Thursday, 23 April 2026

JM

 Meditn v spacing out 

This is an excellent question!

It brings up a contradiction that a lot of meditation instructions contain.

The usual instructions go something like this:

  1. Sit quietly with a reasonably straight posture.
  2. Try not to think about all of your problems at once.
  3. A meditation object like a mantra might help you with this.
  4. With practice, you will reach a state of profound rest mixed with incredible clarity.
  5. Once you find this state, you can let go of your object and just be.
  6. This state is endless - there is no limit to how deep you can go.
  7. Avoid trance-states and spacing out.

What?

Step #7 doesn’t make any sense.

They just told me to sink into profound rest; now they’re telling me not to space out?

The fault is with how the instructions are given.

This bit of instruction should appear in step #3.

A meditation object can help us avoid worrying andspacing out.

Would it surprise you to learn that the state of profound rest is much deeper than the “relaxation” of spacing out?

When you space out, you engage in a form of mind-wandering that’s a little less energized than worrying.

Think of it as a transitional state.

The open awareness you will eventually find is a much deeper state.

Its signature is incredible stillness and clarity.

BG 18.78

 Ek-Shloki Gita (one-verse summary of the Bhagavad Gita):


यत्र योगेश्वरः कृष्णो यत्र पार्थो धनुर्धरः ।
तत्र श्रीर्विजयो भूतिर्ध्रुवा नीतिर्मतिर्मम ॥


Transliteration:
Yatra Yogeshwarah Krishna, Yatra Partho Dhanur-dharah
Tatra Shrir Vijayo Bhutir Dhruva Nitir Matir Mama


Meaning:
Where there is Krishna (wisdom) and Arjuna (right action),
there will always be prosperity, victory, growth, and righteousness.


A Expansion

 The quote by Scott H Young —

“Happiness is the expansion of possibility” — is about how learning increases your sense of freedom and hope.

Here’s what it means in simple terms:

  • When you learn, you gain new skills
  • New skills create more choices
  • More choices make you feel less trapped
  • That feeling of openness = happiness

So happiness here isn’t just pleasure — it’s:

  • having options
  • seeing a future
  • believing things can improve
  • not feeling stuck

The second line:

“Today, I want to step back and consider the question of why to learn in the first place…”

He’s saying: we don’t learn just for exams or jobs — we learn to expand what’s possible in life.

This connects strongly to your daughter’s situation:

  • Anxiety narrows possibilities (“I can’t… what if…”)
  • Depression reduces motivation (“What’s the point…”)
  • Learning slowly re-opens possibilities
  • That restores hope → then happiness follows

In short:
Learning → Possibilities → Hope → Happiness

It’s a very gentle but powerful idea.


Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Meditn enhances Autosuggestion

 Neurobiology of autosuggestion is about how intentionally repeating thoughts (e.g., affirmations, self-talk, visualization) can measurably influence brain activity, learning, emotion, and behavior. It isn’t magic — it’s mostly about attention, expectation, and reinforcement reshaping neural circuits.

Here’s what’s happening in the brain:


1. Prefrontal cortex: “top-down” control

Autosuggestion starts in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) — the part of the brain responsible for planning, beliefs, and self-talk.

When you repeat a suggestion like:

  • “I stay calm under pressure”
  • “I learn quickly”

The PFC:

  • Holds the statement in working memory
  • Evaluates it as a goal or expectation
  • Sends signals to emotional and motor systems

Over time, repeated suggestions strengthen the goal representation, making your brain more likely to behave consistently with it.


2. Expectation alters perception (predictive coding)

Your brain constantly predicts what will happen. Autosuggestion changes those predictions.

If you tell yourself:

  • “I’m anxious” → brain predicts threat → amygdala activates
  • “I’m confident” → brain predicts safety → less threat response

This involves:

  • Anterior cingulate cortex (conflict monitoring)
  • Insula (body awareness)
  • Amygdala (fear/emotion)
  • PFC regulating them

So autosuggestion modifies prediction signals, which change emotional responses.


3. Dopamine and reinforcement learning

Beliefs influence dopamine release.

When you expect success:

  • Dopamine increases in striatum
  • Motivation rises
  • You persist longer
  • Small wins reinforce the belief

This creates a feedback loop:
belief → action → success → dopamine → stronger belief

Autosuggestion essentially biases the reinforcement system.


4. Hebbian plasticity (“neurons that fire together wire together”)

Repeated thoughts strengthen synaptic connections.

If you repeatedly think:

  • “I’m bad at math” → that network strengthens
  • “I improve with practice” → new network strengthens

This is long-term potentiation (LTP) in:

  • Prefrontal cortex
  • Hippocampus
  • Basal ganglia

Autosuggestion works through repetition-driven plasticity.


5. Stress system modulation

Autosuggestion can regulate the HPA axis (stress system).

Positive suggestions:

  • Reduce cortisol
  • Increase parasympathetic tone
  • Lower amygdala reactivity

This is why:

  • Guided affirmations reduce anxiety
  • Visualization improves performance
  • Placebo effects occur

Autosuggestion overlaps strongly with the placebo effect — belief altering physiology.


6. Default Mode Network (self-identity)

Repeated autosuggestions reshape your self-schema in the Default Mode Network:

  • Medial prefrontal cortex
  • Posterior cingulate cortex
  • Angular gyrus

These areas encode:

  • “Who I am”
  • Personality traits
  • Self-beliefs

Autosuggestion gradually rewrites identity-level beliefs, not just thoughts.


Why repetition matters

One autosuggestion does little. Repetition matters because:

  • Synaptic strengthening requires repetition
  • Prediction models update slowly
  • Identity beliefs are deeply encoded

That’s why daily autosuggestion works better than occasional.


When autosuggestion works best (neurobiologically)

It’s strongest when combined with:

  • Emotion (amygdala tagging)
  • Visualization (sensory cortex activation)
  • Repetition (plasticity)
  • Action (dopamine reinforcement)
  • Relaxed state (theta waves, hippocampal encoding)

That’s why:

  • Before sleep works well
  • After waking works well
  • Meditation enhances autosuggestion


What autosuggestion is NOT

  • It does not instantly change reality
  • It does not bypass skill-building
  • It does not override biology completely

It biases probability by reshaping attention, motivation, and behavior.


One-sentence summary

Autosuggestion works by using prefrontal self-talk to reshape prediction, emotion, and reward circuits, gradually rewiring neural pathways that influence behavior and perception.


If you want, I can also explain:

  •  Autosuggestion vs placebo
  •  Autosuggestion vs hypnosis
  •  Best scientifically supported autosuggestion method
  •  Whether affirmations actually work (mixed evidence)