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Intuition was an almost instantaneous
algorthmic process, which triggered emotions, on
recognition of events. Conflicting emotions triggered
drives, which sought opposing solutions. This article
explains drives and suggests a simple conflict resolution
procedure, which stills the mind and triggers the
creativity of a superior, stress free, consciousness.
THE MONKEY AND THE SPREADSHEET
When the
mind was fidgety, like a monkey. When you felt restless,
it helped to understand drives. The mind perceived,
recognized, interpreted and acted. It recognized
perceived environmental signals as events. Feelings
interpreted those events and triggered drives. Drives
managed action. Intuition, a pattern recognition
algorithm, enabled a response, from input to output,
within just 20 milliseconds. Half a second, between the
shadow and the scream. The incredible speed of this
process depended on massive combinatorial memories in
nerve cells and this elimination algorithm. These vast
memories enabled nerve cells to remember and trigger
drive sequences, with infinite contextual finesse. The
wracking sobs of sorrow, or the relaxing movements of a
belly laugh were both drives responding to emotions. Such
drives were the inherited responses of nerve channels to
varying feelings and emotions. Drives often made you
restless.
Search
components of drives. A feeling of fear dictated an
escape drive, whose purpose was to achieve safety. That
demanded instant responses, varying across species. A
deer bounded away. A bird took flight. A fish swam off.
While the activities of running, flying and swimming
differed, it was the drive, which achieved the objective
of escaping. To achieve their objectives, drives demanded
a powerfully intelligent evaluation of the environment.
If the objective was to escape, that goal was hardly
possible by heading into the predator. Increasing the
distance from danger demanded evaluation of many escape
routes, even of slipping into a safe sanctuary,
inaccessible to the predator. Like the underside of a
rock.. Drives involved a massive search of multiple
contexts to discover the right answer. Creative drives
were crucial for survival.
The
"Aha" experience of drives. When a person sat
down to write a shopping list, drives evaluated the stock
of provisions, menus, toiletries and cleaning needs to
deliver an itemized list to the working memory. By
contextually searching the mind, drives played a
valuable, creative role. Such drives were not limited to
humans. Konrad Lorenz described a chimpanzee in a room
which contained a banana suspended from the ceiling just
out of reach, and a box elsewhere in the room. "The
matter gave him no peace, and he returned to it again.
Then, suddenly - and there is no other way to describe it
- his previously gloomy face 'lit up'. His eyes now moved
from the banana to the empty space beneath it on the
ground, from this to the box, then back to the space, and
from there to the banana. The next moment he gave a cry
of joy, and somersaulted over to the box in sheer high
spirits. Completely assured of his success, he pushed the
box below the banana. No man watching him could doubt the
existence of a genuine 'Aha' experience in anthropoid
apes". But, drives also caused restlessness.
The burden
of responsibility. The need for a solution had given the
animal "no peace." This dilemma was not limited
to animals or just ordinary people. It was a problem at
the highest levels of professional life. Mathen had
retired as director of a major medical college and
hospital, where he had gracefully managed the myriad
problems faced by the institution. He mentioned that,
when he rose from bed the morning after retirement, he
felt as if a heavy burden had been lifted off his
shoulders. His subconscious drives, seeking solutions to
a barrage of issues, had become inhibited. He felt
unburdened. A multitude of such drives operated in your
mind. Some of those could discover no solutions, causing
restlessness. Understanding those drives and acting to
manage them could be a step to peace of mind.
Many
conflicting goals. Life was a creative process, facing a
train of baffling problems. The options were to fight,
compromise, or retreat. Each context triggered distinct
emotions. Anger, friendship, or fear triggered competing
drives. Intuition provided a narrow focus to each drive,
by eliminating concerns that did not fit its own feeling.
For the drive supported by anger, amicable memories were
eliminated. Each drive held a partisan view. As evidence
built up, the emotional strengths of the drives varied.
Opposing emotions competed for control. Intuition acted
in the limbic system to establish the most powerful
emotion as the current feeling. The current feeling
triggered its own drive. Competing drives, which opposed
the feeling were inhibited and became unavailable to
consciousness.
