milliseconds. It saw, recognized, interpreted and acted.
In the blink of an eye. This lightning response of the
mind was powered by intuition, a pattern recognition
process. Myriad processes converted light, sound, touch
and smell instantly into your nerve impulses. A special
region recognized those impulses as objects and events.
The limbic system, another region, interpreted those
events to generate emotions. A fourth region responded to
those emotions with actions. The mind perceived,
identified, evaluated and acted. So, the scream followed
the nocturnal shadow, in a fraction of a second.
An
intelligent drive. Action was the response to an
emotion. If fear was generated, the action sought safety.
A deer bounded away. A bird took flight. A fish swam off.
The frenzied escape of the animals were managed by James,
the invisible chauffeur, a subconscious drive. Consider
the challenges before James. Escape was hardly possible
by heading into the predator. Below conscious levels,
James remembered, evaluated and instantly chose the best
of multiple escape routes to increase distance from
danger. Even the safety of the underside of a rock was an
option. James even managed many components of your
actions. He responded instantly, when you responded to
emotions, such as sorrow, or humor. James managed the
racking sobs of sorrow, or the relaxing movements of a
belly laugh.
A
drive, which even overruled you. For IA, the
wisdom and folly of of the mind were powered by nerve
cells, which remembered and recognized. Millions of years
of neural memories powered that streak of lighting.
Science suggested participation by the supplementary
motor area, the premotor area and the basal ganglia in
the subconscious processes, managed by James. His wisdom
enabled animals to survive. James helped them to forage,
feed and reproduce. He even guided birds to build nests,
selecting secure locations and suitable materials. James
even placed limits on your will. Normally, while alone in
your room, your will could raise your hand. But, at other
times, your hand remained frozen in place. James did that
if you wished to raise your hand, say, when sitting in a
theater. Because that was not proper. The wisdom of James
had decided the issue, faster than you could think.
A
creative drive. While James often overruled you,
it was nice to know that he was a powerful ally in life.
James searched your memory, when you sat down to write a
shopping list. He delivered the list, so you could jot it
down. Those subconscious searches were creative. Konrad
Lorenz described a chimpanzee in a room, which contained
a banana suspended from the ceiling just out of reach,
and a box elsewhere. After much visible restlessness, the
animal suddenly brightened, and joyfully moved the box
below the banana, climbed up and reached for it. That
breakthrough idea was not generated by an act of will by
the chimp. It was James, who discovered the solution.
"No man watching him could doubt the existence of a
genuine 'Aha' experience in anthropoid apes." Lorenz
wrote. That creative experience resulted from the search
of context by James.
The
burden of responsibility. But, often, those
investigations by James created tensions. The chimp was
restless. Such creative restlessness was not limited to
animals. It also burdened professionals. Mathen had
retired as director of a major medical college and
hospital, where he had gracefully managed its myriad
problems. He noted that, when he rose from bed the
morning after retirement, he felt as if a heavy burden
had lifted off his shoulders. Subconscious drives, which
sought solutions to a barrage of issues, had become
inhibited. There was a sense of freedom. The halt of the
search processes, managed by James, had lifted the
intense burdens of responsibility.
Internal
conflicts. Those search processes also created
inner conflicts. That was because James responded
differently to the diverse emotions generated by life's
problems. Anger chose conflict. Affection chose
compromise. And, fear preferred retreat. Independent
emotions competed for control in the subconscious. Since
intuition was an elimination process, each emotion
remained isolated. Anger had no amicable memories. Fear
could see no hope. Each emotion held a partisan view,
varying in strength as evidence built up. Each instant,
the most powerful emotion ruled. Others were inhibited,
remaining beneath awareness. But, they continued their
hidden search processes.
The
power of an inquiring mind. James never burdened
you with those searches. When he was so efficient, where
did you come in? With all those competing emotions, which
was the real you? Were you the angry one, or the fearful
one? Neither, by a long shot. The real you was the one
who recognized, without interpretations. When you
consciously searched, your mind became stilled. Like an
animal, which sensed danger and sniffed the air to
investigate. For survival in a perilous world, nature
demanded answers, free of emotional interpretations. An
inquiring mind was the most open. That was the real you.
Not those wavering emotional responses.
Integrate
your thoughts and sit back. A conscious search
empowered the real you. Where an issue concerned you, you
could write a list of all your related thoughts. James
assisted you by bringing all those subconscious drives to
your list. The process emptied your mind of many
disturbing views. The writing process made all those
partisan drives aware of multiple viewpoints. Anger saw
the positive side. Fear saw hope. Exposed and organized,
disparate concerns became common. The creative forces of
the mind converged. Anger and fear, love and altruism
cooperated to enable James to find for a solution to meet
all your concerns. When you evaluated the whole, you
empowered James. You could then lean back and let him
take you there.
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