Jill Bolte Taylor & 5 tips to reframe your own reality
Jill Bolte Taylor used to label herself as a brain scientist. An unexpected stroke when she was 37 led her to explore deep consciousness and rediscover insight to sustain inner peace. Within four hours, she could no longer walk, talk, read, write, could not recall any of her life or mentally-process information. Then, over a period of eight years, she experienced a profound journey that resulted in a complete recovery. In her book, she shares 50 tips and things she feels were necessary (and not needed) to heal.
As it happens, her book, My Stroke of Insight, was a festive gift to me from an eighty-four year old friend who has lived his own small strokes. He inspires me to encourage people to stop asking what may be wrong with them so they move beyond the education that keeps them thinking as they do. Consider these 5 tips to reframe your own reality;
1) Welcome the opportunity to transcend your normal perceptions. Illness often has one of two main effects on people--it causes them to focus on the ego mind of the left hemisphere, which continues to believe they are invincible and dramatic incapacity is irrelevant or, the right hemisphere influences them to completely transform how they think and behave to nurture states of joy. You may experience one, both or neither.
2) Recognize your information processing system creates you external reality. You choose to divide your moment-by-moment experience into past, present and future based on brain directives that may lie beyond your conscious scope. When you step outside the anticipated limits of time, or find yourself in a state where temporality is gone, then you begin to dissolve self-created boundaries. How you frame our perception expands. You redefine processing through more than visual, sensory and pattern association.
3)Realize you can move beyond analytical judgment. When the left hemisphere is dominant, it distracts the mind from thoughts of peace, serenity, security, intuition and universal inter-connectedness linked to the right hemisphere. Standard perception and behaviour result from constant exchanges between hemispheres. People are generally right or left brain dominant. To achieve greater balance requires a decision to raise awareness and shift gears. To move beyond judgment is the path to enlightenment.
4) Consider illness could appear as a form of biological evolution. In order to evolve into a more highly-oganized form, human genetic material takes advantage of opportunities to adapt and transform. From a biological view, human beings are like a species-specific mutation of the earths genetic code. We are related to everything and constantly evolving in ways we do not always anticipate, grasp or readily explain.
5) Consciously evoke your own waves of clarity. Regardless of your own mental or physical state, you can choose to view it as a blessing in disguise. You can choose to ask questions like, "Who am I?" and What am I doing?" You can take steps to reconnect with spiritual forces, to better understand your attachments to your body and life as you perceive it. Choose to move beyond worry and live each moment the best you can.
Reader Comments (14)
VERY useful post and I, too learned a lot from Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor. Moving more into right brain perceptions does indeed open the world and empower you. The ego-ic brain is always judging and in that limiting power. THANK YOU Liara for your wonderful writings. I have been very inspired by you this last year. I wish you all the best for 2009 and beyond!
Love, Jenny
Sounds like a fascinating book. We place so much emphasis on "formal education," that it is no wonder people are still in the dark when it comes to enlightenment. We are not taught. It is a path of self-teaching. There are plenty of tools around us to help us dig deeper into ourselves.
Anyways, I wanted to add to this post, because I'm impressed with Jill too. I haven't read her book but I think I'll order it now.
Have you seen this video of Jill talking? Its quite a long video, but well worth watching: http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/jill_bolte_taylor_s_powerful_stroke_of_insight.html
Alot of what she describes is very interesting from a yogic perspective...
I'm glad you have decided to get Jill's book. It is fascinating story. Please share your views here after you have read it. Your yoga interests will enable you to appreciate Jill's perspective on new levels. Thanks for the reference to the video.
Thank you so very much for visiting Second Chance to Live and for leaving a comment with your kind words of encouragement. You are a tremendous blessing to me. Thank you my friend.
Thank you for telling me about the above article that you wrote Liara. You are a gifted writer. I am encouraged by your essence as you write. Although I have not read her book, I get the sense that you have done a marvelous job synopsizing the important and poignant points that she outlines and shares through out her book.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to read your synopsis.
Great work Liara and God bless you my friend.
Happy New Year!!!
Craig
Thank you Liara!
Much love,
Natasha
When Jill is asked when it was she made a full and complete recovery, she admits she never has or wants to. What she means by this is that her process of recovery has enabled her to see parts of herself she did not like and wished to change. Rather than revert back to who she was exactly, she has reflected, revised and improved upon her own perception of her authentic self.This is part of her journey to authenticity. We all travel back to our own.
Robert McCrum "My Year Off" (aged 42) was Editor-in-Chief at Faber & Faber .. is similar .. with some emphasis on the journal of his new wife .. I heard the radio play first and took notes, then bought the book ..
He was in the Acute Brain Injury unit of University College Hospital - a separate unit .. specialising in CJD etc .. this was where my Ma was .. we were so lucky .. & lucky they appreciated her intelligence .. so they stablized her & allowed her to have a PEG fitted .. so she has been able to live on: & I've been able to have this wonderful journey with her ....
.. and learn so much & meet so many wonderful people on the way .. including a young 21 year old American girl .. who has made and is continuing to make a good recovery .. and a 26 year old French girl .. who unfortuantely died later on.
Both enlightening books ... well worth a read anyway .. I encourage all to purchase ..
Hilary Melton-Butcher
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I'd love to ask more .. and occasionally I've tried .. but I don't want her to have negativity or sadness on my behalf .. it's one of the things that is no longer there after the strokes.
Thanks for being so interactive .. I have so much to learn ..
All the best for tomorrow for you!
Hilary Melton-Butcher
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It's an interesting area ..
Hilary Melton-Butcher
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