Clashing
drives. You were conscious of the dominant drive. But,
other divergent drives continued as subconscious search
processes. Many sought to achieve opposing objectives.
More often than not, these furtive emotions perturbed
you. For some, this process created massive internal
conflicts. How could the conflicting viewpoints of the
mind be integrated? How could a multitude of clashing
drives be focused on the problems of coping with life in
a harsh and unforgiving world? Across the ages, many
solutions were offered to focus the mind and still
conflicts. Over time, meditation, chanting and breathing
routines were found to be beneficial. But, that treated
the symptom, not the problem. The long term solution was
to broaden the narrow focus of the competing drives. An
integrated approach to life would empower consciousness.
Which was
the real you? But, where was consciousness? Which was the
real you? Nature had a mechanism, which isolated the
truth. When an animal sensed danger, it sniffed the air
to investigate. It was a process which generally stilled
trivial neural activity. Survival, in a perilous world,
demanded a responsive approach, free of distorted views.
An inquiring mind was the most open. But, an
investigation did not need to be about life threatening
concerns. Even when you wrote a shopping list, that very
inquiry stilled background thoughts. Inquiry. In the end,
that curious personality was the true you. The superior
consciousness. The most powerful intelligence in nature.
That questioning drive was devoid of emotions. Open to
recognize the new. All other drives had fractional views.
Views, which were distorted, or bending to the whims and
fancies of anger and fear, or love and compassion.
The
spreadsheet list. For worrying issues, you did not need
costly counseling. You could begin you own investigation.
Just an exercise on a spread sheet assisted this process.
Just as in a shopping list, a search process was set in
motion. This routine began by listing, line by line, any
aspect of a vexing problem, as it came to mind. A short
line would be entered, in a single cell of the spread
sheet. Like a shopping list. It could just begin with,
say, "Downsizing" and go on down. Many
conflicting emotions surged in the background. Each line
would be a thought, which could point to pages of
reports, or be just a hunch. It represented a particular
feeling. The curiosity drive was powerful. It would bring
in differing viewpoints. Each viewpoint was noted down.
These views would arrive in conspicuous sequence.
Emptied
mind. When you noted them down, you brought them into
consciousness into the public view of isolated and
competing drives. The more outraged drives, including
four letter references to corporate stupidity, became
conscious of opposing viewpoints. Raging emotions could
have eliminated those muffled, crucial insights. The
average issue would fill about 60 or more cells. All your
views about those uneasy rumors in the office. It was a
process which emptied your mind concerning the subject.
By the time the list was over, the mind would have thrown
up many rival positions. Opposing viewpoints usually
brought the needed balance.
Organized
thoughts. Once the list was over, a label was entered for
each thought in an adjacent cell on the spreadsheet. From
a calmer perspective, labeling an entry became easier.
The slimming down of the corporation was not the end of
the world. There could be promotional opportunities. Even
possible career improvements. Solutions were bound to
emerge. So an entry in a cell could even be labeled as an
"opportunity." Each such label would fit
several more entries. Gently, the picture cleared.
Subsurface drives which triggered anxieties came out into
the open. Things at the back of the mind, which went
thud, in the dark. The process ended with sixty thoughts
in a dozen labeled categories. A "sort" of the
labels column would arrange similar ones together, in
alphabetic order. Listing similarly labeled ideas
together would bring clarity. They became groups of
consistent, allied thoughts.
Creativity
from a stilled mind. Isolated drives came out into the
open. A dispassionate consciousness viewed the tumult and
made sense. Unlikely worries seen together distilled
reality. Purged anxieties. The less likely outcomes could
be ignored. The inevitable ones had to be accepted. That
left you with the actions you could take. Invariably, the
things you could do never took all that much time. The
rest of the stuff just climbed off your chest. Acted on,
ignored, or accepted. Another threatening issue would
have been acknowledged, accepted and foreseen. Over the
years many such concerns raised their heads. Each time,
the spreadsheet evaluation balanced the mind and stilled
its hidden anxieties. When major concerns in life were
sorted out, the creative forces of the mind converged.
Anger and fear, love and altruism cooperated to search
for solutions which met all the concerns of the mind. An
integrated mind was the most creative force in the world.
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