Lipton, Bruce H. Ph.D, The Biology of Belief: Unleashing
the power of Consciousness, Matter & Miracles. Carlsbad: Hay House,
Inc. 2008.
The Biology of Belief, extends the implications of
“New Biology” beyond what one might expect into the realm of “consciousness,
matter & miracles.” “New Biology” refers to a shift in cell research from
the assumption that DNA is the controller—the brain, if you will—of the living
cell, to recent research tending to show
that living cells respond much more to events in the outer membrane than was
thought. For me, that wouldn't have meant much except for Lipton's readable
treatise on what the shift in thinking about cell functioning might mean;
implications extend to everything from understanding the evolution of life from
the single-cell stage to complex systems like animal life to the rethinking of
allopathic medicine as it's practiced today.
We've long
been held in thrall by the idea of
genetic determination (he inherited it from his dad!) and haven't
really done justice to the role of environment (he learned it from his
dad!). In fact, Lipton suggests that the recent Human Genome Project has
increased our tendency to look to inherited characteristics; in this regard, he
drops some remarkable stats: “95% of breast cancers are not due to inherited
genes.” - 43)
At one
level, we acknowledge that racism is founded on a belief in inherited
characteristics but on the other hand, we cling to the notion that much of what
we are lies in our genes.
Both single
cells and communities of cells (the liver, for instance) reach their destined
makeup through the genetic code of parents; beyond this makeup, however,
research has shown that the behaviour of cells and communities of cells
responds to signals received through their covering membranes. Some of these
signals come through the various hormones and glandular secretions that trigger
fight or flight responses in our muscles and organs, some are
transmitted through the nervous system (both conscious—like reading and
following a map, and subconscious—like ducking in response to an approaching
object) but the point is that our body cells are responsive to all kinds of
environmental signals. Take the difference between the physiology that responds
to stress and fear versus the physiology that follows relaxation or an
experience of loving interaction.
We've long
known that laughter makes good medicine; Lipton basically urges us to carry
this thought into our health practices with the assurance that we can reduce
our reliance on pharmaceuticals and surgery.
We all know
how integral to health care the pharmaceuticals manufacturers have become. Take
a walk through a nursing home ward just before meal time and watch the nurse
dispensing pills and potions to the patients resident there. Frequently, the
particular medications are “experimental;” physicians “try out” a drug or a dosage,
alter it if it proves in-efficacious. New research on cell functioning makes it
much clearer why this reliance on drug solutions is wrong headed. A drug cannot
be assumed to target a problem in one area without finding its way through
other cells and cell communities in the body where it's presence may be
entirely inappropriate; we euphemistically call the results of drug actions in
inappropriate places “potential side effects.” For example, we've known forever
that a certain drug that acts against histamine overload also effects a
drowsiness, a sure signal that cells involved in our sleep cycles are absorbing
drug material and responding inappropriately.
We live in a
hazardous age, health consciousness wise. Genetic modifications to plants and
animals may prove to have no dilatory effect when consumed, but we're not sure
we want to take that chance. This is in itself a stressor and in a biology that
recognizes the role of environment— physical, spiritual and emotional—in the
behaviours of cells and cell communities, the mechanics of GM modifications
might well be overshadowed by the overall negative consequences of being afraid
of our food. That kind of living is very bad for cell health and for cell
communities.
Lipton ends
with a chapter called “Conscious Parenting: Parents as Genetic Engineers” The growth
and protection gates on children's cells are active at birth and the
implications for raising children in fear or safety are enormous. Habits of
thought and expectations are formed early in life and can be highly persistent
into adulthood, so it makes sense that the most potent of preventative measures
for health is the loving, supportive nurturing of children. Unfortunately, this
is difficult for parents who have themselves been raised in an atmosphere of
dark thoughts and may still be wrestling with the demons surrounding them as they
grew up.
Passing
genes on to a next generation is by no means the critical contribution in
parenting.
Among other
things, Lipton's Biology of Belief invites us to rethink our persistent
separation of spirit and body, mind and biology. May I hazard a suggestion:
what we call “miracles” are not magic events; unexplained remissions and
cures happen but not because God reverses the laws of nature for the occasion.
It's probable that we have underestimated the environmental influence coursing
through our bodies when circumstances of pain and illness meet hope, faith and
belief.
I admit that
Biology of Belief leaves me somewhat skeptical, but that's just me. It's
clear that health care costs, for instance, are taxing our ability to pay and
this escalating cost has no end in sight. If Lipton is right, much of the cost
of surgical and drug therapy is wasted; I'd really like to believe there are
better ways to be healthy and to that possibility, Lipton lends credence.